Operations Claw-Eagle and Tiger

Turkish military operation From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The joint Claw-Eagle and Claw-Tiger operations (Turkish: Pençe-Kartal Operasyonu and Pençe-Kaplan Operasyonu) was a Turkish Armed Forces external operation in northern Iraq.[11] The operation took place in the Qandil Mountains, the Sinjar District, and Makhmur, against Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) targets, as part of the ongoing Kurdish–Turkish and Kurdish–Iranian conflicts. Claw-Eagle, the air campaign, began on 15 June 2020. Claw-Tiger, the ground campaign, was launched on 17 June.[12]

Quick Facts Date, Location ...
Operations Claw-Eagle and Claw-Tiger
Part of the Kurdish–Turkish conflict and Kurdish–Iranian conflict
Date15 June 2020 – 5 September 2020
(2 months and 3 weeks)
Location
Belligerents
 Turkey
Supported by:
 Iran (Artillery support)[1][2]
Kurdistan Workers' Party
PJAK
Commanders and leaders

Recep Tayyip Erdoğan
Hasan Küçükakyüz
Ali Özmen

Hulusi Akar
Yaşar Güler

Cemîl Bayik

Murat Karayılan
Units involved

Turkish Armed Forces

Ministry of the Interior

KCK

Strength

Unknown personnel

Unknown
Casualties and losses

5 killed (per Turkey)[5]


300 killed (per PKK)[6]

83 killed, wounded or captured (per Turkey)[7][8]


51 killed (per PKK)[9]
7 civilians killed[10]
Close

Background

As part of the 2013–2015 peace talks, the Kurdistan Workers' Party agreed to move most of its fighters to the mountains in Iraqi Kurdistan. The Turkish Armed Forces also established bases in Iraq which sparked regional and international condemnation. The conflict reignited once more in June 2015, accompanied by ongoing Turkish involvement in the Syrian Civil War and harassment of Kurdish parties in Turkey.[13]

Operation Claw-Eagle

Turkish Armed Forces bombed Sinjar and destroyed multiple PKK camps near Yezedi villages. According to the locals, there were fears of ethnic cleansing and genocide by the Turkish State towards Yezidi's.[14]

The Turkish government claimed that fighter jets destroyed caves in the Qandil Mountains used by the PKK.[15] The airstrikes also struck near Makhmour refugee camp,[16][17] which hosts thousands of Turkish Kurd refugees who fled the conflict in the 1990s,[18][19] as well as Yezidi villages in Sinjar.[14] The Turkish Ministry of National Defense released a video of the airstrikes, claiming 81 targets were destroyed.[20][21][22] On 25 June, a drone strike killed one[23] or two[24] PKK fighters outside a shop in Kuna Masi north of Sulaymaniyah, and injured six nearby civilians in the marketplace (two men, two women, and two children).[23] Four of the wounded are in serious condition in Qalachwan Hospital.[24]

Operation Claw-Tiger

On 17 June, Turkish Land Forces launched a ground operation in the Haftanin region of Iraqi Kurdistan. Units of the Hakkari Mountain and Commando Brigade and 1st Commando Brigade were airlifted across the Iraq–Turkey border.[25][26]

Iranian cooperation

On 16 June, the Iranian military shelled the Choman area of the Qandil Mountains,[1] an attack that is believed to have been coordinated with the simultaneous Turkish airstrikes.[2] The collaboration is said to materialize known alliances between Turkey and Iran.[27]

Domestic reactions

Iraq

The parliament of the Kurdistan region criticized the attacks[28] while Iraq demanded that Turkey stops violating the Iraqi airspace and terrorizing the population in the area.[29][30]

In August 2020, Iraq canceled a ministerial meeting and summoned the Turkish ambassador as Iraq blamed Turkey for a drone strike that killed two high-ranking Iraqi military officers. Officials called it a "blatant Turkish drone attack" in the autonomous Kurdish region in northern Iraq.[31]

International reactions

UN-member countries

In June 2020, the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom accused Turkey that it threatened Yazidis families who attempted to return to their homes in the Sinjar. Turkey rejected the claims.[32]

International organizations

The Arab League condemned the operation based on violation of Iraq's sovereign space.[33] Turkey criticized the declaration, on the claim of PKK itself affecting Iraq's sovereignty.[34]

Protests

Protests condemning the airstrikes were held in Duhok province[35] but also in several countries in Europe.[36][37] In London a Kurdish protester forced a car transporting Boris Johnson to stop in order to raise awareness to the situation of the Kurds in Iraqi Kurdistan.[38]

See also

References

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