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Arab League denounces Turkish troop deployment in Iraq

Arab League deputy chief Ahmed Ben Heli said the Turkish troops also “increased tumult in the region”.

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The foreign ministers of the Arab League condemned on December 24 a Turkish military deployment in Iraq as an “assault” on the country’s sovereignty, demanding Ankarawithdraw the forces.


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In Cairo, Iraqi Foreign Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari said Turkey was not really withdrawing the troops, but merely redeploying them to Iraq’s Kurdish autonomous region.


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Secretary General of the Arab League Nabil Al Arabi attended the meeting, held at the pan-Arab organisation’s headquarters.

US President Barack Obama urged President Recep Tayyip Erdogan to take steps “to de-escalate tensions with Iraq, including by continuing to withdraw Turkish military forces”.

“We support Iraq’s request and this reflects our great Arab solidarity with them”.

Since the start of the U.S.-led assault on the Islamic State group previous year, Turkey has had a few hundred troops stationed at the Bashiqa camp near Mosul – a city now under the control of ISIS. Turkish troops at the camp are not assigned combat duties.

Iraq recently expressed anger at Turkey’s military presence at a base in northern Iraq.

In response to protest from the Iraqi government, which said the deployment was unauthorized, Turkey announced Saturday that it had begun withdrawing troops “in accordance with the requirements of the fight against Daesh [ISIS]”.

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Egypt’s Minister of Foreign Affairs demanded the “immediate and unconditional withdrawal” of Turkish troops from Iraq, describing the presence of Turkish troops as a violation of Iraq’s sovereignty.

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