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Iraq Calls for UN Condemnation of Turkish Troop Deployment

Separately, Iraq has accused Turkey of violating its sovereignty by deploying a heavily armed contingent of forces to a camp near the front line in northern Iraq last week.

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Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan says Turkey has no intention of pulling out troops that are stationed in Iraq as part of a training mission to help combat the Islamic State group.

In the Iraqi parliament on Wednesday, a motion condemning the Turkish intervention was approved unanimously, supporting the government in taking whatever measures it viewed as appropriate.

Erdogan insisted that the troops consist of a noncombative force.

Russian Federation says it is targeting Islamic State militants, who have taken over large swaths of Syria and Iraq and made inroads in Libya and Yemen.

Rivalries between Baghdad and Ankara over Turkish troops entering Iraq should be resolved on the negotiating table because “there is a misunderstanding between both countries and we will work to ease the situation”, Barzani was quoted as saying by the Arbil-based Rudaw.

In a phone conversation with his Iraqi counterpart late on Monday, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu emphasised Ankara’s respect for Iraq’s territorial integrity, spokesman Tanju Bilgic told reporters. Turkey halted the additional deployment following Iraqi protests.

A series of political spats that erupted in Baghdad over the past week surrounding foreign forces on Iraqi soil have exposed the increasing weakness of Iraq’s central government and a growing disconnect between Washington and Baghdad in the US-led coalition’s fight against the Islamic State group.

He called the Turkish moves “a reflection of the lack of legality in the actions of the worldwide coalition led by the USA”.

He did not specify which comments he meant, but said: “If these attitudes continue, the traditional Turkey-Iran friendship will suffer great harm…”

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Turkish fighter jets carried out a new barrage of air strikes against Kurdish rebels in northern Iraq overnight, the army said on Wednesday. Unfortunately we can not see fair governance in Iraq. The document may be adopted at a meeting on December 18, which will be chaired by the U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry. He noted that Turkish trainers have been in Iraq for nearly a year and when Ankara became aware “of some kind of sensitivity on the Iraqi side” after the recent employment it contracted Iraq to sort it out.

Iraqi PM asks NATO to press Turkey to pull troops from north Iraq