Turkey has the right to conduct operations not only in Syria but also
any other place in which there are terrorist organizations that target Turkey,
said President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.
“#Turkey
has every right to conduct operations in #Syria and the places where terror
organizations are nested with regards to the struggle against the threats that
Turkey faces,” Erdoğan said Feb. 20, during the event “UNESCO City of
Gastronomy: Gaziantep,” which was organized to celebrate the inclusion of
Turkey’s southeastern province of Gaziantep on the list of UNESCO’s Creative
Cities Network in the gastronomy category.
Erdoğan’s
remarks came one day after he and U.S. President Barack Obama talked on the
phone for more than an hour regarding the latest developments in Syria and
Turkey.
During
his address on Feb. 20, Erdoğan said the situation had “absolutely nothing to
do with the sovereignty rights of the states that cannot take control of their
territorial integrity.”
“On the
contrary, this has to do with the will Turkey shows to protect its sovereignty
rights,” he said. “We except attitudes to prevent our country’s right [to
self-defense] directly as an initiative against Turkey’s entity – no matter
where it comes from.”
Erdoğan
said the point Turkey has reached is a place of self-defense and that no one
had the right to restrict that right.
“The
place where we have come is a point of self-defense. No one can restrict
Turkey’s right to self-defense in the face of terror acts that have targeted
Turkey; they cannot prevent [Turkey] from using it,” Erdoğan said.
Turkey
has been shelling targets belonging to the People’s Protection Units (YPG), the
military wing of the Democratic Union Party (PYD), which Turkey sees as a
terrorist organization due to its links to the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), in Syria since Feb. 13.
Turkey
and the U.S. differ on the designation of the PYD and YPG and relations between
the two NATO allies have been tense for more than
a month. While Turkey regards the two groups as a terrorist organization, the
U.S. sees the PYD and YPG as an important partner in its fight against the
Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) in Syria.
“Turkey
will use its right to expand its rules of engagement beyond [responding to]
actual attacks against it and to encompass all terror threats, including PYD
and Daesh in particular,” Erdoğan said, using the Arabic acronym for ISIL.
His
remarks came after a suicide bomb attack in the Turkish capital Ankara killed 28 people and wounded 61
others on Feb. 17.
The YPG
denied the attack, while the Kurdistan Freedom Hawks (TAK) claimed the attack,
saying it was carried out by an operative named Abdülbaki Sönmez.
Erdoğan
said that while Turkey was defending itself, they would treat anyone that
stands in Turkey’s way as a “terrorist and treat them accordingly.”
“I
especially want this to be known this way,” he added.
Erdoğan
also lashed out at countries where similar terror attacks have taken place,
criticizing them for severely reacting to the attacks when it was their country
at stake but “preaching only patience and resoluteness” when it comes to
Turkey.
This is “disingenuous,” Erdoğan said.
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