Warplanes carried out air strikes on Kurdish militant bases in northern Syria and northern Iraq yesterday, destroying 89 targets, Türkiye’s defence ministry said, in retaliation for a bomb attack in Istanbul that killed six people one week ago.
The strikes targeted bases of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) and the Syrian Kurdish YPG militia, which Türkiye says is a wing of the PKK, the ministry added in a statement.
Ankara has blamed Kurdish militants for the blast on Istanbul’s Istiklal Avenue on November 13 that killed six people and injured more than 80. No group has claimed responsibility for on the explosion on the busy pedestrian avenue, and the PKK and Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) have denied involvement.
“It is time to give account for Istiklal,” presidential spokesman Ibrahim Kalin wrote on Twitter.
The air strikes were carried out in Qandil, Asos and Hakurk in Iraq and Kobani, Tal Rifat, Cizire and Derik in Syria, the ministry said.
The 89 targets destroyed included shelters, tunnels and ammunition depots, it said, adding that ‘many terrorists were neutralised’ including ‘so-called directors of the terrorist organisation’.
A spokesman for the SDF said that the strikes had destroyed infrastructure including grain silos, a power station and a hospital. Eleven civilians, an SDF fighter and two guards were killed, said Farhad Shami, head of the SDF media centre on Twitter.
The SDF said in a statement they would retaliate for the strikes. “These attacks by the Turkish occupied forces will not go without a response,” it said.
Eight security personnel, including seven police, were wounded as a result of a rocket attack by the YPG from Syria’s Tal Rifat on a police post near a border gate in Türkiye’s Kilis province, the interior ministry said.
Separately, a Syrian military source told state media Sana that a number of servicemen had been killed in ‘Turkish aggression on Syrian land’, in the countryside near northern Aleppo and Hasaka.
Türkiye’s Defence Minister Hulusi Akar said in a statement that all necessary measures were taken to avoid damage to innocent people and the surroundings, adding that ‘only and only terrorists and structures belonging to terrorists were targeted’.
“The claw of our Turkish Armed Forces was once again on top of terrorists,” he added, dubbing the operation ‘Claw Sword’.
The defence ministry said it was the first time it had launched an air strike on Kobani.
Regarding the air strikes, Russia’s Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Bogdanov told Tass news agency that Moscow favours ‘negotiated solutions’.
Moscow has supported Syrian President Bashar Al Assad in the country’s 11-year war, while Ankara has backed rebels fighting to topple him.
Türkiye has conducted three incursions so far into northern Syria.