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Turkish General Staff: 150 - 175 Kurdish rebels killed

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  • Turkish General Staff: 150 - 175 Kurdish rebels killed

    PanARMENIAN.Net

    Turkish General Staff: 150 - 175 Kurdish rebels killed

    26.12.2007 14:07 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Turkish military says between 150 and 175
    Kurdish guerrillas have been killed in a large-scale air offensive on
    December 16 that targeted rebel camps in northern Iraq, the first in a
    series of cross-border attacks.

    Turkey launched the offensive, involving some 50 war planes, against
    Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) bases after receiving intelligence and
    clearance from the United States.

    NATO-member Turkey says it has the right to use force to combat the
    PKK, which uses the semi-autonomous Kurdish region of northern Iraq as
    a launch pad to mount attacks in which they have killed dozens of
    Turkish troops in recent months.

    The Turkish General Staff said in a statement more than 200 targets
    were hit on December 16, including three command centers, two
    communications centers, two training camps, nine logistical areas, 182
    living quarters and 14 arsenals.

    "All targets that were taken under fire were hit with full success in
    the air operation, in which most developed target detection and strike
    control systems were used," the statement said.

    The PKK, considered a terrorist organization by the United States,
    Turkey and the European Union, has denied any of its members were
    killed in the strikes.

    The General Staff said many wounded PKK members were brought to
    hospitals in northern Iraqi cities after the air strikes. It added
    that the 150 - 175 figure of killed guerrillas did not include those
    killed when their camps - many in caves - collapsed.

    The military provided black and white video and still images of laser
    guided missiles hitting targets as well as destroyed buildings, but
    offered no images of casualties or close-ups of the camps destroyed.

    Ankara blames the PKK for the deaths of nearly 40,000 people since the
    group began its armed rebellion for a separate homeland in south-east
    Turkey in 1984.

    Turkey says some 3,000 PKK members are based in the mountains of
    northern Iraq.

    The Turkish Government authorized the military to launch cross-border
    operations following what it said were insufficient steps by Iraqi
    authorities to crack down on the PKK, Reuters reports.
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