Turkey sends tanks near Iraqi and Syrian borders
Turkey has launched a military drill featuring tanks close to the Iraqi border and dispatched military vehicles to its southern border with Syria where several warring sides are jockeying for position in the face of Daesh losses.
The military exercises began in the Silopi-Habur region in the country's south, close to northern Iraq, a week before Iraq's Kurdish region holds a vote on possible secession.
Ankara has warned that the vote could risk "civil war" and "have a cost" if it goes ahead but Iraqi Kurds have said they would still hold the non-binding voting on September 25.
Witnesses in the region, quoted by the French news agency AFP, said they saw around 100 military vehicles deployed close to the Iraqi border, including tanks, in the early hours of Monday.
A Turkish military statement said, "Simultaneously with this exercise, counter-terrorism operations in the border region continue."
On Sunday, Turkey sent about 80 military vehicles, including tanks, to the Iskenderun district of the southeastern province of Hatay as part of reinforcements for forces stationed along the border.
It is the second time the Turkish military deploys military reinforcements to the border with Syria where an expanding grip of US-backed Kurdish militants on nearby territories is raising alarms in Turkey.
The Turkish army sent first aid trucks and military vehicles as well as heavy equipment to the same location on Saturday, according to the agency said.
Anadolu noted that a third convoy of armored vehicles was heading to Hatay’s Reyhanli district, where Turkey’s Cilvegozu border gate with Syria is located.
The Syrian government is wary of the outside players carving out zones of influence through local proxies. The US has already brought together a ragtag group of mostly Kurdish militants and equipped them with heavy weapons.
SS