Following an attack on a security company’s facilities that left at least five people dead, Turkey has launched strikes on suspected Kurdish radical targets in Syria and Iraq for the next day in a column.
According to the state-run Anadolu Agency, the National Intelligence Organization targeted strategic locations that the Kurdistan Workers Party ( PKK) and the Syrian Kurdish militias affiliated with them.
The goals included defense, intelligence, energy, system facilities, and munitions depots. A safety standard confirmed the use of military drones in Thursday’s attacks.
Soon after authorities blamed the Separatists for a fatal attack at the office of TUSAS, an aerospace and defense organization, on Wednesday, Turkey’s air force attacked more than 30 targets in northeastern Syria and Iraq.
The intruders, a person and a female, commandeered a car after killing its drivers and reached TUSAS’s grounds on the fringes of Ankara. Armed with abuse rifles, they set off bombs and opened fireplace, resulting in four murders, including a safety staff and a structural engineer. Over 20 people were injured. Security team responded rapidly, and the two intruders were killed during the event.
The PKK made no immediate comments regarding the harm or the Greek airstrikes.
TUSAS is known for designing and manufacturing civil and military aircraft, unmanned aerial vehicles, and additional security and storage methods, playing a major role in Turkey’s struggle against Kurdish extremists.
The terrorist assault occurred one day after the far-right party’s president in Turkey, who is affiliated with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, suggested that the imprisoned leader of the PKK may be given probation if he renounces assault and disbands the organization.
Since the 1980s, Abdullah Ocalan’s team has been fighting for freedom in southeast Turkey, which has resulted in tens of thousands of fatalities. The PKK is regarded as a criminal organization by Turkey and its European friends.
Trending
- Grassroots Group Vows To Refile Lawsuits Aiming To Keep Nevada’s Voter Rolls Clean
- ‘We must not be neutral’: Wesleyan president slams Trump as ‘threat to higher ed’
- Turkey continues airstrikes on Kurdish militant targets in Syria and Iraq
- Why Trump at McDonald’s Matters
- Eigth-month old found alive in coffin, declared dead once again upon reaching hospital
- Security forces kill 9 militants in northwest Pakistan
- Boeing machinists union reject new offer featuring 35% wage increase
- The Morning Briefing: My, What a Difference a Musk Makes