Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi has opposed the US push for the participation of Turkey in the ongoing Iraqi military operation to retake the strategic northern city of Mosul from Daesh Takfiri terrorists, stressing Iraqi forces will accomplish the task themselves.
“I know that the Turks want to participate, we tell them thank you, this is something the Iraqis will handle and the Iraqis will liberate Mosul and the rest of the territories,” Abadi said following a meeting with visiting US Defense Secretary Ash Carter in Baghdad on Saturday, Press TV reported.
The Iraqi prime minister added that the army, Kurdish and other local forces would handle the battle for Mosul.
“We don’t have any problems,” Abadi said, noting that the Baghdad government “will ask for help from Turkey or from other regional countries” if need be.
Carter, for his part, described the inclusion of Turkish military forces in the Mosul offensive as a difficult subject, stating that Abadi has already had negotiations with Turkish authorities over the matter and is likely to have more.
The Pentagon chief further said Iraq’s sovereignty was a key principle, stating that Washington will continue to offer assistance to Baghdad.
Ankara has been locked in a diplomatic row with Baghdad over the presence of Turkish troops at the Bashiqa military camp, located roughly 12 kilometers northeast of Mosul.
The Iraqi government says the troops are there without Baghdad’s permission, and has frequently called for their withdrawal.
Turkey, in return, has been defiantly rejecting Iraq’s opposition to the deployment of its forces in Iraqi territories.
Iraqi forces advance against Daesh in Kirkuk, Nineveh
Iraqi forces make fresh advances as they engage in a sixth day of operations to retake the city of Mosul from Daesh a day after the Takfiri group’s surprise attack on the oil-rich Kirkuk.
From the terrorist group’s last stronghold, there are reports that Daesh militants have executed hundreds of civilians, including women and children.
Clashes resumed on Saturday in Kirkuk between the terrorists and Iraqi security forces. The al-Sumaria TV network said nine Daesh militants had been killed in fresh fighting.
The Takfiri group infiltrated Kirkuk on Friday in an attempt to open a new front and divert Iraqi troops from the most important battle underway in Mosul, located 178 km away from Kirkuk.
The offensive prompted Baghdad to send reinforcements. On Saturday, special military units were hunting down some of the dozens terrorists who stormed public buildings in the early hours of Friday.
“We have 46 dead and 133 wounded, most of them members of the security services, as result of the clashes with Daesh,” an Interior Ministry official told the AFP news agency.
The official said at least 25 Daesh attackers had been killed and several others wounded, including a Libyan believed to be among the raid’s masterminds.
Troops push into Hamdaniya city center
In the ongoing battle for Mosul, troops entered the Keremles district of the Qayyarah town and liberated two nearby villages.
Daesh militants launched a bombing attack on the al-Hamdaniya town, also known as Qaraqosh, as troops moved to wrest its control from the terrorists. The terrorists also blew up the Nineveh Oberoi Hotel, one of the province’s biggest hotels.
Iraqi troops managed to liberate Hamdaniya’s central area, including its hospital, raising the national flag atop its buildings and retaking the province’s al-Askariyah district, Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi said.
Parliament Speaker Salim Abdullah al-Jabouri also said Iraqi forces had raided the Safinah village in Nineveh’s al-Shourah district. The village is situated parallel to the Tigris River, and is of much strategic importance.
Intense fighting broke out near the village of Tel Al-Samen south of Mosul. Daesh militants continue to occupy nearby villages, while improvised explosive devices hamper the army’s progress.
Officials said Iraqi troops are now turning their attention to recapturing Hammam al-Alil, close to Tel Al-Samen.
Daesh executes 285 people
As the army advances gained momentum, the Takfiri terrorists were reported to have executed around 285 people, including women and children, in and around Mosul.
Various sources said the group carried out the executions through Thursday and Friday. The terrorist group, they said, used bulldozers to dump the bodies in mass graves.
UN spokeswoman Ravina Shamdasani said on Friday Daesh militants have taken 550 families from villages around Mosul and are holding them close to Takfiri locations in the Iraqi city, probably as human shields.
H.M