Operation Claw-Lock
Operation Claw-Lock was a military operation of the Turkish Armed Forces in northern Iraq. The operation was taking place in the Duhok Governorate against the Kurdistan Workers' Party, as part of the ongoing Kurdish–Turkish conflict.
Background
The Turkish Armed Forces have been conducting cross-border military operations against the Kurdistan Workers' Party in Northern Iraq since the 1980s. Since 2019, Turkey has begun conducting operations codenamed Claw, including Claw Eagle and Tiger in 2020 and Claw-Lighting and Thunderbolt in 2021. According to Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi Akar, the current operation targets positions in the areas Metina, Zap and Avashin and is carried out in cooperation with their allies.Before the operation was launched, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan met with the Prime Minister of the Kurdistan Regional Government, Masrour Barzani, and according to Al-Monitor briefed the latter on the operation.
Turkish authorities said that the objective of the operation was to prevent a major attack by the PKK. Ömer Çelik of the Justice and Development Party reasoned the PKK planned to establish new bases near the border of Turkey and defended the cross-border military operations into neighboring countries like Iraq or Syria as self defense enshrined within Article 51 of the Charter of the United Nations.
Operation
At the start of the operation, Turkish aircraft bombed several Kurdish villages in Duhok. The ground incursion began on 18 April 2022, with the support of artillery, drones and aircraft. Airstrikes struck caves, tunnels and ammunition depots controlled by the PKK while Turkish Special Forces entered the region by land or were airlifted by helicopters. While the Turkish Defense Ministry announced that fifty targets were hit and all their initial objectives were achieved, the PKK claimed to have repulsed some of the Turkish landing attempts. A PKK affiliated source reported that helicopters used in the operation were based within the Kurdistan Region. On the 22 April 2022, the Turkish Air Force extended the operation, flying sorties to the Sulaymaniyah province in the KRI against suspected PKK positions.On 20 July, Iraqi Kurdish officials said that Turkey had shelled a resort in Zakho District, killing at least eight tourists and wounding more than 20 civilians. Among the dead were reported to be a woman and a child.
Reactions
In Turkey
The Peoples Democratic Party considers the operation as being contrary to international law, and accused Turkey of hypocrisy for presenting itself as a peacemaker in the war between Russia and Ukraine. In October 2022, the HDP and Şebnem Korur Fincancı, the head of the Turkish Medical Association both called for an investigation into the claims of chemical attacks by the Turkish army. Due to this demand, Korur Fincanci was arrested and prosecuted for terrorist propaganda. The MP Sezgin Tanrikulu of the Republican People's Party is threatened with losing his parliamentary immunity for attempting to verify the authenticity of the images he had seen of the alleged chemical attack in the Turkish parliament.In Iraq
Iraqi President Barham Salih condemned the attack and demanded Turkey to end the operation and withdraw all of its forces from Iraqi territory deeming it a "threat to our national security". The Iraqi foreign minister said the operation was a violation of Iraq's sovereignty. Muqtada al-Sadr, the leader of the largest faction in parliament said that if Turkey has security concerns, it should discuss them with the Iraqi Government and considered its military strong enough to take care of the issue.Senior PKK commander Duran Kalkan called on Turkey to immediately halt its operation, threatening that otherwise it would "move the war to Turkish cities". On the 19 May, the Iraqi Ambassador to the United Nations Security Council Hussein Bahr Aluloom filed a formal complaint before the council and called for the withdrawal of the Turkish military as the presence of the PKK should be taken a pretext to remain to Iraqi territory for the Turkish army. In an interview with Norwegian newspaper Verdens Gang, PKK spokesman Zagros Hiwa accused Turkey of attempting to fashion "a new kind of Ottoman Empire", and that Erdogan represented an "expansionist, Ottoman mentality".