Erdogan: Türkiye working to ensure border security, regional stability

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said that Türkiye's new anti-terror operation across the border into Iraq is part of the country's strategy to strengthen peace and security in the region.

Erdogan also commented on recent tensions in Palestine and Türkiye's developing relationship with Israel.
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Erdogan also commented on recent tensions in Palestine and Türkiye's developing relationship with Israel.

Türkiye has no designs on another country's land, but instead only wants to ensure the security of its borders and stability of its neighbours, the Turkish president has said.

Speaking at the parliamentary group meeting of the Justice and Development (AK) Party on Wednesday, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said that Türkiye’s new anti-terror operation across the border into northern Iraq, Operation Claw-Lock, aims to “rid Iraqi lands of terrorists and guarantee the security of our borders.”

“The Turkish Armed Forces launched this operation to clear the areas occupied in northern Iraq from terrorists,” said Erdogan, adding that the area has been used by PKK terrorists to prepare and organise terror attacks on Turkish soil.

“We are making every effort to contribute to the strengthening of their territorial integrity and political unity so that our neighbours can live in security and peace,” said Erdogan.

“We will continue to do so. We act with the same aim in Syria as in Iraq,” he added.

The National Defense Ministry said it launched Operation Claw-Lock on Monday after reports that the terrorist PKK was planning to launch a large-scale attack, adding that the operation is in line with the UN Charter's principle of self-defence.

READ MORE: Türkiye's security forces ‘neutralise’ 26 PKK terrorists in northern Iraq

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Palestine and Israel

On recent tensions in Palestine, Erdogan said: “Effective defence of the Palestinian cause lies in a reasonable, logical, consistent, and balanced relationship with Israel.”

Türkiye still does not intend to turn a blind eye to the occupation or attacks on holy places in Jerusalem and other Palestinian territories, Erdogan said, adding: “We will continue to fulfil the requirements of our own history and belief.”

“For Türkiye, political and economic ties with Israel as necessitated by global and regional factors are separate from the Jerusalem cause,” said Erdogan.

In a Tuesday phone call, Erdogan told Israeli President Isaac Herzog: "We are deeply saddened by the fact that more than 400 Palestinians were injured and 18 people, including children, lost their lives in the events that took place in the [occupied] West Bank and Al Aqsa Mosque since the beginning of the month of Ramadan.”

Herzog visited Türkiye in March, in a move seen by analysts as a sign of possible warming in Turkish-Israeli ties.

Israel occupied East Jerusalem, where Al Aqsa Mosque is located, during the 1967 Arab-Israeli war. It annexed the entire city in 1980, in a move never recognised by the international community.

READ MORE: Türkiye launches 'Claw-Lock' operation against PKK in northern Iraq

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