A Turkish Air
Force F16 jet fighter prepares to take off from an air base during the
Anatolian Eagle military exercise in the central Anatolian city of Konya.
(Reuters / Umit Bektas )
Source: Russia Today
http://rt.com/news/iraqi-turkey-syria-nato-100/
NATO must not use protecting Turkey as a pretext to
intervene in Syria, the Iraqi PM said during a Russian press conference. The
statement followed an escalation of tensions between Turkey and Syria following
last week’s cross-border shelling.
“The
story goes that supposedly Syrian planes dropped bombs on Turkish territory,
but everything has been over-exaggerated, even if it did really happen,” Nouri
al-Maliki said.
He
argued that no one was threatening Turkey, and that there was no need for them
to call on NATO for support.
“Turkey
is being presumptuous, you could say, as if it were taking responsibility for
solving the Syrian conflict instead of the Syrian people and wants to impose
its own solution. For this reason the international community needs to stop
Turkey from intervening," he said.
Al-Maliki also firmly denied allegations that Iraq allows
Iran to deliver weapons to Syria through its territory.
“This is not true,” he said, “we have
been doing random checks of aircrafts and have not discovered any weapon
aboard.”
Earlier, the US urged Iraq to close its airspace to
Iranian planes.
Al-Maliki is on a three-day visit to Russia, where he
said that Iraq's position on Syria is similar to Russia's one as both countries
are calling for peaceful resolution of the conflict. Meanwhile, Russian
President Vladimir Putin postponed a visit to Ankara, Turkey, because of his
busy schedule this month, the Kremlin press office told RT.
Putin’s decision to postpone the visit came amid
increased antagonism between Turkey and Syria. Previously, Russian Foreign
Minister Sergey Lavrov appealed to Damascus and Ankara to negotiate to avert an
escalation in the conflict, referring to the shelling as a “tragic
casualty.”
“To Moscow’s great disappointment Ankara has taken a very
firm stance against President Assad in the Syrian conflict, Turkey has
practically become a base for the so-called ‘Friends of Syria.’ … Ankara’s
actions contradict Russia’s calls not to take sides in the conflict,” he said.
The Turkish government also bolstered its military
presence in the region, including the deployment of 25 F-16 jet fighters to the
Diyarbakir base, 100 kilometers from the Syrian border.
Russia's President Vladimir Putin (L) speaks with Iraqi
Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki during their meeting in the Novo-Ogaryovo
residence outside Moscow on October 10, 2012. (AFP Photo / Kirill Kudryavtsev)
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