A Turkish military base in Bashiqa near the Iraqi city of Mosul. Photo: Rudaw
The lawmakers also asked for the government of Iraq to file a complaint against Turkey at the United Nations and the UN Security Council. They want the government to formally describe Turkish troops as an “occupying” force.
In addition, the parliament demanded the Turkish ambassador be summoned to receive a letter critical of Turkey’s presence in Iraq.
In Iraq’s northern Nineveh Province, Turkey deployed military advisors to train Kurdish Peshmerga forces and the Sunni Hashd al-Watani militia to fight ISIS in that province last year. Baghdad has been demanding Turkish forces withdraw since last December when Turkey sent additional military forces to protect its base in Bashiqa, near Mosul, from ISIS attacks, without the explicit authorization of the Iraqi government.
On Saturday, the Turkish parliament voted to extend the army’s military mandates in both Iraq and Syria, where Turkish forces are trying to establish a 5,000 square kilometre safe zone along its border.



In the course of a recent operation to liberate a terrorist-held enclave in northern Latakia, Syrian Army troops discovered a ‘manual for terrorists’. Printed in Turkey, the book teaches jihadis “the proper conduct of war on foreign soil,” up to and including the use of nuclear weapons.
Syrian authorities are extremely sensitive about published materials which could be seen to inspire sectarian conflict. Before it was engulfed in war in 2011, Syria was known as a secular, multicultural and multiethnic nation with a large number of religious minorities. Since then, many of these minorities have been threatened with enslavement or extermination by homegrown and foreign-sponsored radical Islamist terrorists, including Daesh (ISIS), al-Nusra and a collection of affiliated groups.
BY GAREN YEGPARIAN
German media has reported on a network of over 6,000 informants spying for the Turkish government within Germany’s Turkish community. Asked for comment, German lawmaker Hans-Christian Strobele told Sputnik that the situation was outrageous, adding that criminal charges must be leveled against anyone spying on Germany or its Turkish community.
LONDON – Reuters
Gen. Mustafa Zeki Uğurlu, a high-ranking Turkish military officer on a U.S.-based assignment for NATO, was also seeking asylum in the United States after being recalled by the government. The state-run Anadolu Agency said the general left his post in Norfolk on July 22, one week after the coup attempt. However, a photo on the official
Growing domestic tensions in Turkey are causing more Turks to look to Germany for refuge, a newspaper report says. Most of them appear to come from Turkey’s conflict-ridden Kurdish regions.