Iraq’s Kurdistan region yesterday said it has offered a joint Kurdish-Iraqi deployment at a strategic crossing with Turkey, with participation of representatives from the US-led coalition helping fight the Islamic State group.
The offer was revealed hours after Iraqi armed forces accused the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) of delaying handing over control of Iraq’s borders with Turkey, Iran and Syria, and threatened to resume operations to capture Kurdish-held areas.
The Ministry of Peshmerga Affairs said the offer was part of a five-point “deconfliction” proposal made to the Iraqi government on Tuesday.
The other points included a ceasefire on all fronts, continued cooperation in the fight against the Islamic State group, and a joint deployment in so-called disputed territories, which are areas claimed by both the KRG and the Iraqi central government.
The KRG “continues to welcome a permanent ceasefire on all fronts, deconfliction and the start of a political dialogue” with Baghdad, the Kurdish statement said.
Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi ordered economic and military retaliation after Iraqi Kurds voted for independence in a referendum held in September that Baghdad declared illegal.
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The joint deployment at the strategic Fish-Khabur crossing was meant “as a goodwill gesture and trust-building exercise that ensures a limited and temporary arrangement until an agreement is reached in accordance with the Iraqi constitution,” the Kurdish statement said.
Fish-Khabur is strategically important for the Kurdistan region because it is the point where its oil pipeline crosses into Turkey.
Iraq’s entire land border with Turkey is located inside the Kurdish autonomous region and has been controlled by the Kurds since before the fall of former Iraqi president Saddam Hussein in 2003.
Al-Abadi declared a pause on Friday last week in an offensive that began on Oct. 16 to take over the disputed areas. The oil-rich city of Kirkuk fell on the same day without much fighting.
The Iraqi Joint Operations Command on Wednesday accused the KRG of using the talks that started on Friday to “buy time” to strengthen Kurdish lines.
“We will not allow it; the federal forces are mandated to secure [the disputed] areas and borders,” it said in a statement.
The Kurdish Peshmerga command on Wednesday also accused Iraqi forces of massing weapons and threatening force to resolve “domestic political differences.”
Iraqi troops set up positions between Turkish and Iraqi Kurdish checkpoints on Tuesday at the Habur Border crossing, between the Turkish town of Silopi and the Iraqi town of Zakho.
That meant vehicles crossing the border were subject to three separate checks.
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