Several rockets target Zilkan military base
ERBIL, Kurdistan Region - Several rockets targeted Zilkan military base hosting Turkish troops in northern Iraq on Wednesday morning without resulting in any casualties, the Kurdistan Region’s counter-terrorism forces reported.
The Erbil-based Directorate General of Counter Terrorism (CTD) said that at least eight rockets targeted the military base in the northern Iraqi province of Nineveh, with two of the rockets landing inside the base, while the others landed in its vicinity.
The Islamic Resistance Ahrar al-Iraq Brigade, an Iran-backed armed faction, claimed responsibility for the attack through its telegram channels, saying they had fired 20 rockets at the military base, threatening to expand their operations into Turkish land.
“We declare that our operations are continuing and in continuous development, and will not stop except with the immediate and complete withdrawal of the occupier [Turkish forces]. And if the occupier insists on staying, our operations will expand and target military positions inside Turkish land, and God is witness to what we say,” read a statement from the faction.
Zilkan military base has been frequently targeted in recent years, and the attacks are largely attributed to Iran-backed Iraqi militias.
The Islamic Resistance Ahrar al-Iraq Brigade has previously claimed responsibility for several other attacks on military bases hosting Turkish troops in Iraq, including an attack on Zilkan in December.
The presence of Turkish forces in the base has been widely condemned by the Iraqi government, with criticism reaching a peak when a deadly shelling in July blamed on Turkey killed nine Iraqi tourists and injured tens of others.
The Erbil-based Directorate General of Counter Terrorism (CTD) said that at least eight rockets targeted the military base in the northern Iraqi province of Nineveh, with two of the rockets landing inside the base, while the others landed in its vicinity.
The Islamic Resistance Ahrar al-Iraq Brigade, an Iran-backed armed faction, claimed responsibility for the attack through its telegram channels, saying they had fired 20 rockets at the military base, threatening to expand their operations into Turkish land.
“We declare that our operations are continuing and in continuous development, and will not stop except with the immediate and complete withdrawal of the occupier [Turkish forces]. And if the occupier insists on staying, our operations will expand and target military positions inside Turkish land, and God is witness to what we say,” read a statement from the faction.
Zilkan military base has been frequently targeted in recent years, and the attacks are largely attributed to Iran-backed Iraqi militias.
The Islamic Resistance Ahrar al-Iraq Brigade has previously claimed responsibility for several other attacks on military bases hosting Turkish troops in Iraq, including an attack on Zilkan in December.
The presence of Turkish forces in the base has been widely condemned by the Iraqi government, with criticism reaching a peak when a deadly shelling in July blamed on Turkey killed nine Iraqi tourists and injured tens of others.