August 2011 Turkey-Iraq cross-border raids

On August 17, 2011, the Turkish Armed Forces launched multiple raids against Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) camps based in Iraq, striking 132 targets. Turkish military bombed PKK targets in northern Iraq in six days of air raids, according to General Staff.

Background
PKK fighters killed 40 Turkish security personnel between July and August in southeast Turkey. The Turkish Army launched raids in response to those series of PKK attacks.

Turkish reprisal operation
A day before the operation, PKK fighters ambushed a troop convoy and killed nine soldiers. The first six days of air raids, the Turkish Air Force attacked 132 PKK targets in northern Iraq, killing 90 to 100 militants. However, casualty figures could not be confirmed independently. According to Turkish army statements, 80 militants were wounded in the operations, which hit 73 shelters, eight stores and nine anti-aircraft positions.

Further attacks
In addition to the 132 PKK locations targeted by the Turkish Air Force, 349 targets in Qandil, Hakurk, Avasin-Basyan, Zap and Metina regions was bombed with artillery. Turkish military announced that Turkish jets had bombed PKK targets on Northern Iraq on February 2012 but did not provide details.

Aftermath
Six people were wounded early on 28 August at a beach in Antalya of Turkey, when explosives buried in the sand exploded. The Kurdistan Freedom Falcons (TAK) threatened attacks targeting civilians and tourists earlier. According to Today's Zaman, PKK was responsible for the bombing.

PKK claimed 4 militants were killed on 24 September 2011. PKK claimed 4 additional militants were killed on 28 September 2011, despite the initial claim that no militants were killed.

Iranian operation
Iran began a new military push against Kurdish rebels on the border with Iraq, days after Turkey said its air strikes had killed up to 160 militants inside Iraqi territory. Iran said it had killed dozens of members of Party of Free Life of Kurdistan (PJAK), an offshoot of the Turkey-based Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK).

Responses on casualties
PKK denied Turkish military's claims on number of dead militants, and said that the number of militants killed released by military was a "baseless fabrication". PKK spokesman Ahmed Deni said three fighters had been killed during initial strikes on Dohuk province in northern Iraq. Barham Ahmed Hama Rasheed, mayor of the town of Rania, and officials in Northern Iraq claimed a family of seven were killed by the Turkish army on Sunday. According to Rasheed, among those killed was a 3 month old infant. Kardo Mohammed, a member of the Iraqi Kurdish parliament, said the "shelling constituted a breach of international conventions and agreements between the two countries."

Kurdish Protests
2,000 people protested on Sunday in the town of Rania as victims were buried. Another protest took place on Hakkari, and a member of BDP who was protesting the air assault died.