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TERROR WARS
Turkey urges action against 'IS threat' at NATO talks
by Staff Writers
Antalya, Turkey (AFP) May 12, 2015


Soldier's friendly fire Iraq death a 'tragic' mistake: Canada
Ottawa (AFP) May 12, 2015 - Kurdish allies' friendly fire killing of a Canadian special forces soldier in Iraq in March was a "tragic case of mistaken identity," a Canadian military investigation concluded Tuesday.

Sergeant Andrew Doiron was killed and three members of his unit were injured on March 6 when Kurdish troops mistakenly opened fire on them at a checkpoint near the frontlines of the fight against the Islamic State group.

Brigadier General Michael Rouleau, head of Canada's special forces, told a press conference this was "a tragic case of mistaken identity... compounded by fatigue and other factors."

Rouleau, citing a heavily-redacted report on the incident, said Doiron had advised the Kurds in advance that his team would be coming to the checkpoint on the night in question.

But unbeknownst to the Canadian sergeant, a new group of Kurdish troops who had not received his message had taken up the position.

The Kurds were also "legitimately" on edge after an IS group deadly attack on the outpost the previous day, and were likely spooked by a pack of wild dogs that began barking when the Canadians appeared out of the darkness, Rouleau said.

Attempts to identify themselves in English to the Kurds were met with sniper fire, he said. A machine gunner also shot at the Canadians who ran for cover while pleading with the Kurds to cease firing.

The Kurdish sniper "was looking at Canadians but saw what he thought was an ISIS infiltration of his position," Rouleau said.

Doiron later died at a field hospital. Two others in his team were evacuated to Canada for medical care and are "doing well," Rouleau said. A third soldier has recovered from minor injuries and remains on duty in Iraq.

No charges or sanctions are expected against the Kurdish sniper, said Lieutenant-Colonel Francis Bolduc, commander of the Canadian Forces National Investigation Service.

Canada has around 600 personnel, including about 70 special forces operators, in Iraq as part of a US-led coalition aiding local forces in the battle against Islamic State jihadists.

Turkey on Tuesday called for determined action from NATO member states against the "significant" threat posed by Islamic State jihadists who have taken swathes of Iraq and Syria up to its borders.

Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said in Antalya that the threat from IS to the south of the NATO alliance's borders would be a key issue when its top diplomats hold a two-day meeting from Wednesday in the southern resort city.

He praised a plan -- still yet to be realised -- for moderate Syrian opposition to be trained and equipped on Turkish territory in cooperation with the United States but said more was needed.

"This will be effective but this will not be enough on its own and we have to take further steps," he told a news conference ahead of the meeting, adding that measures like air strikes were also not sufficient alone.

"In order to eradicate terrorism we need to deal with the grassroots of terrorism," he added, without elaborating further on the nature of the steps required.

Turkey has in the past called for the creation of a security zone inside Syria to protect its borders. But the idea has received just lukewarm support from its Western allies.

Turkey, the sole Muslim majority member of NATO, has been criticised for itself not taking harder steps against IS with some commentators even questioning its future in the alliance.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has always insisted the exit of President Bashar al-Assad is the key to peace in Syria.

But Cavusoglu insisted that Ankara was deeply troubled by IS, noting that the militants controlled border posts on Syria on the Turkish frontier.

"Turkey is the only member of the alliance to have borders with Daish," he said, using an Arabic origin and pejorative term for the group.

"Daish on our borders is not a sustainable situation. It poses a significant threat to us.

"It (the group) is a neighbour to Turkey," he added.

Cavusoglu pointed to foreign fighters from "90 different countries" who have tried to come to Turkey in transit on their way to join IS in Syria.

"Once they enter our country, it becomes very difficult to control our borders. We have to rid the region of terrorism. For this we need determined policies."

He batted off criticism that Turkey was not doing enough to halt the flow of foreign militants, saying that 1,300 had already been deported from the country during the Syria conflict.


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