Tayyip Erdogan
© Umit Bektas / Reuters
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has announced the launch of a new military operation against Kurdish militants in Iraqi Sinjar. He also vowed to take over the Kurdish-controlled town of Tal Rifaat in northern Aleppo, Syria.

"We've eliminated 3,747 terrorists [in Syria's Afrin]," Erdogan said on Sunday, adding that Ankara has now begun an operation against the Kurdish militants in Iraq's Sinjar.

"Remember, I told you we'd get them. They will flee, we will chase; the work will not end with Afrin. The PKK went to Sinjar - 'We'll go there as well,' I said. Operations there began," the president declared.

Ankara's operation 'Olive Branch,' targeting Kurdish militias in Syria's Afrin region, has nearly realized its goals, according to Erdogan. "We will take control of the Tal Rifaat town shortly and thus achieve the goals of the operation," he said. Tal Rifaat is the last stronghold in the Afrin region held by the Kurdish militias.

Erdogan has insisted that Turkey's military activities in neighboring countries targeted "terrorists" exclusively and did not constitute an invasion.

"There's a fight both external and internal. Our problem lies with terrorists, we're not an invading power," Erdogan said. "There are examples of that in the West; our African friends know this very well. There's justice in our history. We are on the side of the oppressed. There's no coexisting with oppressors. We stand with the oppressed."

Turkey launched Olive Branch against the Kurdish militia-held Syrian enclave of Afrin late in January, citing concerns over presence of Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) militants in the region. Ankara, as well as Washington and some other countries, designates the PKK as a terrorist group. Turkish military personnel and affiliated Free Syrian Army (FSA) militants have captured almost the entire enclave, including the main city of Afrin.