Turkey's Erdogan to Iraqi PM: 'Know your place'

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Tuesday snubbed Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi's criticism of the presence of Turkish troops in Iraq ahead of a planned operation to retake Mosul city, urging him to "know your place".

"He is insulting me personally. You are not my interlocutor, you are not at my level," Erdogan told a meeting in Istanbul, in comments addressed to Abadi.

"It's not important at all how you shout from Iraq. You should know that we will do what we want to do," he added.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan delivers a speech at the opening ceremony of 9th Eurasian Islamic Council in Istanbul on October 11, 2016 ©Kayhan Ozer (TURKISH PRESIDENTIAL PRESS OFFICE/AFP)

"Who's that? The Iraqi prime minister. First you know your place!"

Turkey has said its troops would remain in Iraq despite Baghdad's growing anger ahead of a planned operation to recapture Mosul from the Islamic State (IS) group.

Ankara maintains an estimated 2,000 troops in Iraq -- around 500 of them in the Bashiqa camp in northern Iraq training local fighters who will join the battle to recapture Mosul, according to Turkish media reports.

The Iraqi premier's spokesman later Tuesday said Erdogan was "pouring oil on the fire" with his remarks and showed Ankara was not serious about resolving the dispute.

Turkey's responses had made an issue of law and security into a "problem of a personal nature", Saad al-Hadithi told AFP.

Baghdad has repeatedly called on Ankara to pull out its troops, with Abadi warning the Turkish deployment risked a regional war.

The dispute between Ankara and Baghdad flared up after the Turkish parliament extended a government mandate by one year, allowing its troops to remain on both Iraqi and Syrian soil.

The Iraqi parliament has labelled the Turkish troops an "occupying force".

Erdogan on Tuesday rejected the Iraqi premier's demand for a withdrawal.

"The army of the Turkish republic has not lost its quality to a degree to receive instructions from you," he said.

The Turkish-Iraqi tensions risk complicating plans for an operation to save Mosul, which was captured by IS jihadists in 2014.

The Turkish president has expressed his country's willingness to join the battle under a similar understanding it had reached for the recapture of Jarabulus in Syria.