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“The North Atlantic Council, which includes the ambassadors of all 29 NATO allies, will meet on Friday 28 February following a request by Turkey to hold consultations under Article 4 of NATO’s founding Washington Treaty on the situation in Syria,” the alliance said in a statement.
Under Article 4, any NATO member can request talks when they believe their “territorial integrity, political independence or security” is threatened. It is separate from the alliance’s Article 5 mutual self-defense pact, which refers to an attack on any members’ territory.
Dozens of more Turkish troops were injured in the airstrike in Syria’s northwestern Idlib province, where President Bashar al-Assad is seeking to wipe out the last rebel stronghold.
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NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg urged de-escalation and condemned the “indiscriminate” airstrikes in a phone call with Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu.
Ankara has called talks under Article 4 a number of times in recent years twice in 2012 including after one of its jets was shot down by Syrian forces, and once in 2015 after a spate of terrorist attacks in Turkey.
After the 2012 incidents, NATO agreed to deploy Patriot missile batteries in Turkey as a defensive measure.