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Awaiting Key Vote, Turks Mull Risks Of Lebanon Troop Move

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  • Awaiting Key Vote, Turks Mull Risks Of Lebanon Troop Move

    AWAITING KEY VOTE, TURKS MULL RISKS OF LEBANON TROOP MOVE
    by Hande Culpan

    Agence France Presse -- English
    September 4, 2006 Monday 12:44 PM GMT

    Analysts on Monday cast doubt on the wisdom of Turkey's decision to
    join the enlarged UN force in Lebanon, saying it could carry grave
    risks, as parliament readied to vote on the planned deployment.

    Lawmakers were due to gather Tuesday to vote on authorising the
    government to implement a one-year deployment of troops as part of
    the UN Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL).

    The ruling Justice and Development Party's (AKP) is highly likely to
    secure the vote since it holds an absolute majority in the 550-seat
    parliament.

    The government argues the move will strengthen its influence in the
    Middle East, a region which was ruled by its predecessor, the Ottoman
    Empire, for centuries and where Ankara has for years strived to become
    a regional player.

    In a bid to quell concerns, Turkish leaders have underlined that the
    mission has minimal risk, that Turkish soldiers will not be a combat
    force and they will not be tasked with disarming the Shiite Muslim
    Hezbollah militia.

    But the government's rationale has failed to convince sceptics who
    see Lebanon as a predicament in which Turkish troops risk being in
    the line of fire.

    "To send soldiers into a quagmire like Lebanon... and to say that
    they will not get into fighting at all is like saying 'I am going to
    swim in the sea but not get wet'," commentator Mustafa Balbay wrote
    in the left-leaning Cumhuriyet daily.

    Political scientists Dogu Ergil raised the possibility of Turkish
    troops facing hostilities in Lebanon due to locals' resentment of
    their former Ottoman rulers.

    "There is a bitter legacy of Turkish rule in the region that the
    Turkish official historiography has covered up. The appearance of
    Turkish flags and uniforms will rekindle this anxiety to the risk of
    the security of the Turkish contingent in Lebanon," he said in the
    English-language Turkish Daily News.

    Lebanon's Armenians -- the largest such community in the Arab world --
    have already spoken out against Turkish peacekeepers on account of
    the massacres of Armenians under Ottoman rule in 1915-1917 and the
    concurrent Ottoman occupation of Lebanon.

    Armenians claim up to 1.5 million of their kin were slaughtered by
    Ottoman Turks in a genocide campaign.

    Turkey rejects the genocide label and argues that 300,000 Armenians
    died when Armenians sided with invading Russian troops for independence
    in eastern Anatolia and were deported to the Middle East.

    Some commentators, meanwhile, saw the risk of Turkey being drawn into
    a wider regional conflict if Turkish troops engage in fighting with
    fellow Muslims and Hezbollah militia whose main backer is Iran.

    "The gist of the story is this: They (Turkish soldiers) will probably
    die and kill in Lebanon. They will rehearse for a possible conflict
    with Iran. They will be accepted as a party to the wider sectarian
    and ethnic civil wars in the region," commentator Umur Talu said in
    the mass-circulation Sabah newspaper

    Then there is also widespread public opposition to the deployment.

    Polls carried out by several Turkish newspapers on their Internet sites
    showed staunch opposition to the deployment of Turkish soldiers. Of the
    51,000 participants who voted on the website of the mass-circulation
    Hurriyet daily, 77.2 percent opposed Turkey's UNIFIL participation.

    "What are we going to do in Lebanon? We should first take care of
    the terrorist threat we face," a reader said in a message left on
    the website of the Milliyet daily, referring to mounting Kurdish
    insurgency in Turkey's southeast.

    At emotional funeral services at the weekend for eight Turkish soldiers
    killed in fighting with separatist Kurdish rebels, mourning relatives
    spoke out against the government's plans.

    "The government should send soldiers not to Lebanon but to northern
    Iraq", which the rebels use as a springboard for attacks against
    Turkey, the father of one of the slain soldiers said, according to
    Sabah newspaper.
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