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ANKARA: Cheney Reassures Ankara On US Stance Against PKK

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  • ANKARA: Cheney Reassures Ankara On US Stance Against PKK

    CHENEY REASSURES ANKARA ON US STANCE AGAINST PKK

    Today's Zaman
    March 26 2008
    Turkey

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdohan yesterday expressed satisfaction
    over seeing a constant US determination to assist in the fight against
    the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) in northern Iraq during
    his meeting with US Vice President Dick Cheney on Monday in Ankara,
    the last-stop of Cheney's 10-day regional tour of the Middle East.

    Erdohan's remarks came in Sarajevo, where he paid an official
    visit as part of a Balkans tour that will last until Friday. He was
    speaking at a joint press conference following a meeting with his
    Bosnian counterpart, Nikola Spiric, when he was asked whether he was
    satisfied with the messages he got from Cheney concerning Turkey's
    fight against terrorist threats posed by the PKK, which has been
    using northern Iraq as a launch pad for attacks on Turkey.

    "I saw exactly the same determination concerning northern Iraq and
    the separatist terrorist organization which I had observed during my
    meeting in the US with President Bush on Nov. 5, 2007, with Mr.

    Cheney," Erdohan was quoted as saying in response by the Anatolia
    news agency.

    "The separatist terrorist organization PKK is a common enemy of Iraq,
    America and Turkey. This has been confirmed [during Cheney's visit],"
    Erdohan added, noting that Turkey and the United States would continue
    common efforts against the PKK, with the latter continuing intelligence
    sharing with Turkey.

    At a landmark November meeting with Erdohan at the White House,
    Bush had declared the PKK "a common enemy" for Iraq, Turkey and the
    United States. The meeting and Bush's declaration had paved the way
    for US intelligence assistance to Turkey for strikes on PKK targets
    inside Iraq following a lengthy period of complaints on the Turkish
    side about US inaction on the PKK issue.

    US officials have long called for non-military measures to address
    the PKK problem. The Turkish government has said it was planning such
    measures to aid in the dissolution of the terrorist group, but that
    it categorically rejects any proposals for dialogue with the PKK.

    Cheney's visit came only weeks after a Turkish ground incursion into
    northern Iraq. The Turkish military began a ground offensive against
    the PKK in northern Iraq on Feb. 21 and announced that troops were
    being withdrawn on Feb. 29. The offensive, the biggest anti-PKK
    operation in a decade, apparently had US consent, but Washington
    underlined repeatedly that it must be limited in length and scope
    to avoid damaging Iraq's stability. Turkish officials said the
    US provided intelligence support for the operation. "If need be,
    operations will continue -- again in coordination. Regardless of
    what form they may take, instruments for combating terrorism will
    be used at the appropriate time and place. This is of course not
    solely military. This has political, diplomatic, socio-economical,
    psychological and cultural dimensions," Erdohan also said in Sarajevo.

    The prime minister, meanwhile, reiterated that Cheney had not requested
    that Turkey send more troops to Afghanistan.

    The United States is pressing NATO allies to provide more support
    for Afghanistan, and it will be a key issue next month at the NATO
    summit in Bucharest.

    Cheney was told during his talks in Ankara that Turkey was going to
    stay engaged in Afghanistan, but he received no immediate commitments
    about doing more, a senior US administration official told reporters on
    Monday, following the US vice president's talks with Erdohan, President
    Abdullah Gul and Chief of Turkish General Staff Gen. Yaþar Buyukanýt.

    Following the talks, speaking to reporters during a reception held
    on Monday evening, Buyukanýt also reiterated Turkey's opposition to
    sending more troops to Afghanistan when the army was fighting the
    PKK elsewhere.

    -------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------

    Cheney : Bush specifically added Turkey to my tour US Vice President
    Dick Cheney has stated that US President George W. Bush wanted him
    to particularly include Turkey in a regional Middle East tour that
    he completed with talks in Ankara on Monday. Cheney's remarks came
    in an interview when he was reminded of the fact that he was on the
    front page of newspapers this week, despite his consistent stance of
    keeping a certain distance from the media.

    "He [President Bush] wanted me to come make these various stops. We
    worked out the schedule together on whom I would see and where I would
    go. He specifically added Turkey to my schedule as a stop he wanted
    me to make. So I'm here to some extent at his behest," Cheney said
    during the interview, which was held at US Ambassador to Turkey Ross
    Wilson's residence in Ankara on Monday. A transcript of the interview
    was posted on the White House Web site.

    This was Cheney's first visit to the Turkish capital since one in
    March 2002 in the run-up to the US-led invasion of neighboring Iraq.

    In March 2003, the Turkish Parliament narrowly rejected a government
    motion asking for permission to militarily cooperate with the US in
    opening a northern front from Turkish territory in the war on Iraq.

    The event triggered a serious crisis with the US, which has only
    recently been overcome with concrete US help in Turkey's fight against
    the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) based in northern Iraq.

    In Ankara, diplomatic sources described Cheney's visit as "a new step
    added to the trend of improvement in Turkish-US relations." The same
    sources called a White House meeting on Nov. 5 of last year between
    Bush and Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdohan a "U-turn" in relations
    that were "almost headed into a crisis situation last year with US
    inaction against the PKK and a resolution pending in the US Congress
    for official recognition of the controversial World War I-era killings
    of Anatolian Armenians as genocide." Ankara Today's Zaman

    --Boundary_(ID_ihkmQ8an89Rm7IRfvIz1aA)--
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