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  • Turks Press U.S. For Action On Rebels

    TURKS PRESS U.S. FOR ACTION ON REBELS

    SunJournal
    Nov 03, 2007
    ANKARA

    Turkey (AP) - Faced with the prospect of another front opening in
    the already difficult Iraq war, the United States struggled Friday to
    persuade Turkey not to send its army across the Iraqi border to attack
    guerrillas who use the remote terrain to launch strikes inside Turkey.

    Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice urged calm and cooperation in a
    string of meetings with top Turkish leaders fed up with rebel attacks
    and insistent that Turkey will do what it must to stop them.

    She made a similar argument later Friday in a separate meeting with
    Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, whose government has said
    it will not stand for any cross-border assault. Foreign Minister
    Ali Babacan sounded impatient, and he offered no public promise of
    the restraint Washington seeks. "We have great expectations from
    the United States," Babacan said at a news conference following
    his meeting with Rice. "We are at the point where words have been
    exhausted and where there is need for action." Ankara has said Turkey
    wants to hear specifics about what the United States is prepared to
    do to counter the rebel Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK, or Turkey
    will launch an attack. Rebel attacks against Turkish positions over
    the last month have left 47 dead, including 35 soldiers, according to
    government and media reports. Many Turks are furious with the United
    States for its perceived failure to pressure Iraq into cracking down
    on the PKK, which operates from bases in the semiautonomous Kurdish
    region of northern Iraq. Street protesters have urged the government
    to send forces across the border even if it means deepening the rift
    with the U.S., their NATO ally. Turkey's military chief has said the
    country will wait until after Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan meets
    with President Bush next week in Washington to make a final decision
    about an assault. Washington worries a Turkish incursion would bring
    instability to what has been the calmest part of Iraq, and could set
    a precedent for other countries, like Iran, that also have conflicts
    with Kurdish rebels. Babacan returned from a trip to Iran last week,
    lobbying for support for the Turkish side and underscoring that Turkey
    will act as it sees fit, regardless of U.S. pressure.

    "We all need to redouble our efforts and the United States is
    committed to redoubling our efforts," Rice said. "No one should doubt
    the commitment of the United States in this situation." She said the
    United States is working to broaden its sharing of intelligence and
    has begun discussing longer-term solutions that would involve Turkey,
    Iraq and the United States. In a sign of potential cooperation, the
    Kurdish region's Minister of Culture Falkadin Kakei told The Associated
    Press in Baghdad that Turkey's ruling Justice and Development Party
    has agreed to meet a delegation of Iraqi Kurds to discuss the crisis.

    "This is a positive development, before Erdogan refused to meet with
    (Iraqi Kurd leader Massoud) Barzani or deal with the Kurdish government
    as an official entity, now this is happening on the level of political
    parties," he said without giving a date for the meeting.

    Kakei, who is reportedly on Turkey's wanted list for his ties to
    the PKK, said he expected these talks to lead eventually to a direct
    dialogue between Ankara and Irbil, something the Turkish government has
    refused to do so far, accusing Iraq's Kurds of "aiding and abetting"
    the separatist guerrillas. The United States charges that weapons
    and foreign fighters flow over Iraq's borders from Iran and Syria
    to confront U.S. forces, but until now the border area with Turkey
    has been relatively quiet. "It is our hope and our desire that as a
    country that has been the target of a big terror attack the U.S. will
    understand the situation we are in, understand the frustration we
    feel, the outrage," Babacan said, according to a simultaneous English
    translation of his words. The conflict between Turkey and the Kurdish
    rebels predates the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq and has little to do
    with the sectarian divisions that have all but paralyzed Iraq's fragile
    U.S.-backed government and prolonged the war. The United States paid
    little attention to the issue, despite Turkish complaints, until the
    burst of rebel attacks this fall threatened to bring open warfare to
    Iraq's largely self-governing north - the only part of the country
    that has been relatively safe, stable and economically sound.

    Bush had named a former NATO supreme commander - retired Air Force
    Gen. Joseph Ralston - as a U.S. envoy to try to defuse tensions,
    but the general resigned in apparent frustration last month.

    Rice's visit to Ankara is a sign of the priority Washington now
    places on cooling a conflict that places the U.S. between important
    NATO ally Turkey, the weak U.S.-backed government in Baghdad and
    the self-governing Kurds in Iraq's oil-rich north. Rice rearranged a
    previously scheduled trip to Turkey to add meetings in the capital,
    where she also tried to soothe lingering Turkish irritation over
    a vote in Congress last month that labeled as genocide the 1915
    killings of Armenians by Ottoman Turks.
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