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  • Turkey mulls defensive measures on Syrian border

    CNN.com
    November 8, 2012 Thursday 10:08 PM EST


    Turkey mulls defensive measures on Syrian border

    By Gul Tuysuz and Ivan Watson, CNN

    Istanbul


    Turkey is drawing up contingency plans with the NATO military alliance
    to fortify its border with Syria, and a Patriot missile deployment is
    one option on the table, Turkish officials say.

    Turkish President Abdullah Gul told reporters Thursday that due to the
    ongoing civil war in Syria and its possible repercussions for
    NATO-member Turkey, every measure was being considered to counter the
    risks.

    Discussions have been ongoing "within NATO... in terms of defensive
    measures" and many defensive scenarios are being looked at as a
    precaution, Gul said when asked whether Turkey was seeking to acquire
    Patriot missiles from NATO.

    Read more: Report: 33 Syrian army members defect to Turkey

    International and Turkish media reported Wednesday that the government
    planned to ask NATO to station Patriot missiles along the border with
    Syria, but the prime minister denied the report.

    "We have not made such a request. Let me be clear, we are not thinking
    about or in a position to buy Patriots at this time," Turkish Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan told reporters during a visit to Bali
    Wednesday. He seemed angry about the media reports, insisting that the
    foreign ministry official said to be the source for the information
    had no right to make such a statement.

    Read more: Turkey strikes targets in Syria in retaliation for shelling deaths

    Ankara has been careful to note that it does not plan to take
    offensive action and does not want a war with its southern neighbor,
    with which it shares a 822-kilometer (about 511-mile) border.

    "It is out of the question that Turkey has any intention of going to
    war with Syria. I hope that it is also out of the question for Syria
    to engage in this kind of inconceivable action toward Turkey," said
    Gul.

    "But when there are these types of last-minute developments, when
    these types of potential risks are present, undoubtedly all sorts of
    precautions are taken in these situations. One of these precautions is
    against ballistic missiles as well as mid-range and near-range
    missiles," he added.

    The U.S.-made Patriot missile system -- which became well-known during
    the first Gulf War, when it was used to protect American allies
    against Iraqi Scud missiles -- works well against short- and
    medium-range missiles.

    Read more: Turkey deploys troops, tanks to Syrian border

    Two decades later, reports about the possible deployment of Patriots
    have emerged as tensions steadily escalate between two other Middle
    Eastern neighbors.

    Schools were closed in the Turkish border town of Ceylanpinar Thursday
    as intense fighting raged in the area between loyalist Syrian forces
    and fighters from the rebel Free Syrian Army.

    "We can hear the sounds of fighting. The town is very quiet today, not
    a lot of stores opened up," said Mehmet Saitavci, a neighborhood mayor
    from Ceylanpinar.

    "People here have a lot of relatives on the other side and they are
    coming up to the border and the Turkish military takes them and brings
    them into Turkey. We were told we can have our relatives be our guests
    for a few days by the municipal mayor," said Saitavci, who also
    reported that two Turks were injured, but not seriously, due to stray
    gunfire.

    Last month, Syrian artillery shells hit the Turkish border town of
    Akcakale, killing five Turkish citizens. Soon after, the Turkish
    parliament approved a resolution that would allow the military to
    carry out cross-border incursions. Since that deadly incident, Turkish
    officials have confirmed more than a dozen cross-border artillery
    strikes believed to have been carried out by the Syrian military. In
    each case, Turkish forces retaliated swiftly against Syria using
    artillery.

    Last June, Syrian anti-aircraft defenses shot down a Turkish military
    reconnaissance jet, killing two pilots, after it briefly crossed into
    Syrian airspace in the eastern Mediterranean Sea.

    Today, Turkey is adamant that its airspace not be used to supply the
    military of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. An Armenian plane headed
    for Syria landed in the Turkish city of Erzurum for a "technical
    inspection" Thursday.

    Read more: Al-Assad: I wish the Turkish jet shootdown didn't happen

    "We are allowing the humanitarian aid to go in Syria. So it was agreed
    beforehand. They knew and agreed to land," a Turkish foreign ministry
    official wrote to CNN, on condition of anonymity.

    A similar flight was also asked to land in Turkey for inspection of
    its cargo last month. In that case, Armenian officials confirmed that
    the Turkish search was part of a scheduled stop.

    But just a few days before the Armenian flight was stopped, a Syrian
    passenger plane from Russia was forced to land, with Turkish F-16s
    escorting it to a runway in the Turkish capital. Turkish authorities
    announced they suspected the aircraft of carrying military equipment
    to Damascus. Turkish authorities later confiscated military equipment
    from a Russian arms manufacturer that was addressed to the Syrian
    defense ministry.

    Once cozy relations between Syria and Turkey have all but collapsed
    since the Syrian uprising began more than 19 months ago. Turkey is
    officially hosting more than 111,000 refugees, but the Turkish
    government says tens of thousands of unofficial refugees also live in
    Turkish cities and towns near the Syrian border.

    Meanwhile, Damascus has repeatedly accused its former ally of meddling
    in internal Syrian affairs by funding and arming the Syrian
    opposition, as well as providing sanctuary and medical care to Syrian
    rebels.

    Turkish, American and British diplomats are attending a Syrian
    opposition conference in Qatar this week, part of a U.S.-backed
    initiative to reorganize and restructure the fractured opposition
    movement.

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