WAR DRUMS IN ANKARA

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Mike Manson

Still Livin'
Apr 16, 2005
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#1
What Turkey Wants From Iraq -- and the US
By Jürgen Gottschlich in Istanbul

The Turkish parliament has granted Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan the right to order a military strike in neighboring Iraq. It's potentially a blank check for a new Iraq war -- but for now, the war drums are a way to underline Turkey's demands.

The words "War Drums in Ankara " were emblazoned across today's front page of Radikal, the center-left Turkish daily. A few hours later, the Turkish parliament reached a historic decision. For the first time since the invasion of Cyprus in 1974, the parliament has authorized a government to send troops into a neighboring country.

With an overwhelming majority of 507 votes (out of 550), the delegates to the Turkish Grand National Assembly handed the government a blank check, valid for one year, to order the army to conduct operations in northern Iraq.

Only 19 parliamentarians from the Kurdish DTP Party voted openly against the measure. Prime Minister Erdogan had insisted on an open vote. "The world should see how our parliament feels," was Erdogan's official reason, but the real intent was to shine a spotlight on the Kurdish faction.

The Erdogan government had expected for days that all the remaining parties would vote in favor of military action. "Our patience has come to an end," Erdogan said on the day before the vote, summarizing the general mood. "If Iraq wishes to prevent a Turkish military campaign, it must take clear action against the PKK," the separatist Kurdistan Workers Party. Iraqi Kurds, in particular, Erdogan said, must "build a wall between them and the PKK." The threat of military action triggered a wave of hectic diplomatic activity (more...) in both Washington and Baghdad.

A Strategic Mess for America

US President George W. Bush has switched to crisis management mode. Over the weekend, Under Secretary of Defense Eric Edelman, a former US ambassador to Ankara who knows Turkey well, and Assistant Secretary of State Dan Fried met with senior Turkish government officials. Bush himself emphasized in public on Wednesday that sending troops to Iraq would not be in Turkey's best interest. But the truth is that nothing could be worse for American interests than a new battle front in the only stabilized part of Iraq.

Trouble has been brewing for a while, though. In the past few weeks alone, 30 soldiers have died in attacks and direct military clashes with PKK militants. "We can no longer tolerate the fact that the United States and the Kurdish regional government in northern Iraq have done nothing against the PKK and still want to prevent us from attacking the PKK camps in northern Iraq ourselves. If this means that relations with the United States will suffer, then that is something we will have to accept. We are prepared to pay the price," said Erdogan.

Ankara's irritation with the US and the Iraqi government extends beyond their tolerance of the PKK. Turkey is also incensed over a decision by the US House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee, which, after years of debate, voted to recommend (more...) to the US Congress that it classify the 1915 massacres of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire as genocide, a term Turkey strictly rejects when it comes to defining the pogroms of the time.

If the US Congress accepts the resolution, Turkish General Chief of Staff Yasar Büyükanit said in an interview over the weekend, "military relations between Turkey and the United States will never be the same." Washington is apparently taking Ankara's threat seriously. An ultra-nationalist party, the MHP, is already calling on the government to close both the US air base at Incirlik in southern Turkey and its borders to Iraq.

Both actions would deal a severe blow to US troops in Iraq. The Pentagon processes close to 70 percent of its entire re-supply effort through Incirlik, and at least a quarter of the gasoline the US Army consumes is brought into Iraq on tanker trucks from Turkey. According to the Wall Street Journal, the Pentagon is already looking into alternate routes through Jordan and Kuwait, despite the fact that both would be inconvenient and dangerous.

For Bush, a great deal hinges on whether he manages to convince his Kurdish allies in northern Iraq to curtail the Kurdish-Turkish PKK's attacks in Turkey, at least temporarily. Turkish government spokesman Cemil Cicek said yesterday: "Our hope is that we will not have to use this motion, but it is clear that an invasion will follow the next spectacular attack by the PKK."

What Turkey Might Do

The Turkish army denies having prepared an invasion plan, but three military options have been discussed in the media. The most comprehensive is an advance by about 20,000 troops to a line about 40 kilometers (25 miles) across the border, the goal being to create a buffer zone in northern Iraq designed to prevent PKK militants from making any further raids inside Turkey. A second option would involve a temporary invasion to attack PKK camps in northern Iraq and destroy the guerillas' logistics, then withdraw to Turkish territory. A third option would be to amass more troops along the Turkish side of the border and launch air strikes into northern Iraq.

For now, the war drums are mainly intended to put the necessary weight behind Turkey's political demands. Erdogan is aware of the costs of invading northern Iraq. Ambassadors from the European Union nations were summoned to the foreign ministry in Ankara this morning to listen to Turkey's position.

But the key political meeting will take place on Nov. 5. Erdogan still plans to sit down on that day with President Bush, although a handful of hardliners in his own party have pushed him to cancel the meeting. Officials in Ankara no longer believe that Bush has the power to dampen congressional enthusiasm for the Armenian genocide resolution, but Erdogan wants to hold Washington to its promise that the US Army and Iraqi Kurds will move against the PKK in northern Iraq. If he returns from Washington empty-handed, though, the prime minister will hardly be able to hold back the Turkish military.

http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,512175,00.html
 

Mike Manson

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Apr 16, 2005
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#5
INVADING IRAQ, AGAIN?

Turkish Parliament Approves Cross-Border Attacks

Turkish lawmakers in Ankara gave legal cover to a military mission inside northern Iraq on Wednesday. Iraqi leaders are still lobbying against any such action, and US President Bush has warned against an incursion, but oil prices hit an all-time high on fears of a difficult winter.

Turkey's parliament approved a measure on Wednesday that clears the way for its military to cross Iraq's northern border and clash with Kurdish insurgents there.

The vote wasn't even close -- 507-19 in favor of empowering the Ankara government for one year to order a military incursion.

Now only diplomacy between Ankara and Baghdad can prevent an offensive that Turkey's NATO allies fear might lead to a wider conflict in the Middle East. One of Iraq's Vice Presidents, Tariq al-Hashimi, was in Ankara for last-minute discussions with Turkish Prime Minister Recip Tayyip Erdogan before the vote on Wednesday. "I think I got what I wanted (from my talks)," he told reporters. "Now there is a new atmosphere and we should use it ... Iraq should be given a chance to prevent the cross-border terrorist activities."

But Erdogan has been under domestic pressure to respond to a series of deadly assaults on Turkish border troops by members of the Kurdistan Workers Party, the PKK, which Ankara considers a terrorist group. Around 3,000 PKK members are believed to be hiding along the border in the Kurdish north of Iraq.

Before the vote on Wednesday, there were mollifying words from Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, who is an ethnic Kurd. He tried to show that Iraqi interests were no different from Turkey's. "We consider the activities of PKK against the interests of the Kurdish people first, and then against the interests of Turkey, against the new trend of democracy in Turkey," he said after a meeting in Paris with French President Nicolas Sarkozy.

Iraq's Prime Minister, Nuri al-Maliki, denied a report on Wednesday by CNN-Turk TV that he had offered Erdogan military help in crushing the insurgents.

Meanwhile on Wednesday, the price of oil hit an all-time high -- $89 per barrel -- and US President George W. Bush warned Turkish leaders that an invasion of northern Iraq would be against their "interests." But his position was weakened by a now-stalled bill (more...) in the US House of Representatives that labels the World War I-era slaughter of 1.5 million Armenians by Turkey as "genocide."

Turkey has been known to send soldiers into northern Iraq before -- 1997 was a particularly bloody year -- but it has shown restraint since the US invasion in 2003. Over the past two weeks, though, 30 Turkish soldiers along the Iraqi border have been killed by Kurdish rebels.
 

Mike Manson

Still Livin'
Apr 16, 2005
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44
#8
HUNTING THE REBELS OF PKK

Turkey Again Bombards Iraq

Once again, Turkish warplanes this weekend flew sorties into Iraq in an effort to eradicate the Kurdish rebel group PKK. Nobody casualties were reported, but the tension on the border continues to rise.

Tensions on the Turkish border with Iraq are once again on the rise. Turkish planes bombed targets in northern Iraq on Sunday, according to an Iraqi Kurdish official, as part of an ongoing effort to eradicate Kurdish rebels ensconced in the mountains there. The raid came one day after jets attacked suspected rebel positions inside Iraq on Saturday in an offensive confirmed by the Turkish military. The Sunday attack was at least the third such cross-border assault in a week.

"We are using our rights based on international law," said Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Sunday without directly confirming the Sunday attacks. "We only have determination and that determination will continue as planned."

There were no casualties reported in either raid over the weekend. The Sunday bombing campaign lasted for three hours starting in mid afternoon local time. Jabbar Yawar, a spokesman for Iraqi Kurdish security forces, said that only farmland had been damaged, with the bombs falling mostly in a difficult-to-reach mountainous area not far from the border. Hundreds of Kurdish fighters, members of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) -- which Turkey, the US and the European Union consider to be a terrorist group -- are suspected to be holed up in the Qandil Mountains just inside Iraq.

So far, Turkey has relied on air and mortar attacks along with limited cross-border ground attacks in its ongoing effort to crush the Kurdish rebels. The PKK has been fighting for autonomy for Turkey's Kurdish-dominated southeast since 1984 and has recently stepped up its attacks against the Turkish military inside Turkey. Because PKK fighters generally slink back across the border into their mountain redoubts in Iraq, Turkey has amassed 100,000 soldiers on its southern frontier with Iraq and threatened to invade.

The situation threatens to destabilize the one part of Iraq that has been reliably peaceful. On Sunday, US Ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker repeated his government's line that Turkey has a right to defend itself against the PKK rebels. But he once again voiced Washington's concern that the situation could ultimately destabilize the entire region.

In addition to respecting Turkey's right to act, he said "we've also said that we all have a pretty substantial interest in the stability of Iraq and none of us want to see operations pursued in a manner that can threaten basic stability inside Iraq."

US President George W. Bush promised in November to share intelligence information with Turkey to help it combat the PKK raids. Turkey has also spent much of the autumn underlining its right to go after the Kurdish fighters, and on Dec. 16th staged its first air assault, a one-day bombing campaign involving 50 warplanes. Several hundred troops chased PKK rebels across the border a few days later.

Iraq continues trying to walk the fine line between the two sides. The Kurdish region in northern Iraq is semiautonomous, and the Kurdish government has shown reluctance to deal firmly with the rebels. Still, Nechirvan Barzani, prime minister of the Kurdish region in northern Iraq, has pledged to do whatever possible to keep the PKK from attacking Turkey.

"We must not let our soil be used for making threats against our neighbors," he told SPIEGEL ONLINE earlier this month. "We will do whatever is necessary (to stop them). I can't say now exactly what, but we will do whatever we can to prevent them from using our soil against (our neighboring countries)."

http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,525211,00.html