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  • U.S., Iraq And Turkey Have A "Common Interest" In Stopping Kurdish R

    U.S., IRAQ AND TURKEY HAVE A "COMMON INTEREST" IN STOPPING KURDISH REBELS

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    19.12.2007 13:16 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Tuesday
    that the United States, Iraq and Turkey have a "common interest"
    in stopping Kurdish rebels in northern Iraq, but cautioned against
    taking any action that could destabilize the region.

    Rice's comments came days after Turkey conducted airstrikes against
    rebels from the Kurdish Workers' Party, or PKK, in northern Iraq. As
    many as 50 fighter jets were involved in the attack, the biggest
    against the PKK in years. The planes attacked several villages,
    killing one woman, Iraqi officials said.

    The Turkish army also sent soldiers about 1.5 miles into northern
    Iraq in an overnight operation on Tuesday, Kurdish officials said. A
    Turkish official said the troops seeking Kurdish rebels were still
    in Iraq by midmorning.

    Rice made it clear the United States supports efforts to quash any
    rebel movement, but she said it was a "Turkish decision" to act. She
    suggested that Iraqi, Turkish and U.S. authorities should try to work
    together against the rebels. "This is a circumstance in which ... we
    need an overall comprehensive approach to this problem," Rice said. "No
    one should do anything that threatens to destabilize the north."

    "This was a Turkish decision," Rice said of the Sunday airstrike. "And
    we have made clear to the Turkish government that we continue to be
    concerned about anything that could lead to civilian casualties or
    anything that could destabilize the north," she said, the AP reports.

    A group of 300 Turkish troops crossed into Kurdish territory in
    northern Iraq overnight and moved 1-2 miles deeper into Iraq on
    Tuesday morning, a senior Iraqi military source told Reuters.

    The source said the Turkish troops were lightly armed and had moved
    into the Gali Rash area, a mountainous district near the border. There
    were no reports of clashes, the source said.
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