Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Cross-border operation on the table for Gul's DC talks

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: Cross-border operation on the table for Gul's DC talks

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Feb 2 2007

    Cross-border operation on the table for Gül's Washington talks


    Foreign Minister Abdullah Gül is expected to outline Turkey's
    concerns over the continuing presence of the outlawed Kurdistan
    Workers' Party (PKK) in Iraq and the status of the oil-rich city of
    Kirkuk when he meets with senior US officials early next week on a
    visit to Washington.

    With Turkey getting increasingly vocal in its concerns, Gül and US
    officials are expected to assess prospects of a Turkish-US military
    intervention in northern Iraq on PKK bases. Gül held a closed-door
    meeting yesterday with Chief of General Staff Gen. Yaþar Büyükanýt,
    who is also due to visit the United States this month, to discuss
    their upcoming visits to Washington. Gül will depart for the United
    States this weekend. Sean McCormack, spokesman for the US State
    Department, said that the issue of an operation against PKK bases
    would be on the agenda during Gül's talks with US officials.
    `I'm sure they'll talk about Iraq. I'm sure they'll talk about this
    cross-border issue that's of concern to us as well as the Turkish
    Government,' McCormack told reporters at a daily press briefing. `And
    most likely Turkish-European relations,' he added.
    Turkey has warned that it could take the matters into its own hands
    if the United States and Iraqi authorities fail to take action
    against security threats emanating from Iraq. A few thousand
    militants of the PKK, considered a terrorist organization by Turkey
    and the United States, are based in mountain camps in northern Iraq.
    Ankara has repeatedly urged the United States and Iraq to crack down
    on the group, but no concrete action has been taken yet. In a sign
    that Turkey's patience is growing thin, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdoðan recently said Ankara had expected a lot when the United
    States appointed a special envoy for countering the PKK -- Ret. Gen.
    Joseph Ralston -- but this initiative has failed to yield any fruit.
    Yesterday, the Financial Times wrote that `one possible outcome
    intended to guard against a unilateral Turkish intervention would be
    a joint anti-PKK military operation with US and Iraqi forces,'
    quoting an analyst.
    Ralston visited Ankara earlier this week and said steps were being
    discussed in the fight against the PKK, although he declined to
    elaborate.
    Gül's visit also comes amid heightened Turkish worries over the fate
    of Kirkuk, an ethnically-mixed northern Iraqi city which sits atop
    vast oil reserves. Ankara has asserted that a referendum, slated for
    2007, on the fate of the city should be postponed, but the United
    States signaled it was not on the same page with Turkey. In recent
    remarks, US officials have said they wanted constitutional
    arrangements to go ahead as planned in Iraq, referring to the Kirkuk
    referendum in late 2007.
    Turkey says large numbers of Kurds flocked to Kirkuk in past years in
    what it sees as a systematic campaign to change the demographic
    composition of the city to favor Kurds. Thus, say Turkish officials,
    a referendum next year would do nothing but to confirm Kurdish
    control over Kirkuk. This, in turn, would be a boost for prospects
    for an independent Kurdish state next to Turkey's borders.


    `Genocide' worries
    Gül is also expected to discuss a resolution introduced on Thursday
    in the US House of Representatives. If passed, the resolution, which
    urges the US administration to recognize an alleged genocide of
    Armenians in Ottoman Anatolia in the beginning of the last century,
    has the potential to inflict serious damage on Turkish-US ties. Gül
    is expected to outline Turkish concerns and explain the damage the
    resolution could cause in relations.
    The foreign minister will have talks with US Vice President Dick
    Cheney on Monday, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and President
    George W. Bush's National Security Advisor Stephen Hadley on Tuesday.
    He will also meet with Tom Lantos who heads the Foreign Affairs
    Committee of the House of Representatives and committee members.
Working...
X