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ANKARA: US Blamed For Failure To Diminish PKK Presence In Iraq

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  • ANKARA: US Blamed For Failure To Diminish PKK Presence In Iraq

    US BLAMED FOR FAILURE TO DIMINISH PKK PRESENCE IN IRAQ

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Feb 9 2007

    The failure of American plans to curb terrorist activities in
    northern Iraq was brought up by Turkish deputies at a meeting
    in Washington, where they said that the fight against separatist
    Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) militants in northern Iraq had fallen
    short of expectations.

    The deputies also appealed for help from neutral countries to increase
    dialogue between Turkey and Armenia before the Armenian "genocide bill"
    comes to table at the US Congress. Although the United States could
    have fought in northern Iraq against the terrorist PKK in many ways,
    the only thing the US administration did was appoint a coordinator,
    said Turhan Comez of the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK
    Party) at a meeting at the Woodrow Wilson Center.

    Speaking of his meeting with Joseph Ralston, a retired American
    general who was appointed to coordinate American plans to reduce
    the PKK presence in northern Iraq, Comez said that when the American
    troops went to attack the Mahmur Camp, they found the camp evacuated
    well before the planned operation began. Although Ralston said the
    American military has no idea where the PKK militants might have gone,
    Comez referred to personal information from Turkmens in Kirkuk who
    alleged that some PKK militants were in hiding in Kirkuk.

    Orhan Ziya Diren of the opposition Republican People's Party (CHP)
    said if the planned referendum is to be held in Kirkuk in 2007 and if
    it yields a result that links Kirkuk to a Kurdish area in Iraq, then
    a civil war will likely follow that would last for several decades --
    a serious concern for the Turkish government. The problem stems from
    plans to create a demographic change in the area, said both Diren
    and Comez, arguing that there are Kurdish people who have no idea
    whatsoever why they are brought there from other parts of the country.
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