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ANKARA: US Retreats from Supporting Turkish Cross-Border Operation

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  • ANKARA: US Retreats from Supporting Turkish Cross-Border Operation

    Journal of Turkish Weekly, Turkey
    Feb 23 2007

    US Retreats from Supporting Turkish Cross-Border Operation

    Friday , 23 February 2007

    Fearing that a possible Turkish cross-border limited operation into
    northern Iraq to hit the PKK camps there could become another
    destabilizing factor with the possibility of civilian casualties, the
    US administration has reportedly stepped back from its earlier
    assessment that Washington might give backing to a limited Turkish
    operation provided that it would be strictly coordinated with the US.


    Well informed Turkish intelligence sources speaking to Today's Zaman
    recalled a meeting that took place in Washington on Jan. 24 during
    which both senior US intelligence and administration officials got
    together to decide on the options available to stop the PKK's
    possible increased infiltration into Turkey as snow started melting
    in the region.

    Bearing in mind that Turkey has never ruled out a unilateral
    operation into northern Iraq (though the US suspects that this
    possibility has been used to put pressure on Washington to do
    something concrete against the PKK), US top officials examined the
    option of allowing Turkey a limited cross-border operation that would
    not exceed two weeks and the set geographical boundaries.

    But unlike the US military officials, civilians at that meeting
    considered the possible collateral damage that such a limited
    operation could inflict even if it was coordinated with the US. Thus,
    the US dropped the limited cross-border operation option to the
    bottom of the list, at least for now.

    Some participants at the meeting raised concerns that a Turkish bomb
    dropped during an operation, killing civilians even if accidentally,
    could turn out to be a serious destabilizing factor in the region,
    which is relatively calm compared with the other parts of Iraq.

    "No one in the US will undertake such a responsibility. Possible
    civilian casualties and their repercussions in the region was
    understood to have made the US officials stall the idea of giving
    backing to even a limited Turkish cross-border operation," said the
    Turkish intelligence sources.

    The US's preference to seek other options to help Turkey's fight
    against the PKK, such as to increase cooperation between Turkey,
    Iraqi government and the Iraqi Kurds, have appeared to have gained
    priority on the list of options as evident by Tom Casey's, deputy
    spokesperson of the US State Department, remarks on Feb. 21 press
    briefing.

    Casey said that the Iraqi government adhered to the principle of
    working closely with both Washington and Ankara to stop PKK's
    activities.
    Casey also went on to say that Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, a
    Kurd, as well as the regional Kurdish administration in northern Iraq
    have been collaborating with both Ankara and Washington in the fight
    against the PKK.

    Through Casey, the US administration has also been responding to
    General Büyükanýt, Turkish chief of general staff, who said during a
    press conference in Washington lately that at least the Turkish
    military would not talk to the Iraqi Kurds whom he blamed for
    cooperating with the PKK.
    Büyükanýt's statement came soon after Turkish PM Recep Tayyip
    Erdoðan's remarks that if it was going to help for peace he was ready
    to have a dialogue with the Iraqi Kurdish administration.

    What next?
    It has become obvious that there has been a serious rift between the
    Turkish political authority and the military over northern Iraq and
    on how to deal with the PKK, though the Turkish government's patience
    has also been wearing thin over the US's failure to take concrete
    measures against Turkey's outlawed terrorist organization i.e. the
    PKK.

    As Turkey enters into presidential as well as national elections this
    year, it was not ruled out that the ruling AK Party government would
    like to see a cross-border operation sometime in late March to ease
    Turkish ultra-nationalistic sentiments.

    Meanwhile, it remains unclear whether the Turkish government, despite
    objections from the military, will enter into a dialogue on the PKK
    with the Iraqi Kurdish administration recognized by the newly
    designed Iraqi Constitution.

    Such a collaboration might force Massoud Barzani, leader of the Iraqi
    Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and the head of the Kurdish regional
    government to stop the supply of food, ammunition and other sorts of
    logistic support to the PKK from northern Iraq while taking over the
    control of the Turkish-Iraqi border form the PKK.
    Additionally, the US might drop a bomb on a major PKK camp in the
    Kandil mountains in northern Iraq bordering Iran and extradite senior
    members of the PKK to Turkey.

    Such measures, though impossible to know for sure, might satisfy the
    Turkish side.
    But the adoption of a so-called Armenian resolution by the
    Democrat-controlled US Congress sometime in late March or early
    April, and a possible major offensive to be launched by the PKK in
    Turkey causing severe casualties might be important factors for the
    Turkish unilateral operation into Northern Iraq.

    The adoption of an Armenian resolution, which is a very emotional
    subject for Turkey, might trigger Turkish unilateral action into
    northern Iraq, said a Western military analyst.

    Zaman
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