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Rice Says Kurd Attacks Will Be Repelled

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  • Rice Says Kurd Attacks Will Be Repelled

    RICE SAYS KURD ATTACKS WILL BE REPELLED
    By Anne Gearan, AP Diplomatic Writer

    AP
    Friday November 2, 2007 11:16 AM

    ANKARA, Turkey (AP) - Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice says the
    United States, Turkey and Iraq will counter any attacks on Turkey by
    Kurdish rebels operating out of northern Iraq.

    She didn't specify just what that meant in speaking with reporters
    en route to diplomatic meetings in Turkey and the Middle East, and
    she warned against doing anything that might worsen the volatile
    situation on the Turkish-Iraqi border.

    Rice was in Turkey's capital Friday and meeting with Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan and other high-ranking officials as part of an
    intense campaign to prevent Turkey from sending its troops across
    the border into northern Iraq to fight Kurdish guerrillas.

    She planned to press the U.S. case that Iraqi Kurds and Turkey should
    back away from an escalating conflict. So far the U.S. has won no
    public promises to stand down.

    She also will try to soothe lingering irritation by Turkey over a
    House committee vote last month that labeled as genocide the deaths
    of Armenians a century ago at the hands of Ottoman Turks.

    Turkey has complained for months about what it contends is a lack of
    U.S. support against the rebels known as PKK. The Turkish government
    has threatened a full-scale ground attack into northern Iraq if the
    U.S. and Iraqi officials fail to do something about the rebels.

    "We have a common enemy and we are going to act as if we have a common
    enemy, which means that we are going to work with our Turkish allies
    and the Iraqis" to have an effective way of dealing with the PKK,
    Rice said Thursday to reporters traveling with her.

    Raids by the rebels and other fighting have left 47 people dead in
    Turkey since Sept. 29, including 35 soldiers. The skirmishes were
    the latest in a conflict that dates back to 1984 and has seen nearly
    40,000 people killed.

    Rice rearranged a long-scheduled diplomatic visit to include stops in
    Ankara. The chief U.S. diplomat was also seeing Iraqi Prime Minister
    Nouri al-Maliki and holding a three-way meeting with Iraqi and Turkish
    diplomats over the weekend.

    Rice's trip places her in the breach between important NATO
    ally Turkey, the weak U.S.-backed government in Baghdad and the
    self-governing Kurds in Iraq's oil-rich north.

    Rice said initial three-way cooperation could include better ways of
    sharing information or means to restrict the rebels' movement. She
    did not rule out sanctions or other penalties on the PKK, but she did
    not address whether the Iraqis should pursue their own military raids.

    "We'll try to talk through the various elements of a strategy, but
    we really need to look for an effective strategy, not just one that
    is going to strike out somehow and still not deal with the problem,"
    she said.

    Turkey did try on Thursday to allay fears about the extent of any
    assault it would launch across the Iraq border, saying such an attack
    would target guerrilla bases and not amount to an invasion.

    Foreign Minister Ali Babacan said the military, if it crosses the
    border, would try to avoid confronting the self-governing Kurdish
    leadership in northern Iraq. Turkish leaders suspect, however, that
    the administration there is assisting the PKK, or at the very least
    tolerating its presence at a network of mountain camps.

    Both the U.S. and Iraq governments fear a large military operation,
    opening a new front in the Iraq war, would unsettle what is now the
    most stable part of the country.

    Turkey fears that Iraqi Kurds could set up an independent Kurdish
    state and fuel separatist sentiments within Turkey.

    Turkey's military chief said last week his country will wait to decide
    on a major cross-border offensive until after Erdogan meets President
    Bush in Washington. Their meeting is set for Monday.

    Many Turks are furious with the United States for its perceived
    failure to pressure Iraq into cracking down on the PKK rebels, whose
    full name is the Kurdistan Workers' Party.

    Street protesters have urged the government to send forces across
    the border even if it means a deepening of the rift with the U.S.,
    their Cold War ally.

    The United States acknowledged this week that it has undertaken limited
    military moves against the rebels after asserting for weeks that the
    clash between Iraq and Turkey was a diplomatic matter.

    Pentagon officials said the U.S. was flying manned spy planes over
    the border area, providing Turkey with more intelligence information,
    and that there are standing orders for American forces to capture
    rebels they find.

    ---

    Associated Press writer Suzan Fraser contributed to this report.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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