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Turkish Leaders Press Rice For Action Against Kurdish Guerrillas

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  • Turkish Leaders Press Rice For Action Against Kurdish Guerrillas

    TURKISH LEADERS PRESS RICE FOR ACTION AGAINST KURDISH GUERRILLAS
    By Helene Cooper

    International Herald Tribune, France
    Nov 2 2007

    ANKARA: Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice came under pressure Friday
    from Turkish leaders seeking strong American action to rein in Kurdish
    guerrillas in northern Iraq.

    During a string of meetings in Ankara before heading to Istanbul,
    Rice took pains to demonstrate support for Turkey, while at the same
    time calling for restraint in an attempt to forestall any military
    incursion of Turkish forces into northern Iraq.

    But whatever restraint Ankara has demonstrated so far may be reaching
    its limits.

    "Our expectations of the United States are very high," Foreign Minister
    Ali Babacan said, standing next to Rice during a press conference. "We
    want action. This is where the words end and action needs to start."

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has given the United States a
    de facto deadline of Monday, the day of his visit to Washington for
    talks with President George W. Bush, to satisfy Turkish demands for
    American action. The Turkish military has indicated that it is willing
    to wait for Erdogan's return before launching any operation into Iraq.

    But with their forces already stretched thin in Iraq, American military
    commanders have balked at taking action against the Kurdistan Workers'
    Party, known as the PKK, which hides in mountains in Iraq and has
    made cross-border attacks on Turkish forces. Thus far, the Bush
    administration has done little besides call on Iraq's Kurdish leaders
    to take action against the PKK.

    America's relationship with Turkey is at perhaps its lowest point
    since March 2003 when the Turkish Parliament refused to authorize
    movement of American ground troops through its territory during the
    initial invasion of Iraq. Things hit another rough patch last month
    after a House committee, with the support of the speaker, Nancy Pelosi,
    approved a resolution condemning the mass killings of Armenians during
    World War I as an act of genocide. Although the full House ended up
    not voting on the resolution, Turkey reacted angrily, threatening to
    shut off the American military's use of its territory as a resupply
    hub for Iraq, and recalling its ambassador to Washington.

    The Bush administration opposed the Armenian vote and has worked to
    smooth things over since. Rice delicately referred to the Armenian
    issue on Friday as "the events of 1915" but made no mention of the word
    "genocide," a term the Turks strongly reject.

    Still, many Turks are now openly criticizing the United States for
    failure to do more to stop the PKK attacks.

    Even within the Bush administration, there has been internal criticism
    that the United States, in more than three years in Iraq, should have
    done more to rein in the Kurdish guerillas. A retired U.S. Air Force
    general, Joseph Ralston, until last month the U.S.

    special envoy for countering the PKK, told McClatchy Newspapers that
    U.S. inaction on the PKK issue might force Turkey to act. Ralston
    resigned his post, administration officials said, because he was
    frustrated with the failure of both the Iraqi government and the
    United States to do more in northern Iraq.

    "I think it's fair to say that we all need to redouble our efforts,"
    Rice acknowledged during the press conference. She added: "All across
    the world we've seen that it's not easy to root out terrorism."

    But she maintained that "effective action means action that can deal
    with the threat, but that's not going to make the situation worse."

    She said that Turkey and the United States "really need to look for an
    effective strategy, not just one that's going to strike out, somehow,
    and not deal with the problem."
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