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Pressed by Turks, Rice Seeks to Solve Kurdish Rebel Threat

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  • Pressed by Turks, Rice Seeks to Solve Kurdish Rebel Threat

    The New York Times

    November 3, 2007 Saturday
    Late Edition - Final

    Pressed by Turks, Rice Seeks to Solve Kurdish Rebel Threat While
    Urging Restraint

    By HELENE COOPER and SABRINA TAVERNISE; Helene Cooper reported from
    Ankara, and Sabrina Tavernise from Istanbul.

    ANKARA, Turkey, Nov. 2


    Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice came under pressure Friday from
    Turkish leaders seeking American help to curb Kurdish guerrillas in
    northern Iraq. But it was not clear whether her public pronouncements
    at the outset of this long-awaited visit would be enough to satisfy
    them.
    During a string of meetings in the capital, Ankara, before heading to
    Istanbul, Ms. Rice took pains to demonstrate support for Turkey. She
    called for restraint in an attempt to forestall any Turkish military
    incursion into northern Iraq, where the Kurdish rebels stage attacks
    on Turkey from mountain hide-outs.
    ''I think it's fair to say that we all need to redouble our efforts,''
    Ms. Rice said at a press conference on Friday. ''All across the world
    we've seen that it's not easy to root out terrorism.''
    Turkish leaders continued to sound resolute. ''Our expectations of the
    United States are very high,'' the foreign minister, Ali Babacan,
    said, standing next to Ms. Rice. ''We want action.''
    Less than two weeks before Ms. Rice's visit, the Kurdish rebels, the
    Kurdistan Workers' Party, killed 12 Turkish soldiers near the border
    with Iraq, prompting Turkey to threaten a military offensive. Turkey
    is a NATO member and a strong American ally in a troubled region, so a
    military offensive into Iraq --whose territory is controlled by the
    United States military -- could be deeply problematic for all parties.
    The Turkish prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, has been skeptical
    of military action in the past, and is well aware of the damage an
    offensive would inflict on Turkey, which is pressing for acceptance
    into the European Union.
    Few Turkish officials expect the United States to offer military
    action, but a public display of support for Mr. Erdogan could ease the
    pressure on him to choose military action.
    ''The Americans are not being concrete, and that is narrowing down the
    field of maneuver for the government,'' said Ilter Turan, a professor
    of political science at Bilgi University in Istanbul. The political
    opposition is fanning nationalism, he said, and with trust in the
    United States at a low in Turkish society, it is ''difficult for the
    Turkish government to appear that it is trusting the Americans without
    some concrete results.''
    Mr. Erdogan will meet with President Bush next week, and he reiterated
    this week that he would not press for a large-scale offensive, but
    that he expected support from the United States.
    But with American forces already stretched thin in Iraq, American
    military commanders have balked at taking action against the rebels,
    known by their initials, the P.K.K., and the Bush administration has
    focused its efforts on pressing Iraq's Kurdish leaders, who control
    the area in which the P.K.K. hides, to take action against the
    group. Those leaders, however, say that it is impossible to dislodge
    the fighters from the remote mountains where they hide, and that the
    only solution is through diplomacy and amnesty.
    The Kurdish rebel situation ''has now become, rightly or wrongly, a
    test of where the United States holds Turkey,'' said Soli Ozel, a
    professor of international relations at Bilgi University.
    Support for the United States eroded further last month, when a House
    committee approved a resolution condemning the mass killings of
    Armenians by Ottoman Turks during World War I as genocide. The full
    House did not vote on the resolution, but Turkey reacted angrily,
    threatening to shut off its territory as an American supply hub for
    Iraq, and recalling its ambassador from Washington.
    The Bush administration opposed the genocide vote, and has worked to
    smooth things over since then. Ms. 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.
    Even within the Bush administration, there has been criticism that the
    United States, in more than four years in Iraq, should have done more
    to rein in the Kurdish guerrillas. Gen. Joseph W. Ralston, who is
    retired from the Air Force and until last month was the United States
    special envoy for countering the P.K.K., told McClatchy Newspapers on
    Friday that United States inaction on the P.K.K. issue might force
    Turkey to act. General Ralston resigned his post, administration
    officials said, because he was frustrated with the failure of Iraq and
    the United States to do more in northern Iraq.
    Bush administration officials are in the middle of a delicate
    balancing act, trying to shore up Mr. Erdogan's hand against those in
    his country calling for military action. But they are also strenuously
    trying to avoid a new front in the war, and Ms. Rice must find a way
    to give Mr. Erdogan public backing while privately urging restraint.
    Professor Turan said that might not be enough. ''This kind of
    explanation is often seen as buying time,'' he said. ''I think what
    the public wants to hear is something concrete.''
    Speaking to reporters on her flight to Ankara, Ms. Rice said pointedly
    that Turkey's problems with the Kurds could not all be laid at
    America's door. ''This didn't arise with the liberation of Iraq,'' she
    said. ''The problem has been there, and no one has been able to deal
    with it. And so now at least we have an Iraqi government that wants to
    deal with it.''
    But there is little trust between the Turks and the Iraqi government;
    Mr. Babacan, the foreign minister, spoke Friday of doubts about the
    efforts of the Iraqi government to rein in the Kurdish guerrillas.
    Ms. Rice is supposed to participate with Iraqi and Turkish officials
    in a three-way discussion on Saturday to try to come up with a joint
    plan that all sides can agree on. Administration officials said that
    the American military had collected a list of P.K.K. guerrillas and
    issued orders for American forces to pick them up if they encounter
    them in Iraq. Beyond that, American spy planes will also feed
    intelligence to Turkish forces on P.K.K. movements in northern Iraq,
    administration officials said.
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