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  • Bush To Step Up Turkish Military Links

    BUSH TO STEP UP TURKISH MILITARY LINKS
    By Daniel Dombey in Washington

    FT
    November 6 2007 01:25

    President George W. Bush on Monday moved to step up military
    co-operation with Turkey, in an attempt to dissuade Ankara from
    launching a large-scale incursion into northern Iraq to hunt down
    Kurdish rebels.

    But it was unclear whether Mr Bush's offer to deepen
    intelligence-sharing and establish a military liaison system would be
    enough to reduce domestic political pressure on Recep Tayyip Erdogan -
    the Turkish prime minister, on a visit to the US - to take decisive
    military action against PKK Kurdish separatists in Iraq.

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    Oct-26Turkish public opinion has been outraged by a series of attacks
    by the PKK, but the US has warned against a large-scale deployment
    of Turkish ground forces into northern Iraq, which it fears could
    destabilise the most stable part of the country.

    Washington officials have hailed the PKK's decision over the weekend
    to release eight kidnapped Turkish soldiers as a signal that practical
    co-operation between the Iraqi and Turkish governments is a concrete
    and preferable alternative to military action.

    But they are acutely aware that Mr Erdogan also wants more practical
    aid from the US. "I made it very clear to the prime minister we want
    to work in a close way to deal with this problem ... Step one is to
    make sure that our intelligence-sharing is good," said Mr Bush at an
    appearance in the Oval Office with Mr Erdogan.

    "Good, sound intelligence delivered on a real-time basis, using modern
    technology, will make it much easier to deal effectively with people
    who are using murder as a weapon to achieve political objectives."

    He added: "The prime minister and I have set up a tripartite
    arrangement, for his number two man in the military to stay in
    touch with our number two man and General [David] Petraeus" - the
    commander of US forces in Iraq. Mr Bush also said that the two sides
    had discussed financing for the PKK, which Turkey wants to disrupt.

    Speaking shortly after leaving the White House, Mr Erdogan described
    himself as "happy" with the results of the meeting, but refused to
    disclose details of the discussion.

    "Turkey does not receive the international support she deserves in
    fighting against the Iraq-based PKK terrorism," he added, but singled
    out European countries, rather than the US, for criticism. "No one
    should expect us to render our national interests victim to irrational
    calculations of power in the region," he said.

    Mr Erdogan also pronounced himself "cautiously optimistic" over the
    controversy concerning the US House of Representatives' attempt to
    describe the mass killings of Armenians under the Ottoman Empire as
    "genocide". The legislation was put on hold after Turkey protested
    against it.

    "This draft has the potential to deeply damage our strategic
    co-operation," he said.

    "It is important to ensure it is not discussed on the floor of
    Congress."
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