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Upsurge In Kurdish Attacks Raises Pressure On Turkish Prime Minister

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  • Upsurge In Kurdish Attacks Raises Pressure On Turkish Prime Minister

    UPSURGE IN KURDISH ATTACKS RAISES PRESSURE ON TURKISH PRIME MINISTER TO ORDER IRAQ INVASION
    Ian Traynor, Europe editor

    Guardian Unlimited, UK
    Oct 8 2007

    Bomb brings death toll of soldiers in one day to 15 · Erdogan caught
    between public opinion and US

    The coffin of a Turkish soldier is carried from a military helicopter.

    Turkey's prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, came under intense
    pressure last night to order an invasion of northern Iraq following
    the deadliest attacks for over a decade on the Turkish military and
    civilians by separatist Kurdish guerrillas.

    Mr Erdogan, who has resisted demands from the Turkish armed forces
    for the past six months for a green light to cross the border into
    Iraqi Kurdistan, where the guerrillas are based, called an emergency
    meeting of national security chiefs to ponder their options in the
    crisis, a session that some said was tantamount to a war council.

    A Turkish incursion is fiercely opposed by Washington since it would
    immensely complicate the US campaign in Iraq and destabilise the only
    part of Iraq that functions, the Kurdish-controlled north.

    Two Turkish soldiers were killed yesterday in booby trap explosions
    laid by guerrillas of the Kurdistan Workers' party (PKK) - fighters
    classified as terrorists by Ankara, Washington and the European
    Union. Those casualties followed the killing of 13 Turkish soldiers
    in the south-east on Sunday when PKK forces outgunned a Turkish unit
    of 18 men without sustaining any casualties, according to the Kurds.

    Last week, in an ambush also ascribed to the PKK, gunmen sprayed a
    bus with automatic fire in the same region, killing 13 civilians,
    including a boy of seven.

    The Turkish media described the toll from the attacks as the worst
    in 12 years in a conflict spanning several decades that has taken
    almost 40,000 lives.

    Mr Erdogan is known to think little of the invasion option, making the
    pragmatic calculation that it would probably fail. Western diplomats
    in Ankara agree that an invasion could be counter-productive. The
    Turkish military raided Iraqi Kurdistan dozens of times in the 1990s
    but were unable to suppress the insurgency.

    After a cabinet meeting dominated by the Kurdish conflict, Cemil
    Cicek, the Turkish government spokesman, said yesterday: "What is at
    issue here is how much any action we decide to take would bring us
    closer to a result." He did not rule out an invasion but queried its
    "usefulness".

    The prime minister, however, is being challenged by the army command,
    which earlier this year demanded his authority to invade. He is also
    vulnerable to a mounting public clamour to act because of the upsurge
    in guerrilla activity and the heavy casualties being suffered.

    Hardline Turkish nationalists entered parliament in Ankara following
    elections in July and they are also baying for Kurdish blood.

    Following the soldiers' deaths on Sunday, Mr Erdogan signalled a shift
    in policy without specifying how. "Our campaign against terrorism will
    continue in a different manner," he said. The Turkish military has
    just declared 27 "security zones" on the Iraqi and Iranian borders
    off-limits to civilians, suggesting to some that it might be gearing
    up for an invasion.

    But despite the rising violence, Mr Erdogan has opted for politics in
    his attempts to defuse the conflict with the Kurds. His Justice and
    Development party (AKP) enjoyed a stunning success among the Kurdish
    minority, concentrated in the south-east, in the July elections and
    he has also focused on political pacts with Baghdad to get the better
    of the guerrillas.

    Last week Iraqi and Turkish interior ministers signed an accord
    aimed at combating the PKK by trying to cut the rebels' funding
    and logistics, and agreeing to extradite captured "terrorists". The
    accord, however, took three days to thrash out; Turkish insistence
    on a "hot pursuit" formula, allowing cross-border raids, was denied,
    and scepticism is high as to whether Baghdad can deliver.

    Officially, Ankara refuses to recognise or deal with the government
    of Iraqi Kurdistan, although there have been back-channel attempts
    over the past year to engage with Massoud Barzani, the president of
    the Iraqi Kurdish region.

    Mr Erdogan's options are also constrained by strong US hostility to an
    invasion. While Turkish public opinion has been strongly anti-American
    since the 2003 invasion of Iraq, much of the logistical support for
    the US troops goes to Iraq via Turkey. Relations are also under severe
    strain because of US congressional moves to brand the 1915 massacres
    of Armenians in Ottoman Turkey as "genocide".

    Mr Erdogan sent aides to Washington yesterday to lobby Congress on
    the "genocide" resolution. Ankara is also warning that it could block
    the logistical support to the US in Iraq if the resolution is passed.

    PKK guerrillas

    The Kurdish separatist guerrillas of the Kurdistan Workers' party,
    or PKK, have been at war with the Turkish state since the early 1980s.

    Although it is now said to favour home rule within Turkey over
    secession, the PKK has historically pursued the breakaway of
    Kurdish-dominated south-east Turkey as a prelude to unifying Kurdish
    lands in Turkey, Iraq, Iran and Syria. Turkey pursued a scorched
    earth policy in the 1980s and 1990s, destroying thousands of villages,
    sending millions of Kurds west and leaving some 37,000 dead. Turkey's
    biggest coup came in 1999 with the capture of the PKK leader Abdullah
    Ocalan, who was jailed for life.

    --Boundary_(ID_pZ+sUZWhMvPPbGPSlbnk1A)--
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