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  • Turkey strikes suspected Kurdish rebel positions

    Turkey strikes suspected Kurdish rebel positions

    The Associated Press

    October 11, 2007

    SIRNAK, TURKEY -- Turkish warplanes and helicopter gunships attacked
    suspected positions of Kurdish rebels near Iraq on Wednesday, a
    possible prelude to a cross-border operation that would be likely to
    raise tensions with Washington.

    The military offensive also reportedly included shelling of suspected
    Turkish Kurd guerrilla hide-outs in northern Iraq, which is
    predominantly Kurdish. U.S. officials are preoccupied with efforts to
    stabilize other areas of Iraq and oppose Turkish intervention in the
    relatively peaceful north. The White House issued a warning Wednesday
    against such an incursion "at this time."

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan told reporters that a
    motion authorizing a cross-border operation was being prepared and
    might reach parliament today. An opposition nationalist party said it
    would support the motion.

    If parliament approves, the military could launch an operation
    immediately or wait to see if the United States and its allies decide
    to crack down on the rebels, who have been fighting for autonomy in
    Turkey's southeast since 1984 in a conflict that has claimed tens of
    thousands of lives.

    "If you're against [the rebels], make your attitude clear and do
    whatever is necessary," Erdogan said in comments directed at
    Washington. "If you cannot do it, then let us do it."

    Turkey and the United States are North Atlantic Treaty Organization
    allies, but relations have also been tense over the U.S. congressional
    bill that would officially recognize as genocide the Turks' World War
    I-era killing of as many as 1.5 million Armenians. The bill passed a
    House panel Wednesday and has been sent to the floor. Turkey denies
    the killings amounted to genocide.

    An Iraqi government spokesman said a Turkish military incursion would
    be regarded as a violation of Iraq's sovereignty.

    "We are aware of the size of the threat Turkey is subjected to, but
    this does not give Turkey the right to enter Iraqi territories," said
    the spokesman, Ali Dabbagh.

    Turkey has conducted two dozen large-scale incursions into Iraq since
    the late 1980s. The last, in 1997, involved tens of thousands of
    troops and government-paid village guards. Results were inconclusive.

    The latest Turkish military activity followed attacks by rebels that
    have reportedly killed 15 soldiers since Sunday.

    Turkish troops were blocking rebel escape routes into Iraq while F-16
    and F-14 warplanes and Cobra helicopters dropped bombs on possible
    hide-outs, Turkey's Dogan news agency reported. The military had
    dispatched tanks to the region to support the operation against the
    rebel Kurdistan Workers Party, or PKK, which the U.S. has branded a
    terrorist group.

    Source: http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-f g-turkey11oct11,1,6775807.story?ctrack=1&cset= true
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