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  • U.S. military looking at alternatives in case Turkey cuts access

    U.S. military looking at alternatives in case Turkey cuts access

    >From Barbara Starr
    CNN

    U.S. military planners quietly have stepped up a review of
    alternatives in case the Turkish government restricts U.S. access to
    Turkish airspace or cuts off access to the air base at Incirlik,
    Turkey, CNN has learned.

    Turkey has threatened such action after congressional moves to declare
    that the killing of Armenians by Ottoman Turks in World War I was
    "genocide."

    Turkey -- now a NATO member and a key U.S. ally in the war on terror
    -- accepts Armenians were killed but calls it a massacre during a
    chaotic time, not an organized campaign of genocide.

    The recent rise in tensions between Turkey and the United States has
    led the military to increase its planning for alternatives, two
    military officials with direct knowledge of the ongoing assessment
    said.

    "Events have triggered more detailed planning for the curtailment or
    closure" of access to Turkey, one official said. The key issue is to
    find ways to ship supplies and other critical equipment into Iraq.

    The U.S. military already had been considering alternatives to Turkey
    because of the growing dependence on that country after the cutback of
    U.S. forces in central Asia in recent years.

    But now, with more "detailed planning" under way, the military is
    considering a variety of options in hopes of being ready for whatever,
    if anything, the Turks do.

    U.S. officials say Turkey's options range from a complete cutoff,
    including ending overland access routes from southern Turkey into
    Iraq, to less drastic options that simply restrict U.S. access.

    The initial assessment is that any cutoff from current access to
    Turkey would force the U.S. military into longer cargo flights, which
    would mean extra costs for fuel and for wear and tear on equipment. It
    may also look for other air hubs in Jordan or Kuwait, officials say.
    See Turkey's strategic position »

    Defense Secretary Robert Gates earlier this week pointed out, "Seventy
    percent of the air cargo, American air cargo, going into Iraq goes
    through Turkey. Seventy percent of the fuel that goes in for our
    forces goes in ... through Turkey ...

    "For those who are concerned that we get as many of these
    mine-resistant ambush-protected heavy vehicles into Iraq as possible,
    95 percent of those vehicles today are being flown into Iraq through
    Turkey."

    Turkey on Thursday recalled its ambassador to the United States and
    warned of repercussions in the growing dispute.

    On Wednesday, in a 27-21 vote, the U.S. House Committee on Foreign
    Affairs passed the measure labeling the killings of Armenians by
    Ottoman Turkish forces "genocide."

    President Bush and key administration figures lobbied hard against the
    measure, saying it would create unnecessary headaches for U.S.
    relations with Turkey.

    The full House could soon vote on the genocide resolution. A top
    Turkish official warned Thursday that consequences "won't be pleasant"
    if it approves the measure. VideoWatch why the resolution stirs strong
    emotions »

    The resolution arrives at a particularly sensitive point in
    U.S.-Turkish relations. The United States has urged Turkey not to send
    its troops over the border into northern Iraq to fight Kurdish
    separatist rebels, who launched some cross-border attacks against
    Turkish targets.

    The Turkish military is poised to strike across the border to fight
    the group -- the Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK -- a move opposed by
    the Bush administration. The Turkish parliament could give approval
    for the incursion into Iraq as early as next week.

    Source: http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/10/12/us.turkey/index.h tml
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