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Military Seeks Alternatives In Case Turkey Limits Access

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  • Military Seeks Alternatives In Case Turkey Limits Access

    MILITARY SEEKS ALTERNATIVES IN CASE TURKEY LIMITS ACCESS
    By David S. Cloud

    New York Times
    Oct 12 2007

    WASHINGTON, Oct. 11 - Loss of access to military installations in
    Turkey would force the United States to send more supplies for Iraq
    through other countries and could cause short-term backups in fuel
    shipments and deliveries of critical equipment, senior officers
    said Thursday.

    The officials said they had a contingency plan in case Turkey followed
    through on threats to shut off the United States military's use to its
    territory if the full House approved a resolution condemning the mass
    killings of Armenians during World War I as an act of genocide. That
    could mean the loss at least temporarily of Incirlik Air Base in
    southeastern Turkey, a key resupply hub for Iraq, and the closing of
    the Turkish-Iraq border to fuel trucks for the American military.

    It could take months to increase operations in other logistical hubs,
    including Jordan, Kuwait and at the Iraqi port of Umm Qasr in the
    northern Persian Gulf, the officials said.

    "Turkey has been a tremendous hub for us, and if we didn't have it
    that would increase time lines and distances," said a senior military
    officer involved in logistical planning and operations. "But it would
    be a short-term impact." The officer spoke on condition of anonymity,
    as did other officials, because he was discussing matters of military
    planning.

    Turkey signaled its displeasure by recalling its ambassador to
    Washington on Thursday, the day after the House Foreign Affairs
    Committee endorsed the resolution. Meanwhile, Bush administration
    officials stepped up their warnings that passage of the measure by
    the full House could have dire consequences.

    For the second day in a row, Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates warned
    about the "enormous implications" for American military operations
    in Iraq if Turkey limited flights over its territory or restricted
    access to Incirlik Air Base.

    "All I can say is that a resolution that looks back almost 100 years to
    an event that took place under a predecessor government, the Ottomans,
    and that has enormous present-day implications for American soldiers
    and Marines and sailors and airmen in Iraq, is something we need to
    take very seriously," Mr. Gates told reporters in London.

    In public, only Turkish legislators have explicitly warned of limiting
    the American military presence, though other members of the government
    have also warned of consequences.

    "This is an issue where the Turkish officials have made clear their
    very strong concerns about this and have raised questions about
    potential consequences in the event that this resolution passes,"
    said Tom Casey, a State Department spokesman.

    Though a NATO ally, Turkey has proved a roadblock to American military
    actions before, especially in March 2003, when its Parliament refused
    to authorize movement of American ground troops through its territory
    during the initial invasion of Iraq.

    Mr. Gates and other military officials have said that 70 percent
    of the military cargo sent to Iraq is flown through Incirlik or on
    routes over Turkey.

    To drive home the potential impact of the House action, American
    officials have warned that delivery of new heavily armored trucks,
    known as Mine Resistant Ambush Protected vehicles, could be
    disrupted. Senior military officials said Thursday that the roughly
    400 such vehicles delivered since July have been flown in over Turkey
    but not landed on its territory. Those flights could avoid Turkish
    airspace, if necessary, they said.
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