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Amid strained relations US seek to stop Turks from taking mil action

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  • Amid strained relations US seek to stop Turks from taking mil action

    International Herald Tribune, France
    Oct 13 2007


    Amid strained relations, the US seeks to stop Turks from taking
    military action in Iraq
    The Associated PressPublished: October 13, 2007



    ISTANBUL, Turkey: U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice on
    Saturday urged Turkey to show restraint in its response to attacks
    from Kurdish rebels based in northern Iraq, as two visiting U.S.
    officials expressed regret over a congressional resolution on
    Armenians that has severely strained relations.

    Turkish leaders have appeared to be less receptive to Washington's
    appeals since a committee of U.S. lawmakers passed the resolution
    last week labeling as genocide the World War I-era killings of
    Armenians by the Ottomans - a characterization that Turkey rejects.

    The issue raised concerns that, as a result of the resolution, Turkey
    is more likely to take unilateral military action against rebels in
    northern Iraq.

    "Did they seek permission from anyone when they came from a distance
    of 10,000 kilometers and hit Iraq?" Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan said of the U.S. on Friday. "We do not need anyone else's
    advice."

    "If such an option is chosen, whatever its price, it will be paid,"
    Erdogan said, responding to a question about the possible
    repercussions of a northern Iraq campaign.

    Rice, speaking during a visit to Moscow on Saturday, acknowledged
    that "it's a difficult time for the relationship" between the two
    allies.

    Two senior U.S. officials flew to Ankara from Moscow, where they were
    on the trip with Rice and U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates.

    The two are Dan Fried, assistant secretary of state for European
    affairs, and Eric Edelman, who is the undersecretary of defense for
    policy and was the United States' ambassador to Turkey from July 2003
    to June 2005.

    The U.S. House of Representatives' Foreign Affairs Committee approved
    the nonbinding resolution on Wednesday. Its passage was deemed an
    insult by most Turks and prompted Turkey to recall its ambassador
    from Washington for consultations. The resolution could be brought to
    a vote in the full House by the end of the year.

    "Secretary of State Rice Condoleezza Rice asked us before we came
    here to express that the Bush administration is opposed to this
    resolution," Edelman told a group of reporters in Ankara after
    meeting with officials from Turkish Foreign Ministry. NTV television
    broadcast his remarks with simultaneous Turkish translation. The AP
    translated them back to English.

    The two Americans also wanted to assure Turkey that they will do
    whatever they can to prevent the genocide resolution from going to a
    vote in the entire House of Representatives, a U.S. official told The
    Associated Press. The official declined to be named because of the
    sensitivity of the matter.

    The administration of U.S. President George W. Bush opposed the
    measure out of concern it would harm relations with an important NATO
    ally and could generate added danger for U.S. soldiers in Iraq.

    At the same time, Turkey, which has long considered a cross-border
    operation against bases of the Kurdistan Workers' Party in Iraq, has
    moved more troops and equipment to its side of the border after a
    recent surge in rebel attacks.

    The separatist rebels have been fighting the Turkish government since
    1984 in a conflict that has claimed tens of thousands of lives.

    Washington opposes any unilateral Turkish action that could
    destabilize one of the few relatively peaceful parts of Iraq.

    A vote in Turkey's parliament authorizing troops to go into Iraq is
    expected after the weekend. Legislators are expected to vote strongly
    in favor of action.

    The visiting officials presented the U.S. concern with Turkey's
    military plans.

    "Turkish officials told us what has happened in (the province of)
    Sirnak near the Iraqi border, and we told our concerns" about a
    military incursion, Edelman said.

    The two Americans told reporters they would convey Turkey's unease
    over rebel activity in Iraqi territory to Iraqi officials. They also
    said they might return to Turkey for more discussions after the
    weekend.

    Rice said she spoke Friday by telephone with Turkey's president,
    prime minister and foreign minister about the genocide resolution.
    "They were dismayed," she said.

    In discussing their reaction to the resolution and activities of the
    Kurdistan Workers' Party in northern Iraq, she said, "I urged
    restraint."

    "The Turkish government, I think, is trying to react responsibly.
    They recognize how hard we worked to prevent that vote from taking
    place," the secretary said.

    ___

    Associated Press writer Matthew Lee in Moscow contributed to this
    report.
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