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Pentagon Plans Alternate Supply Routes If Turkey Restricts Access

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  • Pentagon Plans Alternate Supply Routes If Turkey Restricts Access

    Fox News
    Oct 13 2007


    Pentagon Plans for Alternate Supply Routes If Turkey Restricts Access
    Saturday, October 13, 2007


    ANKARA, Turkey - There are about 60,000 Turkish troops along the
    country's southern border, but the U.S. military is seeing no
    activity to suggest an imminent offensive against Kurdish rebels in
    northern Iraq, U.S. officials said.

    As tensions mount between the U.S. and Turkey over a congressional
    resolution condemning the killings of Armenians a century ago as
    genocide, the Pentagon is both watching the border for troop
    movements, and planning for contingencies if Turkey restricts access
    to critical supply routes there.

    A U.S. military official, speaking on condition of anonymity because
    of the sensitivity of the situation, said Friday that any offensive
    by Turkey into what has been a relatively peaceful area of northern
    Iraq would likely involve airstrikes and mortar fire.

    But so far, the official said, there has been no evidence of Turkish
    soldiers massing along the border. The number of troops there isn't
    unusual, the official said.

    U.S. military officials have said they believe they will get some
    type of warning if the Turks launch an incursion into Iraq against
    the rebel Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK. For years, the United
    States has routinely had military representatives with the Turkish
    armed forces.

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    Passed by U.S. Lawmakers The United States has consistently argued
    against a Turkish offensive, pushing instead for a broader diplomatic
    solution between Iraq and Turkey over the problem of the rebel PKK.

    But of equal concern, however, is what impact the congressional
    resolution will have on U.S. military supply routes that have been
    used recently to move much-needed armored vehicles to troops in Iraq.

    The House Foreign Affairs Committee this week passed a resolution
    labeling the World War I-era killings of up to 1.5 million Armenians
    by Ottoman Turks genocide. Turkey has argued that the toll has been
    inflated and the killings were the result of civil war and unrest.

    Turkish authorities have not said whether further congressional
    action would prompt Turkey to shut down Incirlik air base in southern
    Turkey, a major hub for U.S. and coalition forces in Iraq and
    Afghanistan. Turkey's Mediterranean port of Iskenderun is also used
    to ferry goods to American troops.

    And U.S. military officials said Friday that they have seen no
    indications of repercussions yet from the Turks.

    But the Pentagon has dusted off contingency plans that would reroute
    supplies and arms if transportation through Turkey or across its
    airspace is restricted. There is more "focused planning" as a result
    of the congressional action, the official said.

    One key impact could be on the delivery of mine-resistant
    ambush-protected vehicles (MRAPs) that the Pentagon has been trying
    to rush to Iraq. The vehicles give troops better protection against
    roadside bombs.

    Officials are looking at plans to reroute those deliveries around
    Turkey if needed. Other supply routes - including those used during
    the ramp up to the invasion of Iraq in 2003 - could involve Kuwait
    and Jordan.

    There also have been concerns that Turkey may cut off military
    contracts with the U.S.

    Some of Turkey's largest recent purchases through the Pentagon's
    foreign military sales programs were $1.7 billion for F-16 aircraft;
    $1.6 billion (euro1.1 billion) to upgrade already owned F-16s, and to
    purchase four Airborne Early Warning Aircraft (AWACS) with an overall
    value of about $3 billion.

    Turkey also bought torpedoes in an $80 million sale as part of a
    program to modernize its navy.

    The U.S. each year budgets money under its foreign military financing
    program - essentially money given to Turkey to buy U.S. military
    equipment. Turkey received $34 million in budget year 2005 and $15
    million in each of the next two years under that program.

    The U.S. also budgeted $3 million in each of the last three fiscal
    years for Turkey in the international military education and training
    program, according to the State Department. The money was used to
    help Turkey transform its military to meet some European Union
    standards as well as provide other training and skills.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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