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  • Australia: US urges calm as Turkey threatens to strike Kurds

    The Age, Australia
    Oct 14 2007


    US urges calm as Turkey threatens to strike Kurds


    Email Printer friendly version Normal font Large font Molly Moore and
    Robin Wright
    October 15, 2007

    US OFFICIALS have begun intense lobbying to defuse Turkish threats to
    launch an attack on Kurdish rebels in northern Iraq.

    The US is also troubled by Ankara's threats to limit access to
    crucial air and land routes, which have become a lifeline for US
    troops in Iraq.

    "The Turkish Government and public are seriously weighing all of
    their options," the Assistant Secretary of State, Daniel Fried, said
    after meeting officials in Ankara. "We need to focus with Turkey on
    our long-term mutual interests."

    But as Mr Fried appealed for restraint, Turkish Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan, speaking at a political rally in Istanbul, urged
    Parliament to declare a mobilisation against Kurdish rebels and the
    Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK.

    In the border region, witnesses said Turkish artillery fired seven to
    eight shells into a village in northern Iraq late on Saturday - the
    latest bout of regular shelling of the mountainous border area where
    separatist guerillas are believed to hide.

    Fears of a new frontier of instability in the Middle East sent oil
    prices soaring on Friday to a record high of $US84 a barrel.

    US military officials predicted disastrous consequences if Turkey
    carries out a threat to strike northern Iraq, and warned of serious
    repercussions for the safety of American troops if Turkey reduced the
    supply lines it now permits.

    The confluence of two seemingly unrelated events could not have come
    at a worse time. The bodies of 13 Turkish soldiers killed last
    weekend had barely been buried in towns across Turkey when the House
    Foreign Affairs Committee in Washington approved a resolution that
    labelled as genocide the mass killings of Armenians during the final
    decades of the Ottoman Empire.

    Turkey does not deny the deaths but argues that they occurred as part
    of a war in which Turks were also killed. "This is not only about a
    resolution," said Egemen Bagis, a member of the Turkish Parliament
    and a foreign policy adviser to Mr Erdogan. "We're fed up with the
    PKK - it is a clear and present danger for us. This insult over the
    genocide claims is the last straw."

    Domestic politics in both countries - the Armenian lobby that pushed
    for the genocide resolution in the US Congress, and growing pressure
    on the Turkish President to stop Kurdish rebel attacks - collided to
    create an international crisis.

    "It's a difficult time for the relationship," US Secretary of State
    Condoleezza Rice said on Saturday, noting that Mr Fried had gone to
    Turkey to reassure the Turks "that we really value this
    relationship".

    A recent poll conducted by the German Marshall Fund of the United
    States, a trans-Atlantic public policy organisation, found that
    Turkish attitudes towards the US were becoming increasingly hostile.

    Using its 100-degree thermometer scale, the fund found that Turkish
    "warmth" towards the US had plunged from 28 degrees in 2004 to 11
    degrees in 2007.

    "Each time we have a soldier killed, many people look at Washington
    and they believe that Americans are responsible for this because they
    prevent us from stopping the infiltration into Turkey," said Onur
    Oymen, deputy chairman of the opposition Republican People's Party.

    Mr Erdogan is feeling increased heat from his military, which is
    suspicious of his Islamic roots and acquiescence to Washington in
    taking no action against Kurdish rebels in Iraq.

    His public is angry over the genocide vote, frustrated with a
    European Union that is unwilling to admit Turkey to its club, and
    outraged that the US has turned its back on what Turks consider their
    own fight against terrorism, a 23-year-long war with the Kurdish
    separatists.

    WASHINGTON POST
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