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Turkey In The Crosshairs

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  • Turkey In The Crosshairs

    TURKEY IN THE CROSSHAIRS

    Washington Times
    Oct 15 2007

    A combination of events - including a dramatic upsurge in violence
    from Kurdish terrorists based in northern Iraq and a House resolution
    condemning Turkey for the mass killings of Armenians more than 80
    years ago - have created an explosive, dangerous situation on the
    Turkish-Iraq border that could endanger the resupply of U.S. forces
    in Iraq.

    In recent years, Ankara has been complaining with considerable
    justification about an upsurge in attacks from northern Iraq by
    members of the Marxist-Leninist Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK.

    Beginning in 1984, PKK forces (based in Syria and Lebanon) launched
    a bloody war in southern Turkey in which 37,000 people were killed;
    the war appeared to have ended in 1999 after Turkey pressured Syria to
    exile PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan, who has been imprisoned in Turkey for
    the past eight years. Unfortunately, however, the Kurdistan Regional
    Government in northern Iraq has failed to crack down vigorously against
    PKK operatives based in KRG territory. The PKK has made a comeback,
    and during the first half of this year, it was responsible for the
    deaths of at least 80 Turks. On Sept. 28, Turkey and Iraq signed
    an agreement to clamp down on PKK operations in Iraqi territory,
    but the agreement did not give Turkey permission to pursue PKK
    operatives inside Iraq. The following day, the PKK ambushed a bus
    carrying Turkish soldiers and civilians, killing 12 people. Then,
    last weekend, another PKK attack killed 13 Turkish soldiers.

    As anger mounts in Turkey over the PKK, the Bush administration has
    been urging restraint while simultaneously leaning on Iraq (and Iraqi
    Kurdish leaders in particular) to take action against terrorists
    operating from their territory. But last week, as Turkey was burying
    its most recent war dead and American diplomats were working feverishly
    to prevent the situation on the Iraqi border from exploding, the
    House of Representatives (in this case members of the House Foreign
    Affairs Committee) decided to pour gasoline on the fire, approving
    a resolution accusing Turkey of committing genocide against against
    the Armenians between 1915 and 1923. And House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
    has agreed to bring the resolution to the floor - all the better to
    ensure that U.S.-Turkish relations, already damaged by the failure of
    Washington and Baghdad to stop PKK attacks, continue to worsen. Ankara
    is now hinting that the genocide resolution could cause long-lasting
    damage to Washington's military relationship with Turkey, a nation
    critical to the resupply of the 160,000-plus American soldiers in Iraq.

    Two things need to happen right away 1) Responsible adults on Capitol
    Hill need to bury the Armenian genocide resolution to prevent it from
    doing more damage to relations with Turkey, a critical ally, and 2)
    Washington needs to press the Iraqi government, especially the Kurds,
    to act now to put the PKK out of business. That's the way to ensure
    that Ankara does not take the dangerous, destabilizing step of sending
    its forces across the border into Iraq.
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