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US Explores Alternative Airbase After Row With Turkey

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  • US Explores Alternative Airbase After Row With Turkey

    US EXPLORES ALTERNATIVE AIRBASE AFTER ROW WITH TURKEY
    Ian Bruce, Defence Correspondent

    The Herald, UK
    http://www.theherald.co.uk/news/news/display.va r.1759142.0.0.php
    Oct 15 2007

    The Pentagon is looking for emergency alternatives to its key Incirlik
    airbase in Turkey in case a diplomatic row with Ankara cuts off 70%
    of its airborne supplies to US forces in Iraq.

    The possible loss of Turkish facilities follows US congressional
    criticism over alleged "genocide" against Armenian civilians by
    Ottoman Turkish forces during the First World War.

    The dispute now threatens to turn into an international logistics and
    intelligence-gathering crisis if Ankara decides to impose sanctions
    over the use of its military facilities in retaliation.

    advertisementThe Turkish authorities allow the US to use the giant
    Incirlik base as a main supply hub for Iraq. Unmanned aerial drone
    spy missions over Iraq and Iran are flown from there.

    They also allow overflights of Turkish territory by US transport
    aircraft, allowing them to reduce the risk of being shot down by
    insurgents inside Iraq's troubled northern provinces.

    Pentagon officials confirmed yesterday that 70% of the military cargo
    sent to Iraq goes via Incirlik or on routes over Turkey.

    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 added.

    Turkey, a leading member of Nato because of its common border with
    Russia, blocked US requests to allow part of its invasion force
    for Iraq to use Turkish territory in 2003, forcing planners to make
    last-minute changes to the plan to topple Saddam Hussein.

    The Turkish government recalled its ambassador to Washington last
    week in protest against American criticism.

    More than one million Armenians died as the Ottoman empire collapsed
    almost a century ago. The Turks claim that most died at the hands of
    Kurdish raiders or from hunger and disease rather than from deliberate
    attacks by Ottoman forces.

    Banning the use of the Incirlik base and its wider airspace now
    depends on whether US lawmakers approve a draft resolution condemning
    the Armenian "genocide".
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