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ANKARA: Head-On Confrontation Looms Over Bill

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  • ANKARA: Head-On Confrontation Looms Over Bill

    HEAD-ON CONFRONTATION LOOMS OVER BILL

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Oct 15 2007

    Washington stepped up efforts over the weekend to soothe Ankara's
    anger over the US House's adoption of a resolution labeling the mass
    killings of Anatolian Armenians during World War I as genocide, but
    there do not seem to be even any minor signs of backing down in the
    Turkish capital, which asserts that the resolution is a fatal blow
    to the future of bilateral relations between the two NATO allies.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoðan said that Turkey would not be
    deterred by the possible consequences, if it decides to stage a
    cross-border offensive into Iraq.

    The US administration's efforts to contain possible damage are also
    facing a daunting challenge from the rival Democrats, who remain
    determined to press ahead with the resolution despite Ankara's fury
    and calls from the Republican administration against the motion.

    "I said if it passed the committee that we would bring it to the
    floor," Speaker of the House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi said on
    ABC television, claiming that possible reprisals affecting Turkey's
    cooperation with the US military were "hypothetical" and would not
    derail the resolution. "Some of the things that are harmful to our
    troops relate to values -- Abu Ghraib, Guantanamo, torture. All of
    those issues [are] about who we are as a country. And I think that
    our troops are well served when we declare who we are as a country
    and increase the respect that people have for us as a nation."

    Despite openly and loudly expressed concerns by the US side over
    Turkey's intention to launch a military operation into northern Iraq
    to tackle the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) bases there,
    a government bill seeking the go-ahead to launch an incursion in the
    next year is expected to be submitted to Parliament after a Cabinet
    meeting on Monday.On the military front, the top Turkish commander
    bluntly warned Washington about the fatal impact of the resolution on
    the deeply strategic military cooperation between the two countries,
    describing the resolution as "a shot in the foot" for the US side.

    US-Turkish military ties will never be the same if US lawmakers confirm
    the committee vote, Chief of General Staff Gen. Yaþar Buyukanýt said
    in remarks published in the Sunday edition of the Milliyet daily.

    Republicans are accusing Democrats, who control Congress, of waging an
    "irresponsible" campaign of dubious historical validity that will hurt
    US troops in Iraq. Turkey's furious reaction to the congressional
    vote has fuelled fears within the Bush administration that it
    could lose access to a crucial military base in NATO ally Turkey,
    affecting a vital supply line for US troops in Iraq. Adm. Metin Atac,
    the commander-in-chief of the Turkish navy, has cancelled a planned
    visit to the United States in protest.

    While acknowledging strains in the US-Turkish relations following a
    vote last week by the US Congressional committee on the resolution,
    US Secretary of State Condoleez-za Rice said that she urged restraint
    concerning Ankara's plans for a military incursion into northern Iraq
    during her telephone conversations on Friday with Turkey's president,
    prime minister and foreign minister.

    "If terrorism is based in a neighboring country and if that country
    does very little about it, then it falls upon us to act. After taking
    this road, the cost is already calculated. The bill will be paid,"
    Erdoðan said on Friday, responding to questions about international
    reaction should such an operation take place. Erdoðan, in remarks
    particularly critical of US demands, stressed that "nobody asked our
    permission before launching an attack on Iraq from tens of thousands
    of kilometers away." He also said that his country "had no need of
    advice from anyone on the subject of an operation" against Iraq.

    On Saturday, US Assistant Secretary of State for European Affairs Dan
    Fried and US Undersecretary of Defense for Policy Eric Edelman flew
    to Ankara from Moscow, where they had accompanied Rice. The hastily
    held visit came as an apparent signal of the depth of US concerns
    over the future of bilateral relations as well as of US recognition
    of the gravity of Turkey's resentment.

    Edelman and Fried faced harsh criticism from Turkish officials over
    the resolution in Ankara, which last week recalled its ambassador
    in Washington, Nabi Þensoy, as part of its moves to demonstrate that
    it is not "bluffing." Turkish officials told Fried and Edelman that
    "if the resolution is passed in the House, it will lead to irreparable
    damage in our relationship with the United States."

    While the White House said it hoped for Þensoy's speedy return to his
    post, Þensoy, for his part, has made it clear that his being called
    to the Turkish capital for consultations was "more of a protest."

    Upon his arrival in Ýstanbul on Saturday, when reminded of media
    interpretations suggesting that "he was withdrawn from his post in
    Washington," Þensoy said: "The term 'withdrawing' is also used for
    'consultations' in our diplomatic use [of terms]. This has a sui
    generis meaning. It expressed more of a protest. It [my being called
    for consultations] should be considered within that framework."

    -------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------

    Report: Turkey shells Iraq border areas

    Turkish troops have begun shelling areas across the Iraqi border in
    the autonomous Kurdish region, a news report said yesterday. "The
    shelling began on Saturday night around 10 pm (1900 GMT)," Agence
    France-Presse quoted an Iraqi officer as saying, speaking on condition
    of anonymity. "It carried on sporadically," he said, adding that
    the shells had struck vacant areas without causing any casualties. A
    witness said the shells hit around villages in the Al-Amadiyah area
    about 15 kilometers from the frontier and 50 kilometers northeast of
    the town of Dohuk. Wahid Kista, 42, who lives in the village of Kista,
    said by telephone the shelling was targeting villages in the Mt. Metin
    area "where the PKK [Kurdistan Workers' Party] has bases."

    Iraqi and Turkish officials met in Baghdad on Friday in an attempt to
    reduce tensions. A terse statement from the Iraqi government gave few
    details of what Iraqi Defense Minister Abdel Qader Mohammed Jassim
    and Ambassador Derya Kanbay discussed.

    --Boundary_(ID_L7wWpIcTqsl+3AZTmbx/+A) --
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