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  • Turkey threatens to attack Kurdish separatists in Iraq

    Turkey threatens to attack Kurdish separatists in Iraq

    Despite U.S. pleas for restraint, government will ask parliament to
    approve the operation.

    Los Angeles Times
    By Yesim Borg
    Special to The Times

    October 16, 2007

    ISTANBUL, TURKEY - The Turkish government Monday said it would seek
    parliamentary approval this week to launch a major military operation
    into northern Iraq to attack Kurdish separatists based there, after
    days of cross-border shelling of suspected rebel positions.

    The threatened action comes despite pleas from Washington and Baghdad
    that Turkey refrain from an incursion into Iraq that could destabilize
    an already volatile part of the world.

    Government spokesman Cemil Cicek said that although Turkey respected
    Iraq's sovereignty, it had to act against Kurdish separatists who have
    stepped up their deadly attacks on Turkish troops in recent weeks.

    Several thousand rebels of the Kurdistan Workers Party, or PKK, are
    believed holed up in the mountains of northern Iraq.

    "The reality that everyone knows is that this terrorist organization,
    which has bases in the north of Iraq, is attacking the territorial
    integrity of Turkey and its citizens," Cicek told a news conference in
    Ankara, the Turkish capital.

    He was speaking after the Cabinet approved a motion seeking yearlong
    permission to send troops into Iraq. The motion is to go before
    parliament Wednesday, and is expected to be approved.

    Analysts caution, however, that approval of the request does not mean
    an invasion will be launched immediately.

    The motion gives Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan a bargaining chip
    as he seeks to quell rebel attacks and placate an army chomping at the
    bit to attack.

    Turkish governments were granted similar carte blanche twice in recent
    years but did not act on them.

    Turkey has been shelling targets in northern Iraq in recent days,
    including populated villages, according to Iraqi, Kurdish and Turkish
    sources. Shelling continued Sunday night in the hamlet of Kani Masi in
    the autonomous Kurdish region of northern Iraq, Agence France-Presse
    reported.

    The Bush administration, fearful that Turkish military action in
    northern Iraq would inflame the single relatively peaceful part of
    that country, has dispatched a string of envoys to Ankara to urge
    restraint.

    But Washington lost much of its power of persuasion in Turkey last
    week, when a U.S. House of Representatives committee voted to
    recognize as genocide the deaths of as many as 1.5 million Armenians
    at the hands of Ottoman Turks nearly a century ago.

    The resolution angered Turkish officials, who maintain that the mass
    slaughter of Armenians should be viewed in the context of world war
    and judged by historians, not politicians.

    Times staff writer Tracy Wilkinson in Rome contributed to this report.

    Source: http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-f g-turkey16oct16,1,1069584.story?ctrack=1&cset= true
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