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Iraqi Vice President In Turkey

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  • Iraqi Vice President In Turkey

    IRAQI VICE PRESIDENT IN TURKEY
    By Selcan Hacaoglu

    The Associated Press
    Oct 16 2007

    ANKARA, Turkey (AP) - Iraq's Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi arrived
    in Ankara on Tuesday in an apparent attempt to convince Turkey not
    to stage a cross-border offensive to fight separatist Kurdish rebels
    based in Iraq.

    Al-Hashemi, a Sunni Arab, was scheduled to meet with Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan and other senior officials. The Turkish Parliament
    was expected to approve a motion Wednesday allowing the government
    to order a cross-border attack over the next year.

    "The passage of the motion in Parliament does not mean that an
    operation will be carried out at once," Erdogan said Tuesday. "Turkey
    would act with common sense and determination when necessary and when
    the time is ripe."

    Erdogan called on Iraq and Iraqi Kurds to crack down on separatist
    rebels. He said the regional administration in northern Iraq should
    "build a thick wall between itself and terrorist organizations."

    Erdogan said any action would only target the rebels and Turkey would
    respect Iraq's territorial integrity.

    Washington has urged NATO-ally Turkey not to enter Iraq, fearing that
    unilateral Turkish military action could destabilize the autonomous
    Kurdish region in the north which is one of the country's few
    relatively stable areas. The Kurds are a longtime U.S. ally.

    An offensive could also undermine Turkey's relations with the European
    Union, which has pushed Turkey to treat its minority Kurds better.

    But Turkey says some European countries tolerate the activities of PKK
    sympathizers and is frustrated with the perceived lack of U.S. support
    in the fight against the PKK.

    "We have serious expectations from the U.S. administration on the
    issue," Egemen Bagis, a foreign policy adviser to Erdogan said Tuesday.

    Turkey's frustration with the perceived lack of U.S. support in
    the fight against the PKK, branded as terrorists by Washington, has
    intensified because of another sensitive issue: the killing of up to
    1.5 million Armenians in the final years of the Ottoman Empire.

    A U.S. House panel approved a resolution last week labeling the
    killings as genocide, an affront to Turks who deny any systematic
    campaign to eliminate Armenians at that time. U.S. officials now
    fear Turkey, a cargo hub for U.S. forces in Iraq, could retaliate by
    curbing the flow of fuel and other supplies to American bases.

    House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has said she will schedule a vote soon on
    the resolution.

    On Tuesday, however, a top Turkish official said the country should
    not punish the U.S. administration over the resolution, but instead
    should impose sanctions against Armenia for supporting the measure.

    "Bush and his team should not be punished," Egemen Bagis, a foreign
    policy adviser to Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, said
    on CNN-Turk television. "The reaction should be against Pelosi and
    her team."

    Bagis noted that Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Defense
    Secretary Robert Gates had lobbied against the measure.

    In a televised speech on Tuesday, Erdogan compared the resolution to a
    "summary execution."

    "Nobody has the right to judge Turkey like this," Erdogan said.

    "Those who dare confront an important country like Turkey will pay
    the price."

    Bagis said Turkey should impose sanctions against Armenia because it
    supported the resolution.

    "Turkey must impose sanctions against Armenia," Bagis said. "Turkey
    has already done a list of what and when it will do, and the prime
    minister has already given necessary orders."

    On Tuesday, however, a top Turkish official said the country should not
    punish the U.S. administration over a resolution in the U.S. Congress
    that calls the World War I-era killings of Armenians a genocide,
    but instead should impose sanctions against Armenia for supporting
    the measure, a top Turkish official said Tuesday.

    A U.S. House of Representatives panel approved a resolution last week
    labeling the killings as genocide, an affront to Turks who deny any
    systematic campaign to eliminate Armenians at that time.

    U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said she would schedule a vote soon
    on the resolution. U.S. President George W. Bush opposed it.

    "Bush and his team should not be punished," Egemen Bagis, a foreign
    policy adviser to Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, said
    on CNN-Turk television. "The reaction should be against Pelosi and
    her team."

    Bagis noted that U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Defense
    Secretary Robert Gates had lobbied against the measure.

    In a televised speech on Tuesday, Erdogan compared the resolution to a
    "summary execution."

    "Nobody has the right to judge Turkey like this," Erdogan said.

    "Those who dare confront an important country like Turkey will pay
    the price."

    Bagis said Turkey should impose sanctions against Armenia because it
    supported the resolution.

    "Turkey must impose sanctions against Armenia," Bagis said. "Turkey
    has already done a list of what and when it will do, and the prime
    minister has already given necessary orders."

    Turkey staged several incursions in the 1990s but they failed to
    stamp out rebel hideouts.

    A Turkish soldier was killed Tuesday when he stepped on a mine,
    believed to have been planted by Kurdish rebels, near the southeastern
    city of Bingol, local authorities said.

    PKK rebels have demanded autonomy in Turkey's Kurdish-dominated
    southeast since 1984 in a conflict that has claimed tens of thousands
    of lives.
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