Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkish Assembly Approves Possible Iraq Incursion

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Turkish Assembly Approves Possible Iraq Incursion

    TURKISH ASSEMBLY APPROVES POSSIBLE IRAQ INCURSION
    By Mark Bentley

    Bloomberg
    Oct 17 2007

    Oct. 17 (Bloomberg) -- Turkish legislators authorized the use of
    military force against Kurdish rebels in northern Iraq, a step that
    may further damage Iraqi security and disrupt oil supplies.

    The assembly in Turkey's capital Ankara backed the motion by 507
    votes to 19, Parliament Speaker Koksal Toptan told lawmakers today.

    The measure allows Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan to authorize
    one or more military assaults within a year.

    Erdogan is threatening to direct an attack against members of the
    Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK, saying U.S.-led forces failed to
    control about 3,500 militants sheltered in Iraq's north. The PKK has
    fought a two-decade war of independence from Turkey at the cost of
    almost 40,000 lives.

    "The U.S. must realize the seriousness of this situation and Turkey's
    determination to root out terrorism," said lawmaker Sadullah Ergin,
    speaking to parliament on behalf of Erdogan's governing party. "Iraq
    has become a stomping ground for terrorists."

    The U.S. has urged Turkey to stay out of the oil-rich region,
    a relatively calm area of the country, as American forces seek to
    reduce violence between ethnic Shiite and Sunni Muslim militants in
    other parts of Iraq.

    President George W. Bush re-emphasized American efforts to persuade
    Turkey to exercise restraint in dealing with Kurdish rebels launching
    attacks from the mountainous border area in northern Iraq.

    "We don't think it's in their interest to send more troops in,"
    Bush told reporters in Washington today.

    `Threats Not Useful'

    Turkey, with the second-largest army in NATO, sent troops into northern
    Iraq in pursuit of PKK militants several times in the decade before
    the U.S.-led war to oust Saddam Hussein in 2003. It has halted such
    assaults since the U.S.-led invasion, instead attacking PKK units as
    they have entered Turkey.

    The PKK is designated a terrorist organization by the U.S. and the
    European Union.

    Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki phoned Erdogan today to appeal
    for more time to deal with the PKK, saying Iraqi forces could join the
    Turkish army in a military operation against the group "if necessary,"
    CNN Turk television reported.

    "Threats are not useful," Barham Salih, the Kurdish Deputy Prime
    Minister of Iraq said in London today. A Turkish raid "will
    have serious implications for Iraq, Turkey and for our bilateral
    relationships. It will not be helpful to anybody," he said at a news
    conference at Chatham House, a London-based consultant that advises
    European governments on foreign policy.

    NATO Urges Calm

    Turkey should seek to "remain calm" in the face of PKK attacks, North
    Atlantic Treaty Organization Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer
    told President Abdullah Gul in a telephone conversation today, CNN
    Turk said.

    "The Iraqi government should be given a chance to prevent cross-border
    terrorist activities," Iraqi Vice-President Tareq al-Hashemi said in
    Ankara after meeting with Erdogan.

    Crude oil rose to a record $89 a barrel in New York after the
    Turkish vote.

    Crude for November delivery rose 87 cents, or 1 percent, to $88.48
    a barrel at 11:24 a.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Futures
    reached $89, the highest since the contract was introduced in 1983.

    Prices are up 50 percent from a year ago. This is the seventh straight
    daily gain.

    "Oil supplies are very tight -- Saudi Arabia can barely fill up any
    capacity constraints from Iraq," said Fadi Hakura, an analyst at
    Chatham House.

    Kirkuk Pipeline

    Iraq's oil-rich city of Kirkuk is located about 100 miles (160
    kilometers) from the border with Turkey. Iraq exports a portion of
    its oil via a 600-mile (965 kilometer) pipeline stretching from Kirkuk
    to Turkey's Ceyhan port.

    Erdogan's government asked parliament to approve the incursion after
    more than two dozen soldiers and civilians were killed over the past
    two weeks in attacks blamed on the PKK.

    Turkish companies started pulling workers out of northern Iraq ahead of
    today's vote in parliament and the rival Nationalist Action Party urged
    Erdogan's government to widen the attack on the PKK to include fighters
    loyal to Iraqi Kurdish leader Massoud Barzani, Vatan newspaper said.

    Relations between the U.S. and Turkey, both NATO allies, worsened
    last week after a U.S. House of Representatives committee passed
    a resolution labeling the World War I-era killing of Armenians by
    Ottoman Turks as genocide. Turkey withdrew its ambassador to Washington
    in protest.

    Pentagon Planning

    The Pentagon is drafting plans for alternate supply routes into Iraq
    in the event Turkey closes its airspace to the U.S. because of the
    resolution, a senior military official told reporters yesterday.

    The U.S. military is "looking at a broad range of options" it could
    pursue if Turkey cuts air and ground access, said Lieutenant General
    Carter Ham, the director of operations for the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
    according to the American Forces Press Service. "That is prudent
    military planning."

    Seventy percent of U.S. air cargo into Iraq goes through Turkey,
    including almost all of the new vehicles containing heavy armor to
    protect against roadside bombs, Defense Secretary Robert Gates said
    Oct. 11.

    A Turkish attack would put the U.S. in a difficult position, Ham
    said. Turkey is a "highly valued NATO ally," though the U.S. is also
    committed to Iraq's sovereignty and its right to protect itself,
    he added.
Working...
X