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Standoff Between Ankara And The United States: Yes To Military Opera

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  • Standoff Between Ankara And The United States: Yes To Military Opera

    STANDOFF BETWEEN ANKARA AND THE UNITED STATES: YES TO MILITARY OPERATIONS AGAINST KURDS IN IRAQ
    by Mavi Zambak

    Asia News, Italy
    Oct 18 2007

    All doubts were removed by the public outrage over the US Congress
    vote on the Armenian Genocide and frustration at increased terrorist
    attacks.

    Ankara (AsiaNews) - The Turkish parliament has approved a motion put
    forward by Premier Erdogan's government, authorising - "if necessary"
    - a large scale operation in northern Iraq to eliminate Kurdish PKK
    camps (Kurdistan Workers Party founded by Ocalan). The operation could
    last up to a year. Erdogan said that the vote does not mean that any
    military intervention is imminent, but the parliamentary decision is
    laden with hidden dangers that could have global repercussions.

    It has come at a very delicate time in relations between the United
    States and Turkey, which have recently deteriorated.

    The decision to step up the offensive against the PKK by crossing
    the Iraqi border comes in the wake of the killing of 13 Turkish
    soldiers on October 8th in the south of the country close to the Iraqi
    frontier. Certainly this is not the first time that Turkish soldiers
    have been killed during operation "anvil": sconce April of this year -
    when the unilateral ceasefire with the PKK fell through - over twenty
    thousand soldiers have been tracking the Kurdish terrorists.

    But this time national resentment has been fed by the resolution
    passed by the US Congress' Commission for Foreign Affairs on October
    10th regarding events which took place in the Ottoman Empire during
    World War I and the "Armenian Genocide".

    Up until now the American ban had curbed any military intervention
    in Iraq; now the resolution on the genocide is the perfect weapon
    "against the United States", to find a way out of the ancient Turkish
    frustration over the unresolved issue of Kurdish terrorism and the
    Armenian genocide which have persecuted the Turkish nation now for
    over ninety years.

    Days before, General Yasar Buyukanit, military chief, had warned that
    the resolution being passed by the US House of Representatives, would
    "cause irreparable damage in US-Turkey relations". This is exactly
    what is happening, without the minimum consideration of the negative
    effect this backlash will have in the long term for the Turkish nation,
    in losing this close ally.

    Until now Erdogan had kept a reasonably neutral position in the face
    of military insistence, justifying his prudence with a generic "we
    must take into account all of the political, economic, diplomatic and
    military consequences". Today all hesitations vanished. He declared
    without the minimum hesitation to the nation which is pushing for a
    strong answer to terrorism: "whatever the price may be we will pay it,
    we have lost our patience". What's more, in seconding Turkey's rampant
    anti-Americanism, he said that the US ban will prove no obstacle,
    given that "they asked for no-one's permission before invading Iraq".

    It is a veritable stand-off between Ankara and Washington (who does
    not want an armed conflict in the only calm area of the country),
    given that Ankara could limit access or even close down NATO bases
    in the south of the country at Incirlik, through which over 60%
    of all US traffic to Iraq passes.

    Before the 22 July elections, public opinion had been the only reign
    on the government. Now this obstacle has been removed: intervention
    in Iraq is being demanded from all quarters, "to radically uproot
    terrorism which destroys peace and continually kills young and innocent
    Turkish lives, military and civilians". Its victims are considered
    true martyrs for the Nation; national collections for their families
    have garnished over 45 million Turkish Lire (27 million Euros) in
    just a few days.

    And yet not everybody is convinced that a military operation is the
    only decisive solution capable of defeating the PKK.

    "The list of Turkish military interventions in Iraq is very long",
    insist both Turkish and Western military analysts. "In particular
    during the '90's" -they declare - on at least two separate occasions
    Ankara's army crossed the Iraqi border with tens of thousands of
    men and a heavy military force. The support of some local Kurdish
    factions as well as the combined logistical support of the Americans
    was still not enough to defeat the PKK. And - they continue - when
    attacked the rebels take refuge in the mountains waiting for the
    storm to pass. Why should it be any different this time? Above all
    when you take into account that now the Turks cannot even count on
    support from the Kurds or the Americans".

    Moreover, Northern Iraq is not what it was 90 years ago: it is part
    of a legitimate state, with its own president of the republic and
    foreign minister. The president of the autonomous Iraqi Kurdistan,
    Massud Barzani, has declared that a Turkish invasion of the Qandil
    Mountains, where the PKK rebel bases are believed to be, would be
    considered an act of aggression against the independence of the entire
    region which is being called to decide its own future by popular vote
    in November. Within this lies the city of Kirkuk - referred to as the
    "Kurdish Jerusalem" for the mix of religions and ethnic minorities -
    which according Barzani will remain within Iraqi Kurdistan after the
    referendum, thus giving the Kurds the economic benefits of the massive
    oil reserves ( equal to over half of all Iraqi reserves). A tasty
    morsel which invites a lot of speculation and which risks becoming
    a new hotbed within the Middle East.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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