Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Concern grows at Turkey's Iraq incursion plan

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

  • Concern grows at Turkey's Iraq incursion plan

    Concern grows at Turkey's Iraq incursion plan
    By Daniel Dombey and Demetri Sevastopulo in Washington,and Vincent
    Boland in Ankara

    FT
    October 17 2007 03:00

    Turkey's parliament is set to give authorisation as early as today to a
    large-scale incursion into northern Iraq, despite mounting
    international concern about the consequences of such a move,
    particularly in the US.

    Yesterday, Tariq al-Hashemi, an Iraqi vice-president, flew into Ankara
    to plead with Turkish officials to choose another course in their bid
    to crack down on the Kurdish separatists of the PKK.

    "Approval does not mean that an operation will be undertaken
    immediately," Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkish prime minister, told his
    MPs ahead of today's debate, which is expected to end in a vote to
    authorise an incursion.

    He added Turkey would "act with common sense and determination when the
    time is right".

    But the Bush administration is worried that a large- scale Turkish
    military operation in Iraq could spiral out of control, leading to a
    possible clash between Turkish and Kurdish government soldiers.

    At the same time it is seeking to limit the fallout from the vote last
    week by a US Congressional committee to denounce the killings of
    Armenians during the Ottoman empire as genocide, amid fears that Turkey
    will reduce logistical support for US troops in Iraq if the bill is
    approved by the full House of Representatives.

    "The Turkey-US relationship is becoming a victim of the tensions
    between Congress and the administration: the relationship between the
    Democrats and the White House is now so bad that it really limits what
    the administration can do," said Bulent Aliriza, director of the Turkey
    programme at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies in
    Washington.

    He added that the Bush administration was worried that a large scale
    Turkish intervention could rapidly turn into "a conflict between the
    US's strategic ally, Turkey, and its tactical ally, the Kurds".

    "We are trying to promote the idea that regional stability is in
    everyone's interest," said a US government official. On being asked
    whether Washington was worried about the possibility of clashes between
    Turkish and Kurdish government forces he added: "There is definitely
    that angle."

    In the meantime, Washington's call for Turkey to co-operate with Iraq
    and the US on a joint anti- PKK push has been hit by the recent
    resignation of Joseph Ralston, the retired US general who had been
    appointed to co-ordinate such an effort.

    Mr Erdogan said yesterday that the only target of any Turkish military
    operation would be the PKK.

    But US officials are also worried that other countries could be drawn
    into a conflict and have noted recent clashes between Iranian forces
    and Kurdish rebels based in north-east Iraq.

    Speaking in Brussels yesterday Antonio Guterres, United Nations High
    Commissioner for Refugees said he was "extremely concerned" about the
    possibility of conflict on the Turkish-Iraq border.

    Still, Peter Rodman, a former senior Bush administration Pentagon
    official, argued that from the US standpoint it would be preferable
    that Turkey sent troops into northern Iraq rather than cut off crucial
    military supply lines because of the Armenian genocide resolution.

    "Maybe that is the only solution," said Mr Rodman, now at the Brookings
    Institution. "If the US is unable to deal with it [the PKK], and the
    Iraqis are unwilling to deal with them, what else do you tell the
    Turks? There may be ways to go after the PKK and accomplish something,
    whereas strangling our logistical lifeline doesn't help them with the
    PKK and it just creates a monumental problem."

    The Pentagon is concerned that Ankara could react to the House passage
    of the Armenian resolution by limiting, or denying, it access to
    Turkish air space. The US military relies heavily on Turkey, which
    hosts a US air base at Incirlik, to transport supplies, fuel and
    equipment into Iraq and Afghanistan.

    Robert Gates, US defence secretary, said last week that 70 per cent of
    the materials the US sends by air to the war zones went through Turkish
    air space, while 30 per cent of fuel shipments went through the country.

    In an attempt to warn US lawmakers about the damage the resolution
    could cause, the Pentagon has stressed that 95 per cent of the heavily
    armoured MRAP vehicles designed to protect soldiers from roadside
    bombs, the biggest killer of troops in Iraq, are shipped through Turkey.

    Pentagon planners are preparing contingency plans. While the US could
    find alternative routes - as it had to do after it was evicted from
    Uzkekistan several years ago - it would prove costly and time consuming.

    Omar Taspinar, an expert on Turkey at the National War College, said
    the US would have to look for alternative air routes in the Gulf,
    including Qatar and Kuwait, should Turkey cut off access to its air
    space.

    Additional reporting by Laura Dixon in Brussels
Working...
X