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Diplomacy must be used to dissuade Turkey from mil. action in Iraq

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  • Diplomacy must be used to dissuade Turkey from mil. action in Iraq

    Allentown Morning Call, PA
    Oct 19 2007


    Diplomacy must be used to dissuade Turkey from military action in
    Iraq
    October 19, 2007


    Turkey, with its border on Iraq, is an important U.S. ally in a
    troubled part of the world. The country is used for oil transit in
    the region. Also, though the United States doesn't have troops at the
    border, it controls the airspace. An American air base, Incirlik, is
    in southern Turkey.

    Consequently, it was worrisome when the Turkish Parliament decided
    Wednesday to authorize cross-border military operations into northern
    Iraq in an attempt to combat Kurdish separatist rebels. The
    Parliament voted overwhelmingly, 507-19, to give Turkish Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan permission to launch strikes at any
    time during the next year.

    Military action isn't expected yet. But the Parliament vote was a
    clear signal of the country's growing lack of patience with the fact
    that the northern Iraq Kurdish government has given rebels of the
    Kurdistan Workers' Party the freedom to run its headquarters and
    training camps, and plot attacks on Turkey across the border.

    President Bush, Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and NATO
    Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer are urging Turkey to exercise
    restraint. They fear that military strikes by Turkey could prompt
    involvement by neighboring countries, especially Iran and Syria. As
    it is, both Turkey and Iran have fired artillery shells into northern
    Iraq in recent weeks. Also, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad told The
    Washington Post for a story Thursday that his country supports ''all
    decisions by Turkey and we are standing behind them.''

    Relations between Turkey and the United States took a downward turn
    last week when a House committee passed a resolution calling the
    World War I-era mass killing of Armenians an act of genocide.
    Congressional leaders, recognizing the critical nature of U.S.-Turkey
    relations, have since backed away from a commitment to hold a vote on
    that bill.

    But, U.S.-Turkey relations remain strained because Kurdish rebels in
    Iraq have conducted raids into Turkey and the United States has not
    responded to complaints from Turkey about the ongoing problem. The
    Turkish military estimates that 3,800 Turkish Kurd guerrillas operate
    from Iraqi territory and 2,300 in Turkey.

    Northern Iraq, where the Kurds dominate, has largely escaped the
    strife of the war in Iraq since the U.S.-led invasion in 2003. The
    situation is complicated, however, because, even though Washington
    lists the rebel Kurds as a terrorist group, Iraqi Kurds are reluctant
    to fight Kurds who have ties to Turkey.

    Parliament's vote Wednesday sent the price of a barrel of oil up to a
    record $89; it then settled at $87.40. But the wider concern, of
    course, is that neighboring countries will get involved in Iraq if
    Turkey were to finally lose patience and send its troops. Diplomacy
    by the United States and NATO is of the utmost importance.
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