Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

PKK Pushes Turkey To Brink With Fresh Attacks

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

  • PKK Pushes Turkey To Brink With Fresh Attacks

    PKK PUSHES TURKEY TO BRINK WITH FRESH ATTACKS
    Suna Erdem in Istanbul, for Times Online

    Times Online
    October 21, 2007

    The prospect of Turkey invading northern Iraq drew closer today after
    Kurdish rebels killed at least 12 soldiers in an ambush, blowing up
    a bridge near the Iraqi border as a military convoy crossed.

    The Turkish Prime Minister flew back to Ankara for an emergency summit
    with military leaders after the attack, in which another 16 troops
    were injured in heavy fighting and, according to unconfirmed reports,
    a further 10 were missing, believed kidnapped. In a separate incident
    in the same province today at least 17 people were injured when a
    mine blew up a wedding convoy.

    The provocative upsurge in violence comes days after the Turkish
    Parliament gave the authorisation to press ahead with a threatened
    cross-border military incursion into Iraq, despite warnings from
    Washington and Brussels.

    Turkey blames US and Iraqi authorities for failing to clamp down on
    the activities of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which has been
    using its guerilla bases in the mountains of the autonomous Kurdish
    region of northern Iraq to mount increasingly intense attacks on
    Turkish targets in recent weeks.

    "We are determined to respond to these events in a level-headed manner.

    What must be done will be done...We are not giving any thought to
    what others might say," Mr Erdogan said as he prepared to fly to the
    capital, Ankara, to join President Abdullah Gul and senior officials
    for the summit.

    "We are very angry at the moment."

    Turkey's Government is under strong public and military pressure to
    take action against the PKK in northern Iraq. There are reportedly
    between 60,000 and 100,000 troops deployed along the border to try
    to stop the rebels crossing back into Turkey. Mr Erdogan has already
    ordered plans for some sort of cross-border action days after 13
    Turkish troops were killed in an overnight ambush earlier this
    month. That ambush sparked nationwide condemnation as the soldiers'
    funerals turned into marches demanding retaliation.

    Turkey's Nato ally, the United States, and the Baghdad government
    are worried about the prospect of Turkish troops destabilising the
    only relatively peaceful part of the country. But anger at a recent
    US congressional vote to blame Ottoman Turks for genocide against
    Armenians in World War One has deafened Turkish ears to calls for
    calm from Washington.

    Western diplomats and analysts, however, believe Turkey is reluctant
    to go ahead with an operation that would cause diplomatic and economic
    headaches.

    According to Mr Erdogan, Turkey has mounted 24 previous cross-border
    incursions with little lasting effect.

    The Turkish General staff said in a statement that 23 guerrillas
    were killed during the overnight attack on a military convoy in the
    border region of Hakkari's Daglarca district. The statement said 63
    'targets' were under heavy fire as clashes continued into the day,
    and an air-backed military operation was launched in the area.

    The PKK claimed that it had had the upper hand in the fighting. "There
    were clashes between the two sides. We killed a large number of
    them. We took a group of Turkish soldiers as prisoners," said Abdul
    Rahman al-Chadirchi, a leading member of the PKK.

    Jalal Talabani, the Iraqi President and himself a Kurd, warned
    Ankara that it's demands that Iraq should flush out the PKK were
    unrealistic. Iraq's armed forces would be unable to impose its will
    on the Kurdish separatists in the north where the might of the large
    and well-equipped Turkish army had failed, he said.

    Massoud Barzani, the President of the autonomous Kurdish region of
    Iraq, warned meanwhile that if Turkey moved in, the Kurdistan regional
    government would be compelled to defend its people.
Working...
X