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VoA: Gates Meets Turkish Defense Minister Sunday On Iraq Tension

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  • VoA: Gates Meets Turkish Defense Minister Sunday On Iraq Tension

    GATES MEETS TURKISH DEFENSE MINISTER SUNDAY ON IRAQ TENSION
    By Al Pessin

    Voice of America
    Oct 21 2007
    Washington

    U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates will meet with Turkey's defense
    minister in Ukraine on Sunday to urge restraint in Turkey's desire
    to attack Kurdish insurgents based in Northern Iraq. The meeting
    will be one of the first items on the secretary's five-day visit to
    Europe, which will also involve talks on U.S. effort to install a
    part of its new missile defense system in Europe and on the need for
    more capability to support NATO-led operations in Afghanistan. VOA
    Pentagon Correspondent Al Pessin is traveling with the secretary,
    and filed this report shortly before their departure Saturday night.

    The U.S. and Turkish ministers will have much to discuss during
    their scheduled half-hour meeting, including the Turkish government's
    request, approved by parliament last week, for permission to invade
    Northern Iraq to hunt for Kurdish guerrillas. Secretary Gates spoke
    about the issue during a news conference on Thursday.

    "We call on Turkey to refrain from military action into Iraq that
    would create an international crisis, and further undermine stability
    in Iraq," said Gates.

    Secretary Gates went on to say the U.S. and Iraqi governments would "do
    the appropriate thing" if they received specific information about the
    activities of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) [which is blamed for a
    series of deadly raids inside Turkey]. Iraqi officials have also been
    involved in intense, high-level diplomacy with Turkey about the issue.

    Turkey is also concerned about a U.S. congressional resolution that
    would label the Turkish mass killing of Armenians early in the last
    century as "genocide." It now appears that the resolution may not pass,
    but Secretary Gates says, if it does, he has no doubt that Turkey
    will retaliate by cutting U.S. access to the key base at Incirlik. He
    has said that would have a significant impact on supplies flowing to
    U.S. forces in Iraq.

    The other main focus of the secretary's trip will be NATO's lead
    security role in Afghanistan.

    "One of the problems that we encountered is that, while we have
    40 countries cooperating in Afghanistan to help Afghanistan, both
    in terms of security and in terms of development, not all of those
    countries have delivered on the commitments they made at Riga, at
    the NATO summit," he said.

    Secretary Gates says that will be the "centerpiece" of his meetings
    with NATO defense ministers in Holland later in the week. He says the
    most pressing needs are for training teams for Afghanistan's army and
    police force. The American general in charge of the training program
    says he needs about 60 more teams, each with about 16 members. In
    addition, officials say, the NATO effort needs more airlift and fewer
    restrictions on the use of the forces it has.

    Secretary Gates says NATO prevented a Taliban offensive during the
    spring. But he acknowledges violence has increased in Afghanistan this
    year, and he wants the NATO ministers to develop a long-term strategy.

    "We need to look ahead and see what we're going to do over the next
    year or two to have a strategic plan that moves us in the right
    direction in terms of the security situation, but also better
    coordination of the economic and civil development part of the
    challenge," added Gates.

    The NATO ministers are also expected to discuss progress reports from
    Albania, Croatia and Macedonia on steps they are taking to qualify
    for invitations to join the alliance.

    Secretary Gates will also visit Prague during his trip for talks
    focused on the U.S. desire to put a sophisticated anti-missile radar
    in the country. It would be linked to an anti-missile launch site the
    United States wants to put in Poland. A senior U.S. defense official
    says negotiations over the Czech facility are ahead of schedule,
    and could be completed in time for construction to begin next year.

    Russia is strongly opposed to the plan, and during a visit to Moscow
    earlier this month, Secretary Gates presented some secret proposals
    designed to ease Russian concerns. The U.S. official who spoke on
    condition of anonymity Friday said Russia had not yet responded to
    the ideas.

    Secretary Gates will also meet with members of the Southeastern Europe
    Defense Ministers organization. The U.S. official who spoke Friday
    says the group will discuss possible future deployments of its joint
    force. The organization deployed about 100 troops to Afghanistan last
    years to provide headquarters services for the NATO-led operation
    there.
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