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Nervous US Vows Help For Turkey Against PKK Rebels

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  • Nervous US Vows Help For Turkey Against PKK Rebels

    NERVOUS US VOWS HELP FOR TURKEY AGAINST PKK REBELS
    by Laurent Lozano

    Agence France Presse -- English
    Oct 23 2007

    President George W. Bush Monday promised US cooperation in Turkey's
    struggle against Kurdish rebels operating out of northern Iraq, but
    Washington also urged restraint after deadly border clashes.

    Bush telephoned Turkish President Abdullah Gul and "expressed his
    deep concern" about the weekend attacks by the outlawed Kurdistan
    Workers' Party (PKK), White House national security council spokesman
    Gordon Johndroe said.

    "The president reaffirmed our commitment to work with Turkey and Iraq
    to combat PKK terrorists operating out of northern Iraq," he said,
    without spelling out what kind of US help might be extended.

    The PKK said it had captured eight Turkish soldiers after an ambush
    Sunday on a military unit near the village of Daglica on the Iraqi
    border, which left 12 troops dead.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has threatened to launch
    a military drive into northern Iraq unless Baghdad clamps down on the
    rebels and turns over the PKK leaders it accuses of masterminding
    cross-border attacks.

    The United States, which uses the Incirlik air base in southern
    Turkey as a major staging post for supplies headed to its forces in
    Iraq and Afghanistan, fears any incursion could gravely undermine its
    battle to stabilize Iraq.

    In a video-conference with Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, Bush
    pressed for more action from authorities in Baghdad and Iraq's
    Kurdish north against the PKK.

    "The prime minister agreed with President Bush that Turkey should
    have no doubt about our mutual commitment to end all terrorist
    activity from Iraqi soil," Johndroe said.

    "They agreed to work together, in cooperation with the Turkish
    government, to prevent the PKK from using any part of Iraqi territory
    to plan or carry out terrorist attacks."

    US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice earlier Monday telephoned
    Erdogan to urge restraint and also spoke with the president of Iraqi
    Kurdistan, Massoud Barzani.

    "We do not believe unilateral cross-border operations are the best
    way to address this issue," State Department spokesman Sean McCormack
    said.

    As tensions soared, Rice and visiting British Foreign Secretary David
    Miliband called for Turkey and Iraq to work together against the PKK.

    "We continue to believe that cooperation and coordination between
    Turkey and Iraq is the most effective means to eliminate the PKK
    threat," the top US and British officials said in a joint statement.

    "At a time when we are seeing real progress in the security situation
    inside Iraq and efforts to promote peace in the region, the Iraqi
    government must demonstrate its commitment to regional stability,"
    they added.

    The PKK, the Turkish acronym for the Kurdistan Workers Party,
    contends that the government has oppressed minority Kurds for
    decades.

    The group, which is fighting for Kurdish self-rule in southeast
    Turkey, said in a statement that it was ready for a ceasefire "if the
    Turkish army stops attacking our positions, drops plans for an
    incursion and resorts to peace."

    More than 37,000 people have been killed since the PKK took up arms
    against the Turkish state in 1984.

    US Defense Secretary Robert Gates, in talks with his Turkish
    counterpart Vecdi Gonul in Ukraine on Sunday, said restraint was
    preferable and "not to be confused with weakness."

    "I'm heartened that he (Gonul) seems to be implying a reluctance on
    their part to act unilaterally, and I think that's a good thing,"
    Gates said, adding: "I didn't have the impression that anything was
    imminent."

    However, Washington fears that its influence with Turkey has been
    undermined by a push in the US Congress to describe the World War I
    massacre of Armenians by Ottoman Turks as "genocide."

    "President Bush also reiterated his opposition to House Resolution
    106, the Armenian 'genocide' resolution," Johndroe said.

    After the resolution was approved by the House Foreign Affairs
    Committee, Turkey recalled its ambassador to Washington and has
    threatened to cut off logistical support to the US war efforts in
    Iraq and Afghanistan.

    Meanwhile, Iraqi Deputy Prime Minister Barham Salih, who is a Kurd,
    indicated during an appearance at a Washington policy institute
    Monday that the Kurdish regional government would not attack its
    ethnic kin.

    "Don't ask us to start an endless civil war," he said.
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