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BAKU: Ankara's Commencing Active Military Operations In Iraq May Pro

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  • BAKU: Ankara's Commencing Active Military Operations In Iraq May Pro

    ANKARA'S COMMENCING ACTIVE MILITARY OPERATIONS IN IRAQ MAY PROVOKE ENTIRE REGION - HEAD OF FEDERATION COUNCIL'S COMMITTEE

    TREND News Agency, Azerbaijan
    Oct 24 2007

    Azerbaijan, Baku / Òrend corr A. Gasimova / Ankara's commencing
    active military operations in Iraq against Kurdish militants may
    provoke a regional conflict and propel the involvement of neighbouring
    countries. "If Ankara turns to active military operations in Iraq,
    that may provoke an inter-state conflict that covers the entire region
    and will affect not only Turkey and Iraq, but also neighbouring Syria
    and Iran," Mikhail Margelov, the Chairman of the Russian Federation
    Council's Committee on International Affairs, said.

    Official Ankara states that at least 3,000 militants of the Kurdish
    Worker Party (PPK) are hiding in the hilly area of northern Iraq and
    they regularly commit acts of terror in Turkey. On 17 October, Turkish
    Parliament approved the inquiry of the Turkish Government headed by
    Prime Minister Receb Tayyip Erdogan about holding an intervention
    within Iraq, in order to carry out a trans-border military operation
    against Kurdish separatists in the north of Iraq.

    Ankara's intensions to solve the problem through military operations
    and de-facto intervention of a sovereign country can be only condemned,
    Margelov reported from Moscow by phone on 24 October.

    "Moreover, as we can see from the war between Lebanon and Israel, such
    measures grant only a temporary respite," the political scientists
    said. He believes that there is only one way out of the situation
    - establishment of a centralized power in Iraq. "A considerable
    improvement of the situation at the Iraqi-Turkish border can be
    achieved only when a strong centralized power appears in Iraq,
    which will be able to put the country under its control. But
    unfortunately, neither official Baghdad nor the United States can
    give such guarantees."

    According to Margelov, Turkey should take another position - to
    assist in every way to the new Iraqi authorities to become firmly
    established and to begin restoration of its destroyed infrastructure,
    security and control systems, instead of further destabilizing the
    situation in the country.

    At the beginning of August 2007, Turkey and Iraq agreed to jointly
    combat Kurdish militants. Ankara repeatedly threatened the Kurds in the
    north of Iraq, which is used by the PPK as bridge-head for attacking
    targets in the Turkish territory. Several times Ankara sent troops
    to the Kurdish regions in northern Iraq.

    Turkey's preparations for a military campaign against Kurds alarmed
    international society, raising fears of the threat of a new regional
    conflict when the situation in the Middle East is already strained.

    The EU and the United States have already called on Turkey to refrain
    from violence and to solve the issue through cooperation with Iraqi
    authorities. Meanwhile, the dialogue between Washington and Ankara
    on the issue is becoming complicated, as the US Congress is still
    considering the resolution that recognizes the mass slaughter of
    Armenians by Ottoman Turks at the beginning of the 20th century as
    Armenian genocide.

    --Boundary_(ID_x33PvSESze4IFSNhN0M7Bw)- -
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