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    Washington Times
    Editorial
    Act now

    October 25, 2007

    In recent weeks, as the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) has stepped up
    its murderous campaign to plunge Turkey and Iraq into war,
    well-intentioned Kurds have embarked on a PR campaign aimed at telling
    the world that the PKK is really interested in halting armed struggle
    and becoming a nonviolent political party. Apparently, the PKK didn't
    get the message that it had become a "peaceful" political grouping: On
    Sunday afternoon, several hundred PKK fighters ambushed a group of
    Turkish troops on Turkish soil killing at least 12. Indeed, since the
    beginning of the year, scores of Turks have died in PKK attacks,
    including a dozen civilians who were dragged off a public bus and shot
    to death several weeks ago.

    Along with PKK terror, and Turkey's perception that the United States
    until very recently had done little to try to stop it, House Speaker
    Nancy Pelosi has weighed in with some mischief of her own: She has
    pressed the House Foreign Affairs Committee to pass a resolution
    condemning Turkey for genocide against the Armenians between 1915 and
    1923. This combination could do serious damage to U.S. relations with
    Turkey, a NATO ally which is playing critical roles in supporting U.S.
    military campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan. Two weeks ago, Ankara
    recalled its ambassador from Washington, and Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan has warned that U.S.-Turkish relations could be "cut
    off." Milliyet, a pro-Western newspaper, ran a front-page editorial
    demanding that Turkey curb the usage of its military base at Incirlik
    by the U.S. military in response to the Armenia measure, which Mrs.
    Pelosi wants on the November calendar.

    Since the U.S. deposed Saddam Hussein in 2003, Turkey has repeatedly
    demanded that the United States hit PKK bases in northern Iraq or
    force the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) to take action. But
    until now, Washington has responded to Turkey's complaints with
    excuses and empty promises to act at some point in the future. Well,
    as the late Redskins Coach George Allen used to say, the future is
    now. According to the Pentagon, more than two-thirds of all cargo
    shipped to Iraq and Afghanistan is sent through Turkey, which has
    given Washington blanket permission for military logistical operations
    using Turkish territory. Turkey, which has more than 1,100 troops in
    Afghanistan in addition to reconstruction teams, plays a vital role in
    maintaining security in Kabul. If Turkey were to reduce its military
    cooperation, it would undermine the missions in Afghanistan and Iraq
    put the lives of American soldiers there at risk.

    One bit of good news is that the Bush administration has come to the
    realization that it needs to put pressure on the KRG now to eradicate
    the terrorist presence in northern Iraq right away. The failure to do
    so would be catastrophic for the Kurds and the Iraqi people as a
    whole.

    Source: http://www.washingtontimes.com/article/20071025/ED ITORIAL/110250008/1013
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