Iraq
warns Turkey against 'disastrous' incursion
AFP/Behrouz
Mehri

Machines use yellow cake to produce Uranium hexafluoride
(UF6) at the Iranian Isfahan Uranium Conversion Facilities
(UCF), 420 kms south of Tehran, February 2007.
ANKARA
Petroleumworld.com
10 30 07
Turkey paraded its military muscle Monday, amid
stern warnings from Baghdad that any large-scale Turkish incursion against Kurdish
rebel bases in northern Iraq would have "disastrous" results.
In the capital Ankara, tanks and rocket launchers were on display in the annual
national day parade as Turks celebrated the 84th anniversary of the secular republic's
creation by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk.
In stark contrast to the festive mood across most of the country, Turkish troops
faced off with some 100 rebels in the Ikiyaka mountains in the southeast.
The military had surrounded the fighters from the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK)
in a bid to prevent them escaping across the Iraqi border, the Anatolia news
agency reported.
Witnesses saw helicopter gunships pounding suspected rebel positions in mountainous
areas on the Turkish side.
Turkey has threatened a major cross-border assault on PKK bases in northern Iraq
if Baghdad and Washington fail to make good on promises to crack down on the
rebels there.
Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari warned Monday that such a move could have "disastrous
consequences" and would be met with stiff Iraqi resistance.
"They are talking about a large-scale military incursion which is getting
people extremely, extremely nervous and worried," Zebari told the BBC in
an interview.
Describing the situation on the Turkish-Iraqi border as "dead serious," Zebari
complained that Turkey "was not responsive" when Iraqi officials flew
to Ankara last week for talks.
According to Turkish media reports, some 100,000 Turkish troops have been deployed
along the border over the past week.
Zebari also insisted that Turkish demands for PKK leaders in northern Iraq to
be rounded up and handed over were unrealistic.
"They are not under our control in fact. They are up in the mountains, they
are armed," he said.
Monday's celebrations saw President Abdullah Gul lead top officials on the traditional
trek to Ataturk's imposing mausoleum on a hill overlooking Ankara.
The separatist PKK, considered a terrorist group by much of the international
community, has fought for self-rule in southeast Turkey since 1984 in a conflict
that has claimed more than 37,000 lives.
Several cities witnessed anti-PKK protests, which have been held on a daily basis
since October 21, the day 12 Turkish soldiers were killed and eight taken prisoner
in a PKK ambush near the Iraqi border.
The army has reported killing more than 60 rebels since, but has yet to confirm
media reports Sunday that another 15 were killed in fighting in eastern Tunceli
province.
One Turkish soldier was killed and another wounded in the fighting, while a second
soldier died in a separate incident in the southeastern province of Sirnak, according
to reports.
Talks between Turkey and Iraq in Ankara collapsed on Friday.
Ankara had asked Baghdad to submit "concrete proposals" for dealing
with the rebels, but said it found the Iraqi offers "unsatisfactory," if "well-intentioned."
Turkey will launch a military operation "when it deems necessary," Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Saturday.
Erdogan and US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice are to meet here Thursday
in a further bid to settle the crisis through diplomacy.
The culminating point of diplomatic efforts will likely come on November 5, when
Erdogan is scheduled to meet US President George W. Bush at the White House.
It will be the first meeting between the two since Erdogan's governing Justice
and Development Party won snap elections on July 22.
Washington wants to avoid destabilising the relatively peaceful north of Iraq,
administered by its Iraqi Kurd allies, but NATO-member Turkey, traditionally
the closest US supporter in the region, says it has reached the limits of its
patience.
General Yasar Buyukanit, the chief of Turkey's general staff, said it was unlikely
that any military operation would take place before the Erdogan-Bush talks.
Story by
Burak Akinci from AFP
AFP
29 1840 GMT 10 07
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