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Turkish warplanes bomb Kurd rebels

US military sees no sign of Turkish air strikes
A senior US military official said Wednesday he knew of no Turkish air strikes or cross-border incursions into northern Iraq despite reports of such attacks on Kurdish rebels along the border. The semi-official Anatolia news agency said Turkish warplanes bombed several Kurdish Workers Party (PKK) positions in provinces along the border with Iraq, and that helicopter gunships also took part in raids. "I don't know that there have been any Turkish air strikes or cross border operations into Iraq," said Major General Richard Sherlock of the US Joint Staff.

A Pentagon official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said there had been no reports in US military channels of Turkish air strikes on either side of the border. Separately, a senior US defense official told reporters that there was increasing sympathy in Washington for Turkey's insistence that "concrete and tangible" actions be taken against the PKK. "I don't want to get into too much detail. But there are logistics lines, there are things we've done to curtail movement of the PKK." "There are a variety of things that might be done to make it if not impossible, much more difficult for the PKK to operate across the border, which would also be visible to the government of Turkey," he said.

The US side is pressing for a diplomatic solution to the crisis but the senior official acknowledged that the Turks are under "volatile" domestic political pressure and may be forced to act. "I would say within the senior reaches of the US government there is increasing sympathy for the Turkish position that something has to be done," the official said. He said it was the responsibility of both the Iraqi government and the Kurdish regional government to take measures to stabilize the situation.

"I don't think we're going to be prescriptive about who does what, but I think we expect some tangible, concrete things to happen," the official said. He added that the threat of Turkish military action had "concentrated people's minds" in Baghdad and in the Kurdish regional government. "So I think we've perhaps the best chance to get some things done in quite some time," he said.

by Staff Writers
Ankara (AFP) Oct 24, 2007
Turkish warplanes bombed Kurdish rebel targets along the Iraqi border on Wednesday as the country's National Security Council urged economic sanctions against Iraqi Kurds accused of backing the insurgents.

Fighter jets bombed and destroyed several Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) mountain positions in provinces bordering Iraq and Iran, the semi-official Anatolia news agency reported.

Helicopter gunships also joined the raids that followed the killing of 12 soldiers in a PKK ambush near the Iraqi border on Sunday. The PKK said it captured eight soldiers in the clashes.

Another operation against the PKK was under way in the eastern province of Tunceli, Anatolia said.

The military said 34 PKK militants were killed in operations that followed Sunday's attack, which increased pressure on Ankara for a military incursion into northern Iraq, where the rebels take refuge.

A meeting of Turkey's National Security Council, comprising top officers and senior ministers, called late Wednesday on the government to apply economic sanctions against the Iraqi Kurds accused of supporting the PKK fighters.

"It has been decided to recommend to the government that they take economic measures against the Kurds who support, directly or indirectly, the separatist organisation," said a statement issued after the six-hour meeting.

Normally, the government follows the council's recommendations.

Politicians had previously raised the possibility of economic sanctions -- Foreign Trade Minister Kursat Tuzmen pointed out that Turkey was Iraq's largest trading partner, adding: "We are keeping all our options open."

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan also hinted Tuesday at export restrictions on vital items such as power, water and food.

Meanwhile in Baghdad, Iraqi President Jalal Talabani denied a Turkish report that he had offered to extradite PKK leaders based inside Iraq.

"We have said several times that the leaders of the PKK are not staying in Kurdish cities of Iraq but they live with 1,000 of their fighters in the rugged Qandil mountains," said a statement from his office.

"It is impossible to arrest them and deliver them to Turkey."

The Qandil mountains are located along the Iraq-Turkey border, north of the city of Sulaimaniyah, a stronghold of Talabani's Patriotic Union of Kurdistan party.

Earlier, a Turkish government source said that Talabani told Turkish Foreign Minister Ali Babacan in Baghdad on Tuesday that he "did not exclude the possibility" of extraditing PKK militants.

Babacan had called on Iraq to hand over about 100 PKK members named on a list sent to Baghdad earlier this year, the source said. They were to discuss the matter with a visiting Iraqi delegation on Thursday, he added.

Ankara says it will not flinch from military action if Iraq and the United States fail to clamp down on PKK bases in northern Iraq.

Washington called for calm on both sides, and US Defence Secretary Robert Gates warned that any military action must be intelligence-based.

"Without good intelligence, sending large numbers of troops across the border or dropping bombs doesn't seem to make much sense to me," he told reporters after talks with NATO defence ministers in the Netherlands.

But NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer said alliance member Turkey was "showing remarkable restraint under the present circumstances".

"The allies expressed full solidarity with Turkey in the face of these horrible terrorist attacks against Turkish soldiers and civilians," he said.

The European Union, which Turkey hopes to join, called on Ankara to refrain from unilateral military action and give diplomacy a chance.

"Turkey should think twice before launching a military intervention," Manuel Lobo Antunes, the European affairs minister of Portugal, told the European Parliament in Strasbourg. Lisbon currently holds the EU presidency.

Turkey has long demanded that Iraq stop the PKK from using its territory, cut off logistical support to the group and hand over rebel leaders to Turkey.

In Berlin, the United States' assistant secretary of state for European and Eurasian affairs Daniel Fried said the Kurdish administration in Iraq's autonomous north had to do more to weed out PKK rebels.

"It is in the interests of the Kurdish residents of Iraq that these terrorist attacks stop and that Turkey and Iraq become good neighbours," he said.

The United States also urged Iraq to follow through on a new promise to shut the offices of the Kurdish rebels, noting that Baghdad made the same vow 13 months ago.

"We can understand why the Turks would be skeptical, because that pledge was made, it does need to be fulfilled and we'll be talking to the Iraqis about that, as well," said White House spokeswoman Dana Perino.

Massud Barzani, the president of Iraqi Kurdistan, on Wednesday urged the PKK to end its armed struggle.

earlier related report
NATO allies express solidarity with Turkey
NATO expressed solidarity with Turkey on Wednesday against Kurdish rebel attacks and said Ankara was showing "remarkable restraint" in the circumstances.

"The allies expressed full solidarity with Turkey in the face of these horrible terrorist attacks against Turkish soldiers and civilians," NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer said.

While he did say that it was important for Turkey to show "restraint", Scheffer said: "I think the Turkish government is showing remarkable restraint under the present circumstances."

Scheffer, speaking to reporters on the sidelines of a meeting of NATO defence ministers, said that Turkish Defence Minister Mehmet Vecdi Gonul had informed the meeting about developments.

Turkish warplanes reportedly bombed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) targets along the Iraqi border Wednesday, as leaders met to consider whether to launch operations across the frontier, where the rebels are taking refuge.

A NATO diplomat said, on condition that he not be named, that Gonul had thanked Scheffer for his statements of support and the allies for understanding Turkey's position.

"He explained the political situation in Turkey ... and the enormous political pressure that the government is under from the public because of these continuing attacks," the diplomat said.

"He welcomed statements by the Iraqi government that it would take action against the PKK inside Iraq and of course expressed his wish that this would happen as quickly as possible."

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US leads new calls for Afghan reinforcements
Noordwijk, Netherlands (AFP) Oct 24, 2007
The United States led calls Wednesday for NATO allies to contribute more combat troops and aircraft to help fight the insurgency in Afghanistan, as public support for the mission wanes.







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