-Caveat Lector-

>>>Now, why would Turkey want to prevent the Americans from massing on
the Northern Iraq border for an additional front?  Could it have something
to do with reclaiming some part of the Ottoman Empire to include the oil
fields at Mosul (or even Kirkuk)?  Neutralising the Kurds?  Doing the non-
native born Sec'y of State (Kissinger / Albright) thing:  "What's the use of
having all these troops (there) if you don't use them?"  A<:>E<:>R <<<

http://www.guardian.co.uk/The_Kurds/Story/0,2763,919741,00.html
Turkish troops enter northern Iraq

Ankara ignores US warning of secondary battle front

Oliver Burkeman in Washington and Michael Howard in Zakho, Iraqi
Kurdistan
Saturday March 22, 2003
The Guardian

Turkey began sending troops across the border into Iraqi Kurdistan last
night, a move which threatens to open a "war within the war" and hugely
complicate the American military strategy in Iraq.

The Turkish foreign minister, Abdullah Gul, announced the incursion after
an apparent breakthrough for the coalition's northern front yesterday,
when Ankara finally gave overflight rights to US planes.

During the days of hard bargaining Turkey demanded the right to send
troops into Iraq as a condition for allowing the overflights. But enraged US
officials said last night that Washington had not agreed and had told
Turkey to "stay the hell out".

About 1,000 Turkish soldiers crossed the border, augmenting the several
thousand it has there to pursue Turkish Kurd guerrillas. Another 5,000
were moving through Turkey to mass on the border.

Donald Rumsfeld, the US defence secretary, said: "We have special forces
units connected to Kurdish forces in the north ... and you can be certain
that we have advised the Turkish government and the Turkish armed forces
that it would be notably unhelpful if they went into the north in large
numbers."

The secretary of state, Colin Powell, visibly irritated, had said earlier: "We
don't see any need for any Turkish incursions into northern Iraq."

"We told them to stay the hell out, and it is a major problem which we are
going to be watching very closely today," an unnamed senior official told
CNN.

Turkey said it would send troops to avert a humanitarian crisis in northern
Iraq, to hold back a flood of refugees into Turkey, and to prevent
terrorists crossing its border.

Mr Gul said. "A vacuum was formed in northern Iraq and that vacuum
became practically a camp for terrorist activity. This time we do not want
such a vacuum."

The US is deeply apprehensive of a secondary war if Kurdish fighters clash
with the Turks, potentially bringing chaos to the coalition's attempt to
advance on Baghdad from the north and threatening the Kirkuk oil fields.

Turkey fears instability and attempts by Iraqi Kurds to establish an
independent state, perhaps by seizing control of the oil fields. The 4m
Iraqi Kurds, for their part, fear that a Turkish force could take away their
freedoms and condemn them to the same fate as Turkey's 13m Kurds.

The Turks entering north Iraq may begin hunting the remaining members of
Kadek, the militant group formerly known as the PKK.

Last week, Osman Ocalan, brother of the group's imprisoned leader
Abdullah Ocalan, promised a violent retaliation if Turkish troops crossed
the border.

The US won its overflying rights after weeks of reversals, and they are only
a fraction of the help it sought, which included stationing 62,000 service
personnel there.

Iraqi Kurds living near the border were leaving their homes yesterday.
Lieutenant Massoud Rushdi, a recent graduate from the Zakho military
academy, said his wife and two sons were leaving because they knew that
Turkish tanks could soon cross the bridge over the Zakho river and crush
their 12-year experiment in self-rule.

"We decided that it was not safe for them to stay," he said. "If Turkey
wants to help us fight Saddam, they are welcome. But if they come here
to prevent us being free, we have the right to defend ourselves."

The Kurds of Zakho are preparing to resist. "We don't want to be liberated
from Saddam only to be oppressed by Turkey," said Ahmed Barmani, a car
mechanic. "I hate Turkey more than I do Saddam."

He joined his childhood friend Massoud to dig themselves into a defensive
position overlooking the river.

"Wherever they try to cross, we'll be ready for them," he said.

The two friends were not alone. Several hundred peshmerga fighters from
the villages around Zakho could be seen taking up positions in the hills.

There is little that they, lightly armed, can do to stop the Turks, who have
the second biggest army in Nato.

But Babekir Zebari, a regional commander of the Kurdish military forces,
said life would be made very difficult for Turkey if it tried to occupy the
self-rule area.

"If they disturb our situation, we will disturb theirs," he said.

"Saddam has been unable to defeat us; neither will the Turkish generals."

Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2003
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