-Caveat Lector-

from the February 21, 2003 edition -
http://www.csmonitor.com/2003/0221/p01s04-woiq.html

Turkey imperils US war strategy

Washington wants Turks to greenlight a major US troop presence Friday,
but relations are at their worst in decades.

By Ilene R. Prusher and Ann Scott Tyson | Staff writers of The Christian
Science Monitor

ANKARA, TURKEY AND WASHINGTON - A US-led war in Iraq without Turkey
as a pivotal ally was once a remote possibility. But months of prickly
negotiations between Washington and Ankara are coming to a head and
the US is dangerously close to its first setback - one that would force
drastic changes in the war plan, military officials say.

Already 30 to 40 US cargo ships are either waiting off the Turkish coast or
scheduled to arrive there soon, officials say. The Bush administration says
Turkey must decide Friday whether tens of thousands of US troops can be
stationed here.

On the surface, the two countries are stuck haggling over dollars. Turkey
wants more aid for an economy shattered by the first Gulf War. Secretary
of State Colin Powell said Wednesday that the US can't double its offer: $6
billion in grants and $20 billion in loan guarantees.

But even if Turkey were to get everything on its wish list - including a
buffer zone for refugees and Kurdish guerrillas - strong antiwar feelings
here might be Washington's toughest obstacle.

"[Recep Tayyip Erdogan, leader of Turkey's ruling party,] says he still has
military and political concerns that aren't satisfied. If that's the case,
clearly, kicking in another 4 billion just ain't gonna cut it," says Bulent
Aliriza, the director of the Turkey Project at the Center for Strategic and
International Studies in Washington.

"It's not just a matter of numbers - it's philosophical," he says of Mr.
Erdogan's AK [Justice and Development] Party, a movement rooted in
political Islam that won by a landslide in November.

"Many of the people in the AK Party feel that the US is conducting war on
the Muslim world, and it may be that no matter what, it wouldn't have
worked," says Dr. Aliriza.

Military setbacks

While not a deal-breaker, a refusal by Turkey to allow basing for the Army's
Fourth Infantry Division could delay a US assault. It would also likely require
US commanders to reshuffle their ground forces, at least temporarily
replacing a heavy armored division with lighter forces that lack a similar
punch.

"They would have to change their entire strategy as a result," says one US
military official.

Some 20 to 30 US cargo ships bound from Texas ports and another 10
headed from Northern Europe are carrying 4.5 million sq. ft. of cargo
including tanks, trucks, and other heavy equipment for the 16,000-strong
division.

It would take 18 to 21 days to divert these ships from the eastern
Mediterranean to Kuwait via the Red Sea and Persian Gulf, with additional
delays possible from winter high seas and traffic in the Suez Canal. The
roll-on, roll-off cargo ships of the ready reserve fleet travel at about 14 to
16 knots. Once in Kuwait, finding pier space to offload the cargo, and
additional staging grounds, could also take time, officials say.

War strategy would also change, as the 4th Infantry Division would be
replaced by lighter US ground forces such as Marines or Army airborne
infantry that would be flown into northern Iraq.

"There would be some vertical implant of ground troops," says retired Rear
Adm. Stephen Baker, a senior fellow at the Center for Defense Information
in Washington. "We have looked at the option of using airfields in northern
Iraq," he says.

Such forces, however, would lack the heavy armor and firepower intended
to spearhead a strike at the Iraqi Army's northern flank as other US troops
move in from the south.

A powerful pincer movement is vital to forcing Saddam Hussein to array the
Iraqi military to fight on two fronts. In addition, a US ground assault in
northern Iraq is crucial to securing Iraqi oilfields and quelling possible
infighting among Kurdish factions living in northern Iraq and along Turkey's
southern border, according to military analysts and officials.

Still, Turkey's lack of cooperation, while requiring US forces to regroup,
would in no way block an Iraq campaign, Pentagon officials and military
analysts say. "It's doable, and there are work-arounds," Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld said Wednesday.

Military contingency plans for such a problem already exist, analysts say.
"It's not insurmountable, just a shift in tactics and strategy," Admiral Baker
says.

Turkish leaders have balked at suggestions that they should, by the end of
this week, produce an answer to the Pentagon's request to base troops
here - which must by law be backed by a vote in parliament. Turkey's
foreign minister said yesterday that a parliamentary vote would not take
place till early next week.

"A framework for the agreement we are looking for has not been
established," a spokesman said after a meeting of Turkey's Cabinet. "No
decision regarding the request [to parliament on admitting troops] has
been made."

Turkey's wish list

Turkey has a laundry list of concerns that have not been satisfied by the
Bush administration's offer. In short, Turkey wants guarantees - in writing.
No to a Kurdish state, or even an ethnic Kurdish regional parliament, in a
postwar Iraq. Yes to Turkish military demands to have more troops in
northern Iraq than the US does. Yes to Turkey's request to set up a buffer
zone there to protect itself from refugees and Kurdish guerrillas.

Turkey also wants a short-term guarantee that Congress will approve any
funds the Bush administration promises, and a long-term guarantee that
the US military is not planning to hunker down in and around Turkey's
borders indefinitely.

Turkish President Ahmet Sezer says that the US must first win international
legitimacy before launching any military operation in Iraq, arguing that a
second UN Security Council resolution beyond Resolution 1441 be passed.
Bush administration officials will seek a vote at the Council next week,
requiring 9 out of 15 votes for the measure to pass. But even if it does not,
Bush has said, the US may go ahead and launch a war led by a "coalition of
the willing."

It's just as likely as not, say senior officials here, that such a coalition
won't include Turkey.

"We have our own agenda, and our main objective is to prevent a war from
happening at any cost," says Murat Mercan, the deputy chairman of the AK
Party and close advisor to Erdogan and Prime Minister Abdullah Gul. He
said the current government is not worried that the standoff and the
possibility of not reaching an agreement would harm the US-Turkish
relationship.

"Things change over times. Countries have ups and downs in their
relations," he says in an interview. "If their interests are not in line with
our interests, that doesn't mean we cannot cooperate on other issues.

"We want the agreement to be determined, fixed," he says of the sticking
points in the negotiations. "We want guarantees, and I think that's also
problematic for the Americans because they cannot guarantee things
without congressional approval."

For Turkey, mounting pressure

Turkish officials here complain that they are under enormous pressure
from the US to reach a decision, and say they cannot understand the Bush
administration's rush to start a war against Iraq.

Polls show that 96 percent of Turks are opposed to war, and weekend
antiwar protests around the globe had an impact on thinking here about
how to proceed with Bush's inclination to use force to unseat Saddam
Hussein.

"They didn't expect these demonstrations to be so large," says Hasan Kone,
a professor of international relations at Ankara University. He says the US
may not appreciate how desperate Turkey's economic crisis is - and that it
has to consider its future trading partners. Some 50 percent of Turkish
exports go to Europe, he says, where opposition to a war remains high.

"The economic conditions," he says, "are forcing the government to play
this kind of game."

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