-Caveat Lector-

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?
xml=/news/2003/03/23/wturk23.xml/
Turks hem Kurds in on three fronts
(Filed: 23/03/2003)

Damien McElroy in Vamerni, Northern Iraq, is
confronted by aggressive Turkish invaders defying US wishes and waiting
for reinforcements.

Kurdish troops inside northern Iraq were in a tense
stand-off with apparently hostile Turkish forces last night after Ankara
deployed tanks and commandos at least 15 miles south of the border.

In the small town of Vamerni, three miles beyond the "buffer zone"
announced by the Turkish government, eight Abram tanks were positioned
around a bombed-out building on a strategic ridge overlooking the valley.
Armoured personnel carriers and other military vehicles were also in partly
concealed positions. Kurdish troops at a garrison on the opposite side of
the road watched apprehensively as their traditional northern enemies
prepared for the arrival of reinforcements.

"We were told to expect the Turkish troops to arrive," said First
Lieutenant Mohammed Tahir. "They are here, but we have not got any
relationship with them. There are no orders to stop them coming here."

At the Turkish checkpoint, the soldiers were less forthcoming. "It's
forbidden," the guard said. "Please leave, there's nothing happening here."
As I stalled for time by asking for a cup of tea and lighting a cigarette, the
attitude of soldiers guarding the area grew increasingly hostile. Finally they
snarled that I would be arrested if I did not leave. "If you stay here, there
will be trouble," said one officer in fatigues. "Someone will come and get
you."

The Turkish government pushed ahead with its troop deployment, deeper
into Iraq than at any time since the last Gulf war, despite pleas from
Washington to avoid confrontation with the Kurds. Until this war began,
Kurdish militia leaders had vowed retaliation if the Turks pressed south.
Last week, however, they placed themselves under American command,
and have to stand aside as the Turkish military extends a cordon sanitare
well beyond its borders.

Now the Kurds effectively face dangers on three fronts. On the eastern
border of the Kurdish region they are under threat from an enclave
controlled by Ansar al-Islam, the Islamic group linked to al-Qaeda.
Yesterday a raid by Kurdish troops killed 10 Islamic militants within the
enclave, the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan claimed. A further 25 Ansar
fighters were reportedly killed overnight by American cruise missiles fired
at the enclave.

With hostile activity in both the north and east, Kurdish forces have been
drawn away from the southern front with Iraq, where American special
forces are battling alongside Kurdish militia to liberate the nearby oilfield
cities of Kirkuk and Mosul.

American bombing of Mosul began in the early hours of yesterday and I
watched from the Kurdish frontline as massive bombs fell on positions
clearly visible, miles away.

The Iraqis were confronted by an enemy they could not see, hear or
smell. Only the first tremendous crumpling blast signalled that an attack
was on the way. The B2 bombers fly too high to be seen, and cruise
missiles leave no vapour trails. Still the anti- aircraft fire spat into the night
sky, each burst a streak of big fast sparks piercing the cloud cover. After
the first blast, there was a tremendous vibration and then a dull red cone
of fire rose on the far horizon.

A Kurdish militia soldier stood with me on the roof of a mud brick annex
and smiled broadly in response. "Is good, yes," he said.

On two-way radios the Kurds discussed possible targets: the northern
command of the fifth core of the Iraqi army and the Republican Guard
compound at Mosul. Three more vast blasts followed and the Kurdish
militia remained glued to the skies, fascinated by a display of military
power far beyond their wildest ambitions.

The mood on the roof was tense, however, the easy-going friendliness of a
few days earlier having vanished.


22 March 2003: Turks send 1,500 commandos into Kurds' safe haven

20 March 2003: Turkish troops mass on border

19 March 2003: Kurds flee into hills amid fears of a revenge attack

18 March 2003: Kurds hope their dream of statehood will at last come true

18 March 2003: Who will rule Iraq when peace returns?

17 March 2003: Iraqi Kurds remember day Saddam gassed them


Related reports




David Pryce-Jones: When war stops



External links




Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP)


Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK)


Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Republic of Turkey


The Kurds: a catastrophe waiting to happen [20 Mar '03] - International
Herald Tribune


History of Kurds and Kurdistan - World History Archives







© Copyright of Telegraph Group Limited 2003.
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