http://www.ndtv.com/convergence/ndtv/story.aspx?id=NEWEN20070031222
<http://www.ndtv.com/convergence/ndtv/story.aspx?id=NEWEN20070031222&ch=10/3
0/2007%204:24:00%20PM> &ch=10/30/2007%204:24:00%20PM#
 

Turkey attacks rebel sites inside Iraq

 
 
Associated Press
Tuesday, October 30, 2007 (Ankara)
Cobra attack helicopters blasted suspected Kurdish rebel targets on Tuesday
near the southeastern border with Iraq in a second day of fighting in the
Mount Cudi area, which has reportedly claimed the lives of three Turkish
soldiers and six guerrillas.

As the military pressure continued, the government called a Cabinet meeting
for Wednesday to discuss a National Security Council recommendation on
possible economic measures against groups supporting the Kurdish rebels,
private CNN-Turk and NTV television reported.

State-run Anatolia news agency reported the meeting but not what would be
discussed.

Turkey is reportedly considering a string of economic actions against the
self-governing Kurdish administration in Iraq's north, where rebels are
based.

The region is heavily reliant on Turkish electricity and food imports, as
well as Turkish investment in construction works.

The Turkish assault on the mountainside positions in Sirnak province began
early on Monday with helicopter rocket attacks.

The Firat news agency, accused by the Turkish government of being a
mouthpiece of the Kurdish rebels, said more than 30 Cobras were involved.

Transport helicopters then flew in commando teams and trucks later drove
more troops to the area.

Aerial assaults

The fighting went late into the night, and the Cobras resumed their aerial
assaults early on Tuesday morning. An AP Television News cameraman saw smoke
rising from Mount Cudi in the aftermath.

Three soldiers were killed in the first day of fighting, according to the
private Dogan News Agency and Hurriyet newspaper, which published their
names.

Six rebels from the Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK, were also killed, the
private Cihan news agency reported.

It was not immediately possible to independently verify the casualty
reports.

One other soldier was killed on Monday during operations in Tunceli province
when he stepped on a land mine believed to have been hidden by the rebels,
bringing the total number of people killed by the PKK in the past month to
46, according to government and media reports.

Those casualties included at least 30 Turkish soldiers killed in two
ambushes that were the boldest attacks in years and were a major factor in
the increasing domestic pressure on Turkey's prime minister to act.

Denouncing PKK

In the latest of the regular patriotic demonstrations that have been held in
cities around the country, some 600 motorcyclists held a moment of silence
at an Istanbul cemetery, then drove through the city waving Turkish flags
and denouncing the PKK.

The United States, Iraq, and other countries have been pressuring Turkey to
refrain from a cross-border attack against the PKK.

Such a campaign could derail one of the few stable areas in Iraq, and leave
the United States in an awkward position with key allies: NATO-member
Turkey, the Baghdad government and the self-governing Iraqi Kurds in the
north.

Turkey has threatened to attack, however, unless scores of PKK leaders are
extradited from Iraq.

On Thursday and Friday, high-ranking officials are to hold talks before a
foreign ministers' meeting about Iraq in Istanbul.

Scheduled to attend are the permanent members of the UN Security Council,
the Group of Eight industrialized nations, representatives of the
Organization of the Islamic Conference, the Arab League and the European
Union.

US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is to meet with Turkish President
Abdullah Gul and Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Ankara on Friday.

Erdogan then flies to Washington on November 5 to meet with US President
George W Bush for a meeting many believe will be key in determining whether
Turkey carries out its threats of a cross-border incursion.

 



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