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Bush urges Turks to end offensive in Iraq quickly

Thu Feb 28, 2008 1:16pm EST
 
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By Kristin Roberts and Paul de Bendern

ANKARA (Reuters) - U.S. President George W. Bush urged NATO ally Turkey on Thursday to end its offensive against Kurdish PKK rebels in northern Iraq quickly, but Washington said it would not threaten to withdraw intelligence help.

The United States fears prolonging the Turkish operation, which began on February 21, will undermine stability in the region, particularly Iraq, though it backs Ankara's mission to crush the PKK and late last year began providing significant intelligence.

"The Turks need to move, move quickly, achieve their objective and get out," Bush told a White House news conference.

His comments came shortly after U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates wrapped up a brief visit to Ankara, where he failed to pin down a possible timetable for a Turkish withdrawal.

Before arriving in Ankara he had made clear that he wanted the mission to be short -- days or a week or two, not months.

Turkey's military General Staff General Yasar Buyukanit was quoted by Turkish television as saying: "A short time is a relative concept, it could be one day or one year."

But Gates, who held talks with Buyukanit, Turkey's president and Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan, played down any differences, saying the United States and Turkey had shared interests.

"I think that those interests are probably not advanced by making threats, by threatening to cut off intelligence."

"The key is for us to make clear what our interests are, our concerns about the situation in Iraq," he said.

The Bush administration has been sharing intelligence with its chief military ally in the region, mainly to help its aerial bombing campaign to destroy PKK havens. If Ankara does not heed Washington's call to complete the operation quickly, Washington could curtail or cut off that intelligence flow.

Turkey's defense minister said troops, battling icy winter conditions, would stay in Iraq as long as necessary to accomplish their goal of ending the PKK threat from Iraq.

Thousands of Turkish troops, backed by warplanes and attack helicopters, crossed the border on February 21 to root out Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) fighters and destroy their bases.

"It should be clear that military action alone will not end this terrorist threat," Gates added, saying Ankara must also take political and economic steps to isolate the PKK guerrillas and help support Turkey's large ethnic Kurdish minority.

Iraqi Kurds, long suspicious of neighbor Turkey, fear Ankara is seeking to undermine the autonomy of oil-rich Iraq's Kurdistan region. Ankara says it only wants to end terrorism.

It is Turkey's first major ground offensive into northern Iraq in a decade.  Continued...

 
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