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Turkey to knock Stuffing out of Kurdish Rebels.
Turkey on the move, against US governments protests has sent troops along it's Southern Border with Iraq to quash Kurdish Rebels along it's own borders.
SIRNAK, Turkey -- Turkey said on Monday eight of its soldiers were missing a day after clashes with Kurdish rebels near the Iraqi border, in which at least 12 soldiers were killed.The General Staff also said 34 rebels from the Kurdistan Workers Party [PKK] were killed in the clashes, two more than reported earlier.
The pro-PKK Firat news agency said eight Turkish soldiers had been captured and gave the names of seven men. Turkey has denied some of its soldiers were captured in the fighting.
October 22, 2007. Turkey vowed strong action against Kurdish separatists after 12 of its soldiers and 32 rebels were killed in clashes sparked by an ambush in Daglica, near the tense border with Iraq.
Turkey vowed strong action against Kurdish separatists after 12 of its soldiers and 32 rebels were killed in clashes sparked by an ambush in Daglica, near the tense border with Iraq.
Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan said on Sunday he expected the United States to take "swift" steps against the PKK, many based in northern Iraq.
Turkey has deployed as many as 100,000 troops, backed by tanks, F-16 fighter jets and attack helicopters along its border with Iraq in anticipation of a possible incursion.
Asked about any pending attack, Defence Minister Vecdi Gonul said on Sunday: "Not urgently. They are planning a cross-border [incursion] ... We'd like to do these things with the Americans."
The United States and Iraq have called on Turkey to refrain from a military push into the largely autonomous Kurdish region, one of the few relatively stable parts of the Iraq since the U.S.-led invasion in 2003.
Turkey estimates 3,000 rebels from the PKK are based across the border and a series of recent attacks on Turkish forces has put intense pressure on Erdogan to act.
Turkey believes U.S. forces could, if they wanted, capture PKK leaders in the Qandil mountains, shut down their camps and cut off supply routes and logistics support.
U.S. HESITANT
But Washington is hesitant as such moves could destabilise Iraq's Kurdish region and hurt the regional authority there if it looked as if it were siding with Turkey against fellow Kurds.
Turkish media said more than 200 rebels were involved in the clashes on the Turkish side of the border over the weekend.
Mr. Gonul, speaking in Kiev after meeting U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates, said 17 soldiers were killed and 10 were missing.
The Turkish losses, among the worst in a decade, came four days after parliament overwhelmingly approved a motion to allow troops to cross into northern Iraq.
Erdogan chaired a weekly cabinet meeting on Monday, which was expected to focus on the rebels. He was due in London later on an official visit. President Abdullah Gul briefed opposition party leaders on the situation.
Opposition leader Deniz Baykal repeated his demand on Monday for an urgent cross-border operation. In Ankara, some 8,000 students joined an anti-PKK rally, one of many staged in the past 24 hours in this Muslim country of 75 million.
The Turkish lira currency fell 3% to 1.2360 against the dollar and the Istanbul stock exchange fell five percent early on Monday on concerns of a cross-border offensive.
Turkey's tougher stance has helped propel global oil prices to record highs over the past week. The PKK has said it might target pipelines carrying Iraqi and Caspian crude across Turkey.
U.S. President George W. Bush condemned Sunday's attacks.
"Attacks from Iraqi territory need to be dealt with swiftly by the Iraqi government and Kurdish Regional authorities," White House National Security Council spokesman Gordon Johndroe said.
(Additional reporting by Gareth Jones and Evren Mesci in Ankara and Emma Ross-Thomas in Istanbul)
Crowd Power
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Barry Artiste
Vancouver, Canada




Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (6)
at 09:46 on October 22nd, 2007
Great story. This will be evenmore important in the coming days. Turkey has wanted to attack teh PKK in Iraq for years andnow it looks like it will. I understand that 40 Turkish soldiers have been recently killed by teh PKK terrorist and Turkish people want action. It will be interesting to see how the US and Turkey engage on thsi issue. After all the US is now a power broker in teh region. I hope the Kurdish people do not suffer from all of this as tehy have built a fantastic life for themselves in the middle of a really bad location.
at 11:47 on October 22nd, 2007
Apparently regiojns controlled by Kurdish rebels are the best areas desired by US troops who patrol the region as they are welcomed with open arms by the Kurds.
at 12:05 on October 22nd, 2007
Lets hope Iran does not join in the fray or Russia
at 11:48 on October 22nd, 2007
Apparently these regions controlled by Kurdish rebels are the best areas desired by US troops who patrol the region as they are welcomed with open arms by the Kurds.
at 12:50 on October 22nd, 2007
Iran already IS in the fray, having bombed the Kurds very recently.
and I would personally be very hesitant to believe the turks on their excuses to engage in this area, since they have long desired the oil-rich area, and have greatly stretched the truth regarding the fate of Armenians in the early 20th C.
Any unbiased reports actually coming out of this area??
at 17:25 on October 22nd, 2007
The US is in sort of a quandary when two allies to the US are at each others throats, mediation seems to be the only solution, but I am afraid it is for naught.