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PKK threatens retaliation after Turkish raids

Turkey says Iraq raids hit targets
All Kurdish rebel positions targeted in weekend air strikes in northern Iraq were hit and there were no civilian casualties, the Turkish military said Monday. "Initial evaluations show all planned targets received direct hits," a general staff statement said, adding that casualty and damage assessment was continuing. No civilians were targeted in Sunday's strikes on positions along the Turkish border and in the Qandil mountains to the east, where the rebel Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) is known to have a major base, it said.

"All targets were set after careful and detailed analysis and were included on the list after it was firmly determined that they were not in civilian inhabited areas," it said, denying reports that civilians were targeted. The PKK said seven people were killed, two of them civilians. Locals said schools and bridges were destroyed in the foothills of the Qandil mountains. Turkish chief of staff General Yasar Buyukanit has said the United States gave tacit consent for the operation by providing "intelligence" and opening Iraqi airspace. After talks with Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Washington in November, US President George W. Bush called the PKK a "common enemy" and promised to provide Turkey with real-time intelligence on rebel movements. Bush's pledge was seen as barely veiled US approval for limited cross-border Turkish strikes against PKK targets in northern Iraq.

by Staff Writers
Ankara (AFP) Dec 17, 2007
The separatist Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) threatened retaliation on Monday following Turkish air strikes on its bases in northern Iraq at the weekend.

"Our people have every right to defend themselves and to retaliate. This right is sacred and our people will do what is required," the PKK said in a statement carried by the Firat news agency, considered to be a rebel mouthpiece.

The PKK said five of its militants and two civilians were killed in Sunday's raids on positions along the Turkish border and in the Qandil mountains to the east along the Iraqi-Iranian frontier, where the PKK is known to have bases.

The Turkish army strongly denied its warplanes targeted civilians. It has not yet given a casualty figure.

Chief of staff General Yasar Buyukanit said the United States gave tacit consent for the operation by providing "intelligence" and opening Iraqi airspace.

The PKK said its positions also came under artillery fire from Iran following the Turkish air raid and put the "primary" blame on the United States.

"Even though this attack ... was conducted by the Turkish and Iranian armies, it is obvious that the United States is primarily responsible for providing this opportunity," the statement, published on Firat's website, said.

The PKK, listed as a terrorist group by Ankara and much of the international community, enjoys refuge in the rugged mountains of Kurdish-populated northern Iraq and uses bases there as a springboard for attacks in southeast Turkey.

It has waged a bloody campaign for Kurdish self-rule since 1984 in a conflict that has claimed more than 37,000 lives.

Iran, which has its own restive Kurdish minority, also complains that Kurdish rebels from PJAK, a PKK-linked group, take refuge in northern Iraq.

related report
Iraq parliament condemns 'cruel' Turkish air strikes
Iraq strongly condemned Monday Turkish air strikes on Kurdish rebel bases in its northern territory, branding them a "cruel attack" on Iraqi sovereignty that claimed innocent lives.

Amid expressions of concern from the European Union, the Turkish military denied there were any civilian casualties, while the separatist Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) vowed retaliation against Turkish targets.

"We strongly condemn this cruel attack on Iraqi sovereignty and on the principle of friendly neighbourhood," the Iraqi parliament said in a statement that spoke of "several innocent civilian casualties".

Sunday's raids saw Turkish warplanes bomb a number of villages in northern Iraq, targeting rear-bases of the PKK, which said seven people were killed, including two civilians.

"Our people have every right to defend themselves and to retaliate," the rebel group said in a statement carried by the Firat news agency, considered to be a PKK mouthpiece.

"This right is sacred and our people will do what is required," the statement said.

Locals said schools and bridges were also destroyed in the foothills of the Qandil mountains along the border.

"We all were asleep when the warplanes struck our village," said Hassan Ibrahim, 75, a farmer from the village of Qalatuqa along the Iraq-Turkey border.

"When the attack came I got out of the house. We were all suffocating because of the dust."

He said Turkish warplanes had been overflying the region for the past month.

"Earlier it was Saddam who destroyed our homes, now it is the Turks," an angry Ibrahim told AFP as he prepared to leave his home.

Witnesses said the bombings had razed dozens of buildings in Qalatuqa, including a soon-to-be-opened school building.

Asaka Abdullah, 40, said she woke up shocked with the noise of the bombings.

"I was asleep when the sound of the explosion woke me up. When I stepped out of my house I saw people fleeing barefoot," she said.

"We really have no choice but to flee to the mountains to escape the bombs."

In Baghdad, the parliament demanded that Ankara exercise military restraint and focus on dialogue to solve the PKK problem.

The PKK has been fighting for self-rule in southeastern Turkey since 1984. More than 37,000 people have died on both sides of the conflict.

Turkey has threatened a full-scale incursion against PKK bases in northern Iraq unless Baghdad and the United States make greater efforts to curb the rebels' cross-border operations.

Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari condemned the Turkish air strikes.

"We understand Turkish concerns over the presence of PKK, but yesterday there was some collateral damages to civilians... Such action must be coordinated with the Iraqi government," said Zebari, who did not give casualty figures.

The European Union also expressed concern in a statement issued by Portugal, which holds the EU's rotating presidency.

"The presidency calls on the Turkish authorities to exercise restraint, to respect the territorial integrity of Iraq and refrain from taking any military action that could undermine regional peace and stability," it said.

On Sunday, Ankara's most senior general Yasar Buyukanit said Turkey had received tacit US consent for the operation by providing "intelligence" and opening up northern Iraqi airspace.

The US State Department declined to confirm or deny what help might have been given, saying only that the strikes were "in keeping with" past air raids in northern Iraq.

"That said, we want to make sure that the actions that are taken are done in an appropriate way, that hit only those targets that are PKK and avoid civilian casualties," said State Department spokesman Tom Casey.

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US reviewing plans for violence-hit Afghanistan
Washington (AFP) Dec 17, 2007
The Pentagon confirmed Monday that the US military and its NATO partners were reviewing plans for Afghanistan, rocked by its bloodiest year since 2001 amid a fierce Taliban resurgence.







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