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WRAPUP 4-Turkey's patience running out after rebel attack


ANKARA, Oct 25 (Reuters) - President Abdullah Gul warned Kurdish rebels on Thursday that Turkey's patience was running out after Turkish forces said they had repelled a guerrilla attack near the Iraqi border.

Ankara has massed up to 100,000 troops along the mountainous border before a possible cross-border operation to crush about 3,000 rebels of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) who launch attacks into Turkey from northern Iraq.

Iraqi, Turkish and U.S. diplomats have stepped up efforts to avert a large-scale Turkish incursion but Gul said NATO-member Turkey would not tolerate any more PKK attacks from Iraq.

"We are totally determined to take all necessary steps to end this threat ... Iraq should not be a source of threat for its neighbours," Gul told an economic conference in Ankara.

"Although we respect the territorial integrity and unity of Iraq, Turkey is running out of patience and will not tolerate the use of Iraqi soil for the purpose of terrorist activities."

The United States is keen to avert a large-scale Turkish offensive in northern Iraq, fearing it would destabilise not only the most peaceful part of that country but potentially also the region as a whole.

"(The United States) may not want us to carry out a cross-border operation. But it is we who will decide whether to do one or not," Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan told reporters during a visit to Romania.

PUBLIC PRESSURE

Public pressure on Turkish authorities to act has grown since rebels killed 12 soldiers last weekend. The PKK, branded a terrorist organisation by the United States, Turkey and the European Union, has said it captured eight soldiers.

"We are doing all we can, (we are) working with the Iraqi and Turkish governments to make sure the hostages are freed," Matthew Bryza, U.S. deputy assistant secretary for European and Eurasian affairs, said in a speech in Ankara.

Turkish security sources have confirmed a series of sorties by warplanes and ground troops since Sunday into Iraqi territory, although Ankara has said it still hopes diplomacy can stave off the need for a full-scale ground invasion.

Turkish tanks and artillery helped beat off an attack by up to 40 PKK rebels late on Wednesday on a military post in Hakkari province near the border, security officials told Reuters.

After fierce clashes, the guerrillas withdrew into northern Iraq, taking an unknown number of dead and wounded, the officials said. One Turkish soldier was wounded.

F-16 fighter jets took off early on Thursday from the airport in Diyarbakir, the largest city of Turkey's mainly Kurdish southeast region. Their destination was not known.

An Iraqi Kurdish security official said a Turkish warplane bombed a Kurdish village on Wednesday but gave no details of damage.

In a visit described by Turkish officials as a last chance for diplomacy, an Iraqi team, led by Defence Minister General Abdel Qader Jassim and including members of northern Iraq's Kurdish administration, was due in Ankara later on Thursday.

The Baghdad government has promised to shut down PKK camps but Ankara knows the central authorities in Iraq hold little sway in the autonomous Kurdish north.

Turkish newspapers on Thursday accused Iraqi and Iraqi Kurdish leaders of dishonesty and unreliability, saying they promised much but delivered virtually nothing.

"SERIES OF COMMITMENTS"

They were especially angry with Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, a Kurd, whom senior Turkish officials quoted on Wednesday as saying Baghdad might hand over PKK rebels to Turkey. Talabani's office later denied he said this.

"We made a whole series of commitments to eliminate the PKK terrorist threat, we mean it. We're working on it and we are doing that in our cooperation both with the Turkish government and the Iraqi government," Bryza said.

Diplomats say the United States -- which has practically no troops in northern Iraq -- should put pressure on the leadership of the Kurdish northern Iraqi region to act against the PKK.

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is due to visit Turkey on Nov. 2 and 3 to try to ease tension between Turkey and Iraq.

Erdogan is expected to meet President George W. Bush in Washington on Nov. 5.

A senior Turkish diplomat, who asked to remain anonymous, told Reuters Ankara was waiting for the United States to come up with a response to its request for action against the PKK.

"The real deadline is the Bush-Erdogan meeting. There will be no major military action before that," the diplomat said.

Ankara blames the PKK for the deaths of more than 30,000 people since the group launched its armed campaign for an ethnic homeland in southeast Turkey in 1984.

(Additional reporting by Gareth Jones in Ankara, Thomas Grove in Uludere and Seyhmus Cakan in Diyarbakir)

Copyright 2007 Reuters North American News Service
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
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Author:Evren Mesci
Publication:Reuters North American News Service
Date:Oct 25, 2007
Words:782
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