Turkey’s prime minister said on Friday his Cabinet had authorised the armed forces to conduct a cross-border operation against Kurdish rebels in northern Iraq, but analysts said major action did not appear imminent.
Tayyip Erdogan’s comments, following up on a parliamentary resolution last month and emergency talks with United States President George Bush, seemed chiefly designed to keep up pressure on US and Iraqi forces to honour pledges to tackle the rebels.
”We took our Cabinet meeting decision on November 28 and with the president’s approval our Turkish Armed Forces are now authorised for a cross-border operation from November 28,” Erdogan said in televised comments.
Turkey has amassed up to 100 000 troops near the mountainous border, backed up by tanks, artillery and warplanes, for a possible strike into mainly Kurdish northern Iraq against rebels of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) hiding there.
Ankara has made many threats of military action but, under heavy US pressure, has so far shown restraint. Washington fears a large-scale operation could destabilise the most stable part of Iraq and possibly the wider region.
There was a muted reaction in financial markets to Erdogan’s comments, with the lira weakening slightly against the dollar.
Turkey’s Parliament approved a resolution on October 17 giving the government the legal basis to order cross-border military operations if and when it deemed them necessary.
The resolution, approved by an overwhelming majority of lawmakers, followed a series of deadly PKK attacks on Turkish security forces that fanned an angry wave of nationalism across Turkey, a Nato member that also wants to join the European Union.
That resolution is valid for one year. The Cabinet decision this week effectively frees up the generals to act as they see necessary without seeking further political approval. — Reuters