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Turkey steps up Iraq onslaught as US calls for quick pull-out


Wednesday, 27 February, 2008 , 15:29

ANKARA, Feb 27, 2008 (AFP) — Turkey stepped up its offensive against Kurdish rebels in northern Iraq on Wednesday and refused to set a pull-out timetable, despite a US warning that the incursion should last no more than "a week or two."

The military said 77 members of the separatist Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) were killed overnight in what they called the heaviest clashes since its forces rolled over the border into the snow-bound mountains of northern Iraq last week.

That brought the army toll of PKK dead to 230, while its own losses climbed to 27 with the deaths since Tuesday evening of five soldiers and three government-armed Turkish Kurd "village guard" militiamen, the general staff said.

As fighter jets continued to pound rebel positions on the sixth full day of the incursion, US Defense Secretary Robert Gates made it clear that US support for its NATO ally was not open-ended.

The offensive must end quickly, he said.

"I measure quick in terms of days, or a week or two, something like that. Not months," he said in New Delhi before flying to Ankara for talks.

But a senior Turkish official said the operation would continue until the PKK, listed as a terrorist group by Turkey and the international community, is uprooted from the region, which it uses a springboard for attacks in Turkey.

"There will be no timetable to withdraw Turkish troops... until the presence of the terrorist organisation is eliminated," said Ahmet Davutoglu, chief foreign policy advisor to Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Davutoglu, accompanied by two other officials, was dispatched to Baghdad as Ankara sought to allay mounting Iraqi protests over the incursion.

"We condemn terrorism. We condemm the PKK but at the same time we condemn any violation of Iraqi sovereignty," Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari said after talks with the delegation.

The United States has backed the offensive, supplying Turkey with intelligence on PKK movements, and said the Turkish army had acted "responsibly so far".

But Washington is wary of the prospect of conflict between Turkish forces and the Kurdish administrators of northern Iraq -- two key US allies with chilly ties.

Turkey has long accused the Iraqi Kurds of providing the PKK with a safe haven, weapons and ammunition. The military warned the Iraqi Kurds this week not to shelter PKK rebels fleeing the fighting.

Gates urged Ankara to back up military action with political and economic measures to win over its sizeable Kurdish community and erode popular support for the PKK.

"They need to deal with some of the issues and complaints that some of the Kurds have and move this in a non-military direction in order to get a long-term solution," he said.

Gates will meet Erdogan, President Abdullah Gul, Defence Minister Vecdi Gonul and Chief of General Staff Yasar Buyukanit on Thursday.

Erdogan is already under pressure at home to improve Kurdish rights, tackle rampant poverty in the Kurdish-majority southeast and issue an amnesty for PKK rebels to encourage them to end their armed separatist campaign.

The military said warplanes and artillery maintained fire on rebel positions and hide-outs "deep" in the operation area Wednesday.

PKK leaders are believed to be in groups involved in fighting on the ground, it said.

The PKK claims to have killed around 90 soldiers, including five in an ambush Tuesday, and to have downed a Turkish attack helicopter.

Ankara estimates some 4,000 rebels are holed up in northern Iraq.

The PKK took up arms for self-rule in southeast Turkey in 1984, sparking a conflict that has claimed more than 37,000 lives.