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KurdistanObserver.com
Turkish FM Gul: Ankara Will Not Be Drawn Into
Any US Or Israel Military Operations Against Iran
April 30, 2006 DEBKAfile
The Dubai newspaper Al Bayan (out on April 30) quotes the Turkish leader as
disclosing that, during her visit to Ankara last Tuesday, US secretary of state
Condoleezza Rice requested the use of the Incirlik air base for an American
strike against Iranian nuclear installations. She was said to have offered
Turkey in return a nuclear reactor for electricity, but was turned down.
DEBKAfile’s military sources add: Washington’s original request was for
permission to build a new air base in eastern Turkey between Lake Van and the
Iranian border. From there, US bombers could have reached nuclear targets
situated in northern Iran where most of its nuclear sites are thought to be
concentrated.
In particular, they could have hit the top secret plant under construction at
Neyshabour – first disclosed by DEBKAfile on April 15 - to run 155,000
centrifuges, enough to enrich uranium for 3-5 nuclear bombs a year.
This was the second time in three years that the Turks have spurned an American
request to use its bases for attacking a Middle East neighbor. Ankara’s refusal
of a second front for the US-led Iraq invasion in 2003 delayed Saddam Hussein’s
overthrow by more than a month.
Turkey’s rationale this time is motivated by five factors:
1. Ankara does not believe the US will go through with military action against
Iran.
2. Gul says that with 165 nuclear sites scattered over Iran, its program is well
nigh indestructible.
3. Ankara perceives the Bush administration’s domestic situation as too shaky to
undertake an effective military attack on Iran. The Erdogan government believes
the Republican party faces defeats in the mid-term elections at the end of the
year.
4. Turkey has no intention of joining an American-Israeli military collaboration
against Iran, or following the example of Pakistan and India in complying with
Washington’s demands.
5. Turkish actions against the radical Kurdish PKK rebel strongholds in Northern
Iraq are raising tensions in relations Ankara-Washington relations. Especially
resented is the reciprocal assistance understanding Turkey and Iran have
concluded to help each fight the Iraq-based Turkish PKK and the anti-Tehran
People’s Mujaheedeen. Both Turkey and Iran have massed forces on their borders
with northern Iraq. Turkey complains that its requests to Washington to help
root the PKK out of its bases in northern Iraq were greeted with the response
that violence in other parts of Iraq were the priority of US force.
Rice during her visit called on Ankara to refrain from “unilateral action”
against the Kurdish rebels in Iraq.
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