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The GuardianUpsurge in Kurdish attacks raises pressure on Turkish prime minister to order Iraq invasion
· Bomb brings death toll of soldiers in one day to 15
· Erdogan caught between public opinion and US
Ian Traynor, Europe editor
Tuesday October 9, 2007
The Guardian Turkey's prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, came under intense pressure last night to order an invasion of northern Iraq following the deadliest attacks for over a decade on the Turkish military and civilians by separatist Kurdish guerrillas.
Mr Erdogan, who has resisted demands from the Turkish armed forces for the past six months for a green light to cross the border into Iraqi Kurdistan, where the guerrillas are based, called an emergency meeting of national security chiefs to ponder their options in the crisis, a session that some said was tantamount to a war council.
A Turkish incursion is fiercely opposed by Washington since it would immensely complicate the US campaign in Iraq and destabilise the only part of Iraq that functions, the Kurdish-controlled north.
Two Turkish soldiers were killed yesterday in booby trap explosions laid by guerrillas of the Kurdistan Workers' party (PKK) - fighters classified as terrorists by Ankara, Washington and the European Union. Those casualties followed the killing of 13 Turkish soldiers in the south-east on Sunday when PKK forces outgunned a Turkish unit of 18 men without sustaining any casualties, according to the Kurds.
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http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,,2186530,00.html
Turkey'a patience has worn thin about cross border raids by Kurdish terrorist. It is long overdue for Turkey to go into Northern Iraq in search of people responsible for so many deaths and wounded.