From owner-imap@chumbly.math.missouri.edu Sun Mar 2 17:0
From: Mark Graffis
<mgraffis@vitelcom.net>0:43 2003
Date: Sat, 1 Mar 2003 20:41:23 -0600 (CST)
From: Mark Graffis
<mgraffis@vitelcom.net>
Subject: Turkey’s Refusal Stuns US
Article: 152933
To: undisclosed-recipients:;
They did what?blurted one State Department official
WASHINGTON—US officials appeared stunned by the Turkish parliament’s refusal Saturday to allow the deployment of 62 000 US troops for a possible war with Iraq.
The officials, who had been prepared to hail the parliament’s approval of the deployment based on initial reports that the vote had succeeded, expressed consternation when told that it had in fact been defeated.
They did what?
blurted one State Department official. That
official and others declined to comment on the nullification of the
close vote and were seeking clarification from the US embassy in
Ankara as well as Turkish authorities.
We are seeking clarification and waiting to see what the Turkish
parliament’s decision is,
said Tara Rigler, a department
spokesperson.
In Ankara, the embassy said US ties with Turkey would not be threatened by the vote, calling it democratic and one that would be respected by Washington.
We respect this as a democratic result,
embassy spokesperson
Joseph Pennington said. We will live with that. US ties with Turkey
are not threatened in any way.
Washington had placed great importance on the vote and had lobbied the Turks relentlessly to approve the deployment, sweetening the pot by offering some $6bn in aid to the Muslim nation, where public opposition to a possible war with Iraq is overwhelming.
On Friday, the State Department said negotiations over the aid package
were substantially completed
and could not be revised much
further, making clear Washington was losing patience with repeated
delays in the vote.
It’s now up to Prime Minister (Abdullah) Gul and his cabinet
to complete the Turkish political process,
spokesperson Richard
Boucher said.
He would not say whether Washington had set down a deadline for the
vote, but a senior department official said if it was postponed any
longer it would be in effect too late
and would force troops
now massing in the region to consider alternatives.
If they wait longer than Saturday, we’re going to have to
look elsewhere,
the official said.
After hearing the first incorrect reports on Saturday that the parliament had approved access for US troops, Washington was set to laud the move and praise the Turkish government for its courage, according to a reaction prepared by the State Department.
We warmly welcome the decision of the Turkish parliament to permit
US forces to enter Turkey for possible military operations towards
Iraq,
it said. We applaud the courageous leadership of the
Turkish government.
This vote is a further sign of the strong strategic partnership
between our countries and our joint commitment to ensure that the
Iraqi regime complies with UN Security Council Resolution 1441 and
eliminates its weapons of mass destruction.
The United States and Turkey share a common vision of an Iraq free
of all forms of oppression on the way to a free, peaceful and
prosperous future in accordance with the principles of the UN
charter,
it said.
After it became clear the vote had failed, one US official said the
earlier State Department language was no longer operative
.
The speaker of the Turkish parliament, Bulent Arinc, said the motion to allow the deployment had failed because it had not received the necessary majority of MPs present in the chamber.
Of the 533 MPs present for the vote, 264 supported the motion, 250 voted against it and 19 abstained, Arinc announced.