Turkish parliament authorizes cross-border military operations in Syria
Turkey’s
parliament has authorized cross-border military operations into Syria
‘when necessary.’ The move follows a cross-border mortar-shelling
into Turkey which Damascus has apologized for.
RT,
4
October, 2012
The
Turkish parliament voted 320-129 in favor of the bill, though the
government was quick to eliminate the perception they country
preparing for a unilateral military assault.
Turkish
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Turkey "does not want
to "start
a war" with
Syria while speaking at a press conference on Thursday evening .
"All
we want in this region is peace and security. We have no intention of
starting war. We are aware of the outcome, consequences, of war in
Iraq and Afghanistan…we see the same in Syria," Al
Jazeera cites him as saying. But Errdogan warned the country was
capable of defending itself against threats after he claimed that new
shells coming from Syria had landed on Turkish soil on Thursday.
"An
accident can be called 'an accident' once, twice, three times, but
four, five six times," Errdogan
continued.
His
statements regarding the bills follow those made by Deputy Prime
Minister Besir Atalay following the vote on Thursday.
“The
bill is not for war… It has deterrent qualities,” he said.
Atlay
stressed that Turkey’s priority was to act in conjunction
with “international
institutions” on
Syria. He further said the Syrian government "has
admitted what it did and apologized. The
deputy premier added that Syria had given its assurances "such
an incident would not be repeated."
Syria's
UN envoy said on Thursday that “Syrian
authorities confirmed that they are seriously investigating the
source of the [attack] that lead to the death of Turkish citizens.”
Ambassador
Bashar Ja'afari read out a letter which had been delivered to the UN
Security Council expressing Syria's"deepest
condolences" to
the families of the victims of Wednesday's
mortar attack which
killed five civilians in southeast Turkey.
He
called for both sides to act "wisely" and "rationally",
saying that "undisciplined,
armed terrorists" operating
on the countries' shared border posed a threat not only to Syria, but
the greater region. He further claimed the long Turkish-Syrian border
had been used as a conduit for terrorists to smuggle arms into Syria.
Ja'afari
insinuated the Turkish response to the incident had been
disproportionate, however, saying that Turkey had shelled southern
Syria for nearly 12 hours straight following Wednesday's attack.
He
also charged that retaliatory shelling from Turkey on Thursday
morning injured two Syrian army officials.
Ja'afari
criticized "one member" of the UN Security Council for
finding "itself
incapable of issuing an official position to condemn these terrorist
attacks" that
killed dozens in Aleppo on Wednesday.
A
document posted online by an al-Qaeda affiliated group called the
al-Nusra Front claimed responsibilty for the multiple bombings, but
the UN security coucil has thus far remained silent.
US
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in contrast was quick to condemn
Syria for Wedensday's mortar attack in Turkey."We
are outraged that the Syrians have been shooting across the border.
We are very regretful about the loss of life that has occurred on the
Turkish side. We are working with our Turkish friends."
'You can wage a world war'
The
government-initiated debates in the Turkish parliament to decide on
how hammer out a response to Wednesday's cross-border incident took
place behind closed doors. The cabinet of Turkish Prime Minister
Tayyip Erdogan claimed the Syrian military had launched an act of
aggression against Turkey.
MP
Muharrem Ince from the opposition Republican People’s party said
the motion was dangerous as it had no clearly defined limits.
"You
can wage a world war with [this
motion],"Hürriyet Daily News cites him as saying.
Ince
also lambasted the fact that the session took place outside of the
public view.
"Why
would you hide this from the people? Will it be your children that go
to war? People are not going to know why they have sent their
children to war," he
said.
On
Wednesday at least three mortar bombs fired from Syria killed five
civilians and wounded at least eight in the Turkish town of Akcakale.
It was the second such mortar attack on the Turkish town since last
Friday. Foreign Minister Davutoglu warned he would take action if
there were a repeat in the wake of the shelling.
After
a heated debate an urgent parliamentary session has opted to apply
the new law.
Originally
the bill targeted militants of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK)
fighting for independent Kurd state for the last three decades. The
Kurds have bases in northern Iraq, de-facto not controlled by the
government in Baghdad. The Turkish military has conducted a number of
air and ground assaults on Kurdish positions in Iraq, most of them
considered successful.
The
debates around the move have sparked sharp negative reaction among
the Turkish population. While a small group of anti-war protesters
rallied outside the Turkish parliament in Ankara, a real anti-war
storm has been initiated by Turkish and foreign activists on social
networks both inside and outside of Turkey. The hashtag #savasahayir
(no to war) quickly spread beyond Turkish borders into global social
networking.
'Turkey should proceed with caution'
Former
Pentagon official Michael Maloof told RT Turkey would likely exercise
caution, as they did when Syria shot down a Turkish
fighter in
June.
“If
you look at the example of the shoot down of the aircraft, they did
go to NATO, they did everything under Article 4[which
allows for consultations if a NATO state feels threatened]. They
did it again as a result of this incident. I think it is in Turkey’s
interest to proceed very, very cautiously. They don’t want to get
into a full conflagration with the Syrians, and also you have a lot
of background pressure, particularly from the Russians, for calm,” he
said.
Maloof
also stressed that the actual source of the mortar attack had not
been confirmed, as the opposition could use such an assault to
provoke a Turkish military response.
“I
think there still needs to be an investigation of that [attack], but
I think Turkey’s going to remain very cautious. I don’t think
they are going to try to get NATO to launch [an attack] under Article
5 [NATO’s
key collective defense principle].Frankly
I don’t think NATO would be in the position or have a desire to do
that,” he
said.
“Consequently,
rather than push that issue and cause a potential rift between Turkey
and NATO, I think Turkey could, conceivably under the authorization
of its parliament, at least set up a buffer zone just inside Syria to
prevent this from happening again,” Maloof
continued.
Eric
Draitser, a geopolitical analyst from stop imperialism.com told RT
that he believes Syrian rebels based on
the border may
be emboldened by Turkey’s announcement and feel they are protected
from Syrian troops.
“The
Adena base, which is, as was reported by Reuters, right around
Incirlik NATO base inside of Turkey, this is one of the centers of
Jihadists, which are infiltrating into Syria, now we have this
revelation that Turkey is at least formally preparing for war, its
entirely likely that they will use that as the pretext for unleashing
at least a new wave of infiltrations into Syria,” he
said.
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