Turkish
Army continues shelling positions in Syria
Turkish
forces continue shelling targets in Syria following a deadly
cross-border attack on a town in southeast Turkey amid escalating
tensions between the two neighbors.
3
October, 2012
Ankara
said the attacks were in retaliation for a Syrian mortar strike that
killed five people in Turkey's southeastern town of Akcakale in
Sanliurfa province earlier on Wednesday.
In
a letter to the UN Security Council, Ankara condemned the shelling as
“a flagrant violation of international law,” and asked the world
body to take action to stop such “acts of aggression.”
The
Turkish parliament is due on Thursday to discuss a motion for
cross-border military operations inside Syria "when deemed
necessary."
NATO
ambassadors also held an emergency late-night meeting in Brussels to
discuss the Syrian shelling and the Turkish backfire.
The
alliance blamed Syria for the incident and demanded Damascus end what
it called aggressive acts against member-nation Turkey.
Meanwhile
in a phone conversation, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
assured Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu of Washington’s
full backing for Ankara at NATO and the UN, the Turkish Foreign
Ministry said in a statement.
Separately,
White House spokesman Tommy Vietor said, "We stand with our
Turkish ally and are continuing to consult closely on the path
forward.”
The
remarks came despite the Syrian government’s gesture to offer
condolences to Turkish people over the deadly mortar attack and to
launch an investigation into the source of the shelling.
Damascus
also called for an end to the transfer of terrorists into Syria,
which has been plagued by more than a year of deadly unrest.
Syria
accuses certain Western and regional countries, including Saudi
Arabia, Qatar, and Turkey, of arming and funding insurgents fighting
against the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

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