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Monday, January 29, 2007
12:10 Mecca time, 09:10 GMT
 
News Middle East
Turkey fears 'endless war' in Iraq
Kurdish moves towards gaining independence from Iraq have angered neighbouring Turkey [AP]

Turkey has told the US not to leave a power vacuum or allow Iraq to split when it leaves, because a divided Iraq would slip into "endless war" involving all of its neighbours.
 
"They cannot leave a vacuum behind them," Abdullah Gul, Turkey's foreign minister, said at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, on Friday.
"If Iraq is divided, there will be a real civil war and all the neighbours will be involved in this.
 
"If that happens, there will be another dark era in Iraqi history, there will be endless war, civil war."
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Gul also said Turkey would not recognise any new states that might emerge if Iraq were to split up and said that none of its neighbours, including Saudi Arabia, wished to see the country divided.
 
"If there is a division, we will not recognise any new government in the region," he said.
 
"We [Turkey and its neighbours] are all having the same target: to keep Iraq as one."
 
Legitimate
 
Separately, Gul urged the US and Iraq to deal with several thousand fighters of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) that are based in northern Iraq, saying if they were not brought under control, Turkey's military would intervene.
 
"We are expecting the Americans to do it. Either they have to do this, or if they are not able to do this, we have to do this. It is so legitimate," he said.
 
Ankara has repeatedly asked US forces to take action against the PKK, which uses the Kurdish area of northern Iraq as a base for attacks against Turkey.
 
More than 30,000 people have been killed, mostly in the mainly Kurdish southeast of Turkey, since the PKK began its armed campaign for a Kurdish homeland in 1984.
 Source: Agencies
 
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