TEHRAN,
Sept 1 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Key U.S. ally Turkey and
long time foe Iran said Sunday, September 1, 2002, they wanted
Washington to resolve its differences with Iraq through "peaceful
means", rejecting U.S. plans to strike the country. Turkey also
warned it would take military action against Kurdish groups along the
border with northern Iraq if they moved towards independence after a
possible U.S. strike.
Washington's
crisis with Iraq over its weapons of mass destruction "must be
resolved through peaceful means," Turkish Foreign Minister Sukru
Sina Gurel said quoted by Iranian state television, reported Agence
France-Presse (AFP).
"Any
change must be decided by the Iraqi people," he said, in a veiled
reference to U.S. President George W. Bush's promises to oust the
regime of Saddam Hussein.
Gurel
was the fourth top diplomat of a pro-Western state in as many weeks to
beat a path to Tehran to voice opposition to U.S. Iraq policy.
His
Iranian counterpart Kamal Kharazi reiterated opposition to U.S. plans
to strike Baghdad, but criticized Iraq for being
"unpredictable" in its actions.
"The
Iraqi regime is unpredictable and over the past two decades has caused
much damage to countries in the region," Kharazi said, a
reference to the Iran-Iraq war of 1980-1988 and the Iraqi invasion of
Kuwait in 1990.
However,
"this should not justify any interference in the affairs of
Iraq," he added, saying "consultations between Turkey and
Iran as well as other countries neighboring Iraq can be very effective
in preventing a bigger crisis in the future", he added.
Iranian
President Mohammad Khatami during his talks with Gurel, meanwhile,
stressed the two countries' "identical views" on regional
stability, the president's office said.
"Cooperation
between Iran and Turkey contributes to the economic progress and helps
to maintain the security and stability in both countries as well as
other countries in Central Asia and Caucasus," the statement
said.
For
his part, the Turkish Foreign Minister renewed an invitation from
Turkish President Ahmet Necdet Sezer, for Khatami to participate in a
summit of Economic Co-operation Organization (ECO) on October 14 in
Turkey.
Gurel's
trip to Tehran, kicked off Saturday, followed visits last month by
diplomats from the pro-Western Gulf states of Bahrain, Saudi Arabia
and Oman, in a regional display of solidarity to express misgivings
about US military action against Iraq.
In
Ankara, meanwhile, Turkish Defense Minister said Sunday that his
country will not allow the Kurds in Northern Iraq to declare
independence if the U.S. went ahead with its unilateral threats
against Baghdad.
"Under
UN charter, countries can at times carry out border operations to
ensure border security," Sabahattin Cakmakoglu said in the
northwestern town of Mengen, the Anatolia news agency reported.
The
Minister recalled that the Turkish army frequently carried out
"border operations" in the past against armed Kurdish rebels
fighting for Kurdish self-rule in Turkey's south east.
Such
operations saw Turkish troops entering deep into northern Iraq to hunt
down Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) rebels sheltering in the
mountainous region.
"If
Turkey sees a possible threat at its border, it is ready to undertake
similar moves," Cakmakoglu said.
His
remarks came two days after the chief of the Turkish army, General
Hilmi Ozkok, acknowledged that the country kept a military presence in
northern Iraq, but refused to give any further details.
Two
main Kurdish factions have run northern Iraq since the 1991 Gulf War
when the area was taken out of Baghdad's control and put under the
protection of a Western-enforced no-fly zone