Turkish parliament to "decide" t'm'w - in secret!

John Mage jmage at panix.com
Sat Mar 1 10:43:39 PST 2003


Beautiful... the government did what they promised the US (and the
generals) to do, but instead the Turkish parliament made a display of
constitutional democracy.
Not exactly the scenario I had been hoping for, but damn close....
john mage

Turkish Official Nullifies Approval of G.I. Presence
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Filed at 1:00 p.m. ET

ANKARA, Turkey (AP) -- In a serious blow to U.S. plans for a possible
war with Iraq, Turkey's parliament speaker nullified the legisature's
vote Saturday to allow deployment of 62,000 U.S. combat troops to open a
northern front against Iraq.

Speaker Bulent Arinc voided the vote on constitutional grounds, ruling
that a majority of legislators present had not voted in favor. Arinc
then closed parliament until Tuesday.

The vote was 264-250 with 19 abstentions, four short of a simple majority.

The bill's rejection is likely to seriously increase tensions with the
United States which had been expecting a positive vote.

The motion would have empowered the government to authorize the basing
of up to 62,000 troops, 255 warplanes and 65 helicopters.

Washington has been looking to use bases in Turkey to open a northern
front against Iraq, which would have divided Saddam Hussein's army if
there is a war. Turkish and U.S. generals said the strategy would lead
to a quicker and less bloody war.

Washington had been offering Turkey some $15 billion in loans and grants
if the troops were allowed in to cushion the Turkish economy from the
impact of any war.

A signing of that agreement had been expected after the vote.

But there was strong resistance in the governing Justice and Development
Party to any vote. An overwhelming majority of the Turkish public -
polls show as high as 94 percent - oppose a war and deputies were under
strong domestic pressure to reject any U.S. troop basing.

Hours before the vote, the party's leader, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, met
with his party legislators, trying to persuade them to back the U.S.
troop deployment.

A mile from parliament, 50,000 Turks held a rally to protest the war.

``No to War,'' and ``We don't want to be America's soldiers','' they
shouted as some 4,000 police stood guard. Some carried banners that
read: ``The people will stop this war,'' and ``Budget for education not
war.''

Party leaders had called for a Thursday vote, but that was put off until
Saturday amid signs that some legislators would vote against the motion.



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