Güncelleme Tarihi:
"For the first time in our 24-year struggle against terrorism, the Turkish armed forces have become the target of such meaningless attacks," the General Staff said in a statement posted on its Web site. "These attacks hurt the determination of the Turkish armed forces to fight terror even more than the traitors do," it said, describing the criticism as "unfair and underhand".           Â
The statement did not name the critics, but it was clearly aimed at MHP leader Devlet Bahceli, who said the General Staff had lent to the PKK a certain prestige by speaking of outlawed separatist command centres as if they were a conventional enemy army. Bahceli and his MHP are usually staunch backers of the armed forces and are quick to accuse the centre-right AK Party government of lacking respect for soldiers.
Turkey's military has been thrown on the defensive since last Friday's surprise decision to pull all troops out of Iraq after eight days of often fierce combat with the outlawed PKK separatists in the snow-bound mountains of northern Iraq. The military said the ground operation had achieved its objectives, including the deaths of some 240 PKK members and the destruction or seizure of PKK equipment and facilities. Both the General Staff and the government say Turkey reserves the right to send troops back into northern Iraq against the PKK if this is deemed necessary.