ISTANBUL, Turkey (CNN) -- Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki promised Saturday to smoke out Kurdish separatist rebels using Iraq as a base to launch attacks into neighboring Turkey.
The Iraqi leader spoke at a gathering of Iraq's neighbors and other Arab countries held to discuss the future of the war-torn country. The meeting, however, has been overshadowed by the crisis along the Turkish-Iraq border.
U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice met on the conference sidelines with the foreign ministers of Turkey and Iraq to discuss joint cooperation between the three countries to tackle the activities of the Kurdish rebel group, Kurdistan Workers Party, or PKK, which al-Maliki called a "terrorist" group.
"The terrorism that targeted our infrastructure and our public facilities and universities and shed the bloods of the innocent civilians in Iraq is the same terrorism that is targeting your countries and here in our brethren Turkey," the Iraqi leader said.
"Turkey is facing criminal threats by the terrorist PKK, and our relationship with our neighbor Turkey will not be affected by the current crisis, and we will work on defeating the terror that is targeting both the Iraqi and Turkish people."
Al-Maliki said Iraqi authorities would close businesses thought to be fronts for the Kurdish separatists and controls at borders and airports will be tightened to check the group's movements.
The Iraqi leader said greater efforts would be made to isolate the PKK by cutting off aid to the group. Suspected PKK members caught by the authorities would be tried in Iraqi courts on terrorist charges, al-Maliki said.
Following al-Maliki's comments, Iraq's state-run al-Iraqiya television network reported that the office of the Kurdistan Democratic Solution Party, a local political group, was shut down because of its ties with the PKK. No additional information was immediately available.
The PKK has been launching attacks into southeastern Turkey in recent weeks, and some of the violence has spilled over into northern Iraq. The group is pushing for an autonomous Kurdish state in the region.
Turkey is threatening to launch a full-scale military attack against the PKK, and has massed 100,000 troops near the border. The United States fears strikes by its NATO ally against the PKK could destabilize the American-backed government in Baghdad and jeopardize supply lines for its 160,000-plus troops in Iraq.
Rice met Friday with al-Maliki, who pledged to work with Turkey in addressing the matter. State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said Rice and al-Maliki met with their aides for about an hour ahead of Saturday's conference in Istanbul.
Both leaders agreed in the brief meeting that the presence and activities of the PKK were a "threat" to the Kurds, to Iraq and to Turkey, McCormack said. The Iraqi prime minister said both the Iraqi government and the Kurdish Regional Government would be involved in resolving the conflict with the PKK.
Earlier Friday, senior State Department officials said the United States is offering Turkey a package of measures to dissuade it from launching a ground assault against the Kurdish rebels.
The officials told CNN that Rice met with Turkish officials in Ankara armed with a three-pronged approach, which included "concrete plans" to increase cooperation among the United States, Turkey and Iraq on the issue; support for limited Turkish action to punish the separatists and prevent further attacks; and a long-term strategy to dissolve the rebels' group.
The U.S. proposals address demands by the Turkish government to reduce the PKK's ability to conduct terror attacks, including limiting the movements of PKK fighters; stopping the flow of supplies and oil to the rebels; closing PKK offices in northern Iraq; and arresting those thought to be responsible for the recent attacks in Turkey, State Department officials said.
These are all steps the United States has been pressing the Kurdish government in northern Iraq to take.
In addition, the United States pledged to help increase cooperation among the United States, Turkey and Iraq. The Pentagon has confirmed it is already sharing intelligence with Turkey on PKK hideouts and movements.
Iraqi officials have said they did not want the Turkish conflict with Kurdish rebels to be the centerpiece of the neighbors conference, wanting instead to focus on their proposals for Iraq's future, including security, energy and refugees.
The first neighbors conference in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt, in May addressed Arab concerns about the al-Maliki government and its inability to foster political reconciliation among Iraqis Sunni, Shiia and Kurdish factions.
In the days before the Istanbul meeting, U.S. Ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker toured key Arab countries to urge them to engage with the Iraqi government and use influence with parties in Iraq to get behind the effort and support Iraq, senior State Department officials said.
"He is telling them the U.S. made an effort to stabilize Iraq with the surge and is getting ready to draw down, and won't be there forever, so it is time for the Arabs to think about their long term interest in a stable Iraq. If they want to counter Iranian influence, they need to engage," one aide to Crocker told CNN.
The official said that Crocker senses a keener interest and willingness of Sunni Arab states to help out in Iraq and open embassies in the Iraqi capital Baghdad.
Crocker has met with the Iranian ambassador three times as part of a working group with Iraq to address Iranian behavior in Iraq, including U.S. charges it is supporting militants and arming insurgents with deadly explosives to kill U.S. soldiers. Although no progress has been made in the meetings, officials say the channel is still open and the two are expected to meet again in the near future.

Rice is not expected to meet the foreign minister of Iran or Syria at the Istanbul conference, although they are both attending. At the May meeting Rice met with the Syrian foreign minister and had a brief exchange with the Iranian minister
Rice will meet with the Saudi foreign minister in Istanbul and attend a ministerial meeting on Lebanon. E-mail to a friend ![]()
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