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  • The US Dilemma: Do We Share The Burden Of Turks, Or Support Our Curr

    THE US DILEMMA: DO WE SHARE THE BURDEN OF TURKS, OR SUPPORT OUR CURRENT ALLY--THE KURDS?
    by Aram Azez

    OpEdNews, PA
    April 20 2007

    Despite all its negative approaches towards the US interests in the
    region, Turkey is still considering itself an old ally to the US and a
    member of NATO, which deserves to receive the same political, military,
    and financial support from the US that it used to prior to the Second
    Gulf War. However, with the backstab that the United States experienced
    by Turkey when it engaged in the "Freedom Iraq Oppression," how much
    more and for how much longer should the US take the burden of and old
    "ally" when, in stead, it has the essential and loyal collaboration
    of the Kurds?

    The worst of Turkey's burdens for the US to share are: financial,
    military, and political support to cover up its unprecedented Kurdish
    issue, the Armenian Genocide, the Islamic orientation, the Cyrus issue,
    its human rights violations, its so-called freedom of expression,
    etc. Most of these issues are conditions for Turkey's membership into
    the European Union. But Ankara is "allergic" to and quite sensitive
    about mentioning any of these points. In many aspects, however, the US
    has a responsibility to press Turkey to obey the criteria set by the
    EU; otherwise, the load will not be an easy one for America to share.

    It is a heavy weight on US shoulders to share with an old ally, which
    is now a more restrictive and problematic regime for the World Super
    Power in the region than any other country. Recently, the Turkish
    government rejected, once again, the requests made by the US Air Force
    to conduct training flights in the Mediterranean Sea air space and
    overnight fighter air raids over Turkey. The main backstab by Turkey;
    however, was when it declined the US troops access to their land in
    the 2003 Iraq War, which is a clear factor in affecting the strategic
    relationship between the two countries.

    Moreover, Turkey threatens to invade the Kurdish region of Iraq every
    now and then, further attempting to halt the US efforts in the area.

    Meanwhile, Turkey's political and military leaders are expressing their
    need for more US military and financial support to eradicate PKK,
    Turkey's Kurdish rebels. Turkey is asking the US to be reluctant in
    supporting the Kurdish objective over an independent Kurdish state
    in Iraq's northern region. The Bush administration is playing much
    smarter than Turkey in this regard. The United States has come to
    realize that the Kurdish leaders are their key ally, and they would
    not jeopardize this robust relationship over an old, retired one.

    Senator and wife of the former US President Clinton, has lately
    realized the significance of this relationship. "I think we have a
    vital national security interest and obligation to try to help the
    Kurds manage their various problems in the north so that one of our
    allies, Turkey, is not inflamed and they [the Kurds] are able to
    continue their autonomy," she has said.

    The only stable region that the US can depend on where it feels
    welcomed, at the present time and in the aftermath of its potential
    withdrawal from Iraq, is Kurdistan. US officials have now become well
    aware of the Kurdish support for Americans in the region, and they
    should respect Kurdish 'sensitivities.'

    Although the US blacklisted PKK, naming it a "terrorist" organization
    in the 1990s - to keep Turkey happy at the time - it is now realizing
    that taking action against any Kurdish political party would mean
    taking action against the Kurdish nation as a whole. This is regardless
    to the part of Kurdistan for which the party is struggling. If the
    Bush administration will take Turkey's burden at least in this matter,
    it should prepare itself to face other more serious circumstances
    in the region. Such a move by the US would be viewed by the Kurds as
    another betrayal in a series of betrayals by America.

    In 1975, Iran agreed with former US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger
    to close its doors and end its support to the Kurdish people,
    leaving them at the mercy of Saddam Hussein in 1975 - still vivid
    in the memories of the Kurdish people. In 1991, under the rule of
    George Bush Senior, the US encouraged the Kurds to rise up against
    the now obsolete Iraqi regime, but did not keep its promise, leaving
    the Kurds, once again, completely helpless. As a result, more than
    one million Kurdish civilians fled to neighboring Iran and Turkey.

    The struggle to survive as a nation is a continuing theme for the
    Kurds, the largest ethnic group in the world without a state of their
    own. The Kurds are living in the mountainous border regions among
    Turkey, Iran, Iraq, and Syria. They are the second largest US ally,
    offering their land to US forces as a frontier in the 2003 war on the
    Iraqi regime. The Kurds have taken an active part in the Iraqi war
    from its beginning. They collaborated with the US despite all fears
    of more possible chemical attacks by Iraq - something the Kurds had
    already experienced in 1988. Now, instead of another US betrayal,
    the Kurds say they deserve full support of the US for an independent
    Kurdish state.

    Turks' "Kurd-phobia"

    Denying an ancient nation like the Kurdish nation, with all
    assimilation and exodus, the eradication attempts by the Turkish
    regime reached its climax in the 1980s. During the 1980 military coup
    by Turkish leader and now ex-President Kenan Evren, who once denied
    the very existence of Kurds in Turkey, the Kurds were given the lowest
    status given to human beings in the history of mankind. His regime did
    not only restrict the use of the Kurdish language; it also described
    the Kurdish people, who had lived in the region for millennia prior
    to the arrival of the Turks, as "mountain Turks". He said the name
    "Kurd" came from the noise their boots made when walking in the
    snow {Kurt.-Kurt}.

    Even in the current millennium, Turkey's worst nightmare remains to be
    an independent Kurdistan. Ankara fears that such a move would bring
    together some 40-45 million Kurds, the majority of whom live within
    the borders of modern Turkey - in the country's southeast boundaries.

    Recently, to ease Turkey's anxiety, President of Kurdistan Region
    Massoud Barzani said, "Turkey should get used to the idea of an
    independent Kurdistan." The independence and statehood for Kurds,
    who live in a region that straddles Turkey, Iraq, Iran and Syria,
    is a "legitimate and legal right."

    The scenario of an independent Kurdish state will move a step
    closer by the end of this year, by which time Article 140 of
    the Iraqi Constitution must be implemented. According to the new
    Iraqi Constitution, this Article is to reverse the policies of the
    "Arabization Campaign" conducted by Saddam Hussein in the 1980s and
    1990s which drove thousands of Kurds out of their homes and replaced
    them with Arabs. After the "normalization" of the city, a census is to
    follow, then the referendum during which the people of the oil-rich
    city of Kirkuk will decide whether they want to stay as part of the
    Iraqi federal government or to join Iraq's Kurdistan region.

    This will be a more painful time for Turkey.

    US officials have been criticized by Turkish nationalists over the
    usage of the word "Kurdistan." For instance, during his farewell
    speech in Erbil, former US Ambassador to Iraq Zalmay Khalilzad, said,
    "There has been too much pain and violence in many parts of Iraq, but
    thank God not in Kurdistan." As usual, Ankara reacted to his remarks.

    Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice was also pinched into the quarrel
    after the Turkish government took her to undertaking over the use
    of the word "Kurdistan." Speaking before the Senate Appropriations
    Committee last February, Rice referred to the Kurdish rebels who
    were "operating on the border between Turkey and Kurdistan." Turkish
    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan called Rice's description of the
    region "wrong," adding that Turkey would pass "necessary messages"
    to US authorities.

    The Armenian Genocide - Another controversial issue for Turkey

    According to PanArmenian.net, a group of prominent Armenians and
    Turks initiated a third-party study in 2002 of the procedures of
    1915-1918 when they equally came up to the International Center
    for Transitional Justice (ICTJ). In a comprehensive report, the
    New York-based organization fulfilled that the Armenian massacres
    included "all of the elements of the crime of genocide" as distinct
    by a 1948 United Nations convention. The Armenian Genocide Resolution
    (S. Res. 106) calls upon George W. Bush to ensure that the foreign
    policy of the United States reflects suitable sympathy and sensitivity
    regarding issues related to human rights, ethnic cleansing, and
    genocide recognized in the United States evidence relating to the
    Armenian Genocide.

    U.S. President George W. Bush has also cited the ICTJ study in his
    annual messages to the Armenian-American community. Bush's most recent
    statements called it "a significant contribution toward deepening our
    understanding of these events". However, both the US defense secretary
    and US Secretary of State have sent a letter to senior members of the
    US Congress indicating the damage that Turkish-US ties could suffer
    if the pending resolution on Armenian claims of genocide at the hands
    of the Ottoman Turks is passed.

    "It is no secret that the strategic relationship between the United
    States and Turkey has undergone some turbulence in recent years,"
    Gates said, in his first public speech after becoming Secretary of
    Defense. It was not by accident that he spoke at a Turkish-American
    event, Gates said, adding that Turkey and the United States should
    avoid damaging attitudes, such as the Armenian genocide resolution
    pending at the US Congress and the worsening anti-American stance
    in Turkey.

    Human rights and freedom of expression violations

    Despite the escalating pressure by the European Union on Turkey -
    an EU-hopeful country - regarding freedom of expression, in recent
    years, hundreds of politicians, writers, journalists and academics
    have been prosecuted in Turkey for expressing their views. Among
    them were 2006 Nobel Prize winner, Orhan Pamuk and renowned Turkish
    novelist Elif Shafak. According to Turkey's Article 301, mentioning
    the Armenian genocide or raising the Kurdish issue or praising Kurdish
    leaders, are criminal offenses. According to this notorious Article,
    criticizing Turkey in any way is considered "denigrating Turkishness
    or undermining Turkey's national unity."

    A 92-year-old retired Turkish archaeologist, Muazzez Ilmiye Cig, who
    is also an expert on the ancient Sumerian civilization of Mesopotamia,
    has claimed in one of her books that the headscarf worn by Muslim women
    was first used by women in ancient Sumerian era - for pre-Islamic
    sexual rites. She went on trial in Turkey for expressing her views,
    which the government considered "insulting Islam."

    In recent years, hundreds of prominent Kurdish politicians and
    intellectuals have faced charges for referring to Abdullah Ocalan
    as honorific, or simply for having raised the Kurdish issue. Current
    Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan, himself, was accused of referring to
    Ocalan as "Sayin" or esteemed in an interview in 2000. Prosecutors
    examined recordings of the comments, but found him not guilty.

    On March 6, a Turkish court ordered blocking access to You Tube because
    of videos allegedly insulting Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the founder of
    the modern Turkish state. Many Kurdish-English websites, newspapers,
    and TV channels are also being banned in Turkey - something that
    George Bernard Shaw of the New York Times called "the extreme form
    of censorship". EU skepticism over an Islamic Turkish government

    The skepticism of the European Union towards the efforts of Turkey's
    Islamist government to meet the EU standards has much elevated.

    Turkey has been at the center of the altercation between Islamism and
    freedom of speech. Scientists say religious Muslims in the government,
    that has its roots in political Islam, are trying to push Turkish
    education away from its traditionally secular approach.

    Reuters newly noticed: Now here's a hilarious conundrum for the idiot
    left that cheers on reactionary Islamism as heroic anti-imperialism.

    Are we supposed to oppose this garbage when conservative Christians do
    it in the US, but support it when conservative Muslims do it in Turkey?

    Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan has met and invited his Palestinian
    counterpart Ismail Haniya of the hardliner Islamist Hamas movement
    to visit Ankara. Haniya heads the new Palestinian government that
    includes Hamas, which is regarded as a terrorist group by Israel and
    the West. Turkey also has strong relations with Iran, which nowadays
    is almost an isolated regime in the international community, especially
    in relations with the US and its allies.

    Turkish Islamist administration was annoyed by an EU mug in Brussels
    last March. The mug was offered to the French President by German
    Chancellor Angela Merkel at the last European Union summit, but Turkish
    media said the lid of the mug portrayed the 1799 defeat of Turkish
    forces by Napoleon in Egypt. Although Turks are sensitive nationalists
    in the matter of their related issues, experts believe that the recent
    reaction by Turkish Foreign Minister was likely religion-related.

    Another crucial trouble of Turkey with the EU is Cyprus. Last December,
    the EU suspended talks in 8 of the 35 areas because of Ankara's refusal
    to open its ports and airports to traffic from Cyprus, an EU member
    that Turkey does not recognize.

    Now, it is still up to the US to decide whether to share Turkey's heavy
    burden, which includes political, military, and financial assistance
    to overcome its 'Kurd-phobia,' the Armenian genocide, the Cyrus issue,
    the human rights violations, trouble joining the EU and so forth. Or,
    to support its' new and loyal Kurdish ally in Kurdistan on which the
    Americans can depend without facing any hostilities and where, from the
    beginning of the Iraq War up to now - not a single US soldier has died.

    www.newand.net

    Aram Azez is a Kurdish Political Journalist. He writes about
    the Kurdish and Middle East Issues in both Kurdish and English
    languages. Most of his articles are published in Kurdish-English
    Newspapers and Websites(see www.kurdishmedia.com for his articles
    in English .) Currently he is editor-in chief of printed Kurdish
    Newspaper, Newand .

    http://www.opednews.com/articles/opedne_aram_az e_070420_the_us_dilemma_3a_do_w.htm
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