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  • New battlefront

    World Magazine
    Oct 19 2007


    New battlefront

    Turkey: Turkey's parliament authorizes military into northern Iraq to
    oust rebels

    by Jill Nelson


    Turkish soldiers patrol on the Turkish-Iraqi border
    Iraq's Kurdish north has been a sanctuary for thousands of Iraqis
    fleeing the chaos and sectarian killings in Baghdad and the volatile
    provinces. That could all change after Turkey's Parliament burst into
    applause on Oct. 17 upon authorizing a military incursion against
    Kurdish rebels in northern Iraq - a blow to the battered Iraqi
    government and its war-weary civilians.

    Turkish leaders say that an assault is not imminent, but their action
    provoked Washington and Baghdad. President George Bush urged Turkish
    leaders to rethink the resolution. Iraqi leaders - fearful that such an
    incursion could throw their only peaceful region into chaos - flew to
    Ankara to persuade its leaders to engage in diplomacy instead of
    combat.

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    Journalist and political writer Kenneth Timmerman recently spent
    several days with Iranian Kurdish rebels in Iraq who control some of
    the area Turkey considers "cleaning out." The terrain is treacherous,
    he said, with mountain peaks reaching past 10,000 feet and roads
    susceptible to guerrilla attacks. He has little faith that Turkey can
    maneuver a successful operation in northern Iraq. "The Kurds will do
    what they have done for generations, which is to simply melt back
    into the mountains," Timmerman told WORLD.

    Classified as a terrorist group by the United States and others, the
    Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK, has plagued Ankara for decades.
    Although their quest for a Kurdish state within Turkey eventually
    transformed into a less-threatening crusade for basic rights, an
    escalation in violence in the past two years has rekindled old
    hostilities. Two recent attacks - one that killed 13 Turkish soldiers
    and a bus ambush that left 12 civilians dead - again brought the
    Kurdish clash to the forefront of Turkish politics.

    The vast majority of Kurds don't support PKK and its splinter groups.
    Iraqi Kurdistan depends on trade with Turkey to support the growing
    population of both native Kurds and those newly displaced from the
    south. President Jalal Talabani, an ethnic Kurd, called on the PKK to
    end its guerrilla warfare in Turkey and urged Ankara not to send more
    troops into Iraq: "We consider the activities of the PKK against the
    interests of the Kurdish people first and then against the interests
    of Turkey."

    David Cuthell, Executive Director for the Institute of Turkish
    Studies, says the Kurds would have their own state "in a perfect
    world" but are "cursed by geography and history." The Kurdish people
    comprise an estimated 20 percent of Turkey's population and have
    substantial minorities in Iraq, Iran, and Syria.

    Turkey has received its share of international criticism for
    human-rights abuses against Kurdish minorities. And Timmerman says
    the Kurds fighting today are quite different from the old PKK. Their
    primary grievance is an article in the new Turkish constitution - set
    for ratification later this month - stating that the people of Turkey
    are Turks: "The Kurds believe - rightfully so in my view - that this
    amounts to ethnic supremacy."

    Complicating diplomacy is a congressional measure labeling as
    genocide the murder of 1.5 million Armenians in Turkey during World
    War I recently approved in the U.S. House. The resolution - largely
    ceremonial and backed by Democratic leadership - lost steam after
    almost a dozen lawmakers withdrew support. Some cited warnings from
    the White House, which called the measure "dangerously provocative,"
    while others attributed their shift to the possibility of Turkey
    severing diplomatic ties while allies in the region are in short
    supply.

    Cuthell says the measure is philosophically bankrupt: "This is just
    walking up to the Turks, poking them in the eye, and then asking them
    to do a favor," he said.

    Underlying the fear of severed ties with Turkey is the Iranian
    threat. Timmerman, who serves as the executive director of the
    Foundation for Democracy in Iran, suspects Turkey's leaders are on a
    journey toward an Islamic state and says the country's recent
    military and economic alliance with Iran, "which includes joint
    military planning for the offensive against the Kurds," is
    "especially troubling."

    With winter around the corner, rebel activities are expected to go
    dormant, providing new opportunities for diplomacy. "The U.S. and
    Turkey have a real deep and profound congruence at many levels," said
    Cuthell, "and we need to make sure we don't let untamed remarks and
    resolutions undermine what has been a long-standing and very solid
    relationship."

    http://www.worldmag.com/articles/13446
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