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  • Turkey's troubling threat

    Berkshire Eagle, MA
    Oct 20 2007


    Turkey's troubling threat

    Editorial
    Article Last Updated: 10/20/2007 06:47:07 AM EDT


    The long-standing enmity between Turkey and the Kurds of bordering
    northern Iraq is a conflagration waiting to happen, and the Turkish
    parliament's authorization of cross-border incursions to root out
    Kurdish rebels from their mountain bases may ignite it. The United
    States has little pull with Ankara, but the European Union, which
    Turkey desperately wants to join, does, and the member nations should
    use it to restrain the government from actions that could be
    disastrous.
    Among the many after-effects of America's toppling of Saddam Hussein
    was the freeing of the Kurds from Mr. Hussein's tyranny. The Kurds
    have largely steered clear of the Sunni-Shiite civil war tearing
    apart the country, and as they slowly carve out an autonomous region
    on the Turkish border, Ankara worries that Kurds in Turkey will
    demand similar independence. Turkey accuses Iraqi Kurds of crossing
    the border to assist restive members of the Kurdistan Workers' Party
    in their periodic battles with the Turkish military, which Massoud
    Barzani, the president of the Kurdish region in Iraq, denies.

    A Muslim nation and a member of NATO, Turkey, for centuries a shaky
    bridge between Europe and Asia, is desperately trying to keep a foot
    planted in both the West and the East. It is a difficult trick, which
    the Bush administration has made much more difficult.
    Ankara opposed the invasion of Iraq, refusing to allow the White
    House to launch planes from its military bases, because it knew the
    invasion would destabilize the country. Turkey wants to maintain
    friendly relations with Iran and resents White House efforts to
    pressure it to join its sanctions campaign. The government's
    crankiness over a House resolution declaring Turkey's World War I-era
    massacre of Armenians to be genocide is part and parcel of its
    unhappiness with Washington.

    If Turkey invades northern Iraq it may create another Chechnya. Its
    forces will have difficulty rooting out the Kurds from the mountains
    they know so well and Kurds in Turkey will become more rebellious.
    Iran and Syria may follow Turkey's lead and invade sections of Iraq
    that they have an interest in exploiting or subduing.

    Barzani has urged Ankara to engage in talks about the alleged border
    incursions and Ankara should take up that offer. If Turkish leaders
    are reluctant to do so, the European Union should not be reluctant to
    lean on them. A Turkish incursion into Iraq would have repercussions
    that will be felt around the globe.

    http://www.berkshireeagle.com/editorials/c i_7232948
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