Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The 'Kurdish problem' is our problem

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • The 'Kurdish problem' is our problem

    The 'Kurdish problem' is our problem

    Turkey has a legitimate complaint against the U.S. for not doing more
    to stop Kurdish terrorists in Iraq.

    Los Angeles Times

    Editorial
    October 22, 2007

    The "Kurdish problem" used to be a Turkish problem, a Syrian problem,
    an Iranian problem and an Iraqi problem. The U.S. invasion of Iraq has
    turned it into an American problem -- and lately, a very vexing one.

    Failure to quell Kurdish terrorism could end 50 years of strong
    relations between the United States and Turkey. The country matters a
    great deal because it is the only genuine Islamic democracy in the
    Middle East, the only Muslim country in NATO, a key ally in
    Afghanistan and an essential transit route into Iraq. It's also very
    angry at the United States -- and was so even before the House Foreign
    Affairs Committee approved a bill condemning Turkey for the World War
    I-era Armenian genocide. It's probably impossible for Washington to
    give Ankara what it wants, but this would be a good time to give
    Turkey something.

    It's true that the Turkish parliament refused to allow U.S. troops to
    pass though its territory to invade Iraq. It's true that the Turks --
    once the warmest of allies -- now give poll responses showing them to
    be the most anti-American population in the Middle East. And it's true
    that Turkey's historic repression of the Kurds has made matters
    infinitely worse, as has its refusal to negotiate with terrorists,
    which thwarts political solutions.

    Nevertheless, Turkey has a legitimate grievance. Rebels from the
    Kurdistan Workers Party, or PKK, whom the U.S. State Department has
    labeled terrorists, have stepped up attacks on Turkey from their
    sanctuaries in northern Iraq, and the Turks are furious that the U.S.
    military claims to be helpless to stop them. President Bush promised
    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan in 2004 to do more to stop the PKK
    inside Iraqi Kurdistan. But in the last month alone, PKK fighters have
    killed at least 25 Turkish soldiers and 12 civilians. Ankara can be
    forgiven for complaining that Bush's demand for nations to be "either
    with us or against us" in the war on terror is not reciprocated.

    So when the Turkish parliament last week authorized the use of
    military force in Iraq, U.S. officials did not deny its right to do
    so. They merely prayed aloud that Ankara would decide it's not in
    Turkey's best interest to invade. But Turkish patience with unkept
    American promises is understandably running out.

    Gen. David H. Petraeus, the U.S. commander in Iraq, has reportedly
    opposed diverting American troops "surging" in Iraq to a probably
    fruitless campaign to roust PKK guerrillas who have been dug in for
    decades among a supportive population in some of the Middle East's
    most rugged territory. But the United States could at the very least
    pressure Kurdish leaders to clean up their backyards -- or spare a few
    U.S. Special Forces troops for a "snatch and grab" operation to
    capture top PKK commanders.

    Would the passive Kurdish authorities be more willing to act against
    the PKK if they learned that the U.S. and Turkey were planning a joint
    NATO operation against the sanctuaries? Washington should find out.

    Source: http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-ed-turkey22 oct22,0,1368284.story?coll=la-opinion-leftrail
Working...
X