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Daily Analysis: If Turkey Invades

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  • Daily Analysis: If Turkey Invades

    CFR
    Daily Analysis

    If Turkey Invades

    October 22, 2007

    Author: Lee Hudson Teslik

    Turkey removed a major legislative hurdle blocking an invasion into
    northern Iraq with an October 18 parliamentary vote authorizing raids
    (Turkish Daily News). Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
    cautioned that the vote would not necessarily translate to an
    invasion, but analysts did not seem too reassured, particularly after
    an ambush (BBC) of Turkish troops by Kurdish separatists incited
    crisis talks in Ankara on October 21. While U.S. and Iraqi officials
    alike warn Turkey not to invade, CFR's Steven A. Cook says in a
    podcast that a controversial vote by a U.S. congressional panel,
    deeming the slaughter of Armenians by Ottoman Turks in World War I a
    "genocide," may have given Turkey the political catalyst needed to
    launch an invasion. U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice responded
    to the ambush by asking Erdogan to hold off for a few days before
    launching any ground attacks, and the New York Times reports Turkish
    officials agreed to the request. But the pause did not quell the
    drumbeat of "what ifs," and analysts focused their attentions on what
    the fallout might be if Turkey follows through with cross-border
    raids.

    Most experts say the after-effects of an invasion would depend largely
    on the scale of the attack and how it is carried out. Iraq's Foreign
    Minister Hoshyar Zebari has indicated he prefers limited air attacks
    (Gulf Daily News) on Kurdish targets to full-on land raids. Iraqi and
    U.S. leaders say a Turkish ground attack would work to destabilize
    Iraq's north, currently one of the less volatile regions in the
    country. In a recent interview with CFR.org, the Kurdish head of
    foreign affairs in Iraq expresses hope the issue can be solved
    politically. The tension is particularly awkward (FT) for the United
    States, which finds itself stuck between a political ally in Turkey
    and a tactical ally in Iraq's Kurds. Given the fragility of the
    current situation, Iraq's foreign minister said in a recent statement
    that the effects of an invasion could ripple (VOA) well beyond
    northern Iraq, destabilizing the entire region.

    Should this happen, one major casualty might be Iraq's nascent
    government, which already struggles to keep order in a country fraught
    with ethnic tension. As a new Backgrounder explains, some U.S.
    officials are calling for schemes to manage Iraq's regions
    separately - though these plans meet a contentious response from many
    Iraqi leaders. CFR President Emeritus Leslie H. Gelb says in an
    interview that a federalized Iraqi government remains the best way to
    "maintain harmony" among Iraq's sects. Kurds in recent years have been
    able to mediate between Iraq's Sunni and Shiite factions, and analysts
    worry that if they become embroiled in violence, their ability to do
    this will be compromised.

    It remains to be seen whether Turkey will actually invade Iraq, or if
    authorizing raids simply represents a bargaining chip. Turkey has
    again called on the U.S. to seize Kurdish separatist fighters, and
    U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said the U.S. needs to do more on
    this front. Either way, intense diplomacy has broken out in an effort
    to stave off bloodshed. On October 19, Kurdish Iraqis held protests
    (NYT) in an effort to coax Turkey not to attack. Meanwhile, the
    Economist argues the best hope for preventing a crisis may lie not in
    getting Turkey to sympathize with Iraqis or Americans, but in getting
    Ankara to better understand its own interests. "With luck," the
    article says, Turkey "will recognize that a full-blown invasion of
    northern Iraq would damage its interests and further inflame Kurdish
    separatists."

    Source: http://www.cfr.org/publication/14577/if_turkey_inv ades.html?breadcrumb=%2Fbios%2F12286%2Flee_hudson_ teslik
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