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Old Gripe Brings Turkey Face To Face With Iraq

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  • Old Gripe Brings Turkey Face To Face With Iraq

    OLD GRIPE BRINGS TURKEY FACE TO FACE WITH IRAQ
    Dilip Hiro

    YaleGlobal Online, CT
    http://yaleglobal.yale.edu/display.article?id=9 855
    Oct 22 2007

    American failure to rein in the restive Kurds reignites a
    long-simmering conflict

    Invasion looms? Kurds in Irbil protest the Turkish Parliament's
    decision to authorize sending troops into northern Iraq

    LONDON: The Kurdish problem has been a running sore for Iraq and
    Turkey since their emergence as modern states, but was little more
    than a local irritant - until now. With US occupation forces encamped
    in Iraq and the Kurdish drive for independence appearing irreversible
    under Washington's wings, the issue has shot up on the international
    agenda, threatening to upset the fragile regional balance of power
    and further delay US withdrawal from Iraq.

    Several strands make the issue highly combustible: tapped and
    untapped hydrocarbon reserves in the Kurdish territories; strong
    extra-territorial Kurdish solidarity; the unresolved distribution
    of power between the center and the provinces in post-Saddam Iraq;
    Washington's ongoing coddling of Iraqi Kurds, who consolidated their
    quasi-independent status, with support of the US and Britain for 12
    years; and the Partiya Karkeren Kurdistan (PKK) in Turkey resorting
    to violence to achieve autonomy for the Kurdish-majority region.

    Although Kurds in the region are citizens of Turkey, Iraq, Iran or
    Syria, their ethnic identity tends to supersede their loyalty to the
    central national authority. A major event concerning Kurds in one
    country quickly engages fellow Kurds in neighboring states.

    The Kurds in the region envy those in Iraq. Consisting of three
    provinces, Iraqi Kurdistan has its own army, parliament and flag. Its
    schools impart education in the Kurdish language, akin to Persian, not
    Arabic. It passed its own hydrocarbon law. And, ignoring the warnings
    of the oil ministry in Baghdad, it signed exploration and production
    contracts with nine oil companies including the Dallas-based Hunt
    Oil Company, which is close to the Bush administration.

    Recent events put the Kurdish issue on the front burner. Despite last
    month's agreement between the prime ministers of Turkey and Iraq to
    stamp down Kurdish terrorism, and repeated pinprick forays by the
    Turkish army into northern Iraq, an estimated 3,500 PKK guerrillas,
    based in Iraqi Kurdistan, have killed 42 Turks, soldiers and civilians.

    The Turkish parliament provided the government with a yearlong window
    to conduct cross-border operations against the PKK, listed as a
    terrorist organization by the US and the European Union. The vote was
    507 to 19, with all negative votes cast by ethnic Kurds, highlighting
    the priority that Kurds give to their ethnicity over their nationality.

    Against this volatile background came the ill-considered attempt by
    the US House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee to pass
    legislation that inflamed Turkish opinion. The resolution describes
    the massacres and deportations of 1 million Armenians during World
    War I - when Ottoman Turkey sided with Germany against the Allies -
    as genocide. This is a highly sensitive subject for Turkey, successor
    to the Ottoman Empire. Turkey has threatened, if the House adopts this
    resolution, to close its airspace and ports to the US, thus reducing
    Pentagon effectiveness in Iraq.

    After securing parliamentary authorization for "cross-border
    operations" - a euphemism for invasion - Turkish Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan said that such a move was not imminent.

    That did not stop thousands of Iraqi Kurds in the regional capital of
    Irbil marching to the United Nations compound to demand intervention
    by the UN Security Council.

    Nor did it dampen debate in Iraq as to how Iraqi authorities would
    respond to the Turkish army's advance into northern Iraq. Will Kurdish
    militiamen - called "peshmergas," or those ready to die - and US
    troops engage the Turkish soldiers? Or will the central government
    deploy forces to repel the incursion?

    The second option is academic. The Kurdistan Regional Government
    (KRG) has upgraded the 75,000 peshmergas, belonging to the two ruling
    political parties - the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and Patriotic
    Union of Kurdistan (PUK) - to regular soldiers, and refused to let
    Iraqi troops enter its territory. Its armed forces guard the posts
    along the borders with Turkey and Iran.

    Faced with the prospect of an onslaught by the Turkish army, the second
    largest in NATO, a spokesman of the KRG offered "honest dialogue"
    with Ankara to resolve the PKK problem without "the constant violation
    of Iraqi sovereignty."

    In his view, Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al Maliki made a mistake by
    excluding the KRG from talks with his Turkish counterpart to forge
    an agreement on countering PKK terrorism.

    But Turkey has shunned the government in Irbil - which repudiated the
    Erdogan-Maliki agreement - while loudly protesting its ever-expanding
    power and profile. It fears that even implicit recognition of this
    entity will encourage Turkish Kurds to demand autonomy as a preamble
    to independence.

    The idea of independence for the Kurds in the region dates back to
    the disintegration of the Ottoman Empire after World War I, formalized
    in the Treaty of Sèvres in 1920. Kurds feel that US President Woodrow
    Wilson failed to keep his promise of delivering to them an independent
    state as envisaged in the treaty. They ignore the fact that the Turkish
    parliament rejected that treaty and the subsequent Treaty of Lausanne
    of 1923 made no mention of an independent Kurdistan.

    More recently, heeding the call by US President George H.W. Bush at
    the end of the 1991 Gulf War, the Kurds in Iraq rebelled against
    Saddam Hussein's regime, only to see their uprising crushed by
    Saddam's forces. Washington and London created a safe haven in the
    north for Kurdish refugees and rebels by providing an air umbrella
    that continued until the Anglo-American invasion of Iraq in 2003.

    Kurdish leaders agreed in March 2004 to dissolve their militias or
    merge them into the new Iraqi army and then later said they were
    postponing the agreement "indefinitely." The US, the occupying power,
    did nothing.

    In the interim parliament, lacking proportionate Sunni representation
    due to the Sunnis' boycott of the general election, conflict
    developed between Shiites and Kurds. The recently empowered, deeply
    religious Shiite majority wanted to establish a centralized Islamic
    republic. But, committed to secular Kurdish nationalism, the KDP and
    the PUK favored a federal Iraq with a weak center.

    When Shiite leaders failed to get their Kurdish counterparts to agree
    to diminution of the autonomy Kurdistan had enjoyed, they approached
    Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani for guidance. Noting Kurdish obstinacy,
    Sistani recommended a federalist system, allowing one or more of the
    15 non-Kurdish provinces to form a regional government with powers
    comparable to Kurdistan's.

    This alarmed Ankara. In contrast, the Bush administration, beholden
    to the Iraqi Kurds, looked on benignly as the new Iraqi constitution
    sowed the seeds of the republic's break-up.

    Washington's failure to pressure the Iraqi Kurdish leadership at a
    crucial moment alienated the Turkish government. Matters grew worse
    when Ankara's repeated appeals to the US to use its forces to curb
    the PKK went unheeded.

    Irked by Bush's warnings against a military move into Iraqi Kurdistan,
    Erdogan said that he did not need to seek permission from any foreign
    entity: "Did they [the Americans] seek permission from anybody when
    they came from a distance of 10,000 km and hit Iraq?"

    What puzzles the Turkish leaders is Bush's failure to see that they,
    too, combat terrorism.

    "Turkey is implementing the same international rules that were
    implemented by those who linked the attacks on the twin towers to some
    organization," explained Turkish justice minister Mehmet Ali Sahin.

    But payback inevitably follows. "If Turkey conducts any attack or
    operation against Iraqi Kurdistan or Kurds anywhere, we are prepared
    to defend ourselves," said an unnamed PKK leader. "We will spread
    resistance throughout Turkey and Kurdish areas in Iraq, Iran and
    Syria."

    The Bush administration should have tempered its indulgence toward
    Iraqi Kurds with pressure during the drafting of the new constitution
    and gotten its leaders to scale down Kurdistan's quasi-independence
    to re-establish a unitary republic. The failure to do so brings it
    to the point where the US is seen as soft on terrorists - albeit of
    non-Islamist variety - facing the prospect of the only peaceful Iraqi
    region turning into a battlefield.

    Dilip Hiro is the author of "Secrets and Lies: Operation 'Iraqi
    Freedom' and After," and, most recently, "Blood of the Earth: The
    Battle for the World's Vanishing Oil Resources," both published by
    Nation Books, New York.

    note After World War I and the fall of the Ottoman Empire, world
    powers carved up the Middle East. The 1920 Treaty of Sèvres would have
    partitioned Turkey and created an autonomous Kurdistan, but Turkish
    nationalists rejected that plan. The Treaty of Lausanne that followed
    in 1923 granted independence to Turkey, but not for Kurdistan -
    and ethnic Kurds instead are spread among Turkey, Iraq, Iran and Syria.

    The 1991 Gulf War and the 2003 invasion of Iraq fired up Kurdish hopes
    for independence. Since the invasion, Kurds in three northern Iraqi
    provinces have formed a regional government with a quasi-independence
    that alarms Turkey. Adding to the tension are attacks on Turkey by
    guerillas based in northern Iraq and subsequent Turkish authorization
    of military "cross-border operations." Author Dilip Hiro analyzes the
    complex history that has unfolded over the last century; examines
    the many challenges for the US, Iraq and Turkey in handling the
    confrontation; and details why the issue has shot to the top of an
    already packed agenda for the world. - YaleGlobal

    --Boundary_(ID_z1FI1/1v8LOMN0wGBx41Lw) --

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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