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Tension Between Turkey, Iraq And The United States Went Up

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  • Tension Between Turkey, Iraq And The United States Went Up

    TENSION BETWEEN TURKEY, IRAQ AND THE UNITED STATES WENT UP
    by Jacques N. Couvas

    IPS (Latin America)
    October 29, 2007 Monday

    TURKEY: Incursion Into Iraq a Minefield Larger Than It Looks

    The attacks, reported by state-controlled Anadolu and private Dogan
    Turkish news agencies, and confirmed by western wires, seem to be
    the prelude to an incursion into Iraqi Kurdistan, a probable course
    of action by Ankara following the approval the government received
    last week from the Turkish parliament.

    Turkey's intent is to disrupt PKK's activities against Turkish
    military bases and patrols in the region, which, according to Ankara,
    are organised with the support of Iraqi Kurds, and the tolerance
    of Baghdad. The guerrilla conflict has so far cost 30,000 lives in
    both camps.

    It is estimated that 3,000 Turkish Kurds are engaged in PKK operations
    in the zone. PKK, formed in 1984, was initially a movement aiming to
    form an independent state, but has in recent years limited its claims
    to becoming an autonomous region of Turkey.

    Although PKK combatants consider themselves freedom fighters, they
    are listed as terrorists by Turkey, the European Union and the
    U.S. Escalation in hostilities has increased since the beginning
    of the year, causing dozens of deaths weekly, particularly amongst
    Turkish soldiers. The high command of the Turkish Armed Forces (TSK)
    has since the spring been putting Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
    under pressure to authorise punitive actions on Iraqi soil in order
    to dismantle the PKK.

    In spite of the parliament's decision last week by 507 votes to 19 to
    let TSK have its way, Erdogan is still reluctant to press the button.

    His preference all along has been for a peaceful, negotiated solution
    involving the rebels, Washington and Baghdad. But his hands are tied,
    and he may have to give in soon under bellicose public and press
    opinion, and bitter feelings of officers.

    The PM's strategy has so far been to loudly ask the Iraqi government
    to police the PKK, and for the U.S. to ensure that such policing take
    place. This is, of course, a manoeuvre to appease his citizens, who,
    although they supported him during the July legislative elections,
    nourish unconditional solidarity with their army.

    Meanwhile, a semi-promise to invade can give secularist TSK a sweet
    pill after the appointment of Abdullah Gul as President of the
    republic, against fierce opposition by the General Staff of the army.

    Gul and Erdogan are leaders of the Islamist-origin Justice and
    Development (AK) Party.

    Erdogan knows that Baghdad can, or is willing to, do very little.

    Northern Iraq has since the end of the first Gulf war been outside its
    military jurisdiction, as law enforcement and defence have become the
    prerogative of the local Kurdish forces, the Peshmerga. The latter's
    affinities are closer to their autonomy-seeking brothers from Turkey
    than to Iraq's central government, and their loyalty lies with Massoud
    Barzani, president of autonomous Iraqi Kurdistan.

    Moreover, the President of Iraq, Jalal Talabani, is also a Kurd,
    born in Kelkan and educated in Arbil and Kirkuk, which are located
    in the area targeted by TSK. Talabani has since 1961 led various
    Kurdish separatist movements against Baghdad. In the 1980s, during
    the Iran-Iraq war, he sided with the Iranians in order to further
    his people's cause.

    Although he has kept friendly relations with Turkey, having been
    protected by former Turkish president Turgut Ozal when he was
    persecuted by Saddam Hussein, it is unlikely that he will turn a
    blind eye to a Turkish invasion of his homeland.

    At a press conference called on the weekend to calm down the Turkish
    government after a PKK ambush that killed 12 TSK soldiers, Talabani
    threatened to close down their bases and offices, but categorically
    refused to hand over any PKK member to the Turks.

    Barzani, who addressed the press conference along with Talabani,
    warned that the regional administration will defend itself against
    any attack by its neighbour.

    'We are not going to be caught up in the war between PKK and
    Turkey, but if (Iraqi) Kurdistan is targeted, then we are going
    to defend our citizens,' Barzani said. He had earlier secured a
    motion of 183 to 92 by the Iraqi national assembly condemning Turkey's
    threat to cross over to northern Iraq.

    What should be read between the lines, however, is that an invasion
    of Iraq could prompt armed participation in the combat by other
    Iraqi guerrilla factions, something that neither the Kurds, nor
    Baghdad, Ankara or Washington would like. Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri
    al-Maliki will be particularly careful not to provoke the Kurds,
    as his government's survival relies on their political support.

    The hopes of Ankara for a solution that excludes an incursion have,
    as a result, now been narrowed down to the White House's willingness,
    or ability, to exert influence on the Iraqi leadership.

    The White House is stuck in a series of dilemmas in its own right.

    The Iraqi Kurds have been strong allies in the two wars staged against
    Saddam's regime, and were given encouragement and promises of autonomy,
    and possibly independence. They cannot be left in the cold if their
    territory is invaded.

    But the U.S. also needs its Turkish ally, albeit not as much as it
    did during the Cold War. Turkey is right now useful because of a
    large base the U.S. Army has at Incirlik in south-eastern Turkey,
    which is vital for the logistics enabling the occupation of Iraq,
    and which would be suitable for its evacuation.

    This base has been leveraged by Erdogan to gain support from
    U.S. President Geroge W. Bush to counter the initiative by the
    U.S. House of Representatives, which resulted this month in a
    non-binding resolution acknowledging the massacre of up to 1.5 million
    Armenians in 1915-1916 by the Ottoman Turks as genocide. Bush's
    administration is therefore in a weaker negotiating position with
    Ankara than it would have liked.

    With the new, tougher sanctions by the U.S. against Teheran announced
    Thursday, and chilly relations with Damascus, Bush is likely to avoid
    frustrating Turkey in a war against the PKK, while preserving the
    loyalty of Kurds, not only in Iraq but also in Iran and Syria.

    There are no verified figures about Kurdish populations, but
    international agencies, researchers and the U.S. Central Intelligence
    Agency estimate that there could be as many as 37 million ethnic
    Kurds worldwide.

    Of these, approximately 12 to 19 million live in Turkey, spread in 17
    of the country's 81 provinces, five to six million in Iraq, about as
    many in Iran, and two to three million in Syria. The total contiguous
    territorial surface inhabited by Kurds would be about 500,000 square
    kilometres, more than double the size of the United Kingdom.

    Any impulsive action by Turkey could set the clock for another time
    bomb in the entire region.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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