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Turkey Before The Gates Of Hell In Kurdistan

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  • Turkey Before The Gates Of Hell In Kurdistan

    TURKEY BEFORE THE GATES OF HELL IN KURDISTAN
    By Youssef Ibrahim

    New York Sun, NY
    Oct 29 2007

    Welcome to the latest regional war in the Middle East - Turkey's
    contemplated invasion of northern Iraq. Among other things, this
    latest Turkish aggression, preceded years ago by the invasion of
    Cyprus, threatens to:

    ~U Send energy prices through the roof. With oil prices already at
    a record $90 a barrel, they will easily keep setting new highs as
    winter arrives in Europe and America.

    ~U Set back American military and political efforts to stabilize an
    already convulsed Middle East, inviting even more meddling by Iran
    and Syria.

    ~U Bring doom upon the Turkish invaders, who failed for more than
    30 years to subjugate their Kurdish minority of 7 million, or 10%
    of Turkey's population. Now they would expand the fight to all 25
    million Kurds, who share the mountainous border areas of Iraq, Iran,
    and Syria. These well-armed Kurds live in a contiguous area the size
    of Germany and Britain combined.

    The distance separating a military skirmish by a pompous Turkish
    army and the emancipation of what in effect is the largest minority
    in the Middle East united by language, culture, and militias is
    deceptively short.

    Targeted "Kurdistan" is no picnic. It is the size of Austria,
    economically prosperous, and endowed with huge oil resources. It has
    thrived as a Western-protected haven since the Gulf War of 1991 and
    functions as territory where America maintains extensive strategic
    bases of intelligence gathering and army operations. Even more
    important, those Kurds are America's only true friends and allies
    inside Iraq.

    Decades of aggression by both the Turkish and Iraqi armies over the
    past 30 years, destroying 10,000 Kurdish villages, have failed to
    extinguish the Kurds' quest for identity. Saddam Hussein went so far
    as to rain chemical and biological weapons on innocent civilians in
    Kurdish villages. Yet they remain, stronger than ever.

    Today Turkey's real goals are what they have been for decades -
    Iraq's northern oil. The region is already exporting some 750,000
    barrels a day via a pipeline to the Turkish port of Ceyhan on the
    Mediterranean Sea. Before the American invasion, it exported nearly
    1.5 million barrels daily, and there is a lot more from where this
    comes. Turkey wants to own it instead of merely transporting it.

    This would not be the first Turkish grab for hegemony in the Middle
    East. Turkish troops invaded Cyprus on July 15, 1974, using the
    pretext of defending the Turkish minority of the island against its
    Greek majority. They are still occupying an independent pro-Western
    democracy. Indeed, the Turkish beachhead on Cyprus has been the main
    reason the European Union has been dragging its heels on Turkish
    membership. The impending invasion of Iraq will close that door
    permanently.

    Even as a NATO member, Turkey has done little except to subvert Western
    strategies, including its flat rejection of access for American and
    British troops into Iraq prior to the invasion in 2003.

    What would happen should Israel be subjected to a Syrian-Iranian attack
    and should America ask our Islamist Turkish allies for permission to
    use their territory to help?

    When a few weeks ago Congress proposed a resolution to commemorate
    the genocide by Turks that, starting in 1915, massacred 1.5 million
    Armenian Christians, the government of Prime Minister Erdogan
    threatened to halt shipments of fuel and materiel to American troops
    in Iraq.

    After the end of World War I, in the Treaty of Sevre of 1920, the
    major powers promised Kurds their own nation in the Middle East as part
    of the spoils from the defeated Ottoman Empire. Predictably, Turkey,
    Syria, and Iran, along with most Arab countries of the region, balked
    at the suggestion of founding a non-Arab state. Yet for centuries the
    Kurds endured, united by language, tradition, culture, fighting ethos,
    and strong militias. Above all they have a dream, one that a wayward
    Turkish incursion in Iraq may finally bring about - an independent
    Kurdish state. America should support the creation of such a state,
    as it sorely needs countries it can claim as friends in that region.

    http://www.nysun.com/article/65404
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