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Exposing The Myth Of Lasting Iranian-Turkish Amity

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  • Exposing The Myth Of Lasting Iranian-Turkish Amity

    EXPOSING THE MYTH OF LASTING IRANIAN-TURKISH AMITY
    By Soner Cagaptay and Duden Yegenoglu

    Daily Star (Lebanon)
    Washington Institute for Near East Policy, DC
    May 23 2006

    With Iran's nuclearization a hot button issue, analysts are asking
    how Turkey, the only NATO country bordering Iran, would respond if
    the United States imposed sanctions on Tehran or chose a military
    option to prevent Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon. There is one
    answer that American policymakers will hear in Ankara: Turkey should
    not confront Iran because Turkey and Iran have been good neighbors
    since the 1639 Treaty of Kasri Sirin (also called the Treaty of
    Zuhab). Turkish policymakers assert that the two countries have
    neither fought nor changed their mutual border since that date.

    The "Myth of Kasri Sirin" suggests four centuries of amicable ties
    between Turkey and Iran. Nothing could be further from the truth.

    Turkey and Iran have repeatedly fought since 1639, and since the 1979
    Islamic Revolution Iran has supported terror groups inside Turkey to
    undermine governments there.

    First, some history: The Ottoman and Iranian empires have fought
    many wars since Kasri Sirin. A full-scale war broke out in 1733 when
    the Persians attempted to take Baghdad from the Turks. The Persian
    siege of Baghdad and the accompanying battles ended in 1746 with the
    Treaty of Kurdan, signed between the new Zand Dynasty of Persia and
    the Ottoman Empire.

    Soon after, in 1775, the Zand Dynasty attacked the Ottoman Empire
    again and captured Basra. The invasion lasted until 1821, at which
    time another war started between the Ottoman Empire and the new
    Qajar Dynasty of Persia. The war ended in 1823, with the First Treaty
    of Erzurum.

    Rivalry over Muhammarah region (Iran's modern-day Khorramshar) deepened
    the conflict between the two empires by adding a new dimension to
    the conflict. Persians and Ottoman Iraqi governors clashed over its
    control, bringing the two empires to the brink of war in 1840. The
    British intervened, establishing a boundary commission composed
    of Iranian, Turkish, British, and Russian diplomats. As a result,
    the Persian and Ottoman empires signed the Second Treaty of Erzurum,
    reconfiguring the Iranian-Ottoman border.

    Troubles between the two countries extended well beyond the Ottoman
    era. Fighting also took place across the Turkish-Iranian border during
    Mustafa Kemal Ataturk's rule in Turkey. In 1930, when some Kurds
    launched a rebellion around Mount Greater Agri (Ararat) in Turkey,
    Kurdish bands armed by Armenian nationalists entered Turkey across
    the Iranian border to support the rebellion.

    This was no small skirmish. Turkey used airplanes in a counterattack
    and mobilized 15,000 troops to suppress the incursion. In the end,
    the Turkish Army was able to put down the border infiltration, though
    with great difficulty, and only after losing several planes. In 1931,
    Ankara asked Iran for a border rectification that put Mount Lesser
    Agri, the base of the 1930 incursions, inside Turkey.

    Volatility along the border became an issue again when the terrorist
    Kurdish Workers Party (PKK) launched a campaign against Turkey in
    1984. Iran's theocratic regime, diametrically opposed to Turkey's
    secular, pro-Western society, saw the PKK as a useful tool to wreak
    havoc in Turkey. Accordingly, Tehran allowed PKK bases such as Haj
    Umran, Dar Khala, Benchul, Mandali, and Sirabad in its territory. Ali
    Koknar, an expert on terrorism, writes that in 1995 the PKK "maintained
    about 1,200 of its members at around 50 locations in Iran." Throughout
    the 1980s and the 1990s, the PKK crossed from these bases into Turkey,
    attacking the Turkish military as well as killing civilians.

    Iran has supported not only the PKK but also Islamist terrorist
    cells. Since the 1979 revolution, Iranian-backed cells have killed a
    number of secular Turkish intellectuals and journalists considered
    offensive, including theologian Bahriye Ucok, a female Islamist
    modernizer, and journalist Cetin Emec.

    Interestingly, Iran's policy of war by proxy, the use of the PKK and
    Islamist terrorists to undermine Turkey's secular system, has recently
    come to a strategic halt. Since the beginning of the Iraq war, Tehran
    has been feeling an increase in American-imposed isolation. To break
    this policy, Iran has launched a policy of courting Ankara. Iran
    now aims to win the Turks' hearts. In this regard, Tehran is taking
    advantage of American inaction against the PKK's Qandil terror enclave
    in northern Iraq -- a fact that is planting seeds of resentment in
    Turkey toward Washington -- by launching attacks against Qandil and
    the very PKK camps Iran allowed in the 1990s.

    While these steps are helping Tehran build a positive image in Turkey,
    the fact is that Tehran is far from the benevolent neighbor the "Myth
    of Kasri Sirin" implies. Turkey and Iran have fought many times since
    1639, repeatedly changing their mutual border, including as recently
    as 1931. Lately, Tehran has fought war by proxy against Ankara. Yet,
    like all other myths, the "Myth of Kasri Sirin" satisfies a real need:
    So long as the U.S. ignores Turkey's battle against the PKK in Iraq,
    the future holds out the possibility that Ankara may be closer to
    Tehran than to Washington.

    Soner Cagaptay is a senior fellow at the Washington Institute for
    Near East Policy, an Ertegun professor at Princeton University,
    and chair of the Turkey Program at the State Department's Foreign
    Service Institute. Duden Yegenoglu is a research assistant at
    the Washington Institute. This commentary first appeared at
    bitterlemons-international.org, an online newsletter presenting
    contending views of Arab or Middle Eastern affairs.
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