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  • Turkey snaps over US bombing of its brethren

    Turkey snaps over US bombing of its brethren

    By K Gajendra Singh

    Al-Jazeerah
    September 19 , 2004

    For the first time since the acrimonious exchange of words in July
    last year following the arrest and imprisonment of 11 Turkish
    commandos in Kurdish Iraq, for which Washington expressed "regret",
    differences erupted publicly this week between North Atlantic Treaty
    Organization allies Turkey and the US over attacks on Turkey's ethnic
    cousins, the Turkmens in northern Iraq.

    Talking to a Turkish TV channel, Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul warned
    that if the US did not cease its attacks on Tal Afar, a Turkmen city
    at the junction of Turkey, Iraq and Syria, Ankara might withdraw its
    support to the US in Iraq.

    "I told [US Secretary of State Colin Powell] that what is being done
    there is harming the civilian population, that it is wrong, and that
    if it continues, Turkey's cooperation on issues regarding Iraq will
    come to a total stop." He added, "We will continue to say these
    things. Of course we will not stop only at words. If necessary, we
    will not hesitate to do what has to be done."

    Turkey is a key US ally in a largely hostile region. US forces use its
    Incirlik military base near northern Iraq. Turkish firm! s are also
    involved heavily in the construction and transport business in Iraq,
    with hundreds of Turkish vehicles bringing in goods for the US
    military every day. It is an alternative route through friendly
    northern Kurdish territory to those from Jordan and Kuwait. But many
    Turks have been kidnapped by Iraqi insurgent groups and some have been
    killed.

    Turkey contains a large ethnic Turkmen population and Ankara has long
    seen itself as the guardian of their rights, particularly across the
    border in northern Iraq, where they constitute a significant minority.

    The US attacks on Tal Afar, which Iraqi Turkmen groups in Turkey say
    have left 120 dead and over 200 injured, were launched, the US says,
    to root out terrorists. The US has denied the extent of the damage,
    saying that it avoided civilian targets and killed only terrorists it
    says were infiltrating the town from Syria.

    US ambassador to Turkey Eric Edelman commented, "We are carrying out a
    limited military operation and we are trying to keep civilian losses
    to a minimum. We cannot completely eliminate the possibility [of
    civilian casualties] ...We believe the operation is being conducted
    with great care," he said after briefing Turkish officials. There have
    not been any reports of further attacks since the Turkish warning.

    The deterioration in US-Turkish relations underlines the fast-changing
    strategic scenario in the region in the post-Cold War era after the
    collapse of the Soviet Union, the September 11 attacks on the US, the
    US-led invasion on Iraq, now conceded as illegal by United Nations
    Secretary General Kofi Annan, and the deteriorating security situation
    in that country.

    Despite negative signals on Ankara's mission to join the European
    Union, Turkey is moving away ! from the US and closer to the EU - it
    is even looking to buy Airbuses, and arms, from Europe rather than the
    US.

    At the same time, Turkey is drawing closer to Syria, normalizing
    relations with Iran and improving economic relations with Russia, as
    well as discuss with Moscow ways to counter terrorist acts, from which
    both Russia and Turkey suffer. Russian President Vladimir Putin called
    off a visit to Turkey when the hostage crisis broke at Beslan in the
    Russian Caucasus last week.

    And Turkey has also moved away from long-time friend Israel, the US's
    umbilically aligned strategic partner in the Middle East. Turkey has
    accused Israel of "state terrorism" against Palestinians. A recent
    ruling party team from Turkey returned from Tel Aviv not satisfied
    with Israeli explanations over charges that it was interfering in
    northern Iraqi affairs.

    With newspapers full of stories and TV screens showing the Turkmens
    being attacked in the US operations at Tal Afar, many Turks are angry
    at what is being done to! their ethnic brethren. These have been large
    protests outside the US Embassy in Ankara, and the belief that the US
    attacks are a part of a campaign to ethnically cleanse the Turkmens
    from northern Iraq is widespread.

    "Some people are uncomfortable with the ethnic structure of this area,
    so, using claims of a terrorist threat, they went in and killed
    people," said Professor Suphi Saatci of the Kirkuk Foundation, one of
    several Turkmen groups in Turkey.

    He claims that the the attacks are a part of a wider campaign to
    establish Kurdish control over all of northern Iraq, and he points to
    the removal of Turkmen officials from governing positions in the
    region to be replaced by Kurds. He also says that the Iraqi police!
    force deployed in northern Iraq is dominated by members of Kurdish
    factions. "The US is acting completely under the direction of the
    Kurdish parties in northern Iraq," says Saatci. "Tal Afar is a clearly
    Turkmen area and this is something they were very jealous of."

    While Kurdish officials deny any attempt to alter the ethnic balance
    in the region, last week Masud Barzani, leader of one of the two
    largest Kurdish parties, the Kurdish Democratic Party (KDP), said that
    Kirkuk "is a Kurdishcity" and one that the KDP was willing to fight
    for, which certainly did not calm fears of the Turkmens and angered
    the Turks. Many Turkmen see Kirkuk as historically theirs. Turkey
    considers northern Iraq - ie Kurdistan - as part of its sphere of
    influence, especially the Turkmen minority. Ankara is especially
    concerned that the Kurds in Iraq don't gain full autonomy as this
    would likely fire the aspirations of Turkey's Kurdish minority.

    The US military disputes that its forces laid siege to Tal Afar,
    saying that the operation was to free the city from insurgents,
    including foreign fighters, who had turned it into a haven for
    militants smuggling men and arms across the Syrian border. And a
    military spokesman denied that Kurds were using US forces to gain the
    upper hand in their ethnic str! uggle with the Turkmens.The US
    characterized the resistance in Tal Afar as put up by a disparate
    group of former Saddam Hussein loyalists, religious extremists and
    foreign fighters who were united only by their opposition to US
    forces.

    Gareth Stansfield, a regional specialist at the Center of Arab and
    Islamic Studies at Britain's University of Exeter, said recently that
    "the most important angle of what the Turkish concern is [and that is]
    that there is a strong belief in Ankara that Iyad Allawi, the Iraqi
    prime minister, and the Americans, were suckered into attacking Tal
    Afar by Kurdish intelligence circles, and really brought to Tal Afar
    to target ostensibly al-Qaeda and anti-occupation forces with the
    Kurds knowing full well that this would also bring them up against
    Turkmens and create a rift between Washington and Ankara over their
    treatment of a Turkmen city."

    Turkey maintains a few hundred troops in the region as a security
    presence to monitor Turkish Kurd rebels who have some hideouts in the
    region. But any large-scale presence has been derailed by the
    objections of Iraqi Kurdish leaders. "That has created an uneasy state
    of co-existence between Ankara and the two major Kurdish political
    parties, the Kurdish Democratic Party and Patriotic Union of
    Kurdistan, a balance which any US military operation in the area could
    easily disturb."

    Stansfield added that the incident shows how volatile tensions remain
    between Ankara and the Iraqi Kurds, despite ongoing efforts by both
    sides to work together. "The Turkish position has become increasingly
    more sophisticated over the last ! months, and arguably years, with
    Ankara finding an accommodation with the KDP and PUK and beginning to
    realize that while it is not their favored option to allow the Kurds
    to be autonomous in the north of Iraq, it is perhaps one of the better
    options that they are faced with in this situation," said Stansfield.

    He added, "However, the relationship between the two principle Kurdish
    parties and the government of Turkey will always be sensitized by the
    Kurds' treatment of Turkmens and indeed now the American treatment of
    Turkmens vis-a-vis Kurds."

    Transfer of sovereignty and the Kurds In January this year, the then
    Iraqi Governing Council agreed to a federal structure to enshrine
    Kurdish self-rule in three northern provinces of Iraq. This was to be
    included in a "fundamental law" that would precede national elections
    in early 2005. The fate of three more provinces claimed by the Kurds
    was to be decided later. "In the fundamental law, Kurdistan will have
    the same legal status as it has now," said a Kurdish council member,
    referring to the region that has enjoyed virtual autonomy since the
    end of the 1991 Gulf War.

    "When the constitution is written and elections are held, we will not
    agree to less than what is in the fundamental law, and we may ask for
    more," saidthe Kurdish council member. Arabs, Turkmens, Sunnis and
    Shi'a expressed vociferous opposition to the proposed federal system
    for Kurdish Iraq. Theyorganized demonstrations leading to ethnic
    tensions and violence in Kirkuk and many other cities in north
    Iraq. Many protesters ! were killed and scores were injured.

    However, when "sovereignty" was transferred on June 30 to the interim
    government led by Iyad Allawi, the interim constitutional arrangement
    did not include a federal structure for Kurdish self-rule, although to
    pacify the Kurds, key portfolios of defense and foreign affairs were
    allotted to them.

    A press release from the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) stated
    that "the current situation in Iraq and the new-found attitude of the
    US, UK and UN has led to a serious re-think for the Kurds. The
    proposed plans do not seem to promise the expected Kurdish role in the
    future of a new Iraq. The Kurds feel betrayed once again." It added
    that "if the plight of the Ku! rds is ignored yet again and we are
    left with no say in the future of a new Iraq, the will of the Kurdish
    people will be too great for the Kurdish political parties to ignore,
    leading to a total withdrawal from any further discussions relating to
    the formation of any new Iraqi government. This will certainly not
    serve the unity of Iraq." Underlining that the Kurds have been the
    only true friends and allies of the US coalition, the release
    concluded that "the Kurds will no longer be second-class citizens in
    Iraq". However, the Kurds did not precipitate matters.

    Demographic changes in north Iraq Kirkuk, with a population of some
    750,000, and other towns are now t! he scene of ethnic and demographic
    struggles between Turkmens, Arabs and Kurds, with the last wanting to
    take over the region and make the city a part of an autonomous zone,
    with Kirkuk as its capital.

    The area around Kirkuk has 6% of the world's oil reserves. In April
    2003, it was estimated that the population was 250,000 each for
    Turkmen, Arab and Kurd. A large number of Arabs were settled there by
    Saddam Hussein, and they are mostly Shi'ites from the south. The
    Turkmens are generally Shi'a, like their ethnic kin, the Alevis in
    Turkey, but many have given up Turkmen traditionsin favor of the
    urban, clerical religion common among the Arabs of the south. Kirkuk
    is therefore a stronghold of th! e Muqtada al-Sadr movement which has
    given US-led forces such a hard time in the south in Najaf. The
    influential Shi'i political party, the Supreme Council for Islamic
    Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI), also has good support, perhaps 40%, in the
    region. Kurds are mostly Sunnis,and were the dominant population in
    Kirkuk in the 1960s and 1970s, before Saddam's Arabization policy saw
    a lot of Kurds moved further north.

    According to some estimates, over 70,000 Kurds have entered Kirkuk
    over the past 17 months, and about 50,000 Arabs have fled back to the
    south. It can be said, therefore, that now there are about 320,000
    Kurds and 200,000 Arabs in the city. The number of Turkmen has also
    been augmented. During the Ottoman rule, the Turkmen dominated the
    city, and it was so until oil was discovered. It is reported that,
    encouraged by the Kurdish leadership, as many as 500 Kurds a day are
    returning to the city. The changes are being carried out for the
    quick-fix census planned for October, which in turn will be the basis
    for the proportional representation for the planned January elections,
    if these areeven held, given the country's security problems. Both the
    Turkmens and Arabs have said that the Kurds are using these
    demographic changes to engulf Kirkuk and ensure that it is added to
    the enlarged Kurdish province which they are planning. The Kurds hope
    to get at least semi-autonomous status from Baghdad.

    North Iraq and Turkey's Kurdish problem Turkey has serious problems
    with its own Kurds, who form 20% of the population. A rebellion since
    19! 84 against the Turkish state led by Abdullah Ocalan of the Marxist
    Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) has cost over 35,000 lives, including
    5,000 soldiers. To control and neutralize the rebellion, thousands of
    Kurdish villages have been bombed, destroyed, abandoned or relocated;
    millions of Kurds have been moved to shanty towns in the south and
    east or migrated westwards. The economy of the region was
    shattered. With a third of the Turkish army tied up in the southeast,
    the cost of countering the insurgency at its height amounted to
    between $6 billion to $8 billion a year.

    The rebellion died down after the arrest and trial of Ocalan, in 1999,
    but not eradicated. After a court in Turkey in 2002 commuted to life
    imprisonment the death sentence passed on Ocalan and parliament
    granted rights for the use of the Kurdish language, some of the root
    causes of the Kurdish rebellion were removed. The! PKK - now also
    called Konga-Gel - shifted almost 4,000 of its cadres to northern Iraq
    and refused to lay down arms as required by a Turkish "repentance
    law". The US's priority to disarm PKK cadres was never very high. In
    fact, the US wants to reward Iraqi Kurds, who have remained mostly
    peaceful and loyal while the rest of the country has not.

    Early this month, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said that
    Turkey's patience was running out over US reluctance to take military
    action against Turkish Kurds hiding in northern Iraq. In 1999,! the
    PKK declared a unilateral ceasefire after the capture of its leader,
    Ocalan. But the ceasefire was not renewed in June and there have been
    increasing skirmishes and battles between Kurdish insurgents and
    Turkish security forces inside Turkey. Turkey remains frustrated over
    US reluctance to employ military means against the PKK fighters - in
    spite of promises to do so.

    Iraqi Kurds have been ambivalent to the PKK, helping them at
    times. Ankara has entered north Iraq from time to time - despite
    protests - to attack PKK bases and its cadres. Ankara has also said
    that it would! regard an independent Kurdish entity as a cause for
    war. It is opposed to the Kurds seizing the oil centers around Kirkuk,
    which would give them financial autonomy, and this would also
    constitute a reason for entry into north Iraq. The Turks vehemently
    oppose any change in the ethnic composition of the city of Kirkuk .

    The Turks manifest a pervasive distrust of autonomy or models of a
    federal state for Iraqi Kurds. It would affect and encourage the
    aspirations of their own Kurds. It also revives memories of Western
    conspiracies against Turkey and the unratified 1920 Treaty of Sevres
    forced on the Ottoman Sultan by the World War I victors which had
    promised independence to the Armenians and autonomyto Turkey's
    Kurds. So Mustafa Kemal Ataturk opted for the unitary state of Turkey
    and Kurdish rebellions in Turkey were ruthlessly suppressed.

    The 1980s war between Iraq and resurgent Shi'a in Iran helped the PKK
    to esta blish itself in the lawless north Kurdish Iraq territory. The
    PKK also helped itself with arms freely available in the region during
    the eight-year war.

    The 1990-91 Gulf crisis and war proved to be a watershed in the
    violent explosion of the Kurdish rebellion in Turkey. A nebulous and
    ambiguous situation emerged in north Iraq when, at the end of the
    war. US president Bush Sr encouraged the Kurds (and the hapless Shi'a
    in the south) to revolt againstSaddam's Sunni Arab regime. Turkey was
    dead against it, as a Kurdish state in the north would give ideas to
    its own Kurds.

    Saudi Arabia and other Arab states in the Gulf were totally opposed to
    a Shi'i state in south Iraq. The hapless Iraqi Kurds and Shi'a paid a
    heavy price. Thousands were butchered. The international media's
    coverage of the pitiable conditions, with more than half a million
    Iraqi Kurds escaping towards the Turkish border from Saddam's forces
    in March 1991, led to the creation of a protected zone in north Iraq,
    later patrolled by US and British war planes.The Iraqi Kurds did elect
    a parliament, but it never functioned properly.! Kurdish leaders
    Massoud Barzani and Jalal Talabani run almost autonomous
    administrations in their areas. This state of affairs has allowed the
    PKK a free run in north Iraq.

    After the 1991 war, Turkey lost out instead of gaining as promised by
    the US. The closure of Iraqi pipelines, economic sanctions and the
    loss of trade with Iraq, which used to pump billions of US dollars
    into the economy and provide employment to hundreds of thousands, with
    thousands of Turkish trucks roaring up and down to Iraq, only
    exacerbated the economic and social problems in the Kurdish heartland
    and the center of the PKK rebellion.

    But many Turks still remain fascinated with the dream of "getting
    back" the Ottoman provinces of Kurdish-majority Mosul and Kirkuk in
    Iraq. They were originally included within the sacred borders of the
    republic proclaimed inthe National Pact of 1919 by Ataturk and his
    comrades, who had started organizing resistance to fight for Turkey's
    independence from the occupying World War I victors.

    So it has always remained a mission and objective to be reclaimed some
    time. The oil-rich part of Mosul region was occupied by the British
    forces illegally after the armistice and then annexed to Iraq, then
    under British mandate, in 1925, much to Turkish chagrin. Iraq was
    created by joining Ottoman Baghdad and Basra vilayats
    (provinces). Turks also base their claims on behalf of less than half
    a million Turkmen who lived in Kirkuk with the Kurds before
    Arabization changed the ethnic balance of the region.

    With its attacks on Tal Afar, the US is stirring a very deep well of
    discontent.

    K Gajendra Singh, Indian ambassador (retired), served as ambassador to
    Turkey from August 1992 to April 1996. Prior to that, he served terms
    as ambassador to Jordan, Romania and Senegal. He is currently!
    chairman of the Foundation for Indo-Turkic Studies. Emai:
    [email protected]
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