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East : Turkey
Turkish military flexes its muscles in northern Iraq
By Peter Symonds
7 June 2007
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Reports of a Turkish military incursion into northern Iraq
yesterday have highlighted the escalating tensions between the
two countries along the border. In recent weeks, Turkish leaders
have repeatedly warned that the Turkish army would take action
against separatist Kurdish Workers Party (PKK) camps in Iraq,
if US and Iraqi forces failed to do so. The PKK has waged a guerrilla
war inside Turkey for more than two decades.
Concerned to play down yesterdays incident, Turkish,
Iraqi and American officials quickly issued formal denials that
any Turkish troops had crossed the border. Iraqi Foreign Minister
Hoshiyar Zebari told the media in Baghdad there was no evidence
of any incursion. In Washington, US National Security Council
spokesman Gordon Johndroe declared there had been no new
activity in northern Iraq.
In Ankara, Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul also denied
the reports, but did not rule out future Turkish military operations.
There is no such thing, no such entry to another country,
he told NTV television. If such a thing happens, then we
would announce it. We are in a war with terror, we will do whatever
is necessary to fight terrorism.
Nevertheless, three unnamed Turkish officials confirmed to
Associated Press that several hundred Turkish troops had been
involved in a hot pursuit raid into a remote mountainous
region of northern Iraq yesterday. One source based in the border
region said 600 commandos, backed by several thousand troops on
the border, entered Iraq before dawn and returned later in the
day. He claimed that the raid across from the Turkish border town
of Cukurca was in response to an attack by PKK rebels inside Iraqi
territory. According to Associated Press, the three officials
stood by their comments despite government denials.
Jabar Yawir, a deputy minister in the Kurdistan Regional Government
(KRG) in northern Iraq, yesterday told Reuters: This afternoon
10 Turkish helicopters landed in a village in Mazouri, which is...
3 kilometres inside the Iraqi border. They landed around 150 Turkish
special forces. After two hours they left and there were no confrontations
with the PKK. He confirmed that the village was in an area
controlled by the PKK.
Whatever its exact character, the Turkish operation yesterday
is part of a pattern of confrontation that threatens to boil over
into a large-scale military invasion. According to media reports
last week, the Turkish military has boosted its forces on the
Iraqi border with large contingents of extra soldiers, tanks and
armoured personnel carriers. On Sunday and Monday, Turkish troops
reportedly shelled PKK positions inside northern Iraq.
In an interview with NTV News Channel on May 29, Turkish Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan reinforced the message that the
continued existence of PKK camps inside Iraq would not be tolerated.
We want all acts of the terrorist organisation to come to
an end. We expect the United States and Iraq to eradicate the
terrorist organisations camps in northern Iraq. We have
already informed them of our expectations, he said. The
prime minister did not rule out a unilateral Turkish intervention.
The PKK has an estimated 4,000 fighters in northern Iraqi camps.
Turkish Chief of General Staff, General Yasar Buyukanit, put
the matter more bluntly on May 31, telling reporters he favoured
a military incursion to clean out the PKK bases. He said the military
was ready, but the order had to come from the government. The
political authorities must determine whether, once we go in, we
act only against the PKK, or if something will happen with [KRG
President Massoud] Barzani as well... I already told Turkey and
the world on April 12 that we need this... As military men, we
are ready, but all military men need orders.
An intense political crisis in Ankara is undoubtedly a factor
in these threats. Fresh elections are due on July 22 in a bid
to break the constitutional crisis that erupted over the failure
of the ruling Islamist Party for Justice and Development (AKP)
to secure parliamentary support for its presidential nomineeforeign
minister Gul. In the course of the political standoff, which has
witnessed large opposition rallies, the Turkish military issued
a thinly veiled warning that it would intervene directly to defend
the countrys secular state. In the lead-up to the election,
AKP leadersdetermined not to be outflanked politicallyhave
proclaimed their opposition to terrorism and offered
cautious support for a military assault in northern Iraq.
While the tensions on the Turkish-Iraqi border involve a good
deal of posturing by both the government and the military, there
is no doubt that the Turkish establishment as a whole is hostile,
not only to repeated PKK attacks inside Turkey, but to the emergence
of a quasi-independent Kurdish state in northern Iraq. As the
price of their support for the 2003 US-led invasion, the two major
Kurdish nationalist parties in Iraqthe Kurdish Democratic
Party (KDP) and Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK)insisted
on the establishment of an autonomous Kurdish region with extensive
powers and its own security forces.
Opposition to Kirkuk referendum
General Buyukanits provocative reference to KRG President
Barzani was no mistake. The two men were at loggerheads in April
after Barzani accused Turkey of interfering in preparations for
a referendum later this year on the inclusion of the northern,
oil-rich Iraqi city of Kirkuk in the Kurdish region, and threatened
to retaliate. It would be easy, he warned, for Iraqi Kurds to
stir up their 30 million ethnic brethren in southeastern Turkey.
Buyukanit responded by declaring that a cross-border attack was
necessary and that the Turkish military was ready to carry it
out. The Turkish government demanded that the US haul Barzani
into line.
Ankara is bitterly opposed to the extension of the Kurdish
region to Kirkuk, which has a substantial Turkomen, as well as
Arab, population. More fundamentally, Turkish leaders fear that
the addition of Kirkuks oil wealth to the Kurdish region
will establish the economic basis for the KRG to declare full
independencea move that would provide political encouragement
for Kurdish separatists in Turkey, as well as Syria and Iran.
Inside Kirkuk itself, sectarian violence is escalating as Kurdish
leaders press ahead with their demand for a referendum despite
the opposition of Arab and Turkomen residents.
The prospect of a Turkish invasion of northern Iraq again demonstrates
that the US neo-colonial occupation has not only created a catastrophe
for the Iraqi people, but profoundly destabilised relations throughout
the Middle East. Just as the ousting of Saddam Hussein and the
Sunni establishment in Baghdad helped fuel Sunni-Shiite sectarian
tensions in Iraq and the broader region, so the US encouragement
of Kurdish nationalists in northern Iraq has resurrected unresolved
issues that date back to the collapse of the Ottoman empire following
World War I. The emerging Turkish state laid claim too much of
northern Iraq but was rebuffed by Britain, which ruled over newly-formed
Iraq and was determined to retain control of the oil fields in
the north.
The confrontation between Turkey and the Kurdish regional government
underscores the incoherent and reckless character of the Bush
administrations foreign policy. As the Economist
magazine caustically noted in an article on June 5: The
number of awkward questions raised [for Washington] is as great
as the number of overlapping alliances and rivalries in the region.
The Kurds are Americas best friends in Iraq and a decent
advertisement that at least something has gone right in that bloodied
country. Many plans for an American exit from Iraq involve leaving
some forces in the relatively peaceful region. So a Turkish invasion
would be a disaster, inserting NATOs second-largest army
in the middle of territory America is desperately hoping to keep
calm.
The US administration has repeatedly warned Turkey against
any military incursion. In a pointed reminder of American strength,
two US warplanes briefly entered Turkish airspace near the Iraqi
border on May 24, drawing a rapid protest from Ankara that such
violations should not happen again. Last weekend Defence
Secretary Robert Gates reiterated that the US hopes there
would not be a unilateral military action across the border into
Iraq.
At the same time, the US does not want to alienate Turkey,
which is an important NATO ally and economic partner. While urging
Turkey not to unilaterally intervene in northern Iraq, Washington
has continued to denounce the PKK as terrorists and
sought to placate Ankara. Since 2003, the US has permitted Turkey
to maintain a force of some 1,300 troops, nominally as observers,
inside northern Iraq, causing friction with the Kurdish leadership.
Last year Washington appointed retired air force general, Joseph
Ralston, as a special envoy to Ankara to coordinate a joint approach
on the PKK.
However, the US administrations ability to maintain this
delicate balancing act is further complicated by its barely disguised
support for Kurdish guerrillas using bases in northern Iraq to
operate inside Iran. As the Economist explained: According
to many reports, America is stirring Kurdish ambitions in Iran,
where the worlds biggest bunch [of] stateless people also
have a significant presence. American assistance to Iranian Kurds
may involve military assistance, and those Kurds may also operate
from bases in Iraq. In other words, the Turks could find themselves
shooting at Kurds who are firing back with American-supplied weapons.
In fact, the ties between Kurdish separatists fighting in Iran
and Turkey are even closer than the Economist has cautiously
suggested. Several reports point to the fact that the Party for
a Free Life in Kurdistan (PEJAK), which at the very least appears
to be encouraged by the US, and probably Israel, to conduct surveillance
and attacks inside Iran, is an offshoot of the PKK. Both organisations
have bases inside northern Iraq and in all probability continue
to maintain relations. So while the US continues to join Turkey
in denouncing the PKK as a terrorist outfit, it is
tacitly promoting its sister group, the PEJAK, as an organisation
fighting for Kurdish liberation in neighbouring Iran.
The cynical character of the US war on terror is
not lost in Turkey, where anti-American sentiment is on the rise,
not only over perceived US support for Kurdish separatists, but
the criminal occupation of Iraq and threats against Iran. In 2003,
opposition to the US invasion was so widespread that the AKP-dominated
parliament felt compelled to prohibit the use of Turkish military
bases, forcing the Pentagon to modify its plans. According to
the Washington Post, recent polls in Turkey show that only
12 percent of respondents view the US favourably.
In the lead-up to the upcoming election, Turkish politicians
are stirring up anti-Kurdish sentiment and will no doubt appeal
to anti-American sentiment by criticising the US for failing to
halt continuing PKK attacks. An estimated 30,000 people have been
killed in clashes between the military and the PKK since 1984,
including 600 last year. For the Bush administration, the political
danger exists that its NATO ally will be driven into closer collaboration
with its arch-enemy Iran against the Kurdish rebels, right at
the point when Washington is intensifying its confrontation with
Tehran.
Through its backing for the venal Kurdish leaders in Iraq and
their ambitions to carve out a Kurdish statelet, the US has opened
up a political can of worms for which it has no answers and which
threatens to drag the region into another bloody quagmire. While
the Turkish government and military appear at this stage to be
holding back from a full-scale invasion of northern Iraq and a
rupture of relations with the US, none of the parties to the dispute
are in control of what is a highly volatile situation.
See Also:
Turkey: Constitutional Court
stops presidential election
[3 May 2007]
Report warns of civil war
spreading to Kurdish north of Iraq
[5 May 2007]
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