The current
crisis between Turkey and the Kurds has been building up for
decades. In recent weeks, Turkish-Kurdish tensions burst into
flames. Marxist-nationalist PKK guerrillas fighting for an independent
nation for Turkey’s 20 million or so Kurds killed a score of
Turkish soldiers and captured eight.
Hundreds
more Turkish soldiers have been killed in eastern Anatolia by
increasingly effective Kurdish fighters known as "pesh-merga,"
who have been receiving more and better weapons from fellow
Iraqi Kurds.
Fiercely
nationalist Turks demand their armed forces invade Iraq’s autonomous
Kurdish mini-state to destroy PKK bases. The Turks have massed
100,000 troops and armor on their mountainous border with Iraq.
Limited Turkish air attacks and ground probes inside Iraq began
last week.
A decade
ago, I covered the brutal guerilla war in the hills of bleak,
windswept Eastern Anatolia between Kurdish PKK guerrillas (Turks
brand them "terrorists") and the Turkish Army. At
the time, the world ignored this ugly conflict in which 35,000
people had by then died. I came away torn by sympathy for both
sides in this tragic conflict.
No one
should be surprised by this crisis. Critics long warned the
US invasion of Iraq would inevitably release the genie of Kurdish
nationalism. Creation of a virtually independent, US-backed
Kurdish state in northern Iraq was certain to provoke a violent
reaction by Turkey.
Ankara
has warned for a decade it would never tolerate creation of
an independent Kurdish state in northern Iraq which it fears
would quickly spark demands by Turkey’s restive Kurds for their
own state.
Washington
has been piously urging "restraint" on Turkey, a key
US ally. By contrast, after two Israeli soldiers were captured
last year in a routine border clash with Hezbullah guerrillas,
the White House gave Israel a green light to bomb and invade
Lebanon, killing over 1,100 civilians and causing $4 billion
of damage.
This crisis
is a huge mess for all concerned. Turkey provides 70% of air-delivered
supplies to US forces in Iraq and allows US military aircraft
to use its airspace. Turkey also quietly allows Israel certain
overflight rights, which may eventually include the right to
launch an air blitz against Iran through Turkish air space.
Israel’s recent air attack on a mysterious Syrian building was
flown over Turkish territory. Turkey’s military approved the
Israeli overflight; its civilian government knew nothing about
the attack until afterwards.
Meanwhile,
anti-Americanism is peaking in Turkey. Turkey’s powerful army
and civilian government make conflicting policies. Turkey’s
popular democratic government wants no part of America’s war
in Iraq and is loathe to attack Iraq, fearing getting embroiled
in the US-created debacle. But Turkey’s powerful military establishment,
a state within the state with very close links to the Pentagon
and Israel, is pressing for an invasion of Iraq.
Iraq’s
Kurds, America’s only ally in that strife-torn nation, discreetly
back the PKK, and are working for fully a independent Kurdish
state. The Kurdish mini-state in northern Iraq is already de
facto independent, with its own government, finances, army,
and flag. The feeble US-installed regime in Baghdad has almost
no influence over the Kurds, even though its president, Jalal
Talabani, is also one of the two senior Kurdish leaders.
Turkey’s
government must respond to surging public outrage, but fears
major military action in Iraq will foreclose its hopes of getting
into the European Union, and put it on a collision course with
the US in Iraq. Interestingly, US forces in Iraq have turned
a blind eye to the PKK’s operations there and to its cross-border
attacks into Turkey.
Israel,
which has its eye on Mesopotamia’s oil, is secretly backing
Iraq’s Kurdish mini-state and hopes one day to build an oil
pipeline from Iraqi Kurdistan to Haifa, either via Jordan or
through a splintered Syria – which is also high on Israel’s
hit list. But Israel is also a close ally of Turkey’s right-wing
generals who hate Kurds as much as their own democratic government
led by able PM Recep Erdogan. The Israelis are thus caught in
the middle of the Turkish-Kurdish conflict, just as they were
recently during the bitter dispute between Turkey and the Armenians.
A new danger
looms. The US invasion devastated Iraq and effectively split
into three pieces fulfilling the first step in Israel’s grand
strategy of fragmenting Iraq, Lebanon, and Syria. Iraq’s Mosul
oil region, which formerly belonged to the Ottoman Empire, is
a mere 119 kms from Turkey’s border. Kirkuk is only a bit further.
After World War I, the British Empire grabbed this oil-rich
region, cobbling together the unnatural state of Iraq to safeguard
the oil.
If Iraq
slides further into the abyss, Turkey and Iran may partition
Iraq. Today, Turkey has no oil. Its fragile economy is hammered
by having to earn US dollars to buy oil. But if Turkey repossessed
Iraq’s northern oil fields, this nation of 70 million with 515,000
men at arms would become an important power that would reassert
traditional Turkish influence in the Mideast, Balkans, Caucasus,
and Central Asia.
"Pan-Turanism,"
the idea of spreading Turkish influence from its eastern border
across the Turkic lands of Central Asia to the Great Wall of
China remains dear to the hearts of many Turkish nationalists
and far rightists. Iraq’s huge oil reserves are a big temptation
Ankara cannot ignore. After all, if the US can invade Iraq for
oil, why not neighboring, ex-owner Turkey?
Meanwhile,
Washington mutters about launching attacks on PKK, which it
also brands "terrorists." But with the glaring double
standards typical of US Mideast policy, Washington closes its
eyes – and may be secretly arming Iraqi Kurds who are attacking
Iran. Turkey insists it is fighting "terrorism" and
has every right to strike into Iraq to protect its national
security – one of President George Bush’s justifications for
invading Iraq.
This
Kurdish fracas comes just as Vice President Dick Cheney and
President George W. Bush are fanning hysteria over Iran and
threatening war. Their latest claim: Iran "might"
have nuclear knowledge, so is a world danger.
Welcome
to Washington’s new bogeyman: "thoughts of mass destruction
(tmd’s)."
Throw in
the growing crisis in key US ally Pakistan, and we face one
unholy mess.