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Halfway to a
Kurdish Triangle in Iraq
Ximena Ortiz
America
has joined a list of countries with a "Kurdish problem."
For other governments, this problem has taken
undignified dimensions -- eliciting brutal,
village-razing, knocks-in-middle-of-the-night style
repression. To be sure, America's potential troubles
with Kurdish Iraq will not take these dynamics, but the
United States will likely be reckoning with challenges
in the area. These could be manageable, if
Turkey
doesn't unceremoniously enter the fray. If Turkey were
to eventually deploy troops to Iraq or otherwise provoke
conflict, part of
Iraq
could erupt in civil war.
The
United States managed to pressure and cajole Turkey into
agreeing to send troops to Iraq on Oct. 7, when the
Turkish parliament approved a 1-year deployment. The
decision, which cost America about $8.5 billion in loans
and the Turkish government considerable political
capital, was watched with alarm in Iraq.
The
Iraqi Governing Council’s collective and firm stance
against Turkish troops has stopped deployment for now.
On Nov. 5, the president of the council, Osman Faruk
Logoglu, said, "the question of sending Turkish troops
is closed." Still, America’s gyrations are worrisome.
The original plan of sending Turkish troops reflects
poor
U.S.
strategizing, and, though Iraqi opposition was a
foregone conclusion, America apparently offered Turkey
handsome incentives to send troops. The plan was so
advanced it appeared the United States was going to
shrug off Iraqi concerns. But the Bush Administration
recently did an about-face and said there would be no
Turkish deployment without Iraqi approval – a move which
bitterly embarrassed
Ankara.
This untidy back and forth makes it appear no one in the
administration is fully in charge of
Iraq.
Turkey
has the ability to cause a civil war in
Iraq's
Kurdish area, even without a troop deployment, by
pitting Iraqi Kurds against Iraqis of Turkish origin
(the Turkmen). It could also incite Kurd-on-Kurd
fighting, as it has done in the past. Also,
Turkey
has asked the United States to move against members of
the PKK that it claims are hiding in the Kurdish area of
Iraq. The PKK, a Kurdish rebel group once active in
Turkey,
called off its 4-year cease-fire with Ankara in
September. A military confrontation could be volatile.
The
United States should be wary of Turkey's request and
tread lightly in the Kurdish area. Instability in
Kurdish Iraq would now be America's problem. The Kurds
in Iraq, which make up about a third of the country’s 25
million people, view Turkey as responsible for a 15-year
war with their ethnic brethren in Turkey. Although
hostilities between Ankara and Turkish Kurds have ebbed
since 1999, Kurds would be highly suspicious of any
Turkish military involvement in Iraq.
"Turkey
is not a neutral party. They have their own agenda,"
Mohammed Ihssan, Minister of Human Rights for the
Kurdistan Regional Government, told me in a telephone
interview. And if Turkey were to send troops to Iraq,
other neighbors would feel justified in becoming
involved, he added. "If we are going to let Turkey in,
who can keep Iran out?" he asked. He added that Turkish
troops, once they are deployed, are difficult to usher
out, citing Turkey’s military presence in the island of
Cyprus since 1974.
Kurds
in Iraq are watching Turkey. On July 4, U.S. troops
detained 11 Turkish Special Forces for plotting to
assassinate Kirkuk's Kurdish mayor. In April, a Turkish
Red Crescent convoy was found to be carrying weapons and
explosives, identified as humanitarian supplies, at a
checkpoint. Also, U.S. military authorities accused
Turkish Special Forces of posing as aid workers to
smuggle munitions to ethnic Turks in
Iraq.
For other Iraqis, a Turkish deployment would conjure the
Ottoman occupation of Iraq, which ended in 1917. Iraqis
in the 21st century would view such a deployment as 19th
century Americans would have a British military mission.
The
October suicide bombing of the Turkish embassy
demonstrates the aggression a deployment could provoke.
Despite these legitimate fears of escalation, some in
America's “punditocracy” have bullied the Kurds for
opposing Turkish troops. The United States will be
grappling with an empowered Kurdish people in
Iraq.
Having suffered centuries of repression, the Kurdish
people have long had an eye towards self-determination.
In
Iraq,
thanks to U.S.-enforced no-fly zones in the Hussein
days, they have exercised that autonomy for over ten
years. They are going to doggedly defend it on the Iraqi
Governing Council, which is heavily weighted with Kurds,
and beyond.
By no
design of its own, the
United
States
may have given the Iraqi Governing Council a boost by
having to honor its opposition to Turkish troops. The
Bush Administration made an offer the council had to
refuse and gave the Iraqis a chance to exercise more
sovereignty than the administration had bargained for.
And though it may be difficult for America to turn to
Turkey for help again, the issue has highlighted to the
world Iraqi concerns over Turkish involvement, and may
have sent the Turks a succinct message to stay out.
Ximena
Ortiz is the 2003-2004 recipient of the Pulliam
fellowship for editorial writers. She is writing a book,
The War, According to the World, on the global
policy repercussions of the
Iraq
war.
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