Turkey and the Kurds: What goes around comes around
By James M.
Dorsey
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Turkey, like
much of the Middle East, is discovering that what goes around comes around.
Not only
because President Recep Tayyip Erdogan appears to have miscalculated the
fallout of what may prove to be a foolhardy intervention in Syria and neglected
alternative options that could have strengthened Turkey’s position without
sparking the ire of much of the international community.
But also because
what could prove to be a strategic error is rooted in a policy of decades of
denial of Kurdish identity and suppression of Kurdish cultural and political
rights that was more likely than not to fuel conflict rather than encourage
societal cohesion.
The policy
midwifed the birth in the 1970s to militant groups like the Kurdish Workers
Party (PKK), which only dropped its demand for Kurdish independence in recent
years.
The group
that has waged a low intensity insurgency that has cost tens of thousands of
lives has been declared a terrorist organization by Turkey, the United States
and the European Union.
Turkish
refusal to acknowledge the rights of the Kurds, who are believed to account for
up to 20 percent of the country’s population traces its roots to the carving of
modern Turkey out of the ruins of the Ottoman empire by its visionary founder,
Mustafa Kemal, widely known as Ataturk, Father of the Turks.
It is entrenched
in Mr. Kemal’s declaration in a speech in 1923 to celebrate Turkish
independence of “how
happy is the one who calls himself a Turk,” an effort to forge a national
identity for country that was an ethnic mosaic.
The phrase
was incorporated half a century later in Turkey’s student oath and ultimately
removed from it in 2013 at a time of peace talks between Turkey and the PKK by
then prime minister, now president Erdogan.
It took the
influx of hundreds of thousands of Iraqi Kurds in the late 1980s and early
1990s as well as the 1991 declaration by the United States, Britain and France
of a no-fly zone in northern Iraq that enabled the emergence of an autonomous
Iraqi Kurdish region to spark debate in Turkey about the Kurdish question and
prompt the government to refer to Kurds as Kurds rather than mountain Turks.
Ironically, Turkey’s
enduring refusal to acknowledge Kurdish rights and its long neglect of development
of the pre-dominantly Kurdish southeast of the country fuelled demands for
greater rights rather than majority support for Kurdish secession largely
despite the emergence of the PKK
Most Turkish
Kurds, who could rise to the highest offices in the land s long as they
identified as Turks rather than Kurds, resembled Palestinians with Israeli
citizenship, whose options were more limited even if they endorsed the notion
of a Jewish state.
Nonetheless,
both minorities favoured an independent state for their brethren on the other
side of the border but did not want to surrender the opportunities that either
Turkey or Israel offered them.
The
existence for close to three decades of a Kurdish regional government in
northern Iraq and a 2017 referendum in which an overwhelming majority voted for
Iraqi Kurdish independence, bitterly rejected and ultimately nullified by Iraqi,
Turkish and Iranian opposition, did little to fundamentally change Turkish Kurdish
attitudes.
If the referendum
briefly soured Turkish-Iraqi Kurdish relations, it failed to undermine the basic
understanding underlying a relationship that could have guided Turkey’s
approach towards the Kurds in Syria even if dealing with Iraqi Kurds may have
been easier because, unlike Turkish Kurds, they had not engaged in political
violence against Turkey.
The notion
that there was no alternative to the Turkish intervention in Syria is further
countered by the fact that Turkish PKK negotiations that started in 2012 led a
year later to a ceasefire and a boosting of efforts to secure a peaceful
resolution.
The talks
prompted imprisoned PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan to publish a letter endorsing
the ceasefire, the disarmament and withdrawal from Turkey of PKK fighters, and
a call for an end to the insurgency. Mr. Ocalan predicted that 2013 would
be the year in which the Turkish Kurdish issues would be resolved peacefully.
The PKK's
military leader, Cemil Bayik, told the BBC three years later that "we don't want to separate
from Turkey and set up a state. We want to live within the borders of
Turkey on our own land freely.”
The talks
broke down in 2015 against the backdrop of the Syrian war and the rise as a US
ally of the United States in the fight against the Islamic State of the PKK’s
Syrian affiliate, the People's Protection Units (YPG).
Bitterly
opposed to the US-YPG alliance, Turkey demanded that the PKK halt its
resumption of attacks on Turkish targets and disarm prior to further
negotiations.
Turkey responded
to the breakdown and resumption of violence with a brutal crackdown in the
southeast of the country and on the pro-Kurdish Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP).
Nonetheless,
in a statement issued from prison earlier this year that envisioned an
understanding between Turkey and Syrian Kurdish forces believed to be aligned
with the PKK, Mr. Ocalan declared that “we believe, with regard to the Syrian
Democratic Forces (SDF), the problems in Syria should be resolved within the
framework of the unity of Syria, based on constitutional guarantees and local
democratic perspectives. In this regard, it
should be sensitive to Turkey’s concerns.”
Turkey’s emergence
as one of Iraqi Kurdistan’s foremost investors and trading partners in exchange
for Iraqi Kurdish acquiescence in Turkish countering the PKK’s presence in the
region could have provided inspiration for a
US-sponsored safe zone in northern Syria that Washington and Ankara had
contemplated.
The
Turkish-Iraqi Kurdish understanding enabled Turkey to allow
an armed Iraqi Kurdish force to transit Turkish territory in 2014 to help prevent
the Islamic State from conquering the Syrian city of Kobani.
A safe zone
would have helped “realign the relationship between Turkey’s Kurdistan Workers
Party (PKK) and its Syrian offshoot… The safe-zone arrangements… envision(ed)
drawing down the YPG presence along the border—a good
starting point for reining in the PKK, improving U.S. ties with Ankara, and
avoiding a potentially destructive Turkish intervention in Syria,” Turkey
scholar Sonar Cagaptay suggested in August.
The
opportunity that could have created the beginnings of a sustainable solution
that would have benefitted Turkey as well as the Kurds fell by the wayside with
Mr. Trump’s decision to withdraw US troops from northern Syria.
In many
ways, Mr. Erdogan’s decision to opt for a military solution fits the mould of a
critical mass of world leaders who look at the world through a civilizational
prism and often view national borders in relative terms.
Russian
leader Vladimir Putin pointed the way with his 2008 intervention in Georgia and
the annexation in 2014 of Crimea as well as Russia’s stirring of pro-Russian
insurgencies in two regions of Ukraine.
Mr. Erdogan
appears to believe that if Mr. Putin can pull it off, so can he.
Dr. James
M. Dorsey is a senior fellow at Nanyang Technological University’s S.
Rajaratnam School of International Studies, an adjunct senior research fellow
at the National University of Singapore’s Middle East Institute and co-director
of the University of Wuerzburg’s Institute of Fan Culture
excellent article!
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