http://www.metimes.com/storyview.php?StoryID=20061005-103015-1318r

 

Analysis: Will US sell out Kurds again?

Laura Heaton
United Press International
October 5, 2006

WASHINGTON --  President George W. Bush pledged US support for
anti-terrorism efforts in Turkey, but concrete US action seems a remote
possibility, given America's split allegiances in the region. 

"Our desire is ... to help people who care about a peaceful future to reject
radicalism and extremism," Bush said at a joint press conference with
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan after their private meeting at
the White House Monday. 

Although Bush and Erdogan reaffirmed their collective efforts to combat
terrorism, neither spoke specifically about threats posed by what Turkey
sees as its prime terrorist organization, the Kurdistan Workers' Party, or
PKK. The paramilitary group has been fighting for an independent Kurdish
state at the intersection of Turkey, Syria, Iraq and Iran for the past two
decades. 

"Neither [leader] wanted to focus on an issue they knew they wouldn't be
able to resolve," said Vali Nasr, an adjunct senior fellow at the Council on
Foreign Relations in California. "The goal of the meeting was to heal
relations between Washington and Ankara ... so they chose to not focus on
differences of opinion on Iraq." 

The Turkish government has accused the PKK of perpetrating attacks on
Turkish police, security forces, and for targeting tourist areas. Turkey
claims that the leadership of the PKK has taken refuge just over the border
in northern Iraq, and that guerrillas are indoctrinated in and operate from
these camps. 

Washington views the PKK as a terrorist organization but has been reluctant
to aggressively pursue terrorists in the region. 

"The United States doesn't have the ability or the forces to go into
northern Iraq, the only relatively stable region of the country ... and push
some 5,000 [PKK] fighters out of Iraq," Nasr said. "Nor would this option be
politically favorable." 

The United States is wary of any offensive that might alienate the Iraqi
Kurdish population, the group most supportive of US presence in Iraq. The
United States has a long history of favorable relations with Kurdish
nationals, beginning as early as 1919 when US President Woodrow Wilson
favored an independent Kurdistan at the end of World War I. 

"Kurds are supportive because the United States has offered them protection
for a long time, covered up the Kurdish uprising of 1991 and provided air
cover over Iraqi Kurdistan, for example," explained Edmund Ghareeb, a
professor at American University and author of The Kurdish Question. 

Citing increased terrorist activity, Turkey recently threatened to use
military strikes to quell the terrorist movement coming from northern Iraq.
The US government immediately warned against such action. 

A military offensive against the PKK would "create a whole new environment,
a lot of instability, and a lot of unknown factors in this very explosive
area," Ghareeb said. 

Addressing the likelihood that Turkey would take forceful steps against the
PKK in the near future, Nasr said, "The PKK is a major irritant, but not
significant enough to stage an attack [in northern Iraq] and put Turkey at
odds with Washington." 

The United States and Turkey recently appointed envoys to work to resolve
the situation, but it remains to be seen whether the move was something more
substantial than an attempt by Washington to placate the Turkish
authorities. 

"[The] United States is very sympathetic to the Turkish problem with the
PKK, but won't be able to act definitively," Nasr said. 

At the joint press conference, Erdogan thanked Bush for supporting Turkey's
bid to join the European Union. "The United States is a strategic partner, a
very important strategic partner for Turkey," Erdogan said. 

But in light of the dismal state of US efforts in Iraq, the Bush
administration may be the one looking to Turkey for support. 

"Turkey is an important ally of the United States because it is militarily
strong, a member of NATO, has a relatively strong economy ... and [Ankara]
has generally been a friendly government," Ghareeb said. 

Turkey's favorable relations with a number of important actors in the region
suggest that it could be a significant mediating force, particularly in
post-war Iraq and in dealing with Iran's nuclear ambitions. 

Given the balance of powers that any dramatic assertion of allegiance might
upset, the United States will likely do little to change the status quo in
US-Kurdish and US-Turkish relations. If the situation changes, however, what
Ghareeb called "a general suspicion among the Kurdish population" may prove
true once again. "If the United States has to choose between the Kurds and
the Turks, it will choose the Turks," he said.



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