The PKK's Dream 


by Austin Bay <http://www.austinbay.net/> 
October 24, 2007 
http://www.strategypage.com/on_point/200710240452.aspx



The Kurdistan Workers Party is dreaming. 


The Kurdistan Workers Party, best known by its initials PKK, dreams of an
independent Kurdistan. 


A "Turkish partition" has always been a Kurdish nationalist goal -- carving
a Kurdistan out of southeastern Turkey's
<http://www.strategypage.com/on_point/200710240452.aspx#>  ethnic Kurd
region. Now, an "Iraqi partition" has become the PKK's goal. 


At the moment, the PKK is trying to goad Turkey into a full-scale invasion
of Iraq. A firefight along the Turkey-Iraq border late last week reportedly
involved as many as 200 PKK fighters. The typical PKK operation consists of
(at most) two dozen infiltrators. When Turkey beefs up its military forces,
the PKK usually melts away. Turkey now has up to 100,000 troops in the
region. The PKK isn't melting, however. If the 200 fighters figure is
accurate, then the PKK was conducting a major combat operation despite
Turkey's reinforced military presence. 


The PKK wants Turkey to attack. 


Why? Because the PKK is desperate. Support for the PKK within Turkey has
waned since 1998, when Turkey nabbed its cult leader, Abdullah "Apo" Ocalan.
Nabbing Ocalan was a sophisticated operation that included threatening his
host and protector, Syria, with invasion. Grievances the PKK once exploited
are finally -- if belatedly -- being addressed. Turkish Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan has pumped development money into Kurdish areas. Turkey's new
dams are producing power, and once-neglected Kurdish villages have lights.
Likewise, Iraq's Kurds have made extraordinary economic and political
progress. The Iraqi government
<http://www.strategypage.com/on_point/200710240452.aspx#>  and Iraqi Kurds
want good relations with Turkey, and PKK attacks on Turkey damage those
relations. 


Waning support in Turkey and new, economically rewarding Iraqi-Turk
relations put the PKK in a bind. And in this desperation the PKK's dream
scenario begins -- a dream with several tricky plot sequences and delusional
twists. 


Dream Step One: The Turkish invasion destroys Iraq, and Iraqi Kurdistan
emerges as an independent state. Step Two: Kurdish arms or international
opprobrium or U.N. sanctions or whatever forces Turkey to accept an
independent Iraqi Kurdistan. Once Turkey accepts New Kurdistan, these same
powers force Turkey to accept a ceasefire with PKK cadres inside Turkey.
Negotiations result in an internationally mandated plebiscite where Turkish
Kurds, of course, vote to join New Kurdistan. 


Later, hocus pocus or Syrian and Iranian sweetness allow Syrian and Iranian
Kurdish regions to secede and form Greater Kurdistan, uniting all Kurds in
one happy state with billions of barrels of oil. Then -- the dream continues
-- politically moderate Turkish Kurds (who exist) and Iraqi Kurds (who for
the moment run Iraq's most stable and economically productive region) will
agree the PKK's senior commanders should dominate Greater Kurdistan. Why, if
they don't they'll either be killed or forced into exile. 


Then ... it's time to wakeup. What the PKK's leaders are risking is really a
potential Kurdish nightmare. 


Here's why: 



*       Turkey is not going to accept an independent Kurdistan. Iraq's
would-be partitioners, whether in al-Qaida or American academia, don't
understand the certainty of Turkey's veto. Forget the United Nations and
whatever. Proud Turkish nationalists know they have the military power to
enforce the veto. 


*       If a Turkish attack on PKK bases in Iraq induces Iraqi collapse --
which is doubtful, since 30 or so previous incursions haven't -- the
resulting chaos will destroy Iraqi Kurdistan's stability and erase its
economic and political gains. Iraqi Kurds know this. 

Iraqi Kurds, however, are reluctant to arrest fellow Kurds. That's very
politically unpopular. 


This is where Turkey's scenario begins, one with an assumption or two, but
the kind of assumptions that military and economic pressure can move toward
certainties. Perhaps a "bluffed invasion" and U.S. diplomatic pressure will
force Iraqi Kurds to hand over senior PKK leaders (like the threat worked on
Syria). It's doubtful, but possible. More likely, Turkey will attack,
pressing its assault and destroying the PKK bases. PKK leaders will flee,
attempting to hide among Iraqi Kurds as they have in the past. This time,
however, the leaders are quietly disarmed and detained, by Iraqi Kurds and
the Iraqi government. 


Bet that Turkey and Iraq have already discussed the terms of detention. 

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