-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the April 3, 2003
issue of Workers World newspaper
-------------------------

CAUGHT BETWEEN TURKEY AND U.S.:
KURDS ARE SQUEEZED BY OIL POLITICS

By Greg Butterfield

On March 26, Gen. Hilmi Ozkok, chief of staff of Turkey's armed forces,
conceded to U.S. demands not to send additional troops into northern
Iraq.

Earlier, it appeared to many, including Turkish officials, that a quid-
pro-quo agree ment had been reached between Washington and Ankara to
allow Turkish intervention in northern Iraq in exchange for letting U.S.
and British warplanes fly over Turkey.

But as the Bush administration's hopes for a swift war were dashed in
southern Iraq, Washington feared the possibility of open warfare between
the Turkish Army and U.S.-allied Kurdish groups in northern Iraq.

The Pentagon says it's counting on the Kurdish groups and their militias-
-now officially under U.S. military command--to aid U.S. Special Forces
troops in the north. So Turkish officials were leaned on, and paid off
with $1 billion in cash grants and loan guarantees of $8.5 billion "to
cushion the economic trauma of war." (New York Times, March 26)

Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdo gan, in a televised address March 23,
had said the U.S. and Turkey reached an agreement for Turkish troops to
deploy "in a limited area, reportedly 19 kilometers, skirting the border
in northern Iraq." (ChannelNewsAsia.com, March 24)

Their purpose, Erdogan said, was to pre vent tens of thousands of
refugees from flooding southern Turkey and to hunt down Kurdish
"terrorists."

Now, according to General Ozkok, "We have no desire to establish a
permanent buffer zone."

On March 21, the Turkish Parliament voted to allow U.S. overflights in
the war against Iraq. The vote came three weeks after the parliament had
rejected Wash ington's plan to use Turkish bases to launch a "northern
front" with 62,000 U.S. troops.

Erdogan, the ruling Justice and Dev elopment Party, and especially the
Turkish military wanted to collaborate with the Pentagon. But popular
opposition to the war, including massive street protests, made the
rulers afraid to accept U.S. terms.

So a compromise-the overflights-was pushed through.

Turkish military leaders continued to deny that 1,000 commandos had
crossed the border into Iraq on March 21-22. But a BBC World News
correspondent stationed in the area and others asserted that the
commandos did indeed enter Iraq. And some 50,000 heavily armed Turkish
troops are poised along the border.

It's unclear whether those commandos will be withdrawn. General Ozkok
insisted that Turkey's military reserved the right to send in additional
forces, but would do so only under U.S. supervision.

KURDISH MILITIAS
UNDER U.S. COMMAND

Turkey's government is among the biggest recipients of U.S. military
aid. Washington has long supported its suppression of Kurds in southern
Turkey.

From 1984 to 1999, the army carried out a bloody campaign aimed at
destroying the pro-independence Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), a group
allied with Turkey's communist movement. More than 30,000 people died--
mostly civilians suspected of sympathizing with the PKK.

The Congress for Freedom and Democracy in Kurdistan (KADEK), successor
to the outlawed PKK, still has strong support among Kurds in Turkey.
KADEK has called for a spring uprising against both the Turkish regime
and the U.S.-led war in Iraq.

Opposition to the war was a major theme March 21 during Kurdish new year
celebrations in southern Turkey.

For months Kurdish people in northern Iraq have been voicing their
opposition to Turkish military intervention. The Patri otic Union of
Kurdistan (PUK) and the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP), two bourgeois
parties allied with the U.S. against the Iraqi government, warned of a
shooting war between local Kurds and the Turkish military if Ankara was
permitted to intervene.

Both groups are hostile to KADEK and have cooperated with U.S./Turkish
repres sion of the left.

The Sunday Times of London reported March 23 that three days of arm-
twisting meetings took place in Ankara just before the U.S./British
assault began. These meet ings, under the auspices of U.S. special envoy
and former Unocal oil company adviser Zalmay Khalilzad, aimed at
clamping down on leaders of rival Kurdish and Iraqi opposition groups--
many on the CIA's payroll for years.

The PUK and KDP agreed to place their armed forces under direct U.S.
command. (Reuters, March 18)

REAL TARGETS:
OIL PROFITS AND KADEK

The interests of the U.S. and Turkish ruling classes in northern Iraq
overlap considerably, and have nothing to do with securing rights and
sovereignty for Kurdish people.

Both Washington and Ankara want to hunt down KADEK members thought to be
hiding in the mountainous region.

U.S. officials assert that their primary goal is to secure two major oil
centers, Kirkuk and Mosul, under Pentagon
control.

The Bush administration doesn't want Kurdish militias--even those
dominated by the compliant PUK and KDP--to seize these areas, which
remain under the control of the Iraqi government. U.S. companies don't
want to have to share control of the oil or how the profits are divvied
up.

Both cities have faced heavy bom bardment since the war began.
Kurdishmedia.com reported that hundreds of U.S. Special Forces troops
began to arrive in the region March 22 at Bakrajo Airport near the town
of Sulemani. More troops could be flown in from Jordan or the numerous
U.S. bases in Central Asia.

Turkey doesn't want these oil centers to come under Kurdish control,
either. Ankara fears such an outcome would fuel demands for independence
among Kurds in Iraq and Turkey, and could strengthen the forces of the
revolutionary left.

- END -

(Copyright Workers World Service: Everyone is permitted to copy and
distribute verbatim copies of this document, but changing it is not
allowed. For more information contact Workers World, 55 W. 17 St., NY,
NY 10011; via e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subscribe wwnews-
[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] Support the
voice of resistance http://www.workers.org/orders/donate.php)




------------------ This message is sent to you by Workers World News Service. To subscribe, E-mail to: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To unsubscribe, E-mail to: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To switch to the DIGEST mode, E-mail to <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Send administrative queries to <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>



Reply via email to