Turkey
and its Kurdish obsession
S P
SETH
Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan seems to believe that not
only is he is the country’s strongman
but also its savior. And that image was further reinforced when his ruling AKP
won the November 1 parliamentary elections. Earlier, on June 7, the ruling
party had lost its parliamentary majority, though it still had the most seats
with 41per cent of the vote. The victory on November 1 was engineered by
creating an image of a security crisis for the country from the separatist
Kurdish militant movement, PKK. The period between the June and November
elections saw an explosion of violence with two suicide bombings, one on July
20 in the border town of Suruc that killed 33 people, and the second in the
capital Ankara on October 10 killing 102 people during a peace march. In both
cases, the IS was believed to have been behind the explosions and most of the
victims were Kurds.
Before the November 1 elections last year, the Erdogan government
blamed it all on PKK and the Kurds in general and started a crackdown in the
predominantly Kurdish populated area of southeastern Turkey. And it continued
even after the ruling AKP won its parliamentary majority. In the November
election, even though the predominantly Kurdish party, HDP, still managed to
secure just over 10 per cent of the votes as mandatory requirement for
parliamentary representation, it wasn’t able to hold on to the 13 per cent it
had won with the support of some non-Kurdish minority votes, as Erdogan sought
to paint them as well as a security threat.
In other words, all Kurds in Turkey, constituting 15 to 20 per cent
of its population, were suspects of some sort or the other. And it has destroyed
a political process that was going on, before violence erupted recently, that
had sought to accommodate some of the Kurdish cultural and political
sensitivities without making them sound anti-national. Erdogan declared, soon
after the parliamentary elections, that his government would go after the PKK
“until all its members surrender or are eliminated …” He added, “The period
ahead of us is not one of talks and discussions.” And now the Kurdish southeast
region of Turkey is turned into a battle zone and the region is under seize.
And why has Erdogan gone back on this path, which had marred Turkey
in a prolonged bloody conflict with the Kurds costing about 45,000 lives and
causing devastation to much of the predominantly Kurdish southeastern region? And
there hangs a tale that keeps getting more tangled and dangerous. When IS
emerged as a major regional threat after the fall of Mosul in June 2014, Ankara
was shaken when its 40-odd consulate staff was taken hostages. But, despite the
IS’ usual barbarity in disposing of their hostages, in this case they released
their Turkish hostages without any harm, and that was a welcome surprise. When
asked about how it happened, Turkey’s Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said that
the hostages were freed through the Turkish intelligence agencies’ “own
methods.” It certainly wasn’t done through any rescue operations. It would,
therefore, appear that there was some tacit understanding/agreement that Turkey
would refrain from becoming part of the US-led aerial operations against IS. That
received credence when Turkey kept out of the military coalition against IS,
nor did it grant the use of its bases for bombing IS targets and territory even
though it is a NATO ally. This, though, changed a little later, as we shall
see.
During the US-led operations against IS, Kurds emerged as a very
effective force on the ground to fight IS, making them a virtual US ally. Ankara
saw this as a threat to Turkish national unity, as YPG (Syrian Kurdish
movement) virtually carved out an autonomous Kurdish region in northern Syria
on the Turkish border. The Assad regime, overstretched as it was, had earlier withdrawn
from Syria’s Kurdish region. And YPG are the ones fielding their fighters on
the ground successfully pushing back IS, as the US keeps bombing IS positions.
The US supports YPG fighters in Syria that are engaged against IS, while it
goes along with Turkey which has outlawed militant PKK. But Turkey doesn’t make any distinction
between the two-- Turkish-based PKK and Syrian-based YPG. They are both
terrorists.
Indeed, Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davotoglu reiterated his
country’s position during a recent visit of the US Vice President Joe Biden.
Which is that YPG in Syria is part of the larger PKK movement. He also
reportedly said that YPG had become an increasing threat to Turkey and it would
attack its positions in northern Syria. And this Turkey is doing now so that
they don’t consolidate their hold on northern Turkish border. While Turkey is
firing at YPG positions, it fears that a recent bomb explosion in the Turkish
capital, Ankara, might have been the handiwork of the Kurdish YPG. It could as
well be IS as was suspected in earlier bombings, but Ankara is inclined to put
it YPG.
For quite sometime now, Ankara has been pushing US to put up a no
fly zone over northern Syria to both frustrate the Kurdish designs as well as
to deter Russian bombing missions. In other words Turkey would like NATO to be
drawn into the whole complicated business of fighting its multiple enemies. The
question is: will the US and its NATO allies widen the stakes to make it into
anti-Russian operations and in the process be distracted from the main game of
destroying IS? So far, Turkey is not succeeding in this.
There are two problems with Erdogan and his administration. First: He
sees Turkey in his own larger-than-life image where he is the new Sultan and
wants the world to recognize and respect him in that role. And if and when this
doesn’t happen, he tends to overshoot, so to say. Its most blatant example was
the shooting of a Russian plane to force Moscow to stop propping up the Assad
regime, which has backfired. At the same time, it hasn’t been happy with the US
for not getting rid of the Assad regime when it used chemical weapons on its
citizens.
President Obama had promised, more or less, to do this, as it was
tantamount to crossing his ‘red line’. And Erdogan showed his annoyance by
keeping out of the military coalition against IS, and denying the US the use of
its air base for bombing IS positions, until now. But its obsession remains
with the Kurds, where YPG in Syria has carved out an autonomous region and its
perceived links with the PKK. Ankara sees that its perceived threat is already
a reality. Which accounts for a major part of Erdogan’s irrational policies
both at home and abroad.
Note: This article was first published in the Daily Times.
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