By Pepe Escobar
Turkish foreign policy,
codified by Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, used to be known in shorthand as
"zero problems with our neighbors". When Turkey started calling for
regime change in Syria, it turned into "a major problem with one of our
neighbors" (even tough Davutoglu himself admitted on the record the policy
change failed).
Now, in yet another twist,
it's becoming "all sorts of problems with two of our neighbors".
Enter - inevitably - Ankara's ultimate taboo; the Kurdish question.
Ankara used to routinely chase
and bomb Kurdish PKK guerrillas crossing from Anatolia to Iraqi Kurdistan. Now
it may be positioning itself to do the same in Syrian
Kurdistan.
Turkish Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan came out all guns blazing on Turkish TV; "We will not allow
a terrorist group to establish camps in northern Syria and threaten
Turkey."
He was referring to the Syrian
Kurdish Democratic Party (PYD) - affiliated with the PKK; after a quiet deal
with the Assad regime in Damascus, the PYD is now in control of key areas in
northeast Syria.
So Ankara may provide
logistics to tens of thousands of Syria's NATO "rebels" - which
include plenty of hardcore Sunni Arab "insurgents" formerly known as
terrorists; but as long as Syrian Kurds - which are part of the Syrian
opposition - demonstrate some independence, they immediately revert to being
considered "terrorists".
It's all conditioned by
Ankara's immediate nightmare; the prospect of a semiautonomous Syrian Kurdistan
very closely linked to Iraqi Kurdistan.
This Swedish report [1] contains arguably the
best breakdown of the hyper-fragmented Syrian opposition. The
"rebels" are dominated by the exile-heavy Syrian National Council
(SNC) and its Hydra-style militias, the over 100 gangs that compose the Not
Exactly Free Syrian Army (FSA).
But there are many other parties as well, including socialists; Marxists; secular nationalists; Islamists; the Kurdish National Council (KNC) - an 11-party coalition very close to the Iraqi Kurdistan government; and the PYD.
The KNC and the PYD may bicker
about everything else, but basically agree on the essential; the civil war in
Syria shall not penetrate Syria Kurdistan; after all, when it comes to the
nitty gritty, they are neither pro-Assad nor pro-opposition; they favor Kurdish
interests. The agreement was sealed under the auspices of their cousins - the
Iraqi Kurds. And it explains why they are now in full control of a de facto
Kurdish enclave in northeast Syria.
As much as Turkish paranoia
may apply, it's a long and winding road from a semi-autonomous area to an
independent Kurdistan agglutinating Kurds in both Syria and Iraq - not to
mention, in the long run, Turkish Kurds. Yet half of a possible, future,
independent Kurdistan would indeed be Turkish. Ankara's nightmare in progress
is that the closer Iraqi and Syrian Kurdistan get, the merrier the agitation
among Turkish Kurds in Anatolia.
Priorities though divert; the
bottom line for Iraqi Kurds is independence from Baghdad. After all; they have
loads of oil. On the other hand Syria Kurdistan has none. This means,
crucially, no role in regional Pipelineistan.
This concerns above all two strategic
oil and gas pipelines from Kirkuk to Ceyhan - a direct deal between Ankara and
the Iraqi Kurds which in theory bypasses Baghdad.
Well, not really. As Baghdad
has made it clear, there's no way these pipelines will be operative without the
central government having its sizeable cut; after all it pays for 95% of the
budget of Iraqi Kurdistan.
Show me your terrorist ID
Iraqi Kurdistan President Massoud Barzani told al-Jazeera [2] that yes - they are training Syrian Kurds who defected from the Syrian Army to defend their de facto enclave. It was Barzani who supervised the key deal sealed in Irbil on July 11 that led to Assad forces retreating from Syrian Kurdistan.
Iraqi Kurdistan President Massoud Barzani told al-Jazeera [2] that yes - they are training Syrian Kurds who defected from the Syrian Army to defend their de facto enclave. It was Barzani who supervised the key deal sealed in Irbil on July 11 that led to Assad forces retreating from Syrian Kurdistan.
What is being described as
"liberated cities" [3] is now being "jointly ruled" by the
PYD and the KNC. They have formed what is known as a Supreme Kurdish Body.
One can never underestimate
the Kurdish capacity to shoot themselves in the foot (and elsewhere). Yet one
can also imagine all this cross-country Kurdish frenzy terrifying quite a few
souls in Istanbul and Ankara. This [4] columnist for the daily newspaper
Hurriyet got it right; "Arabs are fighting, Kurds are winning." The
Kurdish Spring is at hand. And it is already hitting Turkey's borders.
Davutoglu must have seen it
coming; when a formerly "zero problem" foreign policy evolves into
housing the weaponized opposition to a neighboring government, you're bound to
be in trouble.
Especially when you start
itching to kill "terrorists" living in your neighbor's territory -
even though your Western allies may view them as "freedom fighters".
Meanwhile you actively support Salafi-jihadis - "insurgents" formerly
known as terrorists - back and forth across your borders.
An increasingly erratic
Erdogan has invoked a "natural right" [5] to fight
"terrorists". But first they must produce an ID; if they are Sunni
Arab, they get away with it. If they are Kurdish, they eat lead.
Notes: 1. See here
2. Iraqi Kurds train their Syrian brethren, Al-Jazeera, 23 Jul 2012
3. See Iraq's Kurdistan Peshmerga forces will be called into Syria when needed, PYD Leader says, Kurd Net, July 26, 2012
4. The Arab Spring has transformed into the Kurdish Spring, Hurriyet Daily News, July 27 2012
5. PM declares Syria intervention a ‘natural right’, Hurriyet Daily News, July 27 2012
2. Iraqi Kurds train their Syrian brethren, Al-Jazeera, 23 Jul 2012
3. See Iraq's Kurdistan Peshmerga forces will be called into Syria when needed, PYD Leader says, Kurd Net, July 26, 2012
4. The Arab Spring has transformed into the Kurdish Spring, Hurriyet Daily News, July 27 2012
5. PM declares Syria intervention a ‘natural right’, Hurriyet Daily News, July 27 2012
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