Turkish military moves towards border, U.S. scrambles

The Kurdish region of Iraq, the one part of the country that’s been fairly stable and able to function in recent years, is on the brink of a new conflict, following an attack yesterday on Turkish troops.

An audacious cross-border ambush by Kurdish rebels based in northern Iraq killed at least 17 Turkish soldiers Sunday, ratcheting up pressure on the Turkish government to launch a military offensive into Iraq. […]

The raid on Turkish soldiers, among the deadliest attacks in recent memory, was carried out by the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, known by its Kurdish initials PKK. The armed group aims to create an independent Kurdish state out of parts of eastern Turkey, northern Iraq and western Iran.

Turkish officials said 16 soldiers were also wounded in the fighting in Hakkari province, which borders Iraq. Thirty-two Kurdish fighters were killed in subsequent clashes and 10 Turkish troops were still missing, they said.

Since that report was published, it appears that the PKK has eight Turkish troops in custody. As of this morning, the AP reports that dozens of Turkish military vehicles loaded with soldiers and heavy weapons are headed towards the Iraq border, prompting Iraq President Jalal Talabani, himself a Kurd, to say that the PKK will announce a cease-fire later today. That’s unlikely to do much good; it hasn’t in the past.

Besides, as James Joyner noted, Talabani has admitted he can’t really control what Kurdish rebels do anyway.

It brings up a sensitive political question: does the Bush White House take a firm stand, defending an ally as it prepares to respond to terrorists, or does it caution patience? Given the president’s philosophy, shouldn’t one course of action be the obvious one?

Matt Yglesias’ take struck the right tone.

I’ll take the path of consistency and say that for the sake of the United States, and the sake of the Kurds, but also for Turkey’s sake as well, I hope Turkey doesn’t respond to PKK provocations with cross-border military actions that will ultimately fail to solve anything. That said, I do wonder what the apostles of “toughness” and willpower on the right will say about this. Don’t they think that the Turks must cross the border in force and show the Kurds what’s what? Won’t weakness only invite further aggression?

Actually, The Daily Show had a rather adroit segment exploring this very point late last week. (I know it’s a comedy show, but what can I tell you; quality analysis is quality analysis.) The Daily Show noted that Bush’s worldview practically requires him to support a Turkish military response. The president backed Israel’s strikes on Lebanon, emphasizing the importance of a country having the right to “defend the homeland” against attacks from terrorists. For that matter, Bush’s “doctrine” states that harboring a terrorist is no different than being a terrorist. If the PKK has found refuge among the Kurds in northern Iraq, then Turkey, a close U.S. ally, would presumably enjoy American support on a military response to yesterday’s attack.

As Aasif Mandvi put it, “Turkey isn’t facing some nebulous threat, thousands of miles away, substantiated only by dubious intelligence. Turkey has every right to defend its border. Quite frankly, I wouldn’t be surprised to see America first in line to join Turkey’s ‘coalition of the willing.'”

Of course, actual foreign policy crises and Bush administration rhetoric need not connect at any level — and in this case, they won’t. U.S. officials have scrambled today to urge Turkey to be patient, and not launch a military incursion. Condoleezza Rice reportedly appealed to Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan for what he characterized as “a few days” before any Turkish military response.

Turkey expects the U.S. to deal with the PKK, the U.S. expects Iraq to deal with the PKK, and the Kurds expect Turkey to back off. It’s not exactly a recipe for success.

Stay tuned.

What. A. Mess.

  • The Kurdish region of Iraq, the one part of the country that’s been fairly stable and able to function in recent years…

    If the Kurds are unable or unwilling to control their insurgents then what can we possibly expect from the rest of Iraq? Most of that poor country is demonstrably unstable and just about as functional as a wooden watch.

    If the PKK was operating out of say, Iran or Syria I’d guess that the Bush administration would be singing a completely different tune to the Turks.

  • I seem to recall that prior to Bush’s War in Iraq on false pretenses, that Turkey did not want the Kurds to create their own autonomous state as a result of $hrubf__k’s war. It seems exactly that has happened and with the CongrASS’s vote to partition Iraq, the north has essentially become a separate Kurd region. Turkey is now going to do something about that autonomous Kurd state that they were against from the beginning. Good thing they are Kurds and not Armenians, right?

  • My cynical guess: Some un-named US official will release the shocking news that The PKK got its weapons from Iran. This will be all the proof BushCo needs to unleash Operation Infinite Disaster III on Iran.

    A month or so after the dust clears someone will realize there isn’t a single Kurd left in the region. Turkey will drop the shovels and hotly deny having anything to do with the strange disappearance. The large patches of freshly turned soil? Those are for a Victory Garden, of course.

    I can’t believe this disaster is about to get worse.

  • This is where things get really fun in the White House. Turkey is a U.S. ally with a strong military and can’t be invaded or bombed into submission by the U.S. If they invade Kurdistan it will show even more clearly how powerless the U.S. is to affect change or protect the borders of Iraq.

    Yet the U.S. needs Turkey’s goodwill for it’s own strategic needs and can’t lean on them too hard, so we’d need top diplomatic talent to try and settle things down.

    Except that the State Department is filled with useless hacks whose sole qualification of being loyal Bushies is of absolutely no use in this situation so they have no idea how to take effective action.

    The weirdness of this situation is beyond the capacity of even my cynical brain to comprehend. Bush is finally reaching the limits of his twisted neocon fantasy’s ability to deal with the real world and people at State must be going nuts trying to figure out what to do with this mess.

    And the most tragic thing is that they never saw it coming, never even considered that something would come up that they couldn’t control with a growl from Dick Cheney. How low the mighty have fallen…..

  • All this while the Bushies have been thinking they opened up a can of whoopass when in reality they just opened up a can of worms. Cue the neocon hand-wringing “Whoda thunk it possible…” “This couldn’t have been predicted…” “The problem wasn’t in the concept of invading Iraq, it was in it’s execution …”

    How hilarious that Condi now has to translate IOKIYAR into Turkish. Wonder if the Turks will explain they don’t want the proof of the PKK’s aggressive posture to be a mushroom cloud. Et tu Condi.

  • C’mon, George, you’re either with Turkey or you’re with the terrorists.

    Istanbul should never have to get a permission slip from the US to defend the security of their country.

    Freedom is on the march into northern Iraq.

  • Wonder if the Turks will explain they don’t want the proof of the PKK’s aggressive posture to be a mushroom cloud. Et tu Condi.
    -Petorado

    LOL. I think the Turkish Gov’t will go with: “We’re fighting them over there so we don’t have to fight them over here.”

  • Here’s a little coda to this sad symphony:

    What if the non-PKK aligned Peshmerga get a little cheesed off if Turkey sends troops into Kurdish territory and retaliate in kind, thus broadening the conflict until it spirals out of control into a whole separate theater of operations?

    Can’t wait to hear Cheney threaten to bomb Istanbul into the Stone Age if they don’t back off. Yeah, that’ll work.

  • A month or so after the dust clears someone will realize there isn’t a single Kurd left in the region. Turkey will drop the shovels and hotly deny having anything to do with the strange disappearance. The large patches of freshly turned soil? Those are for a Victory Garden, of course. — TAIO, @5

    And only one question will remain… Who gets to sign the Kurdish oil over to us?

  • This isn’t exactly a new thing you know. It’s been going on pretty steadily since the 70’s. There was a brief lull a few years ago after the Turks massed troops along their border with Syria finally prompting the Syrian government to give up Abdulla Ocalan I believe his name was (Apo for short), founder of the PKK, who suddenly turned up in Italy then Africa where he was kidnapped by Turkish commandos and taken back to Turkey for trial. Then of course the US invasion of Iraq kept provided a distraction for Kurds all over the region. Anyway the conditions that gave rise to the Kurdish separatist movement likely haven’t changed much in the mean time so it was probably only a matter of time before the PKK regrouped and resumed operations.

    But the Turkish military has been threatening and occasionally actually making cross-border incursions in pursuit of Kurdish guerrillas operating out of camps in neighboring countries for years. And I don’t think there was ever a time I was ever in Turkey back in the 90s that a bomb didn’t go off somewhere in Istanbul or Ankara or one of the resort areas along the Aegean or Mediterranean coasts. All but crippled the Turkish travel industry in fact. This does highlight one potential problem with the idea of a partitioned Iraq however.

  • Libra, there’s no oil to speak of in southeastern Turkey, or anywhere else in Turkey for that matter.

  • CalD, @14

    Not Turkey; *Iraq*. Iraq’s Kurdistan does have oil. If it doesn’t… What the heck were they doing signing exploration contracts with that US corporation out of Texas (I forget its name)? And why was Saddam so hot and bothered about relocating Kurds and killing as many as possible in the process?

  • We were talking about Turkey, I thought. The mainly just want Kurdish separatists to stop attacking their military convoys and bombing their discos. Of course I could recommmend a few changes in their own internal Kurdish policy that might also help in the long run, but that’s another discussion.

  • PS: The area the Turks are concerned with is the mountainous region right along the border where the PKK camps are. The only part of Iraqi Kurdistan that has any oil is way to the south of there.

  • The fact is, any PKK terrorist can live at those high and unreachable mountains if they dont have any logistic support. And this support comes from inside of the Iraq. In this case no one can say that those terrorist can live at there without the permission of Iraq goverment or Us…

  • The double standard in US foreign policy is the ugliest face of USA politics; as a result of this policy people around the world are no longer recognising US as a democratic country, let alone promoting and defending democracy and human rights in other regions around the world. More to that, Mr Bush and his ignorant team have helped to make this matter worse. I was listening to news channel from Kurdistan and a 10 years old girl, who lost her house as a result of Turkish bombardment, labelled Mr Bush a Turkish solder. The problem in Turkey is not PKK, some many years ago PKK did not exist but the Kurdish question was, and still, and it is and it will, because in the brain of every Turkish person there is a small Ataturk, no matter of their believes or ethics they cannot stand the word “Kurdistan”. In our recent history we have seen fascist governments or groups or etc…., but in the case of Turkey the ordinary people are fascists, and all political parties in Turkey, left or right wins…Muslim…nationalists…etc are making this matter worse. It is very sad to see US and some Europe countries are supporting such country, Turkey.

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