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UPI
Analysis: Turkey pits U.S. against Kurds
Published: Jan. 10, 2008 at 5:37 PM
By BEN LANDO
UPI Energy Editor
WASHINGTON,
Jan. 10 (UPI) --
Turkey's
president made it clear during his visit to
Washington this week that his country will
continue a hard-line approach in dealing
with the Kurdish guerrilla campaign in his
country and ensuring Kirkuk, Iraq's oil-rich
northern city, doesn't fall under control of
Iraq's Kurds.
After meetings with top officials, including
President Bush, President Abdullah Gul
exposed the fault line between U.S.-Turkey
and U.S.-Kurd relations.
"Turkey and United States are partners in
Iraq," he said Tuesday during a speech at
the Woodrow Wilson International Center for
Scholars. "Needless to say, we both have
great stake in Iraq's security and stability
and welfare."
Turkey says the Kurdistan Workers' Party, or
PKK, based in the hard-to-reach northern
Iraq mountains, crosses the border north to
carry out its violent strategy of Turkish
Kurd autonomy. Turkey said U.S., Iraqi and
Iraqi Kurdish leaders have not done enough
to prevent attacks.
The future of Kirkuk, 180 miles north of
Baghdad, is a struggle two decades in the
making. Gul called it "a powder keg" that
could enflame the region if the
"international community fails."
After raising the issue with Bush, Gul met
with U.N. Security-General Ban Ki-moon and
pressed for the United Nations to take an
active role in solving the Kirkuk issue.
Bulent Aliriza, director of the Center for
Strategic & International Studies' Turkey
Project, said Turkey basically holds a
three-point position on keeping Kirkuk from
the KRG: "the city and the oil resources
around it belong equally to Turkomen, Arabs
and Kurds who live there; its incorporation
by the Kurds would provide the economic
underpinning of an independent Kurdish
state, which Turkey opposes; and it's
contrary to the vital interest of the
Turkomen who are ethnically related to the
Turks."
Kirkuk is the capital of Iraq's northern oil
sector, with adjacent oil fields holding up
to an estimated 15 billion of Iraq's 115
billion barrels of proven oil reserves and
the start of a pipeline feeding Iraq's
largest oil refinery as well as sending oil
exports to market when it juts north into
Turkey.
Kurds, Turkomen, Arabs and others composed
its population in the 1980s when Saddam
Hussein forcibly moved Arabs in and others
out and redrew the provincial boundaries to
put the oil-rich lands out of majority
Kurdish provinces.
Iraq's Kurdish leadership ensured the 2005
Constitution contained language, however
vague, to reverse Hussein's brutal move.
Kurds, Turkomen and others were to be
resettled back in Kirkuk (and other disputed
territories touched by the late dictator).
Arabs brought in were to be brought out.
Then a census was to be taken to determine
eligible voters in "a referendum in Kirkuk
and other disputed territories to determine
the will of their citizens," according to a
translation of the Constitution posted on
the U.S. Commerce Department's Iraq
Investment and Reconstruction Task Force Web
site, "by a date not to exceed the 31st of
December 2007."
A week before that deadline, the top U.N.
envoy to Iraq, Staffan de Mistura, and U.S.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice met in
Kirkuk to negotiate a six-month timeline to
work out a solution. Iraq's Kurds, intent
and passionate about a referendum where
residents could choose to join the disputed
territories -- and its oil -- to the
semiautonomous Kurdistan Regional
Government, reluctantly agreed. They've been
vocal in their critique of the national
government for not putting enough effort
into complying with the constitution's
Kirkuk agenda and are ardently opposed to
anything but the referendum in six months at
the latest.
"As the primary Turkish goal is to prevent
the incorporation of the city into the
territory controlled by the Iraqi Kurds,
they are happy with the postponement of the
referendum and would not mind an indefinite
postponement" Aliriza said. "It's as simple
as that."
However, he said they were now pressing for
a U.N.-negotiated "special status" for
Kirkuk, like a region unto itself.
"The U.S. government is taking the Turkish
position seriously," Aliriza said, "and this
was a major factor in the U.S. decision to
punt by getting a six-month delay."
"Clearly the U.S. has taken some hits from
the Iraqi Kurds on the bombing of PKK
targets," Aliriza said when asked what the
U.S.-Turkish warming means for U.S.-Kurd
relations.
"Whether the relationship suffers further
we'll see," he said, adding the United
States will be forced to take sides if
Turkey escalates its effort to "finish the
PKK" at the end of the six months.
Top Kurdish leader and KRG President Massoud
Barzani canceled a meeting with Rice during
her brief Kirkuk visit. Turkey had just
bombed and invaded northern Iraq using U.S.
intelligence, promised by Bush in November
when Turkish Prime Minister Recep Erdogan
was visiting.
The PKK, considered a terrorist organization
by the United States, NATO, the EU and
others, formed in the 1970s for the cause of
Kurdish nationalism. Subsequent fighting and
attacks are blamed on deaths in the upper
30,000s, both Turkish troops and civilians.
Iraq's government, while calling the PKK
terrorists, has also called on Turkey to
work on improving the human rights of Kurds
in Turkey. Iraq's Kurds have also said there
is no proof attacks in Turkey were planned
in or carried out by anyone based in Iraq.
A senior administration official said Bush
and Erdogan didn't get specific in Kirkuk
talks. For the PKK, Bush said support would
continue, though he urged Ankara to talk
with Iraq and Iraqi Kurds.
"We have (U.S.) cooperation," Gul said, "at
the moment."
--
(e-mail: blando@upi.com)
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