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KurdistanObserver.com
Turkey Steps Back From Southern Kurdistan Invasion After Poll
The Independent (England)
July 24, 2007
As Turkey's government savoured an overwhelming electoral victory yesterday,
regional analysts agreed that the immediate impetus for an invasion of Kurdistan
(northern Iraq) had receded.
Sunday's clear mandate for the Islamic-rooted AKP of the Prime Minister, Recep
Tayyip Erdogan, has been received as a snub to his secularist and nationalist
opponents, who put the fight against Kurdish separatist guerrillas across the
border at the centre of their failed campaign.
Orhan Miroglu, one of the Kurdish politicians elected to parliament, said the
veiled threat of military intervention and a massive military build-up in
Turkey's south-east had failed to attract votes.
"Sunday's results are a victory for common sense and civilian democracy over a
politics of nationalism and foreign intervention," he said in a telephone
interview from the southern port city of Mersin.
With more than 100,000 troops on the border, Turkey's military has been talking
about the strategic value of Iraqi operations for months. But it needs
parliamentary permission to cross into Iraq. Mr Miroglu, one of 24 deputies to
be elected from Turkey's Kurdish nationalist party, says he will oppose an
invasion. "We've had enough war," he says.
On the Iraqi side of the border, Murat Karayilan, the military commander of the
Kurdish separatist group the PKK, which has been at war with the Turkish state
since 1984, is still expecting a fight. "The date of the Turkish offensive has
drawn near," he told the Associated Press. "We are ready to defend ourselves."
Despite repeated assurances that it will do what is necessary to combat the PKK,
the signs are that the victorious Justice and Development Party (AKP) has little
enthusiasm for starting a new war.
One of the most striking aspects of it winning 47 per cent of Turkish votes this
weekend was the increased support it gained from the south-eastern heartlands of
Kurdish nationalism. At least 100 AKP deputies are of Kurdish origin. With
unemployment in some Turkish Kurdish towns higher than 50 per cent, they know
that war in Iraq is the last thing their constituents want. For a start, much of
Turkey's $2.7bn (£1.3bn) trade with Iraqi Kurdistan is in the hands of Turkish
Kurds.
A security expert at the Ankara-based International Strategic Research
Organisation, Ihsan Bal, was unwilling to rule out the likelihood of small
cross-border raids by highly-trained anti-terrorist groups.
Anything bigger would be a sign of government weakness, and the AKP has just
been given an overwhelming public mandate. "Soft power is in the ascendant," he
said.
How Turkish analysts interpret "soft power" depends on their political
allegiances. Umit Ozdag, the author of an unsuccessful attempt last year to take
over the leadership of Turkey's newly elected right-wing nationalist party,
believes that Turkey should simply impose sanctions on Iraqi Kurds.
Under pressure from the secular establishment, AKP has until now avoided talking
directly to the Iraqi Kurdistan region president Massud Barzani and the Iraqi
President Jalal Talabani, a Kurd. Faruk Logoglu, whose term as Turkey's
ambassador to Washington ended last year, said: "These are the first people we
should be talking to about the PKK. I hope the government, now it has its
massive new mandate, will have the courage to enter into dialogue with them."
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