Bush's Turkish Gamble, Betraying The Kurds
Again
The Washington Post
By Robert D. Novak
Monday, July 30, 2007
The morass in
Iraq and deepening difficulties in
Afghanistan have not deterred the Bush administration from taking on a
dangerous and questionable new secret operation. High-level U.S. officials are
working with their Turkish counterparts on a joint military operation to
suppress Kurdish guerrillas and capture their leaders. Through covert
activity, their goal is to forestall
Turkey from invading Iraq.
While detailed operational plans are
necessarily concealed, the broad outlines have been presented to select
members of Congress as required by law. U.S. Special Forces are to work with
the Turkish army to suppress the Kurds' guerrilla campaign. The Bush
administration is trying to prevent another front from opening in Iraq, which
would have disastrous consequences. But this gamble risks major exposure and
failure.
The Turkish initiative reflects the
temperament and personality of
George W. Bush. Even faithful congressional supporters of his Iraq policy
have been stunned by the president's upbeat mood, which makes him appear
oblivious to the loss of his political base. Despite the failing effort to
impose a military solution in Iraq, he is willing to try imposing arms --
though clandestinely -- on Turkey's ancient problems with its Kurdish
minority, who comprise one-fifth of the country's population.
The development of an autonomous Kurdish
entity inside Iraq, resulting from the decline and fall of
Saddam Hussein, has alarmed the Turkish government. That led to
Ankara's refusal to allow U.S. combat troops to enter Iraq through Turkey,
an eleventh-hour complication for the 2003 invasion. As the Kurds' political
power grew inside Iraq, the Turkish government became steadily more uneasy
about the centuries-old project of a
Kurdistan spreading across international boundaries -- and chewing up big
pieces of Turkey.
The dormant Turkish Kurd guerrilla fighters
of the
Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) came to life. By June, the Turkish
government was demonstrating its concern by lobbing artillery shells across
the border. Ankara began protesting, to both Washington and
Baghdad, that the PKK was using northern Iraq as a base for guerrilla
operations. On July 11, in Washington, Turkish Ambassador Nabi Sensoy became
the first Turkish official to assert publicly that Iraqi Kurds have claims on
Turkish territory. On July 20, just two days before his successful reelection,
Turkish Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdogan threatened a military incursion into Iraq against the
Kurds. Last Wednesday, Murat Karayilan, head of the PKK political council,
predicted that "the Turkish Army will attack southern Kurdistan."
Turkey has a well-trained, well-equipped army
of 250,000 near the border, facing some 4,000 PKK fighters hiding in the
mountains of northern Iraq. But significant cross-border operations surely
would bring to the PKK's side the military forces of the
Kurdistan Regional Government, the best U.S. ally in Iraq. What is
Washington to do in the dilemma of two friends battling each other on an
unwanted new front in Iraq?
The surprising answer was given in secret
briefings on
Capitol Hill last week by Eric S. Edelman, a former aide to
Vice President Cheney who is now undersecretary of defense for policy.
Edelman, a Foreign Service officer who once was U.S. ambassador to Turkey,
revealed to lawmakers plans for a covert operation of U.S. Special Forces to
help the Turks neutralize the PKK. They would behead the guerrilla
organization by helping Turkey get rid of PKK leaders that they have targeted
for years.
Edelman's listeners were stunned. Wasn't this
risky? He responded that he was sure of success, adding that the U.S. role
could be concealed and always would be denied. Even if all this is true, some
of the briefed lawmakers left wondering whether this was a wise policy for
handling the beleaguered Kurds, who had been betrayed so often by the U.S.
government in years past.
The plan shows that hard experience has not
dissuaded President Bush from attempting difficult ventures employing the use
of force. On the contrary, two of the most intrepid supporters of the Iraq
intervention --
John McCain and
Lindsey Graham-- were surprised by Bush during a recent meeting with him.
When they shared their impressions with colleagues, they commented on how
unconcerned the president seemed. That may explain his willingness to embark
on such a questionable venture against the Kurds.
© 2007 Creators Syndicate Inc.