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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Turkish troops invade northern Iraq
By Patrick Martin
23 February 2008
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Thousands of Turkish army troops crossed the border with Iraq
Friday in a major military operation against guerrilla forces
of the Kurdish Workers Party (PKK), which has fought for decades
against the Turkish state, seeking a separate state for the 15
million Kurds who inhabit southeastern Turkey.
The military action demonstrates the increasingly volatile
conditions created by the US invasion and occupation of Iraq,
which has destabilized the entire Middle East. The Turkish forces
are operating within the battle space of the American army of
occupation in Iraq, as well as on the territory of the Kurdistan
Regional Government (KRG), whose militia, the pesh merga, is the
most formidable local military force.
The attack was the first ground invasion of Iraq by Turkish
troops since the United States invaded and occupied the country
in 2003. Turkey conducted several major military sweeps against
the PKK in the 1990s, while Saddam Hussein was still in power.
Hussein backed the operations since he was himself engaged in
bloody repression against Kurdish nationalist elements.
There were conflicting reports about the scale of the operation.
The Turkish television network NTV, which is privately owned,
said 10,000 troops were engaged in the offensive and had crossed
six miles into Iraq in the Hakurk region, south of the town of
Cukurca.
The Turkish press hailed the invasion in stridently chauvinist
terms, with the daily newspaper Hurriyet reporting it under
the headline, Ten Thousand Heroes in Northern Iraq.
The state-run Anatolia news agency reported the participation
of Turkish bombers, helicopters and artillery as well as the ground
troops, but said only 3,000 soldiers, the equivalent of two brigades,
had actually entered Iraq. The rest were apparently deployed in
support positions on the Turkish side of the border.
A PKK spokesman confirmed the invasion and reported Turkish
casualties, both dead and wounded. An Iraqi border officer told
the press that Turkish artillery had shelled Kurdish villages
in the Sedafan area, some 20 miles from the border, with casualties
still unknown.
The government of Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
called the operation limited and said it would be
concluded as quickly as possible. Officials said that Turkey was
committed to respecting Iraqi sovereignty, but had no choice to
act because of cross-border raids by PKK guerrillas. More than
40,000 people have died in fighting between the Turkish army and
the PKK, the bulk of them Kurdish civilians.
But it was not clear that Erdogan was in full control of the
military command, which has repeatedly clashed with his Islamic-oriented
Justice and Development Party (AKP).
A commentary in the Eurasia Daily Monitor noted, referring
to the Turkish army command by its acronym, TGS, It is currently
unclear whether the decision to stage the operation was taken
by the TGS or the Turkish civilian government. Speaking on Turkish
television, several pundits suggested that the final decision
to launch the operation must have been taken at the four-hour
February 21 meeting of the National Security Council (NSC) ...
However, the artillery bombardment began several hours before
the NSC convened.
It is thus quite possible that Erdogans hand was forced
by the military commanders, who have been pressing him to authorize
a ground assault on the PKK in addition to the sporadic air strikes
conducted since last November, after a PKK raid that killed more
than a dozen Turkish soldiers.
The timing of the ground invasion was surprising, given the
extreme winter conditions, including heavy snow in the mountains
and high winds, which negate much of the technical advantages
of the Turkish army, a key component of NATO with extensive weaponry
supplied by the United States.
The invasion produced different responses in the US and Europe,
with the Bush administration and US military officials in Iraq
largely supportive, while the European Union called on the Turkish
government to exercise restraint.
White House officials said that Erdogan informed Bush of the
ongoing military operation in a midnight phone call. The Turkish
deputy chief of staff, Gen. Ergun Saygun, visited Washington this
month and held talks with Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, in which the campaign against the PKK was
undoubtedly discussed.
White House spokesman Scott Stanzel said Friday, We were
notified and we urged the Turkish government to limit their operations
to precise targeting of the PKKto limit the scope and duration
of their operationsand we urged them to work, directly,
with Iraqis, including Kurdish government officials, on how best
to address the threat.
The US military spokesman in Iraq, Rear Admiral Gregory Smith,
said, Multi-National Forces-Iraq is aware Turkish ground
forces have entered into northern Iraq, for what we understand
is an operation of limited duration to specifically target PKK
terrorists in that region... The United States continues to support
Turkeys right to defend itself from the terrorist activities
of the PKK and has encouraged Turkey to use all available means,
to include diplomacy and close coordination with the Government
of Iraq to ultimately resolve this issue.
A spokeswoman for the European Commission was more cautious,
saying, Turkey should refrain from taking any disproportionate
military action and respect human rights and the rule of law...
The EU understands Turkeys need to protect its population
from terrorism. We encourage Turkey to continue to pursue dialogue
with international partners.
The British government urged Turkey to withdraw as quickly
as possible while the German government said it viewed the incursion
with great concern.
The most important response could come in Iraq itself, whose
US-imposed government includes the two main Kurdish nationalist
parties that share power in the Kurdish region which has now been
invaded by Turkey.
Turkish President Abdullah Gul spoke with Iraqs President
Jalal Talabani, a Kurd, to reassure him that no long-term occupation
of Kurdish territory was planned. Both the Iraqi regime in Baghdad,
headed by Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, and the Kurdistan regional
authority, headed by Massoud Barzani, urged Turkey not to carry
out the military action. But Barzani ordered the Kurdish pesh
merga not to fight the Turkish troops.
Despite these efforts, a clash between Turkish and Iraqi Kurdish
forces nearly erupted Thursday, when hundreds of Turkish troops
stationed inside northern Iraq since 1997 as monitors of a ceasefire
between two rival Kurdish militias attempted to link up with the
Turkish troops about to come across the border.
According to several press reports, the Turkish monitors were
actively coordinating their actions with the Turkish high command,
and one unit tried to bring its tanks and armored cars out of
their base and take up positions to secure two major roads in
the province of Dahuk, in Iraqs northwest corner.
They were quickly confronted by a larger group of Kurdish pesh
merga and a 90-minute standoff ensued, at which point the Turkish
troops retreated and returned to their base, where they remain
surrounded. A spokesman for the Kurdistan Regional Government
said, The government of Kurdistan ordered the pesh merga
forces to be on alert in fear of any Turkish incursion on Iraqi
territory.
The day before the Turkish invasion, McClatchy Newspapers carried
an account of a rare visit by a US journalist to a PKK-controlled
area in the Qandeel Mountains, along the Iraq-Turkish border.
The article said: No Iraqi troops patrol here. PKK men in
uniform check the IDs of those who seek to visit. The image of
the PKKs leader is emblazoned on a mountain slope, and a
sign openly proclaims PKK headquarters. The pesh merga troops
of the Kurdistan Regional Government, which officially rules northern
Iraq , make no effort to enter.
A PKK spokeswoman complained about US intelligence agencies
supplying information to the Turkish military to assist the invasion,
and appealed for efforts to solve the Kurdish question through
dialogue.
See Also:
Iraq: US occupation faces crisis of its
own making
[21 February 2008]
Turkish military again strikes Kurdish
areas in northern Iraq
[7 February 2008]
Turkey continues its
incursions into northern Iraq
[29 December 2007]
Historical issues
in the Turkish-Kurd conflict
[10 November 2007]
Turkish government
gives green light for military intervention in northern Iraq
[15 October 2007]
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