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Iraqi president visits Ankara in wake of Turkish incursion
By James Cogan
11 March 2008
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Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, who is also a Kurdish leader,
visited Turkey on March 5 along with the five senior economic
and security ministers. The visit took place amid ongoing Turkish
air strikes on northern Iraq against Kurdish Workers Party (PKK)
rebels and just one week after Ankara ended a ground incursion
that the Iraqi government denounced as an unacceptable
violation of its sovereignty. Turkish President Abdullah Gül
invited Talabani to Ankara on February 21the day the military
assault began.
The acceptance of the invitation under such conditions highlights
the strategic importance of Turkey to both the US and various
factions of Iraqs pro-occupation elite. The Bush administration
views Ankara, with its large military and growing economic clout,
as a major counterweight in the Middle East to Iranian efforts
to assert regional dominance. Inside Iraq, Turkey inevitably exerts
considerable influence. Oil from the countrys north is piped
to Turkish ports for sale on the world market. The Turkish port
of Ceyhan is also the destination for the US-backed project to
develop an alternate means to Russias pipeline network for
transporting oil and gas from the Central Asian republics to the
European Union.
The Iraqi government, with Washingtons encouragement,
has sought to reassure the Turkish ruling class that Kurdish nationalist
ambitions will be curbed in northern Iraq and has offered Ankara
the prospect of an even greater role in the exploitation of Iraqi
oil and gas reserves.
Talabani pledged Iraqi assistance to Turkey in dislodging PKK
guerillas from their bases in the rugged mountains of northern
Iraq. Even more significantly, he declared that the Kurdish Regional
Government (KRG), which controls the countrys three northern
provinces, would actively assist. The KRG, he said, had been requested
by Baghdad to put pressure on PKK units to give up their
weapons or leave the region.
Until now, the KRG has made no attempt to use its pesh merga
militia to establish their authority over the PKK-controlled areas.
There is considerable sympathy inside Iraqs Kurdish parties
for the perspective of a greater Kurdistan that would include
south-eastern Turkey, as well as parts of Syria and Iran. The
notion of suppressing Kurdish rebels on behalf of Turkey is not
a popular one.
Kurdish resentment towards Turkey is amplified by Ankaras
opposition to the KRGs perspective of incorporating the
oil-rich Kirkuk province. Turkeys assertion that it has
the right to militarily intervene inside Iraq is not limited to
the PKK-held mountains. It has also declared its right to deploy
troops to Kirkuk, on the grounds of protecting the citys
ethnic Turkomen community from abuse by Kurdish nationalist forces.
Kurdish control of Kirkuk would dramatically enhance the KRGs
economic importance and, in the event of a declaration of Kurdish
independence from Iraq, provide considerable resources. It is
therefore bitterly opposed by Turkey, which views the very existence
of the Kurdish autonomous region in Iraq as an incitement to Kurdish
separatism throughout the Middle East.
The US occupation encouraged Kurdish ambitions by including
a stipulation in the Iraqi constitution that a referendum on Kirkuks
status would take place by the end of 2007. Last year, however,
as the Bush administration sought to strengthen its relations
with Ankara, it prevailed on the Iraqi Kurdish factions to accept
a six-month delay.
Every signal from Washington indicates that the US is not prepared
to create diplomatic tensions with Turkey by backing Kurdish demands
for a referendum in June. The Bush administration pointedly distanced
itself on Saturday from military commanders who implied last week
that the US was prepared to enter into negotiations with the PKK.
A White House spokeswoman stated: We have not and will not
negotiate or hold talks with the PKK, nor do we expect Turkey
to do so... The PKK is a common enemy.
Talabanis conduct in Turkey indicates that the Iraqi
Kurdish eliteor at least a significant factionare
also prepared to relinquish their aspirations to control. His
first act after disembarking was to pay homage at the mausoleum
of Kemal Atatürk, the first president of the modern Turkish
republic.
Iraqi Oil Minister Hussain al-Shahristani held talks with senior
Turkish ministers over closer economic ties, including a free
trade agreement and major investments in Iraqi oil and gas. Turkish
deputy minister for foreign trade Kursda Tuzmen told journalists:
Turkeys priority is to invest in the development of
Iraqi gas fields, for import and transit to Europe. Further
discussion took place on constructing a gas pipeline parallel
to the oil pipeline that ships Iraqi oil from Kirkuk to Ceyhansomething
that would not take place if the KRG were to control Kirkuk.
Within two years, Tuzmen declared, the objective was to boost
bilateral Iraqi-Turkish trade from $US3.5 billion in 2007 to $20
billion. Turkey is intending to open a consulate in the Iraqi
city of Basra to facilitate greater Turkish investment into the
oil and gas sector in southern Iraq as well. Shahristani declared
that Turkey could construct oil refineries wherever it liked
in Iraq. The Iraqi oil minister again denounced the KRGs
various contracts for oil projects with transnational energy companies
as illegal, declaring that the Kurdish region had no authority
over oil and gas resources.
Talabani concluded his visit by addressing an audience of Turkish
business leaders on Saturday. He declared that Iraq wanted strategic
relations in all fields, including oil, the economy, trade, culture
and politics, with Turkey. The Bush administration issued
a statement noting it was pleased with the outcome of the Iraq-Turkish
meetings.
US ambassador to Turkey Ross Wilson announced on March 7 that
Vice President Dick Cheney will visit Ankara en route to the NATO
summit in Bucharest from April 2 to 4. The last time Cheney travelled
to Turkey was in 2002, in an attempt to secure Turkish backing
for the invasion of Iraq.
Iran will undoubtedly be a major issue in the discussions between
Cheney and President Gül, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
and the head of the Turkish military, General Yasar Büyükanit.
Despite US overtures over recent months, Turkey has not made any
definite moves toward lessening its political and economic engagement
with the Iranian regime.
A major meeting of the Turkish-Iranian Business Council is
currently underway in Tehran, at which Iran is expected to seek
greater Turkish investment and involvement in the development
of its energy sector, in defiance of UN economic sanctions pushed
through by the US and its allies.
While the Bush administration was no doubt hoping that Talibanis
trip would help woo Ankara away from Tehran, sections of the Iraqi
elite, including the president, are responding to uncertainty
about the outcome of US-Iranian tensions by maintaining their
own relations with Iran. Iranian President Ahmadinejad was welcomed
to Baghdad on March 2-3 with full honours.
See Also:
Turkey hails Iraq incursion as success
[4 March 2008]
Turkey rejects timetable to
end invasion of northern Iraq
[29 February 2008]
Turkish forces push deeper
into Kurdish northern Iraq
[25 February 2008]
Historical issues
in the Turkish-Kurd conflict
[10 November 2007]
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