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The Next Invasion of Iraq? Kurdish Mountain Army Awaits Turkish Incursion

By Patrick Cockburn, CounterPunch. Posted July 23, 2007.


Another war in Iraq looms as Turkey's 140,000 troops amassed on the border with Kurdish Iraq threatens to set off a new wave of violence and destabilization in the Middle East.
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Hiding in the high mountains and deep gorges of one of the world's great natural fortresses are bands of guerrillas whose presence could provoke a Turkish invasion of northern Iraq and the next war in the Middle East.

In the weeks before the Turkish election on Sunday, Turkey has threatened to cross the border into Iraq in pursuit of the guerrillas of the Turkish Kurdish movement, the PKK, and its Iranian Kurdish offshoot, Pejak.

The Iraqi Foreign Minister, Hoshyar Zebari, warns that there are 140,000 Turkish troops massed just north of the frontier.

"Until recently, we didn't take the Turkish threat that seriously but thought it was part of the election campaign," says Safeen Sezayee. A leading Iraqi Kurdish expert on Turkey and spokesman for the Kurdistan Democratic Party of Massoud Barzani, the president of the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG), Mr Dezayee now sees an invasion as quite possible.

The Iraqi Kurds are becoming nervous. The drumbeat of threats from Turkish politicians and generals has become more persistent. "The government and opposition parties are competing to show nationalist fervour," says Mr Dezayee. Anti-PKK feeling is greater than ever in Turkey.

Most menacingly, Turkey is appalled that the Kurds are key players in Iraqi politics and are developing a semi- independent Kurdish state in northern Iraq.

After the election, Ankara may find it impossible to retreat from the bellicose rhetoric of recent weeks and will send its troops across the border, even if the incursion is only on a limited scale.

If the Turkish army does invade, it will not find it easy to locate the PKK guerrillas. Their main headquarters is in the Qandil mountains which are on the Iranian border but conveniently close to Turkey. It is an area extraordinarily well-adapted for guerrilla warfare where even Saddam Hussein's armies found it impossible to penetrate.

To reach Qandil, we drove east from the Kurdish capital Arbil to the well-watered plain north of Dokan lake. In the town of Qala Diza, destroyed by Saddam Hussein but now being rebuilt, the local administrator Maj Bakir Abdul Rahman Hussein was quick to say that Qandil was ruled by the PKK: " We don't have any authority there." He said there was regular shelling from Iran that led to some border villages being evacuated but he did not seem to consider this out of the ordinary. "The Iranians do it whenever they are feeling international pressure," he said.

We hired a four-wheel drive vehicle and a driver in black Kurdish uniform who was from Qandil. Just below the mountains, we were stopped by the paramilitary Iraqi Frontier Guards. A red-white-and-black Iraqi flag, a rare sight in Kurdistan, flew over their headquarters which is built like a miniature medieval castle.

Kurdish officials close to Qandil are strangely eager to disclaim any authority over their own sovereign territory. In a stern lecture, after consulting with his superiors by phone, Lt- Col Ahmad Sabir of the Frontier Guards said we could go on but "we have no control beyond this point and no responsibility for what happens to you. You may meet PKK, Iranians on the border or shepherds with guns."

The road to the mountain climbs up the sides of steep hills dotted with small oak trees, past hamlets with flat roofs made from mud and brushwood.

The road is at first pot-holed asphalt, then broken rock and finally, after crossing a bridge over a mountain torrent, it gives up being a road at all and becomes a track, parts of which had been swept away by avalanches.

The first sign of the PKK was a sentry box confidently in the open with two armed men in khaki uniform who confiscated our passports and mobile phones. Driving on, we came to a strange and exotic mausoleum to the PKK dead. Its walls are painted white and red and inside the gates are ornamental ponds and flowerbeds overlooked by a white column 30ft high, on top of which is miniature yellow star in metal or concrete, the symbol of the PKK.


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See more stories tagged with: turkey, kirkuk, kurdistan, pkk

Patrick Cockburn is the author of 'The Occupation: War, resistance and daily life in Iraq', a finalist for the National Book Critics' Circle Award for best non-fiction book of 2006.

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And...
Posted by: JoshuaLudd on Jul 23, 2007 7:49 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Bush will do nothing. Because, surprise surprise, he doesn't actually give a damn about the Kurds. You know... those people who were attacked with chemical weapons that are part of what we went in for.. nevermind that it happened 20 years ago.

Bush will use and abuse any and every corpse he has to to get what he wants.

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MR. BUSH YOU WERE WARNED ABOUT THIS
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Jul 23, 2007 7:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
He can't plead ignorance or suprise on this one. By the time surrounding countries decide to take matters into their own hands we won't be able to find our own military, much less bring them home. The President is on the verge of abandoning his troops, and that is unforgivable. The Turks did not show up on the border yesterday. They've been there for months just waiting. It was not a secret. Well, George?Thanks, ANNA

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OIL.. is the only concern of GWB and the NEOCONs
Posted by: wmGreybeard on Jul 23, 2007 9:58 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
..

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The PLAN is working! Congratulations Bush, Cheney, Bush Sr., James Baker III,
Posted by: albrechtkrausse on Jul 23, 2007 10:27 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Brezenski, Kissinger, et al!! Divide those Muslims. Get them fighting each other. Keep Turkey out of the EU. Keep energy prices high. Use instability in the region as an excuse for more foreign bases (and fat no-bid contracts for large corporations.) Get more influence in the former USSR 'stani' republics. Expand 'starwars' defence system into Europe. Lessen influence of Russia in those precious mineral and energy rich region. Destabilise and then allow NATO/US/Europeans in to 'prop up' friendly regimes.
Out of Choas, Order.

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Turkey and Iran are justified
Posted by: persian on Jul 23, 2007 10:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
to hunt pkk and pejak terrorists. If US can justify its invasion of iraq partly based on Saddam's alleged support for Al Qaeda, surely Turkey is within its right to do same against the very real threat of PKK. We should avoid any romantic notion of pkk and its sister terror group pejak. they are not freedom fighters. They are just as ruthless as al qaeda, just not as well supported.

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» Yeah, nevermind... Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» RE: Yeah, nevermind... Posted by: JSurmeli
How can anyone say...
Posted by: Pirate1 on Jul 23, 2007 11:14 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That the people of the area that was once Kurdestan that, through the same sort of caveat as was used to transform Palestine into Israel and the nations of the Americas into what is there now, was erased and it's territory given to modern Iraq, Iran, Syria and Turkey are not freedom fighters? They have tried beseaching the UN, begging the powerful countries of the world and other peaceful means but nothing was ever done. In what was their homeland for centuries they are treated as subhumans, the way Native Americans here were and are and the way people of Mexican decent who have been in what is now the USA since before the border moved south are. I've seen amuricans ready to kill if you deny them their percieved "right" to drive their ATVs anywhere they want... If a border moved and they were declared something else, would they not fight? Would you then call them terrorist? Those founders of America we revere so were all Terrorists to the British of those times... it is another in a long line of terms used to dehumanise and trivialize. Don't buy into it. In this case then, you are a terrorist, it would seem if you refuse to lie down and be redescribed by others as Turks, Syrians, Iraqis and Iranians.

I am against military solutions to political problems but I can understand where the people there might feel there is no other option, given the total lack of any response by anyone to their call for justice. After all, they have but to look to the now non existing nations of the Americas to see how thouroughly forgotten they could become if they just give up and accept these European dictates.

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» RE: How can anyone say... Posted by: Sepah
» Yeah, but there should be. Posted by: Scientz
Bravo
Posted by: JSurmeli on Jul 23, 2007 9:52 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I can do naught but applaud the bravery and immaculate foreign relations insight of the modern progressive left to romanticize the actions of PKK. Undeterred by common sense, the left has grown to support the ideals of these true freedom fighters. Guerrilla attacks on primarily civilian areas are, after all, the most noble representation of one's inherent yearning for proper treatment. This nobility is certainly matched, if not superseded, by the courage it takes to ignore the complete hypocrisies of ones of own ideas and dare to suggest that attacks of the PKK are justified whereas the advances of the Turkish military are ruthlessly aggressive. Wake the fuck up and stop identifying with every stupid band of "freedom fighters" that places upon itself a Marxist mark. Some actions simply lack justification, regardless of the self-imposed labeling of the motives behind them. Turkey's response, while still regrettable due to the impending loss of human life, at least carries with it the pretext of retaliation for attacks against its citizenry. The PKK wants to undo hundreds of years wars, conquests and societal shifts to assigns themselves an arbitrarily drawn homeland, a demand that is far too lofty and self-serving to be considered reasonable.

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good report, but the description of the region was a mistake
Posted by: aram on Jul 23, 2007 11:46 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The description of the mountains, the Pkk bases, and the roads etc., kind of harmful for the region and for members of the PKK, Otherwise it is a good report. It is a mistake to write this much description of this kind of "war-zone" area.

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