Turkey's
Ecevit
Hopes
and Worries Arrive in Washington
Ertugrul Kurkcu
(Ertugrul
Kurkcu is a political analyst and coordinator of the Istanbul-based
Independent Communications Network.)
January 15,
2002
When
Turkish Prime Minister Bulent Ecevit arrives in Washington DC this
week to meet with President George W. Bush he will come bearing
a symbolic gift: a replica of a 16th century Koran, beautifully
embroidered and written with real gold lettering. The original of
this Koran comes from the Topkapi Palace Museum, once the seat of
the Ottoman Sultans who ruled the Muslim world for over four centuries.
Buried since
the First World War, the Ottoman Empire is no longer. Yet, the heirs
to the Empire's legacy, Turkey's Republican military and political
leaders, are firmly convinced that history is again calling them
to center stage. In the wake of September 11th, these leaders hope
to join the "war against terrorism" so as to take an active
role in the reshaping the region. Thus far Turkey has been supportive
of the military campaign in Afghanistan. But while President Bush
may refer to the current war as a "crusade," Ecevit 's
gift of a Koran indicates that Turkey may have it's own interpretation
of the region.
Bush's aides
are sure to have done their homework in studying Ankara's point
of view before the leaders meet. They will aim to keep Mr. Bush
on message, not only to avoid further verbal blunders, but also
to keep Turkish geopolitical ambitions in check. If Bush has his
way, the discussion will therefore center around certain key topics:
Turkey's present financial troubles, its huge foreign debt and military
dependence on US technology, as well as its regional rivalries with
Greece, Iran and Russia.
THE CORE
OF TURKEY'S REGIONAL CONCERNS: IRAQ'S TERRITORIAL INTEGRITY
Prime Minister
Ecevit will undoubtedly raise the issue of Iraq's "territorial
integrity," especially as the country seems to be a possible
next target. Despite recent reassurances to the contrary from Deputy
Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz, the Pentagon's leading hawk, Turkish
leaders remain uneasy. ''Perhaps US ambitions to topple Saddam Hussein
will not result in an immediate attack" remarked former Turkish
chief of staff retired General Dogan Gures last week. "But
in unofficial talks, US envoys keep asking my advice on the pros
and cons of such a military strike.'' When questioned in the press,
Ecevit continues to reiterate that Turkey will preserve, at whatever
price, its present borders with Iraq.
With an eye
toward unofficial US concerns, Turkish chief of staff, General Huseyin
Kivrikoglu, as well as Prime Minister Ecevit have both indicated
in public statements that Ankara is more concerned with preserving
territorial integrity and borders than it is with the survival or
downfall of Saddam Hussein's regime. "Of course, the United
States may have its own concerns" Ecevit told reporters recently.
"And we are committed to ... discussing such efforts jointly
with the United States particularly regarding Iraq." Nevertheless,
Ecevit will express his worries that any US operation against Saddam
could encourage uprisings in the mostly Kurdish northern areas of
Iraq bordering Turkey, and prompt the formation of a Kurdish state
in that region. Such an event could pose a serious threat to Turkey's
unity by provoking Turkish Kurds to rebel for greater autonomy in
the Kurdish-dominated southeast, bordering Iraq.
Prior to Ecevit's
departure, a delegation of US senators visited Ankara allegedly
to discuss whether Turkish leaders thought the fall of Saddam might
actually help solve their Kurdish problem. Their logic was that
the survival of an undemocratic Saddam regime was in fact increasing
rather than squelching Kurdish desires for independence. Ecevit
did not agree. "We definitely can't accept that,'' Ecevit remarked,
adding only that on Kurdish aspirations for independence, "we
will never allow that'", regardless of Saddam's status.
SYMPATHY
FOR SADDAM OR APATHY FOR KURDISH CLAIMS?
During the
upcoming meetings, Bush will host the only NATO leader who over
the years has not disguised his differences with the US position
on Iraq. In 1990-91, Ecevit was working as a journalist and he visited
the Iraqi leader in Baghdad twice while the then Turkish President
Turgut Ozal was busy advising the US president for a full-scale
invasion of Iraq, backed by a strong Turkish land support from the
north.
Ecevit's stance
toward Saddam Hussein has occasionally earned him sharp criticism
from political foes who have publicly denounced him as "Saddamist."
Yet, Ecevit's outlook on the Iraqi leader seems to have changed
during his ascent to power in the late 1990s, a transition which
some analysts attribute specifically to his military briefings during
his prime ministry as well as to his growing desire for US and NATO
allegiance.
Nevertheless,
fifteen years of internal conflict with the insurgent Kurdish guerrillas
of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) has left the Turkish government
cautious about the possible birth of a Kurdish state in northern
Iraq. Ecevit remains highly skeptical that Iraq can maintain its
territorial integrity should the Saddam regime collapse under prospective
US strikes.
Many believe
that Washington will turn to Turkey for advice before it makes any
move on Iraq. Some Turkish analysts, such as Sami Kohen, argue that
inaction would be the worst advice for Turkey to give. "Until
recently Turkey has urged for the status quo to continue."
Kohen remarked. "Yet, it becomes ever apparent now that the
status quo is not in Turkey's best interest," he observes.
In Kohen's view, Turkey runs the risk of being excluded from decision-making
in the future if it does not engage and assist US interests.
On the other
hand, Ecevit's Kurdish critics see Ankara's unwillingness to get
involved in an operation against Baghdad as having less to do with
concerns for "territorial integrity" than having to do
with keeping Saddam in his place. These critics point out that Iraq
"hardly preserves any of its territorial integrity as Turkish
troops frequently launch cross-border operations and strike Northern
Iraq in countless air raids," according to one leading Kurdish
intellectual, Umit Firat. "Turkey indeed fears the replacement
of Saddam Hussein by a democratic regime that could grant northern
Iraqi Kurds broader freedom, and in turn present a legitimate model
for Turkey's Kurds."
Divided into
four parts after the collapse of the Ottoman Empire, the region
is home to 12 million former Ottoman Kurds, now mostly living in
southeastern Turkey. An additional two million Kurds live in northern
Iraq, one million in Iran and fewer than one million in Syria. The
PKK, which declared war against Ankara for Kurdish self determination
in 1984, built rear bases in northern Iraq and recruited guerrillas
from among the Iraqi Kurds. The PKK leader, Abdullah Ocalan, based
his headquarters in the Syrian capital, Damascus, throughout 15
years of bitter armed conflict. During the war, particularly after
the abortive Kurdish uprisings which followed the Iraqi defeat in
the Gulf War in 1991, PKK influence in northern Iraq grew considerably.
In response, Ankara felt compelled to extend its operations deep
into northern Iraq. Turkish forces staged countless cross-border
operations, the biggest in 1996 when Turkish troops inflicted around
2,000 PKK casualties. This 1996 incursion considerably undermined
The PKK's fighting force and strategic balance.
Having left
behind 30,000 deaths and a devastated countryside, the armed conflict
between the PKK and Turkey reached a de facto stand-still in 1999
when Abdullah Ocalan was extradited from Damascus and handed over
to Turkey by the Kenyan police under apparent US supervision. After
a brief trial at which Ocalan was condemned to death, the PKK leader
was placed in the Imrali Island prison in maximum isolation. Since
then, Turkey has suspended Ocalan's execution pending the outcome
of Ocalan's lawyers appeal to European Human Rights Court for "a
fair trial."
THE TURKOMAN
EQUATION IN NORTHERN IRAQ
Despite deep
concerns over Iraq's territorial disintegration, Ankara has reportedly
considered a multi-ethnic equation for northern Iraq in which the
Turkoman population would become part of an autonomous administration,
if the present status quo were suddenly destroyed. In Ankara's view,
such an approach would safeguard Turkey's greater influence in the
region in the aftermath of a collapsed Saddam regime.
The issue was
raised during Ecevit-Saddam meeting of 1991, in which Ecevit probed
Saddam's opinion of Turkoman and Kurdish autonomy. According to
Turkish journalist Derya Sazak, Saddam only responded: "We
are ready to fight for Qirquq."
Mostly populated
in and around the oil rich Qirquq and Mousul areas in the north
of Iraq, Turkomans comprise around five percent of Iraq's total
24 million population. Ever since the 1924 division of the former
Ottoman territory between Iraq and Turkey, the ethnically Turkic
Turkomans of Iraq have kept close ties with Ankara. Since the 1991
declaration of the no-fly zone north of 36th parallel, the region
is under "Operation Provide Comfort" which has strengthened
Ankara's access and ties to resident Turkoman leaders. Ankara has
used these increased ties to counter-balance the activities of the
rival Kurdish factions of Mesoud Barzani's KDP (Kurdistan Democratic
Party) based in Salahaddin in the northwest of the zone and Jalal
Talabani's PUK (Patriotic Union of Kurdistan) based in Suleymaniyah
in the northeast.
It was based
on these ties and counterbalances that former Turkish president
Turgut Ozal based his aspirations during the Gulf War during which
he strongly encouraged the elder Bush to march all the way to Baghdad.
Ozal's hope was that once Saddam fell, Turkish ground forces could
quickly march to Mosul and Qirquq, thereby winning a channel for
Iraqi oil to flow to Turkey's refineries. However, Turkish military
leaders believed that the military risks of betraying the borders
and pursuing Ozal's ambitions far outweighed the perceived oil returns
on such an action. Since Ozal's death in 1993, Turkish military
and political leaders have shelved his schemes of invasion of northern
Iraq. Yet they have kept an ever-watchful eye on developments with
the Turkomans in the region.
FINANCIALLY
HAMSTRUNG
Whatever ambitions
Ecevit might have for playing a deciding role in reshaping the region
will be severely hamstrung by Turkey's current economic woes. It
is these same woes which have already prevented Ankara from keeping
the promise to send special troops to Afghanistan to take part in
the future reshaping of Kabul. Ecevit's recent explanation was simply
that "the costs of deploying overseas troops exceeds Turkey's
planned defense budget."
Nevertheless,
the Turkish chief of staff announced this week that Turkey will
deploy 261 troops for the ISAF (International Security Assistance
Force). Initiated by Britain, the ISAF comprises of forces of Britain,
France, Germany, Italy, The Netherlands, Turkey, Belgium, Portugal,
Austria, Finland, Sweden, Rumania, Norway, Greece, and New Zealand.
The ISAF coalition will provide oversight in establishing the emergent
administration in Afghanistan, and Ankara has not concealed an ambition
to take over ISAF command when Britain's turn expires in April.
"Turkey
is prepared to provide assistance for rebuilding the Afghan armed
and police forces," Ecevit remarked. However, such plans may
be trapped in Turkey's growing financial difficulties. "To
assume a greater role in Afghanistan, we will ask not only for a
forgiveness on our $5 billion military debt but also for military
aid," Ecevit told journalists prior to his January arrival
in Washington.
Since the market
crash of last February, the Turkish economy has shrunk by 40 percent.
Per capita income has dropped by almost one third. Ankara's best
hope is that its recently increased geopolitical value, post September
11th, may bring the country some additional economic opportunities.
In this effort, Ecevit will be tirelessly making the rounds. On
his itinerary are meetings with: Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld,
Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage, Secretary of Treasury
Paul H. O'Neill, Secretary of Commerce Donald L. Evans, International
Monetary Fund Director Horst Köhler and World Bank President
James Wolfensohn. Instead of seeking new loans to add to Turkey's
already whopping $120 billion foreign debt, Ecevit will most likely
look for a reduction in US tariffs on Turkish exports, particularly
textile products. Some 100 business leaders who will accompany Ecevit
will also be looking for increased cooperation from US firms.
For now, the
region's fragile status quo will probably remain. And in all likelihood,
both Bush and Ecevit will keep the discussion, or at least the public
face of it, tied to issues of finance.
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