From: Juan Cole <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Turkey has been the strongest ally that the United States has had in
the Middle East since the end of WW II.  The Marshall Plan started
with Northern tier states like Turkey and Greece.  Turkey joined NATO
and was a key player in the American victory in the Cold War.  As a
secular government, Turkey stood against the rising tide of Muslim
radicalism. To the extent that Turkey is moderating its long-term
secular militancy, and moving toward fair elections, it may be
providing a model for a moderate, democratic Middle East.  Its economy
is growing rapidly, foreign investment is in the billions.  Turkey is
in short, almost everything the US could have asked for in the Middle
East.


But the Bush administration, during the past five years, increasingly
thrown away this asset, and now is in danger of losing a close and
valued ally altogether.  It is unclear what US interests are served by
this repeated and profound damage inflicted by Washington on Turkey,
or what Ankara ever did to us that we are treating them so horribly.

The threat of a Turkish hot pursuit of PKK guerrillas into Iraqi
Kurdistan is starting to have an effect on Kurdistan's economy and
stability.  Inflation is high and some Turkish businesses that had won
bids to operate in the Kurdistan Regional Authority (KRG) are going
back home in fear of trouble.  Getting banks to underwrite economic
enterprises is getting harder, which could result in a slowdown for
Iraqi Kurdistan.  This area was the last in Iraq not to be hit hard by
instability, but tensions are growing.

Imagine what things look like from a Turkish point of view.  Remember
that Turkey is a NATO ally, that it stood with the US during the
Korean War (in which its troops fought), during the Cold War, and
during Bush's war on terror.  Turkey gives the US military facilities,
including the Incirlik Air Force base, through which large amounts of
materiel for the US forces in northern Iraq flows.

First, the Bush administration insisted on invading Iraq and
overthrowing the secular Iraqi government.  It thereby let the Salafi
Sunni and the Shiite fundamentalist genies out of the bottle and
created vast instability on the southeastern border.  It would be as
though a US ally had invaded Mexico and inadvertently unleashed a
Marxist peasant rebellion against San Diego.  Secular Turkey already
felt itself menaced by the Shiite ayatollahs of Iran and by the rising
Salafi and al-Qaeda trends, and the US made everything far worse.

Then, the US gave the Kurdistan Regional Authority control over the
Kirkuk police force and unleashed Kurdish troops on the Turkmen city
of Tal Afar.  (The Turks look on Iraq's 800,000 Turkmen as little
brethren, over whom they feel protective, and don't want them
dominated by Kurds).

The Kurds promptly announced their aspiration of annexing 3 further
provinces, or at least big swathes of them, including the oil province
of Kirkuk, and including substantial Turkmen populations.  Not only
was that guaranteed to cause violence with the Arabs and Turkmen, but
it would give Kurdistan a source of fabulous wealth with which it
could hope to attract Kurds in neighboring countries to join it, a la
German Unification after the fall of the Berlin Wall - except that
this unification would dismember several other countries.

Then the Kurdistan Regional Authority gave safe haven to 3,000 to
5,000 Kurdish guerrillas from eastern Anatolia in Turkey who have been
killing Turks and blowing up things, reviving violence that had
subsided in the early zeroes.  Despite the US military occupation of
Iraq, Washington has done nothing to stop what Turkey sees as
terrorists from going over the border into Turkey and killing Turks.
Turkish intelligence is convinced that the camps in Iraqi Kurdistan
are key to weapons provision for the PKK, and that funding is coming
from Kurdish small businessmen in Western Europe.

PKK guerrillas have just killed 13 Turkish troops on Sunday and in the
past few weeks have killed 28 altogether.  If guerrillas were raiding
over the border into the United States and had killed 28 US troops I
think I know what Washington's response would be.

The the US Congress abruptly condemned modern Kemalist Turkey for the
Armenian genocide, committed by the Ottoman Empire.  I have long held
that Turkey should acknowledge the genocide, which killed hundreds of
thousands and displaced more hundreds of thousands.  The Turkish
government could then point out that it was committed by a tyrannical
and oppressive government-- the Ottoman Empire under Enver Pasha's
military Junta-- against which the Kemalists also fought a long and
determined war to establish a modern republic.  I can't understand
Ankara's unwillingness to distance itself from a predecessor it
doesn't even think well of (the capital is in Ankara and not Istanbul
in part for this very reason!)

But no dispassionate observer could avoid the conclusion that the
Congressional vote condemning Turkey came at a most inopportune time
for US-Turkish diplomacy, at a time when Turks were already raw from
watching the US upset all the apple carts in their neighborhood,
unleash existential threats against them, cause the rise of Salafi
radicalism next door, coddle terrorists killing them, coddle the
separatist KRG, and strengthen the Shiite ayatollahs on their borders.

The Congressional vote came despite the discomfort of elements of the
Israel lobby with recognizing the mass killing of Armenians as a
genocide.  Andrew E. Matthis explains Abraham Foxman's intellectually
bankrupt vacillations on this issue.  Foxman and others of his
ideological orientation have been forced grudgingly to back off their
genocide denial in the case of the Armenians by a general shift in
opinion among the American public, and his change of position may have
removed any fears among congressional representatives that the Israel
lobby would punish them for their vote.  (Turkey and Israel have long
had a strong military and diplomatic relationship, which the Israel
lobby had earlier attempted to preserve by lobbying congress on
Turkey's behalf with regard to some issues.  But the Israel lobby is
now split between pro-Kurdish factions and pro-Turkish factions, and
the pro-Kurdish ones appear to be winning out.  Richard Perle &
Michael Rubin of AEI are examples of the pro-Kurdish Neoconservative
strain in the Israel lobby.  They are losing.)

In 2000, 56% of Turks reported in polls that they had a favorable view
of the United States.  In 2005 that statistic had fallen to 12%.  I
shudder to think what it is now.

--
Jim Devine / "The truth is at once less sinister and more dangerous."
-- Naomi Klein.

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