Editorial
Commentary
Scott
Sullivan:
Bush
and Putin must suppress the PKK*
President Bush’s policies are creating large scale instability in the
Middle East -- see yesterday’s New York Times editorial “Even Closer
to the Brink.” Bush is creating Middle East instability by providing
the PKK a safe haven in Northern Iraq; by alienating Turkey, a key NATO ally,
via US support for the PKK; and by alienating Syria and Russia from participation
in a US anti-PKK program.
President Bush’s major blunder was to establish an autonomous Kurdish
government in northern Iraq under Massoud Barzani in 2003. Barzani was then
and still is pro-PKK. Today, President Bush appears to be in disbelief as his
pro-PKK Barzani government in northern Iraq refuses to rein in the PKK!
Have CIA and Defense failed to warn Bush about the numerous reports of US-PKK
collaboration since 2003? As early as 21 October 2003 the Turkish Undersecretary
for National Intelligence Organization Sonmez Koksal warned Bush via the Turkish
daily press that the PKK was confronting US policies in the region and that
US faced a showdown with the PKK.
How did Bush respond to this Turkish warning about the PKK? Bush responded
by strengthening US ties with Barzani and the PKK.
President Bush is again today accommodating the PKK and Barzani while alienating
Turkey. Bush must strengthen his anti-PKK initiatives – a classic Bush
example of policy that is far too little, far too late -- with the following
US actions.
First, Bush should endorse all of Turkey’s anti-PKK initiatives in northern
Iraq, including US approval of Turkish forces in Iraq.
Second, Bush should make good use of Syria’s recent opposition to the
PKK and Syria’s support for Turkey. Syria is not the enemy. The PKK is
the enemy. To be blunt, a US anti-PKK strategy in the region that excludes
Syria is useless, as Turkey knows.
Third, while including Syria, the US must exclude Iran from the anti-PKK initiative.
Unlike Syria, Iran refuses to endorse Turkey’s anti-PKK measures. Instead,
in lockstep with Bush, Iran supports Massoud Barzani, Kurdish president, and
Jalal Talabani, the Iraqi president, who are both pro-PKK.
Fourth, in addition to US re-engagement with Turkey and Syria, Bush must re-engage
with Russia on a joint US-Russian-Turkish anti-PKK initiative. Russia’s
KGB first established and armed the Kurdish extremists under Barzani during
the Cold War. Russia now faces responsibility for addressing the PKK/Barzani
problem.
Fifth, President Bush should reject advice for passing the buck to Turkey to
address the PKK problem. Bush should also reject advice for a temporary solution
to the PKK crisis that would accept a continuing PKK presence in northern Iraq.
Bush must recognize that he has allowed today’s PKK crisis to emerge
by creating the new state of Iraqi Kurdistan in 2003; by allowing the PKK to
become entrenched in Iraqi Kurdistan; and by allowing the PKK to use Iraqi
Kurdistan to mount armed raids into Turkey.
Along with President Putin, President
Bush now bears primary responsibility, not PM Erdogan and Turkey, for suppressing
the PKK.
If
Tabani and Barzani continue to defend the PKK, US forces should apprehend
and deport them as a danger to Iraqii security. Also, US forces should
join Turkish forces in attacking PKK camps in northern Iraq.
*
The
last paragraph was added on 10/26/07
Scott
Sullivan is a former Washington government employee. Petroleumworld
not necessarily share these views. Petroleumworld does not necessarily
share these views.
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Petroleumworld
News 10/25/07
Copyright© 2007
Scott Sullivan. All rights reserved.
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