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Turkey In The Balance? Inside The Improbable Turkey-Iran Partnership

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  • Turkey In The Balance? Inside The Improbable Turkey-Iran Partnership

    TURKEY IN THE BALANCE? INSIDE THE IMPROBABLE TURKEY-IRAN PARTNERSHIP
    By Alexander Sherbany

    Harvard Political Review
    Aug 5 2008
    MA

    For much of the last 50 years, through the Cold War, Iranian
    Revolution, and Iran-Iraq War, Turkey and Iran have weathered
    ideological tension and mutual mistrust to maintain a peaceful
    coexistence. Over the objections of the United States, in the
    past decade Turkey has moved to solidify a pragmatic economic and
    geopolitical partnership with oil-rich Iran.

    Turkey, a NATO ally seeking membership in the European Union, has
    long been the Muslim world's best prospect for a secular, democratic
    state close to the United States and Europe. Yet the country is divided
    over the issue of the Iraq-based Kurdistan Worker's Party. The party,
    also known as the PKK, is recognized as a terrorist organization by
    Turkey, the United States, and the European Union. The tension between
    the PKK and Turkey has drawn the latter closer not to the U.S. or EU,
    but to the region's staunchest enemy of the West, the Shia theocracy
    of Iran. As Washington attempts to isolate Tehran, stabilize Iraq,
    and address the PKK issue, it must simultaneously assure Iraq of
    its sovereignty and Turkey of its security. American relations with
    Turkey and policy towards Iran could be undermined by a Turkey-Iran
    relationship more cordial than one might expect, given their divergent
    histories, internal politics, and relations with the West.

    Turkey's War on Terror As is often the case, diplomacy makes strange
    bedfellows. For much of the last 25 years, the Turkish military
    has been involved in a sporadic but continuous guerilla war with
    the PKK, a Kurdish separatist faction whose goal is to establish an
    independent Kurdistan in the largely Kurd-inhabited area comprising
    parts of northern Iraq, southeastern Turkey, Syria, and Iran. With
    over 30,000 lives claimed by the conflict since 1984, Turkey--which
    has a significant Kurdish minority--considers the PKK a threat both to
    its national security and territorial integrity. Many Turks perceive
    the PKK with the same sense of urgency many Americans feel towards
    al-Qaeda, and view Afghanistan as a case study of how to respond when
    a country becomes a haven for terrorists that plague their own country.

    Warplanes and long-range artillery have been continuously targeting PKK
    positions in northern Iraq since December of last year, but in late
    February the Turkish military launched an eight-day ground incursion
    into northern Iraq to attack PKK hideouts beyond the border. Abdulkadir
    Onay, a lieutenant colonel in the Turkish army and Visiting Military
    Fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, told the
    HPR that since Turkey has participated in international missions
    for the U.S.-led War on Terror, "she expects the same reaction for
    terror against Turkey." With troops spread thinly elsewhere, however,
    American forces can scarcely afford a bloody entanglement in the
    otherwise stable semi-autonomous Kurdish zone of Iraq. Until a few
    months ago, Washington was sending a strong message to Turkey not to
    enter Iraq for fear of unsettling regional stability.

    Polls of the Turkish public have shown record-high levels of
    dissatisfaction with American foreign policy, underscoring deeper
    anti-American sentiment since the election of the current AKP
    government in 2002 and the Iraq War. According to a 2007 survey
    by the Pew Global Attitudes Project, only nine percent of Turks
    express a favorable view of the United States, down from 30 percent
    in 2002. Meanwhile, as the United States attempts to exert pressure
    on nuclear-bent Iran, Tehran sees a critical opportunity to bolster
    ties with Ankara by carrying out military operations against the PKK
    and strengthening cooperation on energy resources.

    A Trend of Cooperation As the United States and others move to stifle
    Iran's nuclear ambitions, Turkey's strategic security and energy
    interests deter it from a supporting role. Robert Olson, Professor of
    Middle History and Politics at the University of Kentucky, noted in
    an interview with the HPR that Turkey is pursuing a nuclear energy
    program itself with plans to build several reactors in the next
    few years. In light of this, Olson said, "Turkey would acquiesce
    in Iran obtaining nuclear capabilities." It relies on Iran for 20
    percent of its oil, maintains a major pipeline for the natural gas
    required to heat Turkish homes in the winter, and signed an energy
    agreement last year under which it would act as a transit venue and
    joint marketer of Turkmen and Iranian gas westward to Europe. In
    violation of America's 1996 Libya-Iran Sanctions Act, Turkey also
    plans significant investment in Iran with the construction of three
    large power plants. Threatened but persistent, Iran is eager to court
    its most powerful neighbor and a key ally of the United States. And
    Turkey, unwilling to play the obedient mistress in the U.S. campaign
    to isolate Tehran, has responded warmly to the wooing.

    Tehran, moreover, is adept at turning the public relations game
    against Washington. In an interview with the HPR, Soner Cagaptay,
    Director of the Turkish Research Program at the Washington Institute
    for Near East Policy, said that Iran is attempting to "drive a wedge"
    between Turkey and the U.S. with what he calls "public diplomacy":
    on days when U.S. officials conduct talks in Ankara, Iran bombs
    PKK camps and steals headlines in the Turkish newspapers. Despite
    U.S. intelligence sharing on rebel positions, Cagaptay says, "the
    Iranians have created this semblance in Turkey that when it comes to
    the PKK, the Americans talk the talk and Iranians walk the walk."

    Repairing Ties Last October, President Bush condemned a particularly
    deadly cross-border ambush by the PKK that killed 17 Turkish soldiers,
    saying, "the attacks must stop now." A few months later, the day
    before the majority of Turkish forces withdrew from Iraq, Bush joined
    Secretary of Defense Robert Gates in calling for Turkey to get out "as
    soon as possible." The rhetorical juggling act illustrates the fine
    line that Washington must tread between protecting the sovereignty
    of the fledgling Iraqi state and assuring one of its most important
    regional allies of the right to dislodge terrorists from border
    positions.

    There is, however, potential for improved U.S.-Turkey relations
    going forward. Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan met with President
    Bush in November 2007 partly to discuss the PKK, and the United
    States has since augmented its sharing of actionable intelligence
    to assist Turkish operations. Washington, Cagaptay says, also gave
    Turkey the "green light" for its recent incursions into northern Iraq,
    improving relations considerably. The defeat of the Armenian genocide
    resolution in Congress, a largely symbolic bill that is nonetheless
    a highly sensitive issue for Turkey, also eased tensions as the Bush
    administration made a strong show of resistance. And although the
    United States and Iraq pressured Turkey to withdraw at the end of
    February, Colonel Onay predicts that this will not be the last of
    Turkish offensives: "Turkey is determined to take all the measures no
    matter what it costs, because this problem is a matter of existence
    for her."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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