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  • Raging War w/Kurds, Escalating Water Conflicts Drain Turkey Resource

    Raging War With Kurds, Escalating Water Conflict With Arabs Drain
    Turkey's Resources

    14.05.2011 | 11:20 | www.nt.am | Noyan Tapan | Articles and Analyses



    (Noyan Tapan - 14.05.2011) By Appo Jabarian

    Executive Publisher/Managing Editor

    USA Armenian Life Magazine

    In 1922, Ottoman Turkey's successor Young Turk regime underwent a
    face-lift through the creation of the modern republic of Turkey in an
    attempt to create a `fresh start.' But that `fresh' start failed to
    yield sustainable peace both within what is now called Turkey, and in
    its relations with neighbors.

    Peace proved elusive because of Ankara's long-unsolved problems
    including ongoing war against the 23 million-strong Kurdish minority;
    and water rights conflicts with Arab states such as Iraq and Syria.

    As the June 12 general elections near, The Kurdish Workers' Party
    (PKK) is used by Ankara `as an excuse to circumvent Kurdish people's ...
    liberties, a tactic that has become the hallmark of the AKP and
    [Turkish scholar Fethullah Gülen's loyalists -- namely Erdogan's]
    Gulenist Administration in Turkey. The Turkish government and the
    AKP's agents improperly and illegally have used the PKK and the War on
    Terror as an excuse to imprison many Kurdish intellectuals,
    politicians, and writers, and to defame them for the purpose of
    becoming the dominant power in the Southeastern part of the country.
    Otherwise, the AKP and the Gulenist agents cannot be successful
    without slandering and intimidating the Kurdish leaders and people.
    This kind of game has been played against the Kurds for decades and
    continues to be played,' wrote Dr. Aland Mizell on Kurdishaspect.com.

    Turkey's brand of `democracy' is funded `by and for the State. ...
    Democracy in Turkey is hypocrisy' that knows no boundary. Turkish
    Prime Minister Erdogan's Islamist Justice and Development Party (AKP)
    `wants to have political control in Diyarbakir in order to bring its
    version of `peace' to the region and constantly reject the Kurdish
    political leaders' proposals.'

    `Turkey has been dancing with the Kurds for more than three decades.
    They are not genuinely trying to solve the Kurdish problems. ... The AKP
    and Gulenists know the military and Turkish state conducted a dirty
    war in the Kurdish regions and did not want the problem to end,
    because the generals were making big money,' lamented Mizell.

    It is no secret that AKP and its allies are an integral part of the
    Turkish Deep State. They regularly refuse to investigate unsolved
    political murders committed during the 1990's against Kurds,
    maintaining adamant silence regarding clandestine disappearance of
    Kurdish civilians.

    Fears of a fresh escalation in Turkish-Kurdish war substantially grew
    a few days after suspected Kurdish rebels attacked the election convoy
    of Erdogan. The attack began when a hand grenade was thrown at one of
    the police cars escorting the prime minister's bus. That was followed
    by fire from assault rifles. One police vehicle caught fire when its
    petrol tank was hit. Police returned fire, but the attackers, said to
    number about five or six, escaped into the forest. A search operation
    by police and the military failed to produce any arrests, noted
    Reuters news agency.

    Kurds regularly hold Erdogan `responsible for this war' between Turkey
    and Kurds, and its practice of `police terror' against unarmed
    political activists.

    The Kurds have detected a `push-pull' game or `good cop-bad cop'
    politics played by Erdogan's AKP and Turkish nationalists. The `good
    cop' Erdogan finally unmasked himself by vehemently declaring that
    `These separatist forces think they can get this way what they cannot
    get at the ballot box. ... We will not allow anyone to split up this
    nation's 780,000 square kilometers.'

    As a result, Abdullah Ocalan, the imprisoned leader of Turkey's main
    Kurdish rebel group has warned his forces will unleash a `big war'
    after national elections if Turkey refuses to negotiate to end the
    decades-old conflict, reported The Associated Press.

    Ankara has grown wary of the fact that the PKK has now began launching
    military operations in the Black Sea region - several hundred
    kilometers west of its normal area of operation.

    Murat Yetkin, a columnist with the Radikal newspaper, wrote: `PKK
    militants are now ready to strike ... anywhere in Turkey. This is a
    serious situation.'

    The Kurdish activists of Turkey's Southeast have long been suspected
    by Ankara of receiving financial backing from the oil-rich Kurdistan
    Regional Government of Iraq's north.

    Turkey's worse nightmare about the Kurds' increased economic power and
    resulting war-making capability has become a reality ever since Iraq's
    Kurdistan Regional Government began receiving revenues from its oil
    productions. These revenues regularly flowing into Kurdistan's coffers
    bode badly for the Turkish hardliners.

    Recently, Iraq's self-ruled northern Kurdish region has received the
    first payment from the central government in Baghdad for oil exported
    from its region.

    The payment amounted to nearly half of the 3 million in revenues
    generated from exporting over 5 million barrels between February and
    March 27.

    Adding to Erdogan's and Turkish Deep State's woes, lately the
    relations with Iraq and Syria have soured over the water rights of the
    Tigris and the Euphrates rivers because of Turkey's mismanagement of
    these resources. An increasing number of dams, hydroelectric power
    plants and irrigation projects have been constructed within the
    context of the Southeast Anatolia Project (GAP) supposedly to harness
    the energy of Turkey's water resources. But in reality Turkey is
    seeking to sell the waters.

    Several critics of GAP say `the more Turkey utilizes these rivers, the
    less water there is to flow to the downstream riparian states of Syria
    and Iraq.' UN Representative and NGO worker Imane Abd El Al was not
    optimistic about a Turkish proposal to export dammed water from Turkey
    to Iraqi and Syrian farmers in exchange for oil or money. `We're
    talking about Mesopotamia here.' Importing water to the `cradle of
    civilization', she argued, is absurd, as is the idea of treating water
    as a commodity rather than a right.'

    As the Arab Spring escalates, Ankara fears the triggering of a Turkish
    Simmering Summer undermining the already-shaky relations with its Arab
    neighbors.

    It seems all too inevitable that the war with the Kurds will rage on;
    and the water conflict with Arab states - Iraq and Syria will further
    escalate draining Turkey's economic, military and political resources.

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