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  • Commentary: Armenians, Kurds, Cypriots, Greeks Can Form Anti-Turkey

    COMMENTARY: ARMENIANS, KURDS, CYPRIOTS, GREEKS CAN FORM ANTI-TURKEY COALITION

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    October 28, 2011 - 17:30 AMT

    PanARMENIAN.Net - Kurds and Kurdistan have never felt so much promise.

    Federalism in Iraq is secure. Iraqi Kurdistan attracts billions of
    dollars in investment, Masud Barzani no longer needs a borrowed Turkish
    passport to travel abroad, and the Kurdistan Regional Government
    has offices which act as virtual embassies in Washington, London,
    and other major capitals. It is ironic, therefore, that against this
    progress, Kurds wield so little influence over the issues about which
    Kurds inside and outside Iraqi Kurdistan most care, says a commentary
    posted on the website of the American Enterprise Institute for Public
    Policy Research.

    "After Kurdistan Workers Party [PKK] members attacked Turkish military
    outposts in the early morning hours of October 19, Nechirvan Barzani,
    a former prime minister who retains the power of that post, rushed
    to Ankara to try to defuse any retaliation. He failed. So too did
    regional president Masud Barzani, who placed an emergency phone call
    to Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan," Michael Rubin writes in the
    article titled "Is It Time for an Anti-Turkey Coalition?"

    "The failure of Kurdish leaders to fulfill their diplomatic agenda
    extends beyond the latest Turkish incursion. After all, even before
    the Hakari attacks, the Turkish Army stationed more than 1,000 troops
    stationed on mountains and around villages several kilometers across
    the Iraqi and Iraqi Kurdish border," the article says.

    "While Arab states focused on the simultaneous rupture in the
    Israel-Turkey partnership, Turkey's bellicosity toward Cyprus was the
    subject of greater concern not only in Nicosia and Athens, but also
    in many other European capitals. Apart, neither Cyprus nor Kurdistan
    has much leverage. Turkey's 37-year occupation of Cyprus is seldom
    front page news in Washington, London, or any other country. While
    former Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer tries to broker
    an agreement, and occasionally UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon
    makes statements about the need to resolve the conflict, lack of
    international interest condemns Cyprus to continued division."

    "Of all Turkey's neighbors, it is the Armenians who have the greatest
    influence in Washington. Corollary Armenian Diaspora groups are also
    influential in London, Paris, and across Europe. In the United States,
    at least, the Armenian lobby has failed repeatedly in its principle
    goal to win American recognition of Armenian Genocide by Ottoman
    Turks in World War I," it says.

    According to the author, the Armenians can join the Kurds, Cypriots,
    and perhaps Greeks as well in eschewing coalitions in a failed attempt
    to go it alone. "If those victimized or threatened by Turkey, however,
    would pool their resources and demands, each group may find its
    influence amplified exponentially. Kurds who seek recognition of the
    Anfal as genocide might solicit the support of Armenian counterparts,
    but also must be willing to offer support as well. Kurdish officials
    should be outspoken in support of Greek Cyprus, and should leverage
    Cypriot and Greek influence to ensure that a Turkish withdrawal from
    Iraq and Kurdistan becomes a European Union platform."

    "Kurds should be proud of their achievements, but they are not as solid
    as they once were. That the Kurds have no friends but the mountains
    will simply be an epitaph unless Kurdish leaders become far more apt
    at building alliances than they are now," the article concludes.

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