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Turkey, U.S. Need to Change Policy Towards Syria's Kurds

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  • Turkey, U.S. Need to Change Policy Towards Syria's Kurds

    Turkey, U.S. Need to Change Policy Towards Syria's Kurds

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2014/01/18/syria-kurds/
    By Amberin Zaman // January 18, 2014

    Special for the Armenian Weekly


    On Nov. 5, I was among a group of panelists who took part in the
    European Parliament's 10th conference on Turkey and the Kurds. It was
    surely an honor to address such a distinguished crowd, including the
    widely acclaimed woman Kurdish politician and activist Leyla Zana. But
    I can happily confess that my greatest joy was to be able to finally
    meet Saleh Muslim, my co-panelist and the co-chairman of Syria's most
    influential Kurdish party, the Democratic Unity Party (PYD), in the
    flesh.

    The author with PYD co-chairman Saleh Muslim

    Mr. Muslim and I had spoken countless times. But we were never able to
    meet in person. Not for lack of will or of opportunities. He was
    supposed to be in Washington last month to speak at a groundbreaking
    conference organized by Turkey's largest pro-Kurdish grouping, the
    Peace and Democracy Party (BDP), to discuss the role of the Kurds in
    the new Middle East. But Mr. Muslim was unable to come and was left
    addressing us all via Skype.

    This is because the U.S. government denied him a visa. Not because Mr.
    Muslim had committed any crime. Not because the PYD had committed any
    unlawful act. Nor was it because the main Kurdish militia, known as
    the People's Defense Units (YPG), in Syrian Kurdistan or Rojava had
    ever engaged in terrorist activity. On the contrary, they are
    combatting well-known and extremely brutal terrorist groups who are
    officially designated as such by Europe and the United States. I am
    talking about al-Qaeda, about the heartless people who killed Mr.
    Muslim's youngest son Sherwan in October, not to mention countless
    innocent civilians

    Mr. Muslim continues to be denied a visa because of the well-worn and
    utterly hypocritical policy of supporting so-called `good Kurds'
    against the `bad.' It is a policy that has been practiced for
    centuries and continues to be practiced by regional powers, including
    my own country, Turkey.

    This policy is not only harmful to the Kurds but to the very countries
    that practice it, and to regional stability as a whole. Nowhere is
    this more apparent than in Rojava, where Turkey has been mentoring
    assorted and armed Syrian opposition groups, not only to fulfill its
    thus far elusive goal of toppling President Bashar Assad but also to
    keep the Syrian Kurds' legitimate aspirations in check.

    This policy is morally and strategically flawed.

    I say morally flawed because Turkey's policy of keeping its borders
    shut with areas that are under the Syrian Kurds' control means that
    tens of thousands of people living in those regions are deprived of
    urgently needed humanitarian aid. Of medicine, of water, of milk.
    Women and children, the sick and the elderly are suffering as I write.

    Turkey has repeatedly claimed that its policy on Syria is based on
    ethics, on morality. If so, how can Turkey justify keeping its doors
    shut to the Kurds when border gates controlled by other opposition
    militias remain open?
    Ask a Turkish official and the answer you get will no doubt be that
    the PYD is the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) in Syrian clothing. My
    answer to that is, `So what?' To be sure, there are close ideological
    and organizational links between the PKK and PYD. According to some
    estimates, one third of the PKK's fighting force is made up of Syrian
    Kurds. I met some of them when I last went to the Qandil Mountains in
    2010.

    It is therefore unsurprising that sympathy for the PKK runs strong
    among Syrian Kurds who have lost countless sons and daughters in the
    mountains and whose mothers and fathers, brothers and sisters have,
    like Mr. Muslim and his wife, AyĆ?e Effendi, been jailed by the Assad
    regime.

    Also let us not forget that the borders drawn up by the Allied powers
    less than a century ago left many Kurdish families divided. Turkey's
    Kurds cannot remain indifferent to the plight of the Syrian Kurds, for
    they are one and the same people. Label it as you will, the Kurdish
    movement inspired by the imprisoned PKK leader, Abdullah Ocalan, is
    growing stronger by the day. It is the most popular Kurdish movement
    in Turkey, in Iran, and in Syria. It is well established in Europe and
    increasingly so in the United States. Most importantly, the PKK is
    moving away from violence to peaceful politics. Ocalan has declared
    unequivocally that the days of armed struggle are over.

    The other reason why Turkey and the United States say they won't
    engage with Mr. Muslim and the PYD is because the latter has refused
    to join the Istanbul-based Syrian opposition and to take up arms
    against the Assad regime. Turkey's foreign minister, Ahmet Davutoglu,
    made it clear that this is why Ankara has frozen dialogue with Mr.
    Muslim.

    Setting aside the fact that the Assad regime has committed horrible
    crimes and must be punished, looking at the tragic and messy picture
    in Syria today, the path chosen by the Kurds'that of neutrality'seems
    unquestionably right. Rojava is, relatively speaking, one of the
    safest areas in Syria, and not just for the Kurds.

    Arabs, Assyrian Christians, Armenians, Alawites, and Yezidis all have
    been offered protection and a chance to take part in the Syrian Kurds'
    brand new experiment with democratic self-rule. They have been spared
    the destruction of Assad's killing machine. The Kurds of Syria are at
    last able to taste freedom. The PYD's strategy is paying off.

    But what of Turkey's strategy? If the purpose was to prevent the Kurds
    from pursuing their cultural and political rights, it has clearly
    failed. The Kurds are steadily consolidating their autonomy through
    the establishment of local councils, and plan to hold elections and
    draw up a constitution. Their battle against the jihadists has won
    them a growing number of friends within Syria and beyond.

    Moreover Turkey's perceived backing of jihadist groups in a proxy war
    against the PYD is jeopardizing its attempts to make peace with its
    own Kurds. How can you purport to be seeking peace at home when you
    are complicit in the Kurds' suffering next door? And what is the logic
    in refusing to deal with the PYD'on the grounds that it is no
    different from the PKK'when you have accepted Abdullah Ocalan as a
    legitimate interlocutor for achieving peace?

    And how can Ocalan and the BDP believe that Turkey is acting in good
    faith when it is applying such double standards? The Kurds certainly
    want to know.

    If the main concern is Turkey's security, well that hasn't worked out
    all that well either. All along our 900-kilometer border with Syria,
    the al-Qaeda-linked group known as the Islamic State of Iraq and ash
    Sham or ISIS is steadily consolidating its hold, save for in those
    areas controlled by the Syrian Kurds.

    I recently spent several days touring the Syrian border. People are
    scared. Very scared. Especially the Alevis in the Hatay province who
    fear that al-Qaeda will attack them as well. I spoke to Ali Yeral, a
    leading Alevi sheikh in Hatay, who told me that he and his family had
    received numerous death threats. Also in Hatay, I met Syrian Turkmen
    fighters who had just returned from their villages across the border.
    They were desperate for help. ISIS had seized control of their
    villages, unleashing a reign of terror among the civilian population.
    Just months ago, Turkmen brigades had fought alongside the jihadists
    against the Kurds. One of the Turkmen who took part in the battle
    against the Kurds told me that Turkey, as he put it, `gave us lots of
    bullets.'

    Al-Qaeda's growing presence in Syria is also threatening to
    destabilize Turkey's close ally, the Iraqi Kurds. ISIS claimed
    responsibility for the October suicide bomb attack that claimed the
    lives of innocent civilians. While many of us have criticized the
    Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) in Northern Iraq for sealing its
    border with Rojava, the fact remains that above and beyond the
    differences between the KRG leader, Massoud Barzani, and the PYD, the
    Iraqi Kurds want at all costs to prevent the war between al-Qaeda and
    the Syrian Kurds from spilling over to their side of the border.

    To sum up: Turkey needs to change its Syria policy and to resume
    government-level dialogue with Syria's Kurds. There is absolutely no
    reason why Turkey and the Syrian Kurds cannot enjoy the same kind of
    strategic and economic ties that Turkey now has with Iraq's Kurds.

    The same holds true for Europe and America. Be they in Iraq, Iran,
    Turkey, or Syria, the main Kurdish political parties are secular, and
    pro-Western, and though we cannot as yet call them true democrats we
    can credit them for trying.

    The Kurdish movement inspired by Abdullah Ocalan is no exception. The
    funny thing is that when I talk to Turkish and Western officials in
    private, they all agree. My trip to the border left me feeling that
    things are changing for the better, that Turkey has finally realized
    the enormity of the risk and is making an effort to restrict the
    movements of al-Qaeda.

    In turn, much responsibility lies with Mr. Muslim and his friends to
    prove that they are truly committed to democracy and to disproving the
    claims of all those who say that the PYD is bent on replacing one
    dictatorship with another.

    My hope is that they will not seek to settle past scores with the
    Arabs, and to uproot those who were forcibly settled by the regime in
    Kurdish lands. For they, too, are victims. I recognize that none of
    this simple or easy in times of war. I look forward to traveling to
    Rojava in the near future. I am hearing encouraging rumors that I may
    be able to cross through Turkey, legally; that the borders may soon be
    re-opened. And if not, as we say in Turkish, when one door closes
    another opens.



    This article is an adapted version of the speech delivered by Amberin
    Zaman at the European Parliament on Dec. 5?, 2013.

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