Fifteen months ago, the armed wing of Lebanon’s Hezbollah party, listed as a terrorist organization by the United States and most other Western countries, attacked Israel’s northern border, capturing two Israeli soldiers and killing eight more. Israel replied with a month of massive air attacks all across Lebanon that destroyed much of the country’s infrastructure, leveled a good deal of south Beirut, and killed around a thousand Lebanese civilians.
Washington, London, Ottawa and some other Western capitals insisted that this was a reasonable and proportionate response, and shielded Israel from intense diplomatic pressure to stop the attacks even when Israel launched a land invasion of southern Lebanon in early August, 2006. The operation only ended when Israeli casualties on the ground mounted rapidly and the Israeli government pulled its troops back.
So what would be a reasonable and proportionate Turkish response to the recent attacks by the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), listed as a terrorist organization by the United States and most other Western countries, from northern Iraq into southeastern Turkey? More than forty Turkish civilians and soldiers have been killed in these attacks over the past two weeks, and a further eight Turkish soldiers were captured.
Well, it would be unreasonable for Turkey to bomb Iraq, where the PKK’s bases are, for any more than one month. It would be quite disproportionate for the Turkish Air Force to level more than a small part of Baghdad — say, 15,000 homes. Ideally, it should leave Baghdad alone and restrict itself to destroying some Kurdish-populated city in northern Iraq near Turkey’s own border. Moreover, when the Turks do invade Iraq on the ground, they should restrict themselves to the northern border strip where the PKK’s bases are.
What’s that? Washington is asking Turkey to show restraint and not attack Iraq at all? Even after the Kurdish terrorists killed or kidnapped all those Turkish people? Could it be that Turkish lives are worth less than Israeli lives?
Never mind. At least the United States officially classes the PKK as a terrorist organization and refuses to let its officials have any contact with it. But what’s this? There is a parallel terrorist organization called the Party for Free Life in Kurdistan (PJAK), essentially a branch office of the PKK, also based in northern Iraq, which carries out attacks into the adjacent Kurdish-populated region of Iran, and the United States does not condemn the PJAK? It even sends its officials to have friendly chats with the PJAK terrorists? How odd!
The PJAK’s leader, Rahman Haj-Ahmadi, paid an unofficial visit to Washington last summer. One of his close associates, Biryar Gabar, claims to have “normal dialogue” with US officials, according to a report last Tuesday in the New York Times — and the American military spokesman in Baghdad, Cmdr. Scott Rye, issued a carefully structured nondenial saying that “The consensus is that US forces are not working with or advising the PJAK.”
Biryar Gabar also said that PJAK fighters have killed at least 150 Iranian soldiers and officials in the past three months. That’s a lot more people than the PKK have killed in Turkey in the same time, and yet neither Washington nor any other Western country has expressed sympathy for Iran. Could it be that Iranian lives are worth even less than Turkish lives?
And here’s something even more peculiar. Iran, like Turkey, is already shelling Kurdish villages on the Iraqi side of the frontier that it suspects of sheltering or supplying the PKK/PJAK. How come President George W. Bush and Vice President Richard Cheney simply ignore these actions, when they have been working hard for the past year to build a case for attacking Iran? As Pat Buchanan noted on MSNBC’s “Hardball” last week: “Cheney and Bush are laying down markers for themselves which they’re going to have to meet. I don’t see how.”
The US military “assets” for an attack on Iran are all in place, so it can’t be that. Maybe the delay means that Bush and Cheney are having difficulty in persuading the military professionals to go along with this hare-brained scheme. Most senior American military officers see an attack on Iran as leading to inevitable failure and humiliation for the United States, and the last thing the White House wants is a rash of US generals resigning in protest when it orders the attack.
On the other hand, Bush is still the commander-in-chief, and how many American generals resigned when he committed the somewhat lesser folly of invading Iraq? Only one, and he did it very quietly.
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Note: I have yet to see any logical and fact-based argument which would justify the label “terrorist” for either Hezbollah or the PKK. However, setting aside the issue of whether the PKK and Hezbollah deserve to be called “terrorist” or not, this article does raise the pertinent issue of the double standards systematically applied by the Imperial High Command. One could also note here that the IRA did bomb the UK on many occasions and kidnap British citizens without the UK ever carpet-bombing or invading Ulster or the Irish Republic. Israeli and Turkish responses to the attacks on their soldiers are totally out of any reasonable proportion and the label “terrorist” is far more appropriate to the regimes in Jerusalem and Ankara then to any of their opponents.
When the Turkish parliament opposed any US invasion of Iraq through its SE border and the Kurds of Northern Iraq stood shoulder to shoulder with the Americans dying and sheding blood side by side you could never imagine a ‘scenario’ whereby anyone was discussing supporting Turkey to attack the Kurds!
But by salami tactics and lots of psychological warfare planning we’ve got to a point where the whole arguement is being turned around.
It began, I would argue, long ago, maybe one year or more.
Certainly an important staging post along the way was Michael Rubins speech to the Foreign Affairs Committee in Washington, pressing for a distancing from the Kurds and closer relationship with Turkey.
Again, there is this curious fellow called ‘Scott Sullivan’ who was also part of the offensive to ‘shift policy’ towards the Turkish military. He almost daily would be knocking out articles in favour of a Turkish invasion and painting the Kurdish President Barzani as Hitler.
Just ‘google’ ‘Scott Sullivan Turkey Kurds’ and you’ll see what I mean.
I’ve documented the shift over the course of one year on my blog at http://hevallo.blogspot.com. If you tpye in my search engine Neo Cons Turkey you’ll see a whole host of postings there.
Obviously, from reading this and other articles it seems to of worked with some forgetting the sacrifice that the Kurdish people made for the American Government in its invasion of Iraq and are willing to support the Turkish military invasion into Kurdistan.
But interestingly, the AEI is sponsored by ExxonMobil and Scott Sullivan as well as writing for Conservative websites writes for petrol and oil based websites too.
Any journalist worth their salt would now being looking at the Exxon Mobil, AEI, Turkish Military angle.
But we may not have long to wait for that either.
A ex FBI Turkish translator, Sibel Edmonds, who translated tapped telephone conversations between the Turkish embassy and ‘other people’ is about to reveal all she knows about the US’s dirty relationship with Turkish military if a US news network will allow her to speak live or unedited. See my blog for more details.