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May 28, 2012
 
 
 
 
 
 

Middle East turmoil draws Turkey and Iraqi Kurds closer

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan (R) and Iraqi Kurdish leader Massoud Barzani pose for cameras before a meeting in İstanbul on Nov. 5, 2011. (Photo: AP)
2 February 2012 / REUTERS, ARBIL
Upheaval in the Middle East and mutual economic interests are drawing together two unlikely partners; rising powerhouse Turkey and an entity whose name Turkish leaders hardly dare mention - Kurdistan, the semi-autonomous region of northern Iraq.

Ankara has developed solid political and trade ties with Iraq's Kurds, as its foreign policy of "zero problems with the neighbors" unravels due to the uprising in Syria, tensions with Baghdad and rivalry with Iran.

Iraqi Kurdish leaders also recognize that in an unstable region and with sectarian conflict threatening to upset the delicate political balance in Baghdad, their landlocked, oil producing territory needs an ally among its neighbors.

Turkey, with one of the fastest growing economies in the world, could be their best bet.

"We can call it a key relationship because Turkey has an important status because of its location and because of the role that it plays in the international community," said Falah Mustafa Bakir, the head of the Department of Foreign Relations of the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG).

"Turkey is a major partner for Iraq as a whole, but also for the Kurdistan region in terms of commerce and trade," he told Reuters in a recent interview. "I am sure Turkey would have a good opportunity to be a major or main partner with the KRG, but also with Iraq."

But big issues remain, not least the presence in northern Iraq of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), a group designated as terrorist by Turkey, the United States and the European Union.

Turkish leaders are also reluctant to see the emergence of a Kurdish state in northern Iraq, fearing this could rouse the already restless Kurds just across the border in Turkey.

In a landmark visit to the region last year, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan repeatedly referred to the "Kurdish administration", but never once used the word Kurdistan.    

 

Pipeline diplomacy

Victims of massacres and chemical weapons attacks, Iraq's Kurds rose up against Saddam Hussein during the 1991 Gulf War and broke free from Baghdad-rule. The 2003 US-led invasion then toppled the dictator and led to a constitution that recognized the Kurds' hard-won de facto autonomy.

Once the poorest region of Iraq, Kurdistan is now its most prosperous, insulated from the insurgency and sectarian violence in the south by its mountains and stable government.

For now the region largely depends on receiving 17 percent of the national budget, but the regional government estimates there are about 45 billion barrels of oil reserves in the north, most of it as yet untapped.

Oil majors, analysts say, are expected to follow the lead of Exxon Mobil and sign exploration and production deals with the regional government. This should help to raise production, estimated to reach 175,000 barrels per day this year, to 1 million bpd by 2015.

Kurdish oil exports are pumped into the Iraqi national pipeline system, but relations between the Kurds and Baghdad have been dogged for years by rows over late payments for crude, the legality of the regional government's oil deals and disputed territory.

Add to that the traditional distrust of Baghdad following Saddam's atrocities, the present political infighting in the capital and risk of renewed sectarian violence, and the Kurds feel they are right to look after their own interests.

That means the regional government becoming less reliant on Baghdad.

One pipeline pumping about 60,000 bpd already feeds directly from Kurdistan's Tawke oilfield into the main pipeline to the Turkish port of Ceyhan, and more are due to follow.

"Turkey is our port to Europe and the West," said a regional government official who declined to be named. "It is a member of NATO, and one day could join the European Union. It is a much better option than Baghdad or Iran."

With an economy growing at 8 percent last year, Turkey is hungry for energy and values a fast-growing market on its doorstep where it can sell its manufactured goods.

From the construction firms putting up new five-star hotels to accommodate Western oil executives flocking to the region, to banks, retailers and restaurants, more than half the foreign companies in Iraqi Kurdistan are Turkish. About 80 percent of goods sold in the region are made in Turkey.

Iraq as a whole is now Turkey's second biggest export market after Germany, selling more than $8 billion of goods last year. But according to Turkish Economy Minister Zafer Çağlayan, about 70 percent of Turkey's exports to Iraq are to the north.

If the Kurdistan region were a country it would still be Turkey's eighth biggest export market.

A war of words between Erdoğan and Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki has also drawn Turkey closer to the Kurds. Erdoğan has warned that Turkey would not remain silent if a sectarian conflict erupts in Iraq. Maliki has accused Erdoğan of meddling.

Turkey has heavily courted the Kurds, along with Iraq's Sunni Arab parties in recent years, analysts said, but Maliki and Shi'ite parties remain allied to Iran.

Strategic alliance

Involving Turkey in the economy of Iraqi Kurdistan may not be enough to ensure Ankara's enduring support, particularly while its soldiers are being killed by PKK militants whose leaders are based in the mountains of northern Iraq.

"For 30 years, we have paid a very heavy price for the terror directed here because of the lack of authority in Iraq, especially northern Iraq," Erdoğan told his parliamentary deputies on Tuesday.

Turkey has staged 28 operations into northern Iraq in pursuit of the PKK in the last 20 years, Kurdish officials said, so it is in the regional government's interests to help solve the problem if it is to seek closer ties with Turkey.

The regional government, made up of pro-Western conservative parties led by landowners, has little natural sympathy with the PKK, a group with Marxist roots.

But a military move against the PKK by the regional government's forces would be extremely unpopular with Iraqi Kurds, and in any case when the two sides have clashed in the past the PKK have generally come out on top.

While Erdoğan has granted some Kurdish language and cultural rights in Turkey to try to de-link the "Kurdish problem" from the "terrorism problem", secret peace talks between the Turkish state and the PKK broke down last year, Turkish media said.

Massoud Barzani, the regional president, and the government are working behind the scenes to bring the two sides back to negotiations, said a second official who declined to be named.

"I think violence only brings catastrophe," Barzani said when asked about efforts to mediate between Turkey and the PKK. "I cannot call it a mediating role, but both sides know our view very clearly ... We only see a peaceful solution to this and the moment there is a need to follow a peaceful approach then we are ready to do whatever we can," he said in a recent interview.

"Turkey is the key alliance for us, politically and economically," said the second government official. "It is a strategic alliance for us, mutually beneficial for both sides."

 
COMMENTS
In the early 90s Mesud Barzani and its KDP lost more than 3500 peshmerge soldiers in the fight against PKK in cooperation with Turkish armed forces. The TSK bombed from the air and KDP peshermges beat PKK on the gorund. PKK gave up but Ergenekon within TSK did not want to finisg off PKK. On the cont...
Osman F
Turkey and the KRG are not unlikely partners. They are real partners. Current business volumes already prove that and this will continue to increase. Sunnis and Shias have not been able to resolve their differences in 14 centuries and it is highly likely that Iraq will be split into three soon, alon...
Baris
and it was a big mistake of Turkey to accept 500.000 kurdish peshmerge some of whom later turned into pkk terrorist when Gulf war broke out. ..
necati
The unity of Iraq is a red line for Turkey. i hope Turkish government thinks same..
necati
Turkey should be careful doing business with them since they easily could turn their backs on Turks when it is advantaguous for them. Turks should support other groups other than Kurdish to prevent a Kurdish state anywhere near to Turkey. It is for the sake for the safety of the Turks.
superiour turk
ZN, it shows how much the US has bankrupted itself giving all its money to these kurds.
GeneralSherman
This shows how united the Kurdish people are!
ZN
Kurdistan is the best thing that could happen to Turkey. Accept Kurdistan and your wildest dreams will come true. On March 21st South Kurdistan is going to declare Independence from Iraq. On the New Constitution Turkey should accept an Autonomous Kurdistan in Turkey. In a second stage South (Iraqi) ...
Kurdistan
To the editors of Zaman - why do you always quote officials who 'refused or declined to be named'? Does this paper just fill in the editorial cracks where there is no real story to write?
Mark
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