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FEATURES The Ottoman
umpire Owen Matthews on
Washington’s embarrassment over Iraqi hostility to Turkish
peacekeepers The United States is suffering from a reverse Midas
touch in Iraq. Just as things start to go right, fate intervenes to
screw it up. So it was with Turkey’s agreement in principle earlier
this month to share the burden of occupation, an event billed by the
White House as a major turning point. Turkey, as a serious military
power willing to contribute a 10,000-strong division (roughly equal
to the current British presence), would dramatically alleviate the
US’s acute manpower shortage. Better still, as one US diplomat
enthusiastically explained to me, the Turks, as ‘Sunni Muslims from
the same neighbourhood’ would be ‘welcomed’ by the Iraqis because
they were ‘on the same cultural wavelength’.
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| It was in this belief — that Turkey was somehow
the vital missing link which would make the occupation suddenly
start to go right — that the US expended months of diplomatic
effort, plus an $8.5 billion loan, persuading Ankara to come on
board. Throughout this process, members of the Iraqi Governing
Council (IGC), particularly but not exclusively the Kurds, were
telling anyone who would listen that they opposed the presence of
troops from any of Iraq’s neighbours in their country. So it should
have come as no surprise that when the Turks finally came through
with a qualified yes to deploying troops, the IGC came out
unanimously against: 24 to 0. Nor were the Kurds the most strident
opponents — Adel Abdul Mehti, a Shi’ite IGC member representing the
Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, complained that
‘the Americans are trying to act as the authority, not only de facto
but the legitimate authority and they’re dictating things, trying to
intervene. This is not acceptable to Iraqis.’ Even the three
Turkoman representatives on the Council, though personally in
favour, decided to vote against because they realised, as one of
them put it, ‘opposition [to Turkish troops] in Iraq is too strong,
there could be clashes and that is in no one’s interest.’
Talk about snatching defeat from the jaws of victory.
Instead of welcoming a major new partner in the Coalition of the
Willing, the US-led Coalition Provisional Authority, headed by L.
Paul Bremer III, faces a breakdown in its relations with the only
political institution in Iraq — the IGC — created by the US.
‘We take the governing council seriously,’ insisted Bremer
last week as he gadded from Black Hawk to Land Cruiser in his
trademark combination of dark blue suit and yellow suede Timberland
boots. ‘We are in a partnership. We don’t see eye to eye on
everything; why should we?’ Yet Washington must now either make
arrangements for the deployment of Turkish troops against the wishes
of the IGC, or abandon the idea of Turkish help altogether.
Neither is an attractive option. Despite the US’s widely
advertised military superiority, the strain of keeping such a
massive military presence in Iraq is beginning to show. Already
reservists are facing the prospect of a full year ‘in country’,
twice as long as a normal tour. The uncomfortable truth is that the
US cannot easily sustain the current occupation on its own. It needs
more bodies on the ground, and effective fighting troops too, not
just the politically useful but practically useless handfuls of
Mongolians, Latvians and Hondurans who are usually posted to supply
depots and the like while GIs get on with the serious business of
security and reconstruction. And apart from Turkey, there have been
few takers for participation in Iraq. India has cried off, citing
trouble in Kashmir, and Pakistan is still dragging its heels. Even
after last week’s UN resolution, major military powers like Russia
and France have yet to step up to the plate.
In the wake of
the IGC’s very public rejection of the Turks’ offer of peacekeepers,
Ankara’s government, sensing a brewing military and PR disaster, is
backing off the idea of sending troops at all. The feeling seems to
be mutual — Washington has, in the opinion of Turkish diplomats,
been ‘dragging its feet’ about arranging the practicalities of
Turkish deployment, while at the same time leaking to the press
plans for scaled-down versions of Turkish participation.
Turkey’s politically powerful military are putting down
stiff conditions of their own before they finally commit to sending
troops. Particularly thorny is a demand by the Turkish military that
all its troops must travel and be supplied overland, and that
Turkish forces will be responsible for the security of the route.
That’s a major problem for the Kurds, because the main road from
Turkey into Iraq runs through their territory, and is one of the
Kurds’ most strategic assets. Also, the Turkish military has often
cited protecting the interests of Iraq’s Turkomans as one of the
reasons for deploying in Iraq. That also worries the Kurds. What if
there’s a repeat of the kind of Turkoman–Kurd clashes that took
place in Kirkuk in August, leaving 11 dead, wondered one senior
Kurdish official. ‘I fear the Turks would feel justified in rushing
a few tens of kilometres north to intervene. That would be
disaster.’ A third problem is Turkey’s demand that a refugee camp
for Kurds who fled Turkey in the 1990s during a separatist conflict
that claimed 30,000 lives be shut down, supposedly because it
harbours militants wanted by Ankara. It’s ‘deeply worrying’, says
the Kurdish official, that Turkey is beginning to ‘tell us how to
run our own affairs even at this early stage.’
Now Ankara’s
politicians, if not the military, also seem to be waking up to the
fact that Washington’s plan may not be a great idea. Turkey’s army
is a conscript one, which makes sending Mehmetchik (‘little Mehmet’,
the generic Turkish trooper) to war an emotive national issue
fraught with electoral disaster if it goes wrong.
‘We will
not go where we are not wanted,’ said Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan over the weekend, reversing his earlier, high-handed
position that ‘the US is our interlocutor’, not Iraq. As of this
week, says a senior foreign ministry source, Ankara is likely to
insist on a formal invitation from the IGC before sending troops. So
for the time being, unless Mr Bremer can pull off a miracle of
diplomacy and get the IGC to change their minds, the burden of
occupation will remain on the shoulders of the US, with significant
help from only Britain and Poland.
The debacle could have
been avoided. The clash with the IGC was entirely predictable. The
fact that Washington seems to have been taken by surprise by the
vehemence of the Iraqis’ opposition suggests that the US should
spend more time evaluating the realities on the ground, instead of
trying to bend them to fit a view of reality that exists only in the
optimistic imaginations of Beltway policymakers.
But there
may yet be an up side to the affair, a rare instance of a positive
manifestation of the law of unintended consequences. The IGC, as a
result of its opposition to the US over Turkish troops, has never
enjoyed more credibility or popularity among ordinary Iraqis, who
were previously inclined to see it simply as US stooges. Since
whatever government eventually grows up in Iraq to replace the
coalition occupiers will grow out of the IGC in some shape or form,
growing public trust in the Council, rather than some more radical
alternative, must be a good thing. In the long term, the confidence
the IGC has won by standing up to America may do Iraq more good than
Turkish peacekeepers ever could.
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