On September 30th,
Kurdish Peshmerga troops mounted a
series of attacks against ISIS in Iraq.
Those Kurdish boots
on the ground are in stark contrast to the distinct
absence
of Arab, Turkish or Western boots attacking ISIS. With
that in
mind, some insights into the Kurds, the Turks, the
West and ISIS may
be illuminating.
The Kurds are, arguably, the only reliable, liberal and
somewhat secular Islamic entity in the Mideast. Yet,
the West has often notoriously ignored and/or
periodically stabbed the Kurds in the back.
That all began -for practical purposes- right after
WorldWar I when President Woodrow Wilson expressly
promised the Kurds a homeland. Indeed, the Kurds'
thirty million people now constitute the world's largest
ethnic minority without a national homeland. So, when
President Wilson gave the Kurds his promise, he made
a point to do so with the clear consent of then existing
Turkish authorities.
That consent was then promptly revoked by Mustafa
Kemal (who was not yet Ataturk). He feared -not
without substantial
justification- what an independent
Kurdistan would do to Turkey whose eastern
third is
heavily Kurdish.
In fact, about twenty percent of Turkey was and
is
Kurdish. Since WWI, the Turks have repeatedly,
woefully and
unapollogetically discriminated against
the Kurds in a multiplicity of manners
and egregious
forms. To be clear, the Turks and the Kurds are
anything but
best buds.
Actually, Mr. Abdullah
Ocalan, a founder of Turkey's
Kurdistan Worker's Party, known as the
PKK, has
languished since 1999 in Turkish prisons. Interestingly
enough, the PKK -because of its wanton methods
seeking to create an independent
Kurdistan - is still
deemed to be terrorist organization by the USA, the
EU and NATO.
That said, the West did not have the geopolitical
testosterone to stand up to Turkey after WWI. And
now, as ISIS/ISIL attacks Kurds in Iraq and in
northwest Syria immediately astride the Turkish border
at Kobani, the Turks are playing a not unsimilar game to
the imminent damage of the Kurds. In fact, the Turkish
army could readily aid the Kurds who are besieged
at Kobani. The Turks have wittingly chosen not to do so.
So, the West spectates
as Kobani is about to fall.
More trenchantly, the West remains conspicuously
inept and unable and/or unwilling to impose its will upon
the Turks
who are - in fact if not in actual sentiment
(except when it conveniently suits
them) - members of
NATO.
Moreover, the Turks have
flatly refused to allow the
USA to use the huge NATO airbase at
Incerlik (or any
Turkish territory) for air operations against ISIS. Even
more critically, Turkey’s own air force boasts hundreds
of American combat
aircraft. Yet it has adamantly
refused to launch a single fighter or missile
against
ISIS positions in Syria which are less than one
hundred miles from
Incerlik.
to be blatantly and flagrantly
aiding ISIS by enabling
the transport and sale of rogue oil from ISIS and
thereby enriching ISIS' coffers and supporting ISIS'
barbaric endeavors.
To complicate
matters, most Turks -like the minions
of ISIS- are Sunnis. So
are most Kurds. But the
latter's liberal brand of Sunni Islam is anathema
to
both ISIS as well as to many Turks. In short, the
ethnically
different Kurds are not only heretics to
ISIS, they are also damnable
potential fifth
columnists to the increasingly Islamified Turks.
To further that
convoluted state of affairs, there
is an uneasy -if de facto- relationship and
or
accommodation between Syria's Alawite regime
(Shiites) and the
Kurds. Syria’s President Assad
has played that game astutely. He has
effectively
ceded -without undue rancor- the Kurdish northern
sliver
of Syria to the Kurds.
In return, the Kurds
have not agitated against Assad.
His Alawite-Shiites are deemed to be
worse than
Christians, Jews or even idolaters according to ISIS
and -arguably- also to President Erdogan's increasing
strident
Islamist regime in Turkey.
In the parlance of
regional Arabic dialect, if one
desires to pejoratively characterize
someone as
stiff-necked, the expression is: "He has the mind
of a
Kurd." Not unexpectedly, the
Kurds have a
rather unique and generally agreeable relationship
with another
people that was Biblically lampooned
as stiff-necked, i.e. the ancient
Israelites.
It should, therefore, be no surprise that the Israelis
and the Kurds maintain a number of noteworthy
points of positive contact and mutual interest. Neither
currently has terribly favorable ratings with the
Turkish establishment. Quite the contrary. At the
same time, both the Kurds and the Israelis are reviled
by ISIS.
But pointedly, if geographic proximity is of any
consequence, the West has substantially less to fear
from ISIS than do the Kurds, the Syrian Alawites,
moderate Mideast Moslems, regional Christians and
the Israelis.
As such, the Kurds, the
Israelis, Syrian Alawites and
the infidels of the West must all must
confront ISIS
as an ominous adversary. Notably, ISIS is
an enemy
with an unabashedly savage ideology, an
aggressive
agenda and a clear strategy.
It is,
therefore, abundantly curious and thoroughly
suspect that, for as yet in
explicable reasons, ISIS
wittingly and prominently released a large contingent
of hostage Turkish diplomats all of whose heads
remained quite unsevered.
So, what nation has
somehow escaped designation
as ISIS' avowed enemy? What nation has now
conspicuously opted to stand virtually uncommitted
on the
geopolitical sidelines as a seemingly neutral,
if not as an actual friend
of ISIS? Turkey!
But wait.
Underneath its geopolitical diddling, its
apparent prevarication and
its seeming equivocation,
Turkey aspires to regional hegemony. It is thus
that
the Turks may be looking even beyond ISIS down
the regional path
to Turkey's geopolitical rivalry
with Iran and its ethnic Persians. The
latter, not so
incidentally, are -from both the Turkish and ISIS
perspectives -
detestible Shiites.
Not to be outdone, the
Iranians -from their exalted
ethnic Persian perspectives- deem ISIS' Arabs to
be low-life and uncouth plebians ("anaryans").
To be
candid if not kind, Iranian opinion of the
Turks is equally unsavory.
actually welcome the presence of ISIS as both
a
buffer and as a convenient obstacle to Iran’s
hegemonical aspirations.
ISIS is also an expedient
foil that the Turks are delightedly
watching as it
thrusts and jabs into the heart of the despised
Syrian Alawite regime. More potently, ISIS
could be Assad's Islamic ebola!
With deadly enemies
like that, it is surely worth
recognizing who one's friends
really are...and
are not.
Go Kurds!