Turkey: NATO’s Neo-Ottoman
Spearhead in the Middle East
By Rick Rozoff
Global Research, August 8, 2012
Stop NATO
URL of this article: www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=32268
Turkey already has troops in Syria and has threatened military action to protect the site they guard.
A 1921 agreement between Ottoman Turkey and France (the
Treaty of Ankara), the latter at the time the colonial administrator of
Syria, guaranteed Turkey the right to station military personnel at the
mausoleum of Suleyman Shah (Süleyman Şah), the grandfather of the
founder of the Ottoman Empire, Osman I (Osman Bey).
Turkey considers the area adjacent to the tomb to
be its, and not Syria’s, sovereign territory and late last month
reinforced its 15-troop contingent there.
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan stated the
following in an interview televised on August 5: “The tomb of Süleyman
Şah and the land surrounding it is our territory. We cannot ignore any
unfavorable act against that monument, as it would be an attack on our
territory, as well as an attack on NATO land. Everyone knows his duty,
and will continue to do what is necessary.” The gravesite of a Seljuk
sultan who was reputed to have drowned in the Euphrates River while on a
campaign of conquest is now proclaimed a NATO outpost in Syria.
If confirmation was required that a neo-Ottoman
Turkey is determined to reassert the influence and authority in
Mesopotamia it gained 700 years before and lost a century ago and,
moreover, that it was doing so as part of a campaign by self-christened
global NATO to expand into the Arab world, the Turkish head of state’s
threat to militarily intervene in Syria with the support of its 27 NATO
allies should provide it.
Especially as the above complements and reinforces
the roles of the U.S. and NATO in providing military assistance to
Ankara in its current war of attrition against the Kurdistan Workers’
Party (PKK) in Turkey and Iraq, with Syria soon to follow as last week Turkey
deployed troops, tanks, other armored vehicles and missile batteries to
within two kilometers of the Syrian border for war games. Last week
a retired Turkish official compared the current anti-Kurdish offensive
to the Sri Lankan military’s final onslaught against the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) three years ago, ending the 25-year-long
war against the latter with its complete annihilation.
U.S.
Defense Secretary Leon Panetta’s trip to Colombia in April was designed
to achieve the same result in the 48-year joint Colombian-U.S.
counterinsurgency war against the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia
(FARC). In the current era of international lawlessness, only NATO
states and American clients like Colombia and Israel are permitted to
conduct military strikes and incursions into other nations and to wage
wars of extermination against opponents.
In the same interview cited above, Turkey’s Erdogan
asserted the right to continue launching military strikes against
Kurdish targets in neighboring countries, stating, “It should be known
that as long as the region remains a source of threat[s] for Turkey we
will continue staging operations wherever it is needed.”
Turkish Interior Minister Idris Naim Sahin recently
claimed that his nation’s armed forces had killed 130 suspected PKK
members and supporters in Hakkari province, which borders Iran and Iraq.
Specifically in respect to military attacks inside
Syria, Erdogan stated: “One cannot rule that out. We have three brigades
along the border currently conducting maneuvers there. And we cannot
remain patient in the face of a mistake that can be made there.”
He also stated, in reference to fighting in the
Syrian city of Aleppo, “I believe the Assad regime draws to its end with
each passing day” and criticized Iran’s support, which is to say its
recognition, of the Syrian government. Iran is the inevitable secondary
target of actions directed by Turkey and its NATO and Persian Gulf Arab
allies against Syria and will be struck through Iraq also.
In the same interview the Turkish head of state
identified a third target: Iraq. He condemned the government of Prime
Minister Nouri al-Maliki, declaring it illegitimate and urging it be
overthrown. In what portends confrontation and possible conflict with
Iran and Syria as well by exploiting the PKK issue, he added:
“Even though we should be countries that share the same values, for us to be in such rigor [conflict?] only makes the terrorist organization more powerful. This leads us to approach each other with suspicion.”
In the process he criticized Iran as well:
“It is not possible to accept Iran’s stance [of supporting the Iraqi government]. We conveyed this to them at the highest level of talks. We said to them, ‘Look, this has been a source of disturbance in the region.’”
His comments occurred after the Iraqi government
criticized the visit of Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu to the
cities of Kirkuk and Irbil in the Kurdistan Regional
Government-controlled north of Iraq in part to secure oil and natural
gas deals with the regime of Massoud Barzani, president of the Kurdish
autonomous region. Irbil is the region’s capital, but Kirkuk is claimed
by Iraq’s central government too. Davutoglu’s trip to Kirkuk was the
first by a Turkish foreign minister since 1937.
On August 7 Hurriyet Daily News columnist Murat Yetkin offered this perspective on the matter:
“Because Iraq [is] at risk of falling apart. Massoud Barzani, the leader of the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) in the north of the country, which borders Turkey, has started to sign oil and gas deals with energy giants despite the objection of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki in Baghdad, who refuses to approve a hydrocarbons law to regulate the sharing of oil and gas income. The energy giants have an interest in supplying more oil and gas that is not controlled or is less controlled by Russia and Iran to Western markets; Turkey provides an option under NATO protection for both Iraqi Kurdish and Azeri resources to be transferred further west. The presence of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) in the KRG region and its armed campaign is, of course, a pain in the neck and a big obstacle to greater cooperation...”
On July 26 the same commentator claimed that “There
are already political and economic actors trying to push Turkey to claim
some energy-rich parts of Iraq and Syria, which would mean a regime
change such as a federated Turkey, with Kurdish and possibly Arabic
members,” which, he conceded, “could drag the whole region into a chain
reaction of wars.”
Part of Turkey’s justification for involvement in
northern Iraq, and another pretext for potential military intervention,
is the protection of their ethnic kin, the Turkmen, in the country.
However, since the U.S. and British invasion of Iraq
in 2003 the true indigenous people of the north, the Assyrians, have
been decimated by attacks from Barzani’s peshmergas and Saudi-backed
Wahhabi extremists without Turkey, or the West, being in the least
degree concerned. Nine years ago there were an estimated 1.5 million
Assyrian and other Christians in Iraq; now there under 500,000. Churches
have been destroyed and in 2008 the Chaldean Catholic Archeparch of
Mosul, Archbishop Mar Paulos Faraj Rahho, was kidnapped and murdered in
the northern Iraqi city where he resided. Other religious minorities –
Mandeans, Sabeans and Yezidis – have suffered the same fate. Shiites are
regularly targeted by Wahhabi death squads.
The Barzani domain in the north has become a Turkish
foothold inside the country, which has aided Ankara by preventing the
PKK from operating on its territory and suppressing its sympathizers. It
is also a dependable Sunni ally for Turkey, Saudi Arabia and other Gulf
monarchies in efforts to weaken the Shiite-led government in Baghdad.
The al-Maliki administration condemned last week’s visit by the Turkish
foreign minister to the Kurdish-dominated north as a violation of Iraq’s
constitution and national sovereignty as Davutoglu had neither
requested nor obtained permission to enter Kirkuk.
Iraq’s Foreign Ministry handed the Turkish chargé
d’affaires in Baghdad a harshly-worded statement and the Turkish Foreign
Minister in response summoned the Iraqi ambassador to lodge a protest.
With Turkish threats against Iraq and Syria, and by
inevitable implication Iran, mounting, on August 6 the Chief of Staff of
the Iranian Armed Forces, Major General Seyed Hassan Firuzabadi, warned
that:
“Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Turkey are responsible for blood being shed on Syrian soil.“This is not an appropriate precedent, that neighboring countries of Syria contribute to the belligerent purposes of...the United States. If these countries have accepted such a precedent, they must be aware that after Syria, it will be the turn of Turkey and other countries.He added that Iran fears “Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and Qatar have become victims of promoting the terrorism of al-Qaeda and we warn our friends about this.”On the same day Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian stated, “There is a question that when al-Qaeda plays an active role in Syrian terrorism and violence, why the US and other countries back the shipment of heavy and semi-heavy weapons to the country?”
Kazem Jalali, a member of the Iranian Parliament’s
National Security and Foreign Policy Commission, said that “Turkey and
those who support and arm terrorists” in Syria were responsible for the
safety of 48 Iranians kidnapped in the country on August 4.
The following day the Turkish press reported that
Osman Karahan, a Turkish lawyer who defended a suspected top-level
al-Qaeda operative accused of participating in deadly bomb attacks in
Istanbul in November of 2003 was killed in Aleppo fighting with
anti-government forces. In 2006 the Turkish government charged Karahan
with aiding and abetting al-Qaeda.
Syria has announced that it captured several Turkish
and Saudi military officers in Aleppo. Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Qatar
have established a base in the Turkish city of Adana, 60 miles from the
Syrian border, to supply weapons and training to Syrian rebels for
cross-border attacks.
The Turkish government is providing bases, training
and advisers for al-Qaeda and other participants in the insurrection
against the Syrian government at the same time that it is threatening
Syria, Iraq and Iran over the “terrorist” Kurdistan Workers’ Party.
In bordering Iran, Iraq and Syria, Turkey provides
NATO – and through NATO the Pentagon – direct access to those three
nations. The final stage in the West’s Greater Missile East Initiative
is now well underway, as is a new redivision of the Levant modeled after
the Anglo-French Sykes-Picot Agreement of 1916.