THE KURDISH
QUESTION IN TURKISH POLITICS
Source: Orbis, Winter2001, Vol. 45
Issue 1, p31, 16p
In November 1998, Turkey's
Kurdish question returned to the top of the international agenda with the
seizure in Italy of Abdullah Ocalan, leader of the rebellious Kurdistan Workers'
Party (Partiya Karkeren Kurdistan--PKK). Demonstrations in support of Ocalan's
release wreaked havoc throughout Europe and served as a reminder of the war
between the PKK and the Turkish state that has claimed over 30,000 lives since
1984. A month before his seizure, Ocalan had been expelled from Damascus, his
base for the last nineteen years, after Turkey had threatened Syria with war
unless it ceased to provide a safe haven for the PKK. Having failed to find
asylum in Russia, Belgium, or the Netherlands, Ocalan--apparently acting on an
invitation from Italian leftists--believed he could find refuge in Italy. After
heavy Turkish and American pressure, Ocalan was nevertheless forced to leave
Italy and seek asylum elsewhere, but was eventually apprehended by Turkish
security forces on February 16, 1999, in Nairobi, Kenya.
The Kurdish question is
arguably the most serious internal problem in the Turkish republic's
seventy-seven-year history and certainly the main obstacle to its aspirations to
full integration with European institutions. Most Westerners define the problem
simply as a matter of oppression and denial of rights by a majority group (the
Turks) of an ethnic minority (the Kurds). The civil war in southeastern Turkey
that raged between 1984 and 1999 is accordingly viewed as a national liberation
movement and enjoys widespread sympathy both in the West and in the Third World.
The Turkish political elite, for its part, promotes an entirely different view
of the problem, which is often misunderstood and ridiculed in the West. In
official Turkish discourse, there is no Kurdish problem, but rather a
socioeconomic problem in the southeastern region and a problem of terrorism that
is dependent on external support from foreign states aiming at weakening Turkey.
In reality, neither the official Turkish view nor the dominant Western
perception holds up to close scrutiny. A deeper study of the problem reveals its
extreme complexity, with a number of facets and dimensions that tend to obscure
the essentials of the conflict.
One observation that should
be made at the outset is that the Kurdish issue in Turkey differs in many
respects from such recent ethnic conflicts as those in Bosnia, Chechnya, Kosovo,
Liberia, Nagorno-Karabakh, and Rwanda. Despite almost two decades of armed
conflict and thousands of casualties, open tensions in society between Turks and
Kurds remain, under the circumstances, minimal. Foreigners are startled by the
discovery that a significant portion of Turkey's political and business elite is
of Kurdish origin, including three of the country's nine presidents--something
unthinkable for Kosovars or Chechens--and that Kurds' representation in the
country's parliament is larger than their proportion of the population.(n1) At the same time, it is difficult to refute the
assertion that there is an ethnic dimension of the conflict, in the sense that a
portion of the country's population holds on to an identity
distinct from that of the majority and feels discriminated against on the basis
of that identity, resulting in at least a limited ethnic mobilization. In
addition to the irrefutable ethnic aspect, the Kurdish problem contains
oft-neglected social, economic, political, ideological, and international
dimensions that have carried different weight at different times.
Several points need to be
understood with regard to the origins and future prospects of the Kurdish
problem in Turkey. A thorough grasp of the problem requires, first, an
understanding of the national conception underlying the Turkish state and
society. Secondly, it must take into account the social (and not only ethnic)
distinctiveness of the Kurds and their relationship with the republic's
leadership. Thirdly, the Kurdish problem in Turkey must be understood as
distinct from the problem of PKK terrorism. Finally, the Kurdish question must
be understood within the analysis of the general process of democratization in
Turkey.
The National Conception of
the Turkish Republic
The Turkish republic is the
successor state of the Ottoman Empire, which dissolved during the First World
War after more than a century of decay. However, the republic is a dramatically
different construct from its predecessor. The Ottoman Empire was an
authoritarian monarchy with a religious foundation derived from the sultan's
claim that he was also the caliph, the spiritual head of all Muslims of the
world. The empire recognized minorities and accorded them extensive self-rule,
but it defined minorities in religious terms. Hence, no Muslim people was ever
accorded minority rights, while Jews and Christian Armenians, Serbs, Greeks, and
others were. Before the twentieth century, this approach posed few problems,
especially given that the Muslim peoples in the empire developed national
identities considerably later than the empire's Christian subjects in the
Balkans, and did so at least partly as a result of the latter's emerging
national awareness. Collective identities were based primarily on
religion--Islam at the broadest level and various religious orders and sects at
the local level--and regional or clan-based units.
The Turkish republic, by
contrast, was modeled upon the nation-states of Western Europe, particularly
France. It was guided by six "arrows" or principles enunciated by its founder,
Mustafa Kemal Ataturk: republicanism, nationalism, secularism, populism, etatism, and reformism. Among these, the first three
principles form the foundations of the republic. Although Turkey was no
democracy in Ataturk's lifetime, the principles of republicanism and populism suggest the goal of popular rule, that is, a democratic
political system.(n2) In the speeches and writings of Ataturk, republicanism
unmistakably meant a break with the monarchy of the past.(n3) The second pillar,
secularism, entailed a break with the Islamic character of the state. Although
religion was to be kept out of political life, however, this is not to imply
that Kemalist Turkey was in any way atheistic. Indeed, as Dogu Ergil has noted,
Ataturk's highest goal in the religious field was the translation of the Quran
into Turkish. In fact, the aim of the new regime was twofold: to dissociate the
state from religious principles, and to "teach religion in Turkish to a people
who had been practicing Islam without understanding it for centuries."(n4) The
regime's policies, most blatantly the abolition of the caliphate, nevertheless
enraged the more religious parts of the population. This included
the Kurds, who have been described as being at that time "a feudal people . . .
of extreme religious beliefs."(n5) Indeed, the Kurdish population
was ruled by local hereditary chieftains whose power often stemmed from the
backing of the Naqshbandi or Qadiri religious orders.
The founding principle most
relevant to the Kurdish question, however, is nationalism. The new state was
based on Turkish nationalism, but the territory comprising the republic was a
highly multiethnic area even before the large migrations that took place in the
late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.(n6) As the Ottoman Empire was
retreating from the Balkans, large numbers of Muslims, predominantly Slavic by
ethnicity, fled to the heartland of the empire, the present-day Turkish
republic. In addition, the Russian suppression of Muslim highlanders' resistance
in the North Caucasus in the 1850s forced additional hundreds of thousands of
people to migrate to Anatolia. As a result, when the Turkish republic was
created in 1923, a large proportion of its population consisted
of recent immigrants of Slavic, Albanian, Greek, Circassian, Abkhaz, and Chechen
origin, whereas people that could claim descent from the Turkic tribes that had
come from Central Asia were certainly a minority of Anatolia's population. It was in this complex setting that Ataturk and his
associates aimed to create a modern nation-state, an integrated, unitary polity
of the French type. For that reason, the model of the nation that Ataturk and
his associates adopted was civic, as expressed by the maxim that lies at the
basis of Turkish identity: "Ne mutlu Turkum diyene," best translated as "Happy
is whoever says `I am a Turk'"--not whoever is a Turk. To be a Turk meant to
live within the boundaries of the republic and thereby be its citizen. The very
use of the word Turk, moreover, was a breakthrough, since it had been a
derogatory term during Ottoman times, referring to the peasants of the Anatolian
countryside. Thus, the word Turk defined a new national community into which
individuals, irrespective of ethnicity, would be able to integrate. Language
reform and the introduction of the Latin alphabet added to the novel character
of the nation. It is against this background that every person living within the
borders of the republic and accepting its basic principles was welcome to be its
citizen. Immigrants to Anatolia of Caucasian or Slavic origin and indigenous populations of Kurdish, Laz, or Arabic origin all became Turks in
their own right, whereas ethnically Turkish minorities outside the boundaries of
the republic, in the Middle East or the Balkans, were disqualified from
membership in the national community. But whereas the Turkish national
conception was benign compared with the fascist ones triumphing in Europe in the
1920s and 1930s, becoming a Turk entailed the suppression of an individual's own
ethnic identity. In other words, Ataturk's maxim was generous in allowing
everyone who desired to do so to become a Turkish citizen, but it did not
provide a solution for those who were not prepared to abandon their previous
identities in favor of the new national idea. This, in a nutshell, was the
problem of a significant portion of the Kurdish population,
which differed from the rest of the population not only because of language, but
also because of its clan-based feudal social structure.
In retrospect, Ataturk's
nation-building project appears to have been largely successful. Out of the
melting pot of the 1920s has emerged a society in which an overwhelming majority
of individuals feel a strong and primary allegiance to a Turkish identity. The
only group that has escaped this process seems to have been the Kurds, though by
no means all of them. In fact, a great number of Kurds, especially those that
willingly or forcibly migrated to western Turkey, integrated successfully into
Turkish society and adopted the language, values, and social organization of the
republic. Kurds today are active in all spheres of social and political life,
and are even present in the ranks of the Nationalist Movement Party (Milliyetci
Hareket Partisi--MHP), which is often characterized in the West as fascist and
anti-Kurdish. This remarkable level of assimilation can be attributed in part to
the policies of the state, but clearly the ethno-linguistic heterogeneity of the
Kurdish population was an additional factor.
It remains a fact, however,
that the Kurds are the one ethnic group that to a large degree has retained a
distinct identity. There are several reasons for this, of which a major one is
demography. The Kurds are by far the largest non-Turkish-speaking group in the
country. A second reason is geography: the Kurds were settled in a single area
of the country that is distant from the administrative center and inaccessible
because of its topography. Thirdly, the Kurds differed from other large groups
such as Slavs or Caucasians in that they were an indigenous group and not
comparatively recent migrants. Uprooted immigrant populations
that have suffered severe upheavals and hardships are significantly more likely
to embrace a new national identity than are indigenous groups. Fourthly, the
Kurds, unlike other populations, were organized according to a
tribal and feudal social structure, a factor that remains crucial to this day.
Paradoxically, the Turkish nation-building project (with its one major
exception) has been so successful that it is doubtful that state policies can
still be described as seeking integration rather than assimilation. As the
Turkish identity has strengthened and previous identities vanished or receded,
Turkish identity itself has become more homogeneous; as such it carries the risk
of growing less civic and more ethnic in nature.
The Distinctiveness of
Kurdish Society
The Kurds are not a
homogeneous ethnic group and evince differences in religion, language, and ways
of life. In Turkey, the clear majority of the perhaps 12 million people that are
referred to as Kurds are Sunni Muslims and speak Kurmandji. Nevertheless, some
Kurdish groups speak Zaza, which is not mutually intelligible with Kurmandji, or
adhere to the Alevi faith, a heterodox branch of Islam with strong non-Islamic
features. Moreover, these groups overlap, especially in the Tunceli and Bingol
areas of Turkey, where most Kurds are both Zaza-speaking and Alevi. Hence there
are important divisions among Kurds, a fact emphasized by most analysts as an
important reason for their lack of political unity.(n7) Even among Sunni Kurds,
adherence to different religious orders (tariqat) has been a divisive factor. A
more important element of the problem is Kurdish social organization, which has
traditionally been, and essentially remains, tribal and feudal. The tribes,
usually referred to as ashiret in Turkey, are "fluid, mutable, territorially
oriented and at least quasi-kinship groups" that range in size between tribal
confederacies of thousands of members to small units of several dozen
individuals.(n8) At the head of a tribe is an agha, the leader of a ruling
family, who seeks to--and often does--command absolute loyalty from the members
of the tribe. Tribes are often, but not always, held together by kinship
ideology: an underlying myth of common ancestry, at times going back to a
descendant of the Prophet Muhammad, has been a strong source of legitimacy
keeping the tribe together. Numerous shaykhs, or leaders of the religious
orders, have also been tribal aghas, thereby exercising dual authority over
their followers. Practically speaking, some tribes have nevertheless been no
more than what McDowall calls "a ruling family that has attracted a very large
number of clients."(n9) During Ottoman times, the state used tribal leaders as a
means to exert territorial control over Kurdish areas. Those that sided with the
Ottomans in their wars with Persia were rewarded with the recognition of their
autonomous rule over essentially semi-independent principalities, in return for
which they paid an annual levy and pledged military support for the empire in
times of war. A number of tribal leaders received the title of emir through such
agreements.(n10) But whereas tribal leaders were co-opted by the state, shaykhs
and aghas also led rebellions against the state. However, the very fact of these
rebellions' tribal rather than national nature led to a lack of cohesion
vis-a-vis the state. When one tribal leader revolted, for example, others saw it
fit to collaborate with the state to quell the rebellion. As Gerard Chaliand
notes, perpetual competition was the hallmark of relations between tribes:
"Allegiances can . . . fluctuate, but division itself . . . remains a
constant."(n11)
Moreover, the relationship
between a tribal society and the state is by no means easy. As displayed not
only in Kurdish-populated areas but also in places such as
Afghanistan and Chechnya, there is a fundamental incompatibility between the
tribal hierarchy and the modern nation-state. Tribal leaders "act as arbitrators
of disputes and allocators of resources, benefits and duties . . . [and]
jealously guard [their] monopoly of all relations with the outside world."(n12)
A centralized state is a direct threat to tribal leaders' authority because by
definition it seeks to exercise direct control over all citizens. There are two
basic ways for a state to exercise control over predominantly tribal areas:
either to break down the tribal structures and integrate the population into the social structures of the state, or to co-opt
tribal leaders and use them as instruments of power in the tribal areas. Most
states facing this dilemma have employed a mixture of these two strategies,
often playing tribal leaders against one another. Needless to say, the strategy
of breaking down tribal structures risks provoking armed resistance on the part
of the tribal leaders, and so the Turkish republic, much like the Ottoman Empire
before it, adopted a strategy of co-optation. Among the numerous members of
parliament from the predominantly Kurdish southeast, many if not most belong to
families of feudal lords or are endorsed by them. This is especially the case
for the rightist parties with an origin in the now-defunct Democratic Party
(Demokrat Partisi--DP).(n13) In the southeast, where it is not uncommon to find
up to 80 percent electoral support for a given political party in one province
and equally strong backing for a different party in a neighboring province, such
curious parliamentary election results should be interpreted with that history
in mind.(n14) A tribal leader's endorsement of one party is likely to ensure the
votes of an overwhelming majority of tribal members. It is small wonder, then,
that the political leaders in Ankara have resorted to the policy of co-optation,
which not only is much safer than trying forcibly to break down tribal
structures, but also carries the distinct advantage of winning large numbers of
votes without significant campaigning. Turkish governments until the 1990s
therefore had little incentive to integrate southeastern Anatolia socially with
the rest of the country.(n15)
Whereas this strategy has
been beneficial both for Ankara and the tribal leaders, it has been less so for
the Kurdish population as a whole. The Kurdish areas have
consistently lagged behind the rest of Turkey in terms of economic development,
due largely to the preservation of the tribal structures and the neglect of the
central government. Tribal leaders, of course, have an interest in preventing
rapid modernization, which would inevitably weaken the traditional social
structures that perpetuate their power. As a result, they have in all likelihood
encouraged a certain lack of attention to their region on the part of central
authorities. This is not to say that the rapid development of Turkish society
has wholly bypassed the Kurds. Although the government may have neglected the
area, considerable development has taken place, especially through the
introduction of nationally standardized educational norms and compulsory
military service, and through the spread of mass media, which have all brought
dramatic changes to the perceptual environment of a generation of Kurds. In
addition, as noted above, numerous Kurds have migrated to urban areas in western
Turkey. Some of them left the southeast in search of better economic conditions
and others were relocated by the state in an effort to integrate Kurds into
society, but in both cases the result was to expose thousands of young Kurds to
previously alien ways of living and thinking. In this context, leftist
ideologies have had a specific attraction to many of the Kurds who have studied
in Turkish universities since the 1960s.
The Militant PKK
Kurdish rebellions before
World War II had a strong tribal and religious character that often overshadowed
the national component, but in the postwar period this pattern underwent
significant change. Turkey held its first multiparty election in 1950, resulting
in the electoral defeat of Ataturk's Republican People's Party and a transfer of
power to the center-right DP. The new government allowed exiled shaykhs and
aghas to return, co-opting them into the system as outlined above.(n16) The
strengthened position of tribal leaders gave further impetus to the migration of
Kurds to the urban areas of western Turkey, where a number of them benefited
from the increasingly market-oriented economic policies of the government.
Within a short time, a movement called "Eastism" (Doguculuk) emerged, advocating
economic development efforts in eastern and southeastern Anatolia. After the
military coup of 1960, a new and more liberal constitution was adopted that
included substantial protections for democracy, freedom of expression, and human
rights. Indeed, the 1961 constitution (which was superseded in 1982) was the
most liberal that Turkey has ever had. These freedoms led to a mushrooming of
leftist activity among Kurds and others in Turkey. Although more-radical groups
with various Marxist-Leninist affiliations emerged, the most prominent was the
Workers' Party, whose public statements calling attention to an oppressed
Kurdish minority eventually led to its closure.(n17) Meanwhile, the increasing
stature of Mullah Mustafa Barzani and his Kurdish Democratic Party (KDP) in
northern Iraq and the rise of Kurdish nationalism there had a profound effect on
more right-wing Kurdish activities in Turkey. From the 1960s onward, therefore,
one can speak of a clear ideological division among politically active Kurds. A
Marxist wing cooperated with ideological brethren of Turkish origin and often
formed parts of Turkish-dominated groups, while a more traditionally
nationalistic wing identified closely with Barzani's KDP. A main item on the
agenda of the leftist Kurds was the socioeconomic restructuring of the southeast
into a more equitable society through the dismantling of tribal institutions
and, in its more extreme versions, the creation of a socialist system. This
agenda was naturally anathema to the right-wing groups, which were closely
linked to the tribal hierarchy. The right-wing Kurdish nationalists nevertheless
failed to prevail for two main reasons: internal tribal divisions among them
weakened their strength and appeal, and both their main leaders were forced into
exile after the 1971 military intervention and eventually assassinated in
northern Iraq. During the 1970s, leftist radicalization intensified as migration
to urban areas of western Turkey continued and enrollment in higher education
increased. These parallel processes heightened awareness of economic and
political disparities between the southeast and the rest of the country, and
Kurds were socioeconomically predisposed to be absorbed into the leftist climate
predominant among the student body in Turkish universities. Gradually, however,
Kurdish leftists became alienated from their Turkish colleagues and formed
separate political movements.
Having its origins in an
informal grouping around Abdullah Ocalan dating back to 1973, the PKK was
formally established as a Marxist-Leninist Kurdish political party in 1978 and
advocated the creation of a Marxist Kurdish state. From the outset, the PKK
defined Kurdish tribal society as a main target of the revolutionary struggle.
It described Kurdistan as an area under colonial rule, where tribal leaders and
a comprador bourgeoisie colluded to help the state exploit the lower classes. In
particular, it advocated a revolution to "clear away the contradictions in
society left over from the Middle Ages," including feudalism, tribalism, and
religious sectarianism.(n18) It should be noted that in the 1990s the PKK toned
down its Marxist rhetoric and instead emphasized Kurdish nationalism in the
hopes of attracting a larger following among Turkish Kurds. Marxism-Leninism
found little resonance among the population in agricultural,
rural southeastern Turkey.
The PKK suffered heavily
from the 1980 military coup, and Ocalan and some associates fled Turkey for
Syria and the Beka'a Valley of northern Lebanon. But the
repression of other leftist and Kurdish movements allowed the PKK to emerge as
the sole credible Kurdish challenger to the state, and with the start of
military operations in 1984, the PKK left Turkish Kurds with few choices. Unless
they decided to stay out of politics completely, Kurds were forced either to
side with the state, thereby expanding their opportunities as Turkish citizens
at the price of suppressing their ethnic identity, or else join the PKK and
fight the state. Any option ranging between these two extremes became highly
dangerous, since any form of peaceful advocacy of Kurdish rights would attract
the wrath of both the state and the PKK. The Turkish state painted itself into a
corner by equating virtually all expressions of Kurdish identity with PKK
terrorism. The PKK, in turn, suffered from several drawbacks that would
ultimately precipitate its demise. Most significantly, its violence against the
very population it claimed to represent disillusioned many
Kurds, who saw little difference between the repressive Turkish state organs and
a repressive PKK. To this should be added the megalomania that has been
attributed to Ocalan. Beyond disallowing intraparty opposition, Ocalan developed
a true personality cult around himself, leading other Kurdish leaders to abandon
him as a madman. Jalal Talabani, the leader of the northern Iraqi Patriotic
Union of Kurdistan (PUK), stated that "Ocalan is possessed by a folie de
grandeur . . . he is a madman, like a dog looking for a piece of meat." The
other Iraqi Kurdish leader, Masoud Barzani of the KDP, compared him to the
Ugandan dictator Idi Amin.(n19) Thirdly, the PKK's Marxist-Leninist ideology,
which never really commanded much enthusiasm in Kurdish society at the outset,
became a liability after the collapse of communism worldwide. Fourthly, despite
its ideological zeal, the PKK failed to stay out of the tribal politics it aimed
to destroy. In light of the authority commanded by tribal leaders, the PKK was
forced to negotiate with the aghas, since winning over a tribal leader meant
winning the support of the whole tribe, an advantage the PKK could not afford to
forgo. As a result, the PKK had a stake in preserving tribal structures.(n20) A
fifth source of weakness derived from the westward migrations that were partly a
result of the war. By the mid-1990s only a minority of Turkey's Kurds actually
lived in the southeast. The sixth and final flaw was that the prospect of a
separate Kurdish state did not enjoy the support of a majority of Kurds. The
failure of the Kurdish "Federated State" in northern Iraq in the early 1990s,
which culminated in economic misery and factional infighting, heightened the
appeal of remaining within Turkey, especially as Turkish attempts to gain
membership in the European Union were likely to bring increased democratization
and economic development.
The longevity and intensity
of the PKK rebellion are partly explained by the party's organizational skills
and the support it managed to muster as a result of dissatisfaction among Kurds
in Turkey. Of equal or greater importance, however, has been the PKK's
mobilization of international resources, which can be divided into three basic
categories: support from Kurds in exile, primarily in Western Europe; financial
resources stemming from the narcotics trade; and indirect and direct support
from states with an interest in weakening Turkey. Reliable PKK support has come
from the Kurdish communities in Western Europe, especially Germany and, to a
lesser degree, Sweden, where it has commanded the loyalty of a majority of
exiled Kurds. This is not surprising, given that Kurds in exile include large
numbers of politically motivated migrants, and given that the political
mobilization of Kurds in Europe, including the (sometimes forced) levy of
"taxes," is considerably easier than in Turkey, where state restrictions are far
more stringent.(n21) As concerns the drug trade, significant circumstantial
evidence suggests that the PKK derives a large part of its financing from the
production, refining, and smuggling of illicit narcotics to Europe, although the
importance of the drug factor in the PKK rebellion should not be
overestimated.(n22)
Unquestionably, the most
important factor in the PKK's survival has been the support of several foreign
countries. During the 1980s the PKK was funded mainly by its ideological
brethren in the Soviet Union. Evidence that other states supported or tolerated
its operations on their soil has also surfaced, notably Greece, Iran, and Greek
Cyprus. The PKK's most crucial and stable ally, however, has been Syria, which
hosted Ocalan for twenty years and provided training facilities in the Beka'a
Valley of Syrian-controlled northern Lebanon. Syria's reasons
for opposing Turkey are manifold.(n23) Most fundamental is a border dispute over
the Hatay province, which is claimed by Syria but was ceded to Turkey by France
(Syria's League of Nations mandatory) in 1939. Furthermore, Turkey's economic
development program for southeastern Anatolia, which was inaugurated in the
1980s, planned to use water from the Euphrates and Tigris Rivers to irrigate
large tracts of the arid region. Syria, fearing this would jeopardize its own
access to water from the Euphrates, increased its support not only for the PKK,
but also for Armenian terrorist organizations targeting Turkey.(n24) Syria's
role as the PKK's main patron became increasingly evident as the Soviet Union
dissolved. Although Russia has utilized the PKK as a lever against Turkey,
especially to deter possible Turkish support for Chechen insurgents, Russian
support in no way approaches that which the Soviet Union provided in the
1980s.(n25) It is doubtful whether the PKK could have attained anything close to
the position it did without foreign support.
Whereas the end of the Cold
War entailed a series of problems for the PKK, the Persian Gulf War was highly
beneficial. The coalition against Iraq and Operation Provide Comfort for all
practical purposes removed northern Iraq from Baghdad's jurisdiction, and a
U.S.-backed Kurdish "Federated State" was created there. At the heart of this
new entity was a power-sharing agreement between Barzani's KDP and Talabani's
PUK, an arrangement achieved partly through the efforts of the Turkish
government, which stepped in as a patron of the deal in order to keep the PKK
out of the area. However, conflicts between the KDP and PUK prevented the scheme
from being implemented, and northern Iraq became a power vacuum, which coincided
nicely with the aims of the PKK. Ocalan's organization soon based its operations
there, and by 1994 it had managed to deny the Turkish state effective control of
large tracts of its southeastern territory.(n26) At the same time, the Turkish
army's demonstrable lack of preparation for mountain and guerrilla warfare
undermined discipline in the ranks. As soldiers continually failed to
differentiate between civilians and rebels, the PKK enjoyed increasing popular
support.
But the situation began to
change in the mid-1990s. The Turkish army, having apparently realized the
importance of not alienating the civilian population, emphasized
discipline within the ranks and initiated a public-relations campaign that
included the introduction of health and educational facilities for the population of the southeast. Meanwhile, the Turkish military
eventually adapted successfully to guerrilla warfare (in stark contrast to the
disastrous performance of the Russian army in Chechnya at roughly the same time)
and gathered enough strength to strike the problem at its roots in northern
Iraq. Since 1995, regular and massive troop incursions (some involving up to
35,000 troops) and the establishment of a security zone reminiscent of the
Israeli zone in southern Lebanon have caused the PKK's position
in northern Iraq to wither away. By 1998 the PKK's only lifeline was Syria.
Spurred by its alliance with Israel, the Turkish government felt strong enough
to threaten Syria with war unless it expelled Ocalan and the PKK bases in the
Beka'a Valley. Unable to rule out the prospect of Israel's joining a Turkish
punitive expedition, Damascus complied and expelled Ocalan in October 1998.
After the PKK's forces relocated to northern Iraq, a subsequent Turkish
incursion dealt a severe blow to their military capabilities. Since Ocalan's
capture, his unreserved submission to Turkish authorities seems to have damaged
the PKK so seriously that it is doubtful that it will ever again become a
credible actor.
In sum, the PKK's intrinsic
weaknesses that shrank its base of popular support, the Turkish military's
change of policy toward the civilian population, and especially
Turkey's growing ability to crush the insurgents and stamp out its sources of
foreign support combined to defeat the insurgency. In late 1999 the PKK declared
its withdrawal from Turkish territory and in early 2000 publicly laid down its
arms, apparently emulating the PLO by trying to gain recognition as a political
movement instead.
The Kurdish Question and
Turkey's Democratization
Having defeated the PKK,
Turkey has still not resolved its Kurdish question, since the PKK never
represented the opinions of a majority of Turkey's Kurds. Although few reliable
sources are available on Kurdish attitudes, there is conclusive evidence that
only a minority of Kurds see the PKK as their main representative organ and that
the majority desires to remain within the Turkish state. In the PKK's heyday in
1992, a poll conducted in the southeast showed that only 29 percent of the population viewed the PKK as the best representative of the Kurdish
people.(n27) Moreover, a great part of the Kurdish population
has taken on Turkish identity in whole or in part. Indeed, Kurds in Turkey have
three options: to reject Turkish identity altogether, to accept it in its civic
version while retaining their Kurdish ethnic identity (which amounts to
integration), or to accept Turkish identity in both its civic and ethnic forms
(which amounts to assimilation). A 1993 poll showed that over 13 percent of
Istanbul's population claimed Kurdish roots, while 3.9 percent
considered themselves Kurds, and 3.7 percent identified themselves as "Turks
with Kurdish parents." Apparently, the remainder considered themselves simply
"Turks." Even accounting for the less-than-ideal polling conditions at the
height of the conflict (including state restrictions on expressions of Kurdish
identity), this outcome clearly shows that a significant number of Kurdish
people have integrated into Turkish society.
That said, these figures
should not be taken as evidence corroborating the view that Turkey does not have
a Kurdish problem. Clearly, a large portion of the Kurdish population feels a significant frustration at the state-imposed
restrictions on cultural and other rights. However, these figures do show that
any solutions based on autonomy or federalism, which have often been advocated
by outsiders, are obsolete. Since a majority of Kurds live in western parts of
Turkey or are otherwise integrated into Turkish society, autonomy and federalism
are impractical alternatives. Moreover, despite the bitterness of the armed
conflict, tensions on the grassroots level between Turks and Kurds remain low.
Any solution that would institutionalize ethnic distinctiveness would therefore
risk fueling ethnic antagonism.(n28)
The solution to the Kurdish
question, pragmatically speaking, depends on several factors. First, the Turkish
state needs to act in accord with its own rhetoric stipulating that the Kurdish
issue is distinct from PKK terrorism. With the PKK militarily vanquished and
Ocalan behind bars, the time has come for Turkey to accelerate its
democratization, including the removal of restrictions on cultural rights.
Turkey has long opposed any easing of its strict legislation governing
terrorism, freedom of expression, and cultural rights, and justifies its
position with the argument that reform would imply concessions to
terrorists.(n29) Now that the specter of PKK terrorism has significantly
diminished, a window of opportunity has emerged for the country to press forward
with reforms on human rights and democratization. In so doing, Turkey could take
significant steps to prevent separatist organizations from receiving popular
support, and it could do so with little risk of harming its own interests. Some
activists claim that Turkey should permit school instruction in Kurdish and
other minority languages, but such provisions may be counterproductive. Lack of
command of the state language has proven to be a major socioeconomic impediment
in countries where similar policies have been in effect, such as the Soviet
Union. While retaining its unitary state structure and preserving Turkish as the
sole official language of the state and the medium of education in schools, the
liberalization of language laws to allow private and supplementary school
instruction in minority languages would enable Kurds (and others) to retain
their identity while integrating with society. Television broadcasts in Kurdish
would serve a similar purpose and deal a significant blow to the PKK-aligned
channel MED-TV, which (via satellite from Europe) has had a virtual monopoly on
Kurdish-language programming. If the Turkish government allowed private or
state-controlled Kurdish media to exist, its ability to influence the local population would increase significantly, as some high Turkish
officials have acknowledged. Such measures would also improve Turkey's image in
the West. In its relations with the European Union and international human
rights bodies, Turkey's very defeat of the PKK rebellion makes it increasingly
difficult to justify restrictions on cultural rights. An even more important
step, however, would be to lift the state of emergency in the southeast. Until
that happens, the country is effectively split into two juridically, with a
significantly stricter legal system applied in one part of the country.
In this context, the role
of Kurdish political parties deserves mention. Most Kurdish-oriented parties in
the 1990s have been closed by the Constitutional Court due to alleged links to
the PKK. Presently the People's Democracy Party (Halkin Demokrasi
Partisi--HADEP) is under the same threat. However, the results of the 1999
general elections indicate the wide popularity of HADEP in the southeast.
Although the party received only 4.7 percent of the total votes in the
parliamentary election, this poor showing is largely related to the 10 percent
threshold for representation in the parliament. With little chance of attaining
that level nationwide, many voters concluded that a vote for HADEP was wasted.
Results in the simultaneous municipal elections suggested a different picture.
In many towns in the southeast, including the large cities of Van and
Diyarbakir, HADEP candidates won landslide victories with up to 70 percent of
the vote. This is a clear sign that large parts of the population of the southeast strongly favor a democratic
representative of Kurdish rights. State attempts to destroy HADEP, either by
closing down the party through legal measures or through the harassment or
arrest of its leaders, are thus likely to be counterproductive. Removing the
possibility of a democratic outlet for Kurdish sentiment will only fuel new
illegal movements or enable the PKK to regain some strength. Despite its
sometimes warranted suspicions, the state needs to tolerate and, if possible,
engage HADEP and other democratic Kurdish movements instead of suppressing them.
Secondly, the economic
measures consistently touted by the Turkish state must be realized. After the
capture of Ocalan, the government did launch yet another large-scale investment
program for the southeast, and as a result there is now a distinct possibility
to attract foreign investments to the region. However, the government must take
measures to ensure that development benefits the entire population and not just the tribal leaders who own most of the land
and industry. Development efforts that enrich only aghas and their client
networks but not the Kurdish population as a whole could provide
a spark for a social explosion. The educational system, which suffered greatly
from the war, also needs to be reestablished so that the Kurdish region's population can compete on equal terms in the increasingly
competitive Turkish society.
Finally, the crucial issue
for both democratization and economic development is the proper implementation
of existing legislation. Previously, Turkey's main problem stemmed not from the
legislation itself, but from a state bureaucracy that was often unable or
unwilling to implement reforms. There is, however, reason to hope that this
problem may be somewhat alleviated in the future. Civil associations in Turkey
are growing in strength and exerting increasingly effective pressure on the
government. At the same time, the end of large-scale hostilities should increase
the transparency of state organs. The election of Ahmet Necdet Sezer, a
prominent democrat from the judicial establishment, to the country's presidency
could also have a positive effect in this context.
The multifaceted Kurdish
question is central to Turkey's future, including its relations with the
European Union. Its international ramifications, moreover, make it an issue of
utmost importance in the regional politics of the Middle East. However, the
issue is often understood or depicted in simplistic ways. A deeper understanding
of the matter must take into account the tribal character of Kurdish society,
the dynamics of the PKK rebellion's rise and fall, and the larger context of
Turkey's ongoing democratization. It is noteworthy that the current Turkish
government is dominated by' parties generally branded as "nationalist." Besides
the MHP, the Democratic Left Party of Bulent Ecevit is a center-left party with
strong nationalist tendencies. However, the electoral victory of these two
parties in the 1999 general elections should not be dismissed as "a nationalist
wind" sweeping through the country after the capture of Abdullah Ocalan.(n30)
The anticorruption profile of these two parties and the infighting of the
center-right played at least as important a role as the seizure of Ocalan.
Nevertheless, the dominant political forces in Turkey today subscribe to a
definition of the Kurdish problem that denies its ethnic dimension. Although the
current government promotes economic development programs in the southeast, it
seems unwilling, close to two years after (Scalan's capture, to release the
pressure on Kurdish-oriented political parties or to consider the easing of
cultural restrictions. Without broadening its understanding of the Kurdish
question and the measures needed to address it, the government is unlikely to
resolve this problem. The Turkish state must therefore take advantage of the
opportunity created by its victory over the PKK, because conditions have never
been better to address the Kurdish question constructively and bring an end to
the political instability and economic backwardness of southeastern Turkey.
Having won the war, Turkey now needs to win the peace.
(n1) Based on estimates,
given that the ethnicity of members of parliament is not published, and that
census data do not include ethnicity.
(n2) Populism (balkcilik) carries the meaning of a "government for the
people" rather than the present-day meaning of the term, used to define
political opportunism.
(n3) For Ataturk's ideas,
see e.g. Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, Nutuk (Ankara: Kultur Bakanligi Yayinlari,
1980). Nutuk is the Great Six-Day Speech held by Ataturk on October 15-20, 1927.
(n4) Dogu Ergil, Secularism
in Turkey: Past and Present (Ankara: Foreign Policy Institute, 1988), p. 61.
(n5) Patrick Kinross,
Ataturk: The Rebirth of a Nation (London: Weidenfeld, 1964), p. 397.
(n6) Justin McCarthy, Death
and Exile: The Ethnic Cleansing of Ottoman Muslims, 1821-1922 (Princeton, N.J.:
Darwin Press, 1995).
(n7) For a useful
introduction, see David McDowall, A Modern History of the Kurds (London: I. B.
Tauris, 1996), pp. 1-18.
(n8) See, for example, Jack
David Eller, From Culture to Ethnicity to Conflict (Ann Arbor: University of
Michigan Press, 1999), p. 149-51.
(n9) McDowall, A Modern
History of the Kurds, pp. 15-16.
(n10) See Martin van
Bruinessen, Agha, Shaikh and State (Utrecht: Rijswijk, 1978).
(n11) Gerard Chaliand, The
Kurdish Tragedy, trans. Philip Black (London: Zed Books, 1994).
(n12) McDowall, A Modern
History of the Kurds, p. 15.
(n13) The present-day
center-right True Path Party (Dogru Yol Partisi--DYP), Motherland Party
(Anavatan Partisi--ANAP), Welfare Party (Refah Partisi--RP), Virtue Party
(Fazilet Partisi--FP), and Nationalist Movement Party all originate from the DP,
which existed from 1950 to 1960.
(n14) For the 1995
elections, see Harald Schuler, "Parlamentswahlen in der Turkei" (Parliamentary
elections in Turkey), Orient, vol. 37, no. 2 (19961).
(n15) See Erik Cornell,
Turkey in the Twenty-First Century: Challenges, Opportunities, Threats
(Richmond, U.K.: Curzon Press, 2000), p. 101.
(n16) McDowall, A Modern
History of the Kurds, pp. 396-400.
(n17) See Nader Entessar,
Kurdish Ethnonationalism (Boulder, Colo.: Lynne Rienner, 1992), p. 90. The
Workers' Party is unrelated to the PKK.
(n18) See Michael M.
Gunter, The Kurds in Turkey.. A Political Dilemma (Boulder, Colo.: Westview
Press, 1990), p. 60. For details on the PKK's ideology and tactics, see Michael
Radu's article, "The Rise and Fall of the PKK," in this issue of Orbis.
(n19) See Nicole and Hugh
Pope, Turkey Unveiled (New York: Overlook Press, 1998), p. 261.
(n20) Ismet G. Imset, PKK:
Ayrilikci Siddetin 20 Yili (The PKK: Twenty years of separatist terror) (Ankara:
TDN, 1992).
(n21) Henri J. Barkey and
Graham E. Fuller, Turkey's Kurdish Question (Lanham, Md.: Rowman and
Littlefield, 1998), p. 30.
(n22) Nimet Beriker-Atiyas,
"The Kurdish Conflict in Turkey: Issues, Parties, Prospects," Security Dialogue,
vol. 28, no. 4 (1997), p. 440; Nur Bilge Criss, "The Nature of PKK Terrorism in
Turkey," Studies in Conflict and Terrorism, vol. 18. no. 1 (1995), pp. 17-38.
(n23) See Suha Bolukbasi,
"Ankara, Damascus, Baghdad, and the Regionalization of Turkey's Kurdish
Secessionism," Journal of South Asian and Middle Eastern Studies, Summer 1991,
pp. 15-36.
(n24) See Philip Robins,
Turkey and the Middle East (London: Pinter/RIIA, 1991), p. 50.
(n25) Robert Olson, "The
Kurdish Question and Chechnya: Turkish and Russian Foreign Policies since the
Gulf War," Middle East Policy, vol. 3, no. 4 (1996), pp. 106-18.
(n26) See Kemal Kirisci and
Gareth Winrow, The Kurdish Question and Turkey (London: Frank Cass, 1997), pp.
161-67.
(n27) See Milliyet, Sept.
6, 1992, for the results of the poll; and Hugh Poulton, Top Hat, Grey Wolf and
Crescent: Turkish Nationalism and the Turkish Republic (London: C. Hurst, 1997),
pp. 245-48.
(n28) On the perils of
autonomy, see Svante E. Cornell, "Autonomy: A Catalyst of Conflict in the
Caucasus?" paper presented at the Fifth Annual Convention of the Association for
the Study of Nationalities, New York, Apr. 2000
(http://www.geocities.com/svantec/ASNCornell.pdf). Also see Henry J. Steiner,
"Ideals and Counter-Ideals in the Struggle over Autonomy Regimes for
Minorities," Notre Dame Law Review, vol. 66 (1991), pp. 1539-60.
(n29) On human rights
problems and legislation in Turkey, see Dilnewaz Begum, International Protection
of Human Rights: The Case of Turkey, report no. 43 (Uppsala, Sweden: Department
of East European Studies, 1998).
(n30) For a development of this argument,
see Svante E. Cornell, "Turkey: Return to Stability?" Middle Eastern Studies,
vol. 35, no. 4 (1999), pp. 209-34.