National Post

Turkey, Kurdish conflict heats up

- By Desmond Butler

• The military helicopter­s swooped in over the Kurdish heartland and dropped white incendiary powder on a raging brush fire — igniting a massive conflagrat­ion that raced through the mountains, devouring orchards and livestock. For Kurds living in nearby Lice, the recent Turkish operation brought back memories of the traumatic days in the 1990s when the army twice burned the town to the ground.

The military may have been trying to smoke out Kurdish militants, who had allegedly set off a car bomb near Lice killing a soldier and wounding four more. But locals in Lice, where the rebels have widespread support, see a more sinister motive: “Just like the old days,” said local journalist Metin Bekiroglu. “They want to spread fear.”

In an abrupt reversal, Turkey and the Kurdish rebels appear to be hurtling toward the return of an all-out conflict that plagued the nation for decades, before a fragile peace process was launched in 2012. A truce that has helped bring social and economic stability to Turkey evaporated only one week into the government’s new offensive against the militant Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK , which stretches from southeaste­rn Turkey to northern Iraq. Old habits of militancy, killing and retaliatio­n are returning to a region that until recently harboured hopes of joining mainstream Turkish life.

Forest firebombin­g is not the only provocativ­e method Turkey is using to put pressure on the Kurds. In nearby Diyarbakir, the spiritual capital of Turkish Kurds, fighter jets are taking off for dozens of sorties to hit PKK stronghold­s in northern Iraq. The planes screech over the city as if to send a threat of destructio­n. Many Diyarbakir residents have relatives in the mountains among the Kurdish targets.

Around Lice — a highly contested prize at the height of the conflict — the new cycle of violence was triggered last week when Kurdish militants kidnapped a policeman in the area and hit the military convoy with a car bomb.

Many Kurdish politician­s accuse Erdogan of escalating the tensions to undermine the main Kurdish political party after its election success in June parliament­ary elections.

They say Erdogan is hoping to tarnish the Kurdish party, widely considered to be the political arm of the PKK , so that he can win back his party’s parliament­ary majority in a possible repeat election in November.

The conflict escalated after a suicide attack in a crowd in the town of Suruc along the Syrian border. Turkish authoritie­s say the bomber was trained by Islamic State terrorists and was targeting a group seeking to help Syrian Kurds across the border rebuild the city of Kobani, which ISIL had destroyed. But many Turkish Kurds accused the government of responsibi­lity for the

Just like the old days. They want to spread fear

explosion, which killed more than 30 people.

Days later, as the government prepared airstrikes against the Islamic State, two policemen were killed in an apparent PKK attack in a southeaste­rn town, prompting the government to retaliate against the Kurdish rebels with airstrikes. Turkish authoritie­s also began a nationwide terror sweep netting more than 1,300 Islamic State, Kurdish and leftist terrorist suspects.

Yet the vast majority had affiliatio­n with the PKK , which Turkey and the United States consider a terrorist organizati­on. That prompted the Kurds to claim that Turkey’s moves against ISIL were really a pretext to crack down on the Kurdish rebels.

Government officials countered that leaders simply moved decisively to protect the public at a precarious moment, in which both ISIL and the PKK — sworn enemies of each other — had mobilized simultaneo­usly in Turkey.

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