The Jerusalem Post

The Iran-turkey fight over energy

It’s brought the IRGC and the PKK together

- • By FARHAD REZAEI The writer is a senior fellow at the Philos Project.

anew alliance has been formed between Iran and the Kurdish Workers party (pKK) in Iraq to undermine the turkish-Kurdish energy partnershi­p.

the pentagon’s defense Intelligen­ce agency (dIa) has reported that the Iran-sponsored shia militias in Iraq collaborat­ed with the pKK to target the turkish military siri base in the amedi district, north of duhok in the Kurdistan region. mehdi taeb, commander of the ammar headquarte­rs (the brother of hossein taeb, the head of the Islamic revolution­ary Guards Corps (IrGC)’s Intelligen­ce organizati­on), confirmed the dIa report, saying that the IrGC coordinate­d the attack.

Iran’s alliance with terror groups, such as hezbollah, hashd shaabi, and houthis, to wage asymmetric­al warfare is well known. more secretive is the partnershi­p between the IrGC and the pKK, a guerrilla insurgency that fights against turkey to establish an independen­t Kurdish state.

the IrGC and the pKK have had a long, pragmatic history of collaborat­ion against turkey. starting in 1984, abdullah ocalan, the leader of the pKK who hoped to establish a solid relationsh­ip with Iran, ordered his guerrilla troops to refrain from clashes with the Iranian forces on the borders. moreover, the pKK has agreed that it would not support the Iranian Kurdish movement for the liberation of Iranian Kurdistan in exchange for the IrGC’s support of the pKK efforts against the turks.

to please the theocratic regime in Iran, pKK senior leaders even mourned the death of Imam husayn, the third shia Imam, who was martyred in the Battle of Karbala, which drew harsh criticism from fellow sunni Kurdish groups. ocalan hoped that Iran would help in his goal of gaining greater political and cultural rights as a stage of securing an independen­t Kurdish state.

Iran had its own reasons for supporting the pKK. Initially, the Islamic regime in Iran viewed turkey’s membership in nato as a threat to its survival. the pro-western secular government in ankara was seen as an ideologica­l rival in the region. Iranians also believed that turkey was siding with saddam hussein during his eight-year war with Iran even though the turkish government publicly maintained the policy of neutrality. the 1983 security agreement between turkey and saddam hussein disappoint­ed Iranians and resulted in the IrGC’s aiding the pKK.

Furthermor­e, the regime believed that turkey supported the 22 million turkish-speaking Iranian azeris in gaining self-determinat­ion, fueling its anxiety over the ever-present danger of secessioni­sm. according to Iranians, the independen­ce-seeking groups such as the pan-turkist azerbaijan national resistance organizati­on (anro), which advocates separatism for the

Iranian azerbaijan­is, have been aided by ankara.

In response, Iran has provided military and logistic support to the pKK to destabiliz­e turkey. Collaborat­ing with the pKK has enabled Iran to collect intelligen­ce inside turkey.

numerous pKK senior leaders have secretly visited Iran and met with the revolution­ary Guards officials. Cemîl Bayik, one of the senior leaders of the pKK known for good ties with the revolution­ary Guards. osman Öcelan, brother of abdullah ocelan, who had strong personal relations with the Guards, played a significan­t role in securing the IrGC’s support for the guerrillas. In 1990, after he visited Iran and met with the Guards officials, the IrGC started to aid, train and arm pKK fighters, and provided them with a safe haven, health assistance, and facility camps inside Iran’s territory.

In 1992 alone, approximat­ely 800 pKK fighters were trained by the revolution­ary Guards in 20 camps establishe­d inside Iran. Back in 1986, when the Kurdish government in northern Iraq tried to expel pKK guerillas from northern Iraq because of the turkish military attacks, the IrGC provided them with a safe haven. according to intelligen­ce reports, by the end of 1997, the IrGC hosted 7000 pKK fighters inside the Iranian territory.

In 1999, when ocalan was captured, thousands of pKK guerrillas passed through Iran to reach Qandil mountain, the pKK’s main stronghold in northern Iraq. part of the Qandil mountains is located inside Iran and pKK’s high ranks settled on the Iranian side of the mountain. even when Iran ostensibly joined turkey’s operations against the pKK guerrillas, its contributi­on was very limited to small-scale operations on the border.

In recent years, the partnershi­p has entered a new phase. after the outbreak of the civil wars in syria and Iraq, turkey increased its military interventi­on there. the IrGC stepped up its aid to the pKK, which attacked the turkish military bases in both countries. since 2020, turkey has launched three major operations in Iraq (Claw tiger, Claw eagle, and Claw-lock) and establishe­d new outposts, observatio­n networks and monitoring inside the Kurdistan region. Iran views the turkish long-term military presence in its backyard as a threat to its policy of regional expansioni­sm.

of particular note is turkey’s effort to strengthen political and economic ties with the Kurdish regional Government (KrG) in accessing the Iraqi oil and gas in the northern part of the country. tehran, ever vigilant about its dominance of the energy market, has viewed it as a threat.

Iran has vehemently opposed turkish interventi­on in Iraq and sought to exert pressure on turkey to leave. Iraj masjedi, Iran’s former ambassador to Iraq, called on ankara to withdraw its troops from Iraq. according to masjedi, turkey had no justificat­ion for intervenin­g

in sinjar, “We reject [turkish] military interventi­on in Iraq and turkish forces should not pose a threat or violate Iraqi soil. the security of the Iraqi area should be maintained by Iraqi forces and [Kurdistan] region forces in their area.”

Iranians believe that turkey’s ultimate goal goes well beyond fighting the pKK. the regime is convinced that ankara wants to control the oil and gas reserves in northern Iraq, which account for 30 percent of the country’s total resources. Iranian media recently revealed that the Barzani family in KrG had reached a 50-year agreement with ankara to export oil and gas from northern Iraq to turkey, and then to Israel and europe. the agreement bypassed the Iraqi central government. Controllin­g the oil and gas fields in the north of Iraq would enable turkey to gain more bargaining power over Iran in the energy market.

the war in ukraine introduced a new urgency to the project. Iranian media corroborat­ed the Kurdish officials’ statement to the effect that they can make up for the oil and gas shortfall in europe, due to sanctions on russian exports. masrour Barzani told the atlantic Council energy forum in dubai that he is confident

that Kurdistan could meet the world’s growing demand and europe’s energy deficit due to russia’s invasion of ukraine and the subsequent sanctions targeting moscow.

Clearly, KrG gas and oil export plans would hurt Iran’s status as a major regional energy producer. as the holder of the world’s second-largest gas reserves and with substantia­l spare oil production capacity, it hopes to replace russian oil and gas for europe when the nuclear-related sanctions are lifted. It is doubtful that Iran would allow turkey to import oil and gas from Iraqi Kurdistan.

the alliance of the pKK and the IrGC through its proxies in Iraq is a clear manifestat­ion of Iran’s strong resolve to undermine the turkish-Kurdish energy plans. to this effect, the pKK leader Cemîl Bayik has recently sent an explicit message to the turks and KrG leaders that “they would not allow turkey to smuggle Kurdish oil and gas to europe.” From the perspectiv­e of the Iranians, the alliance with the pKK in Iraq is an inexpensiv­e way to bring all of KrG-turkey’s energy dreams to an end.

 ?? (Aziz Taher/Reuters) ?? A KURDISH man carries a flag with a portrait of jailed PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan during Nowruz festival celebratio­ns in Beirut, in March.
(Aziz Taher/Reuters) A KURDISH man carries a flag with a portrait of jailed PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan during Nowruz festival celebratio­ns in Beirut, in March.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel