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Title: The PKK Subtitle: Coming Down from the Mountains Date: 2015 Source: Retrieved on 28<sup>th</sup> July 2021 from [[https://es1lib.org/book/2725875/a73646][es1lib.org]] Authors: Paul White Topics: history, democratic confederalism, kurdistan, PKK, turkey Published: 2021-07-28 16:53:10Z
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| KURDISH OR TURKISH NAME | ENGLISH NAME |
| Adalet ve Kalkınma Partisi | Justice and Development Party
| Anayasa Mahkemesi | Constitutional Court
| Ankara YĂŒksek ĂÄrenim DerneÄi | Ankara Higher Education Union
| Apocular | âApoistsâ; followers of Apo |
| ArtĂȘĆa Rizgariya GelĂȘ Kurdistan | Peopleâs Liberation Army of Kurdistan |
| BarÄ±Ć ve Demokrasi Partisi | Peace and Democracy Party |
| Demokratik ĂzgĂŒr Kadın Hareketi | Free Democratic Womenâs Movement |
| Demokratık Toplum Kongresi | Democratic Society Congress |
| Demokratik Toplum Partisi | Democratic Society Party |
| Derin devlet | Deep state |
| Devrimci DoÄu KĂŒltĂŒr Ocakları | Eastern Revolutionary Cultural Centres |
| DoÄu ĂalıĆma Grubu | East Working Group |
| Eniya Rizgariya Netewa Kurdistan | National Liberation Front of Kurdistan |
| Fazilet Partisi | Virtue Party |
| Genelkurmay | Military General Staff |
| HĂąkimler ve Savcılar YĂŒksek Kurulu | Supreme Board of Judges and Prosecutors |
| Halkın Emek Partisi | Peopleâs Labour Party |
| Halkın KurtuluĆu | Peopleâs Liberation |
| HĂȘzĂȘn Parastina Gel | Peopleâs Defence Forces |
| HĂȘzĂȘn Rizgariye Kurdistan | Kurdistan Liberation Force |
| Jandarma police (Jandarma Havacilik Komutanligi) | Jandarma (Jandarma Havacilik Komutanligi): paramilitary police attached to the Ministry of Interior |
| Jandarma Ä°stihbarat ve Terörle MĂŒcadele | Intelligence and Fight against Terrorism Gendarmerie |
| Koma CiwakĂȘn KĂŒrdistan | Kurdistan Communities Union |
| Koma JinĂȘn Bilind | High Womenâs Council |
| Koma KomalĂȘn Kurdistan | Council of Associations of Kurdistan |
| KomĂŒnizm Ä°le MĂŒcadele Dernekleri | Associations for Struggling with Communism |
| Kongra Netewiya Kurdistan | National Congress of Kurdistan |
| Kongra-Gel | Kurdistan Peopleâs Congress |
| Kongreya AzadĂź Ă» Demokrasiya KurdistanĂȘ | Kurdistan Freedom and Democracy Congress |
| KordĂźnasyona Civata DemokratĂźk a Kurdistan | Coordination of Democratic Communities in Kurdistan |
| Milli GĂŒvenlik Kurulu | National Security Council |
| Milli Ä°stihbarat TeĆkilatı | National Intelligence Agency |
| Milliyetçi Hareket Partisi | Nationalist Action Party |
| Ăzel Harp Dairesi | Special Warfare Department |
| Partiya Carseravi Demokratik Kurdistan | Kurdistan Democratic Solution Party |
| Partiya Jiyana Azad a KurdistanĂȘ | Kurdistan Free Life Party |
| Partiya KarkerĂȘn Kurdistan | Kurdistan Workersâ Party |
| Partiya YekĂźtĂź a Demokratik | Democratic Union Party |
| Refah Partisi | Welfare Party |
| Tevgera Jinen Azadiya Kurdistan | Kurdistan Womenâs Freedom Movement |
| TeyrĂȘbazĂȘn Azadiya Kurdistan | Kurdistan Freedom Falcons |
| TĂŒrk Ä°ntikam Tugayı | Turkish Revenge Brigade |
| TĂŒrk Silahlı Kuvvetleri | Turkish Armed Forces |
| TĂŒrkiye Halk KurtuluáčŁ PartisiâCephe | Popular Liberation PartyâFront of Turkey |
| TĂŒrkiye Ä°áčŁĂ§i Partisi | Workersâ Party of Turkey |
| Ulusal KurtuluĆ Ordusu | National Liberation Army |
| YekĂźtiya DemokratĂźk a GelĂȘ Kurd | Peopleâs Democratic Union |
| YekĂźtiya Jinen Azad | YJA STAR â the Free Women Units |
| YekĂźtiya Jinen Azadiya Kurdistan | Association of Free Women of Kurdistan |
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| KURDISH NAME | TURKISH NAME | |
| Amed | Diyarbakır |
| ĂelĂȘ | Ăukurca |
| CizĂźr | Cizre |
| ColemĂȘrg | HakkĂąri |
| DĂȘrsim | Tunceli |
| Ălih | Batman |
| Gewer | YĂŒksekova |
| MĂȘrdĂźnĂȘ | Mardin |
| ĆemzĂźnan | Ćemdinli |
| Ćirnex | Ćırnak |
| Wan | Van |
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| NAME | ROLE | |
| BaĆbuÄ, Ä°lker | General, Chief of the Turkish General Staff |
| Bayık, Cemil | PKK joint acting leader with BesĂȘ Hozat |
| Bookchin, Murray | Deviser of âdemocratic confederalismâ |
| Buçak, Mehmet Celal | In 1979 Buçak and other large landlords were the first persons targeted for assassination by the group headed by Abdullah Ăcalan. |
| Cansız, Sakine | PKK co-founder, assassinated on 10 January 2013 in Paris, together with two comrades. |
| Catlı, Abdullah | Mafia boss and putschist |
| DemirtaĆ, Selahattin | BDP chairman |
| Dicle, Hatip | Former independent candidate for the Diyarbakır province. Elected with a big vote, but his election was annulled; replaced by the sixth-placed candidate, a member of the government party. |
| DoÄan, Fidan | PKK activist, assassinated on 10 January 2013 in Paris, together with two comrades. |
| Emek, Fikret | Retired Ăzel Harp Dairesi operative, implicated in Ergenkon putsch |
| Erbakan, Necmettin | Refah Partisi leader |
| ErdoÄan, Recep Tayyip | Prime Minister of Turkey 2003â14; President of Turkey 2014â |
| Eruygur, Ćener | Four-star general implicated in Ergenkon putsch |
| GĂŒl, Abdullah | Formerly Refah Partisi deputy chairman, then President of Turkey in the ErdoÄan government |
| GĂŒlen, Fethullah | Hizmet leader |
| GĂŒney, Ămer | Man accused of murdering Sakine Cansız and her comrades |
| Hozat, BesĂȘ | PKK joint acting leader with Cemil Bayık |
| Huseyin, Fehman | âDoctor Bahozâ: responsible for training guerrilla fighters |
| Kalkan, Duran | Real name Selahattin Abbas; a senior PKK commander |
| Kaplan, Leyla | The youngest PKK suicide bomber, at 17 years, in 1996. |
| Karasu, Mustafa | PKK deputy commander |
| Karayılan, Murat | A senior PKK leader |
| Karer, Haki | PKK cadre, whose assassination convinced the **Apocular** to establish a political party. |
| Kınacı Zeynep (Zilan) | PKK female suicide bomber on 30 June 1996. |
| Kutan, Recai | Fazilet Partisi chairman |
| Ăcalan, Abdullah | PKK founder and leader |
| Ăcalan, Osman | Abdullah Ăcalanâs brother. Formed the Partiya Welatparezen Demokraten Kurdistan with Kani Yilmaz. |
| Ărnek, Ăzden | Four-star general implicated in Ergenkon putsch |
| Ăzal, Turgut | Prime Minister of Turkey 1983â89; President of Turkey 1989â93 |
| Pir, Kemal | PKK co-founder |
| Sakık, Ćemdin | âParmaksiz Zekiâ; former PKK member and commander |
| Söylemez, Leyla | PKK activist, assassinated on 10 January 2013 in Paris, together with two comrades. |
| TaĆ, Nizamettin | Former senior PKK leader. Formed the Partiya Welatparezen Demokraten Kurdistan with Kani Yilmaz and Osman Ăcalan. |
| Tekin, Muzaffer | Retired Ăzel Harp Dairesi operative, implicated in Ergenkon putsch |
| Tolon, HurĆit | Four-star general implicated in Ergenkon putsch |
| TuÄluk, Aysel | Demokratık Toplum Kongresi chairwoman |
| TĂŒrk, Ahmet | Democratic Society Congress president |
| Yilmaz, Kani | Real name Faysal Dunlayıcı. Former commander of the PKK guerrilla training camp in Lebanon, then PKK political organizer in Europe. He split from the PKK after the **Serok**âs arrest, forming the Partiya Welatparezen Demokraten Kurdistan with Osman Ăcalan. The PKK is accused of assassinating him on 11 February 2006. |
| Zana, Leyla | In 1991 she became the first Kurdish woman to win a seat in the Turkish parliament. She was imprisoned for ten years. She was re-elected to parliament in the June 2011 elections and is a member of the BarÄ±Ć ve Demokrasi Partisi. She received the Rafto Prize in 1994 and the Sakharov Prize in 1995. |
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| 1974 | Kurdish members of a radical leftist Turkish group meet and decide to form a distinctly Kurdish organization. Abdullah Ăcalan is elected leader of the group. |
| 1978 | The Partiya KarkerĂȘn Kurdistan (PKK â Kurdistan Workersâ Party) is established. |
| 1978 | 27 November: The PKK holds its founding congress. |
| 1979 | 30 July: Mehmet Celal Buçak and other large landlords are targeted for assassination by the group headed by Abdullah Ăcalan. |
| 1980 | August: Abdullah Ăcalan and a few other PKK members deploy to the Bekaâa Valley in Lebanon, for political and military education.
12 September: A military coup is staged in Turkey. |
| 1982 | 20â25 August: The PKKâs Second Congress is held and resolves to return to Kurdistan, undertake diplomatic activities, establish military and political organizations, and retain Abdullah Ăcalan as leader. The HĂȘzĂȘn Rizgariye Kurdistan (HRK â Kurdistan Liberation Force) is formed at the Congress. |
| 1984 | 15 August: Simultaneous armed raids by PKK forces staged on Jandarma police stations, killing several soldiers. These were the first attacks against direct state representatives. |
| 1985 | 21 March: Eniya Rizgariya Netewa Kurdistan (ERNK â National Liberation Front of Kurdistan) formed. |
| 1986 | 25â30 October: PKK Third Congress. ArtĂȘĆa Rizgariya GelĂȘ Kurdistan (ARGK â Peopleâs Liberation Army of Kurdistan) replaces HRK. |
| 1990 | 26 and 31 December: PKK Fourth Party Congress. |
| 1991 | Prime Minister (later President) Turgut Ăzal makes overtures to the Kurds. The overtures continue until 1993. |
| 1992 | Congress of PKK women held. Abdullah Ăcalan rules that the congressâs decisions are null and void. |
| 1993 | 17 March: Abdullah Ăcalan announces a unilateral ceasefire.
24 May: Ceasefire ends with the killing of 33 unarmed Turkish soldiers. |
| 1994 | 8 March: International Kurdish Womenâs Conference is held on International Womenâs Day. |
| 1995 | 24 January: PKK Fifth Party Congress. 8 March: On International Womenâs Day the first official Congress of PKK Women is held. The Congress elects an Executive, which subsequently founds the Tevgera Jinen Azadiya Kurdistan (TJAK â Kurdistan Womenâs Freedom Movement), which later changes its name to the YekĂźtiya Jinen Azadiya Kurdistan (YJAK â Association of Free Women of Kurdistan), and then to YekĂźtiya Jinen Azad (YJA STAR â the Free Women Units).
10 December: PKK announces a unilateral ceasefire with Turkey. |
| 1996 | 16 August: Ceasefire ends. |
| 1998 | January: PKK holds its Sixth Party Congress in Kurdistan.
24â26 May: The Kongra Netewiya Kurdistan (KNK â Kurdistan National Congress) is formed.
1 September: PKK declares a new unilateral ceasefire.
9 October: Abdullah Ăcalan expelled from Syria. |
| 1999 | 15 February: Abdullah Ăcalan captured in Kenya.
19 January and 16 February: PKK Sixth Party Congress. The PKK Presidential Council ends the ceasefire.
August: PKK restores the ceasefire, following Abdullah Ăcalanâs intervention via a message to the Congress conveyed by his lawyers. |
| 2000 | January: PKK Seventh Extraordinary Party Congress adopts policy of moving from armed struggle to âdemocratic transformationâ with a democratic republic.
The ARGK is renamed the HĂȘzĂȘn Parastina Gel (HPG â Peopleâs Defence Forces). |
| 2002 | April: PKK briefly changes its name to the Kongreya AzadĂź Ă» Demokrasiya KurdistanĂȘ (KADEK â Kurdistan Freedom and Democracy Congress) at its Eighth Party Congress. |
| 2003 | KADEK renames itself Kongra-Gel (KGK â Kurdistan Peopleâs Congress). |
| 2004 | 1 June: Ceasefire finally formally ended by Kongra-Gel. |
| 2005 | 28 Marchâ4 April: PKK Ninth Congress. KGK returns to the name PKK at the Congress.
17 May: Koma CiwakĂȘn KĂŒrdistan (KCK â Kurdistan Communities Union) is founded, as the sovereign authority body of the PKK movement, overseeing all the movementâs activities in all parts of Kurdistan. It is run by an administrative council with Kurds representing all parts of Kurdistan.
19 August: New ceasefire announced by the PKK, scheduled to last until 20 September, and then extended until 3 October. |
| 2006 | Fighting between the PKK and the Turkish military intensifies, before the PKK declares a new unilateral ceasefire on 1 October. |
| 2007 | Dialogue between the PKK and the Turkish state in Oslo.
April: PKK declares a further unilateral ceasefire.
June and October: Turkish attacks on PKK bases in Iraqi Kurdistan and clashes in south-east Turkey end the ceasefire. |
| 2008 | August: PKK Tenth Party Congress. |
| 2009 | 25â31 August: New PKK unilateral ceasefire lasts only one week.
11 May: âKurdish Openingâ announced by President Abdullah GĂŒl.
11 December: The Kurdish DTP is banned. |
| 2010 | May: The Kurdistan National Congress claims that more than 1,500 politicians, human-rights advocates, writers, artisans and leaders of civil-society organizations have been arrested since April 2009.
13 August: New PKK unilateral ceasefire. |
| 2011 | 28 February: PKK ends ceasefire. |
| 2012 | 18 October: Ankara acknowledges the existence of peace talks between the MÄ°T and Ăcalan. |
| 2013 | 10 January: Three PKK members â Sakine Cansız, Fidan DoÄan and Leyla Söylemez â are shot dead in Paris.
21 March: Abdullah Ăcalan declares end of the conflict between the Turkish government and the PKK on Newroz (Kurdish New Year). |
I offer the Turkish society a simple solution. We demand a democratic nation. We are not opposed to the unitary state and republic. We accept the republic, its unitary structure and laicism [secularism]. However, we believe that it must be redefined as a democratic state respecting peoples, cultures and rights. On this basis, the Kurds must be free to organize in a way that they can live their culture and language and can develop economically and ecologically. ([[#calibre_link-420][Ăcalan, 2009]]: 38â9)
Negotiation and struggle are both important processes in determining the future of peoplesâ movements. It is not those who are feared but rather those who have the confidence of their people that can lead those processes. ([[#calibre_link-495][Ăcalan, **Guardian**, 2014]])
âI, myself, am declaring in the witnessing of millions of people that a new era is beginning, arms are silencing, politics are gaining momentumâ ([[#calibre_link-158][Dalay, 28 September 2013]]). With these simple words from his prison cell on 21 March 2013, the Kurdish nationalist guerrilla leader Abdullah Ăcalan put an end to armed hostilities between his PKK guerrillas and the Turkish army, which have taken in excess of 45,000 lives (overwhelmingly PKK militants) since 1984 ([[#calibre_link-154][**HĂŒrriyet**, 16 September 2008]]).
Turkey captured the PKK leader in February 1999. It is now well known that Abdullah Ăcalan was apprehended as a result of cooperation between Greece and the CIA. A leading officer in Greeceâs Intelligence Service (the EYP), Colonel Savvas Kalenterides, admits that Athens collaborated with the CIA to deliver the Kurdish leader to Turkey ([[#calibre_link-418][Smith, 19 February 1999]]). Abdullah Ăcalan himself alleges: âI was handed to Turkey at the end of a plot carried out by an international forceâ ([[#calibre_link-120][Ăcalan, 17 February 2011]]). He has labelled his abduction an international conspiracy backed by an alliance of secret services, comprising a âcomplex mix of betrayal, violence and deceptionâ ([[#calibre_link-419][Ăcalan, 13 February 2010]]; [[#calibre_link-420][Ăcalan, 2009]]: 27â8). Since then, much has changed â and much has remained very much the same.
The present book is in many ways a sequel to and an updating of **Primitive Rebels or Revolutionary Modernizers?** (Zed Books, 2000), a Turkish-language edition of which appeared recently in Turkey entitled **Ä°lkel Ä°syancılar Mı, Devrimci ModernleĆtirmeciler Mi?** (2012, Vate Publishing House, Istanbul, 2012).
The earlier book examines the transformation of peasants from âsocial rebelsâ into modern Kurdish nationalists, and the changing nature of political leadership in Kurdish society in what may be described as the âmodernâ period. It shows that the Kurdish national movement emerged in the late nineteenth century as a product of traditional Kurdish society. Affected by Ottoman and Kemalist economic and political changes, the movement evolved towards a less parochial, âpurerâ nationalism, led centrally by urban Kurds formed in the Turkish left. It also demonstrates that ethnic differentiation was a central cause of the failure of several armed uprisings in the name of Kurdish nationalism. This differentiation is a problem that Kurdish nationalists in Turkey are still coming to terms with.
That book goes on to argue that, in many significant respects, the present-day Kurdish national movement, in Turkey the Partiya KarkerĂȘn Kurdistan (PKK â Kurdistan Workersâ Party), represents a qualitatively different sort of leadership from that of its historical predecessors. Initially a group of âprimitive rebelsâ, with both millenarian tendencies and some âmodernâ political features, the PKK eventually emerged as a modern revolutionary nationalist organization, with a burgeoning diplomatic presence, which contemplated bringing a complete end to its armed activities before this political evolution was curtailed by its founderâs capture. Ăcalanâs apprehension in February 1999 raised the distinct possibility of a political âde-evolutionâ on the part of the PKK, back towards practices of social banditry. In other words, were Turkeyâs Kurdish nationalist leaders âprimitive rebelsâ or revolutionary modernizers?
This new book reveals the PKKâs initially contradictory evolution since 1999, its apparently enthusiastic return to a non-violent, democratic road, and the even more astounding evolution of the Turkish state from denouncing Ăcalan as a mass murderer to dealing with him on the PKKâs proposed âdemocratic confederalismâ, which the PKK maintains will eventually develop into full-blown self-managed autonomy.
Given that the PKK previously advocated nothing less than full independence for a united Greater Kurdish state, engaging in bloody feuds with Kurdish nationalist groups favouring a perspective of mere autonomy, this alone is a remarkable change for the PKK. The fact that this new outlook represents a decisive step away from MarxismâLeninism in the vague direction of semi-anarchist ideas is arguably even more astounding.
The first two chapters of the book set the scene, laying out the origins and aims of the PKK â its foundation, organization and membership and the role of ideology in the organization. The notorious âunder-underdevelopmentâ of Turkeyâs Kurdish region is discussed, and its violent consequences explained.
Chapters 3 and 4 discuss key events of the modern Kurdish national movement in Turkey, showing the impact of the ideologies developed by Abdullah Ăcalan and propagated by the PKK. The ideas and perspectives of Ăcalan (known affectionately as âApoâ by his followers) have impacted deeply on political life throughout Turkey as a whole. Indeed, Apoâs ideology (**Apoizm**) has changed Kurds and Turks in Turkey forever. The influence of the Kurdish **Apocular** diaspora is also elaborated in these chapters.
Chapter 5 examines the peace process between Ankara and the PKK that began in late 2012. An analysis of Turkish responses to the process â by the AKP government, the far right, the military and the conservative GĂŒlen sect â and the reality or otherwise of the process is offered. The contradictory, perilous, nature of this process is shown.
Chapter 6 considers the PKKâs ideological evolution from MarxistâLeninist guerrilla status to âdemocratic confederalismâ, via the radical municipalism of Murray Bookchin. It is shown that this enabled it to exchange its traditional stance of struggling for nothing less than a united independent Kurdistan to a new perspective of âdemocratic confederationâ, leading to self-managed Kurdish autonomy within the borders of the Turkish state. An investigation of the PKKâs fascinating feminist transformation rounds off this chapterâs examination of the PKKâs ideological evolution.
The final chapter, âComing Down from the Mountainsâ, sums up the PKKâs transition from âterroristsâ to legitimate (or almost legitimate) rebels. It explores future directions for Turkeyâs Kurds and Turks. The future of the PKK in a democratic Turkey is critically examined and final conclusions drawn on PKK ideology and organization.
âEvents, however great or suddenâ, as John William Draper once reflected, âare consequences of preparations long ago madeâ ([[#calibre_link-118][Draper, 1875]], vol. 2: 152). The emergence and evolution of the Partiya KarkerĂȘn Kurdistan provides sound verification of this astute observation. It was the product of nationalist and protonationalist uprisings and events hundreds of years earlier, which had divided Kurdistan into enclaves subservient to domination by a number of foreign states, as [[#calibre_link-119][Figure 1]] illustrates.
The Kurdish and Turkish left in Turkey almost universally regard Turkish Kurdistan as feudal. PKK **Serok** (Leader) Abdullah Ăcalan is no exception, still maintaining:
the Kurds have not only struggled against repression by the dominant powers and for the recognition of their existence but also for the liberation of their society from the grip of feudalism. ([[#calibre_link-120][Ăcalan, 2011]]: 19)
As several scholars have observed, the actual picture in Turkish Kurdistan is more complex. In fact, all ancient Anatolian society stagnated under a dominant âAsiaticâ mode of production. Interaction with Europe increasingly evoked feudal forms there from the seventeenth century onwards. But Mustafa Kemalâs Turkish nationalist takeover in 1923 ushered in an openly modernizing regime â albeit Turkey remained a weak, underdeveloped economy, subordinate to the economies of those great powers that had successfully industrialized centuries earlier. Nevertheless, Turkey was integrated into the world economy during the 1920s and experienced real growth, including industrialization from the 1950s onwards.
Yet Turkish Kurdistan stumbled backwards in comparison, relatively speaking. Peasants have remained mostly landless. Kurdish economic development problems were not resolved by the economic modernization of the 1980s onwards, and political âdemocratizationâ was not achieved for the Kurds. The Kurds were effectively excluded from citizenship.
As Majeed R. Jafar ([[#calibre_link-121][1976]]) masterfully explains, the Kurdish region in modern Turkey is not merely underdeveloped, like Turkey as a whole, but is an exceptionally underdeveloped sector within the latter â or, as he puts it, Turkish Kurdistan suffers from âunder-underdevelopmentâ. ZĂŒlkĂŒf Aydin ([[#calibre_link-122][1986]]) shows that the regionâs peasants remained mostly landless sharecroppers. He verifies the general verdict of severe economic underdevelopment for the region. Aydin, along with Ronnie Margulies, Ergin YıldızoÄlu ([[#calibre_link-123][1987]]) and Kemal H. Karpat ([[#calibre_link-124][1973]]), explain how the mechanization of agriculture, beginning in the 1950s, forced vast numbers to migrate either to western Turkey or even abroad. The landless rural Kurds who remained were caught in a horrendous poverty trap, as not even a modest degree of stunted industrial development in Turkish Kurdistan soaked up the jobless and underemployed.
The continuing war in Turkish Kurdistan has massively impacted upon all who live there. Kurdish sociologists estimate that about 3,500 Kurdish villages have been destroyed, rendering some 4 million people homeless. Severe unemployment prevails even in Amed (Diyarbakır), the largest city. In Turkey as a whole the mean annual income is US$7,000, whereas in the four poorest neighbourhoods in Amed it is a mere US$500 ([[#calibre_link-68][Tatort Kurdistan, 2013]]: 70; [[#calibre_link-125][Cagaptay and Jeffrey, 2014]]: 10).
Ä°smail BeĆikçiâs **DoÄu Anadoluânun DĂŒzeni: Sosyo-ekonomik ve Etnik Temeller** ([[#calibre_link-126][1969]]) documents the serious effects of agricultural mechanization on the Kurdish regionâs economy. Seyfi Cengizâs work ([[#calibre_link-127][1990]]; n.d.) establishes that, despite grave economic underdevelopment in the region, a Kurdish working class not only exists but periodically organizes strikes and other forms of economic and political struggle, both inside and outside the trade unions. Basing himself on Turkish government statistics, Cengiz proves his case, showing that industrial activity by Kurdish workers in the region is intimately connected to similar action by workers throughout the Turkish state. This is potentially significant for understanding the objective factors impelling Kurds into political action, for Kurdish industry and economy today are linked with Turkish industry and economy, not that of Kurdistan as a whole. Cengizâs research thus reveals potential counter-pressures to Kurdish nationalism in Turkey.
Taking its prehistory into account, a schematic chronological typology of the Kurdish national movement in Turkey from its earliest murmurings up to the present day would be as follows:
- 1514â1879: the period from division to the Sheikh Ubaydallah rebellion.
- 1879â1908: the period from the defeat of Ubaydallah to the (Turkish nationalist) Young Turk rebellion.
- 1908â1925: the period from the Young Turk rebellion to the Sheikh Said rebellion.
- 1925â1938: the period from Sheikh Saidâs rebellion to DĂȘrsim (Tunceli).
- 1938â1965: the period from the DĂȘrsim rebellion to the dawn of the modern national movement.
- 1965âthe present: the period of the modern national movement.
All of these risings unquestionably took place on the historic territory of Kurdistan, although â as discussed in the present writerâs earlier book on the Kurds ([[#calibre_link-28][White, 2000]]) â the KızılbaáčŁ and Zaza peoples also claim most of them. Naturally, modern Kurdish nationalists reject these claims, also asserting that the KızılbaáčŁ and Zaza are Kurds. It is quite clear that the modern Kurdish national movement considers this asserted rebellious patrimony essential for its legitimacy.
These rebellions were all evoked by a heady mix of territorial particularism (the desire to rule their own lands themselves) and economic motives. Sheikh Saidâs 1925 rebellion was also animated by Islamic concerns. The modern Kurdish national movement is the product of the interaction of territorial particularist and economic motives, with leftist political radicalization, in the wake of Turkish political development and the explosion of radicalism in Western countries during the 1960s. It is Kurdish leftist political radicalization, especially, which differentiates the modern Kurdish national movement from its historical antecedents.
In May 1960, Turkeyâs armed forces â which since the establishment of the Turkish Republic in 1923 have considered themselves the Republicâs guardian â staged a military coup. The military hierarchy asserted that the military has both the right and the responsibility to intervene in affairs of state when absolutely necessary in order to guarantee the systemâs continuance. It was not a left-wing coup, but the military brought in a new, and surprisingly democratic, constitution. The prime minister and two of his ministers were executed and hundreds of right-wingers were imprisoned in 1961. The result of all these events was an unprecedented leftist resurgence.
From 1968, a rising tide of strikes began, supplemented by leftâright political violence, culminating in a series of political murders in early 1970. Hundreds of thousands of workers and students repeatedly clashed with police on the streets. On 12 March 1971 another military coup took place.
For a brief moment during this period, the need of the 1960 junta to repress the right allowed the left a breathing space. A staggering range of leftist publications emerged â from radical populist and social democratic in inclination, such as **Yön**, **Ant** and **TĂŒrk Solu**, through to ostensible Marxist, âMarxistâLeninistâ and Maoist. All of these groups looked towards a leftist reworking of the tradition of military intervention in national politics. In this scheme, the elite, technocrats (including, in some versions, the students) and officers would lead Turkey âindependentlyâ on behalf of the workers and rural poor â âfor the people, despite the peopleâ. âStudents would agitate, officers would strike, and a national junta would take powerâ ([[#calibre_link-128][Samim, April/May 1981]]: 65â72).
This strategy soon proved to be a failure. The radicalism sweeping across Western countries in the 1960s then swept over Turkey as well â despite the reality that in this country right-wing radicalism had a much stronger popular base than in Europe at the time. Left-wing radicalism in Turkey now took the shape of a different leftist approach, the urban guerrilla strategy of Che Guevara ([[#calibre_link-129][Landau, 1974]]: 31).
Turkish Kurdistan was not immune to these developments. Indeed, many Kurdish intellectuals were deeply affected by the political cauldron of 1960sâ Turkish politics. Confused political and organizational links soon developed between the movements in Turkey proper and these intellectuals ([[#calibre_link-130][Bozarslan, 1992]]: 97â8). Crucially, this confused intellectual leftist renaissance occurred at a time when Turkeyâs
Kurdish population ⊠was both more mobile and more susceptible to influence from regions to the West. Migratory movements, which were intensified by industrialization, ultra-rapid means of communication and the massive presence of Kurdish students in major Turkish towns, together with a more heterogeneous political environment were crucial in transforming EastâWest relations in Turkey. ([[#calibre_link-130][Bozarslan, 1992]]: 98)
A number of bilingual (Turkish/Kurdish) nationalist journals emerged, only to be swiftly suspended ([[#calibre_link-131][Kutschera, 1979]]: 4â5). Then in 1965 the Democratic Party of Turkish Kurdistan (PDKT in Turkish) was formed ([[#calibre_link-132][Vanly, 1986]]: 64). The new party name referred to the Iraqi Kurdish Democratic Party of Iraq (KDP), founded and led by the famous Barzani clan, although in the beginning it was controlled by Ibrahim Ahmad, who had nothing to do with the Barzanis. At the time, the KDP was waging a highly successful guerrilla war against the Baâathist authorities in Baghdad ([[#calibre_link-130][Bozarslan, 1992]]: 98â9; [[#calibre_link-131][Kutschera, 1979]]; [[#calibre_link-7][More, 1984]]: 68, 70, 193â4; [[#calibre_link-133][Ghareeb, 1981]]: 7â8; [[#calibre_link-134][Kendal, 1982]]: 91â2).
The PDKT was never an effective organized force. Nevertheless the social and political issues that ripped it apart in the late 1960s were significant for the emergence of a fully modern national movement of the Kurds. At their core, these disputes involved the role of both traditional leaders and intellectuals in the Kurdish national movement and the relationship of the national movement itself towards the international working-class movement ([[#calibre_link-130][Bozarslan, 1992]]: 98â9). The PDKT was clearly unable to adapt to the rapid radicalization occurring among Kurdish workers and intellectuals during the late 1960s. The organization was soon branded âbourgeois nationalistâ by most of the radicalized Kurdish organizations that subsequently emerged.
Kurdish resentment was growing, spurred on not just by centuries of perceived ill treatment, but also now by immediate outrages. In April 1967, a provocative article appeared in the extreme right-wing Turkish magazine **ĂtĂŒken**, journal of the far-right Milliyetçi Hareket Partisi (MHP â Nationalist Action Party). The article stated that the Kurds were a backward people, devoid of history and culture, who wanted to cut Turkey into pieces. The author suggested that the Kurds get out of Turkey, since Turkey was only for the Turks, adding that Kurds âdo not have the faces of human beingsâ (cited in [[#calibre_link-132][Vanly, n.d.]]: 41â3).
Demanding that Ankara punish the author and ban the magazine (Section 12 of the Turkish Constitution proclaimed the equality of all citizens), a furious Kurdish protest movement erupted. The government did nothing, even when a follow-up article appeared in the June issue of **ĂtĂŒken**, entitled âThe Howlings of the Red Kurdsâ, which declared:
the Kurds may represent a majority as high as 100 per cent of the population of the eastern provinces; yet their dreams to establish a Kurdish state on the soil of Turkey will always remain a dream comparable to that of the Armenians in a Greater ArmeniaâŠ
But the day when you will rise up to cut Turkey into pieces, you will see to what a hell we shall send you⊠(cited in [[#calibre_link-132][Vanly, n.d.]]: 42)
The Kurds were well aware that the Armenians were massacred by the Ottoman Turks (with assistance from some Kurds). Now a Turkish writer was implying that the same thing might happen to the Kurds.
These articles provoked a swift and widespread response by Kurds. A public statement signed by nineteen student committees was sent to the president and the prime minister ([[#calibre_link-132][Vanly, n.d.]]: 42). Protest demonstrations organized by Kurdish students on 3 August 1967 attracted 10,000 people in Silvan and over 25,000 in Amed. Large demonstrations were also held in most of the other towns of Turkish Kurdistan ([[#calibre_link-8][Heinrich, 1989]]: 8; [[#calibre_link-133][Ghareeb, 1981]]; [[#calibre_link-132][Vanly, n.d.]]: 42). The demonstrations protested not only against the articles and the governmentâs inaction in the face of them, but also against Ankaraâs âpolicy of national oppression and of planned underdevelopmentâ of Turkish Kurdistan. This was the first time in the three decades since the disaster at DĂȘrsim that the Kurds had vented their anger politically and publicly ([[#calibre_link-133][Ghareeb, 1981]]; [[#calibre_link-132][Vanly, n.d.]]: 42).
Retribution from the Kurdsâ Turkish adversaries was swift. Shortly after the demonstrations, unknown assailants â suspected by some to have been Turkish secret police â killed PDKT founder Faik Buçak. The other leaders of the PDKT were briefly arrested in early 1969 ([[#calibre_link-131][Kutschera, 1979]]: 340). Specially trained commandos were despatched to the Kurdish region. According to some accounts, these âclearing operationsâ were carried out with great force and to the accompaniment of frequent racial insults hurled at ordinary Kurds ([[#calibre_link-130][Bozarslan, 1992]]**,** 5; [[#calibre_link-131][Kutschera, 1979]]: 341â2). Chris Kutschera ([[#calibre_link-131][1979]]: 342) relates an incident that occurred on 8 April 1970, involving 2,000 commandos and military police and six helicopters, against the town of Silvan. All the men of the town, âexactly 3,144â, were made to line up. They were beaten, while being addressed thus: âDogs of Kurds! Spies of Barzani! Tell us where you have hidden your arms!â
Matters were now well past the point where simple intimidation could prevent the open manifestation of Kurdish disaffection. Over the next two years mass nationalist demonstrations were repeatedly held throughout Turkish Kurdistan ([[#calibre_link-126][Besikçi, 1969]]: 131â2). Frustrated by the failure of the previous âleft Kemalistâ strategy of the Turkish left â especially with the orientation to the âpatrioticâ section of the army â many young Kurdish radicals looked for a new organized alternative. The result was the foundation in 1969 of the Devrimci DoÄu KĂŒltĂŒr Ocakları (DDKO â the Eastern Revolutionary Cultural Centres) ([[#calibre_link-8][Heinrich, 1989]]: 13â14). The DDKOs were the first legal Kurdish organization in Turkey. Despite their diplomatic substitution of the term âEastâ for the name of their motherland Kurdistan, the DDKOs were symbols of radicalism. Propagandizing against cultural oppression and economic backwardness, the DDKOâs monthly bulletins pointed to American imperialism as the central cause and accused local large landholders and capitalists of facilitating this exploitation through their collaboration with the United States ([[#calibre_link-135][van Bruinessen, 1997]]).
DDKO militants were Kurdish students of varying ideologies, who broke free of the political control of the TĂŒrk Ä°áčŁĂ§i Partisi (TÄ°P), the main communist party at the time in Turkey ([[#calibre_link-7][More, 1984]]: 69). Strongly supporting the preservation of Kurdish culture and language, the DDKO built a network of support in Kurdish towns and major Turkish towns. The DDKO represented a radical break for the Kurdish national movement. Convinced that attempts to conciliate Kemalist nationalism must be abandoned, DDKO members looked at events in Vietnam and elsewhere in the developing world, and foresaw that Turkey also faced major upheavals. They viewed the Kurdish problem as centrally a colonial problem, in which, as Hamit Bozarslan explains, in their view âa âpoliceman of global imperialismâ dominated an oppressed nation with the aid of local collaboratorsâ. This was simultaneously both a âclassâ and a ânationalâ problem. Only âprogressive forcesâ could resolve the situation âby liberating Kurdistan â not necessarily as an independent state â from this double yokeâ ([[#calibre_link-130][Bozarslan, 1992]]: 100â101).
The DDKOs were destroyed when all their leaders were arrested in October 1970 ([[#calibre_link-7][More, 1984]]: 69; [[#calibre_link-130][Bozarslan, 1992]]: 101; [[#calibre_link-9][McDowall, 1996]]: 409). It was some measure of the growing support for the widespread Kurdish radicalization which had developed that the military claimed it was acting to foil a Kurdish uprising ([[#calibre_link-131][Kutschera, 1979]]: 343; [[#calibre_link-133][Ghareeb, 1981]]: 9; [[#calibre_link-132][Vanly, n.d.]]: 65). Specifically, it was alleged that the DDKO aimed at the partial or complete removal of constitutional public rights on grounds of race and to conduct propaganda to destroy national feeling. This charge was based on a rather contentious theory of racism â so-called âminority racismâ ([[#calibre_link-136][Bayır, 2010]]: 310â11). This occurred
when those who are numerically a minority constantly demand that they belong to a different race other than the majority race people and give weight to their racial particularities and by changing their race ask for special demands other than the general rights provided for members of the nation, although in the main laws there is no differentiation or no laws which create difference. (cited in [[#calibre_link-136][Bayır, 2010]]: 311)
DDKO leaders such as Musa Anter, Tarik Ziya Ekinci, Sait Elci, Necmettin BĂŒyĂŒkkaya and the young scholar Ä°smail BeĆikçi faced the courts in Istanbul and Amed. BeĆikçi produced a 150-page legal vindication, defending the Kurdsâ existence, history and unique identity. The DDKO leaders received jail sentences of up to ten years. Some of these â notably Musa Anter, Sait Elci and Ä°smail BeĆikçi â went on to play active roles in the Kurdish national movement following their eventual release from prison ([[#calibre_link-9][McDowall, 1996]]: 409â10; [[#calibre_link-135][van Bruinessen, 1997]]). Musa Anter was assassinated by an undercover Turkish security agency (JÄ°TEM) in September 1992 ([[#calibre_link-137][Romano, 2006]]: 135).
It was in this political hothouse that, by 1974, Abdullah Ăcalan was to be found working in the Ankara Higher Education Union (AYĂD â Ankara YĂŒksek ĂÄrenim DerneÄi). AYĂD based itself, at least partially, on the tradition of an earlier organization, the Guevarist TĂŒrkiye Halk KurtuluáčŁ PartisiâCephe (THKPâC, or Popular Liberation PartyâFront of Turkey). AYĂD provided Ăcalan with the foundations of an ideological, political and strategic outlook. Ăcalan and several other Kurds in AYĂD were not satisfied, however, and they began to develop a separate, distinct âpolitical-ideologicalâ grouping ([[#calibre_link-4][Institut de Criminologie, 1995]]; [[#calibre_link-5][Ismet, 1992]]: 10â11; [[#calibre_link-6][Ersever, 1993]]. See also [[#calibre_link-7][More, 1984]]: 188; [[#calibre_link-8][Heinrich, 1989]]: 42â3; [[#calibre_link-5][Ismet, 1992]]: 9; [[#calibre_link-9][McDowall, 1996]]: 418â19; [[#calibre_link-10][Gunter, 1990]]: 25).
One day in 1974 in the Ankara suburb of Tuzlucayir, between seven and eleven of these militant Kurdish nationalists met and drew up rudimentary plans for the formation of a distinct Kurdish leftist organization, which would have no ties with Turkish leftist groups, all of which had ignored the Kurdsâ specific needs. Ăcalan reportedly asserted at this meeting that the conditions existed for the establishment of a âKurdish national liberation movementâ. Ăcalan was elected the leader of this group in the process of formation, which became known simply as the **Apocular**, or âfollowers of Apoâ, until the provisional name of Ulusal KurtuluĆ Ordusu (UKO, National Liberation Army) was adopted by the group, indicating its intention to eventually undertake âarmed struggleâ ([[#calibre_link-8][Heinrich, 1989]]: 43; Ersever, n.d.; [[#calibre_link-5][Ismet, 1992]]: 10â12).
The PKK later described its initial development as a series of stages ([[#calibre_link-11][**SerxwebĂ»n**, October 1991]]: 4â13). The initial stage, between 1973 and 1977, was as an âideological groupâ. During this period, says the PKK today, a ârevolutionary youth groupâ was established, which was involved mostly in theoretical work â ideological struggle and propaganda. By 1974 this group was already distributing leaflets, in an attempt to draw Kurdish youth and intellectuals towards it. The core, founding members, of the tiny **Apocular** propaganda group abandoned any studies or full-time work they were involved in, to become full-time âprofessional revolutionariesâ ([[#calibre_link-12][PKK, 1991]]; [[#calibre_link-13][Gunes, 2012]]: 99; Ersever, n.d.). As the grouping grew, it maintained its initial struggle â discrediting political rivals (both Turkish and Kurdish leftists), which the group dismissed as ârevisionist and reformistâ. These included several Kurdish groups â including TĂŒrkiye Kurdistan Demokratik Parti, KĂŒrdistan Ulusal KurtuluĆcuları, KĂŒrdistan Ä°Ćçi Partisi, Devrimci Halkın BirliÄi and Halkın KurtuluĆu. The PKK stands accused of physically attacking members of these organizations. On the Turkish left the PKK clashed with the TĂŒrkiye Ä°Ćçi Partisi and the TKPâML/TÄ°KKO, among others. In November 1978 the organizationâs first congress agreed upon a âself-criticismâ of the previous policy of armed confrontation with rival groups, saying that these had been a mistake. Nevertheless occasional armed confrontations continued to occur between the PKK and other organizations for some years, before ceasing altogether.
The movementâs next phase was between 1978 and 1980. This stage saw the party organized and its politics refined, to allow the organization to become a political force. The groupâs ideology and programme were taken to villages as well as to workers. During this three-year period, the initial ideological formation evolved into a political party, the Partiya KarkerĂȘn Kurdistan, which was officially launched on 27 November 1978 in the village of Fis, near Lice, in Diyarbakır province ([[#calibre_link-8][Heinrich, 1989]]: 42; [[#calibre_link-5][Imset, 1992]]: 12â20; [[#calibre_link-11][**SerxwebĂ»n**, October 1991]]: 5). The party issued a founding declaration, asserting that âThe time of revolution has startedâŠâ It added:
For some centuries, the people of Kurdistan have directed a war of liberation against foreign domination and its local collaborators. In order to raise the struggle to the level of a war of national liberation for which the situation is mature, and so as to combine the fight with the class struggle, the Kurdistan Workersâ Party has been founded. It is the new organization of the proletariat of Kurdistan. ([[#calibre_link-7][More, 1984]]: 187â8)
By all accounts, the PKKâs founders were all from humble origins. There were no intellectuals in the very early (pre-PKK) organization, except perhaps Haki Karer, who died early on. The intellectuals were only attracted gradually from the cities of eastern and south-eastern Anatolia.
The story of the PKKâs engagement in political and military struggle up until the present day is told in later chapters. The remainder of the present chapter outlines the PKKâs organizational evolution, dealing with the partyâs reformation in the early 2000s, as well as considering the role played by **Apocular** ideology.
The initial period after Abdullah Ăcalanâs capture was one of great disorientation for the PKK. An estimated total of 1,500 militants left the party between 2003 and 2005. Yet, as Casier and Jongerden aptly point out, it would be foolhardy to gauge the PKKâs strength âin terms of the number of its armed membersâ ([[#calibre_link-14][Casier and Jongerden, 2012]]: 10 n1). They add that the PKK is primarily a political organization, noting Hamit Bozarslanâs assessment that PKK violence âwas rational/instrumental, in the sense that it sought to change the political and juridical status [of the Kurds]â ([[#calibre_link-15][Bozarslan 2004]]: 23, cited in [[#calibre_link-14][Casier and Jongerden, 2012]]).
Stuck in his prison cell, Abdullah Ăcalan nevertheless managed to hold the situation together, calling for a âPreparatory Rebuilding Committeeâ to oversee the PKKâs refounding in 2004. The PKK Ninth Party Congress from 28 March to 4 April 2005 âmarks the PKKâs rebirthâ ([[#calibre_link-14][Casier and Jongerden, 2012]]: 10 n1).
The PKKâs Seventh Extraordinary Party Congress in January 2000 had already officially adopted the policy of striving for a democratic republic. Stressing that the party now sought to move from armed struggle to âdemocratic transformationâ, the same Congress also resolved to replace the ArtĂȘĆa Rizgariya GelĂȘ Kurdistan (ARGK â Peopleâs Liberation Army of Kurdistan) and its political front the ERNK (Eniya Rizgariya Netewa Kurdistan â National Liberation Front of Kurdistan) with the HĂȘzĂȘn Parastina Gel (HPG â Peopleâs Defence Forces) and the YekĂźtiya DemokratĂźk a GelĂȘ Kurd (YDK â Peopleâs Democratic Union) respectively. The YDK worked within the European Kurdish diaspora, until it was superseded by the KordĂźnasyona Civata DemokratĂźk a Kurdistan (KCD â Coordination of Democratic Communities in Kurdistan). Then, in April 2002, attempting to build credibility for its peaceful orientation, the PKK briefly changed its name to the Kongreya AzadĂź Ă» Demokrasiya KurdistanĂȘ (KADEK â Kurdistan Freedom and Democracy Congress). In late 2003, KADEK renamed itself again, now becoming Kongra-Gel (KGK â Kurdistan Peopleâs Congress). Each name change represented a further attempt to change its image and broaden its appeal, as if to say that the ânewâ organization was qualitatively different from the original PKK. In 2005 the KGK returned to the original name: Partiya KarkerĂȘn Kurdistan ([[#calibre_link-16][PKK, 2005]]), apparently deciding that historical continuity with its heritage was most important.
The partyâs initial guerrilla force, formed in 1984, was the HĂȘzĂȘn Rizgariye Kurdistan (HRK â Kurdistan Liberation Force). The PKKâs âarmed struggleâ began officially on 15 August 1984, with attacks by HRK guerrillas in the Eruh and ĆemzĂźnan (Ćemdinli) regions. Announcing its existence, the HRK declared on 15 August 1984:
Patriotic People of Kurdistan! It is time to raise the struggle against colonialism, which aimed to destroy our nation for hundreds of years, it is time to ask for the oppression, torture and cruelty, and the blood we have shed for hundreds of years and have become barbaric more than ever in the last four years. This is the duty of all members of Kurdistan who want an honourable life. ([[#calibre_link-17][Bozarslan, 2002]]: 861)
In an effort to remind the world that the PKK per se was merely a political party with a separate armed wing, the partyâs Third Congress on 25â30 October 1986 changed the name of its fighting force from the HRK to the ARGK. In 2000 the Seventh Extraordinary Congress of the PKK again rebadged the force: the ARGK became the HĂȘzĂȘn Parastina Gel (HPG â Peopleâs Defence Forces). The name change was intended to indicate the new, purely defensive, nature of this armed wing, in line with the PKKâs declared aim of seeking a peaceful settlement to the conflict.
The PKK has a fundamentally political front, the ERNK, formed in March 1985 ([[#calibre_link-8][Heinrich, 1989]]: 43â4). As well as being the leading element in a broader political front, the ERNK until recently had its own reserve guerrilla militia in Turkish Kurdistan, which could be mobilized when necessary ([[#calibre_link-5][Imset, 1992]]: 130â33).
The first guerrilla training camp was established in 1982 in Lebanonâs Bekaâa Valley â which was at the time under Syrian control. In achieving this, the PKK was assisted by the Popular Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PDFLP), a radical armed faction of the PLO, which had its own camp on a plateau adjacent to the PKKâs camp (White, personal observation, Bekaâa, July 1992). In late 1994 and 1995 the ARGKâs strength was variously estimated at between 10,000 and 30,000 active guerrilla fighters ([[#calibre_link-18][Korn, 1995]], 34; [[#calibre_link-19][Panico, 1995]]; [[#calibre_link-20][Kutschera, 1994]]: 14; [[#calibre_link-21][US Department of State, 1994]]; [[#calibre_link-22][Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada, 1996]]), supported by a part-time (ERNK) militia of 75,000. The organization then operated out of Syria, Iran and Iraq ([[#calibre_link-23][Bell, 1995]]; [[#calibre_link-24][**Middle East Times**, 25 Juneâ1 July 1995]]; [[#calibre_link-19][Panico, 1995]]; [[#calibre_link-21][US Department of State, 1994]]). PKK âstaging areasâ in Turkeyâs Munzur, Gabar, Tendurek, Cudi, AÄri and DĂȘrsim (Tunceli) regions were also reported by some sources ([[#calibre_link-19][Panico, 1995]]; [[#calibre_link-22][Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada, November 1996âApril 1998]]).
Following massive pressure from Turkey, Syria largely ejected the PKK in the early 1990s, compelling it to recentre its operations in Iraqi Kurdistan, where the organization established a number of small camps along the border with Turkey, including in Sinaht, Haftanin, Kanimasi and Zap. A few camps equipped with field hospitals, electricity generators and arsenals were also established in Iraqi Kurdistan ([[#calibre_link-25][Jenkins, 2007]]). The headquarters of the PKK is still to be found in the Qandil Mountains, around 100 kilometres from the Turkish border.
ARGK/HPG fighters were uniformed and organized in units, platoons and regiments. The units were further subdivided into Military Units, Local Units and Peopleâs Defence Units. Formally under the authority of the **Serok** and the PKK Central Committee, a Military Council directly supervised them, via a network of subordinate bodies:
Field Commands, Provincial Military Councils, Regional Command Offices and Local Stations. These military forces operate out of three forms of bases, which are identified as (1) Supportive base (2) Main Base and (3) Operations Base. ([[#calibre_link-21][US Department of State, 1994]])
The PKK of today is a far cry from the founding band of ragged guerrillas. What can perhaps best now be termed âthe PKK movementâ (PKK founder Kemal Pir, cited by [[#calibre_link-26][Jongerden and Akkaya, 2014]]) consists of a network of organizations across putative Greater Kurdistan. Apart from the PKK itself, there are also affiliated parties in Iraqi, Iranian and Syrian Kurdistan. The PKKâs affiliate in Iran is the Partiya Jiyana Azad a KurdistanĂȘ (PJAK â Kurdistan Free Life Party), in Iraqi Kurdistan the Partiya Ăareseriya Demokratik a KurdistanĂȘ (PCDK â Kurdistan Democratic Solution Party), and in Syria the PartĂźya YekĂźtĂź a Demokratik (PYD â Democratic Union Party).
The Koma CiwakĂȘn KĂŒrdistan (KCK â Kurdistan Communities Union) is the sovereign authority body of the PKK movement, overseeing the movementâs activities in all parts of Kurdistan. The KCK is an umbrella or executive organization for the entire PKK movement, consisting of the pro-PKK parties and other organizational units throughout putative Kurdistan, including the PYD, the PJAK and the PCDK, as well as the HPG. Several civil society organizations are also KCK members. Abdullah Ăcalan is the honourable president of the KCK ([[#calibre_link-27][Ăandar, 2012]]: 82).
According to Ăcalan, the PKK has âa very natural structure; it hasnât got many formalitiesâ (interview by [[#calibre_link-28][White, 2000]]: 212). It is also true, of course, that the PKK has an impressive transnational organizational configuration, at the peak of which is the **Serok**, or Leader. Initially the party had the structure of a typical Communist Party: a leader, supported by a Central Committee, and a party Congress that was the organizationâs highest formal authority. As we shall see below, the party has evolved considerably since 1978.
Abdullah Ăcalan remains accepted by the organization as its leader, despite his life sentence ([[#calibre_link-29][Brandon, 2007]]; [[#calibre_link-28][White, 2000]]: 189â90). In some ways, this is purely symbolic, since subordinate leaders run the day-to-day operations of the PKK. And yet that was always the case, prior to Ăcalanâs capture â hence the lack of âformalitiesâ. As a âcharismaticâ leader, Ăcalanâs role is to âinspireâ the organization and to provide its strategic direction â while intervening, as necessary, in prosaic organizational matters ([[#calibre_link-28][White, 2000]]: 210). Ăcalan was also confirmed as president by the PKK Sixth Party Congress, in March 1999. Certainly, the **Serokâ**s successful declaration that the PKK ceasefire that began on 1 September 1998 was to resume, along with the current peace process, speaks volumes for the continuing effectiveness of his leadership from prison. His ability to lead under such difficult circumstances has not gone without challenge within the organization, however.
After Ăcalanâs capture, the Turkish press speculated about a âleadership struggleâ it claimed was being waged among Cemil Bayık, Osman Ăcalan and Mustafa Karasu ([[#calibre_link-30][**HĂŒrriyet**, 14 March 1999]]). Meanwhile the Turkish daily **Milliyet** reported that Cemil Bayık had been appointed the PKKâs âhigh authorityâ, while Abdullah Ăcalan remained the organizationâs formal leader ([[#calibre_link-31][**Milliyet**, 3 March 1999]]).
The PKK Central Committee swiftly appointed a new Ruling Council, consisting notably of Cemil Bayık (the most senior military wing commander), Osman Ăcalan (Abdullah Ăcalanâs brother and a senior military wing commander) and Murat Karayılan (another senior military wing commander) ([[#calibre_link-32][Med TV, 18 February 1999]]).
Interestingly, the first issue of the PKKâs publication **SerxwebĂ»n** after Ăcalanâs capture confirmed the new leadership structure. In addition to the usual pictures of Abdullah Ăcalan on the front page, this issue also carried photos of the next six most senior leaders: Cemil Bayık, Osman Ăcalan, Nizamettin TaĆ, Murat Karayılan, Sakine Cansız and Mustafa Karasu. All were small and of uniform size, but that of Bayık was prominent. Most of those pictured on the front page had articles in the issueâ again, Bayıkâs was prominent ([[#calibre_link-11][**SerxwebĂ»n**, February 1999]]: 1, 8, 9, 10, 11, 24).
As the PKKâs new âhigh authorityâ, Cemil Bayık was subject only to Abdullah Ăcalanâs veto ([[#calibre_link-31][**Milliyet**, 3 March 1999]]). Bayık has served in the PKK leadership as a military commander, a Central Committee member and on the Presidential Council. His personal history gives every indication that he is a thoughtful man, capable of independent thinking and with a demonstrated ability to strive for his own perspectives within the organization, when circumstances permit this. Successful in his studies, he secured a state scholarship to the Malatya Teacher Training College, after which he pursued university study in Ankara.
Bayık successfully asserted his own authority in Abdullah Ăcalanâs absence, initially reversing the PKKâs drive towards peace with Ankara, and putting it once again on a war footing. Given that his authority in the organization derives substantially from his historical closeness to Ăcalan, however, Bayık can only lead by continually deferring to him. Shortly after his arrest, Ăcalan (through his lawyers) relayed successive letters over some weeks directing the organization to adhere to the âceasefire announced on September 1, 1998â. These communications were initially successfully ignored by Bayık (**Reuters**, Istanbul, 28 March 1999), who apparently argued that Ăcalanâs declarations were the product of torture ([[#calibre_link-33][PKK Central Committee, 15 March 1999]]). Yet, merely by continuing to issue statements via his lawyers, Ăcalan was very soon able to rein in Bayık and return the PKK to his perspective ([[#calibre_link-28][White, 2000]]: 191).
Ăcalan is well aware of the dangers that Bayık potentially poses. Perhaps significantly, he used his courtroom testimony during his trial to criticize Bayık, alleging that he prefers to stay behind the front lines, and reportedly accusing him of killing seventeen wounded PKK fighters in 1992, to avoid his own capture ([[#calibre_link-34][Jamestown Foundation, 2008]]). Hidir Sarikaya, a former PKK member, further alleged in 2007 that Bayık had executed around 300 PKK members for âdisloyaltyâ since the 1980s ([[#calibre_link-35][**Cumhuriyet**, 2007]]), although there exists no independent proof. There have been no allegations that he has executed PKK members in recent years.
Cemil Bayik in some ways represents the âoldâ PKK â especially his ignoring of the ceasefire after Abdullah Ăcalan was captured. Ironically, it is Bayıkâs legacy as a PKK âhawkâ that makes him valuable in Ăcalanâs strategy. With Ăcalan in prison, the **Serok** cannot warn Turkey too strongly of the consequences were it to walk away from the peace process. Ăcalan seems genuinely to want a lasting peace, but he also perceives the need to keep pressuring Ankara to keep its word This is where Bayık comes in handy.
Bayıkâs interaction with reporters on October 2013 â when he warned of the danger of civil war ([[#calibre_link-36][Candar, 2013c]]) â illustrates this. Claiming that Turkey is supporting armed gangs in Syrian Kurdistan (West Kurdistan), Bayık warned:
If the Turkish government continues with its war against the people of west Kurdistan by arming bandit groups, then the Kurdish people have the right to carry their war to Turkey. ([[#calibre_link-36][Candar, 24 October 2013]])
Furthermore, Bayık remains a PKK leader with an alternative perspective, should the current peace process definitively fail. He takes the lead in the organizationâs relations with Iran ([[#calibre_link-37][**Tempo**, 18 October 2007]], cited in [[#calibre_link-34][Jamestown Foundation, 2008]]). Nevertheless, he was supplanted by Murat Karayılan as acting leader between 1999 and 2013 ([[#calibre_link-38][Shekhani, 2013]]; [[#calibre_link-39][**AkĆam**, 2012]]; [[#calibre_link-40][**Independent**, 2007]]; [[#calibre_link-41][**Middle East Newsline**, 2008]]). Since mid-2013, however, Cemil Bayık and BesĂȘ Hozat have been the first joint acting leaders, supplanting Karayılan. The four most senior leaders of the PKK are: Cemil Bayık, BesĂȘ Hozat, followed by Murat Karayılan and the current military commander, Dr Fehman Huseyin ([[#calibre_link-42][Kurdpress News Agency, 2013; Shekhani, 2013]]; [[#calibre_link-37][**Tempo**, 2007]]; [[#calibre_link-43][Arsu, 2013]]).
BesĂȘ Hozat, for her part, strongly advocates the PKKâs feminist positions, as may be expected. A co-founder of the PKK, she is serious-minded and an eloquent speaker. Given that she is an Alevi from DĂȘrsim, Hozatâs appointment will please âAlevi Kurdsâ close to the Turkish opposition party the CHP ([[#calibre_link-44][Gediman, 2013]]; [[#calibre_link-45][Ăandar, 2013b]]). Alevi PKK members are known to have had reservations about the peace process, which requires them to make up with Ankara â which supports Sunni opposition forces in Syria against that countryâs Alawite regime. Alevism is distinct from Alawism, but the two religions are distantly related. Alevi PKK members have been unhappy about making peace with Ankara while Turkey is opposing Assad ([[#calibre_link-46][Uslu, 2013]]) and arming Syrian opposition fighters.
Fehman Huseyin (âDoctor Bahozâ â a Syrian-born Kurd from Western Kurdistan) is in charge of training guerrilla fighters. Accustomed to the exigencies of guerrilla warfare, where commanders must of necessity make independent decisions if they are to survive, Huseyin is also known to act on his own initiative and has broad appeal among Syrian Kurds ([[#calibre_link-47][Pollock and Cagaptay, 2013]]). His inclusion in the central leadership team, as a capable military leader, is also a warning to Turkey to be wary of abandoning the peace process.
In contrast to Cemil Bayik and Doctor Bahoz, Murat Karayılan possesses a personality similar to that of Abdullah Ăcalan. When interviewed by the author in mid-1992, Ăcalan communicated a very quiet, withdrawn personality â an embodiment of the PKK/Ăcalan ideal of the âKurdish personalityâ ([[#calibre_link-28][White, 2000]]: 137â9). Like the **Serok**, Karayılan weighs his words very carefully, pausing when necessary, and closing his eyes as he searches for the right words. He projects a conciliatory outlook, stressing the desire for non-violence and peaceful resolution. This reflects Ăcalanâs current preferred perspective of seeking democratic reform. Karayılan has been appointed leader of the PKKâs HPG guerrilla force. This positions him as a potential counterweight to the âhawkâ Cemil Bayık, should the need arise.
The new party leadership was reportedly required by Abdullah Ăcalan in a letter to the PKK leadership ([[#calibre_link-48][**Taka**, 2013]]). Turkish journalist Emrullah Uslu suggests that Karayılan secured his post as HPG leader âfor the sake of the peace processâ ([[#calibre_link-46][Uslu, 2013]]). Uslu reports that an Iranian general had approached the previous PKK leadership group, urging it not to enter into a new ceasefire with Ankara. The general presumably offered some inducements to the PKK. However, Karayılan rebuffed him. Uslu speculates that by removing Karayılan and appointing the âpro-Iranianâ Bayık as leader, âthe PKK has demonstrated a desire to work with Iranâ ([[#calibre_link-46][Uslu, 2013]]). This is certainly plausible, as it fits the PKK leaderâs perceived desire to strengthen his hand against Ankara, to compel it to honour its commitment to the peace process.
Founded by a grouping of Kurds who had been active in the Turkish left, the **Apocular** advanced from being a tiny propaganda group in 1974 to a fledgling political party, the PKK, in late 1978. The party met formidable obstacles â not only when it took up armed struggle in 1984 after a protracted period of preparation, but also internally, with an estimated 1,500 militants leaving between 2003 and 2005, due to serious disorientation following their leaderâs arrest. The **Serok** nevertheless contained the problem by summoning a âPreparatory Rebuilding Committeeâ to oversee the PKKâs refounding in 2004. The PKK Ninth Party Congress the following year resolved to move from armed struggle to âdemocratic transformationâ. The contemporary âPKK movementâ now comprises a complex of organizations. In mid-2013 Cemil Bayık and BesĂȘ Hozat became the PKKâs first joint acting leaders upon Abdullah Ăcalanâs request.
The PKKâs initial name of Ulusal KurtuluĆ Ordusu (UKO â National Liberation Army) declared its perspective of armed struggle. The organizationâs founding ideology was a mix of Kurdish nationalism and radical MarxismâLeninism, leading it to designate Turkish Kurdistan as an âinternal colonyâ. Just as the countries of Asia and Africa were once characterized by MarxistâLeninists of all stripes as being subjected to âimperialist dominationâ, the **Apocular** asserted that the Turkish state â while itself being subjected by the West â had acted in a similar manner towards Turkeyâs Kurdistan, with a fascistic feudal class exploiting it ([[#calibre_link-498][Silverman, 2013]]).
These ideas emerged and gradually gained support between 1973 and 1977. During this period, **Apocular** cadres took the ideas to Kurdish intellectuals, workers and villagers â to any Kurds who would give them a hearing. The outcome of this patient process was the formation of the PKK in 1978.
This emerging new movement faced an ideological climate in which the state and Turkish nationalists denied the very existence of the Kurdish people generally â and readily resorted to violence in an effort to stifle the movement. PKK co-founder Sakine Cansız argues that this âdenialismâ (of the Kurdish reality) was a very tangible obstacle, preventing the **Apocular** from âexpressing and representingâ their ideas. The killing of group member Aydın GĂŒl in 1977 â widely believed to have been done by the Halkın KurtuluĆu leftists ([[#calibre_link-13][Gunes, 2012]]: 79)**,** although this cannot be proved â was a seminal event for the new movement, reports Cansız, who states that it was through GĂŒlâs murder that
the use of violence was brought to the agenda. Resorting to violence was as a matter of fact a necessity against this obstacle, and we grounded our movement on ideological and political struggle and revolutionary violence. Necessary defense was actually a way of struggle that our movement [was] based on since the very beginning. ([[#calibre_link-499][**ANF News**, 27 November 2013]])
The **Apocular** advocated the destruction of all such âcolonialismâ, by violently ejecting the various state forces âoccupyingâ the different sectors of Kurdistan as a whole. In Turkish Kurdistan this led to armed confrontation with the Turkish state, beginning in 1984. The PKK was not the only Kurdish radical organization with such an analysis at the time. But it became the âthe most radical, most strictly organized and most violentâ of these dozen or so Kurdish parties ([[#calibre_link-500][van Bruinessen, 1995]]: 2â3; [[#calibre_link-490][Jongerden and Akkaya, 2011]]: 123â5). This makes it imperative to outline the nature of the PKKâs early physical struggles.
The 18 May 1977 killing of a PKK cadre, Haki Karer, in a Antep coffee shop convinced the **Apocular** that they needed to move towards the establishment of a party. Cansız reports: âThis incident brought along the need to give a more serious fight. With the determinant [**sic**] approach of the leader, an organization was brought into existence in Kurdistanâ ([[#calibre_link-499][**ANF News**, 27 November 2013]]).
Organized training of a guerrilla force began early the following year in Lebanonâs Bekaâa Valley. The 1980 military coup disrupted the PKKâs operations in Turkey, but by 1982 a force of 300 fighters had been established, based in Southern Kurdistan (Kurdish Iraq), from where they crossed into Turkish Kurdistan, beginning in 1984. The partyâs Second Congress, held 20â25 August 1982, set the PKKâs military strategy, comprising three phases: defence, balance and offence. Reminiscent of Maoâs strategy of protracted war, this envisaged an armed struggle proceeding in stages from asymmetrical guerrilla attacks up to conventional war, aiming to eject Turkey from Turkish Kurdistan ([[#calibre_link-9][McDowall, 1996]]: 420; [[#calibre_link-490][Jongerden and Akkaya, 2011]]: 130, 136, 139 n6).
The initial targets for these guerrillas were widely disliked repressive landlords and tribal chiefs ([[#calibre_link-501][Eccarius-Kelly, 2011]]: 110â11), whom the PKK accused of collaboration with Turkish colonialism. The first such target, in 1979, was Mehmet Celal Buçak, a big landlord who owned over twenty villages and was a prominent member of the Justice Party. This attempted assassination failed. However, a number of subsequent efforts, against similar targets, were successful ([[#calibre_link-490][Jongerden and Akkaya, 2011]]: 139 n6).
In 1984 PKK armed units began reconnaissance operations in Turkish Kurdistan. On 15 August 1984 simultaneous armed raids by PKK forces were staged on Jandarma police stations in the Eruh and Ćemdinli (ĆemzĂźnan) regions of ColemĂȘrg (HakkĂąri) ([[#calibre_link-502][Jongerden, 2008]]: 128). Several soldiers were killed or wounded in this twin operation. Guerrillas distributed propaganda and hung banners on coffee houses. These were the first direct attacks on state representatives. The guerrilla war had now been officially launched (Jongerden and [[#calibre_link-490][Akkaya, 2011]]: 131).
In a harsh move to stem the rising tide of attacks, the Turkish state deforested swathes of Turkish Kurdistan and destroyed over 3,000 Kurdish villages, creating an estimated 2 million Kurdish refugees â many thousands of whom fled to Iraqi Kurdistan ([[#calibre_link-500][van Bruinessen, 1995]]: 11). From 1985 the state also employed âvillage guardsâ (**korucular**, rangers) â pro-government militias armed by the government to fight the PKK in certain Kurdish villages ([[#calibre_link-13][Gunes, 2012]]: 104; [[#calibre_link-500][van Bruinessen, 1995]]: 11). These included notorious criminal bands, such as that of Tahir Adıyaman. Some big landowners (**aÄhalar**) pocketed their menâs **korucu** wages, enriching themselves in the process. David McDowall reports:
Those tribes refusing a government invitation to join the village guards risked retribution. Some were expelled from their villages, which were then razed. In the case of one chief, the security forces persuaded him to reconsider his position by executing his brother in front of his villagers. ([[#calibre_link-9][McDowall, 1996]]: 423)
The PKK killed many **korucular**, in some cases attacking their families as well ([[#calibre_link-9][McDowall, 1996]]: 423â4; [[#calibre_link-500][van Bruinessen, 1995]]: 4).
Many guerrillas were killed and thousands imprisoned and brutalized. Martial law had been in place across Turkey until 1983. This was made permanent in ten Kurdish provinces with the 1987 declaration of the **OlaÄanĂŒstĂŒ Hal Bölge ValiliÄi** (OHAL â Governorship of the Region under Emergency Rule). Entire communities were exiled ([[#calibre_link-503][Silverman, 2013]]; [[#calibre_link-13][Gunes, 2012]]: 104).
In the face of the stateâs response, the PKK now turned to strengthening its military capabilities, resolving at its Third Congress in October 1986 to transform the HRK into the ARGK guerrilla army ([[#calibre_link-13][Gunes, 2012]]: 104). Significantly, especially when compared to the PKKâs later development, the Congress decided that military development was the central objective of the movement in that period, with even âideological-politicalâ, cultural and âexternal relationsâ being subordinated to it. The Congress envisaged that these other aspects would âemerge from the peopleâs warâ. As if to underline the dominance of the Kalashnikov and the RPG over other forms of struggle in that period, the Congress also resolved to introduce a PKK âcompulsory conscription lawâ ([[#calibre_link-13][Gunes, 2012]]: 104â5), according to which each Kurdish family was expected by the PKK to provide one guerrilla fighter.
By the end of the 1980s the ARGK guerrilla forces not only increased appreciably numerically but also succeeded in building connections to local populations ([[#calibre_link-504][Levitt, 1991]]: 24). Local PKK militias (**milis**) were established and ARGK attacks on military targets intensified, especially during 1987, when multiple deaths of military personnel in single operations occurred ([[#calibre_link-13][Gunes, 2012]]: 105â6). ARGK units in the mid-to late 1980s managed to remain in villages â and from 1987 in some towns â for several hours, while making continuous propaganda ([[#calibre_link-505][Rathmell and Gunter, 2014]]; [[#calibre_link-13][Gunes, 2012]]: 106).
Clashes between the ARGK and Turkish security forces only intensified in the 1990s. Battles now lasted for days on end and the area of PKK activities widened. Cross-border attacks by Turkish forces into PKK bases in Iraqi Kurdistan began in late 1991, but were unable to stem the tide of ARGK attacks and the PKKâs growing popularity ([[#calibre_link-13][Gunes, 2012]]: 106â7). âThe people of Kurdistan ⊠is now presented for the first time with the opportunity to assume powerâ declared the PKK ([[#calibre_link-506][**Kurdistan Report**, 1991]]: 1). Convinced of this possibility, Cemil Bayık stated in late 1998: âPresident Apo has explained on various occasions that it is quite possible that the Kurds will be able to claim a peace for themselves by the year 2000, and we are convinced that this can be achievedâ ([[#calibre_link-507][**Kurdistan Report**, 1998]]). In reality the situation was, militarily speaking, approaching stalemate (Silverman, 2013). Neither side could destroy the other. Turkish security forces possessed overwhelming military force, but could not bring this to bear effectively in the harsh mountainous terrain and given the PKKâs growing popular support among Kurds ([[#calibre_link-504][Levitt, 1991]]: 24; [[#calibre_link-13][Gunes, 2012]]: 107). The PKK in this period imagined that it could secure victory by military means, but this was merely a fantasy.
The period in Turkish Kurdistan surveyed in this chapter so far, from 1973 to 2004, witnessed the unfolding of a guerrilla struggle. Beginning with tiny forces, the movement that became the PKK managed eventually to attract mass support, in both the villages and the towns of Turkish Kurdistan ([[#calibre_link-504][Levitt, 1991]]: 24).
As the guerrilla war expanded and deepened across Turkey, the state responded with devastating force. One consequence of this was a massive new Kurdish migration westwards, to the cities of western Turkey. But PKK operations spread to these as well, increasing the stateâs pressure on the Kurds, pushing growing numbers out of Turkey altogether. Some, as we have seen, fled to Iraqi Kurdistan. A larger number uprooted their families and sought refuge in Western Europe â especially in Germany. This provided the PKK with the opportunity to spread its increasingly formidable supportersâ network ([[#calibre_link-508][Bozarslan, 1997]]: 358).
The PKK has never been content to limit its activities to the four corners of Kurdistan. It has long been committed to organizing support for its goals among Kurds globally. Alynna J. Lyon and Emek M. Uçarer observed in 1998 that âcurrent technological innovations provide a conduit for diffusion of contentious politics from state to stateâ ([[#calibre_link-509][Lyon and Uçarer, 1998]]). They pointed out further that âthe rapid growth of communications and transportation provides the mechanism in which Kurdish dissension is sent.â They note that these technological tools are effortlessly relocated from one country to another.
This explains how the PKK has also established itself firmly in the Kurdish diaspora. Hamit Bozarslan ([[#calibre_link-508][1997]]: 358) estimates that the PKK has a âmassive presenceâ in all sectors of the Kurdish diaspora, but particularly in Germany â the West European country with the most Turkish Kurds (**Reuters**, Ankara, 25 November 1998). The PKK reportedly divided Germany into eight âregionsâ, around thirty âsub-regionsâ and numerous âlodgesâ or boroughs, all under the umbrella of YEK-KOM, the Federation of Kurdish Associations in Germany ([[#calibre_link-509][Lyon and Uçarer, 1998]]).
The PKK continues to accumulate prodigious amounts of money from Kurds in Europe. It also maintains full-colour printing presses that produce large quantities of political and cultural books, magazines, newspapers, pamphlets and posters in various languages, which â together with cassettes and DVDs â are distributed as far afield as Australia. Sophisticated PKK websites are based in Europe. The PKK also maintains facilities in Europe for the ideological and cultural training of Kurdish youth.
It is estimated that in excess of 1,300,000 Kurds live in Western Europe ([[#calibre_link-72][**Todayâs Zaman**, 9 August 2012]]; [[#calibre_link-510][**CNN**, 11 January 2013]]; [[#calibre_link-511][**Ethnologue**, 2015a]]; [[#calibre_link-512][**Wereldjournalisten.nl**, 23 May 2007]]; [[#calibre_link-513][Institut Kurde de Paris, 2015; ]][[#calibre_link-514][Northern Ireland Neighbourhood Information Service, 2011]]; Scotland Census, 2013; [[#calibre_link-515][**Ethnologue** 2015b]]; [[#calibre_link-516][**Jyllands Posten**, 8 May 2006]]; [[#calibre_link-517][**Christian Science Monitor**, 12 January 1998]]; [[#calibre_link-518][**Ethnologue**, 2015c]]; [[#calibre_link-519][**Ethnologue**, 2015d]]; [[#calibre_link-520][Statistics Finland, 2015]]; [[#calibre_link-521][**Ethnologue**, 2015e]]; [[#calibre_link-522][**Dublin People**, 11 February 2013]]; [[#calibre_link-523][**Cyprus Mail**, 22 May 2010]]; [[#calibre_link-524][**Rudaw**, 28 November 2011]]; [[#calibre_link-525][**Times of Malta**, 25 October 2014]]). Diaspora Kurds live principally in Germany (800,000 Kurds; [[#calibre_link-72][**Todayâs Zaman**, 9 August 2012]]) and France (150,000 Kurds; [[#calibre_link-510][CNN, 11 January 2013]]). Pro-PKK Kurds in Germany and France especially have long ago âsuccessfully organized themselves along political lines in Europeâ ([[#calibre_link-526][Eccarius-Kelly, 2002]]: 91, 92).
The PKKâs ability to mobilize large numbers of its supporters in Germany has a solid history. In April 1990, the PKK organized 10,000 Kurds to demonstrate in Cologne against Turkeyâs military attacks on Kurds. Some 8,000 gathered on 9 December 1991 in Bremen to celebrate the PKKâs thirteenth birthday. A 120-person hunger strike was begun simultaneously in Hamburg and Kiel, also in the early 1990s, at the same time as a 700-person hunger strike in Brussels ([[#calibre_link-509][Lyon and Uçarer, 1998]]).
On 25 August 1992, protesting the then recent killings by the Turkish army in the south-west of Turkey, 2,000 demonstrated in front of the Turkish consulate in Hamburg ([[#calibre_link-509][Lyon and Uçarer, 1998]]). In the same period, the PKK organized human blockades of German highways as a form of protest, including on the Franco-German border. In one such protest, pro-PKK demonstrators crossed the border on foot without valid visas. The border guards were forced to permit the massive crowd to cross and proceed to their cultural festival in Frankfurt â which was attended by 45,000 Kurds.
On 24 June 1993, pro-PKK Kurds (some of whom were heavily armed) stormed the Turkish consulates in Munich, Marseille and Bern, taking embassy personnel hostage. More or less simultaneously, many Turkish banks and travel agencies were attacked in major German cities, causing heavy damage. Perhaps realizing that it had gone too far, the PKKâs front organization in Europe claimed that these actions had all occurred âspontaneouslyâ. Nevertheless, strong suspicions arose that these actions had been orchestrated by the PKK from outside Germany ([[#calibre_link-509][Lyon and Uçarer, 1998]]).
The French and German governments banned the PKK and its front organizations after these incidents, in November 1993. In retaliation, supporters and members of the banned organization staged new demonstrations, including the occupation of a pro-PKK cultural centre that had been closed under the ban. Protesters threatened to immolate themselves if they were forcibly removed ([[#calibre_link-509][Lyon and Uçarer, 1998]]).
The US Department of State ([[#calibre_link-527][1995]]) reports that the PKK clashed âfrequentlyâ with police in some Western European countries during 1994, in a strategic targeting of âWestern interests in Europeâ. On 22 March 1994 the PKK blocked highways in Germany between Karlsruhe and Stuttgart ([[#calibre_link-509][Lyon and Uçarer, 1998]]). It organized demonstrations in several German cities, some of which ended in violent conflicts with the police ([[#calibre_link-527][US Department of State, 1995]]). When German police killed a Kurdish youth in Hanover, the PKK organized sit-ins at the German embassy in Athens. It did the same at Denmarkâs German consulate, in October 1994, when British immigration authorities detained Kani Yılmaz, the senior PKK leader in Europe. At this time the PKK also opened offices of the ERNK in Italy and Greece ([[#calibre_link-527][US Department of State, 1995]]).
Despite the ban on the PKK, the party laid on busloads of Kurds to show that nothing would prevent them from organizing in Germany. Some 200,000 PKK supporters rallied in Bonn on 17 June 1995, brandishing ERNK flags and Ăcalan posters and chanting **BijĂź PKK!** (Long live the PKK!). Throughout the mid-1990s pro-PKK demonstrators frequently grappled with police in Germany as they attempted to disperse these illegal assemblies. On 16 March 1996, some 2,000 PKK members and sympathizers gathered in Dortmund when their demonstration permit was refused, and attacked the police. These PKK mobilizations were frequently multi-country affairs. For instance, busloads of PKK supporters from Belgium attempting to link up with the Dortmund protesters on 16 March 1996 were stopped at the German border. So some 1,500 of them crossed the border on foot ([[#calibre_link-509][Lyon and Uçarer, 1998]]: 45â6).
In an interview with Med TV on 24 March 1996, Ăcalan warned Europe â especially Germany â of serious disturbances if Turkeyâs government did not respond positively to the PKK ceasefire in Turkey. Ăcalan threatened to make an assault on Turkish holiday resorts, which are very much favoured by German tourists. Claiming that âGermany has launched a war against the PKKâ, he added ominously: âShould Germany decide to stick to this policy, we can return the damage. Each and every Kurd can become a suicide bomberâ ([[#calibre_link-509][Lyon and Uçarer, 1998]]).
Vera Eccarius-Kelly notes that the PKKâs demands â Kurdish-language education, independently managed Kurdish radio and television stations, and the legalization of Kurdish political parties â all parallel requirements for Turkeyâs membership of the European Union. She submits that this provides PKK leaders with potential leverage in future negotiations by Turkey over accession and encourages Kurdish leaders to reach out to Kurds pursuing university degrees in Western Europe ([[#calibre_link-526][Eccarius-Kelly, 2002]]: 114). Despite granting in principle permission for Kurdish-language teaching, Turkeyâs Higher Education Council permitted only two universities (in MĂȘrdĂźnĂȘ and Amed) to create Kurdish Language and Literature departments â with only postgraduate students granted access. A third universityâs application was rejected by authorities as an attempt to âsupport terrorismâ. Students at all other levels (including school) were denied admittance to Kurdish-language programmes across Turkey. Generally speaking, âThe use of the Kurdish language is still seen as a sign of support for âseparatist activitiesââ ([[#calibre_link-526][Eccarius-Kelly, 2002]]: 168).
Young educated Kurds from as far afield as Australia have long been invited to Europe by pro-PKK organizations to participate in its key European undertakings â especially its media projects. Med TV, a PKK-dominated television station ([[#calibre_link-163][Barkey and Fuller, 1998]]: 33) based in London and Brussels, formerly broadcast eighteen hours daily. The broadcaster began transmission in 1995; within six months it was apparently attracting an audience of 50 million, in thirty-four countries â including Turkey â according to one usually conservative source ([[#calibre_link-164][Gunter, 1997]]: 54). Apart from cultural programmes in Kurdish languages, the station also showed ARGK guerrillas in the field, sometimes even engaged in battle. On 22 March 1999 Britainâs Independent Television Commission closed the station (Med TV press releases, 1 April and 23 April 1999). Med TV was succeeded by Medya TV, which began transmitting from Belgium via a satellite uplink from France, until its licence was in turn revoked by French authorities on 13 February 2004. A few weeks later Roj TV began transmission from Denmark. The PKK was once again showing it could not be silenced.
From time to time there have even been PKK guerrilla training camps in European countries. Reported camps have been dismantled ([[#calibre_link-528][**Expatica**, 2004]]; [[#calibre_link-529][**NIS News Bulletin**, 2004]]) at Liempde and near Eindhoven in the Netherlands and in Belgium ([[#calibre_link-530][United Nations OHCHR, 2004]]: 276â7).
The PKK has a sophisticated leadership structure in some European countries ([[#calibre_link-531][Bongar et al., 2006]]: 97). The formidable power of the PKKâs political and communications network was dramatically verified by its campaign for the liberty and physical safety of Abdullah Ăcalan, in late 1998 and early 1999. Ordered to leave Syria by President al-Assad, the PKK leader was variously reported to be in Russia, Lebanon, North Korea, Greece and Kenya. When he was arrested in Rome on 13 November 1998, the PKKâs illegal networks in Germany staged demonstrations attracting over 2,000 Kurds in several German towns ([[#calibre_link-532][**AFP**, 17 November 1998]]).
Meanwhile, the PKK Central Committee beseeched Kurdish âpatriotic peopleâ:
Our nationâs every true eye, ear and heart must be upon Rome and by the side of our national leadership. All who have the means to do so must make their way to Rome, and stand up for our leadership. For every honourable Kurd there is but one task, at home and abroad, in the situation in which we find ourselves: That is to march, to demonstrate, to join on hungerstrike [**sic**] and to undertake whatsoever democratic action may be necessary to stand up for our leadership. No acts other than those of a democratic nature must be resorted to. (PKK Central Committee, 1998)
The Kurds indeed stood up for their leader. When Ăcalan formally requested political asylum in Italy on 15 November, a couple of thousand Kurds had already congregated outside the military hospital near Rome where Ăcalan was being held. Demonstrators arrived from Germany, Romania, Denmark, Russia, Armenia, the Netherlands, Sweden, Finland, Australia, North America, Syria, Lebanon, Switzerland, France, Austria and other lands (**Reuters**, Rome, 15 November 1998; **Reuters**, Beirut, 16 November 1998).
âAn eye for an eye! A tooth for a tooth! We are with you until death, Ăcalanâ, chanted the Kurdish demonstrators in Rome (**Reuters**, 17 November 1998). An estimated 10,000 marched through the city demanding asylum for Ăcalan on 18 November ([[#calibre_link-533][**ABC News**, 1998]]). On the **Voice of America** Amberin Zaman reported that Ăcalan was being lionized in the Italian media as a âfreedom fighterâ ([[#calibre_link-534][Zaman, **Voice of America**, 16 November 1998]]).
Demonstrations and hunger strikes took place in many other countries, as well as in Amed and Istanbul. Pro-PKK websites provided contact points in Rome for Kurds arriving there. The appeals of the PKK Central Committee to the Kurdish diaspora were carried around the globe via the Internet. The diasporaâs strong response proved the tremendous mobilizing power of the PKKâs political and communications network. From an initial fighting force of a hundred guerrilla fighters, the PKK had transformed itself into a movement with mass appeal to Kurds in both Turkey and the Kurdish global diaspora.
From its original ideological melange of Kurdish nationalism and radical MarxismâLeninism, the **Apocular** slowly became more sophisticated in its guiding ideas and organizational structure. The PKK soon became the most radical, the most violent and the best organized of all Kurdish parties in the Turkish state. Turkish repression convinced it to deepen its military preparations. A guerrilla training camp was established in Lebanon in 1978. Guerrilla attacks began in 1984, meeting fierce opposition from Turkeyâs army. Nevertheless the PKK Third Party Congress in 1986 resolved that military development remained the partyâs central objective. This approach brought the PKK a great deal of support in the villages and towns of Turkish Kurdistan, especially from the 1990s onwards. However, the cost to the Kurdish population was so heavy that many fled to Western Europe. Yet this provided the PKK with the opportunity to construct a formidable supportersâ network across the continent.
Peace continued to elude the KurdishâTurkish conflict. In fact, for a long time the conflict grew visibly bloodier with the passage of time. The 1980s and 1990s were the peak of the PKKâs armed struggle against the Turkish state. Numerous authors, and of course the Turkish state itself, have consistently alleged that the PKK during those two decades was guilty of perpetrating widespread atrocities against civilians, including liquidating entire villages ([[#calibre_link-422][White, 1997]]: 227). As the present author has shown, several of these acts were actually perpetrated by Turkish Special Forces ([[#calibre_link-422][White, 1997]]: 249 n5). One well-known case is that of the massacre of 12 July 1993, in which at least twenty-six villagers (including fourteen children) were murdered at GiyadĂźn (Diyadin) village in Van province. Both the pro-PKK newspaper **ĂzgĂŒr GĂŒndem** and the local PKK commander denied the organzationâs involvement, blaming the massacre on the crack Turkish army **Ăzel Timler** (Special Teams) ([[#calibre_link-423][**ĂzgĂŒr GĂŒndem**, 1993]]). Witnesses confirmed to the **Turkish Daily News** that the Turkish state, in the form of **Ăzel Timler**, was behind both this massacre and an earlier one, which had also been attributed to the PKK. Independent investigators, including Deniz Baykal, leader of the Kemalist Cumhuriyet Halk Partisi, also confirmed that state forces were responsible for the killings ([[#calibre_link-168][**Turkish Daily News**, 1993]]; [[#calibre_link-20][Kutschera, 1994]]: 14). The Turkish stateâs portrayal of the PKK as wantonly violent terrorists was facilitated by the rigid censorship of events in Kurdistan and the obliging attitude of most of the Turkish press.
Nevertheless, Abdullah Ăcalan conceded in 1989 that civilians â including women and children â had been killed by the PKK ([[#calibre_link-424][**Ä°kibine DoÄru**, 1989]]: 23; [[#calibre_link-81][Ăcalan, 1999]]: 114). Those classified as civilians by the **Serok** did not include the **Korucular** employed by the Turkish state as a bulwark against the PKK, on the grounds that the **Korucular** were no longer civilians but a traitorous portion of the security forces.
A deadly pattern has marked the KurdishâTurkish conflict in Turkey: wholesale bloodletting is followed by fruitless attempts at peacemaking â which are followed by even worse bloodletting. The PKKâs unilateral ceasefire declaration on 1 September 1998 did not result in a viable peace process and violent attacks continued from both sides. Ankara excused itself with the traditional mantra that it was only âfighting terroristsâ. The PKK retorted that the state was uninterested in peace and that the guerrillas needed to defend themselves against the security forces. Ăcalanâs capture unleashed a particularly ferocious disruption of the proclaimed ceasefire, when PKK forces wreaked furious havoc on the state. The **Serok** managed to restore the ceasefire on the PKK side, but still no viable peace process emerged. Ankara did introduce some very timid reforms in this period, to appease its Kurdish population. Most notably, in 2003 limited use of the Kurdish language was permitted in state television broadcasts. This was not designed as a government confidence-building measure to prepare the way for a lasting peace process, however. The prime function of such limited reforms at that time was to attempt to wean Kurds off supporting the PKK.
Speaking subsequently of the period from late 2004 to May 2011, Abdullah Ăcalan stated that the Turkish stateâs illegal paramilitary organization Jandarma Ä°stihbarat ve Terörle MĂŒcadele (JÄ°TEM â Intelligence and Fight against Terrorism Gendarmerie) âattempted two or three coupsâ against the Turkish government. A meeting between George W. Bush and Recep Tayyip ErdoÄan on 5 November 2007 saw the United States openly switch its support from the army and begin âto support the AKPâ, according to Ăcalan. The **Serok** concurred with the verdict (Uslu, 8 September 2008) of the former JÄ°TEM founder, retired Brigader General Veli KĂŒĂ§ĂŒk, that the generals were âsold outâ at the BushâErdoÄan summit ([[#calibre_link-425][Ăcalan, 2013]]).
On 1 June 2004 the PKK/Kongra-Gel finally formally ended the ceasefire that had been in existence since August 1999. The Kurdish party claimed that the state was continuing to attack it. Armed clashes between Kongra-Gel and Turkish security forces recommenced in late 2004, proceeding on an escalating scale into 2005. Already in May 2004 the PKK had warned that its unilateral ceasefire would end soon, due to what it alleged were âannihilation operationsâ against its forces ([[#calibre_link-426][Cutler and Burch, 2011]]). On 2 July 2005, six people were killed and fifteen injured by a bomb planted by âKurdish guerrillasâ, on a train travelling between ElĂązÄ±Ä and Tatvan in Bingöl province. Attacks attributed to Kurdish nationalists multiplied throughout July ([[#calibre_link-426][Cutler and Burch, 2011]]).
The full truth regarding these incidents may never be known. Nevertheless, evidence suggests that Kongra-Gel might not have been responsible for those attacks that it did not claim. At least some of the incidents were the work of the shadowy TeyrĂȘbazĂȘn Azadiya Kurdistan (TAK â Kurdistan Freedom Falcons). First appearing in 2004, the TAK maintained a website ([[http://www.teyrebaz.com][www.teyrebaz.com]]) between 2 April 2006 and 6 February 2012. The TAK is alleged to be either (i) a splinter group of former PKK/Kongra-Gel members disgruntled with the organizationâs perspective of seeking a peaceful settlement, or (ii) a front for the PKK/Kongra-Gel. PKK leaders deny there is any connection with their group ([[#calibre_link-427][National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism, 2013]]). Lending some credibility to the first assessment, one analysis claims that TAK sought to attract recruits who believed that the PKK/Kongra-Gel was âtoo softâ ([[#calibre_link-34][Bekdil/Jamestown Foundation, 2008]]). Academic Francesco F. Milan (2012) describes TAK as a âhard-line offshootâ of the PKK/Kongra-Gel.
A press release dated 5 August 2006 published on TAKâs website stated that the group was dissatisfied with the struggle of Kongra-Gel and its armed wing, the HĂȘzĂȘn Parastina Gel, for âtaking political balances into consideration⊠We are calling on the HPG to become more active in their struggle.â The same statement noted that TAK militants had for a period fought within the ranks of the PKK, but they had concluded that the latterâs approach of trying to seek peace with the state caused the PKK to become weak. Therefore, the statement continued, the TAK âseparated from the organization and established the TAKâ. Nevertheless, in justifying its attacks, the TAK repeatedly referred to âChairman APO our historical leaderâ, concluding: **YaĆasın BaĆkan APO**! (Long Live President APO!) (TAK website, 5 August 2006).
It is impossible to state with certainty what the real nature of TAK is, due to the extremely shadowy nature of the group. However, in the past **Kontrgerilla** have been deployed by illegal Turkish armed units, to perpetrate atrocities that are falsely attributed to the PKK, in order to both discredit the organization and prevent a peace settlement between the PKK and Ankara. In other words, it is quite feasible that TAK comprises (at least in part) former PKK fighters, yet acts solely under the direction of Turkeyâs âdeep stateâ. It is known that sections of the Turkish state have no wish to see a peace settlement successfully concluded.
TAK has perpetrated a series of bombings: a supermarket; a tourist resort near Antalya ([[#calibre_link-426][Cutler and Burch, 2011]]); the coastal resort town of ĂeĆme; a bus station in Istanbul; a district office of the Justice and Development Party in Istanbul; and in Kızılay ([[#calibre_link-426][Cutler and Burch, 2011]]; [[#calibre_link-427][National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism, 2013]]).
The TAK website contained details of numerous TAK operations, including the burning of Turkish forests in no fewer than fifteen regions. These acts were said to be revenge for âfascist Turkeyâsâ depredations against the Kurdish population in DĂȘrsim, Bingöl, Ćirnex, ColemĂȘrg, Amed and ElazıÄ. Two attacks were claimed in Istanbulâs Sultanahmet district, as were many other acts of sabotage in the city (TAK website, 2 April 2006 to 6 February 2012).
TAK vowed that its âattacks would continue and become more violentâ, targeting the âmilitary bureaucracy, economy and tourismâ as its âtop priority targets, while the state of terror does not stopâ. TAK also promised to attack the âtraitors and compradors ⊠military officers, civil bureaucrats, fascists, traitorsâ who make Kurdish peopleâs lives âa living hellâ. The website contained detailed illustrated technical guides for the preparation of radio-controlled time bombs (TAK website, 2 April 2006 to 6 February 2012).
TAKâs terrorism heightened anti-PKK feelings among ordinary Turks â and ultra-nationalist Turkish forces sought to capitalize on this. For example, a bombing in Amed on 12 September 2006 killed ten civilians. The TĂŒrk Ä°ntikam Tugayı (TÄ°T â Turkish Revenge Brigade), a violent Turkish ultra-nationalist organization with strong military connections ([[#calibre_link-428][**Zaman**, 2007]]), claimed responsibility for the attack, threatening to kill ten Kurds for every Turk killed in the conflict ([[#calibre_link-429][**Voice of America News**, 2009]]). A TAK bombing in Mersin on 30 August 2006 was condemned by the PKK. The latter declared yet another ceasefire on 1 October 2006. Nevertheless minor clashes continued in the south-east as Turkish security forces continued operations ([[#calibre_link-430][MAR Project, 2010]]).
On 22 May 2007 the Turkish capital Ankara was the target of a suicide bombing, which killed eight and wounded over a hundred. The Turkish authorities attributed the attack to the PKK. However, the organization hotly denied this ([[#calibre_link-431][Goktas, 2007]]; [[#calibre_link-432][**Peopleâs Daily Online**, 23 May 2007]]). Whoever was responsible, the incident was a perfect opportunity for the Turkish military to announce an imminent attack upon PKK strongholds in Kurdish northern Iraq. On 2 June the United States withdrew all its troops from Iraqi Kurdistan. An estimated 100,000 Turkish troops were mobilized on the border between Turkey and Iraq.
On 5 June 2007 shelling and air strikes by the Turkish army were reported, targeting PKK bases in Iraqi Kurdistan ([[#calibre_link-433][**Oakland Tribune**, 7 June 2007]]; [[#calibre_link-434][Torchia, 8 June 2007]]). Two days later, several thousand Turkish troops apparently crossed into Iraq in a âhot pursuitâ raid against the PKK there. Turkeyâs foreign minister denied that his troops had entered Iraq. Nevertheless two senior Turkish security officials admitted that the armed incursion had indeed taken place, acknowledging that the troops ventured almost 2 miles inside Iraq. This attack marked a decisive ratcheting up of the AKP governmentâs conflict with the Kurdish nationalists, given that the last major Turkish incursion into northern Iraq had been as far back as 1997, when almost 50,000 troops were sent to the region ([[#calibre_link-435][**BBC News**, 9 June 2015]]; [[#calibre_link-433][**Oakland Tribune**, 7 June 2007]]). The new incursion was preceded by the declaration of a three-month period of martial law in Kurdish areas near the Iraq border and a ban on civilian flights to the area ([[#calibre_link-434][Torchia, 2007]]).
The Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), an Iraqi Kurdish party, reported that Turkish artillery shells hit the Sidikan area in Irbil province during this operation, affecting nine villages. It also confirmed that the Iranian military shelled the adjacent area in Iranian Kurdistan at about the same time. âHuge damage was inflicted on the areaâ, the PUK stated, adding that residents had âleft their houses, fearing for their livesâ. Lt Ahmed Karim of the Iraqi border guards force told the **Associated Press** that seven Turkish shells landed on a forest near Sakta village in the Batous area ([[#calibre_link-434][Torchia, 8 June 2007]]). The justification for this sortie was a PKK grenade attack that killed seven soldiers and wounded six at an army base in DĂȘrsim on 4 June 2007 (**BBC News**, 4 June 2007).
In late September and early October 2007, similar attacks upon the Turkish military paved the way for severe measures against the **Apocular** by the Turkish state. On 27 September, two Turkish Jandarma policemen were killed in Bitlis province by a bomb allegedly planted by âKurdish separatistsâ ([[#calibre_link-426][Cutler and Burch, 2011]]). Then on 7 October a force of forty to fifty PKK fighters ambushed an eighteen-man Turkish commando unit in the Gabar mountains, killing fifteen and injuring three, making it the deadliest PKK attack since the 1990s ([[#calibre_link-430][MAR Project, 2010]]).
The Turkish parliament passed a law sanctioning renewed Turkish military action inside Iraqi territory. On 21 October some 150 to 200 PKK fighters attacked an outpost in YĂŒksekova, manned by a fifty-strong infantry battalion. The outpost was overrun. Twelve were killed and seventeen wounded; in addition eight Turkish soldiers were captured. The Kurdish fighters then withdrew into Iraqi Kurdistan, taking the eight captive soldiers with them; though they later released them unharmed ([[#calibre_link-30][**HĂŒrriyet**, 4 November 2007]]). The PKK force was heavily armed â including with a Russian-made Doçka heavy anti-aircraft machine gun ([[#calibre_link-30][**HĂŒrriyet**, 23 October 2007]]), as well as RPG-7 rocket launchers and C-4 explosives ([[#calibre_link-30][**HĂŒrriyet**, 25 October 2007]]). The stage was now set for the bloodiest fighting in years between Turks and Kurds, as the Turkish military responded by bombing PKK bases on 24 October.
In late October 2007 Turkeyâs air force again bombed PKK targets inside Iraqi Kurdistan and 300 Turkish troops âadvanced about six milesâ, killing thirty-four PKK fighters ([[#calibre_link-436][Tran, 2007]]). This offensive was supplemented on 28 October by a major operation in Tunceli province involving 8,000 Turkish troops with air support ([[#calibre_link-436][Tran, 2007]]). From 16 December an aerial offensive unfolded against PKK camps in Iraqi Kurdistan ([[#calibre_link-430][MAR Project, 2010]]). Operation Sun, a major Turkish cross-border offensive, started on 21 February 2008. Up to 10,000 Turkish forces took part in this offensive, supported by âair assetsâ ([[#calibre_link-30][**HĂŒrriyet**, 24 October 2007]]; [[#calibre_link-30][**HĂŒrriyet**, 25 October 2007]]). This was a major offensive designed to remove the PKK threat in Iraqi Kurdistan. A reported total of twenty-seven Turkish soldiers and 724 PKK militants were killed ([[#calibre_link-430][MAR Project, 2010]]; [[#calibre_link-437][Yuksel, 2008]]). Operation Sun was a total failure, serving only to politically reinforce ErdoÄan and weaken the army. Smaller-scale Turkish operations against PKK bases in Iraqi Kurdistan continued ([[#calibre_link-430][MAR Project, 2010]]).
PKK attacks continued throughout 2008, with casualties on both sides. During the course of the conflict between 1984 and September 2008, the Turkish military had succeeded in exacting a heavy toll from the PKK â reportedly killing 32,000 PKK militants and capturing 14,000 ([[#calibre_link-154][**HĂŒrriyet**, 16 September 2008]]). One-sided âceasefiresâ had come and gone, but the only result had been a steady increase in bloodshed.
Such inter-ethnic bloodshed hardly augured well for the prospect of peace breaking out any time soon. Yet the year 2009 opened with the Turkish government permitting Turkeyâs first ever Kurdish-language television channel, TRT 6, to launch. In addition the state announced plans to rename Kurdish villages that had Turkish names, expand freedom of expression, restore Turkish citizenship to Kurdish refugees and decree a âpartial amnestyâ for PKK fighters. Then the pro-Kurdish Demokratik Toplum Partisi (DTP â Democratic Society Party) secured an impressive increase in its vote in local elections held in the Kurdish south-east on 29 March 2009: it polled almost 50 per cent of total votes in the ten provinces where it was successful, winning ninety-nine municipalities ([[#calibre_link-438][Ăandar, 2009]]: 16; [[#calibre_link-439][Casier, Jongerden and Walker, 2011]]: 108, 109). Encouraged by these developments, the PKK chose this conjuncture to announce its sixth unilateral ceasefire, after the **Serok** commanded them on 13 April 2009 to âend military operations and prepare for peaceâ ([[#calibre_link-440][**FM News Weekly**, 2011]]). The Turkish stateâs initial response was not positive, as April 2009 also saw a wave of repression directed at the DTP. In the wake of the partyâs electoral triumph, three DTP vice presidents and around fifty other party activists and supporters were interned in the Kurdish south-east, as well as in Ankara and Istanbul ([[#calibre_link-64][Casier, Jongerden and Walker, 2011]]: 106).
Mid-2009 saw the unveiling of the AKPâs so-called âKurdish Openingâ, later rebadged the âDemocratic Openingâ to appease Turkish nationalists, and subsequently renamed the ânational unity projectâ ([[#calibre_link-438][Ăandar, 2009]]: 13). This was the first time since Turgut Ăzalâs hesitant overtures to the Kurds in 1991 that any Turkish government had attempted reconciliation, consultation and negotiation with the Kurds, in a declared effort to wind down the PKK insurgency. President Abdullah GĂŒl declared: âThe biggest problem of Turkey is the Kurdish problem⊠It has to be solvedâ, adding that the country had a âhistoric possibility to solve it through discussionsâ. The PKKâs acting leader at the time, Murat Karayılan, told reporters that the guerrillas were ready to lay down their arms and that, if necessary, the Kurdish nationalist parliamentary Demokratik Toplum Partisi could negotiate in its place ([[#calibre_link-441][Christie-Miller, 4 August 2010]]).
Abdullah Ăcalan remarked that the PKKâs âceasefire has started a new eraâ, adding âWhat is asked of us is to deepen this processâ ([[#calibre_link-179][Uzun, 2014]]: 16). He continued:
We never just took up arms for the sake of it. All we did was to open a road for our nation to freely develop. But we had no other means of struggle to adopt: that is why we had to take up arms and have brought the struggle to this stage. The Kurdish situation is, at heart, a TurkishâKurdish situation. Our struggle has come to the point of the Turkish public accepting the Kurdish identity; it has seen it necessary to recognise Kurdish existence and solve the problem. ([[#calibre_link-179][Uzun, 2014]]: 16)
Unfortunately the process was âpoorly prepared and hastily implementedâ on both sides ([[#calibre_link-442][Jenkins, 2013]]). The state even failed to produce a legal framework for any PKK fighters laying down their arms. The PKK, for its part, acted with a degree of immaturity, parading a delegation of PKK fighters and their families who had legally entered Turkey:
A total of 34 persons, of which eight were PKK guerrillas from the Qandil mountains and 26 from the Mahmur refugee camp in Northern Iraq, entered Turkey as a âpeace groupâ at the border town of Silopi. The group members were welcomed by several ⊠thousand enthusiastic Kurds making victory signs in a welcoming ceremony organized by the Kurdish legal party DTP. Mayors and parliamentarians from [the] DTP attended the ceremony. ([[#calibre_link-439][Casier, Jongerden and Walker, 2011]]: 106 n6)
Everywhere the guerrillas went, they were greeted by mass demonstrations of enthusiastic Kurds â probably encouraged by the PKK, although in truth the demonstrations were spontaneous outbursts on the part of the Kurdish population. Both the state and the PKK were already aware of the latterâs high levels of continuing popular support, so the demonstrations were gratuitous. By encouraging (and in some cases organizing) them, the PKK unwittingly gave hard-core Kemalists a stick to break the AKPâs resolve, as an ultra-nationalist Turkish mobilization against the incipient peace process gathered force. Broadcast throughout Turkey, the âwelcome homeâ demonstrations were perceived as PKK victory parades ([[#calibre_link-443][Gunter, 2012]]). Protests against a perceived sell-out to Kurdish nationalists occurred in several Turkish cities. âTerrorists have become heroesâ, complained Deniz Baykal, then leader of the opposition CHP. The head of the Turkish General Staff, General Ä°lker BaĆbuÄ, added that âno one can accept what happenedâ ([[#calibre_link-444][GĂŒzeldere, 2010]]; [[#calibre_link-445][Seibert, 2009]]).
Ankara had ambitiously hoped that the returning guerrillas would be the start of a flood of PKK militants coming back to Turkey and that this process would culminate in âthe PKK dissolving itselfâ. But, in the end, the process fizzled out as suddenly as it had begun. The delegation of eight PKK fighters had been promised immunity from prosecution, but this was reversed, and the guerrillas were all arrested under anti-terrorism laws. A second detachment of PKK returnees (from Europe) did not materialize, as Turkey declined them travel documents ([[#calibre_link-442][Jenkins, 2013]]; Seibert, 2009).
Secret negotiations between the Turkish state and the PKK continued behind the scenes after the demise of the âKurdish Openingâ. These eventually lead to talks in Norway (the âOslo Processâ), with the state apparently scaling down its offensive operations ([[#calibre_link-442][Jenkins, 16 January 2013]]) and the PKK continuing to observe the âunilateral ceasefireâ it had announced in April 2009 ([[#calibre_link-31][**Milliyet**, 28 May 2009]]; [[#calibre_link-446][Uslu, 2009]]). The Turkish general election of 12 June 2011 meant that the process officially went into limbo ([[#calibre_link-442][Jenkins, 2013]]), although the PKK announced the extension of its ceasefire until 15 July, following a request from Abdullah Ăcalan ([[#calibre_link-447][Ciwan, 2013]]; [[#calibre_link-31][**Milliyet**, 28 May 2009]]; [[#calibre_link-446][Uslu, 2009]]). The PKK added that the ceasefire might be extended further, until 1 September, dependent upon developments. Unimpressed, General Ä°lker BaĆbuÄ responded that the PKK had only two options: âlaying down its arms or we will take them from their handsâ (**BĂŒgĂŒn**, 2009; [[#calibre_link-446][Uslu, 2009]]).
It did not take much for the promise of peace to be dashed. On 11 December 2009 the Constitutional Court of Turkey (Anayasa Mahkemesi) banned the DTP â some of whose leaders had been interned since April â setting the scene for the partyâs leaders to be tried later for terrorism. Some 1,400 DTP members were arrested, 900 of whom were held in custody. Then, in late December the Amed Chief Prosecutorâs Office issued warrants for the arrest of eighty officials and representatives of the newly formed BDP, a formally legal replacement party for the now illegal DTP. Those arrested included several current or recent Kurdish party mayors â including âthe mayors of Batman, Siirt, Cizre, Amed-Kayapınar, Amed-SĂ»r, Ăınar, WeranĆar (ViranĆehir), and Kızıltepe, and the former mayor of Dicleâ ([[#calibre_link-439][Casier, Jongerden and Walker, 2011]]: 107 and n8). In mid-February 2010 a further wave of repression saw the detention of dozens of BDP executive members. All of the DTP/BDP arrestees were charged with membership of the Turkey Council of the Koma CiwakĂȘn KĂŒrdistan, and for ârunning municipalities under the direction of the PKKâ. A total of 151 Kurdish politicians and activists were eventually charged with âaiding the PKKâ ([[#calibre_link-439][Casier, Jongerden and Walker, 2011]]: 107 and nn8, 9; [[#calibre_link-448][Marcus, 2010]]).
In response Kurds demonstrated throughout Turkey, resulting in several deaths after the mobilizations were attacked by security forces ([[#calibre_link-440][**FM News Weekly**, 2011]]). The PKK certainly participated actively in these actions. Despite the supposed continuing ceasefire, on 7 December the PKK raised the temperature by ambushing Turkish soldiers in ReĆadiye, in Central Anatolia, killing seven and wounding three. Taking responsibility for this incident on 10 December 2009, the PKK explained that the attack was perpetrated by a unit acting on its own volition. Contradictorily, however, the PKK statement added that the PKK command centre does not issue orders to assault, and that military units have the right to take the initiative ([[#calibre_link-195][**HĂŒrriyet Daily News**, 10 December 2009]]; [[#calibre_link-449][Arsu, 2009]]).
Following a brief period of calm, one Turkish soldier was killed and two others injured during a clash with the PKK in HakkĂąri province on 14 March 2010 ([[#calibre_link-450][**Reuters AlertNet**, 14 March 2010]]). Another Turkish soldier was killed and a further two wounded on the same day during clashes in Batman province ([[#calibre_link-451][**World Bulletin**, 2010a]]). Two PKK militants were killed and three soldiers wounded in Siirt province on the same day ([[#calibre_link-452][**Kurdish Globe**, 2010]]). Then, only three days later, on 19 April, two Turkish police officers were killed when suspected PKK fighters opened fire on their police patrol car with automatic weapons in the northern Turkish province of Samsun (**Press TV**, 19 April 2010).
On 1 May 2010 the PKK attacked a patrol of Turkish soldiers in DĂȘrsim. It then conceded that the ceasefire had totally abandoned. Abdullah Ăcalan added a dramatic flourish to this announcement from his prison cell, declaring that he was formally abandoning all attempts at rapprochement with the Turkish authorities, and handing that task to his military commanders ([[#calibre_link-430][MAR Project, 2010]]). In a context in which only the **Serok**âs repeated intervention was shown to be effective in preventing the PKK from returning to an ongoing war strategy, this was a calculated move against his Turkish jailers, designed to shake them with the spectre of a return to total war on both sides. The immediate consequence, however, was a further intensification of armed conflict on both sides.
The PKK attacked a naval base in Ä°skenderun on 31 May with âmissilesâ (**Todayâs Zaman**, 1 June 2010). This was followed by clashes on 18 and 19 June ([[#calibre_link-453][**World Bulletin**, 2010b]]), and then three further clashes in HakkĂąri and ElĂązÄ±Ä provinces. An additional attack in ColemĂȘrg took place on 20 July. All of these confrontations claimed the lives of both PKK fighters and Turkish troops. On 21 July PKK acting leader Murat Karayılan told the BBC that the guerrillas would disarm in return for greater political and cultural rights for Turkeyâs Kurds through dialogue. âIf the Turkish state does not accept this solutionâ, Karayılan warned, âthen we will declare democratic confederalism independentlyâ ([[#calibre_link-435][**BBC News**, 21 July 2010]]).
The Turkish state was now in no mood for dialogue, however. Casualties on both sides had once again been mounting shockingly. The Turkish military announced it had killed a total of forty-six PKK militants during operations over the previous month in the Kurdish south-east ([[#calibre_link-454][**World Bulletin**, 2010c]]). Around 100 military personnel had already been killed by this point in 2010 â more than the previous yearâs total death toll ([[#calibre_link-454][**World Bulletin**, 2010c]]).
Then, on 12 August 2010, the PKK seized upon the imminent holy Muslim month of Ramadan to declare a new ceasefire ([[#calibre_link-455][**AK News**, 2010]]). This was extended in November up to the Turkish general election of 12 June 2011, even though the PKK later stated that over eighty military operations had been waged against it by the Turkish state during this period.
A PKK raid on a hydroelectric power plant in the Dinar Deresi region of Amed resulted in the deaths of one Turkish soldier and nine PKK fighters on 7 September ([[#calibre_link-456][**Kurd Net**, 7 September 2010]]), while a Turkish soldier was killed when an alleged PKK landmine exploded in the Eruh district of Siirt province on 12 September ([[#calibre_link-195][**HĂŒrriyet Daily News**, 12 September 2010]]). Then at least nine Kurdish civilians were killed and three others reportedly injured on 16 September, when a roadside bomb exploded under their minibus in ColemĂȘrg ([[#calibre_link-457][**Al Jazeera**, 2011]]; [[#calibre_link-426][Cutler and Burch, 2011]]). The PKK was blamed for the bombings (**BBC News**, 16 September 2010). However, the PKK denied responsibility for a suicide bomb attack that left thirty-two people injured in Istanbul on 31 October (**BBC News**, 1 November 2010).
Kurdish unrest continued into the New Year. Dozens of young Kurdish protesters, their faces concealed by scarves, throwing Molotov cocktails and stones were dispersed by police using tear gas and water cannon in Istanbul on 16 January 2011. The violence began after a 2,000-strong rally organized to protest against the trial of the 150 Kurdish activists, including many elected officials, accused of links to the PKK (**AFP**, 16 January 2011).
ErdoÄan adopted a very hard-line stance on the Kurdish issue in the months that followed, refusing any concessions to PKK demands and stepping up military operations in the Kurdish south-east. In response the PKK once more ramped up its attacks, while denouncing Prime Minister ErdoÄan for alleged âinsincerityâ ([[#calibre_link-442][Jenkins, 2013]]). Peace now looked further away than ever. Hostilities once again escalated on both sides.
Led by their Kurdish deputies and mayors, some 3,000 Kurds filled the streets of Amed on 24 March 2011, demanding their rights and calling for an end to the conflict with the PKK. The authorities banned the demonstration, deploying armoured vehicles to block the protesters. Protesters blocked traffic in protest, chanting âKurdistan will be the tomb of fascismâ and other PKK slogans. A small group threw firecrackers at police, who unleashed tear gas and arrested five people. Addressing demonstrators, BDP chairman Selahattin DemirtaĆ demanded the right to education in Kurdish, the release of imprisoned activists, the end of operations against the PKK, and the removal of the electoral threshold of 10 per cent of votes required to enter parliament. âWe shall stay on the streets until the government takes concrete steps for these four applicationsâ, vowed DemirtaĆ (**AFP**, 24 March 2011) âThis decision is ⊠fascist. We cannot take part in an unfair, undemocratic, electionâ, he declared (**ANF News**, 19 April 2011).
The BDP leader threatened to boycott the legislative elections set for June 2011, after the YĂŒksek Seçim Kurulu (YSK â High Election Board) banned twelve BDP candidates, including Leyla Zana (**AFP**, 19 April 2011). The authoritiesâ ban on the candidates sparked angry protests by thousands of Kurdish demonstrators in Amed, who pelted riot police with stones, while chanting **BijĂź Serok Apo!** (Long Live Leader Apo!). Police responded with tear gas, water cannon and batons. At least five protesters were arrested. Several Kurds were injured in a similar demonstration in Van. Istanbulâs Taksim Meydanı (Taksim Square) saw a sit-in by 3,000 pro-Kurdish protestors. Groups of youths attacked subway stations, school buildings and a post office with stones and Molotov cocktails, after police forcibly dispersed protesters. Demonstrators also targeted buses, cars, fire trucks and journalists. The security forces responded with tear gas (**AFP**, 19 April 2011).
New disturbances occurred the following day in Amed, as young protesters battled security forces, while chanting pro-PKK slogans. Several protesters were killed and a number injured. Sixteen demonstrators were arrested. Apparently alarmed by this escalation of events, President Abdullah GĂŒl met on the same day with Selahattin DemirtaĆ and Parliamentary Speaker Mehmet Ali Ćahin (**AFP**, 20 April 2011).
A Kurdish protester was killed and several others injured on 20 April by police gunfire in the small town of Bismil, near Amed, at a rally to protest the invalidation of Kurdish candidates for the June general election. BDP leader DemirtaĆ accused police of opening fire on demonstrators, killing one and wounding at least four. **Agence France Press** (**AFP**, 16 May 2011) later confirmed this accusation.
Armed incidents once again gradually escalated. Thus, on 1 April, seven suspected PKK guerrillas were killed by a police Jandarma unit near the town of Hassa in Osmaniye province, while trying to enter Turkey from Syria. The Kurdish fighters reportedly fired on the soldiers, who had ordered them to surrender. Six Turkish soldiers were wounded in the clash, one of whom later died (**AFP**, 1 April 2011; 2 April 2011).
A Kurdish protester died when police retaliated after facing an âintense barrageâ of molotov cocktails, stones and fireworks from some 800 protesters in Bismil. The angry demonstration followed the disqualification of several prominent Kurds from running in coming parliamentary elections. A statement from local government officials did not specify the cause of the protesterâs death. Police made a forceful intervention against demonstrators with tear gas, plastic bullets and water cannon. Protestors shouted **KĂźn giráčin! KĂźn giráčin!** (Revenge! Revenge!) and other pro-PKK slogans. Sixteen demonstrators were arrested. A few hours after the incident, youths set fire to the offices of the ruling AKP (**AFP**, 20 April 2011; 16 May 2011).
Before this deadly incident, DemirtaĆ was scheduled to have that very same evening a meeting with President GĂŒl in Ankara, to find a solution to the issue of invalidation by the electoral authorities of seven nominees on an independent party list. DemirtaĆ apparently cancelled this meeting following the protestorâs death. Once again, a violent incident had undermined a move towards peace. However, Kirdar Ăzsoylu, vice president of the High Election Board behind the controversial decision, ostensibly taken on account of the criminal records of the would-be candidates, nevertheless tried to calm spirits after the incident: âI hope that our board will decide in favor of human rights and democratic rightsâ, adding that the YSK would begin reviewing the nominations the next day (**AFP**, 20 April 2011).
At a campaign rally at Bayburt in north-east Turkey on 20 April, Prime Minister ErdoÄan denounced what he termed âvandalismâ in the south-east, accusing the BDP of encouraging young Kurds to protest violently and throw molotov cocktails. In Istanbul, BDP supporters had tried earlier that day to close the two bridges crossing the Bosporus to traffic, but police dispersed the group. A roadside bomb exploded on Istanbulâs outskirts, slightly injuring two people. Istanbulâs governor blamed the PKK for this attack, which may well have been the case, as the organization undoubtedly now wielded tremendous influence among Kurds in the city. The **Apocular** had clearly concluded from the rebuffs to the PKKâs ceasefires that only violent struggle would open up the road to resolution of the Kurdish issue. Earlier, Kurdish protesters had stormed the local headquarters of the ruling Justice and Development Party in Bismil, setting it on fire, causing extensive damage but no casualties (**AFP**, 20 April 2011).
On 22 April, the YSK agreed to authorize the applications of six of the seven Kurdish nominees it had initially excluded from the ballot. Several small groups met that evening in Amed, the main city in the south-east, to celebrate peacefully the YSKâs decision (**AFP**, 20 April 2011).
Then some thirty-five people, including local leaders of the BDP, were arrested by police early on 25 April in ColemĂȘrg, accused of belonging to the so-called âurban networkâ of the PKK, the KCK (**AFP**, 25 April 2011; 4 May 2011). Armed clashes continued to exact a growing death toll, as a peace settlement eluded the two sides (**AFP**, 28 April 2011).
In a spectacular attack on the same day near Kastamonu in northern Turkey, guerrillas using machine guns and grenades ambushed the police escort of Prime Minister ErdoÄan, killing one policeman and wounding another. The prime minister was not in the convoy at the time (**AFP**, 5 May 2011). Turkish security sources attributed the assault to the PKK, but the organization did not initially claim the attack. Finally, on 6 May, the PKK claimed the attack, announcing in a statement that the assault âwas made by our members in retaliation for the terror exercised by the police on the Kurdish peopleâ, adding that the attack âtargeted police ⊠not civilians or the Prime Ministerâ (**AFP**, 6 May 2011).
On 5 May the BDP again threatened a boycott of the parliamentary elections set for 12 June, if Turkish authorities kept arresting Kurdish activists and continued military operations against the PKK. The BDP announced its âdetermination to continue to build a democratic and autonomous Kurdistan and organize legitimate resistance to attacksâ. ErdoÄan rejoined: âThe BDP seeks to achieve its objectives with the support of terroristsâ (**AFP**, 5 May 2011).
The BDP is the latest in a series of five pro-Kurdish parties, beginning with the Halkın Emek Partisi (HEP â Peoples Labour Party), which was founded in July 1990. The mere fact that these parties have been established on a non-Turkish basis â on the foundation of Kurdishness â profoundly insults the official Kemalist basis of Turkish society. Each of the predecessor parties was closed down by the Turkish state, accused by Ankara of being tools of the PKK. Members of these parties have been raided by police, pilloried in the media as âterroristsâ â even though the parties have never advocated violence or outright separatism â and imprisoned. It is true that all of the parties have consistently advocated dialogue between Ankara and the PKK. For Turkish ultra-nationalists, that alone is tantamount to acceptance of âKurdish separatismâ. And the partiesâ leaders have not endeared themselves to the Turkish public by being photographed with PKK guerrillas and declaring that Abdullah Ăcalan is a leader of the Kurdish people ([[#calibre_link-195][**HĂŒrriyet Daily News**, 22 May 2012]]).
Yet the fact remains that these pro-Kurdish parties have all secured substantial electoral support in Kurdish regions. In the June 2011 election the BDP increased its number of representatives in the Turkish Assembly by more than one-third, to become the fourth largest party in the parliament. Forbidden by the state from openly supporting the PKK, ordinary Kurds nevertheless flocked to support the BDP, as they did its predecessors.
Arguably, the BDP (like its predecessors) has always been Ankaraâs best hope as an intermediary with the PKK insurgents. PKK leaders have repeatedly stated that they are willing to accept the BDP playing this role, and the party enjoys a high degree of credibility among ordinary Kurds. Indeed, no other grouping in Turkey â with the exception of the PKK itself â has as much credibility with ordinary Kurds. Hence, despite the AKPâs Turkish nationalist base, the government party has no option but to interact meaningfully with the BDP if it wishes to secure a viable, lasting, peace.
ErdoÄanâs reiterated charge that the BDP are âterroristsâ and his governmentâs excalating attacks on the party bode ill for the chance of a successful, peaceful settlement between Ankara and the PKK. Speaking on the television station Kanal D, veteran journalist Mehmet Ali Birand â who in 1992 published a collection of interviews with Abdullah Ăcalan â claimed: âErdoÄan wants to take the [ultranationalist far right] MHPâs votes, so he led with nationalist politics and attacked the Kurdsâ, accusing them of threatening national unity ([[#calibre_link-458][Birand, 2012]]). The PKK, meanwhile, âshows its muscles and demonstrates that it defends its communityâ, he added (**AFP**, 6 May 2011). Meanwhile, Kurdish nationalist icon Leyla Zana declared that, throughout her years of imprisonment by the Turkish state, âI never stopped believing in the democratic fight. My morale is high. Iâm hopeful, and that is my only capitalâ (**AFP**, 15 May 2011; see also [[#calibre_link-459][European Parliament, 2009]]).
Ankaraâs condemnation of both the PKK and its legal interlocutor the BDP left no option for either of these parties but to resist the government as best it could. And so armed clashes and killings continued â on 7 May 2011 in NisĂȘbĂźn (Nusaybin) district (**AFP**, 7 May 2011); on 13 and 14 May in Uludere in Ćırnak province and in HakkĂąri province (**AFP**, 14 May 2011). Thousands of Kurds â including BDP members â clashed with police in mid-May, in Amed, Siirt and Batman. In Amed protesters threw molotov cocktails at the police. Clashes also took place in Istanbul (**AFP**, 16 May 2011). The PKK was accused of planting bombs in Nusaybin and Cizre in Ćirnex the day before a visit by ErdoÄan on 23 May and near a police academy in a prosperous Istanbul residential area on 26 May (**AFP**, 26 May 2011).
In a bold step, on 1 June 2011 ErdoÄan called for a resolution of the Kurdish conflict at an election rally in Amed, the unofficial âcapitalâ of Turkish Kurdistan. The prime minster promised the benefit of investment in Kurdish-population regions but made no commitment to the political reforms demanded by Kurdish nationalists. âWe have prepared the ground for a resolution processâ, ErdoÄan told a rally held under the protection of 5,000 police officers. He promised to launch major infrastructure projects for the region, to lift it out of its economic backwardness, including the renovation of the historic centre of Amed; the construction of a new airport; a dam; new hospitals and highways; as well as leisure facilities on the banks of the Tigris, on the city outskirts. The prime ministerâs speech was punctuated with references to Turksâ and Kurdsâ common Islamic values. He also attacked his partyâs main competitor in the region, the BDP. âTaking strength from the PKK, the BDP wants to divide usâ (**AFP**, 1 June 2011).
Opportunities for a peaceful settlement had continually arisen during the 1980s and 1990s. The PKKâs repeated unilateral ceasefires had met no constructive response from Ankara, which for a long time remained focused on a solely military solution. In this period the military remained dominant in Turkish politics. Even President Ăzalâs hesitant âKurdish Openingâ could not bear fruit, due to its lack of a legal framework for PKK fighters to lay down their arms and to the PKKâs immature response to the initiative.
The BDP made impressive advances during the 2011 Turkish general election of 12 June 2011, winning a record thirty-six seats in the Kurdish south-east. This was even more than the ruling AKP won within the region. Six of the elected BDP deputies were in prison at the time of their election, but the Turkish authorities did not release any of them immediately. It was not until January 2014 that five of the deputies were released, leaving Hatip Dicle still behind bars. Matters worsened when the constitutional court subsequently stripped Dicle of his elected office. Initially released from prison due to his election to parliament in the constituency of Diyarbakır (East), Dicle was subsequently returned to jail by the High Council of Elections. The High Election Board upheld this decision on 21 June 2011 (**AFP**, 22 June 2011; [[#calibre_link-460][Kurdpress News Agency, 8 January 2014]]).
Ahmet TĂŒrk, president of the Kurdish umbrella organization the Demokratık Toplum Kongresi (DTK â Democratic Society Congress), immediately warned that the decision to strip Hatip Dicle of his office was âa decision to take Turkey into chaos ⊠to push our people to an environment of conflictâ, adding accusingly: âThe state government and judiciary try to block our efforts to create a democratic political baseâ for a solution to the Kurdish conflict. He called upon the other newly elected Kurdish MPs, supported by the BDP, to again consider boycotting parliament (**AFP**, 22 June 2011).
MP Sefarettin Elçi, a spokesperson for the now thirty-five elected Kurdish MPs (since Hatip Dicle had been stripped of his elected office), denounced the decision to invalidate Dicleâs election as a measure of âmanoeuvre and obstructionâ that would only prevent a peaceful resolution of the Kurdish conflict. âWe will not go to Parliament as the government and the Parliament have not taken concrete steps to remedy this injustice and provide opportunities for a resolution paving the way for democratic politicsâ, Elçi declared (**AFP**, 23 June 2011).
Six elected Kurdish MPs remained languishing in jail. The Turkish authorities directly responsible for this were clearly obstructing the peace process â but ErdoÄan, mindful of not upsetting his own Turkish nationalist electoral base, was in no mood to challenge them at the time. The thirty MPs outside prison now declared a boycott of the Turkish parliament (**AFP**, 13 June 2011; MAR Project, 2011). Meanwhile clashes between security forces and the PKK further intensified in the wake of Turkeyâs general election. On the day following Dicleâs electoral exclusion, a mine exploded beneath a police vehicle in eastern Amed, killing two officers. Turkish authorities were swift to blame the PKK (**AFP**, 22 June 2011). The attack duly raised the hackles of nationalist Turks. Yet more violence was to follow as a peaceful settlement continued to elude the PKK and the Turkish state. On 27 June PKK fighters attacked a military vehicle in Van province (**AFP**, 27 June 2011). The following day three PKK guerrillas were killed in fighting with security forces near the village of Burnak in the DĂȘrsim region (**AFP**, 28 June 2011). Twenty Turkish soldiers were killed by the PKK in a two-week period in July 2011, as the PKK again intensified its campaign. An estimated ten PKK fighters were also killed during this period ([[#calibre_link-426][Cutler and Burch, 2011]]; **AFP**, 15 July 2011).
The old deadly pattern of ceasefire followed by a renewal of hostilities, followed by an ever increasing spiral of violence, was reasserting itself in Turkeyâs south-east â leading both sides ever further from a peaceful settlement. An armed clash on 15 July in Amed, in which thirteen soldiers were killed and seven wounded in a PKK ambush, especially aroused the ire of Turkish media and politicians. Prime Minister ErdoÄan declared that the Turkish army would make the PKK pay âa high priceâ for this attack. These losses were the heaviest the army had suffered since October 2008. âI say openly to the terrorist organization and its extensions they should not expect any good will on our part to actions as maliciousâ, stated ErdoÄan (**AFP**, 15 July 2011). He added:
If they want peace, there is one thing to do: the terrorist organization must lay down their arms. If they refuse to lay down arms, military operations will not cease and the process (reconciliation) will not move. (**AFP**, 15 July 2011)
Turkish soldiers and PKK guerrillas clashed on 22 and 24 July in the ColĂȘmerg and MĂȘrdĂźnĂȘ regions, resulting in four dead soldiers (**AFP**, 22 July 2011; 24 July 2011). It looked as though the situation was running headlong towards a level of conflict not seen since the 1990s. But then it became apparent that attempts at launching a viable peace process had begun behind the scenes. On 20 June 2011 the PKK had set two principal conditions for the renewal of its unilateral truce. These were that Ankara cease all military operations and recognize Abdullah Ăcalan as a leading interlocutor in talks to settle the Kurdish question (**AFP**, 20 June 2011). The PKK proposals also included regional autonomy for south-eastern Anatolia, education in Kurdish, and an amnesty for PKK fighters (**AFP**, 2 July 2011; 3 July 2011). Some of the proposals were not new and had already received broad support in repeated pro-PKK demonstrations in Turkeyâs Kurdish region, such as those demanding the release of Kurdish MPs.
On 27 June 2011 the Turkish daily newspaper **Milliyet** had revealed the existence of three âprotocolsâ that Abdullah Ăcalan had conveyed to the Turkish government. According to Murat Karayılan (also cited in the **Milliyet** report), the proposals included constitutional reforms to grant regional autonomy and education in Kurdish and âconditions for a complete exclusion of violence and disarmament on the basis of mutual forgivenessâ. Karayılan added: âThe official delegation which met Ăcalan last month did not reject these protocols. They said they would send them to the state and Government⊠We expect an answerâ (**AFP**, 27 June 2011).
A week and a half earlier, the **Serok** is reported to have said that a ârevolutionary peopleâs struggleâ was superfluous, since he was on the verge of concluding an agreement with the Turkish state to form a âpeace councilâ (**AFP**, 18 June 2011; [[#calibre_link-461][Karaveli, 2011]]). The **Serok** was apparently aware that an important new Kurdish initiative was at hand ([[#calibre_link-462][Ăzel, 19 August 2011]]).
On 14 July 2011 the Demokratık Toplum Kongresi declared support for âdemocratic autonomyâ at an âExtraordinary Congressâ of 850 delegates (many of whom were BDP deputies or mayors) in Amed. This was the new development for peace that Ăcalan had been referring to. Parliamentary deputy and DTK chairwoman Aysel TuÄluk conveyed a conference declaration to the media afterwards, stating that the Kurdish people had declared democratic autonomy yet remained loyal to Turkish national unity and respected the countryâs territorial integrity ([[#calibre_link-461][Karaveli, 2011; **HĂŒrriyet Daily News**, 15 July 2011; **Todayâs Zaman**, 14 July 2011]]). One news report added that the Diyarbakır Prosecutorâs Office â immediately suspicious â responded to the DTK initiative by launching an investigation into the conferenceâs final declaration (**Todayâs Zaman**, 14 July 2011).
The DTK had earlier, in December 2010, at a conference in Amed, presented a draft outline of its âDemocratic Autonomous Kurdistan Modelâ. Nevertheless, advocacy of democratic autonomy was very different to the PKKâs own founding objective of a pan-Kurdish state animated by MarxistâLeninist dogmas. Yet, as this book has shown, the PKK (especially its **Serok**) has a vast capacity for adaptability, and has been moving towards its current position since the 1990s. And the legal Kurdish parties inspired by the PKK â such as HEP, HADEP, the Demokratik Toplum Partisi and the present-day BDP â have all demonstrated a similar capacity, evolving their programmes as the PKK moderates its own line, just as they organize militant street demonstrations at precisely the same times that the PKK returned to intensified military struggle at various junctures. These parties are organizationally independent of the PKK, yet manage to mirror its moods and policy changes.
One of the BDPâs political predecessors, the Demokratik Toplum Partisi (DTP â Democratic Society Party) went to great lengths to prove that it supported the principle of a unified Turkey. The DTPâs Aysel TuÄluk has referred in an article to a **Misak-ı Milli** (National Pact) between Turks and Kurds in Turkey, affirming that Turks and Kurds are each otherâs best ally. The article evokes the unity of Turks and Kurds against âimperialismâ ([[#calibre_link-463][TuÄluk, 27 May 2007]]). In the present period, the Demokratık Toplum Kongresi (DTK) is a legal platform for Kurdish NGOs and political organizations in Turkey. Interestingly, Aysel TuÄluk is a leading member of the DTK. In this capacity he told a Turkish daily newspaper in mid-2011 that his party remained loyal to the national unity of Turkey, respected the countryâs territorial integrity and based its advocacy of âdemocratic autonomyâ on âdemocratic national principlesâ (**Todayâs Zaman,** 20 July 2011).
The Brookings Institutionâs Ămer TaĆpınar conceded at this time that âKurdish nationalism, as a political forceâ, was âalive and well across Turkeyâ. TaĆpınar, a Kemalist intellectual, counsels Turkish nationalists to realize that for âmillions of Turkish Kurdsâ the PKK and Ăcalan are âheroic symbols of rejection of decades of forced assimilation under the Kemalist republicâ. He adds that âTurkeyâs Kurdish minority has now much higher aspirations than 15 years agoâ, as evidenced by âdemands for decentralization and federalism bordering on autonomyâ ([[#calibre_link-237][TaĆpınar, 2012]]).
By the end of July 2011, however, Ăcalan was once again despairing of the peace initiative succeeding, declaring that his dialogue with the Turkish government was âfinishedâ. Interestingly, the **Serok** this time blamed intransigence on both sides in the conflict (the government and the PKK) for this failure, declaring: âBoth parties use me for their own interests. I am ending this intermediary role⊠There can be no peace talks under the current conditionsâ (**AFP**, 29 July 2011).
Six Turkish soldiers were killed and three others injured in clashes with the PKK in late July and early August 2011 (**AFP**, 30 July 2011; 1 August 2011). Two policemen died from a mine explosion (**AFP**, 7 August 2011) and another was shot dead by an âunidentified masked assailantâ (**AFP**, 8 August 2011). On 9 August yet another police officer was killed and another injured in a shoot-out between the guerrillas and the Turkish military, which also saw the death of a PKK fighter (**AFP**, 9 August 2011). Then, on 17 August 2011, eight Turkish soldiers and a village guard were killed and eleven soldiers wounded in a PKK ambush in ĂelĂȘ (**AFP**, 17 August 2011).
The rising casualty toll among security force personnel and policemen infuriated Turkish nationalists, and the AKP government felt compelled to resort to sterner measures. On 17 August Turkish warplanes hit sixty PKK positions in the Iraqi mountains (**AFP**, 18 August 2011). This was the first time in over a year that the Turkish military had struck alleged PKK bases in northern Iraq by air ([[#calibre_link-457][**Al Arabiya**, 2011]]).
Politicians and the Turkish military had already announced plans to consider a complete reorganization of the military and police effort against the PKK, to be discussed at a forthcoming meeting of the Milli GĂŒvenlik Kurulu (MGK â National Security Council) on 17 August 2011. Proposed measures included the deployment in combat zones of special police units and fully professional military troops (**AFP**, 18 August 2011). After meeting for almost five hours on 18 August 2011, the MGK drew up a ânew strategyâ for dealing with the PKK. ErdoÄan in fact endorsed even tougher measures than those foreshadowed by the military, citing especially the bloody 17 August PKK ambush as his justification. Over forty policemen and soldiers had recently been killed by the PKK (**AFP**, 18 August 2011). The prime minister declared âa new eraâ in Turkeyâs military confrontation with the PKK, warning that âthose who do not deviate from terrorism will pay the priceâ â which was understood to be addressed to Kurdish politicians close to the PKK (**AFP**, 18 August 2011).
That evening, Turkish F-16 fighter planes commenced six consecutive days of bombarding PKK targets in Iraqi Kurdistan. A statement by the Turkish army on 29 August claimed that these raids had resulted in the intense bombardment of thirty-eight targets, with between 145 and 160 guerrillas killed and over 100 injured, while insisting that due care had been taken to avoid civilian casualties (**AFP**, 29 August 2011). A Human Rights Watch statement issued a few days later, however, claimed that many of the areas attacked in the Turkish raids âwere not used by armed groups, but were inhabited by civiliansâ (**AFP**, 2 September 2011).
Peace now looked less likely than ever. âWe are entering an era where the language of war and violence will prevailâ, wrote popular columnist Soli Ăzel in the daily **Haber TĂŒrk**. Ăzel warned of the consequences of such an upsurge in violence: âThe most dangerous thing is to leave in despair Turks, Kurds, the majority of people who live in this country, even at every opportunity they show with their votes they cannot achieve anything else but terror and warâ ([[#calibre_link-462][Ăzel, 2011]]).
PKK spokesperson Ahmed Denis threatened a âwarâ if the raids continued (**AFP**, 22 August 2011). The PKK did not wait long to respond, launching deadly new attacks on security forces (**AFP**, 28 August 2011). On 27 August thousands of Kurds from six provinces initiated a protest march to the TurkishâIraqi border in opposition to the Turkish militaryâs ongoing campaign in Iraqi Kurdistan. Yıldırım Ayhan, a BDP deputy to the Van assembly, was killed when police dispersed the protest in the town of ĂelĂȘ, after a tear-gas canister penetrated his chest (**AFP**, 28 August 2011).
On 29 August the PKK announced a three-day truce to honour the three days of **âEid al-Fitr** following the end of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan. PKK spokesperson Dozdar Hammo warned that PKK fighters âwould defend themselves against any Turkish attackâ (**AFP**, 29 August 2011). However, violence continued in Turkish Kurdistan, as two soldiers, two policemen and two militiamen were killed in three clashes with the PKK in Amed and ColemĂȘrg on 2 and 3 September (**AFP**, 4 September 2011).
The conflict continued to expand, as new fronts were added. Thus, concurrent with the Turkish military campaign against the PKK, in the same region Iranâs Army of the Guardians of the Islamic Revolution (SepÄh-e PÄsdÄrÄn-e EnqelÄb-e EslÄmi â Revolutionary Guards for short) were at this time pursuing an offensive against the Iranian Partiya Jiyana Azad a KurdistanĂȘ (PJAK â Kurdistan Free Life Party), which is the main armed Iranian Kurdish nationalist movement and a PKK affiliate. The Kurdish people, it will be recalled, straddle the borders of Iran, Iraq, Syria and Turkey â countries that have long been regional rivals.
The Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) in Northern Iraq comprises political elements (organized in the Kurdistan Democratic Party and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan) that are no strangers to betrayal. Each has clashed militarily with other Kurdish nationalist groups (including each other) and could do so again. They permit both the PKK and the PJAK to maintain military bases inside KRG territory for diverse reasons â including the difficulty of ejecting these groups in military terms and the potentially unbearable scandal within their own constituencies were they to eject fellow Kurdish nationalists.
Since 2006 the PJAK has waged sporadic guerrilla war against Tehran. Its struggle has figured in relations between Iraq and Turkey, both of which have their own concerns about the PJAKâs armed operations in the light of their own perceived interests. The Kurdish authorities in the KRG in Northern Iraq would like to be independent of Iraq, if they could manage it, but to achieve this they need US support. This backing is potentially endangered by the PJAKâs operations on the IranâIraq border. Having active in the region an armed group that it considers to be a PKK proxy does not amuse the US. Turkey concurs, not wanting to have solved its own Kurdish problem only to face a group with an identical ideology in the same neighbourhood that shares, as it currently does, PKK munitions in the Qandil mountains ([[#calibre_link-464][Wilgenburg, 2010]]; [[#calibre_link-465][Cagaptay and Eroglu, 2007]]; [[#calibre_link-466][Sehirli, 2000]]: 420â21).
On 3 September 2011 the PKK announced that it had decided to lend strong support to the PJAK against the Iranian offensive in Iraqi Kurdistan. âWe will now fight alongside the PJAK fighters against the attacks of Iranians trying to enter Iraqi Kurdistan, particularly in the region of Qandilâ, PKK spokesperson Dozdar Hammou told **AFP**. Iranâs Revolutionary Guards confirmed in a statement that it had been waging operations against the PJAK on the border with Iraqi Kurdistan ([[#calibre_link-430][MAR Project, 2010]]; **AFP**, 3 September 2011).
On 5 September the PJAK announced a ceasefire, to enable it to redeploy its forces from Iran to join the PKKâs conflict with Turkey ([[#calibre_link-465][Cagaptay and Eroglu, 2007]]). Eight simultaneous PKK attacks on military outposts and police stations near ĂelĂȘ (Ăukurca) and Gewer on 19 October killed twenty-six Turkish soldiers, injuring twenty-two others. Around 100 âKurdish rebelsâ allegedly participated in the attacks, according to Turkeyâs state-run TRT television (**AFP**, 5 September 2011; [[#calibre_link-467][**RT/Reuters**, 2011]]; [[#calibre_link-468][MSNBC, 2011]]).
On 7 September PKK fighters kidnapped two village guards and two civilians near BeytĂŒssebap in Ćirnak province (**AFP**, 8 September 2011). Less than a week later, on 12 September, five people were killed and ten soldiers and policemen injured when the PKK reportedly attacked a police station and barracks in ĆemzĂźnan, a town of HakkĂąri province. The PKK is said to have launched four simultaneous attacks in the ĆemzĂźnan area (**AFP**, 12 September 2011).
As the PKK had predicted in late August (**AFP**, 22 August 2011), Turkey now announced it was considering a further ground incursion against its forces in Northern Iraq. The PKK attacks in ĆemzĂźnan had enraged Turkish nationalist opinion and were duly cited by the government as its justification for this action. Prime Minister ErdoÄan convened an emergency meeting with his ministers of the interior and defence and the army to discuss options. The Turkish armyâs forces had already concentrated on the border with Iraq during recent weeks (**AFP**, 13 September 2011).
As this threat was being discussed in the Turkish media, the Turkish government admitted on 15 September 2011 that it had engaged in secret direct negotiations with the PKK. The announcement was the cause of much consternation among sections of the Turkish media, and extreme Turkish nationalists in the state seized the opportunity to accuse the head of intelligence, Hakan Fidan, of treason. Officials from the Milli Ä°stihbarat TeĆkilatı (MÄ°T â National Intelligence Organization), together with Mr Fidan (acting as ErdoÄanâs emissary), had met several times with PKK leaders in Oslo.
Claiming that some 120 people had been killed in clashes and attacks by the PKK since mid-June, ErdoÄan blamed the breakdown of negotiations on the alleged upsurge in PKK attacks (**AFP,** 3 October 2011), with Ankara once again threatening a ground attack on PKK bases in Iraqi Kurdistan. Turkish warplanes had already conducted a total of fifty-eight attacks on PKK targets there during August and September ([[#calibre_link-45][Ăandar, 2013a]]; **AFP**, 15 September 2011; [[#calibre_link-469][**Pravda**, 2011]]). The PKK, predictably, blamed the government for the talksâ collapse, accusing it of delaying tactics at the negotiations and then forsaking the few promises it made once it secured the June 2011 elections with 50 per cent of the votes ([[#calibre_link-45][Ăandar, 2013a]]). Another opportunity for peace had been lost.
More violence was the inevitable consequence of this breakdown. A Turkish soldier was killed and two others were injured in clashes with Kurdish rebels on 17 September in a rural area of Bingöl province. Police arrested 122 people in the Istanbul city centre the following day, for attempting to participate in a demonstration opposing military operations against the PKK. Protesters also objected to Abdullah Ăcalan being unable to meet his lawyers for almost two months. Police prevented protesters from gathering, while police helicopters flew overhead, monitoring the situation (**AFP**, 18 September 2011). Denied any means to redress their grievances by the Turkish state, Kurkish nationalists grew steadily more frustrated, with âarmed struggleâ â however fruitless it had proven to be â seeming to many the only option available.
Armed clashes between the security forces and the PKK now occurred on an almost daily basis. On 20 September a bomb explosion in Kızılay, in downtown Ankara, killed three people and injured fifteen others, two of whom later died in hospital. This attack was eventually claimed by the TeyrĂȘbazĂȘn Azadiya Kurdistan, however, and denounced by the PKK, which described it as âreprehensibleâ, adding that it âundermined the legitimate demands of the Kurdish peopleâ. Turkish authorities once again alleged that TAK was a PKK affiliate (**AFP**, 24 September 2011; **AFP**, 14 October 2011).
Later the same day, an assault on a police academy in Siirt killed four civilians and one of the attackers (**AFP**, 20 September 2011). Following this operation, on 24 September the PKK leadership ordered âall guerrilla units to be more careful in their preparationsâ to avoid civilian deaths. Two Turkish soldiers were killed and three others were wounded in fighting late on 22 September in Ăatak, in Van province. A policeman injured on 22 September in another attack, in Amed, died a few days later. All attacks were attributed to the PKK by the authorities ([[#calibre_link-457][**Al Jazeera**, 2011]]; [[#calibre_link-426][Cutler and Burch, 2011]]).
On 21 September the Turkish military said it had hit 152 PKK targets in Iraq by air in almost sixty sorties since 17 August. âAll targets were shelled with acuity and were destroyedâ said an online statement, adding that rebel movements would be âclosely monitoredâ and that air strikes would continue âif necessaryâ (**AFP**, 21 September 2011).
The atmosphere became immensely more deadly on 21 September, when ErdoÄan revealed that he had asked the United States to locate US Predator drones to strike PKK positions in Iraqi Kurdistan. The prime minister had met briefly with the US president. President Obama âtold me that the United States is prepared to give us any support in the fight against terrorismâ, reported ErdoÄan. He added that the United States would continue to provide Ankara with âreal-time informationâ on PKK activities in northern Iraq (**AFP**, 21 September 2011; [[#calibre_link-470][**Kurd Net**, 21 September 2011]]). In late October 2011 the Pentagon announced â subject to congressional approval â the sale of three AH-1 Super Cobra attack helicopters to Turkey for $111 million. On 14 November a Pentagon spokesman announced that the US military had relocated four unarmed Predator drones, formerly based in Iraq, to the US/NATO Air Base in Ä°ncirlik in Turkey, to support Ankara against the PKK ([[#calibre_link-471][Zanotti, 2012]]: 22). US material support for the Turkish military was nothing new, of course, given that Turkey hosts a web of US military bases on its soil and is a member of NATO. Nor was there anything novel in strong political support for Ankara against the PKK. Washingtonâs decision to provide powerful direct military assistance to the Turkish military against the PKK reflected the formerâs rising concern with the PKKâs entrenchment in Iraqi Kurdistan, which the Americans considered ran contrary to their own interests in the same region â especially in the light of their military drawdown from Iraq ([[#calibre_link-471][Zanotti, 2012]]: 22).
Prime Minister ErdoÄan disclosed on 23 September that cooperation with Iran was being considered against the PKK in Northern Iraq. He added that Turkey was âalready engaged in sharing informationâ on the PKK with Iran. The prime minister called on the PKK to relinquish its weapons if it wanted to avoid a new ground offensive against its bases in Northern Iraq (**AFP**, 23 September 2011). However, six Turkish soldiers were killed and eleven others wounded the following day in an attack on a small barracks in the village of Belenoluk, near Pervari, in Siirt province, also attributed by authorities to the PKK. Three PKK fighters were also reportedly killed in the clashes (**AFP**, 24 September 2011; **AFP**, 25 September 2011).
On 28 September the thirty-five BDP MPs of the Turkish parliament re-elected at the June 2011 elections suddenly announced their decision to end their boycott of that institution. As shown earlier, this decision came at precisely the time when the government and media alike were attributing an upsurge in government/PKK violence to Kurdish rebels. Plans for a military operation against PKK bases in Northern Iraq were being openly threatened. BDP co-chairman Selahattin DemirtaĆ told a press conference: âWe felt the need to make a change in attitude and to defend peace against war ⊠we decided to participate in the parliament.â He accused the AKP government of wanting to thwart efforts for a resolution of the Kurdish conflict by ordering mass arrests of Kurdish activists across the country in recent months. ErdoÄan responded on the day of the Kurdish MPsâ initiative by accusing the BDP of collusion with the PKK and of âprofiting fromâ the atmosphere of violence. The prime minister called on Kurds to âresistâ the PKK (**AFP**, 28 September 2011). BDP deputies duly returned to the assembly in early October, where they were sworn-in (**AFP**, 1 October 2011).
The violent atmosphere continued to build relentlessly. On 29 September PKK spokesperson Ahmed Denis claimed that Turkish warplanes carried out new raids that day against PKK bases in Iraqi Kurdistan. Denis also stated that a number of individuals had been âarrestedâ by the PKK in Turkey, including military officials, a mayor and twelve teachers. The PKK accused them of alleged âcrimesâ against the Kurds. Asked about the laws that could be applied against them, Denis replied: âWe have our own laws⊠We respect rights and our laws do not provide for the death penalty.â The PKK spokesperson gave no further details of the âarrestedâ individuals. He added that Turkish warplanes had bombed the areas of Khuwa Kork Khnera and Zap (northwest of Erbil and north-east of Dohuk) for two hours (**AFP**, 29 September 2011). Two soldiers fighting the PKK were killed on the same day in BeytĂŒssebap in Ćirnak province, bordering Iraq, where a group of PKK fighters attacked a security forces unit, injuring three soldiers (**AFP**, 30 September 2011).
The focus moved to the Turkish parliament on 1 October, when President Abdullah GĂŒl declared that one of its âmain tasksâ was to draft a new constitution â to be ultimately approved by a referendum (**AFP**, 1 October 2011). This potentially momentous step heralded the possible dawn of a new chance for Turkish/Kurdish peace, since Kurdish rights were high on the agenda for consideration of the new draft constitution (**AFP**, 1 October 2011). Stressing that the current constitution âdoes not meet the aspirations of the Turkish peopleâ, GĂŒl argued for a more liberal text based on Western standards of democracy, without sacrificing the existing textâs republicanism, especially its secularism. Despite its supposed âIslamistâ roots, the AKP has always committed itself to secularism and republicanism. GĂŒlâs emphasis on the non-negotiable nature of these aspects was intended to mollify extreme Turkish nationalists, who might suspect an Islamist conspiracy behind the proposed constitutional reform process.
The AKP government announced the goal of a new constitution by mid-2012, with the perspective of achieving this through political consensus. The government did not possess the necessary two-thirds majority for constitutional reform, although much agreement existed in the parliament on the need to change a constitution inherited from a military coup in 1980. So the AKP sought agreement with opposition parties. A Constitutional Reconciliation Commission (CRC), comprising members from each parliamentary party, was established in September 2011. However, the process effectively collapsed in November 2012, when the four parties presented rival reform proposals.
At first glance, it appeared that the Turkish state did not regard the PKK as a potential interlocutor in this discussion, since **AFP** revealed that the ErdoÄan government was still preparing to launch a ground operation in Iraqi Kurdistan â with the PKK claiming that new air raids on its bases in Northern Iraq had already begun (**AFP**, 30 September 2011; **AFP**, 1 October 2011). On 3 October the prospect of peace was briefly revitalized, however, when Prime Minister ErdoÄan declared that a revival of talks with the Kurdish rebels was not excluded, adding that dialogue with the PKK might possibly resume (**AFP,** 3 October 2011).
Meanwhile, operations against the PKK by the Turkish state continued at all levels. On 4 October police across Turkey arrested almost 150 people suspected of links to the KCK and the PKK. The arrestees joined the over 2,500 Kurds already imprisoned, accused of âlinks with rebelsâ (**AFP**, 4 October 2011). Moving the focus of its renewed offensive to Iraq, on 5 October the Turkish parliament approved the one-year renewal of the authorization to carry out raids against PKK bases in Iraqi Kurdistan (**AFP**, 5 October 2011). The PKK responded harshly to Turkeyâs military response in the wake of these clashes. Spokesperson Ahmed Denis said on 19 October that Turkey was liable to be hit âharderâ if it conducted military operations outside its borders. He promised: âWe will not allow them to lead a military incursion into Iraqi Kurdistan. If they conduct this raid, they will be unable to get out.â As it turned out, however, Turkey was soon to succeed in achieving precisely that.
The PKK also responded within Turkish Kurdistan, and armed operations by both sides occurred in HakkĂąri, Siirt, Adana and Bitlis provinces (**AFP**, 9, 13, 14 October 2011; [[#calibre_link-457][**Al Jazeera**, 2011]]). On 16 October a bomb exploded at Ćeyhan in Adana province, as police attempted to disperse âa banned demonstrationâ of PKK supporters; it injured four policemen and two civilians (**AFP**, 16 October 2011). More significantly, twenty-four Turkish soldiers were killed and several more wounded in PKK attacks carried out simultaneously later the same day against police Jandarma posts in eight localities in ĂelĂȘ and Gewer. The Turkish army launched ground and air operations in the night in retaliation. Observers claimed that these fatalities represented the second highest army death to date (**AFP**, 19 October 2011).
According to Ahmed Denis, fighting between the two sides began when Turkish soldiers tried to cross the Iraqi border hunting for PKK guerrillas. âWhat happened was not planned by the PKKâ, he added. Denis continued: âThe Turkish air force bombed several areas of Northern Iraq heavily and later staged land operations.â According to him, the PKK killed 100 Turkish soldiers as well as injuring many others, and seized large quantities of ammunition. He added: âThe battle continues in some areas and there is bombing by fighter jets and helicopters.â Another PKK spokesperson, Dozdar Hammo, claimed that five PKK fighters were killed on 18 October.
On the day following the simultaneous PKK attacks of 18 October 2011 in south-eastern Turkey, President Abdullah GĂŒl echoed the words of his prime minister in July (**AFP**, 15 July 2011), promising âvery greatâ revenge on the PKK. The remarks came after Turkish security forces said they had killed fifteen âKurdish militantsâ, in the wake of the alleged PKK attacks. Turkish security forces now launched their long-threatened incursion inside Iraq, involving âmultiple attacks along the borderâ ([[#calibre_link-468][MSNBC, 2011]]). Sounding very much like a 1980sâ Kemalist leader, the president addressed reporters:
No one should forget this: those that inflict this pain on us will endure far greater pain; those that think they will weaken our state with these attacks or think they will bring our state into line, they will see that the revenge for these attacks will be very great and they will endure it many times over. ([[#calibre_link-467][**RT/Reuters**, 2011]]; [[#calibre_link-468][MSNBC, 2011]]).
Prime Minister ErdoÄan reported that Turkish elite troops had entered Iraqi territory to hunt down Kurdish assailants, âas permitted by international lawâ. Hundreds of Turkish commandos penetrated 4 kilometres into Iraq to prevent the rebels retreating to their bases in the mountains. Turkish military operations by combined ground and air forces continued until 27 October (**AFP**, 19 October 2011; **AFP**, 27 October 2011). On 31 October BDP deputy chairperson Meral DanÄ±Ć BeĆtaĆ accused the Turkish army of using chemical weapons during this operation (**Press TV**, 29 December 2011). Curiously, this accusation was not denied by the Turkish military until 8 December, some five weeks later (**AFP**, 8 December 2011), with perhaps even the Turkish general staff being wary regarding what some of its units might have done. German chemical weapons experts later confirmed that the Turkish army had almost certainly used chemical weapons ([[#calibre_link-179][Uzun, 2014]]: 15).
Turkish military operations against PKK fighters in the Hakkùri region as well as in Iraqi Kurdistan continued on 21 October. Turkish fighter planes and helicopters engaged the PKK during the night on both sides of the border, involving some 10,000 troops in the whole operation (**AFP**, 21 October 2011). The Turkish army continued its offensive on 22 October for the third consecutive day, causing forty-eight deaths in PKK ranks in the space of two days, (**AFP**, 22 October 2011). Operations continued on 23 October. Then on 24 October twenty tanks and thirty military trucks reportedly entered Iraq from the village of Siyahkaya in Silopi province, before heading towards PKK bases located in the Haftanın valley (**AFP**, 24 October 2011).
The PKK responded forcefully, as best it could. Police in Amed deployed water cannons to scatter stone-throwing protesters, as the bodies of twenty-four PKK fighters killed in a military operation arrived at a mortuary in Malatya (**Reuters**, 29 October 2011). An unnamed security source told **AFP** that a female PKK suicide bomber attacked the provincial headquarters of the ruling AKP on the same day in Bingöl, killing two persons, including herself, and injuring ten others (**Reuters**, 29 October 2011; **AFP**, 29 October 2011).
On 12 November Turkish transport minister Binali Yıldırım accused the PKK of hijacking a small Turkish ferry in the Sea of Marmara for over twelve hours. He said that four or five members of the PKKâs military wing the HPG took possession of the ferry **Kartepe** with eighteen passengers on board, including five women, four crew members and two trainees. âThere are no demandsâ, claimed the minister. One hijacker claimed to be in possession of a bomb and told the ferry captain that he wanted this to be reported by the media, according to the mayor of Ä°zmit, KaraosmanoÄlu Ä°smail. Later, however, this hijacker was found to have only a mock bomb after security forces who stormed the vessel at dawn on 12 November killed him. It was also discovered that he was the sole hijacker. All the hostages were unharmed, according to the Istanbul governor HĂŒseyin Avni Mutlu (**AFP**, 12 November 2011). The PKK has not claimed responsibility for this stunt. If it were responsible, it would indicate the PKKâs increasing desperation to reach international opinion with its message.
Iranâs Ministry of Foreign Affairs had already condemned on 20 October what it termed the âterroristâ activities of the PKK. Tehran pledged to âwork with the Turkish Government on security issues to prevent such actions from occurringâ (**AFP**, 21 October 2011). On the following day, Turkeyâs foreign minister Ahmet DavutoÄlu revealed that Iran had agreed to fight together with Turkey against both the PKK and Iranâs PJAK, in a âcommon action plan until this terrorist threat is eliminatedâ. Turkey thus brought to fruition the cooperation with Iran envisaged by ErdoÄan the previous month (**AFP**, 21 October 2011). Iranâs foreign minister Ali Akbar Salehi, and Massoud Barzani, president of the autonomous region of Iraqi Kurdistan, claimed on 29 October that the âPJAK issueâ had been settled by Tehran, following the conclusion of an operation beginning in July (**AFP**, 29 October 2011).
In a massive operation across the country on 22 November, Turkish police arrested more than seventy people accused of KCK membership. Abdullah Ăcalanâs lawyers, as well as BDP members, were among those arrested (**AFP**, 22 November 2011).
The government, however, was determined to combine repression of Kurdish politicians considered close to the PKK with gestures towards the Kurds more generally. On 23 November Prime Minister ErdoÄan addressed one of the primary sources of Kurdish animosity towards Turks, when he presented a historic apology to members of his ruling AKP on behalf of the Turkish state for the murderous repression of the 1937â38 rebellion in DĂȘrsim, which many had attributed to the Kurds, due to the PKKâs denial of the separate ethnic identity of the Zaza people ([[#calibre_link-28][White, 2000]]: 49).
The Zaza-speaking Alevi tribes of DĂȘrsim rebelled against Ankara from March to November 1937 and from April to December 1938, led by the Alevi cleric Sayyid Riza [Seyt Rıza]. These rebellions triggered a process of repression that forced the exodus of tens of thousands of DĂȘrsimli Alevis. âDĂȘrsim is one of the most tragic and painful events of our recent historyâ, observed ErdoÄan. âI apologize and I apologizeâ. Referring to an official document of the time, the prime minister cited a total of 13,806 killed by air and ground bombardment, followed by abuses and summary executions in the province of DĂȘrsim (**AFP**, 23 November 2011). Unfortunately, a member of the prime ministerâs party had proposed renaming Sabiha Gökçen International Airport after Mustafa Kemal AtatĂŒrkâs adopted daughter, who had actively participated as a pilot, bombing DĂȘrsim (**AFP**, 23 November 2011).
The armed clashes between the army and the PKK and its suspected supporters continued unabated. On 15 December Turkish soldiers stormed a house in Ăay, in Bingöl province, killing eight alleged PKK fighters (**AFP**, 15 December 2011). Then twenty-one PKK fighters were killed in six days of fighting with the Turkish armed forces, beginning on 15 December, in Görese in Diyarbakır province. Turkish ground troops, supplemented by helicopter gunships, were responsible for killing between fifty and seventy guerrillas, according to estimates (**AFP**, 21 December 2011).
On 30 December the PKK called the Kurdish population of Turkey to an âuprisingâ, following the apparently accidental death of thirty-five Kurdish smugglers in an air raid by Turkish F-16s at the Iraqi border on 28 December. Erdal Bahoz, an HPG cadre, announced: âWe urge the people of Kurdistan, especially in HakkĂąri [ColemĂȘrg] and Ćirnak [Ćirnex], to show their reaction against this massacre and to hold accountable the perpetrators.â Thousands of angry Kurds ensured that the funerals of the dead villagers were a demonstration against the Ankara government. A long convoy of cars honking their horns denounced Prime Minister ErdoÄan, calling him a âmurdererâ. Many of the Kurds were convinced that the accidental killings were deliberate. âIt is impossible that were killed by mistake. Soldiers were 150 metres away and within sightâ, stated a local named Mehmet from Robozik (Ortasu) village, from which most of the victims originated (**AFP**, 29 December 2011). ErdoÄan expressed regret at the âunfortunate and distressingâ air raid killings of civilians, conveying his condolences to relatives of the victims. On 2 January 2012 the deputy prime minister, BĂŒlent Arınç, promised that the government would pay reparations to the families of the slain Kurds ([[#calibre_link-472][**Al Jazeera**, 2012]]).
Tension continued to build on the day following the funerals, when two PKK fighters were killed on 31 December in Amed when they threw grenades at police who had ordered them to surrender after attacking their position (**AFP**, 31 December 2011a). Already enraged by the deaths of the thirty-five Kurdish civilians, hundreds of Kurds took to the streets of Amed. Some protesters threw stones at police, who responded with water cannon and tear gas. Ten protesters were arrested (**AFP**, 31 December 2011).
The year 2011 thus ended as it had begun â with bloody violence on both sides. As the year drew to a close, it seemed that nothing could prevent Turkish Kurdistan descending into a deepening bloody cycle of violence.
Armed hostilities continued into 2012, although initially at a lower rate than in the recent past. No major incidents are recorded for January 2012. The Turkish military clashed with the PKK on 9 February, killing thirteen alleged PKK fighters, while two other guerrillas were wounded and one Turkish soldier was killed. Turkish warplanes hit back on 11â12 February with overnight strikes on suspected PKK targets in the Zab and Hakurk areas of Iraqi Kurdistan ([[#calibre_link-472][**Al Arabiya**, 2012]]).
PKK fighters killed policemen on 25 May and 12 June in Kayseri and Istanbul respectively ([[#calibre_link-72][**Todayâs Zaman**, 29 June 2012]]). The violence was now obviously becoming increasingly senseless. Casualties continued to pile up on both sides, but neither a military solution nor a viable peace process appeared to be any closer.
This reality called out for bold steps to resolve the stalemate. Throughout June and August 2012 heavy clashes erupted in HakkĂąri province, when the PKK military leadership ordered a temporary abandonment of standard guerrilla war tactics, by waging a âfrontal battleâ with the Turkish army for the Kurdish town of ĆemzĂźnan. Roads leading to the town from Iran and Iraq were blockaded by the PKK. PKK rocket launchers and Russian-made DShK heavy machine guns were positioned on high ground in preparation for an assault on Turkish motorized units that the PKK anticipated would be sent to secure ĆemzĂźnan. Refusing to take the bait, the Turkish military reportedly destroyed the guerrillas in air attacks, supplemented by long-range artillery salvos. On 11 August the military declared victory, claiming to have killed 115 PKK fighters at the cost of six soldiers and two village guards ([[#calibre_link-430][MAR Project, 2010]]).
The decision by PKK military leaders to eschew standard âhit and runâ guerrilla war tactics in this instance is incomprehensible logically, as they could not seriously have believed that they had the capacity to keep possession of ĆemzĂźnan. The only explanation seems to be that the decision-makers simply did not know what to do next: ceasefire after ceasefire had failed, and a return to all-out war was only leading to greatly increasing PKK casualties. Their acquiring of some heavy weapons (quite possibly from Iran) also probably played a part. Given the number of PKK fighters and heavy munitions involved, it is unlikely that one or two local commanders alone made this decision. It must have been made rather by the central military leaders, in consultation with the PKK political leadership. As such it must be seen as indicative of their high degree of disorientation at this point.
The bloodshed continued after this carnage. Some fifteen suspected PKK guerrillas were killed in HakkĂąri province and two soldiers died in a mine explosion on 19 August alone (Ćahin, 2012; [[#calibre_link-473][Cakan, 2012]]). Then, on 19â20 August, a car full of explosives exploded close to a police station in Gaziantep province, killing nine civilians (four of whom were children) and wounding fifty-six ([[#calibre_link-473][Cakan, 2012]]; [[#calibre_link-474][**NTVâMSNBC**, 2012]]). With this attack the number of civilian casualties since 2007 reached sixty-five, including twenty-three children ([[#calibre_link-475][**Anadolu Ajansi**, 2012]]). The carnage was far from over, however.
Turkey responded to these attacks with six days of intense bombing of PKK bases in the Qandil Mountains. On 23 August Turkish authorities claimed to have killed as many as a hundred PKK fighters in these air raids. Professor Gokhan Bacık of Zirve University commented that the bombing might have been assisted by US intelligence. Despite reports of civilian casualties and condemnation from the president of autonomous Iraqi Kurdistan, Prime Minister ErdoÄan declared that his government had ârun out of patienceâ, and vowed to continue the attacks on the PKK (Christie-Miller, 2012). The Turkish stateâs bombing campaign thus appeared to indicate a decisive move back to military methods for dealing with the PKK.
The year 2012 was shaping up to be the most deadly in the conflict between the PKK and Ankara since 1999. Nearly 800 people died in the conflict between June 2011 and 2 September, including some 500 PKK fighters, more than 200 security personnel and 85 civilians, according to estimates by the think-tank International Crisis Group ([[#calibre_link-476][**Guardian**, 3 September 2012]]; [[#calibre_link-477][TezcĂŒr, 2013]]: 69). Clashes and deaths continued unabated throughout September ([[#calibre_link-478][**Radikal**, 2012]]; [[#calibre_link-479][**CNN TĂŒrk**, 2012]]; [[#calibre_link-480][Watson and Comert, 2012]]).
The Koma CiwakĂȘn Kurdistan reported no fewer than 400 incidents of shelling, air bombardment and armed clashes during August 2012. ErdoÄan claimed in mid-September that, âWithin the last month, in the operations executed throughout the region, about 500 terrorists were eliminatedâ ([[#calibre_link-480][Watson and Comert, 2012]]; [[#calibre_link-480][Yesim, 2012]]; **BBC News**, 17 September 2012). Veteran observer Hugh Pope told **CNN**:
Weâre seeing the longest pitched battles between the army and the PKK. [W]eâre seeing a wide-spread campaign of kidnapping, suicide bombings and terrorist attacks by the PKK. Theyâre very much on the offensive and unfortunately this is matched by much harder line rhetoric on both sides. ([[#calibre_link-480][Watson and Comert, 2012]])
A letter from Aysel TuÄluk, the BDP MP for Van, was published in the daily **Taraf** on 20 September, making concrete suggestions for stopping the fighting and advancing in the direction of peace. She suggested that the Turkish state end Ăcalanâs solitary confinement, release â8,000 KCK friendsâ and accept the status of autonomous administration for Turkish Kurdistan. She recommended that, in return, the PKK declare a ceasefire and become partners with Turkey, âworking together toward the democratic and free future of the regionâ ([[#calibre_link-481][**Taraf**, 2012]]). **HĂŒrriyet Daily News** responded positively, noting that the BDP MP was merely advising Turks how to avoid worsening TurkishâKurdish relations in Turkey. âIn short, she was sending the message: âYou are forcing us; you are pushing us to partition. We are separatingââ (**HĂŒrriyet Daily News**, 19 September 2012).
However, in mid-September 2012 forty-four Kurdish journalists appeared in court in Istanbul to face terrorism charges. Many of them had been remanded in prison since their arrest the previous December ([[#calibre_link-480][Watson and Comert, 2012]]). In October 2012 several hundred Kurdish political prisoners went on hunger strike demanding better conditions for Abdullah Ăcalan and the right to use the Kurdish language in the education and justice systems. The hunger strike only ended after the **Serok** ordered his fighters to stop after sixty-eight days (**BBC News**, 21 March 2013).
On 4 December 2012 Prime Minister ErdoÄan indicated that he might be prepared to repeat the methods of his predecessors in the early 1990s in dealing with the challenges presented by legal Kurdish parliamentary parties, by putting them on trial on terror-related charges, accusing the BDP as a whole of being the political wing and the tool of the PKK. To do so, he would have to cancel pro-Kurdish lawmakersâ parliamentary immunities. Interestingly, President Abdullah GĂŒl stated his disapproval of this suggestion, and was joined in this by over thirty other AKP colleagues. GĂŒl â whose popularity continued to grow, even as ErdoÄanâs declined â perceived that the prime minister was going too far and wished to insulate himself from popular distaste at this move. ErdoÄan responded fiercely, openly threatening the dissidents with expulsion from the party. The **HĂŒrriyet Daily News** commented that the lack of political channels to help solve the Kurdish question, were the BDP to be made illegal, would make a peace settlement with the PKK very difficult â âif, of course, the government still has such a willâ (**HĂŒrriyet Daily News**, 5 December 2012). As the year progressed, peace seemed an increasingly less likely prospect.
As has been seen, the deadly pattern that has long plagued the KurdishâTurkish conflict in Turkey â wholesale bloodletting followed by fruitless peacemaking, which produces even worse bloodletting â continued to reassert itself throughout the period examined in this chapter. To fully understand events in the period described above, it is necessary to examine the role of the Kurdish diaspora in the conflict.
Many of the Kurds from Turkey living in Europe have lived there for several decades, arriving in waves in the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s in response to tumult and oppression in their homeland ([[#calibre_link-482][Kaya, 2012]]: 157). Living in the diaspora, they encountered their fellow Kurds from other parts of putative Kurdistan, especially Iraq â evoking an increasingly âpan-Kurdishâ identity, which allowed them to see themselves simultaneously as Kurds from a particular sector of Kurdistan and as part of the larger entity of Greater Kurdistan. Observing this, Martin van Bruinessen refers to the ââdeterritorializationâ of the Kurdish questionâ, due to the combined effects of mass migration and globalization ([[#calibre_link-483][van Bruinessen, 1998]]: 12).
Naturally, Kurdish immigrants from Turkey did not land in Europe bereft of identity. Feelings of cultural, economic and political subordination in their homeland had already come together within many of them as a Kurdish identity politics that constantly seeks a coherent Kurdish national identity. Kurdish nationalism seemed âto offer a framework to construct a narrative of a unique Kurdish identity that needs to be restored by âgoing backâ to oneâs history and originâ ([[#calibre_link-484][Eliassi, 2013]]: 84).
These feelings never departed the hearts of the older generations in the earlier waves of Kurdish mass migration from Turkey. Aware that they were now living in a quite different environment, however, they generally limited themselves to cultural Kurdish activities. Any Kurdish organization that was established in this earlier period was tiny ([[#calibre_link-482][Kaya, 2012]]: 159). Not wanting to cause trouble for themselves in their new lands â which they feared would have lasting consequences for their children â they were content at first to allow themselves to be described as âTurkishâ. Their children, in the meantime, were already becoming culturally integrated into the countries of migration.
Events in Turkey changed all that. The 1971 and 1980 **coups dâĂ©tat** in Turkey ejected many leftist activists and intellectuals from Turkey, several of whom were Kurds. Landing in the diaspora, they formed political groups and community organizations. Different perspectives initially competed, as Turkish leftists also called the Kurds to their fold, evincing support for Kurdish rights. Some of the same Kurdish political groups that competed for Kurdsâ support in Turkey also emerged. But the emergence and growth of the PKK in Turkish Kurdistan soon convinced the majority of Kurds to support the organization. The PKK sent as many as 7,500 organizers to facilitate this politicization process ([[#calibre_link-482][Kaya, 2012]]: 163; [[#calibre_link-483][van Bruinessen, 1998]]: 8 n12). It was the politicization of Kurdish migration by the PKK that ensured that diaspora Kurds in Europe and elsewhere ceased regarding themselves in any sense as âTurksâ ([[#calibre_link-485][White, 2004]]; [[#calibre_link-482][Kaya, 2012]]: 160, 162). As Zeynep N. Kaya explains, âActivities of the PKK among the diaspora offered a sense of identity, meaning and confidence to the second generation of guest workers, especially in Germanyâ ([[#calibre_link-482][Kaya, 2012]]: 163).
The diaspora Kurds were providing vital support for the PKK. Observing that the PKK was successfully raising large sums of money and mobilizing Kurds for protests across Western Europe, Turkey was quick to explain that the PKK was forcing Kurds to support the organization with extortion, threats and acts of violence ([[#calibre_link-486][Ministry of Foreign Affairs Turkey, 2014]]; [[#calibre_link-487][Australian National Security, 2014]]). However, most contributions were in fact voluntary. Furthermore, the large numbers of youth recruited as guerrillas, technical and other skilled specialists, as well as organizers and diplomats, demonstrated the level of support of these diaspora Kurds for the PKK.
It is due to the high level of Turkish Kurdish diaspora support for the PKK that the latter was able to produce prodigious publications in several languages, open television stations and mobilize around 50,000 Kurds for important demonstrations ([[#calibre_link-483][van Bruinessen, 1998]]: 8â9; 2000: 19). The PKKâs hard work in the diaspora provided âa sense of identity, meaning and confidence to the second generation of guest workers, especially in Germanyâ ([[#calibre_link-482][Kaya, 2012]]: 163). PKK diaspora militantsâ widespread use of the Internet and other modern communication methods transformed them into âlong-distance Kurdish nationalistsâ, carrying out their activities in a âtransnational realmâ ([[#calibre_link-482][Kaya, 2012]]: 160). The Kurdish question continued to be âdeterritorializedâ. The diaspora activists had been inspired by the rise of the PKKâs militancy in Turkish Kurdistan. The diaspora militantsâ activities, in turn, reverberated in the hearts of their compatriots back home, reassuring them that they were not isolated, and that support was building for their cause in Europe.
Europeâs Turkish Kurdish diaspora watched the steady ratcheting up of Turkish state violence against Turkeyâs Kurds with growing consternation. No longer isolated from their homeland by virtue of being in Europe, diaspora Kurds followed political developments in Turkey closely, especially those concerning the countryâs Kurds. The PKKâs successful insertion into the Kurdish diaspora gave it an increasingly formidable supportersâ network throughout Western Europe. Importantly, the failure of the PKKâs efforts towards a peaceful settlement infuriated the diaspora, which was now strongly influenced by the organization.
Indeed, Turkeyâs preference in the 1980s and 1990s for ruthless military force to solve its Kurdish problem had the opposite effect to that which Ankara intended, as the Kurds forced from Turkish Kurdistan into the diaspora were compelled by circumstances to overcome their differences, as a consequence of which many were integrated âinto more inclusive, non-territorial Kurdish networksâ ([[#calibre_link-488][van Bruinessen, 2000]]: 21). However, this development also facilitated the deterritorialization of Ankaraâs war on Kurdish nationalism.
The PKK leadership evolved a network for leading the deterritorialized Kurds, linking the diaspora to the PKK via the Confederation of Kurdish Associations in Europe (KON-KURD), which is based in Brussels. Pro-PKK Kurdish associations in Australia, the United States and Canada are also connected to KON-KURD ([[#calibre_link-489][Gunter, 2011]]: 167). However, a pan-Kurdistan body, the Kongra Netewiya Kurdistan (KNK â National Congress of Kurdistan) now acts as an umbrella organization for the PKK diaspora as a whole, comprising representatives in Europe, the Middle East, North America, Australia and Asia, together with representatives of political, religious and cultural institutions, intellectuals and non-Kurdish ethnic groups from all over Kurdistan ([[#calibre_link-490][Akkaya and Jongerden, 2011]]: 159 n13).
Ankara was not complacent in the face of these developments and showed itself increasingly capable of working directly with Germany and France regarding these groups, especially against PKK supporters. Nevertheless, building on its successful multistate mobilizations to âsave Ăcalanâ when the Kurdish leader briefly sojourned in Europe, by 2010 the PKK had attained a sophisticated organizational and propaganda apparatus in Europe. The Turkish state countered this by providing evidence to European states claiming that the diaspora organizations included terrorists. Turkey signed a broad agreement against terrorism with France in 2011. The PKK had already been classified as a terrorist organisation by the European Union in May 2002.
Until 2012 European PKK supporters did indeed include a number of organization members, who at that point acted as though they were still in Turkey. In other words, when devising their political strategies and seeking to lead the diaspora, they paid little attention to the very different, liberal-democratic states in which they now lived. Their only concern was that the PKK and its perspectives were under attack in Turkey. Like the PKK in this period, on occasion they resisted these attacks using violent means. In this struggle, the diaspora leaders believed that such violence was justified. The Turkish state seized on this approach and used it to secure joint action by European governments against the PKKâs members and supporters in the diaspora.
Exactly as in Turkey, each attack by either side (the pro-PKK diaspora or one of the European states) produced retaliation. Thus, six alleged PKK members were indicted in Paris in December 2010 by the anti-terrorist judge Thierry Fragnoli for conspiracy in connection with and financing of a terrorist organization (**AFP**, 5 June 2011). This set the tone for mobilizations by PKK supporters and members in Europe during the period of the PKKâs violent upsurge of 2011 to 2012 in Turkey. Particularly notable events of that period included disturbances in two parts of France, following the arrest of two men accused of being PKK leading cadres âwithout reasonâ on 4 June 2011 in Evry, in the southern suburbs of Paris. In a remarkable (but hardly unprecedented) display of its ability to instantly mobilize supporters, some fifty PKK supporters soon assembled on the street and directed projectiles at police, who called for reinforcements. As Kurdish protestorsâ numbers doubled, they continued to hurl projectiles at police, who retaliated with rubber bullets and tear gas (**AFP**, 4 June 2011).
Behind this incident was a crackdown by French authorities on the PKKâs organizing in France. Pressured constantly by Ankara to act against the PKKâs deterritorialized militants on its own soil, the French state (along with other European states with large Kurdish populations) was now concerned that the deterritorialized war between Turks and Kurds was both harming its own relations with Turkey (an important strategic partner) and damaging its security. Part of this concern flowed from the emergence and growing electoral successes of far-right political parties, which, capitalizing on economic instability, were prospering by targeting the influx of immigrants (including the highly visible Turkish Kurds). European Union states now determined to snuff out the burgeoning transnational war on their soil.
Pro-PKK Kurds continued to clash with police in France. Searching for PKK cadres at a Kurdish Cultural House, police in northern France clashed with PKK supporters on 4 June 2011, leading to arrests ([[#calibre_link-491][**LibĂ©ration**, 2011]]; **AFP**, 4 June 2011). But that was not the end: just as in Turkish Kurdistan itself, one incident led to another. Hundreds of local Kurds mobilized to battle police, with order not being restored until four hours after the initial arrests ([[#calibre_link-491][**LibĂ©ration**, 2011]]; **AFP**, 4 June 2011). Thousands of Kurds protested the following day in Evry and in Arnouville, where some demonstrators brandished flags bearing the image of Abdullah Ăcalan ([[#calibre_link-492][**Fdesouche**, 2011]]; **AFP**, 5 June 2011). At a follow-up demonstration in Paris up to 3,000 protesting Kurds likewise waved Kurdish flags and portraits of Ăcalan (**AFP**, 11 June 2011).
The arrests in both Val-dâOise and Evry had followed âan investigation conducted for several months by the anti-terrorist sub-directorate (SDAT) on the instructions of the anti-terrorist prosecutor of Parisâ, Interior Ministry spokesperson Pierre-Henry Brandet later claimed ([[#calibre_link-491][**LibĂ©ration**, 2011]]). Seven Kurds were subsequently indicted for supposed âconspiracy in relation to a terrorist enterpriseâ and for allegedly financing terrorism. One of the arrested Kurds was also charged with attempted extortion and wilful violence. Five of these Kurds were subsequently imprisoned (**AFP**, 9 June 2011).
Then, perhaps not coincidentally, on 20 June 2011 the trial opened in Paris of eighteen Kurds who had been arrested in France in February 2007. All stood accused of acts of terrorism and of financing the PKKâs activities. They were also charged with being active members of the PKK; the French state claiming that they had financed guerrilla attacks in Turkey and laundered money obtained from drug trafficking. The defendants included Ali Rıza Altun, Nedim Seven and Atilla Balıkçı, accused of being respectively the representative of the PKK in Europe, the organizationâs âsecretaryâ and its âtreasurerâ (**AFP**, 20 June 2011). A further four Kurds were subsequently arrested for PKK membership in Marseille and Paris following police raids and accused of financing terrorism and conspiracy in relation to a terrorist enterprise (**AFP**, 20 September 2011).
French interior minister Claude Gueant signed a broad agreement on terrorism in Ankara on 7 October 2011, aimed mainly at the PKK. He stated that in 2010 and 2011 respectively, thirty-eight and thirty-two PKK members had been arrested on French soil. The signing took place only three weeks before the French court was due to reach verdicts in the trial of eighteen Kurds of Turkish nationality, referred to above (**AFP**, 28 September 2011; **AFP**, 7 October 2011). More Kurds were arrested in the following weeks, after Franceâs Central Directorate of Internal Intelligence (DCRI) raided several premises in Bordeaux (**AFP**, 15 October 2011).
Sentences were finally handed down in Paris on 2 November 2011 for the eighteen Kurds arrested in 2007. Seventeen of the defendants received prison sentences ranging from one to five years (two of which were suspended), for alleged acts of terrorism and for financing the PKK. One sentence was accompanied by a ban from French territory for ten years. Presented as active members, if not leaders, of the PKK, they were found to have participated in the financing of attacks in Turkey. The court was unable to prove charges of money laundering from drug trafficking. One defendant was acquitted (**AFP**, 2 November 2011). The court also ordered the closing down of the Ahmet Kaya Kurdish Cultural Centre.
Protests by pro-PKK Kurds continued to flare up in France (**AFP,** 30 December 2011; **Hurriyet Daily News**, 6 October 2012). In Germany, meanwhile, security authorities arrested two suspected PKK recruiters on 18 July (**AFP**, 19 July 2011). The PKK also remained active elsewhere in Europe, conducting protests notably in Vienna on 17 October (**AFP**, 17 October 2011) in Amsterdam (**AFP**, 30 October 2011) and in Strasbourg (**AFP**, 23 November 2011).
The PKKâs successful establishment in the Kurdish diaspora gave it an increasingly formidable supportersâ network throughout Western Europe. These diaspora Kurds provided vital support for the PKK, raising large sums of money and mobilizing Kurds for protests across Western Europe. Initially evoked by the rise of the PKKâs militancy in Turkish Kurdistan, these deterritorialized militantsâ activism reassured their compatriots back home that they were not isolated, and that support was building for their cause in Europe. The pro-PKK diasporaâs proudest period was its successful organization of multistate mobilizations to âsave Ăcalanâ when the Kurdish leader briefly sojourned in Europe. Building on this, by 2010 the PKK attained a sophisticated organizational and propaganda apparatus in Europe. These Kurdish activists are well informed and follow political developments in Turkey closely, especially those concerning Turkeyâs Kurds. The failure of the PKKâs past efforts for a peaceful settlement infuriated the diaspora, and it has protested in large numbers on the streets of Western Europe. The same diaspora will not remain passive in the face of provocations from Turkish nationalist extremists aimed at derailing the new peace process.
This chapter has demonstrated the utterly contradictory nature of the PKK/Ankara peace process. After peaking in the 1980s and 1990s, the PKKâs armed struggle against the Turkish state went into abeyance for a period, before again growing visibly bloodier. The reasons for this deadly pattern are no mystery. Both Turkish governments and the PKK (and its wider movement) have exhibited the capacity to think outside of their respective boxes. The AKP, for instance, has grasped the necessity to speak directly to Turkeyâs Kurds; yet, partly due to its being blinded by short-term electoral concerns, it has been unable to accept for many years that this necessitated interacting meaningfully with the BDP. While talking of peace, the AKP persecuted the BDP.
A viable peace settlement requires the building of trust on both sides. The precondition for this is the abandonment by protagonists of ways of thinking and acting that, by their very nature, make the agreements that must be reached by all concerned practically impossible. This has proved very difficult, on both sides, for many years. The PKK has offered Ankara several unilateral ceasefires, but all have been ignored, as the deadly pattern continued to reassert itself. (The 2009 âKurdish Openingâ is a partial exception to this trend, since the ErdoÄan government did seek a peace settlement of sorts with the PKK. However, as shown earlier, the latter behaved immaturely at the time, demonstrating it was not yet capable of securing a lasting peace, while the government of the day, for its part, was unable to break the grip of the Turkish military on affairs of state.)
In the face of repeated failure to resolve the conflict, events have tended to quickly spiral out of control. Kurds protesting on the streets have met fierce repression, and so their demonstrations turned into increasingly violent confrontations with the authorities. Concluding that only violence could resolve the Kurdish issue the PKK has spoken darkly of âpolitical genocide against the Kurdish peopleâ. The unilateral ceasefire called on 13 August 2010 was formally abandoned on 28 February 2011 by the PKK, which recommenced attacking Turkish military targets. Abdullah Ăcalan formally ended all peacemaking moves with the Turkish State in mid-2010, stating that this was now the job of his military commanders. Although this was an attempt to alarm the authorities with the menace of total war, Ăcalanâs initiative simply intensified the violence on both sides.
Ăcalan did not abandon the possibility of a peace process, however. In mid-2011 both he and the DTK announced support for Kurdish âdemocratic autonomyâ, within the boundaries of the Turkish state. Convinced that this proposal had been ignored, Ăcalan declared at the end of July that this dialogue was âfinishedâ. Unfortunately, he was correct, as attacks on the PKK in Turkish and Iraqi Kurdistan became even more intensive. Then, though, even as a new Turkish offensive was waged against PKK bases in Iraqi Kurdistan, the Turkish government admitted in September 2011 that it had been engaging in secret direct negotiations with the PKK. Yet this initiative looked like failing altogether after just a few short weeks, and clashes reached very high levels of intensity.
Growing increasingly anxious as all its efforts brought it no closer to a viable peace settlement, the PKK became more and more desperate during 2011 and 2012, when the armed conflict returned to levels approaching that of the 1980s and 1990s conflict. Ankara exacerbated the problem by resorting to solely military methods and seeking assistance from the United States in pursuing this approach.
Nevertheless, surprising new developments were to emerge at the end of 2012, following behind-the-scenes activity, raising hopes for the possibility of a viable peace process succeeding.
A viable peace process was the very last thing that most people were expecting as the year 2012 ended. The terrible bloodshed of the preceding twelve months especially had sickened a great number of Turks and Kurds alike in Turkey, and most saw no reason why this would be likely to decrease in scale in the near future. In reality, events behind the scenes were about to create a stunning opportunity for peace, as the PKK prepared to announce its complete abandonment of guerrilla activity.
In the midst of the heightened state of bloodletting, on 31 December 2012, Prime Minister ErdoÄan stunned Turkey by admitting that secret peace negotiations had been taking place with Ăcalan in Imralı prison. Of course, the very fact that these negotiations had been happening for some time proves that the incipient peace process had been proceeding at the very same time as the conflict between Ankara and the PKK had reached a new level of bloodshed. The explanation for this apparent paradox is ErdoÄanâs realization that he needed to achieve the resolution of a number of threatening historical issues â any one of which could explode and jeopardize both the peace process and his own government.
Nevertheless, broad public support for the peace process was apparent as soon as ErdoÄan revealed that the intelligence organization MÄ°T had been conducting discussions with Abdullah Ăcalan. The International Crisis Group commented: âThe talks, which enjoy wide political support, may offer a genuine opportunity to end Turkeyâs long-standing Kurdish conflict.â Peace and Democracy Party representatives were permitted to visit the PKK leader for the first time, further lifting Kurdish expectations in the emerging peace process. Ăcalan told his visitors that the period of armed struggle was now ended ([[#calibre_link-153][International Crisis Group, 2013]]).
This opportunity had been a long time coming. The ceasefire that the PKK had launched on 1 September 1998 led directly to a decrease in violence between the PKK and Turkish security forces. This enabled the Turkish state to end Emergency Rule in the provinces of ColemĂȘrg and DĂȘrsim on 30 July 2002. This was extended in 30 November 2002 to Diyarbakır and Èırnak â the last two remaining provinces under Emergency Rule ([[#calibre_link-13][Gunes, 2012]]: 465). However, Ankara still failed to respond positively to the PKK/Kongra-Gel offer of a lasting peace settlement. On 1 June 2004 Kongra-Gel therefore formally ended the ceasefire. All previous PKK/Kongra-Gel unilateral ceasefires had met the same sorry end, for the reasons explored in the previous chapter â the failure of protagonists to abandon ways of thinking and acting that made a viable peace agreement practically impossible.
A total of 32,000 PKK militants were killed and 14,000 captured between 1984 and 2008. Some 5,560 civilians died and 6,482 Turkish soldiers were killed during the same phase ([[#calibre_link-154][**HĂŒrriyet**, 16 September 2008]]). The war has cost Ankara over $300 billion. Hundreds of thousands of Kurds have been displaced ([[#calibre_link-155][Pope, 2013; Schmid, 2012]]; [[#calibre_link-156][Traynor and Letsch, 2013]]). In the eighteen months following the collapse of the 2009â11 âKurdish Openingâ alone, almost 900 people had been killed and 8,000 Kurdish political prisoners taken into detention. To an increasing number of people involved on both sides of this conflict, the sheer senseless horror of the loss of human life was now becoming apparent. The scale of the human carnage began to gradually educe qualitative changes in thinking. The bloody military and political stalemate now convinced âsenior figures on both sidesâ to accept the impossibility of securing a thoroughgoing military or political victory ([[#calibre_link-155][Pope, 2013]]; [[#calibre_link-157][Schmid, 2012]]; [[#calibre_link-156][Traynor and Letsch, 2013]]). At the same time, a year without elections gave ErdoÄan the political space he needed in order to obtain a peace settlement, before his predicted run for Turkeyâs presidency in mid-2014 ([[#calibre_link-155][Pope, 2013]]).
The prime ministerâs adviser on Kurdish affairs stated on 4 January 2013 that the governmentâs goal was a âfinal settlementâ with the Kurds. The fact that the same spokesperson added exactly one week later that military operations against the PKK would continue until it disarmed ([[#calibre_link-153][International Crisis Group, 2013]]) does not contradict anything that has been said about the current peace process â which is, in any case, highly contradictory. The AKP government must at all times maintain a difficult and often convoluted posture in the peace process â continuing to pose as the implacable, active opponent of âPKK terrorismâ and upholder of the values of the âTurkish nationâ, while also promoting a peaceful but genuine compromise with the Kurds of Turkey.
As may be expected from such a complex agenda, the peace process did not advance without difficulties, but in fits and starts, with setbacks and roadblocks. As long as Ankara made positive gestures towards the Kurds, however, the peace process went forward. Such gestures include the government passing a law on 25 January allowing defendants to speak Kurdish in court at will, and a Diyarbakır court on 31 January acquitting ninety-eight Kurdish mayors of terrorism-related charges. Kurds warmly appreciated this. Over a million Kurds who gathered to listen to the **Serok**âs peace message in Amed in both Kurdish and Turkish on 21 March 2013 were permitted by security forces to sing, dance and wave pro-PKK banners with images of Ăcalan ([[#calibre_link-158][Dalay, 2013]]; [[#calibre_link-159][**Associated Press**, 2013]]). Other goodwill gestures included the governmentâs decision in early January 2013 to allow Ăcalan to watch television and to permit Kurdish movement leaders to visit him in prison ([[#calibre_link-155][Pope, 2013]]).
An opinion piece by Ä°hsan DaÄı in **Todayâs Zaman** talked up the prospects for lasting peace, noting that both Abdullah Ăcalan and the BDP were assets in implementing a future peace deal. The op-ed piece added: âĂcalan is an aging man and in an era of post-Ăcalan Kurdish politics it will be impossible to find or create a leader like him to make peace withâ ([[#calibre_link-160][DaÄı, 2013]]). This opinion certainly has much merit. The PKK leader has relentlessly pushed both his own party and the AKP government towards the most hopeful peace initiative of the entire conflict in Turkey. Abdullah Ăcalan admits that his party has committed terroristic deeds at times in the past, but now does not condone these. It is he, more than any other individual in the PKK, who has been responsible for persisting with unilateral ceasefires, even though these have usually been fruitless. On the other hand, his party also contains leaders and cadres who have demonstrated the opposite dynamic â reneging on ceasefires and returning to the path of all-out war. It is a measure of Ăcalanâs leadership abilities that he has been able to reverse such dynamics, despite being confined to a prison cell.
Furthermore, relations between Iraqi Kurdistan and Ankara have improved appreciably, allowing Turkey to emerge âas the only regional ally and balancer vis-Ă -vis Baghdadâ. This cordial relation is likely to continue and prosper, given that Iraqi Kurdistan is a prized market for Turkey and a probable energy provider. It is a strategic partner because of the Iraqi Kurdsâ deteriorating relationship with both Baghdad and Syriaâs al-Assad regime. Mutual âstrategic and economic interestsâ make it increasingly probable that the KRG would help facilitate the PKK/Ankara peace process ([[#calibre_link-160][DaÄı, 2013]]).
By February 2013 Ăcalan had called for prisoners to be released by both sides. In response the PKK freed eight Turkish soldiers and officials it had held captive in Iraqi Kurdistan (**BBC News**, 21 March 2013). Peace was clearly back on the agenda.
<em>Milliyet</em> columnist Kadri GĂŒrsel cites three forces that have opposed the AKP government since 2002: âthe prime minister, the prisoner and the preacherâ (cited in [[#calibre_link-161][Dombey, 2013a]]). This observation also neatly captures the powers that must be secured for the peace process to succeed. The evolving stances of âthe prisonerâ (i.e. Abdullah Ăcalan) have been discussed in earlier chapters. The responses to the peace process of the prime minister and his chief opponents both within and outside the state are considered in the present chapter. The power politics reviewed here, it will be shown, relates directly to an attempt to return Turkey to its previous status as a praetorian state under direct military tutelage. The factors driving this conspiracy derive in large part from fears of rapprochement between Ankara and the PKK.
As a party of so-called âmoderate political Islamâ the AKP is an unusual â but not unprecedented â government in modern Turkey. The Republic of Turkey was founded on 29 October 1923, with Mustafa Kemal AtatĂŒrk as its first president. AtatĂŒrk comprehensively dismantled the Ottoman Islamic Caliphate, outlawing religion in all spheres of public life, with secularism and virulent Turkish nationalism becoming the new stateâs first principles. It took over four and a half decades for political parties inspired by Islamic values to reappear in Turkish public life. Despite this success, these parties have all been stalked perpetually by the threat of judicial abolition â if not removal by the Kemalist military apparatus. These parties have also often been important players in the politics of Turkeyâs Kurdish region and therefore factors in the PKK/Ankara peace process. Indeed, the Kurdish issue has been a constant factor prompting powerful opposition by sections of the Turkish state.
The Adalet ve Kalkınma Partisi led by Prime Minister ErdoÄan derives from deeply conservative Islamic organizations â some of which were closed by the Kemalists for supposedly planning to establish an âIslamic stateâ. One of these predecessor parties, the Refah Partisi (RP â Welfare Party), led by Necmettin Erbakan, became the junior partner in a coalition on 28 June 1996 with the arch-secularist DoÄru Yol Partisi (DYP â True Path Party) (YeĆilada, 1999: 123â4). The Genelkurmay (military general staff) of the TĂŒrk Silahlı Kuvvetleri (TSK â Turkish Armed Forces) exerted mounting pressure on the coalition. In the face of this, perhaps, Erbakan sought to broaden his base in Turkeyâs Kurdish region. The Erbakanists â in all their various incarnations âstruck a real chord in Turkish Kurdistan, consistently polling âwell above the national averageâ in that region during the 1970s and 1980s ([[#calibre_link-162][van Bruinessen, 1991]]: 22).
Kurdish nationalist votes had in fact become crucial to Erbakanâs political project, as legal Kurdish parties were outlawed or heavily repressed, and electoral support for them was transferred to the RP ([[#calibre_link-163][Barkey and Fuller, 1998]]: 101â7; see also [[#calibre_link-164][Gunter, 1997]]: 85, 87). However, the Kurdish question was also the RPâs undoing. In late July 1996 the RP attempted to explore seriously the possibility of a peaceful settlement in the war between the Turkish military and the PKK. Taking advantage of the PKKâs unilateral ceasefire since mid-December 1995, Erbakan held secret meetings with the Islamist writer Ä°smail Nacar, who had been chosen as an intermediary by the pro-Kurdish Peoples Democratic Party (HADEP) ([[#calibre_link-165][**Sabah**, 4 August 1996]]; **AFP**,4 August 1996). HADEP was the predecessor of the present-day Peace and Democracy Party. Erbakan met directly with HADEP leaders (**Reuters**, 5 August 1996) and, the daily **Sabah** claimed, was also in contact with PKK leader Abdullah Ăcalan ([[#calibre_link-165][**Sabah**, 4 August 1996]]).
Less than forty-eight hours after receiving a friendly visit from two senior military officials, Erbakan was repeating the mantra of the Kemalists: âWe will not sit down at the table with terrorists. We will not give one inch in our struggle with terrorism. We will not surrender our insistence on a united stateâ ([[#calibre_link-166][**Wall Street Journal**, European edition, 9 August 1996]]). Within days of this statement, Erbakan was talking about fighting the PKK militarily again (**Reuters**, 7 August 1996).
Meanwhile, the military-dominated Milli GĂŒvenlik Kurulu continued to warn Erbakan to diverge from what the generals believed were challenges to the generalsâ Kemalist agenda, but Erbakan refused to change course. The military soon moved painfully close to direct physical confrontation with the RP. Faced with a full-blooded military coup, the Erbakan/Ăiller coalition resigned in June 1997. Abdullah GĂŒl, RPâs deputy chairman (and later president of Turkey under the AKP government) endorsed the interpretation of these events as a âpost-modern coup dâĂ©tatâ ([[#calibre_link-167][Ăandar, 1997]]).
As the RP faced imminent proscription by the Supreme Court, the Fazilet Partisi (FP â the Virtue Party) succeeded the RP in late 1998 (YeĆilada, 1999: 124). The issues causing concern to the generals were many, but a key worry of the ultra-Kemalists was that the FP might also attempt to deal with the PKK, after its chairman, Recai Kutan, spoke of recognizing âsome of the rights of Turkeyâs Kurdish identityâ ([[#calibre_link-168][**Turkish Daily News**, 13 August 1998]]). Some of the partyâs leaders formed a new party, the Adalet ve Kalkınma Partisi (AKP â Justice and Development Party), in August 2001 ([[#calibre_link-31][**Milliyet**, 17 December 1998]]).
The AKP received 34.17 per cent of votes in the 3 November 2002 Turkish general elections, winning 66 per cent of the parliamentary seats, due to the electoral threshold that disregards parties polling less than 10 per cent of the vote ([[#calibre_link-169][Tezcur, 2011]]). The first AKP government was formed in November. Unusually for an Islamic-tainted ruling party, the AKP remained in power following the 2007 and 2011 general elections and even achieved overall domination of the municipalities in the 2004 and 2009 local elections ([[#calibre_link-169][Tezcur, 2011]]). In the March 2014 municipal elections the AKP polled a six-point increase over its 2009 results.
The AKPâs consecutive electoral successes enabled it to introduce measures that greatly facilitated its peace process with the PKK, by removing obstacles that had stymied its predecessor parties â despite the tremendous concern that this generated within the Kemalist military and judicial establishment. In contrast to its timid predecessor parties, the AKP responded to predictable pressures from the Kemalist judicial establishment and military brass, by making concerted efforts to neuter these institutions ([[#calibre_link-169][Tezcur, 2011]]). The Genelkurmay now lacked the ability to veto government policies and was now unable to impose policies that identified groups (such as the Kurds or their political representations) as âinternal enemiesâ ([[#calibre_link-169][Tezcur, 2011]]).
The abolition of the generalsâ judicial immunity exposed them to prosecution. Beginning in 2007, the AKP instituted a string of criminal investigations that identified highly placed officers in what became known as the so-called Ergenekon conspiracy (discussed below) against the AKP government. By September 2011 over 15 per cent of all generals were in prison ([[#calibre_link-169][Tezcur, 2011]]).
In the face of â and in response to â a web of interlocking conspiracies centred in the Turkish military to allegedly overthrow bloodily the elected AKP government, Turkey voted positively in a constitutional referendum on 12 September 2010. The constitutional amendments placed new limitations on the authority of the military and its personnel, including: introducing civilian trials of members of the army who are accused of violating the constitutional order; subjecting decisions of the high military council to judicial review; and lifting the judicial immunity granted to the leaders of the 1980 coup. The amendments gave Turkeyâs legislature and government enhanced power in judicial appointments, thus ending the protection of the senior judiciary, and thereby hampering the generalsâ ability to sway judicial decisions. The reform also weakened the traditional partnership between the CHP, the military and the senior judiciary.
After the endorsement of the 2011 general election â and with its constitutional reforms already in hand â the AKP imposed restrictions that precluded the promotion of generals hostile to the government. Summing up, one can agree with Tezcurâs assessment that the AKP succeeded in consolidating its authority over the presidency, the high judiciary and the armed forces ([[#calibre_link-169][Tezcur, 2011]]). However, a series of financial âscandalsâ in late 2013 undermined these achievements significantly. These are examined below. To make sense of the events, however, it is first necessary to grasp the reality of Turkeyâs deep state, which originated in the Cold War, and which has impacted heavily on Turkeyâs Kurds.
Numerous sources attest to the existence of secret armies in many Western European countries from the onset of the Cold War ([[#calibre_link-170][Ganser, 2005b]]: 69; [[#calibre_link-171][Senate of Belgium, 1991]]). In 1974 the then Turkish prime minister, BĂŒlent Ecevit, exposed a so-called **kontrgerilla** (counter-guerrilla) force operating independently of the military command. In 2005 former President SĂŒleyman Demirel confirmed that the âdeep state exists, and it is the militaryâ, adding that the deep state could take over the state as a whole in times of crisis ([[#calibre_link-172][**NTVâMSNBC**, 2005]]). Discussing Demirelâs admission, Merve Kavakci suggests that the deep state has infiltrated vast sectors of the state ([[#calibre_link-173][Kavakci, 2009]]). Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄan agrees, affirming that the deep state âdoes existâ (ErdoÄan, on Kanal 7 television, 26 January 2007). Maureen Freely asserts that the deep state is âTurkish shorthand for a faceless clique inside the Turkish stateâ. She adds that, while Turkeyâs deep state may be based in the army, it is also connected closely with the Milli Ä°stihbarat TeĆkilatı, the judiciary and the mafia ([[#calibre_link-174][Freely, 2007]]: 20; see also [[#calibre_link-175][Celik, 1999]]).
Debate on the extent of Turkeyâs deep state (**derin devlet**) continues to rage in Turkey. Some blame the deep state for the military coups of 1971 and 1980, while some also allege that the **derin devlet** has been mobilized against the PKK ([[#calibre_link-175][Celik 1999]]; [[#calibre_link-176][Dundar, 2006]]). Abdullah Ăcalan alleges that a deep-state unit attempted to take over the PKK ([[#calibre_link-177][**Sundayâs Zaman**, 2008]]). Interestingly, many now assert that some alleged PKK armed attacks were actually perpetrated by deep-state forces (see [[#calibre_link-178][Esayan, 2013]]: 34). In one notorious incident on 24 May 1993, for instance, thirty-three unarmed soldiers were allegedly executed by the PKK in Bingöl. PKK advocate Adem Uzun casts suspicion on claims that the PKK was responsible for killing these soldiers, and Abdullah Ăcalan has requested an independent inquiry into the incident ([[#calibre_link-179][Uzun, 2014]]: n3 & 17).
Three members of the Turkish armed forces were subsequently scapegoated in connection with this incident for alleged negligence of duty. A series of appeals by the soldiers failed to resolve their case, although the file in the case mysteriously went missing. Ćemdin Sakık, a former PKK commander â known also as âParmaksız Zekiâ â alleges that the military formed a group called the DoÄu ĂalıĆma Grubu (DĂG â East Working Group) in eastern Turkey back in the 1990s, which he charges with numerous illegal activities, including the killing of the thirty-three soldiers in Bingöl. Perhaps not coincidentally, the attack occurred at a time when the then-president, Turgut Ăzal, was working for a peace settlement with the PKK, which had declared a ceasefire. The attack ended the ceasefire ([[#calibre_link-180][Cihan, 2012]]).
Discussing the âclandestine operations of the Turkish deep stateâ Serdar Kaya cites the activities of the Jandarma Ä°stihbarat ve Terörle MĂŒcadele (JÄ°TEM â Gendarmarie Intelligence and Counter-terror Unit), which he names as âallegedly responsible for thousands of extrajudicial executions and assassinations of PKK sympathizers and supportersâ ([[#calibre_link-181][Kaya, 2009]]: 103; [[#calibre_link-182][Jenkins, 2009]]: v).
Ä°smet Berkan claims that in late 1992 a section of Turkeyâs military formed an ultra-right-wing group involving mafia boss Abdullah Catlı and senior police officers, aspiring to physically liquidate the Kurdish problem permanently ([[#calibre_link-183][Berkan, 1996]]). Thousands of Kurds died in extrajudicial killings and some 3,500 Kurdish villages were burned to the ground (McKiernan, 1999; Cengiz, 2011). Numerous independent reporters assert that the nucleus of this secretive armed force was the ultra-rightist Nationalist Action Party ([[#calibre_link-184][Bayart, 1982]]: 111â12; [[#calibre_link-185][Erdem, 1995]]; [[#calibre_link-186][KĂŒrkĂ§ĂŒ, 1996]]: 5; [[#calibre_link-187][ZĂŒrcher, 1995]]: 276; [[#calibre_link-188][van Bruinessen, 1996]]; 8; [[#calibre_link-19][Panico, 1995]]: 170ff.). In the 1960s Alparslan TĂŒrkeĆ established the KomĂŒnizm Ä°le MĂŒcadele Dernekleri (KÄ°M â Association for Struggling with Communism), and a crypto-fascist political front the Milliyetçi Hareket Partisi (MHP â Nationalist Action Party), both of which have worked closely with the **derin devlet**. An investigation by Ankaraâs deputy state attorney into possible connections between KÄ°M, MHP and the deep state found that all were complicit in massacres and assassinations during the 1970s. The deputy state attorney, DoÄan Ăz, was himself assassinated on 24 March 1978 ([[#calibre_link-189][**TĂŒrkiye**, 2008]]; [[#calibre_link-190][Ganser, 2005]]: 237).
Turkeyâs deep state has always been rigidly Kemalist. By definition, therefore, it is deeply secularist, anti-communist and anti-Kurdish nationalist. But that has not prevented it utilizing both leftist and (after 1980) many Islamic forces to achieve its aims. Ahmet Ćık writes that the **derin devlet** appoints people to interact with the leaders of groups it wishes to make use of. âBe respectful of AtatĂŒrk and weâll help youâ these Muslims were told. Both sides have âmutual interestsâ, despite some of their final goals diverging ([[#calibre_link-191][Ćık]], 2013: 4). This is because all of the groups â the leftists as well as the Islamic forces â are nationalists. The most significant Islamic grouping working with the deep state has been the organization of Muhammed Fethullah GĂŒlen. Osman Nuri GĂŒndeĆ asserts that during the 1980s GĂŒlen worked with the ultra-right anti-communist groups in Turkey supported by both the CIA and the Turkish deep state ([[#calibre_link-192][GĂŒndeĆ, 2010]]). GĂŒlen is a notable nationalist who was politicized and trained in the Cold War fight against communism. The GĂŒlenists are known to have infiltrated Turkeyâs Ministry of the Interior, its police force and its Ministry of Justice ([[#calibre_link-191][Ćık, 2013]]: 4).
The contemporary intervention of Turkeyâs **derin devlet** against the PKK became apparent in Paris in early 2013, in a provocation apparently aimed at derailing the PKK/Ankara peace process. On 10 January three prominent PKK members â Sakine Cansız, Fidan DoÄan and Leyla Söylemez â were shot dead in a northern district of the French capital. French police immediately began investigating a connection with Turkeyâs National Intelligence Organization (Milli Ä°stihbarat TeĆkilatı, or MÄ°T). The provocation provoked a mass resurgence of PKK supporters onto the streets of Western Europe.
The killings had every mark of a meticulously planned intelligence operation. Tenants in nearby offices heard no shots; a silencer was used to muffle the sound ([[#calibre_link-193][Yetkin, 2013]]). But which intelligence service orchestrated the assassinations? **Spiegel Online** voices âsuspicionsâ that âthere may be Turkish intelligence links to the slayingsâ. It adds that Germanyâs domestic intelligence agency, the Bundesamt fĂŒr Verfassungsschutz (BfV) âcurtailed its cooperationâ with Turkeyâs intelligence organizations, due to these suspicions ([[#calibre_link-194][Diehl, Gezer and Schmid, 2014]]).
Yet this scenario raises an even bigger issue: why would the Turkish state assassinate the PKKâs Sakine Cansız and her comrades in the middle of peace negotiations? Does this indicate that Ankaraâs declared commitment to the peace process is a sham? The likely answer to this question is that the government remains committed to the process, but that other sectors of the state â Turkeyâs notorious **derin devlet** â have never accepted it. President Abdullah GĂŒl urged calm, saying that time was needed to reveal the truth concerning the murders. Prime Minister ErdoÄan suggested that the attack could be a provocation from forces who do not want a peace solution to the Kurdish/Turkish conflict. He added, however, that the killings âcould be an internal feudâ ([[#calibre_link-195][**HĂŒrriyet Daily News**, 11 January 2013]]).
Tantalizing revelations emerging after the assassinations in Paris name Ămer GĂŒney, a Turkish citizen, as the primary suspect in the murders of the three PKK militants. A video has emerged of GĂŒney at the crime scene, watching French police investigate the killings ([[#calibre_link-196][Dickey, 2013]]). On 13 January 2014 a close associate of GĂŒney released an audio recording, allegedly made covertly by GĂŒney but only to be released in the event of misadventure on his part. The recording is apparently of GĂŒney planning with MÄ°T the murders of Cansız and her comrades. French police arrested GĂŒney on 17 January 2013 ([[#calibre_link-197][**EKurd Daily**, 13 January 2014]]).
In addition to this, a secret document dated 18 November 2011, supposedly signed by a high official of MÄ°T, UÄur Kaan Ayık, and countersigned by other high MÄ°T officials, O. YĂŒret, S. Asal and H. Ăzcan, has come to light. Entitled âRef: Sakine Cansız, Codenamed Saraâ, the document purports to report information from an agent â code-named âLegionnaireâ â on Sakine Cansız, a PKK founding member. The document claims that âLegionnaireâ met with MÄ°T in Turkey in order to plan Cansızâs assassination. The document states that âŹ6,000 was paid to âLegionnaireâ for the assassinationâs preparation. GĂŒney apparently made several trips to Turkey in 2012 ([[#calibre_link-198][ANF, 2014;]] [[#calibre_link-199][**Pariscinayeti**, 2014;]] [[#calibre_link-200][YouTube, 2014]]).
Franceâs interior minister Manuel Valls declared that the killings were âwithout doubt an executionâ ([[#calibre_link-201][**The Province**, 2013]]; [[#calibre_link-202][Dilorenzo, 2013]]). A statement by the Koma CiwakĂȘn KĂŒrdistan responded to the assassinations: âAs a matter of fact, these murders couldnât have taken place without the support of intelligence servicesâ ([[#calibre_link-203][Kurdistan Democratic Communitiesâ Union, 2013]]).
Hundreds of Kurds quickly gathered outside the Kurdish centre where the three militants were killed. On 15 January Pro-PKK activists carried coffins representing the three dead Kurdish women through the streets of the Paris suburb of Villiers-le-Bel. An estimated 10,000 members of Franceâs Kurdish community attended the ceremony. Waving Kurdish flags, the demonstrators chanted âWe are the PKKâ ([[#calibre_link-204][**Deutsche Welle**, 2013]]). Some 700 Kurds also demonstrated on the streets of Berlin, carrying posters of the three dead women. One group carried a sign reading: âWomen are murdered, Europe is silentâ. Some 200 people stood in sub-zero temperatures outside Stockholmâs French embassy, chanting âLong Live the PKKâ and âTurkey, Terroristsâ ([[#calibre_link-205][Yackley, 2013a]]). On 17 January thousands of Kurds gathered in Amed for the funeral of the three PKK members ([[#calibre_link-206][Cheviron, 2013]]). In an impressive display of organization, demonstrators in Turkey and in France carried the same full-colour portraits of the slain activists. The PKK and its supporters across Turkey and Western Europe had reasserted their strength in the face of a perceived provocation, without letting themselves be drawn back into a shooting war. The provocation had failed.
Turkeyâs **derin devlet** has a proven track record of staging anti-Kurdish provocations at critical political junctures. Whether it was centrally involved in the assassinations of the three PKK militants in Paris will only be definitively proven over time. In the meantime, further provocations from Turkish forces opposed to the PKKâAnkara peace process could occur, before peace is achieved. Sinan Ulgen, a former Turkish diplomat, observes: âUnfortunately, we are bound to see acts designed to derail this process and I think this [the slayings of Cansız, DoÄan and Ćaylemez] is act oneâ ([[#calibre_link-207][Landauro and Parkinson, 2013]]).
By any account, Fethullah GĂŒlen has immense political influence in Turkey ([[#calibre_link-208][Cetinkaya, 1996]], [[#calibre_link-209][2004]], [[#calibre_link-210][2005]], [[#calibre_link-211][2006]], [[#calibre_link-35][2007]], [[#calibre_link-212][2008a]], [[#calibre_link-213][2008b]], [[#calibre_link-214][2009]]). Several police commissioners and security personnel take orders from him ([[#calibre_link-215][YanardaÄ, 2006]], cited in [[#calibre_link-216][Sharon-Krespin, 2009]]). His organization, Hizmet, has 600 schools and an estimated 6 million adherents globally ([[#calibre_link-217][Oda TV, 2010]]), making it the largest Islamic organization in the world. GĂŒlenâs former right-hand man Nurettin Veren admits that GĂŒlenist âgraduatesâ include governors, judges, military officers and government ministers. Veren adds: âThey consult GĂŒlen before doing anythingâ ([[#calibre_link-218][**KanaltĂŒrk**, 2006]], cited by [[#calibre_link-216][Sharon-Krespin, 2009]]).
GĂŒlen has many devotees in the AKP and is assisted by his movementâs massive holdings in the media, financial institutions, banks and business organizations. When entering the state bureaucracy, GĂŒlenists are required by Hizmet to sign a letter of allegiance to Fethullah GĂŒlen. These state officials, including provincial governors, make startling statements of allegiance to GĂŒlen. One governor, for instance, vows âduty of all kindsâ to GĂŒlen. A high-ranking official in the Istanbul University Faculty of Law promises âa lifetime of obedienceâ. Another bureaucrat addresses GĂŒlen reverently: âI kiss your footâ and undertakes to perform any requested services for GĂŒlen âwhere you want, the way you wantâŠâ The letter-writers frequently express the desire for âmartyrdomâ in GĂŒlenâs service ([[#calibre_link-219][**GĂŒndem**, 2014]]).
GĂŒlen has lived in the United States since 1997. Interestingly, former CIA officers were among the conspicuous references in Gulenâs green card application ([[#calibre_link-220][Edmonds, 2011]]). He has always openly exhibited the greatest hostility to the PKK. Yet, according to Hizmet supporter Ä°hsan Yılmaz, âFethullah GĂŒlen very clearly announced that he supports the peace processâ ([[#calibre_link-221][Yılmaz, 2013]]). Nevertheless, in a speech on 24 October 2011 entitled âTerör ve Izdırapâ (Terror and Agony), GĂŒlen rhetorically âsupplicatesâ God:
O God, unify us (**Allahim birligimizi sagla**), and as for those among us who deserve nothing but punishment (**o hakki kötektir bunlar**), knock their homes upside down (**Allahim onlarin altlarini ĂŒstlerine getir**), destroy their unity (**birliklerini boz**), burn their houses to ash (**evlerine ateĆ sal**) may their homes be filled with weeping and supplications (**feryad ve figan sal**), burn and cut off their roots (**köklerini kurut, köklerini kes**) and bring their affairs to an end (**iĆlerini bitir**). ([[#calibre_link-155][Popp, 2013]]; [[#calibre_link-222][Abu Khalil, 2014]])
âGĂŒlen calls here for the killing of 50,000 peopleâ, observes journalist Ăiler Fırtına chillingly ([[#calibre_link-223][Fırtına, 2011]]).
The GĂŒlenists deny this account now â although it is interesting that there is now no archival copy of GĂŒlenâs 2011 original speech on their own websites. Yet even the GĂŒlenists admit that in the speech GĂŒlen âsuggested that there should be military operations targeting PKK membersâ ([[#calibre_link-72][**Todayâs Zaman**, 31 August 2012]]). And GĂŒlen sympathizer Max Farrar concedes regarding GĂŒlenâs stance that âHe does, however, say that those Kurds who use military methods in support for their claim for independence should be met with an overwhelming military response by the Turkish stateâ ([[#calibre_link-224][Farrar, 7 November 2012]]).
A pro-PKK source asserts that GĂŒlen contends:
let us say there are 15,000 or 50,000 of them. So [addressing the Turkish state], you have around ⊠a million intelligence personnel. I donât want to mention them all by name but you have several intelligence organizations; you are member of NATO; you are involved in cooperative projects with a number of international intelligence organizations⊠So, use these projects and programs and localize, identify and triangulate every single of them and then kill them all one by one⊠([[#calibre_link-225][Soleimani, 2011]])
GĂŒlenâs tirade caused quite a stir in Turkish Kurdistan. He appeared to realize that he might have gone too far. A further article on his official website stressed that GĂŒlen had not cursed all the Kurds, only the PKK. Yet even this version â the video of which features very obvious cuts at all the crucial points â contains a toned-down segment of a passage from the original speech in which GĂŒlen calls for the destruction of the PKK by the Turkish military. Thus, GĂŒlen asks God: **birliklerini boz, evlerine ateĆ sal, feryad u figan sal, köklerini kes, kurut ve iĆlerini bitir** (destroy their unity, burn their houses to ash, dry their roots and bring their affairs to an end). GĂŒlenâs audience can be clearly heard on the recording vocally approving his rhetorical supplications to God ([[http://fgulen.com][fgulen.com]], 2012; [[#calibre_link-226][GĂŒlen, 2011]]).
In February 2012 the Istanbul prosecutor attempted to question MÄ°T boss Hakan Fidan â an âErdoÄan confidanteâ â about alleged âlinksâ to the PKK. The pro-GĂŒlen media supported the prosecutorâs fanciful initiative. ErdoÄan viewed the move as a direct political attack on him. Around the same time he apparently began demoting suspected GĂŒlenist police chiefs. The special-authority courts, supposedly controlled by GĂŒlenist judges and prosecutors, were eliminated ([[#calibre_link-227][Akyol, 2014]]: 2â3; [[#calibre_link-70][Gursel, 2013]]). Over the following twelve months the deepening conflict between the GĂŒlenists and the AKP government evolved into an open war, with GĂŒlen himself apparently comparing the government to a dictatorial âPharaohâ ([[#calibre_link-70][Gursel, 2013]]).
GĂŒlenâs Hikmet movement is yet to show its real power in Turkey, for the simple reason that he has never mobilized all his supporters in an all-out push for power. He is an extremely cautious player â but one who has never lost sight of his goal of a Turkey reorganized along lines dictated by him. His most significant power plays are only now being uncovered. They include alleged complicity in a military coup plot â âErgenekonâ â to overthrow the AKP government.
The Ergenekon conspiracy highlights those state institutions â primarily the high judiciary and the military hierarchy â that must remain neutralized if peace between Kurds and Turks is to prosper in Turkey ([[#calibre_link-169][Tezcur, 2011]]). This intrigue also demonstrates how Turkeyâs deep state, the GĂŒlenists and the generals have colluded to derail the PKK/Ankara peace process.
Since the establishment of the Turkish Republic in 1923, Turkeyâs Kemalist armed forces have considered themselves its guardian. âKemalismâ â the praetorian political doctrine that began with Kemal AtatĂŒrk himself â asserts that the military has both the right and the responsibility to intervene in affairs of state at critical junctures, in order to guarantee the systemâs continuance ([[#calibre_link-28][White, 2000]]: 130). The Ergenekon coup plottersâ principal planning document explicitly evokes the armed forcesâ responsibility to protect Turkeyâs secular Kemalist nature ([[#calibre_link-228][**Taraf**, 2010]]). The AKPâs accession to power in 2002 allegedly provoked senior military officers to draw up an elaborate scenario in 2003 â entitled **Balyoz** (Sledgehammer) â involving the creation of a strategy of tension. **Balyoz** aimed to create widespread fear, to manipulate public opinion into supporting a military coup ([[#calibre_link-228][**Taraf**, 2010]]). It has to be remembered that Turkey is no stranger to such plots. Turkish **kontrgerilla** used the same approach to justify the 1980 military coup, racking up public hysteria about âseparatist terrorismâ ([[#calibre_link-190][Ganser, 2005a]]). According to the extensive documentation seized by Turkeyâs Counterterrorism Department, **Balyoz** explicitly states that its model is a strategy to generate tension leading up to a coup ([[#calibre_link-229][Young Civilians and Human Rights Agenda Association, 2010]]: 34; [[#calibre_link-228][**Taraf**, 2010]]).
Combatting so-called Kurdish âseparatismâ was never the only objective of the Ergenekon conspirators, who were at least equally concerned about the rise of Islamic religiosity in Turkey ([[#calibre_link-230][AltuniĆik, 2005]]; [[#calibre_link-231][SakallioÄlu, 1996]]: 231â51; [[#calibre_link-232][Saktanber, 2002]]) and the potential ramifications this might have for the demise of their beloved secular state â but the Kurdish question remains a central concern, nevertheless. For this reason, key conspirators have included senior figures in key paramilitary bodies tasked with liquidating the PKK â the Jandarma Ä°stihbarat ve Terörle MĂŒcadele and the Ăzel Harp Dairesi (ĂHD â Special Warfare Department) ([[#calibre_link-233][Mavioglu, 2008]]; **HĂŒrriyet Daily News**, 15 January 2009).
Even before taking power, ErdoÄan was well aware of the fate of previous so-called âIslamistâ governments in Turkey at the hands of the Kemalist military establishment and appears to have been determined not to share his predecessorsâ fate. Accordingly, soon after the first AKP government assumed office on 14 March 2003, it began undermining the militaryâs autonomy and political power, using the cover of reforms demanded by the European Union as part of Turkeyâs accession to EU membership.
The government established oversight and control of military extra-budgetary spending and removed military representatives from the Radio and Television Supreme Council (RTUÌK) and the Council of Higher Education (YĂK), where they supposedly protected Turkey from âIslamismâ and âKurdish separatismâ. More significantly, the number of military officers on the National Security Council (MGK) was drastically cut from five to one and a civilian secretary-general imposed on it. In addition, the MGK lost its executive authority and was ordered to submit its annual budget to the prime minister. The military was outraged, but was nevertheless compelled to comply, due to the enormous public support â up to 77 per cent â for the EU reforms ([[#calibre_link-234][Cook, 2010]]). The AKP government later abolished the heinously unjust state security courts that had been used by its predecessors to persecute Kurds on the pretext of âfighting terrorismâ, and drew up a draft constitution that would subject the military to civilian control.
In April 2007 the military tested its declining strength, threatening to intervene should AKP co-founder Abdullah GĂŒl become president. Prime Minister ErdoÄan responded with a snap general election, winning 47 per cent of the votes â a landslide win in Turkish terms. GĂŒl became president in August 2007, with the military powerless to prevent it. His enemies within the state responded in March 2008, when the public prosecutor charged the AKP with being âa centre of anti-secular activityâ. The party was found guilty, but the Constitutional Court decided not to ban the party or its leading members from politics ([[#calibre_link-234][Cook, 2010]]). But everything changed when a chest of twenty-seven grenades was discovered in an apartment in UÌmraniye, prompting intense police and judicial activity. A web of conspiracy was found, beginning with retired junior officer Oktay Yıldırım, who had originally placed the grenades in the apartment, but leading to the top of the Genelkurmay ([[#calibre_link-178][Esayan, 2013]]: 30).
The Turkish military establishment now endured serious sustained attacks. Police soon uncovered a document entitled **Ergenekon-Lobi** (Ergenekon Lobby), which laid out the first âdetailed accountsâ of a terrorist network. The document was discovered on alleged conspiratorsâ personal computers â including that of a retired member of Turkeyâs Ăzel Harp Dairesi, Muzaffer Tekin. Tekin confessed to complicity and in turn implicated Fikret Emek, also a retired ĂHD member. Police raided Emekâs residence and found long-range weapons, hand grenades, explosives and bomb-making equipment. Police then discovered three further arsenals across Turkey ([[#calibre_link-178][Esayan, 2013]]: 30â31).
Hundreds of suspects were detained by the Counterterrorism Department of the Turkish National Police. Some forty-nine generals, admirals and former Turkish navy and air force commanders were charged with plotting a coup against the government ([[#calibre_link-235][Cagaptay, 2010]]). In early 2012 the retired former leader of the MGK, General Ä°lker BaĆbuÄ, was arrested for his alleged role in Ergenekon. BaĆbuÄ was specifically charged with âgang leadershipâ and seeking to remove the government by force ([[#calibre_link-236][**National Turk**, 2012]]). Several four-star generals (including Ćener Eruygur, HurĆit Tolon and Ăzden Ărnek) were then arrested for co-leading the conspiracy â marking the first occasion that coup plotters have faced judicial sanction in the history of the Turkish Republic ([[#calibre_link-178][Esayan, 2013]]: 39, 40). Those accused of plotting to overthrow the government and of membership of a terrorist organization also included the former chief of military staff, retired general Ä°lker BaĆbuÄ ([[#calibre_link-178][Esayan, 2013]]: 29).
The biggest consequence of all these events is that the military has lost its aura of untouchability, to the extent that the AKP government was able to cancel the longstanding Protocol on Cooperation for Security and Public Order (EMASYA) in 2010, under which the military assume control of law and order in the event of a governmental breakdown â giving it the legal framework for military intervention ([[#calibre_link-237][Taspinar, 2010]]; [[#calibre_link-238][Park, 2010]]).
A new protocol became law in mid-2013, allowing governors to call for military units in the event of social incidents in a province. This supposed âcivilianâ version of the EMASYA protocol permits military units to intervene in a social incident if demanded by a governor ([[#calibre_link-239][Zibak, 2013]]). Other regulations and bylaws can still be deployed by the Turkish military if it wishes to intervene directly in politics â such as Article 35 of the armyâs internal service regulations, which allows it to âprotectâ the state from Islamic âfundamentalismâ and Kurdish âseparatismâ ([[#calibre_link-237][Taspinar, 2010]]). Nevertheless, the abolition of EMASYA has enormous symbolic value, displaying publicly the decline of the militaryâs once unassailable position of power and respect.
The chief prosecutor of Erzincan, Ä°lhan Cihaner, was arrested on 17 February 2010 for allegedly being an player in the Ergenekon plot. In retaliation, the chief prosecutor of Erzurum who had ordered Cihanerâs arrest â was then dismissed by the ultra-Kemalist HĂąkimler ve Savcılar YĂŒksek Kurulu (HSYK â Supreme Board of Judges and Prosecutors). Accusing the HSYK of undermining the Ergenekon prosecutors, the AKP swiftly restructured the HSYK, rationalizing this as a requirement if Turkey were to satisfy the process of accession to the European Union ([[#calibre_link-238][Park, 2010]]).
The military fought back against the arrests of alleged military coup plotters, apparently attempting to influence legal proceedings, alleging a conspiracy against the military. This followed an appellate courtâs decision to uphold 237 convictions, with prison sentences of up to twenty years for complicity in the âSledgehammerâ plot, in October 2013. The court also released a number of the jailed defendants ([[#calibre_link-240][Peker, 2013]]; [[#calibre_link-241][2014]]). A handful of the generals caught up in the Ergenkon trials appealed to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). The ECtHR ruled that the Ergenekon network was âa criminal organization working to overthrow the governmentâ â the identical verdict reached by Istanbulâs 13th High Criminal Court ([[#calibre_link-178][Esayan, 2013]]: 37). Markar Esayan concludes that the Ergenekon network was clearly âno ordinary criminal organization but a concise strategy that the countryâs old elite class formulated to cling onto powerâ ([[#calibre_link-178][Esayan, 2013]]: 35â6).
On 17 December 2013 a massive corruption scandal broke, which many see as retaliation against the AKP for its nobbling of the military establishment. Pre-dawn raids targeted eighty-nine people, some of whom are ErdoÄanâs closest associates. The sons of the interior minister and the economy minister were formally charged with bribery and corruption, as were prominent businessmen and a banker ([[#calibre_link-242][**Daily Star**, 21 December 2013]]).
Gareth Jenkens suspects that GĂŒlen supporters are behind the corruption investigations: âThe movement wants to intimidate ErdoÄanâ ([[#calibre_link-155][Popp, 2013]]). Referring to these allegations, ErdoÄan declared in early 2014 that members of the judiciary were âseeking to smear innocent peopleâ. âThey call it a big corruption operationâ, he added, asserting that âunfortunately, thereâs a gang that is establishing itself inside the stateâ ([[#calibre_link-241][Peker, 2014]]). He also described it as âa dirty plot against the national willâ ([[#calibre_link-242][**Daily Star**, 21 December 2013]]), nothing less than a âjudicial coupâ ([[#calibre_link-242][**Daily Star**, 12 January 2014]]). âThis conspiracy eclipses all other coup attempts in Turkey. It is a virus bent on taking powerâ ErdoÄan told AKP MPs in mid-January 2014 ([[#calibre_link-243][Parkinson and Albayrak, 2014]]; [[#calibre_link-244][**Kurdish Info**, 2014]]). ErdoÄan alleges that GĂŒlenists in the police and judiciary were plotting to force him from office, by creating a âparallel stateâ within the bureaucracy ([[#calibre_link-243][Parkinson and Albayrak, 2014]]). Abdullah Ăcalan saw the United Statesâ hand in the rise and fall of the Ergenekon conspiracy, commenting:
Those who were detained in the Ergenekon case are professional soldiers who had been trained by the US since the 1960s as intelligence and counter-guerilla officers. The US told them, âYou screwed up!â and later threw them out with the garbage. (Ăcalan, cited in [[#calibre_link-245][GĂŒrbĂŒz, 2014]])
Several observers believe that a power struggle between ErdoÄan and Fethullah GĂŒlen is behind the corruption charges ([[#calibre_link-246][Rodrik, 2014]]; [[#calibre_link-227][Akyol, 2014]]: 2â3). Dani Rodrik â generally a fierce opponent of ErdoÄan â concedes that âthe GĂŒlenistsâ campaign is evidently guided by ulterior political motives and that ErdoÄan rightly questioned the prosecutorsâ motivationsâ ([[#calibre_link-246][Rodrik, 2014]]). If the GĂŒlenists are behind the corruption allegations, the AKP faces a truly formidable opponent. As stated earlier, GĂŒlenâs organization wields influence in the judiciary and police. This was almost certainly ErdoÄanâs justification for his sackings and transfers within the police force and the judiciary.
Turkeyâs AKP national government had already profoundly antagonized the military establishment and fascist elements organized in Turkeyâs âdeep stateâ, when ErdoÄan irretrievably infuriated these formidable foes by negotiating with Abdullah Ăcalan. The prime minister, his party and his government now faced the combined wrath of leading forces in the military, the deep state, fascist organizations and Fethullah GĂŒlenâs Hizmet network â with its millions of adherents within Turkey, including an additional two million sympathizers strategically placed in the police force and the Ministry of Justice. For its part, Turkeyâs deep state was only acting consistently, of course, given that it has sabotaged every attempt by the PKK and (less frequently) Ankara for a peace settlement.
The secret peace negotiations that came to light in December 2012 are the best hope yet of an end to the conflict between Ankara and the Kurds in Turkey. Abdullah Ăcalan announced a new ceasefire and broad public support for the peace process was apparent. Of course, all previous PKK ceasefires have ended in failure, but both sides now seem to accept that one or the other achieving military or political victory cannot resolve the conflict.
The current peace process is due, above all, to the PKK leader ceaselessly pushing both the PKK and the AKP towards settlement. It is Abdullah Ăcalan who has been responsible for persisting with unilateral, usually fruitless, ceasefires. But his party also contains leaders who have shown a capacity to return to all-out war, and the ascendancy of these men remains a possibility if the peace process seriously falters.
The AKP government prefers peace through a genuine compromise with Turkeyâs Kurds, but must at all times maintain a difficult and often convoluted posture in the peace process â representing itself as the implacable, active, opponent of âPKK terrorismâ and upholder of the âTurkish nationâ, while also promoting reforms to keep the peace process alive.
Real hope exists for lasting peace, but the current process remains highly contradictory. Turkeyâs responses to the Turkish/Kurdish peace process have especially been mixed. The AKP government remains haunted by the fate of its predecessor âIslamistâ parties, at the hands of the Kemalist military establishment and its fascistic âdeep stateâ â which has sabotaged every previous attempt at a peace settlement. But the government has worked hard to neuter both the military establishment and the strongly Kemalist high judiciary. Ankara has also taken on the **derin devlet** directly, ending the generalsâ judicial immunity and jailing senior military figures implicated in the planning for the bloody Ergenekon coup.
The Kemalist military retaliated against Ankaraâs curbs, with crucial assistance from Fethullah GĂŒlenâs shadowy Hizmet â apparently unsuccessfully. Even an attempt to provoke the PKK and its supporters across Turkey and Western Europe into a return to lethal violence failed, due to the PKKâs strong leadership of Turkeyâs Kurds. Indeed, the provocation allowed the PKK to reassert its strength with dignity. Further provocations from Turkish forces opposed to the PKK/Ankara peace process could occur, nevertheless â especially due to machinations by GĂŒlenâs Hizmet, which ErdoÄanâs government has also taken specific steps to curb. It is still unclear whether the measures taken are sufficient to permit the establishment of peace. Nevertheless, it seems that Prime Minister ErdoÄan has managed to overcome daunting foes, in the military, the deep state, fascist organizations and the Hizmet networkâs operatives in the police force and the Ministry of Justice, and managed to subdue them.
The PKKâs ability to transform itself from a classical guerrilla organization inspired by MarxismâLeninism to one seeking a peaceful resolution of Turkeyâs Kurdish problem rests directly upon the organizationâs capacity to undertake radical ideological innovation. The present chapter reviews the PKKâs ideological journey from striving for an independent MarxistâLeninist Kurdistan to the current position of advocating âdemocratic confederalismâ by peaceful means. The PKKâs equally astonishing feminist transformation is also examined.
Shortly before his capture, the PKK leader successfully focused global attention on Turkeyâs Kurds â a people of whom the world was largely unaware until then. Turkish government attempts to portray Abdullah Ăcalan as a monster were partially undermined by his remarkable transformation of the Partiya KarkerĂȘn Kurdistan from a nationalist movement of âprimitive rebelsâ (with a MarxistâLeninist heritage of sorts), pursuing ânational liberationâ via âarmed struggleâ, to a thoroughly âmodernâ movement pursuing âpeaceâ and even âdemocratic confederalismâ.
Since Ăcalanâs capture it has become commonplace to read that he turned from violence only under pressure from his Turkish captors. That is not true; the move away from âarmed struggleâ began earlier, with the first PKK unilateral ceasefire in March 1993. Indeed, the PKK contemplated bringing an end to its armed activities before Ăcalanâs capture curtailed this political evolution.
A PKK unilateral ceasefire began on 1 September 1999 on Ăcalanâs orders from his prison cell.
Confined in his island prison, the Kurdish leader struggled to end the conflict through his leadership. But Ăcalan was by now determined not to repeat the mistakes of the past, and looked for new solutions. In 2005, faced by the reality that over two decades of bloody struggle had seen the political awakening of the Kurds but had not yielded an independent Kurdish state, Ăcalan wrestled with the conundrum of the way forward for his movement and his people.
Encountering in prison the writings of the theorist of radical municipalism Murray Bookchin, Ăcalan became enthused with the latterâs notion of âdemocratic confederalismâ ([[#calibre_link-50][**Ideas and Action**, 2 March 2011]]). Ăcalan believes that democratic confederalism offers a way to establish Kurdish national rights, while sidestepping the elusive, bloodstained goal of Kurdish statehood. âWhereas Marx accepted the nation-state, I do notâ, he indicated in 2010. The **Serok** continued: âThe reason for the crisis in Europe is the nation-state structure and its mentalityâ ([[#calibre_link-51][Ăcalan, 2010b]]). Consequently Abdullah Ăcalan initiated debates on democratic confederalism among Kurds. As Joost Jongerden notes, this represented a real âparadigm shift in [Kurdish] politicsâ ([[#calibre_link-52][Jongerden, 2012]]: 4).
Democratic confederalism maps out a system of popularly elected administrative councils, allowing local communities to exercise autonomous control over their assets, while linking to other communities via a network of confederal councils ([[#calibre_link-52][Jongerden, 2012]]: 3; [[#calibre_link-53][Wood, 2007]]; [[#calibre_link-54][Ăzmaya, 2012]]).
Bookchinâs contribution to this system of community organization is to highlight its societal aspect. In its most developed form, confederalism becomes full-blown âautonomyâ, which places âlocal farms, factories, and other enterprises in local municipal handsâ, and in which âa community ⊠begins to manage its own economic resources in an interlinked way with other communitiesâ. Control of the economy is not in the hands of the state, but under the custody of âconfederal councilsâ, and thus, âneither collectivized nor privatized, it is commonâ ([[#calibre_link-55][Bookchin, 1990]], cited in [[#calibre_link-52][Jongerden, 2012]]: 3â4). Bookchin, who says he realized long ago that the proletariat is not going to take power anywhere ([[#calibre_link-56][Biehl, 2012]]), has in practice transposed the notion of rule by a network of workersâ councils (soviets) to the âpost-proletarian-centredâ context, by replacing workers with ordinary people.
Ăcalan may have discovered this system in the writings of Murray Bookchin, but his advocacy of âdemocratic confederalismâ is not as novel as might first appear. The concept is arguably the practical working out of a much older concept that arose first in the international Marxist movement in the late nineteenth century under the rubric of âcultural-national autonomyâ or ânational cultural autonomyâ (NCA). It is not clear whether either the PKK leader or Murray Bookchin were aware of this controversy among Marxist scholars, but it nevertheless provides a compelling theoretical framework for understanding Ăcalanâs advocacy of democratic confederalism.
The debate on NCA within the international workersâ movement began in the Austrian Social Democratic Party and was led by that partyâs leading intellectuals (the so-called âAustro-Marxistsâ), most prominent of whom were Otto Bauer and Karl Renner. The Russian Bolsheviks polemicized fiercely against them ([[#calibre_link-57][Löwy, 1976]]: 87â8; [[#calibre_link-58][Lenin, 1963b]]: 503â7, [[#calibre_link-59][1964]]: 34; [[#calibre_link-60][Stalin, 1913]]). Other leading Austro-Marxists included Max Adler, Karl Renner and Rodolf Hilferding. Their prescriptions regarding what we know today as NCA were intended to resolve the complex problems of minorities in the Austro-Hungarian Empire (see [[#calibre_link-61][Bottomore and Goode, 1978]]: 1â44), but they resonate eerily with the contemporary Kurdish problem as well.
Renner ([[#calibre_link-62][1918]]) urged the adoption of overlapping jurisdictions as a means of solving the problems of minorities. He did not accept that ânationsâ and âstatesâ should necessarily be identical, considering that this set up two competing and mutually deleterious dynamics. For, when a majority culture establishes a nation-state, minority cultures are in practice compelled to live in it as if they were members of the majority culture. Inevitably, this produces a separatist territorial dynamic, as minorities seek their own âself-determinationâ. Crucially, Renner separated territorial jurisdiction from cultural affiliation, thus allowing space for self-government and collective responsibility in certain spheres. This approach also simultaneously defused national struggle, by sidestepping the territorial imperative for national groups. More recently, theorists of NCA in academia have focused discussion on the option of ânon-territorial cultural autonomyâ as an alternative to the old ânational cultural autonomyâ.
Ăcalan had already concluded that âreal socialismâ (Stalinism) and national liberation movements had failed due to their congenital statism. He now told the movement he headed to restructure itself on the basis of the principles of autonomy and democratic confederalism. Between 2005 and 2007 the PKK created the Koma KomalĂȘn Kurdistan (KKK â Council of Associations of Kurdistan), later renamed the Koma CiwakĂȘn KĂŒrdistan (KCK â Kurdistan Communities Union), as the umbrella organization of all bodies affiliated to the PKK in Kurdish communities in Turkey, Iran, Iraq, Syria and the diaspora.
Following a lead from Turkish authorities, the Turkish media immediately labelled the KKK/KCK âthe urban extension of the PKKâ ([[#calibre_link-63][Ä°stegĂŒn, 2011]]). **Todayâs Zaman** journalist Aziz Ä°stegĂŒn disagreed, pointing out that the PKK was actually âjust a piece of the overarching KCK, a fragment of the wholeâ. By forming an alternative to the official organs of justice, management and politics in Turkey, Syria, Iran and Iraq, the KCK âprovides a roof under which its supporters can gatherâ. The KCK has reportedly âspread out to cities, towns, neighborhoods, streets, village organizations, communes and homesâ ([[#calibre_link-63][Ä°stegĂŒn, 2011]]; see also [[#calibre_link-64][Akkaya and Jongerden, 2011]]: 159 n12).
With the aim of organizing itself from the bottom up in the form of assemblies, the Koma CiwakĂȘn KĂŒrdistan advocates radical democracy, presenting this as an alternative to the nation-state. This is âself-determination in a new form, namely, based on the capacities and capabilities of people themselvesâ ([[#calibre_link-52][Jongerden, 2012]]: 4). KCK is thus âa movement which struggles to establish its own democracy, neither grounded on the existing nation-states nor seeing them as the obstacleâ ([[#calibre_link-16][PKK, 2005]], cited in [[#calibre_link-52][Jongerden, 2012]]: 4).
The practical organizational framework of the KCK is set out as an agreement between its participants, **sözleĆme**, also known as âthe Constitution of Kurdistanâ. This envisages the KCK as a âdemocratic, social and confederal systemâ with members and its own judiciary, which âtries to gain influence on central and local administrationâ. The KCK is seen as an umbrella organization for the Kurds in all parts of putative Kurdistan ([[#calibre_link-65][Democratic Turkey Forum, 2012]]).
The Istanbul Special Authority Public Prosecutorâs Office has produced a number of charts that purport to show the KCKâs democratic confederalist structure. Given that the PKKâs sworn enemies produced these, they cannot be considered completely trustworthy, but they are interesting nevertheless. The charts claim that, in addition to its central and provincial leaderships, the KCK also has a âjustice commissionâ, a âsocial areaâ, a âpolitical areaâ, an âideological areaâ, a womenâs movement and a âfinancial areaâ. There are assemblies for each region, as well a âdemocratic town assemblyâ. Five councils exist to represent the Kurds living in Turkey, Iraq, Iran, Syria and in countries other than these. In addition to the PKK, included are its affiliated political parties in other parts of Kurdistan and its armed wing the HPG, as well as civil society organizations. All the councils mentioned previously are represented in a 300-member KCK parliament, called Kongra-Gel (the name was briefly used for the PKK, but it now describes a much more significant entity) ([[#calibre_link-65][Democratic Turkey Forum, 2012]]; [[#calibre_link-66][**Haber TĂŒrk**, 2011; **Prohayat**, 2014; T.C. Ä°stanbul Cumhuriyet BaĆsavcılıÄı, 2011]]â12).
Kurdish engineer Ercan Ayboga suggests that âthere are [democratic confederal] assemblies almost everywhereâ in Turkish Kurdistan. He claimed that some assemblies even exist in Istanbul. Assemblies are at a number of levels. Ayboga describes the structure at the most basic grassroots levels, in which the neighbourhood assemblies in each local community choose the delegates that constitute the city assembly â which is the next level. For âdecisions on a bigger scaleâ, he continues, âcity and village assemblies of a province come togetherâ. The Demokratık Toplum Kongresi (DTK â Democratic Society Congress) is the next level up ([[#calibre_link-67][Biehl, 2011]]). The DTK brings together all Kurds within Turkey: âIt consists of more than five hundred civil society organizations, labor unions, and political parties â they make up 40 percent of its members; 60 percent of its members are delegates from village assembliesâ ([[#calibre_link-67][Biehl, 2011]]).
This bottom-up model can be represented as follows:
|+ +|
| DTK â Democratic Society Congress |
| City and Village Assemblies of a Province |
| City Assembly |
| Neighbourhood Assemblies |
Ayboga claims that in HakkĂąri and Ćırnak provinces â where âthe people donât accept the state authoritiesâ â âtwo parallel authoritiesâ exist, with the democratic confederal structure being more powerful in practice ([[#calibre_link-67][Biehl, 2011]]). However, repression of the KCK has taken a heavy toll, and Ayboga admits that âthe assembly model has not yet been developed broadlyâ. He gives reasons for this: âin some places the Kurdish freedom movement is not so strong. Almost half of the population in Turkeyâs Kurdish areas still do not actively support it. In those places there are few or no assembliesâ ([[#calibre_link-67][Biehl, 2011]]).
An investigation by a group of German leftists who visited Turkeyâs Kurdish areas and interviewed many Kurds attempting to put democratic confederalism into practice reveals that KCK/PKK supporters attempting to build the new autonomist structures inside the shell of the old society are expending an enormous amount of energy. The authors admit that the Kurds have not yet managed to build stand-alone structures that are completely independent of the Turkish nation-state, although the existing democratic confederal structures do demonstrate a potential counter-power to that state ([[#calibre_link-68][Tatort Kurdistan, 2013]]).
Beginning on 14 April 2009 ([[#calibre_link-63][Ä°stegĂŒn, 2011]]) the Turkish state arrested thousands of those centrally involved in the KCK experiment, due simply to the fact that its inspiration was the PKK ([[#calibre_link-69][Human Rights Watch, 2012]]). The KCK detainees included around 190 elected mayors and municipal councillors ([[#calibre_link-70][Gursel, 2013]]). It is noteworthy, however, that of the almost 8,000 people imprisoned on charges of being KCK members, 5,000 were workers and activists of the legal Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party (BDP) ([[#calibre_link-70][Gursel, 2013]]). The arrestees were charged with âmembership of PKK front organizationsâ ([[#calibre_link-71][Jenkins, 2010]]).
Trials of the accused began in 2010, resulting in a handful of detainees being released. Courts resolved fairly quickly that the KCK was to be regarded legally as the political branch of the PKK ([[#calibre_link-72][**Todayâs Zaman**, 28 February 2012]]). Both Turkish and international human rights organizations heavily criticized the trials ([[#calibre_link-73][Ä°nsan Hakları Ortak Platformu, 2011]]).
The PKKâs attitude to its women militants has always differentiated it from other Kurdish parties. Yet the theoretical stance and practice of the **Apocular** on this question have continued to undergo the most radical evolution.
When it began life as an orthodox MarxistâLeninist party, the PKK initially adopted the thesis of Marxâs closest collaborator Friedrich Engels, which located the emergence of social classes in society in the appearance of private property, following the breakup of the initial âprimitive communistâ human communities ([[#calibre_link-74][Engels, 1884]]). According to Engelsâs book **The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State**, the essential precondition for this social inequity was the âworld historical defeat of the female sexâ. He continued:
The man took command in the home also; the woman was degraded and reduced to servitude, she became the slave of his lust and a mere instrument for the production of children. ([[#calibre_link-74][Engels, 1884]])
Women now occupied a âdegraded positionâ and Engels denied emphatically that this position was changing with time. This subjugation could only be overcome with the disappearance of society based on social classes. Basing himself heavily on Lewis Henry Morganâs **Ancient Society** ([[#calibre_link-75][1877]]), Engels accepted the latterâs assessment that âthe exclusive supremacy of the man shows its effects first in the patriarchal familyâ ([[#calibre_link-75][Morgan, 1877]]: 474, cited in [[#calibre_link-74][Engels, 1884]]). He argued that women under capitalism remained oppressed in their relations to men, since marriage is a form of exclusive private property, declaring: âWithin the family he is the bourgeois and the wife represents the proletariatâ ([[#calibre_link-74][Engels, 1884]]).
In Engelsâs analysis, economic deprivation created by capitalist industrialization forced women into capitalist production as workers. As economically exploited wage slaves (proletarians), just like their husbands â although they were paid for their labour as little as half what their spouses earned â women were condemned to depend on their husbands. Unequal at work and unequal at home, women under capitalism were thus doubly oppressed.
The PKK adapted this analysis at its foundation, recognizing that Kurdish women were oppressed, first, as Kurds by colonialism, and then also as women ([[#calibre_link-76][Rygiel, 1998]]: 117; [[#calibre_link-77][**Isku**, 1997]]). In the PKKâs understanding, Turkish colonialism connives with Kurdish feudalism to keep women ignorant and tied to the home ([[#calibre_link-77][**Isku**, 1997]]). Abdullah Ăcalan himself compared womenâs oppression in Kurdish society to Kurdistanâs national oppression, calling for a âdouble liberationâ ([[#calibre_link-78][McDonald, 2001]]: 148).
According to the PKKâs 1995 programme, women in Kurdish society are acknowledged as being âexcluded from social life, often do not attend schoolâ and are âkept away from political lifeâ. Internalizing their subordinate role as colonized subjects, they find their slavery ânormalâ. â[B]ought and sold like a commodityâ, they are âexchanged for money and viewed as propertyâ ([[#calibre_link-77][**Isku**, 1997]]). The PKK repudiated âthe slave-like suppression of womenâ, declaring that a ânational, independent, democratic society, ruled by the people, must be establishedâ ([[#calibre_link-79][PKK, 1995]]), in which
All forms of oppression against women will be stopped, and the equal status of women and men in the society will be realized in all areas of social and political life. Women, who possess an enormous social revolutionary dynamic, will be mobilized towards this aim. ([[#calibre_link-79][PKK, 1995]])
A congress of PKK women had been held in late 1992. One controversial decision made at this meeting was to seek to change the internal PKK regulation prohibiting fighters from being married. Denouncing this as âliquidationismâ, Abdullah Ăcalan ruled that the congressâs decisions were null and void ([[#calibre_link-80][**Zagros Newroz Aryan Kurdistan**, 2012]]; [[#calibre_link-77][**Isku**, 1997]]). There was a further International Kurdish Womenâs Conference on International Womenâs Day, 8 March 1994 ([[#calibre_link-76][Rygiel, 1998]]: 117).
On International Womenâs Day 1995 in Metina on the TurkishâIraqi border, the first official Congress of PKK Women was held. The Congress elected a 23-member executive, which subsequently founded the Tevgera Jinen Azadiya Kurdistan (TJAK â Kurdistan Womenâs Freedom Movement). The TJAK later changed its name to the YekĂźtiya Jinen Azadiya Kurdistan (YJAK â Association of Free Women of Kurdistan). The current name of the PKK womenâs association and army is YekĂźtiya Jinen Azad (YJA STAR â the Free Women Units). âSTARâ is a melding of the name of the pagan goddess Ishtar and the Kurdish word **sterk**, meaning star. Ăcalan explains: âFor me, Ishtar is **Star**. In fact, **star** in Kurdish is **sterk**. **Star** means star in the European languages.â The origins of the word are Kurdish, from Mesopotamia, according to Ăcalan, who tells women to become goddesses, promising âthat new (and respected) [desexualized] boundaries of female identity are closely associated with the refusal of any other love than that of the homelandâ ([[#calibre_link-81][Ăcalan 1999]]: 34â5). He emphasizes that womenâs respectable participation in the liberation movement is wholly dependent upon women developing an ardent love for their homeland, and fighting for it ([[#calibre_link-27][ĂaÄlayan, 2012]]: 17, 19). Rapperin Afrin, a commander of the YJA STAR womenâs army, explains that the YekĂźtiya Jinen Azad acts independently within the PKK, adding: âThe womenâs movement is the most dynamic part of the PKK. We are aware that without the liberation of women a liberated society cannot be developedâ ([[#calibre_link-82][Dolzer, 2013]]).
By 2008 independent reports emerged citing a total figure of 10,000 PKK fighters â of whom between one-third and one-half half were women ([[#calibre_link-83][Marcus, 2007]]: 173; [[#calibre_link-84][**CNN**, 2008]]; [[#calibre_link-85][Taylor-Lind, 2010]]). The growth in female recruitment surged following the **Serok**âs decision to speak out boldly in support of womenâs rights ([[#calibre_link-83][Marcus, 2007]]: 173).
From the early 1990s Ăcalan began averring that the Kurdish movementâs âbasic responsibilityâ is to âliberate womenâ. He criticised the PKK for its failures towards women, continually complaining â to cite Aliza Marcusâs account â that Kurdish women âwere treated like slaves, their lives governed and restricted by their fathers, brothers, and other male relativesâ ([[#calibre_link-83][Marcus, 2007]]: 173). Ăcalan insisted that the PKKâs revolutionary fight would be impossible without the presence of Kurdish women âwho had broken with the prejudices of traditional lifeâ, becoming imbued with an immediate sense of their own worth ([[#calibre_link-83][Marcus, 2007]]: 173).
As increasing numbers of women joined the PKK and its military wing, PKK ideologues, and even some of the partyâs supporters, claimed that women in the organization confronted opposition from men wanting to maintain their positions of power in the party. Such men, it was asserted, did not accept women as commanders, hindering the development of independent women ([[#calibre_link-77][**Isku**, 1997]]).
The PKK 1995 programme explains that, in order to break down gender roles solidified by centuries, women âhad to be on their ownâ, so they could believe in themselves and develop strength and willpower. The independent womenâs army thus ârepresents the strength and power of women; they are here to learn self-confidence to take responsibility and powerâ ([[#calibre_link-86][Kurdeng, 1995; Arbeiterpartei Kurdistans, 1995]], cited in [[#calibre_link-77][**Isku**, 1997]]). Even before then, in 1993, Abdullah Ăcalan had declared the objective of forming a PKK womenâs army. The PKKâs Fifth Conference resolved:
Eventually, an independent Womenâs Army of women fighting in the ARGK will be created, and womenâs units and command structures will be developed to the point where they can operate independently. ([[#calibre_link-86][Kurdeng, 1995]])
From 1995 separate units of female guerrillas were formed, which had their own headquarters. The YekĂźtiya JinĂȘn Azadiya Kurdistan was founded at this time. From late 1992 the PKK was reportedly organizing suicide operations, principally conducted by its women fighters, in Tunceli, Adana and Sivas ([[#calibre_link-30][**HĂŒrriyet**, 13 August 1997]]). One of the most famous of this series of suicide bombings was the operation on 30 June 1996 in which Zeynep Kınacı (Zilan) blew herself up in a DĂȘrsim military parade of Turkish soldiers who were singing the Turkish national anthem. Zilanâs attack reportedly killed ten Turkish soldiers and seriously wounded a further forty-four ([[#calibre_link-87][PKK, 1996]]; [[#calibre_link-80][**Zagros Newroz Aryan Kurdistan**, 2012]]).
The Turkish state contemptuously dismissed Zilan and her comrades as mere âwomen terroristsâ ([[#calibre_link-88][Republic of Turkey, 2011]]). Suicide operations are by definition brutal for all involved. The PKK explains this event:
After Turkish Military Intelligence attempted an assassination of Kurdish leader Abdullah Ăcalan in Syria, Zeynep Kınacı (Zilan), took the decision to avenge this attempt and to also protest against the Turkish regimeâs savage and âdirty warâ against the Kurdish people in Turkey that was being hidden from the outside world. ([[#calibre_link-87][PKK, 1996]])
The PKK justified such operations with the same logic that informed its engagement in political violence, such as guerrilla attacks upon military targets: the Kurds of Turkey faced genocide and the humiliating denial of their identity by the Kemalist state apparatus. Some analysts believe that emotional states such as humiliation can indeed explain the recourse to suicide terrorism ([[#calibre_link-89][Fattah and Fierke, 2009]]: 24). Of course, suicide bombings often target civilians, an act more difficult for organizations to justify. However, as Jonathan Fine explains, the PKKâs suicide attacks targeted government and military installations, instead of populated areas. He adds: âSuicide bombing was never a major component of its terrorist operations; it launched only fifteen suicide attacks between 1995 and 1999, some of which were particularly deadlyâ ([[#calibre_link-90][Fine, 2008]]).
The first PKK suicide attack in the mid-1990s took place in the midst of considerable state brutality against Kurdish victims, not only in terms of lives lost but also the complete destruction of countless Kurdish villages, resulting in some 4 million people becoming homeless. Paul Gill observes that in 1995 the Turkish army claimed it had killed more than 1,100 PKK guerrilla fighters in Iraqi Kurdistan alone. He notes that âSome analysts posit that the first suicide bombing by the PKK, occurring in early 1996, was a response to thisâ ([[#calibre_link-91][Gill, 2013]]: 86).
Of the fifteen PKK suicide bombings that took place between 30 June 1995 and 5 July 1999, fourteen of the suicide bombers were women, none of whom was older than 27 ([[#calibre_link-92][Ergil, 2000]]: 82â3; [[#calibre_link-93][Beyler, 2003]]; [[#calibre_link-94][Zedalis: 2004]]: 2). Leyla Kaplan was the youngest of the bombers, being only 17 years of age, in June 1996. The first female PKK suicide bomber was apparently pregnant ([[#calibre_link-94][Zedalis: 2004]]: 2). Clara Beyler argues that womenâs entry into combat operations and suicide attacks meant that they âwould not be defined as a manâs subordinate anymoreâ. In contrast to the very limited domestic role that traditional Kurdish society offered them, the PKK provided them with a âproductiveâ role for the first time ([[#calibre_link-93][Beyler, 2003]]; [[#calibre_link-95][Ergil, 2001]]: 105â14, 118â28). Thus, Dogu Ergil argues, âyoung Kurdish women began to look to the PKK not only for ethnic liberation, but for their own emancipation as well.â Furthermore, as women they were less suspicious to security forces, making them attractive to the PKK for these operations ([[#calibre_link-95][Ergil, 2001]]: 83â4). The PKK carried out suicide operations from the mid-to late 1990s. The bombings peaked with the brief violent wave of PKK attacks following Abdullah Ăcalanâs capture in February 1999, before stopping with the reimposition of the ceasefire.
Rengin, who commands a female battalion, joined the PKK at the age of 14. She says she enlisted to fight for both Kurdish and womenâs rights: âWe want a natural life, a society that revolves around women â one where women and men are equal, a society without pressure, without inequality, where all differences between people are eliminatedâ ([[#calibre_link-96][**Truthhugger**, 2008]]). The fighter continued:
Women grow up enslaved by society. The minute you are born as a girl, society inhibits you. Weâve gone to war with that. If I am a woman, I need to be known by the strength of my womanhood, to get respect. Those are my rights. And it was hard for the men to accept this. ([[#calibre_link-96][**Truthhugger**, 2008]])
Expounding the **Serok**âs concept, the PKK publication **SerxwebĂ»n** avers that in present-day Kurdish society a womanâs relationship with a man results in her brain and heart being âlocked in a dungeonâ, inducing in her a âslave personalityâ, instead of allowing her to develop freely. The article notes Ăcalanâs call for men with all forms of âslave personalitiesâ to resolve their contradictions with the female identity, relating to women based on freedom and equality. Truth and beauty are thus revealed principles for men. **SerxwebĂ»n** concludes that âevery man and womanâ should be responsible for the fight against womenâs slavery in âall areas of societyâ, in order to successfully organize the democratic Kurdish nationâs âmentality and institutionsâ ([[#calibre_link-11][**SerxwebĂ»n**, 2012]]).
By 1997 there were reportedly some 5,000 women in the womenâs army, while 11,000 women continued to fight in mixed units. By this time the womenâs army had its own commanderin-chief, as well as its own plans and actions. A decision of the PKK National Womenâs Congress in March 1995 agreed that PKK women should create their own infrastructure (education, health care, military structure, and so forth) ([[#calibre_link-77][**Isku**, 1997]]).
The Fifth Congress of the PKK (8â27 January 1995) encompassed a substantial elaboration of the partyâs position on the âwomenâs issueâ. Conference delegates included an unprecedented 63 women out of a total of 317 present. The conference discussion stressed the role of womenâs participation in the revolution, reaching detailed decisions ([[#calibre_link-97][APS/Central Committee of the Kurdistan Workersâ Party, 1995]]).
If Kurdish women can be released from their oppression as women, argues the PKKâs 1995 analysis, âthis will ensure the development of social equality and freedom in the true senseâ ([[#calibre_link-77][**Isku**, 1997]]). Nevertheless, unlike most of the parties that had been dominated by pro-Kremlin MarxismâLeninism, the PKK did not assume âthat the revolution will automatically be accompanied by the liberation of womenâ. The PKK considered that in order for that to happen women needed to have their own independent basis in autonomous institutions, and fostered the creation of these organizations. The womenâs associations associated with the PKK are now coordinated by one overseeing body, the Koma JinĂȘn Bilind (KJB â High Womenâs Council). There also exist an affiliated womenâs party, the PartĂźya AzadĂźya Jin a Kurdistan (PAJK â Party of Free Women in Kurdistan), grassroots mass organizations, the YekitiyĂȘn JinĂȘn Azad (YJA â Unions of Free Women) as well as YJA STAR, the womenâs guerrilla army, discussed above ([[#calibre_link-98][Koma JinĂȘn Bilind, 2011]]; [[#calibre_link-99][Jongerden and Akkaya, 2013]]: 165 n7).
As already noted, in 1995 the PKK declared that the function of the PKK womenâs army was to facilitate women becoming confident in their own strengths and in their ability âto take responsibility and powerâ, despite centuries of patriarchal oppression ([[#calibre_link-86][Kurdeng, 1995; Arbeiterpartei Kurdistans, 1995]], cited in [[#calibre_link-77][**Isku**, 1997]]). In a book edited by Nesrin Esen, Ăcalan argues that the existence of all-male armies is indicative of womenâs oppression and the reality that Kurdistan must overcome this inequality if it is to be free ([[#calibre_link-100][Ăcalan, 2002]]). The **Serok** argues that the way to begin this was the creation of the PKKâs womenâs army.
Handan ĂaÄlayanâs ([[#calibre_link-27][2012]]: 8) Western feminist analysis implies that Ăcalanâs advocacy of womenâs liberation was from the start targeted at winning the freedom of Kurdish women from the constraints of the traditional Kurdish family, in order to secure their active participation in the Kurdish national movement. Nevertheless, ĂaÄlayan also concedes that Ăcalan fundamentally subverted traditional Kurdish notions of womenâs role and place in society ([[#calibre_link-101][2012]]: 8â10). Ăcalan redefined Kurdish (and Middle Eastern) conceptions of âhonourâ (signified by the Arabic term **namus**), which requires a woman to be obedient, faithful and modest. As Dilek CindoÄlu ([[#calibre_link-102][2000]]) argues, womenâs virginity in the region is far from being the relatively minor, purely personal question it has become in the West, being a virtual social phenomenon there. Ăcalan radically switched the focus of **namus** from concern for the protection of womenâs bodies to concern for the defence of the Kurdish homeland. The **Serok**âs redefinition of **namus** was successful â being accepted by ordinary Kurds â enabling women to freely leave home and to actively participate in demonstrations (including violent clashes with security forces) and join the PKK ([[#calibre_link-27][ĂaÄlayan, 2012]]: 8â11).
The party resolved to actively recruit women to its ranks, so that by the end of the 1990s some 30 per cent of members were women. In the partyâs guerrilla camps, these women âworked, trained, and fought on equal terms with the Kurdish men, sometimes becoming camp commandersâ. Moreover, equal participation by women in the partyâs rank and file apparently challenged âthe male dominated power structures so present in the rest of Kurdish societyâ ([[#calibre_link-78][McDonald, 2001]]: 148).
Surbuz, a young PKK guerrilla when she joined the PKK in 1993, told a British journalist in 2007:
There is a lot of pressure in Middle Eastern society, in Kurdistan especially, on women from the father, the mother and the brothers⊠Mothers and sisters, they are made to live in the manâs house. I do not want to be like that. ([[#calibre_link-103][Haynes, 2007]])
Many young women decided to join the PKK in order both to break out of patriarchal oppression and to escape the violence of Turkish soldiers ([[#calibre_link-104][Rote Zora, 1995]]). Rote Zora, a leftist/feminist German terror cell that carried out several bombings of its own between 1977 and 1995 in West Germany, cites a young female PKK guerrilla from the mid-1990s: âAt home, my father gave the orders, and when he wasnât there, my brother did. In the guerrilla, I can decide things for myself, perhaps even become a commander!â ([[#calibre_link-104][Rote Zora, 1995]]). Certainly, some observers suggest that many Kurdish women see the party as the mainspring for both national and womenâs liberation ([[#calibre_link-77][**Isku**, 1997]]; [[#calibre_link-78][McDonald, 2001]]: 148; [[#calibre_link-92][Ergil, 2000]]: 83).
Women have been a part of the PKKâs fighting force since the insurgency began in 1984. At first the Turkish army did not take the women fighters seriously, claims Surbuz ([[#calibre_link-96][**Truthhugger**, 2008]]). However, she observes,
Then they realised that the women are as tough if not tougher than the men⊠After this the soldiers stopped distinguishing between the male and the female fighters. I think they are now more afraid of the women because the women are more disciplined and they will never surrender⊠We will either kill or be killed⊠For me it is freedom, success or death. It is simple. ([[#calibre_link-96][**Truthhugger**, 2008]])
ĂaÄlayan ([[#calibre_link-27][2012]]: 23) emphasizes the PKKâs feminist reorientation and its determined efforts to recruit women fighters and promote the importance of gender equality within the Kurdish movement â including at the organizational level. Writing from a PKK base in Iraqi Kurdistan, journalist Deborah Haynes reports that women âplay a crucial role in the PKKâ, adding:
The best women fighters are also able to climb up the ranks to positions of command, with the âself-defenceâ armed wing of the PKK operating an obligatory 40 per cent female quota. ([[#calibre_link-103][Haynes, 2007]])
She observes:
Treated as equals by their male counterparts on the battlefield as well as in the political arena, women fighters are trained to use Kalashnikovs, grenades and other weapons before being dispatched in mixed and single-sex units. ([[#calibre_link-103][Haynes, 2007]])
Deniz Gökalp ([[#calibre_link-105][2010]]) notes that PKK women possess agency in the organization, based on their political consciousness and aptitude for striving for national, social and gender justice. Early in the twenty-first century, however, women remained âlargely absent in the upper echelons of party powerâ ([[#calibre_link-78][McDonald, 2001]]: 148). However, this began to very quickly change, and Kurdish women are now âprominent in the PKKâs leadership councilâ ([[#calibre_link-106][Yildiz, 2013]]). The PKK elected two new joint leaders at a conference held between 30 June and 5 July 2013: in place of Murat Karayılan, the conference selected Cemil Bayık and a woman, BesĂȘ Hozat. The conference â convened to consider the PKKâs political and organizational structures â also agreed to increase the proportion of female party members to 40 per cent ([[#calibre_link-42][Kurdpress New Agency, 2013; Shekhani, 2013]]).
The PKKâs radical reorientation on the âwoman questionâ involved fundamental rethinking within the organization. This extended to a complete remaking of the PKKâs Median national myth. Identification with the ancient Medes as the mythical ethnic predecessors of the modern Kurds ([[#calibre_link-107][Wahby, 1982]]: 2â3; [[#calibre_link-108][Minorsky, 1986]]: 438â86; [[#calibre_link-28][White, 2000]]: 14) is utilized by almost all Kurdish political parties. Yet the PKK alone has been successful in exercising this discourse. The **Apocular** not only linked the Kurds to the Medes, but extended the story to the âpatrioticâ resistance of the Median/Kurdish blacksmith Kawa and thence to the PKKâs contemporary struggle ([[#calibre_link-109][Sayın, 1998]]: 96â8). The Kawa parable was thus established as a central PKK foundational myth.
By the late 1990s, however, the PKK began replacing the Kawa parable with another ancient myth â that of Ishtar the goddess. Both stories stress the modern Kurdsâ unbroken connection with ancient Mesopotamia, thereby rationalizing an unbroken historical national myth of Kurdish identity. The Ishtar myth adds a new dimension, however: a âhistorical period and structure in which women were activeâ ([[#calibre_link-27][ĂaÄlayan, 2012]]: 2).
The patriarchal domination of men over women was denounced. Women were urged to be independent: âDo whatever you need to do for self-determination as a sexâ ([[#calibre_link-110][Ăcalan, 2000]]: 120, cited in [[#calibre_link-27][ĂaÄlayan, 2012]]: 13). Meanwhile men were ordered to cease their patriachal domination. Ăcalan advocates (ethically) âkilling the manâ, which he asserts is âthe fundamental principle of socialismâ. This means that one strives âto kill power, to kill one-sided dominationâ (cited in [[#calibre_link-109][Sayın, 1998]]: 61, and [[#calibre_link-27][ĂaÄlayan, 2012]]: 17). The **Serok** told men that they were âthe main problemâ â they exercise dominance over women to prove their manhood â and that âThis is a dominion of crude power; I found it foul and I shattered itâ ([[#calibre_link-81][Ăcalan, 1999]]: 30, cited in [[#calibre_link-27][ĂaÄlayan, 2012]]: 13). ĂaÄlayan ([[#calibre_link-27][2012]]: 12) argues that Zilanâs âsuicide protestâ in 1996 was the crucial catalyst that transformed the PKKâs âconstitutive mythâ from the symbolism inherent in the nationalist self-sacrificial liberation parable of the male Kurdish âKawa the blacksmithâ to a legend now based wholly within Kurdish womanhood; in the new myth, the âliberatorsâ missionâ is assigned to women. Zilan was thus elevated not only to the pantheon of martyrdom, but also to the status of goddess ([[#calibre_link-27][ĂaÄlayan, 2012]]: 16) by Ăcalan, who declared: âWhen Zilanâs identity was revealed, old manhood was entirely deadâ ([[#calibre_link-81][Ăcalan, 1999]]: 108).
As goddesses, the **Serok** implies, women fighters in the movement are both superior to men and the bedrock of the movement. Ăcalan elaborates that the YekĂźtiya Jinen Azadiya Kurdistan stands for âthe attainment of the highest possible sentiments for oneâs country. This means that even if everyone gives up on their country, YJAK continues the struggleâ ([[#calibre_link-111][Nurhak, 2013]]). This stands in stark contrast to the conception of national liberation advocates, of which Franz Fanon ([[#calibre_link-112][1965]]) is the paradigm. Fanon famously asserts that colonialism renders colonized men impotent. In a manner radically at odds with that of the PKK leader, he thus conceptualizes the anti-colonial struggle as âmen reclaiming their manhoodâ ([[#calibre_link-27][ĂaÄlayan, 2012]]: 6).
PKK deputy commander Mustafa Karasu summed up in mid-2000 the PKKâs evolving understanding of womenâs role in the Kurdish revolution. Basing himself on Abdullah Ăcalanâs recent teachings, Karasu wrote in the party organ **SerxwebĂ»n** that women in the Soviet Union had achieved significant gains in economic, political and social life â in fact, âthe most advanced bourgeois-democratic rightsâ. Due to a certain ânarrow approachâ, however, there was a âlack of freedom and democracy in the Soviet Unionâ, he insisted. Therefore, he argued, a ânew approachâ to the âwomenâs questionâ was formulated by the PKK and Chairman Apo ([[#calibre_link-113][Karasu, 2000]]).
This comprehensive approach involves women and men striving together for the national democratic revolution, Karasu and Ăcalan assert, since the feminist approach of women fighting by themselves is inadequate for the achievement of such a revolution. Nevertheless women must be in the front line of the ânational democratic revolutionâ, to solve the considerable theoretical problems ([[#calibre_link-113][Karasu, 2000]]). (Interestingly, Karasu here still uses the obsolete terminology of ânational democratic revolutionâ that Stalin misappropriated from Marx, although he appears to have otherwise absorbed his leaderâs evolved teaching on the role of women in the Kurdish national movement.) âThe leadership given to the liberation of women by the PKK and Chairman Apo is very important and goes beyond the contributions developed by the womenâs liberation movementâ, states Karasu. He asserts that the PKKâs approach overcomes the shortcomings of the former Soviet paradigm, adding that his partyâs approach is relevant for women globally ([[#calibre_link-113][Karasu, 2000]]).
Karasu insists that âthe most basic measureâ of the Kurdish revolutionâs achievements is the transformation in Kurdish women: âWomen of the PKKâs movement see themselves as a force for the liberation of not only women but of all of humanityâ ([[#calibre_link-113][Karasu, 2000]]). He concludes:
The PKK martyr Zilan (Zeynep Kınacı) was a model who undermined male domination. The actions of women comrades, the real owners of the struggle for freedom and revolution, add to the spirit of the PKK, deepening the understanding of revolutionary freedom. Womenâs issues not only concern woman but men also. ([[#calibre_link-113][Karasu, 2000]])
Of course, the new womenâs movement that has emerged over the past dozen or so years throughout Turkish Kurdistan is not just based in the PKKâs own organizations â although the PKK apparently does have significant influence over the movement. The Demokratik ĂzgĂŒr Kadın Hareketi (DĂKH â Free Democratic Womenâs Movement), for instance, was founded in 2003. It organized the â1st Middle East Womenâs Conferenceâ jointly with the Demokratık Toplum Kongresi (DTK â Democratic Society Congress) between 31 May and 2 June 2013 in Amed. The DTK is a legal platform for Kurdish NGOs and political organizations in Turkey ([[#calibre_link-68][Tatort Kurdistan, 2013]]: 127; [[#calibre_link-114][Association for Womenâs Rights in Development, 2013]]). The Conference, organized around the slogan âWoman, Life, Freedomâ (**Jin, Jiyan, Azadi**), managed to arrive at common standpoints on âracist nation-state structures, the hegemonic capitalist system, and problematic approaches to women by religions and political Islam which are instrumentalized by tyrannical powersâ ([[#calibre_link-114][Association for Womenâs Rights in Development, 2013]]).
The principal force in the DĂKH appears to be the BDP, and both the DĂKH and the BDP are heavily influenced by Abdullah Ăcalanâs politics of feminized democratic autonomy. When a small group of German radical leftists journeyed to Turkish Kurdistan in 2011 they spoke with elected members of the municipal government in one region. One city councillor told the German collective: âDemocratic Confederalism [autonomy] means that the society is organized by women, that the societyâs mentality is changed, and that taboos are brokenâ ([[#calibre_link-68][Tatort Kurdistan, 2013]]: 127). GĂŒlbahar Ărnek, the mayor of the SĂ»r municipal council, told the Tatort collective that projects organized with the municipalityâs assistance teach women âwhat Democratic Autonomy isâ ([[#calibre_link-68][Tatort Kurdistan, 2013]]: 131).
The PKK began its political and ideological existence as a classical guerrilla organization whose ideological axis was a variant of MarxismâLeninism, with the perspective of an independent Kurdistan carved out of the Turkish state by âpeopleâs warâ. By 1993 it was showing signs of change, when it quietly dropped the demand for an independent Kurdish state and began speaking about Kurdish autonomy â without fixing the form that this would take. As we have seen, Abdullah Ăcalan later theorized this as âdemocratic confederalismâ, leading to self-managed Kurdish autonomy within the borders of the Turkish state, after encountering the radical municipalism of Murray Bookchin.
The year 1993 also saw the beginning of a leap in female recruitment, following the **Serok**âs decision to speak out boldly in support of womenâs rights and his declaration regarding formation of a PKK womenâs army. The PKKâs intriguing feminist transformation since then is no less astounding than its evolution towards the perspective of democratic confederalism. The rapid theoretical and practical feminist transformation of the PKK testifies to its deep commitment to this new world-view. But it does not necessarily follow that traditional Kurdish society will accept this âwomenâs revolutionâ for itself, simply because it agrees with the PKK about Kurdish nationhood.
In the name of repudiating âthe slave-like suppression of womenâ, the PKK has transformed itself into a feminist movement. This has been done by encouraging women to believe in their own strength and abilities, through forming their own autonomous organizations at every level of the PKK movement. So far, this feminist project has been highly successful within the PKK itself, but there is no indication that it has affected traditional societal values â especially in the rural areas that comprise most of Kurdistan, which largely continue to be bound by customary Islamic standards regarding the value of family life and womenâs role within this. The PKK could well face resistance to its modernist notions of womenâs emancipation in the future from traditional Sunni Kurdish Muslims. The very secular PKK might not be aware of it, but most women in conservative Kurdish society value their traditional role. To them it seems very strange when the PKK tells them that their values are âbackwardâ or âcolonialistâ.
The PKK emerged from racist provocation, Kurdish economic under-underdevelopment, as well as from Turkish leftism and Kurdish âprimitive nationalismâ. A more or less orthodox âguerrilla Marxistâ organization emerged, founded on orthodox Marxismâ Leninism. At first quite small and unsophisticated, it has blossomed over time to become a pan-Kurdish political formation, with affiliated organizations in Europe, North America and Australia, capable of mobilizing many thousands onto the streets of Turkish Kurdistan, and in some of Turkeyâs cities, as well as in Europe. In Turkish Kurdistan it has eclipsed all its rivals and gained mass support.
The PKKâs charismatic leader Abdullah Ăcalan has evolved the partyâs ideology, so that Marxism is now largely sidelined in the organization, which now mobilizes its affiliates and supporters to struggle peacefully for âdemocratic confederalismâ. Perhaps most surprisingly of all, the PKK has been guided by its imprisoned **Serok** to become a feminist party, in which women and womenâs self-organization and leadership are prized above all.
It has been shown that a leader of an âinspirationalâ type (such as Ăcalan) generally symbolizes his national groupâs conviction that it is a âgreatâ people. He must regularly demonstrate his ability for this greatness to be realized, by finding new ways forward, thus continuing to inspire followers. So far, against tremendous odds, Ăcalan has achieved this. Even after he was captured by his enemies, Ăcalan continued to personally symbolize the aspirations of his supporters, while still seeking ways to energize and motivate them, in a very flexible manner. Through their warm personal relationship with their **Serok**, his members and supporters have come to believe that they were already, in a sense, âliberatedâ, or at least âexperiencingâ Kurdistan.
Though serving life imprisonment, Abdullah Ăcalan is still considered to be the organizationâs leader. The present author has suggested ([[#calibre_link-28][White, 2000]]: 213â16) that his physical absence, together with his crucial failure to designate a successor, created the possibility of serious internal disputation inside the PKK in the future. That is indeed what has occurred.
A leadership council, initially comprising Osman Ăcalan (the **Serok**âs brother), Cemil Bayık, Nizamettin TaĆ, Murat Karayılan, Duran Kalkan and Mustafa Karasu, took over the running of the movement, but soon âsplit into hardliner and reformist campsâ, as the party initially spun downwards in a spiral of crisis ([[#calibre_link-536][Cagaptay and Koknar, 2004]]; see also [[#calibre_link-537][Mango, 2005]]: 55). After the **Serok**âs capture, it transpired, PKK âmilitants were physiologically and psychologically defeated, and the organization came to the point of dissolutionâ ([[#calibre_link-538][Dönmez and Enneli, 2008]]: 4).
In 2004 Nizamettin TaĆ, Shahnaz Altun and Osman Ăcalan split from the PKK, establishing a new political organization, the Partiya Welatparezen Demokraten Kurdistan (PWDK â Patriotic and Democratic Party of Kurdistan), together with fourteen other cadres, including another leader, Kani Yılmaz, and some thirty fighters. The trio accused Abdullah Ăcalan of being a âdespot comparable to Stalin or Hitlerâ, claiming that he ordered the murder of a number of dissidents. They also condemned him for giving up the historical goal of his party â the independence of Kurdistan â following his capture. Osman Ăcalan further denounced the PKK as a terrorist organization ([[#calibre_link-538][Dönmez and Enneli, 2008]]: 4; [[#calibre_link-465][Cagaptay, 2007]]; **Turkish Daily News**, 17 September 2004).
Abdullah Ăcalan responded to the split by urging Osman Ăcalan and his group to return to the Kongra-Gel, assuring them of protection. At the same time, he heavily criticized Cemil Bayık, Rıza Altun, Duran Kalkan and others ([[#calibre_link-539][Hevidar, 2004]]). In the event, the PWDK venture was unsuccessful, and Osman Ăcalan duly reconciled with the PKK ([[#calibre_link-465][Cagaptay, 2007]]). However, he split from the organization again, and henceforth remained politically inactive. Cemil Bayıkâs continuing authority rests very much upon his ability to successfully embody the **Serok**âs charisma.
It was clear at the time of Ăcalanâs capture that the violent conflict between Ankara and PKK militants would become immeasurably worse in the immediate future. Indeed, there are still observers who insist that âWeapons in the hands of militant cadres and mountain cadresâ (**DaÄ kadrolarının elindeki silahların ve bu militan kadroların**) will determine the fate of all the PKKâs projects ([[#calibre_link-482][Kaya, 2012]]). The soundness of this position remains to be seen. But what is clear is that Ăcalanâs ability to lead his movement and his people to a peaceful resolution of the Kurdish conflict in Turkey rests upon a number of factors. The first of these has already been dealt with: Ăcalanâs continued ability to function as the **Serok**. Three other factors could prove crucial: (i) the continuing impoverishment of Kurdish eastern and south-eastern Turkey; (ii) the effects of the Arab Spring on the Kurdish national movement in Turkey; and (iii) the PKKâs ability to maintain its new path of avoiding bloodshed and revenge.
Kurdish nationalist activity is the practical manifestation of a whole complex of contradictions, including certain types of religious feeling, inter-or intra-tribal tensions, inter-ethnic pressures, and economic issues arising from modernization. Of these, economic pressures seem to be particularly important, in turning âonâ or âoffâ other factors.
Over the past thirteen years, Turkeyâs central authorities have continued to allow the countryâs Kurdish region to remain âunder-underdevelopedâ while effectively excluding the Kurds themselves from citizenship. Yet the contemporary Kurdish national movement arose among Turkeyâs Kurds due to worsening impoverishment following Turkeyâs economic âmodernizationâ. Turkey continues to struggle with the process of economic development. The economic crisis of 2008â09 was the countryâs fifth in thirty years ([[#calibre_link-540][Uygur, 2010]]: 1). The economy recorded the sharpest quarterly GDP decline of the last three decades, at â14.3 per cent. The unemployment rate averaged 10.7 per cent between 2005 and 2014, reaching an all-time high of 16.1 per cent in February of 2009, according to the Turkish Statistical Institute. The number of unemployed persons totalled 2.8 million in February 2014. The non-agricultural unemployment rate was 12.1 per cent, and the youth unemployment rate hit 17 per cent ([[#calibre_link-541][Trading Economics, 2014c]]).
It is extremely difficult for countries running a large external deficit to avoid subsequent stresses ([[#calibre_link-542][**The Economist**, 4 April 2012]]). Turkeyâs external debt reached 43 per cent of GDP in 2010, falling slightly to 40 per cent in 2011. Between 1989 and 2013, Turkeyâs external debt averaged US$1.54 billion, reaching an all-time high of US$3.73 billion in September of 2013 ([[#calibre_link-543][Trading Economics, 13 February 2014b]]). Inflation remains high â at 7.75 per cent in January 2014 ([[#calibre_link-544][**Trading Economics**, 13 February 2014a]]) â making it difficult for the government to repay debts, especially if interest rates need to be raised, which is likely, and could precipitate a serious economic crisis, with worrying implications for internal stability ([[#calibre_link-540][Uygur, 2010]]: 3). A large current-account deficit makes Turkey vulnerable to a shift in global market sentiment ([[#calibre_link-545][**The Economist**, 2013]]).
Veteran observers are only too aware that these pressures are being felt most keenly in the Kurdish region. Nurcan Baysal argues that âarmed conflict and forced migrationâ have combined to cause people of the region to be âutterly pessimisticâ about their future ([[#calibre_link-546][Baysal, 2008]]). Baysal adds: âDuring the AKP Government, the situation in eastern and south-eastern Anatolia has worsened in terms of the rates of poverty, unemployment and education-trainingâ ([[#calibre_link-546][Baysal, 2008]]). A small number of Turkeyâs industrialists and merchants (including a number of wealthy AKP supporters) have earned huge incomes from massive industrialization and growth in trade. Meanwhile the Kurdish east and south-east remain under-underdeveloped and Kurds there have been steadily impoverished due to inflation. In such circumstances, social unrest was inevitable ([[#calibre_link-547][Amarilyo, 2012]]: 3â4).
On 16 April 2010 brick workers in eleven factories in Amed staged a wildcat strike over their low wages. The strike spread spontaneously and lasted for six days, until the workers succeeded in securing a 28 per cent pay increase ([[#calibre_link-548][**Libcom.org**, 22 April 2010]]). The following year, workers in Amed defied a heavy police presence (including an overhead helicopter) to march on International Workersâ Day (May Day) on 1 May 2011. The march was convened in Amed by the trade-union confederations KESK, DÄ°SK, TMMOB, TĂŒrk-Ä°Ć and TTB ([[#calibre_link-549][Kahraman, 2011]]: 182). In Wan, 460 municipal workers staged five one-day strikes in 2013, seeking the right to belong to their trade union. On 7 July the city council agreed that nine workers who were sacked after ten days would return to work and that the workersâ trade-union rights would be upheld ([[#calibre_link-550][Uluslararası Ä°Ćçi DayanıĆması DerneÄi, 2013]]). It seems certain that further workersâ strikes will occur in this region, due to its deepening economic distress.
On the other hand, there is some hope for economic justice. The peace process has already resulted in some positive economic benefits for the Kurds. Thus, in 2012 alone,
over 500 new investment applications were made in eastern Turkey. As violence has stopped, more corporations and entities are becoming interested in investing in the region. According to the Minister of Economy, from June 2012 to June 2013 5,126 domestic Investment Incentive Certificates worth TL68.5 billion were issued. This created employment opportunities for 187,478 people. ([[#calibre_link-165][**Sabah**, 30 January 2014]])
Unfortunately, most Kurds in south-eastern Anatolia are yet to experience the benefits of such investment. The Five Year Development Plan for the period 2007â13 âassigns no priority to the region in terms of development and indicates no specific effort to eliminate regional development disparitiesâ ([[#calibre_link-546][Baysal, 2008]]). Since 1985 several economic packages for the region have been launched, but most investment goes to the GĂŒneydoÄu Anadolu Projesi (GAP, or Southern Anatolia Project). GAP will supposedly create up to 3.8 million new jobs in the region and increase local agricultural yields ([[#calibre_link-551][GAP, 2006]]). Yet GAP will not be the economic and political salvation that Ankara continues to promote it as. GAP consists of several massive projects centring on energy production, which involves the irrigation of 17,000 square kilometres of Kurdish land, affecting Adıyaman, Gaziantep, Urfa, Merdin, Amed and Siirt.
Some local Kurds will undoubtedly benefit from the project â but not those in the direst need. Flooding is displacing entire villages. And, while compensation is paid to the owners of flooded land, this ignores the sharecroppers who cultivate the land, who receive only small sums for their houses. This has provoked new migration to the western part of Turkey. Irrigation from the project has therefore tended to have only negative social and economic effects on inhabitants of rural Turkish Kurdistan. Already suffering chronically stunted development long before GAP was even envisaged, the region has been unable to capitalize upon it economically or in terms of industrial development. Energy produced through GAP will therefore tend to flow to the west of Turkey, not to Turkish Kurdistan ([[#calibre_link-552][Franz, 1989]]: 187â98). And right from the start, workers employed on the project have come from outside the Kurdish region ([[#calibre_link-553][KafaoÄlu, 1991]]: 44â5). Representing not so much a modernization of Turkish Kurdistan as a further modernization of the west of Turkey, GAP is of little direct economic benefit to the inhabitants of Turkish Kurdistan.
A so-called âTurkish Springâ erupted in May 2013 in Istanbulâs Taksim Gezi Park, and quickly spread through the country. However, this movement â although potentially significantârepresents a very heterogeneous attempt to extend democracy. In reality it is no Turkish Spring, for the very obvious reason that it is not an uprising aiming at the revolutionary overthrow of a dictator. It is a potentially significant moment but it represents at most an attempt to reconstruct citizenship and unleash democratic identities ([[#calibre_link-554][Sadiki, 2013]]). Having experienced this brief moment of rebellion against perceived autocracy, it is not impossible that this diverse movement might resurrect itself against any future anti-democratic putsches â including ones that seek to destroy the possibility of peace between Turks and Kurds.
It might also be argued that the eventual collapse of Syriaâs al-Assad regime âcould possibly turn the âArab Springâ into a âKurdish Springâ in Turkey with the help of the PKKâ, using a newly liberated Syrian Kurdish autonomous region as the springboard ([[#calibre_link-555][Noi, July 2012]]: 23). Ăcalan might not support such a development, but the experience of the 1990 **serĂźhildan** in Turkish Kurdistan has shown that Turkeyâs Kurds are now quite capable of acting autonomously in emergent circumstances, when the **Serok** is unable to provide leadership. In such circumstances, the PKKâs HĂȘzĂȘn Parastina Gel fighters would inevitably be drawn into the conflict. Then, just as in 1990, the PKK would declare that it had initiated the uprising, in order to assume its leadership. This assertion would contain a grain of truth: without the PKKâs almost three decades of political, cultural and military struggle, Turkish Kurds would not have developed consciousness of their Kurdish identity.
On 8 February 2014 Abdullah Ăcalan emphasized to visiting BDP MPs three immediate objectives for the faltering peace process: the implementation of a legal framework for the negotiations, the formation of third-party oversight bodies, and a permanent commission to oversee the negotiations under eight general headings. âIf the AKP does not take a step now the political cost will be very heavy from their perspective. In the past those who did not solve the Kurdish problem disappearedâ, Ăcalan is reported to have said ([[#calibre_link-556][**Kurdistan Tribune**, 2014]]). The Turkish government, for its part, continues to declare its support for the peace process. On the other hand, it failed to punish members of the military who shot and killed unarmed civilians in Yakacık in Amedâs Lice district on 29 June 2013 and in Gewer on 6 December 2013 ([[#calibre_link-557][**ANF News**, 29 June 2013]]; [[#calibre_link-195][**HĂŒrriyet Daily News**, 7 December 2013]]). The state claims that the Yakacık victims were hit by ricochets from warning shots, after protestors rather than the soldiers opened fire ([[#calibre_link-558][Karaca, 2013]]; [[#calibre_link-559][Democratic Turkey Forum, 2013]]). In Gewer, Kurds who rushed to the local hospital where the shooting victims were being treated were alarmed when special operations teams surrounded the building with armoured vehicles. Police teams also threw tear-gas canisters into the hospital, having broken the windows and doors with their guns. The governor of HakkĂąri later released a statement claiming that two men were accused of attacking police at the demonstration with heavy weapons and explosives, forcing the police to respond ([[#calibre_link-560][**Efendisizler**, 2013]]).
For the moment, Ăcalanâs extraordinary âdemocratic confederalismâ project has captivated his supporters and the movementâs membership. If the peace process does not result in any tangible progress towards this goal, his reputation could be seriously weakened and the PKK could once again resort to its Kalashnikovs, RPGs and M16s. History shows that this is a possibility. The outbreak of the spontaneous 1990 **serĂźhildan** in Turkish Kurdistan was arguably a warning sign that the Kurdish population was dissatisfied with the efforts of Ăcalan and the PKK. It is likely that the PKK (or at least its HĂȘzĂȘn Parastina Gel fighters) would consider that there was no other option â if it wishes to retain popular Kurdish support â but to resume âarmed struggleâ, should the **Serok**âs âdemocratic confederalismâ project be perceived to be failing.
Despite numerous unsuccessful ceasefires, and an estimated 45,000 deaths, the PKK abandoned armed struggle on 31 December 2012, in the sincere hope of securing a lasting peace. Turkish responses to the TurkishâKurdish peace process in the past were â with some notable, partial, exceptions â negative, due to the crushing weight of the stateâs Kemalist praetorian ideology. Atrocity has been heaped upon bloody atrocity by the Turkish military in Turkish Kurdistan. Abdullah Ăcalan admits that the PKK has also been guilty of atrocities against innocent people, but such instances are few compared to the Kemalist militaryâs deeds.
It is obvious that the current peace process is highly contradictory. Overwhelming Kurdish support for the process was apparent when Ăcalanâs peace message in Amed was read out to over a million of his supporters on 21 March 2013 ([[#calibre_link-158][Dalay, 2013]]). Yunus Akbaba, an analyst with Turkeyâs SETA Foundation, argues that the peace process continues not only due to support from political actors such as the AKP, the PKK and the BDP, but also because of âthe push of public willâ. Political analysts have also drawn attention to strong public support for the process. Opinion polls indicate that Turkey-wide support for the peace process stands at 70 per cent ([[#calibre_link-561][UÌnal, 2014]]).
Nevertheless, in order to succeed the Serokâs bold scheme requires Turkey to accept an ongoing ceasefire â something it has never done in the past. The PKKâs democratic confederalism project provides the possibility of finally achieving a successful peace settlement. Following its launch, the PKK declared new unilateral ceasefires between October 2006 and October 2011. However in February 2011 the PKK moved to a stance of âactive defenceâ, in which its fighters defended themselves if threatened, ending a six-month ceasefire ([[#calibre_link-562][**al-Ahram**, 24 July 2011]]).
The PKK asserts that it halted its withdrawal from Turkish Kurdistan in September 2013 due to frustration with the governmentâs pace in introducing democratic reforms meant to address Kurdish grievances. The PKK accuses Ankara of not abiding by the terms of the peace deal agreed between the two sides. A KCK statement added that the suspension of the withdrawal was âaimed at pushing the government to take the project seriously and to do what is neededâ. The PKK demands amendments to the penal code and electoral laws, as well as the right to education in the Kurdish language and a form of regional autonomy. Prime Minister ErdoÄan has already stated that a general amnesty for PKK guerrillas (including for Ăcalan) and the right to education in Kurdish were not on the table. No deadline had been set for the withdrawal, but a ceasefire agreement reached in March 2013 said that the peace process could not proceed further until it is completed. The PKK nevertheless promised to respect the ceasefire with Turkish forces ([[#calibre_link-563][**Ekurd Daily**, 25 September 2013]]; [[#calibre_link-195][**HĂŒrriyet Daily News**, 9 September 2013]]).
In mid-October 2013 Turkeyâs Ministry of Justice prevented BDP co-chairman Selahattin DemirtaĆ from visiting Abdullah Ăcalan in prison. This was significant, as BDP leaders have acted as mediators in the peace process between the PKK and Ankara. DemirtaĆ was only temporarily barred, after making critical remarks about the AKP governmentâs democratization package. The PKK deputy commander Mustafa Karasu responded angrily on 18 October 2013, stating that Turkey had âliterally stopped the peace processâ. âWe did what we had to doâ, Karasu stated. âBut now we have stopped withdrawing our guerrillas. We will not give up our struggle on mere words from Turkey.â In August 2013 he had warned: âIf Turkey rejects peace and desires war, then the PKK has the right to defend itself. We are ready for everythingâ (Rudaw, 2013). In late October 2013, reaffirming his determination to bring the peace process to a successful conclusion, ErdoÄan declared that whoever ends the peace process will âpay the price for its actionsâ ([[#calibre_link-564][Munyar, 2013]]).
In January 2014, however, four Kurdish elected BDP MPs and a pro-Kurdish independent were released from prison and permitted to take their places in the parliament, breathing renewed hope into the precarious peace process. The MPs were among thousands of Kurdish politicians and activists detained in 2009 and 2010 for alleged ties to the PKK. One of the released MPs, the BDPâs Selma Irmak, told reporters: âitâs really just a first step.â âThere are dozens of mayors and other elected officials still in jail, so for real progress the anti-terror law must changeâ, she added ([[#calibre_link-565][Yackley, 2014]]).
As stated earlier, Cemil Bayık has criticized the focus on withdrawal of PKK forces as the solution to the conflict, highlighting that a ceasefire and the withdrawal of guerrilla forces were components in a democratic political solution to the Kurdish question, which would only have meaning if they were the foundation of an emerging âdemocratization in Turkey and the Middle Eastâ ([[#calibre_link-566][**ANF News**, 2 April 2013]]).
The ruling AKP continues to give out ambiguous signals regarding its commitment to the peace process. Thus, on 6 November 2011 ErdoÄan declared that âthere is no question of giving up armsâ against the PKK. He threatened the press with prosecution if it continued to denounce the successive raids on pro-Kurdish media. âWhether in the media or elsewhere, it should pay attention to what is said about the KCK because it amounts to support of terrorismâ, he warned (**AFP**, 8 November 2011).
The following day ErdoÄan claimed that the continuing crackdown on the KCK had led to the imprisonment of a number of its activists, and commented that the PKK wanted to replace the state apparatus in Turkey, telling reporters that âno one should expect it to endâ. The Turkish prime minister continued: âThere is only one state in Turkey, the Turkish State; there may not be a second.â By this stage around 700 alleged KCK members had already been arrested by the Turkish state, according to government figures â and some 3,000 to 3,500 Kurdish activists (**AFP**, 7 November 2011; 8 November 2011; 26 November 2011).
Then, in January 2013, ErdoÄan replaced the controversial minister of the interior Ä°dris Naim Ćahin with a moderate from Turkeyâs Kurdish region. Ćahin had adopted a ruthless posture against perceived PKK sympathizers following the 12 June 2011 elections, which the AKP won with 50 per cent of the vote. It was he who instigated the arrests of alleged KCK members ([[#calibre_link-70][Gursel/**Al-Monitor Turkey Pulse**, 27 January 2013]]), notoriously prodding police to respond brutally against opposition demonstrations. As one journalist commented: âPolice brutality against demonstrators, primarily their use of pepper gas, had never been so widespreadâ ([[#calibre_link-70][Gursel, 2013]]).
Following his appointment as Ćahinâs replacement, Minister Muammer GĂŒler told the press: âWe will fly peace doves in the south-east. We will continue to work for happiness, security and welfare of everyoneâ ([[#calibre_link-70][Gursel, 2013]]).
Speaking to Nuçe TV on 2 April 2013, Cemil Bayık, a leading member of both the PKK and the KCK, emphasized that ceasefire and withdrawal of guerrilla forces were both part of a democratic political solution to the Kurdish question. He criticized focusing on the withdrawal of PKK forces. Bayık insisted that the PKKâs ceasefire and withdrawal would only be worthwhile if they facilitated the flowering of democratization in Turkey and the region ([[#calibre_link-566][**ANF News**, 2 April 2013]]).
In a small but nevertheless symbolic gesture, Turkish security authorities permitted 20,000 of Abdullah Ăcalanâs supporters to gather in the PKK leaderâs village of Amara (Ămerli), to celebrate his sixty-fourth birthday on 4 April 2013, following his appeal for a ceasefire. Similar gatherings had been roughly dispersed by the authorities in previous years. PKK supporters sang and danced until late into the night and called for âfreedom for Ăcalanâ ([[#calibre_link-567][Ăiftçi, 5 April 2013]]; **AFP**, 4 April 2013).
In a message sent from prison and read before the crowd, Ăcalan claimed that the possibility of an honourable peace was more real than ever and referred to the ârebirthâ of the Kurdish community in Turkey. âLet not a drop of blood be shed during the settlement processâ, he added (**Todayâs Zaman**, 4 April 2013).
Prime Minister ErdoÄan, for his part, in April 2013 criticized Turkeyâs parliamentary opposition parties who opposed the peace process, claiming that his Justice and Development Party (AKP) had âalways been alone on the pathâ. He also conceded that abuses against Kurds in Amed prison after the 1980 coup created conditions in which the PKK was able to thrive, saying that those responsible for such abuse were âas guilty as those who adopted terrorismâ ([[#calibre_link-195][**HĂŒrriyet Daily News**, 4 April 2013]]).
In what he believes is a practical way to strive for his new perspective, Ăcalan advocates a âThree-Phases Road Mapâ to resolve Turkeyâs Kurdish problem. The first phase of this envisages the PKK initiating âa permanent ceasefireâ, to be complemented by a âTruth and Reconciliation Commissionâ established by the Turkish government and parliament, together with an amnesty and the release of âpolitical prisonersâ. Finally, the KCK would be legalized, making the PKK obsolete ([[#calibre_link-120][Ăcalan, 2011]]). Ăcalanâs book **Prison Writings III: The Road Map to Negotiations** ([[#calibre_link-101][2012]]) sets out his plan for peace in Turkey in more detail. The best hope for this bold plan succeeding is the wide support for KurdishâTurkish peace that exists in Turkey, after decades of bloodshed on both sides. It could succeed, although the obstacles confronting it are daunting, as we have seen.
Abdullah Ăcalan took the bold step of declaring a new PKK unilateral ceasefire on 21 March 2013. In a statement issued at the annual Newroz celebration, Ăcalan affirmed that it was now not time âfor opposition, conflict or contempt towards each other, it is time for cooperation, unity, embracing and mutual blessingâ ([[#calibre_link-158][Dalay, 2013]]). Most importantly, he also announced:
I, myself, am declaring in the witnessing of millions of people that a new era is beginning, arms are silencing, politics are gaining momentum. It is time for our [PKK] armed entities to withdraw from the [Turkish] border. ([[#calibre_link-158][Dalay, 2013]])
The PKKâs HĂȘzĂȘn Parastina Gel guerrillas began withdrawing from Turkey in early May 2013. An estimated 2,000 PKK fighters withdrew in stages over several months. The first fighters arrived in Northern Iraqâs Qandil Mountains. Turkish security forces manned checkpoints along the mountainous border with Iraq, but did not intervene. Prime Minister ErdoÄan publicly undertook to ensure that they would not be targeted during the pull-out ([[#calibre_link-568][Casey and Parker, 2013]]; [[#calibre_link-205][Yackley, 2013]]). By early June 2013 Atilla Yesilada reported that the PKK had âlargely quit the country, but stands ready to pounce back, if the demands of the Kurdish minority are not metâ ([[#calibre_link-569][YeĆilada, 2013]]).
PKK-initiated ceasefires have come and gone. As indicated above, some have lasted for years, but none has ever succeeded in convincing Turkeyâs military also to cease its hostilities. Failure could well be the outcome of this new initiative. On this occasion, though, there is some possibility of success. For the first time the Turkish government is openly engaging in peace negotiations with the PKK leader, and the âmoderate Islamistâ Recep Tayyip ErdoÄan, now the countryâs president, has staked his political future on this peace gambit.
ErdoÄan is known to be a very ambitious man, who does not take risks lightly â his secular Turkish opponents call him âthe new sultanâ. He apparently hopes that peace with the PKK will not only stop the destructive war in Turkeyâs south-east, but also bring great strategic and economic benefits to Turkey, in the context of the civil wars in neighbouring Iraqi and Syrian Kurdistan. It remains to be seen, of course, whether ErdoÄanâs ambitions will serve the cause of KurdishâTurkish peace and justice for the Kurds.
President ErdoÄan appears to sincerely desire peace, even though he is capable of deviating from his course at times, on account of electoral and other concerns. In what was hopefully a positive sign, ErdoÄanâs 2014 New Year Message emphasized the peace process with the PKK. He declared that ânew hope, new excitement, new expectationsâ lay before all Turkish citizens, as they entered the New Year âwith fresh hopeâ for an end to war ([[#calibre_link-31][**Milliyet**, 31 December 2013]]).
The **Serok** has also stated that his fundamental understanding of the resolution of the Kurdish/Turkish conundrum ârests on a free and equal rearrangementâ of relations between the two peoples ([[#calibre_link-120][Ăcalan, 2011]]). Such ethnic and political rethinking will require the building of trust between Turks and Kurds in Turkey â and beyond. In 1980 the then security chief of Diyarbakır Prison, Captain Esat Oktay Yıdıran, observed that the PKK had âthree legsâ: the mountains, the prisons and the pro-PKK groups in Europe. Abdullah Ăcalan stated on 23 February 2013 that âthe Kurdish problemâ had two parts: one in Iraqâs Qandil Mountains and the other in Europe. He even addressed a letter to the Kurdish diaspora in Europe ([[#calibre_link-570][Kurt, 2013]]). Journalist Ihsan Kurt points out that Europeâs 1.5-million-strong Kurdish diaspora is now âthe most radical, out-of-reach actor on the sceneâ. Diasporas, it has been said, are either wreckers or promoters of peace processes ([[#calibre_link-571][Ăstergaard-Nielsen, 2007]]: 27; Yossi Shain, cited in [[#calibre_link-570][Kurt, 2013]]). Today many in the Kurdish diaspora remain deeply suspicious of Ankara, believing that previous opportunities to end the conflict have always been sabotaged by powerful forces within the Turkish state. Nevertheless, despite their concerns, most remain cautiously optimistic about the process. Given that the diaspora accounts for millions of Kurds and has powerful propaganda tools at its disposal, it can just as easily encourage as spoil the peace effort ([[#calibre_link-570][Kurt, 2013]]).
The Kurdish issue will remain of major importance for the Turkish state if it remains committed to accession to the European Union. At the EUâs request, Turkey has enacted a number of democratization reforms (albeit sometimes hesitantly and incompletely) that benefit the Kurds. Turkey would prefer to be a part of the EU, but the overly long road to accession has seriously dampened its enthusiasm. In the final analysis, Ankara will agree to full democratization primarily for local reasons, not to please the EU bureaucrats. Thus the EUâs pressure regarding Kurdish rights and in support of the peace process will be factors influencing Kurdish/Turkish peace, but not decisive.
However, the recent rise of the Islamic State (IS) group (formerly known as ISIS) to control over one-third of Syria and a very large swathe of Iraq adds further complications to the peace process. In Iraq the IS is based in Mosul, which is part of historic Kurdistan, although outside the Kurdistan Regional Government area. As the IS has pushed northwards into the Kurdish region proper, it has clashed with both the Kurdistan Regional Governmentâs Peshmerga army and the fighters of the PKKâs affiliate in Iraqi Kurdistan, the PCDK. In Syrian Kurdistan the local PKK affiliate the PYD has also engaged the IS fighters. Freed from the battlefront in Turkish Kurdistan, the PKK has diverted large numbers of its HĂȘzĂȘn Parastina Gel fighters to support both the PCDK and the PYD against the IS.
Accusations that the Islamic State is entering Syria via Turkey have the potential to adversely affect the Kurdish peace process ([[#calibre_link-572][Cengiz, 2014]]). Kurdish politician Ahmet Turk, current leader of the Demokratık Toplum Kongresi â a legal Kurdish party inspired by the PKK â has accused Ankara: âIS has easy access over the border and the state is looking the other way. This makes the Kurds question the sincerity of the peace processâ ([[#calibre_link-573][**Radikal**, 2014]]).
For its part, the PKK on 5 August 2014 urged all Kurds to take up the fight against Islamic State: âAll Kurds in the north, east, south and west must rise up against the attack on Kurds in Sinjar [in northern Iraq]â ([[#calibre_link-573][**Radikal**, 2014]]).
The belief â widespread among Turkeyâs Kurds â that Turkey is âtoleratingâ IS fighters clearly endangers the peace process in Turkey as IS attacks both Syrian and Iraqi Kurds.
Should the current peace process be successful, it is probable that this will enable the PKK to complete its long transition from terrorists to legitimate rebels. As Evren Balta Paker observes, however, autonomy as a solution âin countries where regional inequalities are deepâ requires âa deep sense of social justiceâ ([[#calibre_link-574][Paker, 2013]]: 5). This will arise in Turkey only when the ethnic majority not only facilitates the demise of Kurdish under-underdevelopment, but also allows the Kurds to live as full human beings with their own identity intact, free from persecution for merely asserting their Kurdishness. If this can be achieved, then the deadly, bloody pattern of bloodletting/fruitless peacemaking/even worse bloodletting that has haunted the Kurdish/Turkish conflict in Turkey may be banished forever.
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