PKK Attacks: Turkey's Leader Vows to "Annihilate" Kurdish Rebels

by: Kristen Chick  |  The Christian Science Monitor | Report

Turkey Bombs Kurds in Northern Iraq After PKK Attack
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.(Photo: World Economic Forum)

After the PKK attacks killed 12 Turkish soldiers this weekend, Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Sunday that his government will not rest until the Kurdish rebels are "annihilated." 

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said that Turkey will not stop until the PKK is “annihilated” after the Kurdish rebel group killed 12 Turkish soldiers over the weekend.

The PKK attacks in Turkey’s predominantly Kurdish southeastern region come amid an escalation of violence after the perceived failure of the government’s attempt to solve the Kurdish problem politically, with a reform initiative to give Kurds more political and cultural rights.

Fighters from the Kurdish Worker’s Party (PKK) on Saturday attacked a Turkish military outpost near the border with Iraq, killing nine soldiers. The Turkish military responded with helicopter fire, reportedly killing 12 fighters. Two more soldiers were killed Saturday in a mine blast that Turkey blamed on the PKK, and a PKK attack on a military outpost in Elazig Sunday killed one soldier, reports Bloomberg.

Mr. Erdogan spoke strongly Sunday at funeral services for the 11 soldiers killed, reports the Associated Press. "They will never win," said Erdogan. "They will obtain nothing."

The BBC reports that Mr. Erdogan also called the attacks “cowardly” and said Turkey would not give in to the “spiral of violence” the PKK had initiated.

Airstrikes

Turkey responded to the attacks by launching airstrikes against PKK bases inside northern Iraq Saturday.

AFP reports that they killed one Iraqi Kurdish girl and wounded two others. After those strikes, the PKK threatened to expand its reach, saying it would “take our operations to all Turkish cities” if the governmet does not stop its attacks, reports Agence France-Presse.

"Turkey wants to take us towards war," the group’s spokesman, Ahmed Denis, told AFP. "She is not sincere in dealing with the Kurdish issue and doesn't want to deal with this issue peacefully."

Turkish newspaper Hurriyet reports that the government warned Friday of increased PKK attacks in the coming weeks and months. It said it has killed 130 PKK fighters since March, while 43 Turkish soldiers have been killed. According to AFP, the escalating violence is hurting the government’s Kurdish initiative.

The prime minister on Friday charged the PKK was seeking to undermine the government initiative to boost Kurdish freedoms and investment in the impoverished southeast in a bid to peacefully end the conflict.

The so-called "Kurdish opening," announced last year, has faltered amid an opposition outcry that Ankara is bowing to the PKK, as well as persistent rebel attacks and a judicial onslaught on Kurdish activists.

The Monitor reported that the government’s initiative included easing restrictions on Kurdish-language television stations and Kurdish language university faculties, and allowing towns to use their original Kurdish names.

What the PKK Wants

The PKK was formed in the 1970s to press for the creation of an independent state for Kurds, who number about 30 million and inhabit parts of Turkey, Iraq, Iran, Syria, and Armenia. According to the Council on Foreign Relations, the group has largely abandoned its called for an independent state and now would like to achieve some level of autonomy for Kurds.

The group took up guerilla tactics in the 1980s, and the US and the European Union consider the PKK a terrorist organization. Roughly 40,000 people have been killed in the conflict in Turkey since 1984.

An op-ed in the Turkish English-language newspaper Today’s Zaman Sunday argued that the PKK’s use of violence has caused it to lose popular support, and the government’s initiative should not be sidetracked by the violence.

What must be discussed today is the new war launched by the PKK, which should not be an excuse for shelving the “initiative.” Otherwise, everyone will lose. Rather, the initiative must be fully maintained, without allowing common sense to be distracted by terror. Violence should not be allowed to have practical results, or any result at all.

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They hanged the last guy

They hanged the last guy that said that, if I am not mistaken?



Maybe the Kurds should

Maybe the Kurds should organize a flotilla of human rights activists to promote the inalienable rights of Kurds to establish their own state in their ancestral homelands. Surely the Turks would welcome such an initiative.



Curious bit of sophomoric

Curious bit of sophomoric (if that) "history" writing in this story. For starters, the various Kurdish insurgencies go nigh a century, not merely to the 1980's. And one HUGE factor not mentioned is support for Kurdish players, most especially from Israel. Given the recent collapse of the Turkey-Israel alliance, serious observers will no doubt be wondering if Mossad is back to its usual.... (much like they did with supporting Iraqi Kurds against Saddam, until 1975)



Kurkey bombs Turds?

Kurkey bombs Turds?



You know the World is in

You know the World is in trouble when God is on both sides of the battle! I just hope God catches a virus that can kill him without killing the host... Humans.



You guys don't get it at

You guys don't get it at all, do you?
[What must be discussed today is the new war launched by the PKK, which should not be an excuse for shelving the “initiative.” Otherwise, everyone will lose. Rather, the initiative must be fully maintained, without allowing common sense to be distracted by terror. Violence should not be allowed to have practical results, or any result at all.]

Make the connection here, if you can, regarding terror:-

http://www.upi.com/Top_News/US/2010/06/19/Report-US-fleet-allowed-through-Suez/UPI-79431276991163/



Looks like the Israelis are

Looks like the Israelis are riling up the Kurds.



Dr. Heil (the name that you

Dr. Heil (the name that you chose speaks volumes), there is no mention of Israel in the story. However, there is great irony in Turkey's attacking the PKK while opposing Israel's right to defend itself.



The idea that "defending

The idea that "defending oneself" is the equivalent of "holding a nation captive" is... interesting... much like the eugenics theories of the last century were "fascinating" to some. ^..^



Where is a good IraChernus

Where is a good IraChernus when you need him NOW?



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