The Real Cost of Afrin: The Euphoria Inspired By What Erdogan Terms "An Historic Victory"
17 April 2018
By Amir Taheri
With the Turkish flag hoisted on top of the municipal building in Afrin the
other day President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his supporters are in triumphal
mood.
In a sense they have the right to be as this is the first time in almost 100
years that Turkey has scored a military victory against an adversary ready to
fight. (Turkey's occupation of part of Cyprus in 1974 was achieved without
major fighting.)
However, the euphoria inspired by what Erdogan terms "an historic victory"
would have to be tempered by reality. That NATO's largest army in Europe
should win a war against a rag band of lightly armed Kurds is no surprise.
This is neither Alp Arsalan, after Malazegrd, nor Sultan Muhammad Fatih after
capturing Byzantium.
The capture of Afrin represents a 19th century solution for a 21st century
problem that Turkey faces.
Judging but official statements from Ankara, Erdogan is trying to create what
19Th century strategists termed a cordon sanitaire or a glacis supposedly to
protect Turkey against incursions by Kurdish "terrorists".
However, military history, at least since the debacle of the Maginot Line
enterprise in 1939; shows that such concepts as cordon sanitaire and glacis
are no longer relevant to modern warfare, especially of the asymmetric kind to
which Turkey remains vulnerable.
The classical concepts of glacis and cordon sanitaire triggered a process
which would lead either to further expansion and empire building or ultimate
irrelevance. To protect a glacis you have to create another glacis next to it,
and so on, ad infinitum.
Thus, Erdogan's glacis in Syrian-Kurdish territory would need protection from
neighboring areas in the rest of Syria as well as Kurdish provinces in Iraq,
no to mention Iran which could, as it has done for decades, offer the
Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) safe haven or even operational bases against
Turkey. On a more mundane level, the Kurdish "terrorists" that pose a threat
to Turkey could always cross the border with little difficulty, a practice
that terrorists of all ilk excel in across the globe.
Paradoxically, sole reliance on force and a determined attempt at humiliating
the adversary could help rekindle the PKK's narrative of victimhood as a
justification for violence and terror. That is especially regrettable because
Turkey's Kurdish minority has done rather well under Erdogan.
Those familiar with the situation on the ground in Turkey know that during
Erdogan's stewardship of the state the country's Kurdish-majority areas have
come out of abject poverty and enjoy a measure of prosperity they had never
known before.
Empirical and anecdotal evidence indicate that the PKK's Marxist-Leninist
ideology and its chimera of a proletarian state replacing the Turkish Republic
have limited appeal among Turkey's Kurds.
What sympathy the PKK attracts is rooted in the cluster of so-called "identity
issues", the "them against us" that feeds secessionism even in Scotland or
Catalonia.
By removing many of those "identity issues", Erdogan in the first phases of
his leadership succeeded in depriving the PKK of much of its ideological
fodder. That great achievement was dramatically illustrated by the public
change of tone and course by a significant segment of the PKK leadership,
notably its founding father the imprisoned Abdullah Ocalan.
The capture of Afrin, even supposing it will be permanent, will not solve
Turkey's Kurdish problem. But, with the law of unintended consequences being
triggered, it could lead Turkey into a whole new maze of problems. Already a
good part of Turk's elite troops are bogged down in Cyprus with no end in
sight. The glacis that Erdogan wants to build in Syria could end up pining
down even more of Turkey's elite troops, provoking a strategic imbalance in
the nation's overall defense doctrine and the means needed to sustain it. And
that is without mentioning economic cost of such involvements.
The Syrian glacis would also implicate Turkey in any project for recreating a
new Syria out of the bits and pieces of a broken state. Other nations
currently involved in the Syrian quagmire, including Russia, Iran and the
United States, could easily walk away as their presence does not have a
territorial expression. Even if it decided to hang on to a base in Syria,
Russia would be able to defend the enclave on the Mediterranean without seeing
is own territory threatened by enemy infiltration. Iran could also withdraw
its Lebanese and other mercenaries without exposing its own territory to
perennial terrorist threats.
Turkey, however, could get locked in the Syrian fate as Rwanda is in
Congo-Kinshasa's interminable turmoil.
Getting entangled in Syria's Kurdish areas could also wreck the tight
relationship, built over decades, which exists between Turkey and the
autonomous Kurdistan in Iraq. And that, in turn, could undermine Turkey's
grand man for playing a leading role in Iraq's ambitious reconstruction plans.
Over the past decade Turkish businesses have lost major markets in Tunisia,
Libya, Egypt and Syria.
The prospect of Iraq emerging as a new market is one of the few good news item
Turkish businesses now cling onto, a fact illustrated by the signing of
contacts worth more than $20 billion.
However, Erdogan's new image as an enemy of the Kurds could deprive Turkey of
its surest allies in Iraqi Kurdistan while Iran will play the Shi'ite card to
curb Turkish influence. Erdogan's Kurdish adventure could also exert some
pressure on Ankara's relations with its NATO allies.
Having turned a blind eye to Turkey's campaign against Syrian Kurds, the US is
unlikely to totally abandon its Kurdish allies who helped defeat ISIS. Thus,
Erdogan may soon find out that his victory in Afrin isn't as uncontested as he
wants us to believe. To be sure, no one could dislodge him by force at least
not in the near future. But the US and others could easily help raise the cost
of his "great victory".
Almost two decades ago, Erdogan told us that the Kurdish problem was a
political problem with no military solution. In his first term as prime
minister he showed that he can apply that vision with patience and
forbearance. Now, however, that patience and forbearance seem to have
evaporated. What he is offering now is a banal fast-food of ultimately hollow
military victory.
The mise-en-scene of hoisting the Turkish flag in Afrin was copied from that
of US Marines raising the Star-Spangled Banner in Iwo-Jima. However, as every
Hollywood buff knows remakes are never as good as the original and often end
up bankrupting the studio.
Amir Taheri was the executive editor-in-chief of the daily Kayhan in Iran
from 1972 to 1979. He has worked at or written for innumerable publications,
published eleven books, and has been a columnist for Asharq Al-Awsat since
1987
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