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Iraqi Kurds keep nervous eye on Turkish election race

Iraqi Kurds

Iraqi Kurds gather as they celebrate their new year Nowruz, in the town of Akra in Iraq's northern autonomous Kurdish region, on March 20, 2023. Safin HAMED / AFP

As Turkey’s presidential vote nears, Iraqi Kurds are keeping a close watch on the tightest electoral battle yet for Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, the outcome of which could have major security and economic implications for their region.

For many years, fighting between Turkey’s armed forces and Kurdish militants has spilled over into Iraq’s autonomous Kurdish north, a rugged mountain region where both sides operate military bases.

Many Kurds in war-scarred Iraq sympathize with the ethnic minority in Turkey, but their own region also relies on the big neighbor for business, with its crucial oil long exported via a pipeline that runs through Turkey.

Political leaders in Arbil are not officially commenting on Turkey’s tight electoral race between Erdoğan and his challenger Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, who has pledged to “bring democracy to this country by changing the one-man regime.”

But, whatever the outcome of the Turkish presidential vote, with the first round to be held Sunday, Iraq’s Kurdish region will look to preserve its strategic partnership with Ankara, analysts say.

“The media, the political scene, everyone is highly preoccupied with the Turkish elections,” said Adel Bakawan, director of the French Centre for Research on Iraq, who stressed that Ankara’s role in the region is “fundamental.”

Iraq’s Kurdish leaders have built relationships with Erdoğan, he said, adding that, if “the president changes, the whole relationship between Arbil and Ankara changes… The diplomatic world hates the unknown.”

‘Direction of the war’

Erdoğan, after two decades in power as premier and then president, has strengthened Turkey as a regional player that at times challenges Europe and the United States and negotiates with Russia on Syria’s war.

When he first took office, Erdoğan launched talks aimed at ending the Kurdish armed struggle for broader autonomy in Turkey’s southeast. But the community, estimated to be 15 to 20 million strong, came under pressure when those talks collapsed, and violence resumed in 2015.

Turkey’s battle against the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), classified as a “terrorist” group by Ankara and its Western allies, has long since flared again across its borders into Iraqi Kurdistan.

The Turkish military maintains dozens of bases in northern Iraq and carries out air strikes and ground operations against the PKK, which operates rear bases in the region.

Iraq’s regional Kurdish government rarely rebukes Ankara, despite Turkey routinely bombarding its territory and causing civilian casualties. Instead, Arbil usually limits its public response to press releases condemning violations of Iraq’s sovereignty and their impacts on the population.

Kılıçdaroğlu, while making no concrete proposals to resolve Turkey’s Kurdish question, has accused Erdoğan of “stigmatizing” Kurds.

He has also pledged to free the Kurdish leader of the left-wing Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP), Selahattin Demirtaş, who has been incarcerated since 2016 for spreading “terrorist propaganda.”

According to Bakawan, given the gestures Kılıçdaroğlu has already made to the Kurdish community, there is “the possibility of appeasement” in the conflict should he win.

“The result of the election will directly impact the direction of this war,” said Bakawan, a French-Iraqi political scientist of Kurdish origin.

‘Betting on relaxation’

Political scientist Botan Tahseen argued that Turkey’s opposition is “betting on relaxation” and wants “to turn a new page” after Erdoğan, at a time when the Middle East is thirsty for “political, security and economic stability.”

If Erdoğan is re-elected, he added, Turkey will still “need an initiative to normalize its relations with its neighbors, especially (Iraqi) Kurdistan.”

Ankara remains a strategic economic partner to Arbil. For years, all of Kurdistan’s oil exports — some 450,000 barrels per day — were sent to Turkey, without the approval of Iraq’s federal government.

A legal dispute between Baghdad and Ankara interrupted the trade, but it is expected to resume once technical and financial details are settled.

“Whoever governs in Ankara will obviously have an influence on this issue,” said Bakawan.

Illustrating the close ties between Ankara and Arbil, a Turkish HDP parliamentarian was on Sunday turned away from Arbil’s airport, local media reported. The provincial government later explained he had been subject to a Baghdad-issued “travel ban.”

For Iraq’s Kurds, notions of ethnic solidarity and hopes for an end to discrimination of Kurds in Turkey are tempered with caution.

“We hope that the next Turkish government will sit down at the dialogue table with the Kurds,” said Nizar Soltan, 60, who works at a university in Arbil.

“Dozens of times they tricked the Kurds and used them to achieve their ends,” he said, sitting in a cafe, complaining that the minority invariably ends up being “marginalized.”

“This time let’s hope they keep their promises, and that the Kurdish regions will regain security and stability.”

© Agence France-Presse

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