per Iraqi Foreign Minister.http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19676021/This can be interesting.
7/9/2007 10:13:04 AM
so whats up with the turks and kurds?about a year ago i heard that the shiite/sunni areas of iraq were the ones doing shitty while the kurds were autonomous and running ok...whats their beef with the kurds?
7/9/2007 10:16:38 AM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turkish_Kurdistan
7/9/2007 10:21:59 AM
^^^ Yeah, about a month ago there was premature reporting of the Turks having crossed the border into Iraq. They have been massing for a while and are arguing that Kurdish resistance groups within Turkey constitute terrorist organizations and justify a retaliatory strike.^^ Briefly the Kurds have been shit on by the Turks, Arabs, and Persians for hundreds of years and would like to have an autonomous country of their own, but none of the other countries are interested because the Kurds occupy a fairly oil rich piece of property. Control the Kurds, control their oil.And yes, from what I saw 3 years ago, the Kurds have their shit together. They stop at stoplights, there isn't trash on the street, and their territory is largely violence free. You don't fuck with the Peshmerga.[Edited on July 9, 2007 at 10:34 AM. Reason : ^]
7/9/2007 10:32:34 AM
And also some of the Iraqi Kurds take potshots at the Turks from time to time. In this brave new world, a government can easily construe such as terrorism. The Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), a party sitting in the Iraqi Parliament, is a listed terrorist organization and recently sent death threats to candidates in the upcoming Turkish general election.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PKK#2006_-_to_date[Edited on July 9, 2007 at 10:45 AM. Reason : .]
7/9/2007 10:37:42 AM
North Korea takes pot-shots at American Soldiers on the NK / SK border all the time as well.Actually, there are groups in Turkey that are like a Turkish version of the IRA. I mean, they conduct activities that are legitimately terrorist. Perhaps justifiable, perhaps not, but their intent is to use fear as a weapon. I wouldn't go so far as to call this a majority of the Turks, not by any stretch, but enough of a pretense for the Turks effendi.[Edited on July 9, 2007 at 10:42 AM. Reason : .]
7/9/2007 10:40:46 AM
7/9/2007 11:18:27 AM
^ case in point
7/9/2007 12:32:14 PM
^^ are they just having a pissing contest or something?[Edited on July 9, 2007 at 1:08 PM. Reason : ]
7/9/2007 1:08:32 PM
Turkey is a beautiful country, and has a lot to offer in terms of history, sights, food (GREAT FOOD), nice people, etc.But the Turkish people are on odd lot. They are very VERY proud of their "Turkishness", whatever "Turkishness" means. They refuse to admit the Armenian Genocide they caused, and any attempt to admit it is met with violence or resistance.A newspaper editor who acknowledged it was gunned down recently by a 17 YEAR OLD. Any attempt by writers, thinkers, and intellectuals to criticize any Turkish institution is met by a jail term. Insulting "Turkishness" is a punishable crime. Any attempt to publicly say "the Kurds should have rights" is also met by jail terms, which is also a punishable crime.And they are famous for their brutality and torture in their jails. The people, though generally nice, are quite crude and unpolished, save for the fashionable ones in Istanbul.Going back to the Turkish people, as I said, they are very proud. But the worst is that they are very hot tempered, kinda like Arabs. If you are a tourist there (as I was last year with my girl), they would be all nice to you, inviting you to their houses (in villages) for tea (to sell you their handmade crafts), which is fine... everybody has to survive, so they try to sell you their WAREZ. BUT, if you do go and look at the WAREZ but decide not to buy for whatever reason, they get angry and start cursing, even the elderly women!!! So now, if Kurdistan becomes an independent country, their assholes are itching to try to stop that. They don't want an idependend Kurdistan out of Iraq, as this would make the Kurds in Turkey a bit more vocal again about their freedom.I jut don't see what the problem is... Kurds live in Syria, Turkey, and Iraq, in the tips of those countries which meet, in a triangular fashion. Why not just give them their own country carved out of bits of those 3? That would solve so many problems and save so many lives.
7/9/2007 2:07:59 PM
Turkey is...how can I put this politely...not my favorite country in the world.
7/9/2007 2:38:44 PM
7/9/2007 2:41:22 PM
7/9/2007 2:46:17 PM
7/9/2007 3:51:12 PM
If anyone deserves a country of their own, the Kurds rank up there. But so do the the Tibetans, and Uighurs, and countless other populations who have been divided by poorly drawn national borders. The fact of the matter is, though, that the Kurdish lands have oil; oil that the Iranians, Turks, and Arab Iraqis want. Since no-one is inclined to let go of the oil, and no one is inclined (or capable) of standing up for the Kurds, they're pretty much screwed for the moment.
7/9/2007 4:19:31 PM
1) Turkey has no oil, so arguing that the Turks are interested in oil is a farce. If you argued that Ataturk thought that since Turkomen lived in what is now the autonomous Kurdish part of Iraq that the border of Turkey should include Mosul, then you'd have a greater argument in discussing oil, but as it stands, Turks are only transporters and not drillers of oil.2) The Kurds aren't an innocent people. They formed a guerrilla group in the 1980s that led to the death of an estimated 30,000 people. Did they do all the killing? No. The Turkish military is also largely responsible for the size of the casualties, but it would be incorrect to say that the PKK hasn't committed terrorist activities.3) There are very few Turkish immigrants in France. Most of the Muslim population is Algerian. However, in the European conscious, even to this day (except in maybe the UK), Muslim and Turk are synonymous. Therefore, it's very common to associate the poor, Muslim communities with the "evil" image of Turks, which is based on the misinformation of the 17th and 18th centuries.4) In an effort to join the EU, Turkey has gone above and beyond what the Nationalists were ever willing to concede to allow Kurds rights. Kurdish can now be taught in schools, and radio programs can be broadcast in Kurdish as well. However, as a people, the Kurds have had a very difficult time. In Syria to speak Kurdish or name your child by a Kurdish name is punishable, and I think that the Kurds were innocent victims on the Iranian and Iraqi side of the Iraq-Iran War. 5) JCashFan, I'd be interested to know who your IRA groups are? We have the KKK, Black Panthers, etc. in the US who think that they're acting in the best interest of this country. In Turkey, we have nationalists, Islamists, secularists, all trying to do what they think is best for the country. My question to you is why you're calling it terrorism and not the growing pains of democracy? It's not what the US went through in the 1800s, but I think it's a semi-successful attempt to be a "democratic" country. Are they a democracy? No. But they're trying.6) 0EPII1, I don't think it's fair to look at Penal Code 301 and use that to judge Turkey as a nation. Nor is it fair to say that the only "polished" folks in the nation are from Istanbul. Are the only "polished" folks in the US the ones who have college degrees? Being blue collar isn't being crude. Backwards, probably, but crude, no. Penal Code 301 is a relic of a past time, but Freedom of Speech is a very scary right. A young democracy, or even a democracy going through a mid-life crisis like Turkey is now, is bound to be afraid of being too truthful about itself. So they hang on to a relic law. Is it appropriate? No. But it's their safety net, and it's becoming more and more difficult to enforce.7) The 17 year old was brain washed by Nationalists. No different than Rudolph blowing up abortion clinics in the US, and if you're using Midnight Express as your basis of brutality and torture in Turkish prisons even the makers of the film and the individual on who the story is based have admitted that it was over dramatized. We don't have a flawless human rights record, but don't tell me that any country in the Middle East has a flawless human rights record.I'm Turkish, born in the States, but brought up in a family where we speak Turkish at home. Maybe some of what I said is biased, but I'm pretty comfortable talking about this stuff without too much emotion getting involved. On the issue of the border massing, it's much more an issue of Islamist gov't vs. Secularist military. A nation at a crossroads has a huge decision to make, and there aren't enough educated people to make democracy work. I think the first of August will show the world the direction in which Turkey will move.
7/11/2007 7:07:31 AM
^ nice post. will reply later.here is something VERY relevant to the thread:http://www.turkishdailynews.com.tr/article.php?enewsid=70656read the whoel thing, but here are the last 2 paragraphs:
7/13/2007 7:17:46 PM
And with all that said, Turkey is still the least crazy middle east country.
7/13/2007 11:12:21 PM
7/13/2007 11:28:21 PM
7/14/2007 9:12:22 AM
7/15/2007 8:15:01 PM
The point that the Ottoman empire was sometimes a more tolerant dictatorship than some European empires is irrelevant to the point that Europeans have good historical reasons to mistrust Turks.The point that Europeans have good historical reasons to mistrust Turks is irrelevant to the point that Europeans have bad reasons to mistrust Turks today.[Edited on July 15, 2007 at 8:42 PM. Reason : As always in the soap box, arguments get diverted over a niggling detail.]
7/15/2007 8:41:34 PM