Who Owns Kirkuk? The
Turkoman Case
by Yücel Güçlü
Middle East Quarterly
Winter 2007
The question of Kirkuk's final status
remains among the touchiest issues concerning Iraq's future. The Iraqi
Kurdish political parties seek to include Kirkuk in a federal Kurdish
state, an outcome at odds with Iraqi Turkoman sensitivities. The
Turkomans consider Kirkuk to be their own ancestral capital and cultural
center. Understanding the Turkoman claim to Kirkuk is essential to
defuse a potentially explosive problem.
Policymakers and commentators outside
Turkey often ignore the Turkomans. Literature about them is scarce in
Western languages; the little that exists is limited in academic rigor
and utility.[1] Furthermore, in
terms of enunciating their concerns and interacting with Western
officials, the Turkomans themselves have not always been effective
spokesmen for their cause.
For centuries, the Turkomans have been
part of the urban elite in cities such as Baghdad, Mosul, and Kirkuk.
They remain an integral part of Iraq although their population is
debated. It is hard to come by adequate population numbers in Iraq.
After the 1958 revolution and the Baath Party coup ten years later,
successive Iraqi governments embraced Arab nationalism[2]
and worked to subvert the rights of the Kurdish and Turkoman
communities. The last reliable census in Iraqand the only one in which
participants could declare their mother tonguewas in 1957. It found
that Turkomans were the third largest ethnicity in Iraq, after Arabs and
Kurds. The Turkomans numbered 567,000 out of a total population of
6,300,000. Later polls dropped "Turkoman" as a category. Basing his
estimate on the 1957 census data and a growth rate of 2.5 percent
annually, Erşat Hürmüzlü, a Kirkuk-born Turkoman scholar, estimated
Iraq's Turkoman population today at no less than two million Turkomans,
out of a total population of 25 million.[3]
The City of Kirkuk
The status of Kirkuk remains one of
Iraq's major flash points. A city of more than 750,000[4]
in the center of northern Iraq, it sits adjacent to oil fields holding
40 percent of Iraq's reserves[5]
and is surrounded by some of Iraq's richest agricultural land. Kirkuk's
history is complex, replete with competing claims to suzerainty.
Kirkuk's history dates back thousands
of years.[6] The Ottoman Empire
incorporated Kirkukand much of what is now Iraqinto its domains in
1534. Kirkuk grew in importance in the eighteenth century when it became
the capital of the Ottoman sanjak (county or sub-district) of
Şehrizor, comprising the areas of Kirkuk, Arbil, and Sulaimaniya. With
the reforms of Midhat Pasha, Baghdad's governor between 1869 and 1872,
the name Şehrizor was given to the sanjak of Kirkuk
(corresponding to the present areas of Kirkuk and Arbil). In 1879, the
Ottoman government in Istanbul created the Mosul vilayet, which
incorporated most of what is now northern Iraq. Kirkuk remained an
important garrison town and, for reasons of language and the composition
of the population, a valuable Ottoman recruiting center for civil
servants and gendarmes. Ottoman culture thrived in the city.[7]
The Turkomans dominated the merchant class and provided economic
stability to the city.
Following its defeat in World War I,
the Ottoman Empire forfeited much of its territory in the Middle East.
But, because the majority of the area of Kirkuk was Turkish, the Ottoman
government refused to renounce its claim. The Sublime Porte based its
claim on President Woodrow Wilson's Fourteen Points, Article XII of
which stipulated that the Turkish portions of the Ottoman Empire should
be assured sovereignty. The Ottoman delegation to the Paris Peace
Conference of 1919 argued that in "Asia the Turkish lands are bounded on
the south by the provinces of Mosul and Diyarbekir, as well as a part of
Aleppo as far as the Mediterranean."[8]
At this time, Kirkuk's leading families
were Turkoman: the Neftçilerwhose name in Turkish means oil
producerhad owned and exploited the oil seepages since a 1693 imperial
decree; the Yakuboğulları were landowners; and the Kırdars were both
landowners and merchants. In addition, the city was home to scores of
soldiers and civil servants who had reached high office in the Ottoman
service but retired to their home province after the Allies dismembered
the empire. The Turkomans retained the position of social influence they
had enjoyed under Ottoman rule.[9]
Indeed, Turkish remained the language of communication not only within
the sanjak but also in Baghdad. The only local newspaper was the
Turkish Necme, and there was an association of Turkoman writers.
A.F. Miller, the resident British assistant administrative inspector,
could only speak Turkish; he had little need for Arabic or Kurdish. And
the British vice consul in Mosul, H.E. Wilkie Young, wrote, "There are
7,000 houses in the town of Kirkuk, and the population is not less than
40,000, of whom about 2,500 are Jews and only 630 Christians. The rest
are Moslems of Turkoman origin. The language of the place is
consequently Turkish."[10] W.R.
Hay, another British political officer in northern Iraq, likewise
described a Turkoman crescent stretching from Mosul through Kirkuk and
southward to Mandali. He described how "Kirkuk is the main centre of
this Turkish population
Several villages in its vicinity are also
Turkish-speaking, whereas the other towns are isolated communities
surrounded by Kurds and Arabs. Large numbers of the middle-class Turks
of Kirkuk and Arbil who possess some land, but wish to augment their
incomes, learn to read and write, wear European clothes and undertake
appointments in the government service. Kirkuk and Arbil, especially the
former, provided large numbers of officials to the Ottoman government."[11]
That the British government drew up its proclamations to the city's
residents in the same Turkish language used at the time in Istanbul[12]
was a testament to Kirkuk's Turkish character.
Britain, as the occupying power, sought
to legitimize its imposition of the Hashemite monarchy on the country
through popular vote. During the July 1921 referendum, the people of
Kirkuk rejected both inclusion in the new kingdom of Iraq and Faisal,
the British choice for king. Kirkuk officials did not take part in the
August 23, 1921 proclamation ceremony for Faisal. Rather than turn
toward Baghdad, Kirkuk's population continued to identify with Turkey.[13]
Sir Arnold Wilson, the first British high commissioner of Iraq (1917-20)
observed, "Kirkuk had always been a stronghold of Turkish officialdom,
and pro-Turkish views here were a disturbing element for the occupation
forces."[14] Gertrude Bell, who
would serve as Oriental secretary to the British civil administrator and
later to the high commissioner of Iraq, acknowledged Kirkuk's Turkish
character: "The inhabitants of Kirkuk are largely of Turkish blood,
descendants of Turkish settlers dating from the time of Seljuks."
[15]
In order to persuade Kirkuk's notables
to participate in elections for Iraq's new Constituent Assembly, the
British high commissioner appointed a Turkoman sub-governor (mutasarrıf)
and other Turkoman officials to top administrative posts in Kirkuk.
London wanted Kirkuk to accede to 1923 elections organized by the
British to bestow legitimacy upon the new rulers in Baghdad. The Kirkuk
residents made their participation in the electoral process conditional
on four provisions: (1) non-interference of the government in local
electoral procedures; (2) the preservation of the district
administration's Turkish character; (3) recognition of Turkish as the
district's official language; and (4) the appointment of Kirkukis in all
subsequent Baghdad cabinets.[16]
When Sayyid Abd al-Rahman al-Gaylani formed his first Iraqi cabinet on
October 25, 1920, his minister of education and health was İzzet Pasha,
a retired Turkoman general from Kirkuk.[17]
In July 1923, Prime Minister Abd al-Muhsin
al-Sadun sent a telegram in Turkish to the sub-governor confirming that
the Council of Ministers in Baghdad had accepted conditions two and
three. While this did not go far enough for Kirkuk's local notables, it
nevertheless constituted Baghdad's de facto recognition of their
authority.[18]
On September 30, 1924, the League of
Nations set up a commission to decide on the future of the Mosul vilayet.
The commission spent some two months in the disputed area visiting the
principal localities, speaking to local notables and other residents. It
did not equate language with loyalty and, indeed, found that many Arabic
speakers considered themselves loyal more to Turkey than Iraq. Nor did
the commission find any merit to British claims that there was a
distinction between Turks and Turkomans.[19]
It was not until Turkish, British, and Iraqi representatives in Ankara
signed a tripartite treaty on June 5, 1926, that the three countries
finalized the status of the Mosul vilayet, assigning the
regionincluding Kirkukto Iraq.
Prior to granting Iraq independence,
the British-supervised Iraqi government sought to compel the Arab
majority to respect minority rights. The Iraqi parliament enacted Local
Languages Law No. 74, 1931, to make Kurdish and Turkish official
languages in various northern districts including Kirkuk. The law also
stipulated that the language of instruction should be that of the
majority of pupils. The law acknowledged both Kirkuk and Kifri to be
majority Turkoman.[20]
As condition of acceptance into the
League of Nations, the Iraqi government on May 30, 1932, specified areas
where minority languages, local administration, law courts, and primary
education were to function. This declaration was incorporated into the
constitution of 1925 with the reaffirmation of Iraq's undertakings
toward minorities.[21]
Article 1 of the declaration stipulated
that no law, regulation, or official action could interfere with the
rights outlined for the minorities. Although Arabic became the official
language of Iraq, Kurdish became a corollary official language in
Sulaimaniya, and both Kurdish and Turkish became official languages in
Kirkuk and Kifri. It stipulated that Iraqi officials assigned to Kirkuk
should not only speak Arabic but also have competency in Kurdish and/or
Turkish. The same article stipulated that Iraqi courts should accept
testimony in Kurdish and Turkish. Article 10 placed these rights under
the League of Nations' guarantee. When the league dissolved in 1946, the
U.N. assumed responsibility for its guarantees.[22]
These U.N. obligations remain in effect.
Kirkuk in the Post-Independence Period
Soon after Iraqi independence, and
especially with the growth of the oil industry, the demography of Kirkuk
began to shift. The late historian Hanna Batatu explains: "Kirkuk had
been Turkish through and through in the not too distant past
[but] by
degrees, Kurds moved into the city from the surrounding villages
By
1959, they had swollen to more than one-third of the population, and the
Turkomans had declined to just over half." While the Kurds "Kurdified"
Irbil, Kirkuk retained a greater sense of "cultural links with Turkey
[and] ethnic identity."[23]
This influx of Kurds into heavily
Turkoman-populated areas upset the fragile demographic balance and laid
the groundwork for decades of ethnic tension. On July 14-16, 1959, at
the instigation of the Iraqi Communist Party, a disproportionately
Kurdish mob supported by a Kurdish military unit rampaged through the
city, targeting and killing prosperous Turkomans and Turkoman leaders.
President Abdul Karim Qasim estimated the total death toll in the area
at 120, with many executed and dumped in mass graves. The pogrom ended
only with Baghdad's military intervention.[24]
Still, the Turkoman identity remained intact. Reader Bullard, military
governor of Baghdad in 1920, wrote in 1961 that "the largest of the
Turkish towns in Iraq is Kirkuk."[25]
With the 1968 establishment of Baath
Party control, the situation of the city's Turkomans grew more
precarious as Kirkuk became a flash point in the struggle between the
Iraqi central government and Kurdish rebel leaders. Disputes about
whether Kirkuk should be included in an autonomous Kurdish-run zone led
to the collapse of a proposed 1970 autonomy agreement between Iraqi
Kurds and the central Iraqi government with whom they had been fighting.
In 1974, the Baathist government gerrymandered provincial boundaries so
as to dilute the Turkoman and Kurdish population of the Kirkuk
governorate and divided Turkoman concentrations between different
Arab-led provinces, and in 1975, the Iraqi army moved in to crush the
Kurds.
The Baathist regime launched a new
round of ethnic cleansing and oppression of minorities in the late 1980s
and 1990s. A November 8, 1996 U.N. report detailed problems confronting
the Turkomans. They faced arbitrary arrest, internal deportation or
exile, and confiscation of personal property. Baghdad sought to change
the demography of the city and its environs to scatter Kurds and
Turkomans and replace them with Arabs. In addition, the central
government forbade Kirkuk's Turkomans to purchase and sell real estate,
unless to Arabs.[26] A subsequent
U.N. report added detail to the ethnic cleansing campaign: it described
"nationality correction" forms in which the Baathist regime compelled
Turkomans to register themselves as Arabs prior to the 1997 census and
the expropriation of Turkoman agricultural land.[27]
A 1998 report filed by U.N. special rapporteur Max van der Stoel
reinforced the severity of Baghdad's campaign against the Turkomans and
Kurds in Kirkuk.[28]
Kirkuk: Whose Jerusalem?
Kurds have long claimed Kirkuk as their
own. In a May 2001 interview with the Middle East Quarterly,
Jalal Talabani, leader of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan who would
later become Iraq's first postwar president, called Kirkuk "the
Jerusalem of Kurdistan."[29]
Masoud Barzani, president of the rival Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP),
has also claimed Kirkuk as an exclusively Kurdish city[30]
and insisted that Kirkuk rather than Irbil should be capital of the
Kurdistan Regional Government.[31]
Both Talabani and Barzani consider the Kirkuk oil fields to be theirs[32]
although Iraqi law defines the fields as part of the Iraqi national
patrimony.[33]
On the eve of war, many outside
observers recognized the Turkoman nature of Kirkuk's population. "Kirkuk
is mainly Turkoman," observed correspondent Julian Borger in The
Guardian.[34] In the
months preceding Operation Iraqi Freedom, the Turkish government raised
concern about the potential for Kurdish militias to expand their area of
control unilaterally.[35]
The U.S. government guaranteed that Kurds would not enter Kirkuk or
Mosul.[36] Soon after the start
of hostilities, however, 20,000 Kurds flooded into these cities; half
stayed.[37] In the days following
Saddam's fall, Kurdish militiamen sacked the Turkoman towns of Altın
Köprü, Kirkuk, Daquq, Tuzkhurmatu, and Mandali. U.S. forces did little
to prevent the pogroms and looting.[38]
The peshmerga plundered abandoned government offices in Kirkuk.
They burned land deeds and birth registries so as to remove evidence
countering their claim that Kirkuk is a Kurdish city.[39]
With U.S. red lines shown to be
ephemeral, the Kurds continued their migration. In August 2004,
journalists reported that as many as 500 Kurds a day streamed into
Kirkuk, a move calculated to skew a pre-election census. U.S. military
authorities estimated that 72,000 Kurds settled in Kirkuk between April
2003 and August 2004.[40]
The Kurdish political parties encouraged the flight with subsidies[41]
and, in some cases, denial of livelihood for those who refused to move
from Sulaimaniya, Irbil, and other majority Kurdish cities to Kirkuk.[42]
U.S. authorities undercut the Turkoman
response. Shortly after Iraq's liberation, Washington and London
established the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) to act as an
interim administration of Iraq. L. Paul Bremer, its administrator,
established a 25-member governing council to advise his rule. U.S. and
British officials sought to make the council representative of Iraqi
society. It filled these seats using often arbitrary calculations of
Iraq's population. Because Bremer believed the Turkoman population to be
less than 5 percent, the CPA allocated only one Turkoman representative.
And, because of some U.S. diplomats' desires to fulfill gender quotas,
they appointed Songul Chopuk, a young woman with no constituency, to
represent this group.[43] The CPA
excluded the Iraqi Turkoman Front, the most prominent Iraqi Turkoman
organization. Iraqi Turkomans protested that this initial slight denied
them proper input on their community's issues.[44]
The Turkomans complained that their representative on the council did
not adequately reflect their political views. Among those issues that
most concern the Turkomans are recognition of Turkish as one of the
official languages of Iraq, their acknowledgment as a component
community within the country, and, most importantly, the status of
Kirkuk. Washington's subsequent decision to appoint only one Turkoman
ministerand only to the relatively minor portfolio of science and
technologyin a 33-member cabinet compounded the problem.
Tensions rose as Kurds, Arabs, and
Turkomans vied for control of the city. There have been riots[45]
and assassinations.[46] The
Kurdish political parties sought to monopolize government offices and,
by extension, government services in the city. Turkoman officials say
that Kurdish bureaucrats mandate exclusive use of Kurdish in government
offices, even though the majority of the city's population does not
speak the language. The Kurdistan Democratic Party's minister of
peshmerga affairs declared, "We are ready to fight against all
forces to control Kirkuk. Our share is very little. We will try to take
a larger share."[47] Just as
Saddam used his power to dispense patronage to a single ethnic and
political group, so, too, do followers of Talabani and Barzani today.
With fewer resources at their disposal, Iraqi Turkoman political parties
have been unable to organize their constituency to the same extent.
It is incumbent upon both the
international community and the new Iraqi government to protect the
rights of the Turkomans now threatened by both Kurdish expansionism and
the intolerance by some factions of the central government.
Conclusions
The Kirkuk issue will not go away.
Kurds may feel they have a real claim to Kirkuk, or they may be guided
more by a desire to attain its oil wealth. Ethnic cleansing cannot be
justified, whether ordered by Saddam Hussein or Masoud Barzani. Nor will
Iraq's Turkoman community renounce their historical claim and legal
rights. "Kirkuk is to Iraq what Kosovo is to the Balkans,"[48]
a U.S. military official has said.
So what can be done? There will not be
peace or stability in Kirkuk if the rights or identity of any of the
city's communities are trampled. Local Kurdish authorities have sought
to impose their will through force. They have shown themselves unwilling
to move beyond communal interests to represent all citizens of Kirkuk.
As the Kurdish parties exploit and exacerbate ethnic tensions, the risk
of instability in Kirkuk grows. The international community might
respond by sending human rights monitors in Kirkuk until the local
population can elect a representative government in the city and region.
This will require a fair and impartial census under the monitoring and
supervision of the United Nations.
The U.S. government and other coalition
partners should also pressure the Iraqi central government in Baghdad to
maintain the unity of state, constrain local militias, and prevent local
ethnic or sectarian cleansing. For Iraq to remain viable, the Iraqi law
and constitutional interpretations should address the core concerns of
Iraq's diverse communities. To do otherwise, and allow Kirkuk to fester,
will undercut Iraq's stability, provoke ethnic strife, and perhaps even
lead to civil war.
Yücel Güçlü is a first
counselor at Turkish Embassy in Washington, D.C. These views are his
own and do not necessarily represent the views of the Turkish
government.
[1]
Perhaps the best Western-language treatment of the Turkomans is Scott
Taylor, Among the "Others": Encounters with the Forgotten Turkmen of
Iraq (Ottawa: Esprit De Corps Books, 2004).
[2] Eric Davis, Memories of
State (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2005).
[3] Erşat Hürmüzlü, Türkmenler
ve Irak (Istanbul: Kerkük Vakfı, 2003), pp. 81-4.
[4] Ibid., p. 81.
[5] Middle East Economic Survey,
Apr. 4, 2005.
[6] Suphi Saatçi, Tarihten
Günümüze Irak Türkmenleri (Istanbul: Ötüken Neşriyat, 2003), pp.
15-79.
[7] For the political history of
northern Iraq, see Sinan Marufoğlu, Osmanlı Döneminde Kuzey Irak
(Istanbul: Eren Yayıncılık, 1998), pp. 31-40; for Kirkuk's civic and
administrative lives at the turn of the twentieth century, see Ebubekir
Hazım Tepeyran, Hatıralar, 2nd ed. (Istanbul: Pera Turizm ve
Ticaret, 1998), pp. 505-12. Ebubekir Hazım Tepeyran, a professional
administrator, served as governor of the Mosul vilayet, 1899-1902.
[8] "Memorandum Concerning the New
Organisation of the Ottoman Empire, 23 June 1919," in E.L. Woodward and
Rohan Butler, eds., Documents on British Foreign Policy, 1919-1939
(London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office, 1960), pp. 647-51. For the
full text of the Fourteen Points see Papers Relating to the Foreign
Affairs of the United States. The Paris Peace Conference, 1919, vol.
4 (Washington D.C.: United States Government Printing Office, 1943), pp.
12-7.
[9] Tepeyran, Hatıralar,
pp. 358-62, 521-7.
[10] "Notes by Vice-Consul Wilkie
Young on the Mosul district," paragraphs 16 and 80; "Sir Gerald Lowther
(Istanbul) to Sir Edward Grey (London) with enclosures and annexes, Apr.
5, 1910, notes on Mosul district," enclosure 2 in no. 1, FO 371/1008.
[11] W.R. Hay, Two Years
in Kurdistan: Experiences of a Political Officer, 1918-1920 (London:
Sidgwick and Jackson, 1921), pp. 81, 85-6.
[12] "Command Papers 1814,"
Lausanne Conference on Near Eastern Affairs, 1922-1923. Records of
Proceedings and Draft Terms of Peace (London: His Majesty's
Stationery Office, 1923), p. 342.
[13] Liora Lukitz, Iraq:
The Search for National Identity (London: Frank Cass, 1995), p. 40.
[14] Arnold Wilson,
Mesopotamia 1917-1920: A Clash of Loyalties (London: Oxford
University Press, 1931), pp. 259-60.
[15] Extract from report prepared
by Gertrude Bell under direction of civil commissioner, "Baghdad,
Mesopotamia: Review of Civil Administration, 1914-1918," FO 371/5081,
1920.
[16] Lukitz, Iraq,
p. 41.
[17] Cecil John Edmonds,
Kurds, Turks and Arabs: Politics, Travel and Research in North-Eastern
Iraq, 1919-1925 (London: Oxford University Press, 1957), pp.
266, 283, 342-3; Stephen Hemsley Longrigg, Iraq, 1900 to 1950: A
Political, Social, and Economic History (London: Oxford University
Press, 1956), p. 127.
[18] Lukitz, Iraq,
pp. 41-2.
[19] Report submitted to
the council by the commission instituted by the Council Resolution of
Sept. 30, 1924, document C. 400, M-147, 1925, VII, League of Nations,
pp. 38, 46-7.
[20] Cecil John Edmonds, "The
Kurds of Iraq," Middle East Journal, Winter 1957, p. 59; idem,
"The Kurds and Revolution in Iraq," Middle East Journal, Winter
1959, p. 10.
[21] "Declaration of the Kingdom
of Iraq, Made at Baghdad on 30 May 1932, on the Occasion of the
Termination of the Mandatory Regime in Iraq, and Containing the
Guarantees Given to the Council by the Iraqi Government," League of
Nations Official Journal (Geneva: League of Nations, July 1932),
Annex 1373, pp. 1347-50.
[22] For the assumption of the
United Nations of the functions and powers belonging to the League of
Nations under the international agreements, see League of Nations
Official Journal, "Records of the Twentieth (Conclusion) and
Twenty-first Ordinary Sessions of the Assembly, Texts of the Debates at
the Plenary Meetings and Minutes of the First and Second Committees,
Special Supplement No. 194," 1946, pp. 221-4. For the transfer to the
United Nations of certain functions and activities of the League of
Nations, see Yearbook of the United Nations, 1946-1947 (Lake
Success, N.Y.: Department of Public Information, 1947), pp. 110-3.
[23] "Statistical Compilation
Relating to the Population Census of 1957 (in Arabic), I, Part IV, 170,"
Iraq, Ministry of the Interior, in Hanna Batatu, The Old Social
Classes and the Revolutionary Movements of Iraq (Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 1989), p. 913; David McDowall, A Modern
History of the Kurds (London: I.B.Tauris, 1996), p. 3.
[24] George Kirk, Contemporary
Arab Politics (New York: Frederick Praeger, 1961), pp. 162-3; Amb.
John Jernegan's dispatches in Foreign Relations of the United States,
Diplomatic Papers (1958-1960), vol. 12 (Washington D.C.: U.S.
State Department, 1993), pp. 473-95; Majid Khadduri, Republican Iraq:
A Study in Iraqi Politics since the Revolution of 1958 (London:
Oxford University Press, 1969), p. 124.
[25] Reader Bullard, The
Camels Must Go (London: Faber and Faber, 1961), p. 100.
[26] "Situation of Human Rights
in Iraq: Note by the Secretary-General," U.N. General Assembly,
Fifty-first session agenda item 110 (c), A/51/496/Add.1, Nov. 8, 1996,
p. 4.
[27] Ibid., agenda item 110
(c), A/52/476/Add.1, Oct. 15, 1997, p. 2.
[28] "Report on the Violations of
Human Rights in Iraq Submitted by the Special Rapporteur Max van der
Stoel in Accordance with Commission Resolution 1997/60," U.N. General
Assembly, Commission on Human Rights, Fifty-first session agenda item
(10), E/CN.4/1987/67, Mar. 10, 1998, p. 2.
[29] Jalal Talabani, "No
Grounds for Relations with Baghdad" Middle East Quarterly,
Winter 2002, pp. 19-23.
[30] Turkish Daily News
(Ankara), July 17, 2002.
[31] International
Herald Tribune, June 21, 2004.
[32] Middle East
Economic Survey, June 14, 2004.
[33] Article 108,
Iraqi Constitution, in The Washington Post, Oct. 12, 2005.
[34] The Guardian
(London), Oct. 12, 2002.
[35] Michael Rubin, "A Comedy of
Errors: American-Turkish Diplomacy and the Iraq War," Turkish Policy
Quarterly, Spring 2005.
[36] See "Final Statement of the
Meeting of Representatives of Turkey and the United States with the
Delegations of Assyrian Democratic Movement, Constitutional Monarchy
Movement, Iraqi National Accord, Iraqi National Congress, Iraqi Turkoman
Front, Kurdistan Democratic Party, Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, and
Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq," Ankara, Mar. 19, 2003.
[37] The New York Times,
Apr. 20, 2003.
[38] Reuters, Mar. 2, 2004.
[39] The Washington Post,
Apr. 11, 2003; Los Angeles Times, Apr. 11, 2003; Hürriyet
(Istanbul), Apr. 11, 2003; Radikal (Istanbul), Apr. 11, 2003.
[40] Associated Press,
Sept. 16, 2004.
[41] Associated Press,
Sept. 16, 2004.
[42] U.N. Integrated
Regional Information Networks (IRIN), Sept. 23, 2004.
[43] Rubin, "A Comedy of Errors."
[44] Anatolia News Agency,
July 16, 2003.
[45] The Washington
Post, Aug. 24, 2003.
[46] Associated Press, Jan.
26, 2006.
[47] International Herald
Tribune, Jan. 3, 2005.
[48] Associated Press, Sept. 16,
2004.
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