Turkey on Thursday insisted the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) and all groups allied with it must disarm and disband “immediately,” a week after a historic call by the Kurdish militant group’s jailed founder, Agence France-Presse reported.
“The PKK and all groups affiliated with it must end all terrorist activities, dissolve and immediately and unconditionally lay down their weapons,” a Turkish defense ministry source said.
The remarks made clear the demand referred to all manifestations of Abdullah Öcalan’s PKK, which has led a four-decade insurgency against the Turkish state, costing tens of thousands of lives.
Although the insurgency targeted Turkey, the PKK’s leadership is based in the mountains of northern Iraq and its fighters are also part of the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), a key force in northeastern Syria.
Last week, Öcalan made a historic call urging the PKK to dissolve and his fighters to disarm, with the group on Saturday accepting his call and declaring a ceasefire.
The same day, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan warned that if the promises were not kept, Turkish forces would continue their anti-PKK operations.
“If the promises given are not kept and an attempt is made to delay… or deceive… we will continue our ongoing operations… until we eliminate the last terrorist,” he said.
Resonance in Syria, Iraq
Since 2016, Turkey has carried out three major military operations in northern Syria targeting PKK militants, which it sees as a strategic threat along its southern border.
Ankara has made clear it wants to see all PKK fighters disarmed wherever they are — notably those in the US-backed SDF, which it sees as part of the PKK.
The SDF — the bulk of which is made up of the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) — spearheaded the fight that ousted Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) militants from Syria in 2019, and is seen by much of the West as crucial to preventing its resurgence.
Last week, SDF leader Mazloum Abdi welcomed Öcalan’s call for the PKK to lay down its weapons but said it “does not concern our forces” in northeastern Syria.
But Turkey disagrees.
Since the toppling of Syria’s Bashar al-Assad in December, Ankara has threatened military action unless YPG militants are expelled, deeming them to be a regional security problem.
“Our fundamental approach is that all terrorist organizations should disarm and be dissolved in Iraq and Syria, whether they are called the PKK, the YPG or the SDF,” Ömer Çelik, spokesman for Erdoğan’s ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) said on Monday.
Öcalan’s call also affects Iraq, with the PKK leadership holed up in the mountainous north where Turkish forces have staged multiple air strikes in recent years.
Turkish forces have also established numerous bases there, souring Ankara’s relationship with Baghdad.
“We don’t want either the PKK or the Turkish army on our land… Iraq wants everyone to withdraw,” Iraq’s national security adviser Qassem al-Araji told AFP.
“Turkish forces are (in Iraq) because of the PKK’s presence,” he said, while pointing out that Turkey had “said more than once that it has no territorial ambitions in Iraq.”