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Civil War And Syria Essay

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Turkey: The Kurdish Problem Although Turkey has gained greater prominence in the news due to the influx of Serbian refugees into its borders, it is also struggling with another problem, namely the ethnic tensions pertaining to Kurdish separatists besieging critical areas. Like many Middle Eastern nations, despite its relative close proximity to Europe, Turkey is home to a wide variety of different ethnic groups with various religious affiliations, including the Kurds. The southeast of Turkey is home to a majority population of Kurds, which has sown the seeds of a longstanding civil war. Kurdish separatists have long been engaging in violent resistance against the government of Turkey, demanding their own separate state. Although the violence has existed for many decades, recent skirmishes have been characterized as "the worst seen in the past two decades" (Tharoor 2016). This is due in no small part to the recently emboldened Turkish separatist groups within Syria itself. Turkey must tread a delicate balance between honoring the rights of the Kurdish minority while still curtailing separatist violence. It must also work to ensure that ethnic rivalries between Kurds and Turks do not become further enflamed and result in ethnic tensions becoming a source of discrimination against innocent minorities. Many of these goals put it in conflict with other Western powers, including the United States, who are mainly concerned about limiting the influence of the Islamic State within Syria and abroad and are less concerned about the growing influence of Kurdish militancy which could further destabilize Turkey.

As recently reported in the Washington Post: "In the heart of the ancient city of Diyarbakir, behind its historic black-stone...

Whole neighborhoods have been sealed off under curfew; tens of thousands of people have been forced to flee" (Tharoor 2016). The Turkish government alleges that the Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK has been the cause of the death of more than 200 members of law enforcement and equally as many civilians; but as many as 500 members of the PKK have been killed recently in this civil conflict by the Turkish government (Tharoor 2016).
The reason for the outbreak, Turkey alleges, is U.S. support for Kurdish groups within Syria linked to the PKK. As well as fighting ethnic Kurds within its own borders, Turkey is also battling the Kurdish nation within Syria in the form of the Popular Protection Units (YPG). But the YPG has been very influential in quelling other Islamic groups currently involved in the civil war and the UN, U.S., and EU have all asked Turkey to stop its attack on the YPG given its utility in opposing the Islamic State (also known as ISIS). "Ankara says it is retaliating against what it calls provocations by the YPG...it has long warned against the group making territorial advances in northern Syria near its border" ("Turkey v Syria's Kurds v Islamic State," 2016). Turkey's Western allies do consider the PKK within Turkey's own borders to be a terrorist organization because of its…

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References

Basburg, I. (2016). What has strained U.S.-Turkey relations and what needs to be done?

The Daily Caller. Retrieved from: http://dailycaller.com/2016/11/29/what-has-strained-u-s-turkey-relations-and-what-needs-to-be-done/#ixzz4U5rmgCRN

Tharoor, I. (2016). As Syria burns, Turkey's Kurdish problem is getting worse. The Washington

Post. Retrieved from: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2016/02/03/as-syria-burns-turkeys-kurdish-problem-is-getting-worse/?utm_term=.2db0309c8ba9
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/08/26/opinion/is-turkey-a-us-ally-against-isis.html?_r=0
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-33690060
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