Beyond the Golan: Prospects for Syrian-Turkish Confrontation

Even as American and international attention focuses on Syrian-Israeli negotiations outside Washington, potentially ominous developments are taking place on Syria’s northern border, where the Asad regime has upped its challenge to Turkey. While tensions between the two states go back a half century, simmering for the most part beyond the sight of the outside world, strains have notably increased in the two months.

Background

Three main problems roil bilateral relations: land, water, and terrorism.

Hatay. The two states’ problems began in 1921, when the French government, then in control of Syria, ceded to Turkey (actually, still the Ottoman Empire) a territory the size of England lying south of the Taurus and Anti-Taurus Mountains. Eighteen years later, on the eve of World War II, Paris gave Turkey the region of Alexandretta (subsequently renamed Hatay) -- the price it had to pay to win a nonaggression pact with Ankara. The 1921 area has receded in Syrian consciousness, but the 1939 one remains vivid; indeed, it appears as part of Syria on official maps and is mentioned occasionally along with the Golan Heights as a Syrian territory to be regained.

Euphrates River waters. When the building of the giant Southeast Anatolia Development Project, the Turkish government has gained an ability to control how much of the Euphrates River waters flows into Syria (and beyond it to Iraq). That river had carried on average 850 cubic meters of water to Syria each second; in July 1987, Ankara committed to provide at least 500 cubic meters of water a second. On balance, it has fulfilled this obligation (that is to say, it makes up for any instances of dipping under the 500 cubic meters a second). Still, the Syrian government blames many of its electricity and agricultural problems on the Turkish dams. Those dams also constitute a new lever of power for Turkey, with major political implications. Simply put, Ankara can now threaten to withhold water from Syria, a prospect that Turkish politicians have on occasion publicly relished.

PKK terrorism. The Worker’s Party of Kurdistan (PKK), led by Abdullah Öcalan, took an active part in the spiral of violence and terror that enveloped Turkey in the late 1970s; by the early 1980s, it had become the single greatest menace to Turkish domestic security. Today, after ten thousand and more deaths, the PKK controls substantial parts of eastern Turkey, especially at night. Since 1979, the organization has relied heavily on Syrian help, to the point that is has become a virtual subsidiary of the Syrian state, receiving from it, among other benefits, places to live, money, weapons, ammunition, and false passports.

Until 1987, Syrian authorities categorically denied Öcalan’s presence in their country or any state support for the PKK. Only when the Turks made clear how much they knew (including the address of Öcalan’s domicile in Damascus) did the Syrians acknowledge his presence. Then the real diplomatic jousting began. In July 1987, the two governments signed a Security Protocol, during a state visit by then-Prime Minister Turgut Özal to Damascus, in which they promised to “obstruct groups engaged in destructive activities directed against one another on their own territory and would not turn a blind eye to them in any way.” The Syrian authorities did not live up to this promise, however, nor to the many others they made in August 1988, April 1992, November 1993, and April 1994.

A persistent a pattern has emerged: After a number of Syrian-backed terrorist incidents take place, followed by Syrian denials of guilt, a Turkish delegation goes to Damascus and presents the authorities there with hard evidence. The Syrians reject the evidence but at the same time assure the Turks that they will make sure the problem does not recur. They do for a while, and matters calm down. Then, some months later, Syrian backed terror against Turkey mounts again.

In Syrian eyes, Turkish control of Euphrates waters and Syrian sponsorship of the PKK are closely intertwined, with terrorism a means of putting pressure on the water issue. In Turkish eyes, however, the two issues cannot be connected, for water is a conventional diplomatic issue to be bargained over like many others (coastal shelves, fishing rights); terrorism is totally unacceptable behavior. As Ankara sees it, to reward Asad for sponsoring the PKK would encourage him to use this instrument to raise other questions.

Recent Developments

Two recent developments have further heated this already warm confrontation. First, the imminent construction of a new Turkish dam, Birecik, has prompted Egyptian and GCC support for the Syrian position; in a diplomatic breakthrough for Damascus, the communiqué of a “6+2" meeting on 28 December 1995 called on Ankara to reach “a just and acceptable agreement on the sharing of Euphrates waters.” The Syrian and Iraqi governments have coordinated their diplomatic positions and plan to raise the issue of Euphrates waters at an Arab League meeting in mid-March.

Second, favorable atmospherics at the Wye talks with Israel appear to have made Hafiz al-Asad more bold. For example, his government has started complaining that the Euphrates water that reaches Syria is so polluted it is “sewage"; and it bruited threats to European firms that help construct Turkish dams. More broadly, the Turkish Foreign Ministry believes, according to a leaked report, that “Middle East peace is increasingly linked to Turkey allocating a greater share of Euphrates waters to Syria.” Gün Kut, a Turkish academic specialist, sees Asad expecting to be rewarded for Wye by Turkey’s allies pressuring Ankara to make concessions. (In a January 1995 address at The Washington Institute, Israel’s envoy to the United States, Itamar Rabinovich, pledged that Turkish interests would be safeguarded and “integrated” into any regional peace agreement.) Rob’s addition

If so, until now Asad must be disappointed, for Turks have responded to these steps with uncommon alacrity. In November 1995, they transferred a full division of troops to the border region with Syria. Their rhetoric has heated up (Syrian leaders, according to the foreign minister, are trying “to wash blood off their hands with Euphrates waters”). They insisted on Öcalan’s extradition from Damascus before discussing water issues. And they initiated their own high-stakes water campaign concerning the Orontes River (which begins in Lebanon, passes through Syria and ends up in the Hatay province of Turkey). Ankara complains that it receives a “meager” 10 percent of the river’s waters. Damascus replies with a refusal even to discuss this matter, on the provocative grounds that Hatay is a part of Syria and its water consumption is an internal Syrian affair.

Confrontation?

Both sides agree that a Syrian-Turkish face-off is not out of the question. Murhaf Jouejati, a Syrian-American who has consulted for the government in Damascus, has speculated that the two states “are on a collision course” unless they can resolve their differences. The Turkish media occasionally calls on the government to adopt the “methods used by Israel” and destroy PKK camps in Lebanon.

Indeed, Syrian conflict with Turkey may present a more imminent danger than with Israel. Consider these differences:

* The conflict with Israel is an old one, which Damascus long ago lost and militarily can have few expectations of winning in the future. In contrast, the conflict with Turkey is yet growing.

* The world closely follows the conflict with Israel, so for Damascus to make war against Israel would have great international costs. But the conflict with Turkey is obscure, so fighting presumably would not that much affect Asad’s standing.

* The U.S. government would more likely assist Israel in the case of war with Syria than it would Turkey, even though the latter is a NATO ally.

Prospects

Syrian-Turkish relations proceed along two tracks, one publicly correct and at times even friendly, the other privately hostile and suspicious. The two discourses remain for the most part separate, with foreign ministries handling the friendly portfolio and interior ministries the hostile one.

There are reasons to expect Turkish-Syrian relations to remain calm, with many mutual visits, plenty of communications, and a shared interest in keeping up appearances. A series of small agreements point to a building of relations. The frontier area has become more relaxed. The two sides have lived with each other in peace since Syrian independence, and both governments know that more is to be lost from fighting than gained by it. The two states actively cooperate vis-à-vis Iraq, with their foreign ministers meeting several times a year to discuss strategy. Common bonds forged by history and religion should temper future problems.

The relative quiet of recent years reflects not an absence of problems but a Turkish determination to contain them. The Turkish position has gradually hardened as the leadership feels that Asad is trying to make fools of them; it may not be willing indefinitely to accept this treatment. Just last week, Turkish authorities seized six truck-loads of weapons and ammunition on its way to PKK bases in the Bekaa Valley; it “is not new for Syria to use terrorist organizations to threaten other nations’ internal security,” said Interior Minister Teoman Unusan. Rob’s addition, from Reuter’s dispatch The Turkish-Syrian border could unexpectedly and rapidly become a crisis point.

Daniel Pipes, a historian, has led the Middle East Forum since its founding in 1994. He taught at Chicago, Harvard, Pepperdine, and the U.S. Naval War College. He served in five U.S. administrations, received two presidential appointments, and testified before many congressional committees. The author of 16 books on the Middle East, Islam, and other topics, Mr. Pipes writes a column for the Washington Times and the Spectator; his work has been translated into 39 languages. DanielPipes.org contains an archive of his writings and media appearances; he tweets at @DanielPipes. He received both his A.B. and Ph.D. from Harvard. The Washington Post deems him “perhaps the most prominent U.S. scholar on radical Islam.” Al-Qaeda invited Mr. Pipes to convert and Edward Said called him an “Orientalist.”
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