Ezgi Başaran, award-winning Turkish journalist and former editor of Radikal, the liberal daily closed down in March 2016, has now moved to St Antony’s College. While at Oxford she is preparing a book on what really lay behind the failure of the Kurdish peace process. On 4 May she gave us a comprehensive presentation.
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Both sides recognised the military stalemate in fighting between the army and PKK,
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Internal disputes between Turkish Intelligence circles (who conducted the Oslo talks) and the Gülenists (who opposed any agreement),
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The impact of the Syrian situation on both sides – for the government this included the dispute with Gülen, while PKK was increasingly being seen outside Turkey in positive terms.
Nonetheless, agreement on a 10-point road map was reached and announced publicly, in the February 2015 “Dolmabahce accord”. Ocalan called for PKK disarmament and both sides agreed to the establishment of a monitoring committee. But an initial welcome from Erdogan was subsequently toned down, even if his government contradicted him. And by 21 March Erdogan disavowed the accord entirely, blaming the “warlords in Qandil”, and later denying the existence of a Kurdish problem in Turkey.
The process had survived a very bumpy road over the years. So why did it fall apart when peace seemed to be within reach?
While there were many contributory factors, the ultimate cause was Turkish electoral politics. The HDP had made clear that they would block Erdogan’s goal of becoming an executive President, and the absence of any deal trading Kurdish peace against Erdogan’s presidential ambitions led Erdogan to disavow the entire process. But why did the HDP use this tactic, when their electoral success was founded on their perceived ability to deliver peace?
The price of the collapse of the peace process has been urban warfare throughout the Kurdish regions – civilian and military deaths, relocations, curfews and major damage to cities. While HDP and some parts of AKP would like to restart talks, there is no willingness from the side of Erdogan, whose control of AKP is now further consolidated. On the PKK side, Ocalan remains the unchallenged leader; his is the only voice that can control the radical PKK youth movement’s desire to push for full independence.
So there seems to be little or no reason for optimism that things will improve in the short term.