Zones of Rebellion: Kurdish Insurgents and the Turkish State
By Aysegul Aydin and Cem Emrence
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How do insurgents and governments select their targets? Which ideological discourses and organizational policies do they adopt to win civilian loyalties and control territory? Aysegul Aydin and Cem Emrence suggest that both insurgents and governments adopt a wide variety of coercive strategies in war environments. Zones of Rebellion integrates Turkish-Ottoman history with social science theory and unveils long-term policies that continue to inform the distribution of violence in Anatolia. The authors show the astonishing similarity in combatants’ practices over time and their resulting inability to consolidate Kurdish people and territory around their respective political agendas.
The Kurdish insurgency in Turkey is one of the longest-running civil wars in the Middle East. For the first time, Zones of Rebellion demonstrates how violence in this conflict has varied geographically. Identifying distinct zones of violence, Aydin and Emrence show why Kurds and Kurdish territories have followed different political trajectories, guaranteeing continued strife between Kurdish insurgents and the Turkish state in an area where armed groups organized along ethnic lines have battled the central state since Ottoman times.
Aydin and Emrence present the first empirical analysis of Kurdish insurgency, relying on original data. These new datasets include information on the location, method, timing, target, and outcome of more than ten thousand insurgent attacks and counterinsurgent operations between 1984 and 2008. Another data set registers civilian unrest in Kurdish urban centers for the same period, including nearly eight hundred incidents ranging from passive resistance to active challenges to Turkey’s security forces. The authors argue that both state agents and insurgents are locked into particular tactics in their conduct of civil war and that the inability of combatants to switch from violence to civic politics leads to a long-running stalemate. Such rigidity blocks negotiations and prevents battlefield victories from being translated into political solutions and lasting agreements.
Aysegul Aydin
Daniel Siegel is an associate professor of English at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. He is the author of several articles about Victorian literature and culture.
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Zones of Rebellion - Aysegul Aydin
Zones of Rebellion
Kurdish Insurgents and
the Turkish State
Aysegul Aydin and Cem Emrence
Cornell University Press
Ithaca and London
Contents
Preface
Abbreviations
Chronology
Introduction
Zone Making
Midfield Wars
Origins of Violence
Looking Ahead
Part I. Insurgency
1. Organization
Competitive Origins
Building Trust
Extracting Resources
The Weberian Experiment Failed
Organizational Inertia
2. Ideology
A Fight for Independence
Inviting Pressure from Abroad
Bargaining with the State
3. Strategy
A Border Specialist
Reaching Out
Paying the Price
Back to Botan
Part II. Counterinsurgency
4. Organization
Administrative Solutions
Special Rule
Redistricting
Abandoning the Countryside
5. Ideology
Rural Bias
Blaming Foreign Sponsors
A Developmentalist Response
The Backup Plan
6. Strategy
Locating Insurgents
Sweep and Strike
Curbing Civilian Unrest
The No-Entry Zone
Conclusion
Forging Identities
Path-Dependent Origins
Room for Contingency
Appendix
Notes
Index
Preface
This book is the result of five years of research on the Kurdish conflict in Turkey. It is a story about continuity and resistance to change. Just like individuals, organizations do not make decisions unencumbered by the past. They carry a historical burden, one that surfaces each time they have to cope with changing times. Such is the story of civil wars with no end. Both victorious governments and defeated insurgencies find themselves repeating the same strategies for survival. They do not invent new ways to connect with the masses: instead, they continue to rely on divisions created by the conflict, perfecting them at every turn, in order to hold on to their support base.
The reader will find two central points about political violence in this book. First, we argue that the nature of violence varies according to time and space. Distinct zones of rebellion gradually emerge in civil wars. Once formed, these zones acquire a legacy that defines the relations of combatants with the masses for years to come. The reason is simple: conflicts are resource-dependent processes. Combatants fight conflicts based on their interactions with territory and people. However, these interactions do not develop randomly and cannot be reset overnight. Second, this book shows why this is the case. We explore the combatants’ long-term choices that inform their interactions with territory and people and explain the production of violence along these fault lines.
Our methodology reflects a growing trend in social sciences today that unsettles the boundaries between qualitative and quantitative research. We tried to write an accessible book that has a powerful narrative and an analytical framework. We also strove to combine a strong empirical foundation with arguments driven by major theoretical bodies of work. The result, we hope, is a well-rounded story of the Turkish civil war. Yet the book does not present a survey of the Kurdish conflict or use the Turkish context to test a general argument. It is this new intellectual terrain that makes the book a case study about Turkey and a general study of conflict processes at the same time. It is our hope that colleagues at both ends of the spectrum will find something well worth reading.
The Kurdish conflict has been one of the few issues that has managed to occupy headlines in Turkey throughout the last thirty years. The conflict led to tremendous human suffering and cost billions of dollars. It has also shaken up the political field in irreversible ways. A politicized Kurdish identity was born at the intersection of state repression and insurgent violence. Scholarly studies typically have approached the Kurdish issue as a function of pre-conflict grievances. True as it might be, this view does not tell us much about what went on during the conflict and, perhaps more critically, almost ignores the transformative role of violence. We believe that a narrative that relies on a quantification of violence and a nuanced reading of political processes in Turkish history has something to offer beyond this framework.
This book has been in the making for a long time. Its preparation took more time than originally planned, as we continued for years to work on it during the hot summers of Istanbul and the snowy winters of Colorado. Our priorities shifted along the way. Just like a pebble washed away by the waves, we chased the manuscript as it required a new round of attention of each time we thought we were done. The process of collecting data was exhaustive but innovative, writing and revisions took countless hours but proved rewarding, and the review process was challenging but improved the book in almost every way. This has been an exceptional journey that was well worth the effort.
Our editor, Roger Haydon, has been involved in this project from its inception. He put endless time and energy into turning the manuscript into a book that the reader can actually enjoy reading. He helped us present the most complex ideas about violence in digestible forms. He knows how books work, and we had the pleasure and privilege of learning from his insights and feedback for several years. The attention to detail of one of our reviewers pushed us to cover an extensive literature as we interpreted civil war violence against the background of modern Turkish history since the nineteenth century. His or her extensive knowledge of Turkey was also instrumental in helping us rethink friends and foes in the Turkish civil war.
Our colleagues provided motivation and guidance throughout this journey. Stathis Kalyvas invited us to share our work at the Program on Order, Conflict, and Violence. This book benefited from his ideas and pointed comments in many ways. Will Moore, Daniel Chard and Eric Schoon generously devoted their time to reading and commenting on parts of the manuscript. At the University of Massachusetts-Amherst, David Mednicoff provided a hospitable environment for thinking about the manuscript in its early stages. Several colleagues at the Center for Public Policy and Administration gave useful feedback. We had insightful conversations with Kemal Kirişçi, a friend with a long tenure in Turkish studies. Throughout the years, Şevket Pamuk, Hasan Kayalı, and Çağlar Keyder engrained one of the authors with a deep appreciation of Ottoman-Turkish history from social scientific angles. The University of Colorado’s Innovative Seed Grant Program funded the fieldwork that turned our new intellectual direction into a book and set the stage for a research program.
We also had silent partners: Family and friends were the guideposts as we slowly found our way. Necla, Münir, Leman, Gülümser, Halil, and Ali İsmail taught us the value of determination, freedom of choice, and tolerance. We are grateful to each of them.
Abbreviations
Chronology: Three Phases of the Turkish Civil War
Transforming the Community, 1984–1990
Competition with the State, 1991–1999
Deadlock, 2000–
Introduction
After years of training, the rebels were ready. The Eruh raid was based on an elaborate and well-prepared plan. Prior to the attack, the group staged mock attacks on a model of the target site and became familiar with roads and buildings. Each member of the group was given specific tasks to perform during the attack. On August 15, 1984, around 9:00 p.m., the rebels reached their destination. They assaulted the army compound and set the government building on fire. They also stole guns from the armory and spread propaganda from the mosque’s loudspeaker mounted on the minaret. The organizer of the attack was Mahsun Korkmaz, who would later become a legendary military commander. In his report to the rebel headquarters, he concluded that the Eruh incident demonstrated the vulnerabilities of the Turkish army and boosted the confidence of rebel forces.¹
The rebels soon began to exert their influence in rural areas. The villagers of Taraklı watched as a firing squad shot their neighbors, who were accused of collaborating with the Turkish state and its tribal allies, the Babats.² Violence in the countryside improved rebel prospects, turning the small group into a mass organization. On its thirteenth anniversary (1991), rebel supporters vandalized banks in Istanbul and clashed with police in Adana and Izmir. The following year, the rebels tried to capture Şırnak province to create a liberated zone on the Iraqi border. When rebel fortunes began to decline, Leyla Kaplan was only seventeen years old. Code-named Pınar, she had grown up in Dağlıoğlu, a poor neighborhood of Adana populated by Kurdish migrants. Pınar became a suicide bomber in 1996. On October 25, she blew herself up, causing several casualties.³
War also changed life for those on the other side. Mesut Taner Genç was a district governor in 1993.⁴ He was assigned to Beytüşşebap, a strategic border district where pro-state village guards enjoyed a prominent presence. Travel between the provincial center of Şırnak and the district was dangerous: The road was heavily mined and the rebels frequently installed roadblocks. When he began his new assignment, the district governor had to wait for days for an open seat in an army helicopter, which was crowded with security forces, bureaucrats, and their families. In the mid-1990s, the military situation began to improve: Operation Sparrow (1996) destroyed key rebel camps inside Turkey, and the army periodically conducted cross-border operations into northern Iraq. In 1999, Ankara’s military victory was confirmed: the rebel leader was captured in Kenya and later imprisoned for life. Public jubilation followed, a strong indication that the insurgency was to disappear into history with no chance of return. A decade later, however, thousands in Diyarbakır would disagree. In the fall of 2009, they gathered to salute a group of militants who had surrendered to the Turkish state as a sign of goodwill by the rebel organization.
Kurdish armed contention in Turkey has a long and complicated history. The conflict has spanned three decades and cost more than 40,000 lives. It has destroyed state infrastructure, brought the regional economy to a halt, and resulted in forced migration. The military contestation has also generated a wave of civilian unrest in urban centers that evolved into a Kurdish nationalist platform. The origins of the conflict go back to the 1970s, when the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) was founded by a handful of university students. The PKK’s goal was to create an independent Kurdistan by transforming the Kurdish community and destroying state institutions in southeastern Anatolia. Rebel hopes were soon dashed. The Turkish state decisively defeated the PKK on the battlefield and found political allies in the Kurdish community. Since the capture of the rebel leader, Abdullah Öcalan, the conflict has taken a new turn. The rebels are now staging fewer attacks to win political concessions from the government, and, like Sinn Fein in Northern Ireland, a legal Kurdish nationalist party has emerged as a major political force in the region.⁵
The fortunes of the combatants followed a strange path. Each side started from a disadvantaged position, later gained momentum, and yet failed to capitalize on its battleground gains. On the insurgency side, how did a small group of students turn into a mass guerrilla force? In the early 1990s, the rebel group carried out multiple attacks on any given day and operated across a large territory. It commanded a propaganda machine in Europe, urban cells in border towns, and ample resources in the countryside. In a few years, most of this infrastructure was destroyed. The performance of the counterinsurgent followed a strikingly similar trajectory. Despite the earlier dismal record, security forces largely eliminated Kurdish rebels in the second half of the 1990s. Military success did not, however, deliver political peace. Both sides failed to translate military gains into political solutions at critical junctures in the conflict.
The key issue was the combatants’ failure to unite the Kurdish people and territory around their political agendas. Since the late nineteenth century, the Turkish state had set up special administrative regions and excluded troubled
areas from the nation-building process. The state further fragmented the Kurdish society by encouraging ethnic defections in the special region. Local allies received economic and political rewards for fulfilling security functions. The insurgency did not fare any better. Heavy-handed rule mismanaged the territorial expansion that followed military success. Similarly, the PKK’s nominal definition of Kurdish identity failed to win the loyalties of many in its target community. The end result has been a form of resource partitioning:⁶ Civil war parties divided civilian loyalties and territory in the Kurdish universe. These boundary making efforts have had a formative impact on violence and shaped its distribution.⁷
This book tracks the long causal chain in the Turkish civil war. We explain variation in violence as an outcome of the combatants’ long-term policies. Our argument has two parts. First, we propose an ecological reading of war that focuses on the interaction between combatants and resources.⁸ Combatants have had varying levels of civilian support and territorial control across space, and these differences in turn form distinct zones of violence. Second, we explain why combatants have enjoyed different levels of access to territory and people. Adopting a historical institutionalist approach, we unveil the historical processes behind zone formation and show how combatants’ earlier choices have informed patterns of violence.
Zone Making
We divide the civil war geography into three zones, which emerge asymmetrically for each side: a zone under control, a contested zone, and a zone beyond reach.⁹ In areas where combatants are most successful in transforming the community and uniting it around their political agenda, a zone under control emerges. Examples include the Ayacucho department for the Shining Path in Peru, the North Aceh district for the Free Aceh Movement (GAM) in Indonesia, and Mindanao Island for Muslim rebels in the Philippines. In the zone beyond reach, by contrast, this mobilization is least successful. The contested zone includes areas where neither side is capable of establishing hegemonic control; each combatant faces a unique challenge that prevents it from imposing its political project on territory and people.
Zones reflect the strength of ties between combatants and resources. To understand these dynamics, we turn to organizational analysis, the ecology school in particular, which examines issues of survival and competition from a resource standpoint.¹⁰ This school studies organizations in relation to their resource bases (niches) and argues that competition emerges when resource bases overlap.¹¹ We take a similar approach and suggest that civil war violence varies according to the combatants’ access to resources. When resources are secured by one side, violence is selective and both sides rely on a single tactic. States can close off central political markets to insurgents, whereas the latter can carve out new distant markets in outlying areas. Indiscriminate targeting then becomes the main strategy to enter a rival’s home court. Competition over the same resource base generates a different type of encounter. It diversifies violence in a contested zone and forces combatants to adopt multiple tactics in order to cultivate civilian loyalties and achieve territorial control.
The establishment of emergency rule by the Turkish state was instrumental in zone making during the Turkish civil war. Building on historical precedents, the state carved out a special administrative region in southeastern Anatolia (Olağanüstü Hâl Bölgesi, OHAL, 1987–2002) to contain insurgent violence. This decision was the main difference maker in the distribution of violence. Special rule allowed the combatants to approach civilians and territory differently than it was in the rest of the country. This form of governance put the rule of law aside, escalated the armed conflict to new heights, and opened the door for civilian victimization and social resistance. Accordingly, violence took different forms inside and outside the OHAL region. Still, within this special region, there were fundamental differences depending on combatants’ interactions with territory and people. Civil war sides enjoyed hegemony in certain areas and ran into major difficulty in others.
We identify distinct zones of violence in the Turkish civil war. Outside the OHAL region, the state was hegemonic. We named this area Zone 3, the state’s stronghold. OHAL, however, presented distinct advantages and challenges for each combatant. For the insurgents, the OHAL meant two zones: Zone 1, the insurgency’s stronghold, where the PKK could easily survive and was most effective; and Zone 2, where the PKK faced rivals, a less enthusiastic clientele and considerable state presence. Consistent with its past experience, the Turkish state’s record in the OHAL region was different. Most of this region was a battlefield where the state responded to insurgent violence with military operations. We call this area the Battle Zone. Elsewhere, the state faced a more complex problem. We refer to this section of OHAL as the Transition Zone. Here ethnic mobilizations challenged the state and forced the counterinsurgent to diversify its methods and targets.
In the initial years of guerrilla struggle (1984–1990), the PKK turned a number of border districts into an insurgent stronghold, Zone 1. To accomplish this, the rebel group used village raids and waged war against its own community. Punishing state-allied coethnics brought about a community transformation. In the second phase (1991–1999), the PKK expanded beyond the border area and operated across the entire region under emergency rule. It used multiple tactics to destroy state infrastructure and assault its rivals. Insurgents frequently targeted schools, businesses, and highways in order to sever the region’s ties with the rest of Turkey. Expansion toward this contested site, Zone 2, however, did not bring Kurdistan under rebel control. Despite the increasing scale of violence, the outcomes remained uncertain. With the capture of Öcalan in 1999, the PKK returned to the border. In this third phase (2000–2008), rebels stopped