Did Turkey Just Invade Iraq To Protect Erdogan's ISIS Oil Smuggling Routes?
4
December, 2015
On
Friday, Turkey sent
troops into
Iraq.
Here's
a video of the deployment shared on social media:
Contrary
to what you might have read, there’s really nothing unusual about
that.
As
you may recall, Turkey’s military entered
Iraq back
in September in hot pursuit of PKK “terrorists” Ankara claimed
had fled over the border. And that was just par for the proverbial
course. Here’s what we said at the time:
In early 2008, Turkish soldiers entered Iraq in a similar effort to eradicate the PKK. "Operation Sun", as the incursion was called, was conducted with Washington's blessing for the most part. "Washington described the PKK as a 'common enemy', and only urged Ankara to keep its incursion short and closely focused," BBC noted at the time, adding that "the positions of the UN and EU have been similar, suggesting a degree of sympathy with Turkey's cause."
And then there was "Operation Steel" in 1995. And "Operation Hammer" in 1997." And "Operation Dawn." And the aplty named "Operation Northern Iraq."
You get the idea.
So while history doesn't repeat itself, it damn sure rhymes and here we are again watching as the Turkish military crosses the Iraqi border as though it's not even there chasing "terrorists" up into the mountains.
What’s
different this time around, is that this isn’t a Kurd-chasing
mission.
In
fact, if you believe the official line, it’s the exact opposite.
Turkey has apparently had some 90 troops on the ground in Bashiqa
“for two years” on a mission to “train” the Peshmerga. The
new troops - around 150 personnel supported by two dozen tanks- will
“take over the mission,” according
to Hurriyet.
“Turkey
will have a permanent military base in the Bashiqa region of Mosul as
the Turkish forces in the region training the Peshmerga forces have
been reinforced,” the
daily continues, adding that “the deal regarding the base was
signed between Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) President Massoud
Barzani and Turkish Foreign Minister Feridun Sinirlioglu, during the
latter’s visit to northern Iraq on Nov. 4.”
Ok,
so what’s important to remember here is that although Erdogan is no
“fan-o’-Kurds”, Ankara is friendly with the KRG and
indeed,Barzani’s
632,000 b/d oil operation (which, you’re reminded, runs independent
of SOMO, much to Baghdad’s chagrin) depends heavily on a pipeline
that runs from Iraq to Ceyhan. Over
the summer, the PKK attacked the pipeline costing the KRG some $250
million in lost revenue. As Rudaw
noted at the time,
that amounts to an entire month’s worth of salaries for the
Peshmerga and other security forces, underscoring the extent to which
oil sales via Turkey are crucial to the government in Erbil.
You
might also remember from "ISIS
Oil Trade Full Frontal: "Raqqa's Rockefellers", Bilal
Erdogan, KRG Crude, And The Israel Connection,"
that there seems to be some commingling going on when it comes to
Turkish and ISIS crude. Technically, both are "illegal" and
because the 45,000 or so barrels per day that ISIS pumps are so
inconsequential in the large scheme of things, it's easy for Islamic
State crude to get "lost" in the shuffle once it gets to
Turkey which works out great for those involved in the smuggling
operation (as an aside, Russia
has identified what
Moscow says are other ISIS oil smuggling routes but we'll focus on
northern Iraq for now).
You
might notice that there's a certian irony to this whole thing as it
relates to the KRG. What the Al-Araby al-Jadeed report (cited in
the article linked above) suggests is that the Kurds in Iraq are to
some extent complicit in the entire operation which is amusing
because it's the sale of undocumented Kurdish crude that allegedly
funds the Peshmerga's fight against Islamic State. As with every
other dynamic in the region, the entire thing is impossibly
convoluted.
With
that in mind, consider where these Turkish troops (who, again, are
supposed to be "training" the Peshmerga) are located.
So
they're right next to Mosul and right between the Kurds and ISIS and,
most importantly of all, right on what Al-Araby
al-Jadeed claims is
the smuggling route for illegal ISIS crude into Turkey from Iraq.
The
star on the map is Zakho. Araby
al-Jadeed, citing an unnamed Kurdish security officials,
employees at the Ibrahim Khalil border crossing between Turkey and
Iraqi Kurdistan, and an official at one of three oil companies that
deal in IS-smuggled oil, says that once
Islamic State oil "is extracted and loaded, the oil tankers
leave Nineveh province and head north to the city of Zakho, 88km
north of Mosul [and]
after IS oil lorries arrive in Zakho - normally 70 to 100 of them at
a time - they are met by oil smuggling mafias, a mix of Syrian and
Iraqi Kurds, in addition to some Turks and Iranians."
Araby
al-Jadeed's story takes a turn for the fantastic after that, but the
point is that it seems extraordinarily convenient that just as Russia
is making an all-out effort to expose Turkey's role in financing
Islamic State's lucrative oil operation and also to destroy ISIS oil
convoys in Syria, that Ankara would dispatch troops and two dozen
tanks to the exact
place in
Iraq where some reports suggest the heart of ISIS' Iraqi oil
operation lies.
For
his part, Iraqi PM Haider al-Abadi has called for Turkey to
"immediately" withdraw its troops. He also calls Ankara's
incursion a "violation of sovereignty." Here's the full
statement:
It has been confirmed to us that Turkish troops numbering around one regiment armoured with tanks and artillery entered the Iraqi territory, and specifically the province of Nineveh claim that they are training Iraqi groups without the request or authorization from the Iraqi federal authorities and this is considered a serious breach of Iraqi sovereignty and does not conform with the good neighbourly relations between Iraq and Turkey.
The Iraqi authorities call on Turkey to respect good neighbourly relations and to withdraw immediately from the Iraqi territory.
That
would seem to indicate that Baghdad has never approved the "training
mission" that Ankara claims has been going on east of Mosul for
two years.
Furthermore,
this underscores the fact that Iraq does not want help from NATO when
it comes to fighting ISIS. As we reported last week, Iraqis generally
believe the
US is in bed with Islamic State and you can bet that Russia and Iran
will be keen on advising Baghdad to be exceptionally assertive when
it comes to expelling a highly suspicious Turkish presence near Nama.
Ultimately,
this is yet another escalation from Erdogan and the timing, location,
and vague explanation raise all sorts of questions about what exactly
those 150 troops and 25 tanks are doing but you can be sure that if
Baghdad rebukes Washington and green lights Russian recon and
airstrikes in Iraq, we'll find out soon enough.
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