The
Prostitution of Freedom and the Kurds
Kani
Xulam
October
6, 2002
For months now, I have been waiting
for someone -- either from the left or the right, from somewhere --
either from America or Europe, to rise up to the defense of freedom, which came
under a merciless attack in Istanbul, Turkey. The man who engaged in this
wicked act was no other than a representative of the United States. The
“scholarly” hawk, as the Time Magazine described him, could not
have chosen a better venue for his harangue. The assembled Turks --
who would not have recognized freedom if it hit them on the face -- gave
him a rapturous applause and were especially moved to hear him utter a couple
of Turkish words expressing his government’s appreciation of its
relationship with his hosts. Thank God, his pronunciation was grotesque;
otherwise, he might have easily been hailed as a Turk. And the honor,
having read most of his statements on Turkey, would have tickled him to
death. And if that had happened, the Kurds would have had no tears for
him, but knowing the Turks, the American representative would have been
declared a martyr for the fatherland, and his statues would have gone up all
over Turkey, including the place of my birth, the Turkish misruled
Kurdistan. No one would have respected them though. Everyone would
have jeered them. The marble or the rock that would have been used to
chisel his likeness would have been a definite waste.
Paul Wolfowitz is the name of this
man. He is the second in command at the Department of Defense. His
staff describes him as an up and coming new star in the firmament, one whose
luster -- hold your breath -- should soon match, nay, surpass the
likes of Henry Kissinger. Journalists who have spent time with him
describe him as an affable man. He is said to hold views that oppose the
torturing of al Qaeda members in America -- the only good thing that I
have read about him. He himself describes himself as a mathematician
first and a professor of political science second. His journey from the
world of numbers to those of words came as an undergrad when he shared a dorm
with the visiting scholar in residence Allan Bloom, best known for his books,
“the Republic of Plato” -- an authoritative translation, and
“the Closing of the American Mind“ -- a biting commentary on
the American education system, at Cornell. The political philosopher
urged his student to take up the world of ideas. The young Wolfowitz took
the advice to heart and plunged himself, it is now obvious, with his heart, and
not his mind, into the realm known as humanities.
But perhaps the meeting should
never have taken place. The man who spent a lifetime teaching Plato only
changed the direction of his student in terms of a career, but failed miserably
to implant the love of truth in his bosom that cost Socrates, Plato’s
teacher, his life. People versed in human nature have long observed that
not all constitutions are capable of truth. The content of his address in
Istanbul makes this abundantly clear. The operative word in his lecture
was expediency. He conveniently forgave the Turks for their past and
ongoing sins -- the man thinks highly of himself and forgives as well as
consigns entire peoples to pedestals or oblivions as he sees fit -- and
hailed them as paragons of virtue, freedom, and democracy. Such pandering
or begging is rare in the annals of human history. When one runs into it,
it is usually in the form of a modest address from the representative of a weak
nation to a great one for need out of desperation. In Istanbul, it was
America that stooped before Turkey. Why it did so goes beyond
Washington’s need for allies in the coming war. Most of it, I
suspect, has to do with Mr. Wolfowitz’s own insecurities, such as his
involuntary need for cringing, his subsequent penchant for domination, and his
love of instant gratification. With such captains in the poop, the future
bodes ill indeed for the ship called America as it now makes forays into the
heart of the Middle East.
It was in the course of one of
those forays through the Levant and Afghanistan that Mr. Wolfowitz found
himself in Istanbul to address a crowd of Turkish leaders with his venal
lecture on July 14, 2002. 10 days earlier, America had celebrated its
226th birthday. It was a poignant one coming as it did on the heels of
9/11. Not a state, nor a combination of states, but a group known as al
Qaeda had humbled the greatest military power on earth, nay, had insulted her
and despoiled her in front of the whole world. Some, among them a few spoiled
Europeans, had taken joy in the misery of America, because they could never
match her creativity, diversity and equality before the law. Others,
especially victims of absolute tyrannies such as the survivors of Halapja, the
only ones who could truly relate to the survivors of 9/11, commiserated with
Americans for the loss of their loved ones, and prayed as well as hoped that
Washington would learn something useful out of this awful tragedy. That
something useful wasn’t a mystery, but freedom. America, they hoped,
would see and seek its future in the expansion of liberty, the source of its
greatness, and stop coddling the dictators, the authors of its present
misfortune.
But what was sounded in Istanbul
was onward with the dictators, semi-dictators or anybody else who would
cooperate with Washington to make the world safe for America, not freedom and
liberty. Mr. Wolfowitz had the temerity to say, “A separate Kurdish
state in the north [Iraq] would be destabilizing to Turkey and would be
unacceptable to the United States.” Freedom, if history has to
serve as a guide, has only destabilized the tyrants. But in Istanbul, an
American, speaking in Orwellian language, stood, defending Saddam’s rule,
or his successor’s, over the Kurds. If I were Saddam, I would have
raised a glass of champagne for the unexpected support from Mr.
Wolfowitz. As a Kurd, I could not help but ask the obvious, what was the
source of this paternalism? Can a man, be it the representative of the
United States, really set a timetable for another people’s freedom?
Can anyone on the face of the earth tell the sun not to glow, or a river not to
flow, or a sapling not to grow? The Yankees threw the yoke of taxation to
establish the United States without taking into considerations the views of the
power brokers in Paris, Vienna and Moscow. The Kurds saddled with
cultural genocide in Turkey, subjected to gas attacks in Iraq, sorry Mr.
Wolfowitz, are not going to look for your permission, nothing personal, or
anybody else’s for that matter, to secure a future of freedom and peace
for their children.
It looked like, Mr. Wolfowitz was
in Istanbul not just to express his opposition to the establishment of a
Kurdish state, but also, solicited or unsolicited I don’t know, pass a
grade on the Turks and their state. Referring to the recent Turkish
victory over Senegal to qualify for the semifinals in the World Cup 2002, he
alluded to watching it in the dead of the night at Pentagon -- wow, and
noted, “[it] was a game worth losing sleep for.” Speculating
on the possibility of the United States doing the same against Germany, he then
took up the prospects of Turkey playing against the United States for the world
cup and said, “… don’t ask me to predict who is going to
win.” Wow, again! I don’t know about you, but I think
the sentence is worth becoming a proverb, as an example of how two nations, one
Asiatic -- which administers torture to infants as well as adults as a
routine matter -- and the other from Occident -- that says it will
not even torture Osama Bin Laden even if he is captured -- can almost
become ONE. I can’t help but ask the question, did Mr. Wolfowitz
really lose sleep over the Turkish game with Senegal or did he watch it on
tape, the next day, in the midst of his briefings on the war on al Qaeda?
Also, by wanting to remain silent to the question he himself posed --
remember the maxim, silence means consent, was he not consenting with the
wishes of his predominantly Turkish audience that a victory by Turkey over the
United States was equally acceptable to him! If that was so, was it
proper for him to imply it?
The deputy Secretary of Defense
loves Turkey. His performance in Istanbul was like a teen on a first
date, making a fool of himself in trying to woo the object of his sleepless
nights. Mixing football with politics, he noted, “I can’t
help noting, though, that whether you call it football or soccer whatever name
you call it – is a team sport. So is democratic government.
And Turks have shown a passion and an aptitude for both.” Now the
name Turks and violence or Turks and intolerance, and only lately, Turks and
soccer have appeared side-by-side, but Turks and the democratic government, is
something new, at least for me, and I am sure glad to see the two things come
together in my own life time. But would the deed follow the
pronouncement? I then found myself thinking about the waning days of the
USSR and how its last leader Michael Gorbachev began using the words glasnost
and perestroika every time he mentioned Soviet Union. At first, the
juxtaposition of these things felt and looked surreal. Soon though, the
words had their intended effect. People feeling free dumped the Soviet
Union, the decaying and corrupt prison of nations, need I invoke the famous
Marxian maxim, to the garbage heap of history, and reclaimed their
identity. A truly democratic Turkey would certainly be open and open to
restructuring. Could it be that a similar fate is awaiting Ankara what
eventually befell Moscow? I know that is not what Mr. Wolfowitz would
like to see happen in Turkey, and it was not what Mr. Gorbachev had hoped to
see in the Soviet Union, but I am waiting for the same result, for another
… .stan to be born, and this one will be my country, with a birthday of
its own, Kurdistan.
As if lecturing the Turks was not
enough, Mr. Wolfowitz also raised his voice, to taunt the Europeans for going
slow in accepting Turkey as a member of their union, and said, “They fear
competition from Turkey. They fear diversity.” Now here one
must stop … and take a good measure of the man who would offer Turkey to
Europe as a specimen of diversity. I found myself wondering, either this
man doesn’t know what he is saying or doesn’t think the Kurds are
human beings. I knew he was smart, he had been the Dean of School of
Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University before assuming his
present post, so I quickly ruled out the remote possibility of him not knowing
about the Kurds. That left me with the tasteless conclusion that he, like
his hosts, the Turks, didn’t believe in our humanity or dignity or
presence on the face of the earth. Is this any different than what Hitler
thought of the Jews?
Perhaps the cold and passionless
nations of Occident can’t be bothered with the plight of the Kurds.
Perhaps when the German Justice Minister Herta Daeubler-Gmelin compared Bush
with Hitler, I shouldn’t have felt surprise. But I wondered to
myself as well as aloud, why the minister did not compare Hussein to
Hitler. The latter had gassed or murdered 150 thousand Germans, some
perhaps her relatives, who had genetic malformations. Saddam Hussein unleashed
his chemical and biological weapons on the Kurds not only killing thousands,
but science now tells us, mutating the DNA of the hapless survivors that will
live with us till the end of time. Mr. Wolfowitz and Mrs. Daeubler-Gmelin
may be on the opposite sides of the coming war, but one will sell the Kurds to
the Turks and the other, well, will not let them stand in the way of, is it
oil? Perhaps a Kurdish mother will one day give birth to a monster that
will put an end to these monstrous machinations.
It was a European, John Stuart
Mill, who noted that there is no worse tyranny than that of majority. In
Turkey, the tyranny of Turks over Kurds is absolute, unequivocal and
abominable. 20 million Kurds have to, on the pain of death sometimes,
call themselves Turks. Article 66 of the Turkish constitution has assured
them of their Turkish-ness by dictate -- notwithstanding the obvious
observation of many that the Kurds have nothing in common with the Asiatic
Turks of Mongolia -- physically, linguistically, and
temperamentally. The Kurds, an indigenous people of the Middle East, have
to forgo their language and culture as well, Article 3 of the Turkish
constitution dictates it, “The language of the country is Turkish and
there can be no changes made to this article.” These articles of
faith as well as practice are the laws of the land, even though Ankara, last
August, took some reluctant steps to offer some lukewarm acceptance to the
Kurds. People of shallow understanding have hailed these moves as
revolutionary in nature and have began cautioning the Kurds to wait. They
would do better to join the Kurds to free another people from the clutches of
tyranny for the cause of liberty.
Too much was said in Istanbul that
should have been left unsaid and I find that addressing the adversaries of the
Kurds, the so-called friends of the Turks, though important, but rather time
consuming and often at the expense of the work that I could do to cultivate
Kurds and the lovers of humanity, the ultimate arbiters of freedom in
Kurdistan. So I will end my incomplete rebuttal by noting that historians
have long observed, and politicians have hardly noted it, that tyrannies are
the real threat to the stability of the world and a menace to the future of
humanity. Societies that are ignorant of equal benefits of law and
liberty are fertile grounds for leaders to engage in flashes of arbitrary
power. When and if that power is used, it is meant to dazzle the subjects
and showcase the justness of the chiefs. Myths are born and legends are
created. People are encouraged to indulge in their perceived or real
hatreds as opposed to seeking glory in the pursuit of peaceful
occupations. Clearly, our times can be cited as an example of one of
these times.
It was an American president,
Abraham Lincoln, who in the midst of one of the worst calamites in the history
of this nation proclaimed to the world that the United States of America
couldn’t be half free and half slave. We would do well, in this
moment of another trying time, to revisit his words again, and ask ourselves,
can this world, after 9/11, be home to both freedom and tyranny? Another
American, a true genius, Benjamin Franklin, was even more on target when he
said, “They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little
temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” In Istanbul,
the harangue was for temporary safety; it should have been for essential
liberty for all the children of God.