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Saturday, October 26, 2024

Turkey, the Kurds and the PKK
DW

The PKK has claimed responsibility for an attack on a defense company in Ankara in which five people were killed. Who is the PKK and what do they strive for?


Image: Alain Pitton/Imago Images

The Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) has claimed responsibility for the attack on the Turkish defense company TUSAS in Ankara, according to the Kurdish news agency ANF.

The report states that the "Immortal Battalion," an autonomous unit of the PKK's military arm, was responsible for the attack, which was carried out in response to Turkish "massacres" and other actions in Kurdish regions.

The attack took place shortly after an advance on the possible release of PKK founder Abdullah Ocalan under the condition that his organization disarms. The PKK denies any links between this and to the attack.

Who is the PKK and what are their aims?

The latest attack might have thwarted attempts to release PKK-founder Abdullah Ocalan after years of prison in return for disarming the PKKImage: Christoph Hardt/Panama Pictures/picture alliance

The origins of the PKK


In Turkey, social tensions between Turks and Kurds have been an issue for decades.

Kurds have been demanding more cultural and political rights from the centrally organized Turkish state, while Ankara often frames such demands as a threat to national stability.

Kurds make up around 20% of Turkey's population. While they live all over the country, the largest communities are concentrated in the southeast. Kurdish groups also live in the neighboring states of Syria, Iraq and Iran.

In Iraq, the Kurds hold a semi-autonomous status in the Autonomous Region of Kurdistan, while in northeastern Syria some areas are under the control of the Kurdish-dominated Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF).

Within Turkey, two main actors seek to represent the interests of the Kurds: The Peoples' Equality and Democracy Party, or DEM — the third largest party in parliament — and the PKK. The DEM Party is committed to a peaceful, political solution whereas the originally Marxist-Leninist PKK is armed, and its members have engaged in guerrilla tactics.

Abdullah Ocalan is said to control the PKK from behind barsImage: Mustafa Abadan/AA/picture alliance


What are the PKK's aims?


Founded in 1978, the PKK's original aim was to establish an independent Kurdish state. However, since 1984, the PKK has been engaged in an armed conflict with the Turkish state.

According to several political scientists, this conflict is considered a low-intensity war. It has claimed up to 40,000 civilian and military victims on both sides. The PKK is classified as a terrorist organization in the USA and the EU.

Since 1995, the organization has been striving for autonomy and cultural rights for Kurds within Turkey and has given up its demand for independence in favour of a system of self-government.

The PKK is believed to have 60,000 members, including active fighters, supporters and sympathizers.

The Kandil Mountains in northern Iraq are its main base of operations, where it organizes militant campaigns and logistics. Turkey regularly bombs positions of Kurdish groups in Iraq and Syria.

Criminalization of Kurdish politics

Over the last ten years, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's Justice and Development Party (AKP), has increasingly criminalized Kurdish politics in Turkey.

The DEM Party and other factions have been associated with the PKK, although the DEM Party officially advocates a peaceful solution and distances itself from the PKK.

Many Kurdish politicians, including the former chairman of the People's Democratic Party, or HDP, Selahattin Demirtas, have been jailed on terrorism charges.

While some HDP members have family ties to the PKK, such as Omer Ocalan, the nephew of PKK founder Abdullah Ocalan, the HDP has asserted that such connections are individual and do not reflect its policies.

PKK founder Ocalan has been held in prison since 1999.


The same year, he was sentenced to death for high treason. However, before the sentence was carried out, Turkey abolished the death penalty and Ocalan's sentence was converted to life imprisonment in 2002.

He continues to exert influence on the organization from behind bars.
While the victims of the latest PKK attack were buried, Turkey's army targeted Kurdish facilities in Iraq and Syria
Image: Adem Altan/AFP

Is peace on the horizon?

In the past, multiple efforts have been made to create peace.

In the first years of the AKP government in particular, Kurds were given new rights, including educational opportunities in their mother tongue and Kurdish-language state media.

However, lasting peace remains the horizon.

Earlier this month, the far-right Nationalist Movement Party leader Devlet Bahceli surprised everyone by shaking hands with representatives of the pro-Kurdish DEM Party in parliament. He later described this as "perfectly normal for a party of unity in Turkey."

Bahceli, who is considered an important ally of Erdogan in the governing alliance with the AKP, appealed to Ocalan on October 15 to persuade the PKK to give up their weapons. On October 22, he called on Ocalan to announce the dissolution of the PKK in parliament.

On October 24, Ocalan replied from prison: "I have the theoretical and practical power to (transform) this process from one grounded in conflict and violence to one that is grounded on law and politics."

The PKK is said to have around 60,000 members, among them supporters, activists and combat soldiers
Image: Yann Renoult/Wostok Press/MAXPPP/picture alliance

What is behind this?

According to experts, regional developments have influenced Turkey's change of course on the Kurdish issue. But, political scientist Sezin Oney sees "no real peace initiative" in these steps. "The main aim is to minimize the threat posed by armed groups such as the PKK," she told DW.

Oney also stresses Turkey's current economic restrictions: "Turkey has neither the political nor the economic basis to finance a new war," she said.

Political scientist Eren Aksoyoglu, a former parliamentary advisor, agrees. "Turkey sees the Israel-Hamas war as a threat and against this backdrop, the government wants to integrate the Kurdish movement into 'Greater Turkey' and bring all internal actors under control," he told DW.

An AKP politician, who wishes to remain anonymous, confirmed that the geopolitical situation is forcing Turkey to strive for a unified domestic policy and resolve conflicts within the country.

This applies not only to the Kurdish question, but also to other domestic political tensions.

However, just one day after Bahceli's appeal, Ankara was shaken by the attack on the TUSAS defense factory, which has led to further strikes on Kurdish areas abroad. Many in the Turkish public see the attack as an attempt to undermine the peace efforts.

Berrak Güngör and Kayhan Ayhan contributed to this article, which originally appeared in German.


Burak Ünveren Multimedia editor with a focus on Turkish foreign policy and German-Turkish relations.










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Friday, October 25, 2024

Message from Abdullah Öcalan

Kurdish People's Leader Öcalan said: "Isolation continues. If conditions are right, I have the theoretical and practical power to move this process from the ground of conflict and violence to the legal and political ground."


ANF
NEWS DESK
Thursday, 24 October 2024, 09:15

Urfa (Riha) MP Ömer Öcalan shared the message Kurdish People's Leader Abdullah Öcalan asked him to convey to the public.

Ömer Öcalan wrote: "This visit was held as part of a family meeting. Mr. Öcalan commented on general political developments during the meeting and asked for the following message to be conveyed to the public: 'Isolation continues. If conditions are right, I have the theoretical and practical power to move this process from a ground of conflict and violence to a legal and political ground.' He was in good health and sent greetings to everyone."

Abdullah Öcalan met with DEM MP and nephew Ömer Öcalan in Imralı - FLASH

Kurdish People's Leader Abdullah Öcalan met with his nephew, DEM Party Urfa MP Ömer Öcalan, after 43 months of total isolation.



ANF
NEWS DESK
Thursday, 24 October 2024, 07:50

Kurdish People's Leader Abdullah Öcalan met with his nephew, Peoples' Equality and Democracy Party (DEM) Urfa (Riha) MP Ömer Öcalan, after 43 months of total isolation.

Ömer Öcalan said on his Twitter account: "The last face-to-face meeting with Mr. Abdullah Öcalan was on 3 March 2020. As a family, we finally met with Mr. Öcalan years later, on 23 October 2024. We want routine family visits, which are a legal right, to continue regardless of the circumstances."


Öcalan's lawyers: Stop systematic rights violations in Imrali

In a statement about the meeting with Abdullah Öcalan on 23 October, Asrın Law Office requested that systematic rights violations be stopped and that a lawyer's visit be granted.



ANF
ISTANBUL
Thursday, 24 October 2024, 14:34

After 43 months of absolute lack of communication, Asrın Law Office made a statement following the visit of Ömer Öcalan, Urfa (Riha) MP of the Peoples' Equality and Democracy Party (DEM Party), to Imralı on 23 October.

The statement said: "Our client, Mr. Abdullah Öcalan, and his nephew, Mr. Ömer Öcalan, had a meeting on Wednesday as part of a family visit. This visit, which took place 4 and a half years after the last family visit (3 March 2020), should not be single and limited like the previous ones, and its continuity should be ensured. Ensuring that Mr. Abdullah Öcalan, Mr. Hamili Yıldırım, Mr. Ömer Hayri Konar and Mr. Veysi Aktaş receive visits from lawyers and families regularly as it is a requirement of the constitution, domestic law as well as international agreements. Again, holding regular meetings with Mr. Öcalan, who has the theoretical and practical power to move the process from the ground of conflict and violence to the legal and political ground, will pave the way for the solution of political and social problems in Turkey and the region on the basis of dialogue, peace and democratic consensus. In this context, it is necessary to put an end to the systematic violations of rights in Imralı, to ensure that the right to visits with families as well as lawyers (no lawyer visits have been allowed since 7 August 2019) is implemented in accordance with the law. We reiterate the necessity of ensuring this."

‘Leader Öcalan’s freedom and Shengal's autonomy are not far away’

Shengal Autonomous Administration and TAJÊ stated that 2025 will be the year of Leader Öcalan’s freedom and vowed to enhance their struggle to achieve this goal.



ANF
SHENGAL
Tuesday, 22 October 2024, 14:39

The ‘Freedom for Abdullah Öcalan, a Political Solution to the Kurdish Question’ campaign, which was launched by friends of the Kurdish people on 10 October 2023, has reached millions of people all over the world.

The Yazidi community also joined the campaign on 21 October 2023 with the slogan ‘Freedom for Leader Öcalan, Autonomy for Shengal’.

The Yazidi and Arab community living in Shengal organised many actions and events across Iraq and Shengal under the leadership of the Shengal Autonomous Administration and the Yazidi Free Women's Movement (TAJÊ).

Shengal Autonomous Administration and TAJÊ made a joint statement at Martyr Dilgeş and Martyr Berxwedan Cemetery on the occasion of the second anniversary of their campaign. The statement was read by Suham Şengali, member of TAJÊ Foreign Relations Committee, and Xwedêda Elyas, Co-Chair of the Autonomous Administration of Shengal.

“Leader Apo (Abdullah Öcalan) has been leading the peoples' resistance in Imrali Prison for 25 years. During this period of time, countless events and actions have been organised for his freedom. However, the ‘Freedom for Öcalan, a Political Solution to the Kurdish Question’ campaign launched last year is quite different from other campaigns. This campaign will continue in line with its aim until the physical freedom of Leader Apo is achieved. All actions and activities for the freedom of the peoples and democracy are also linked to this campaign. In other words, the freedom of Leader Öcalan and the struggle for autonomy and freedom are not independent of each other,” said the statement.

Remarking that the campaign received support from all over the world, the statement continued: “With this campaign, the ideas and philosophy of Leader Abdullah Öcalan have spread more than ever in the world. With the recognition of Leader Öcalan's ideas, the hope and faith of humanity has once again flourished. Enthusiasm, morale and hope increased wherever the campaign reached. Artists, intellectuals, politicians, philosophers, writers and academics all over the world were revitalised by Öcalan's ideas. The whole world rallied around this campaign. The world could not unite in the Ukraine-Russia war or the Hamas-Israel war, but the whole world became one voice for the freedom of Leader Abullah Öcalan. This reveals that the world, divided by wars, conflicts, religious and sectarian wars that started due to the policies pursued by the governments, has found unity in the idea of the freedom of Leader Abdullah Öcalan.”

The statement pointed out that the wars in the Middle East in the last year have once again proved Leader Apo's assessments right and added: “Leader Abdullah Öcalan has been stating for decades that the problems in the Middle East cannot be resolved by war. The events of last year also confirm this. That is why the peoples of the Middle East are turning to the ideas of Leader Öcalan more than ever. Everyone says that the isolation of Öcalan deepens the war in the Middle East and that his freedom will pave the way for the solution of the problems in the region. This was one of the important results of the campaign.”

The campaign has also exposed the true face of the state and the ruling system, said the statement and continued: “It has been revealed that the European states, which present themselves as the representatives of freedom and democracy, have nothing to do with freedom and democracy. The move has revealed that the Imrali system is an international system, that those who cause the isolation to continue and deprive Leader Abdullah Öcalan of his physical freedom are the same ones who swear every day in the name of freedom and democracy. This move again showed that these states are against the freedom of peoples and democracy.”

Emphasising that hope and the claim of freedom are stronger than ever with the campaign, the statement continued: “The main goal is to ensure the physical freedom of Leader Abdullah Öcalan and to recognise the autonomy of Shengal. Although steps have been taken towards these goals, we have not yet fully achieved them. This is also a matter of self-criticism for us. For this reason, we must correct our deficiencies, strengthen our actions and accelerate our work in order to achieve victory in the second year of the campaign. We must reach out to everyone in every house in Shengal and introduce the ideas of Leader Öcalan.

In the second year of the campaign, we will bring the ideas of Leader Abdullah Öcalan to the agenda more in the Nineveh Plain and at the Iraqi level. We will try to turn the campaign into a step towards freedom and democracy, especially in Iraq. Iraq cannot get rid of the war and crisis it is in. For this reason, we say that the ideas of Leader Abdullah Öcalan are the solution for the Iraqi people and the Iraqi state as well.”

Stating that the campaign is also a response to the war policy in the region, the statement said: “We firmly believe that 2025 will be the year of freedom of Leader Abdullah Öcalan. If we raise our hope, belief and struggle, the freedom of Leader Öcalan and the autonomy of Shengal are not far away. As the Shengal Autonomous Administration, we will strengthen our work in the second year of the campaign. We call on the people of Shengal, all the peoples of the Nineveh Plain and the democratic forces of Iraq to embrace the campaign more than ever.”

How can Turkey be saved?

If Leader Apo is wanted to play a role, conditions for this must be created immediately. The opportunity for Leader Apo to meet with everyone, including the PKK leadership, must be created, and Turkey's democratic change must be initiated on this basis.


ANF
NEWS DESK
Wednesday, 23 October 2024, 13:13

The Israeli attacks, which have been intensifying for about a month, have undoubtedly dealt a heavy blow to Lebanese Hezbollah. To be honest, many people did not expect such a war, they did not think that Israel would deal such a heavy blow to Hezbollah in such a short time. Because Hezbollah also had power, making military preparation and deployment. There were also some states that it relied on, such as Iran. But the results were a bit surprising for almost everyone. It even shook and shocked many of them. Why?

There are, of course, many answers to this question. For example, if Israel had attacked from the ground and not from the air, it would not have achieved such rapid and effective results. One of the reasons for the current military result is that Israel had prepared for and relied on an air attack. Again, Israel followed a clever tactic by first detonating the devices and then cutting off contact. This is also an important reason for the current result. Moreover, the indecisive war policy pursued by Hezbollah and Iran, on which it relies, has also been a factor in this outcome. Hezbollah and Iran, while appearing to support Hamas, have also pursued an attitude of political reconciliation. It is even rumoured that Israel and Hezbollah came to the point of signing a ceasefire through the mediation of France and similar powers. It was at this point that Israel carried out the big attack and hit Hassan Nasrallah. In other words, Hezbollah and Iran have been brought into a kind of political game. It is said that the reaction of the French Administration to Israel stems from this.

So, what will happen now? Obviously, the US-Israeli bloc will try to reshape Lebanon. It will want to create a Lebanon in which Hezbollah and Iranian influence are weakened and which does not pose a threat to Israel. Not satisfied with this, it will try to neutralise Iran's power outside its borders. In other words, it will target Iran's power spread throughout the region. It had already started this process four years ago by shooting Qassem Soleimani. Now, based on the military superiority it has achieved, it will try to reach a conclusion.

In the face of this state of affairs, the current Iranian leadership is always talking about peace, trying to limit the war as much as possible and to continue the search for reconciliation. However, it is difficult to realise this unilaterally. Even though the Iranian administration approaches this way, a kind of Israeli-Iranian war has already emerged. In other words, the circles that rely on and want such a war have actually found what they were looking for. Let's see who will gain and who will lose from this war.

Undoubtedly, the AKP-MHP administration was one of the forces that most wanted and provoked a war between Israel and Hezbollah, and therefore Iran. The spokespersons and lackeys of this administration were resorting to all kinds of lies and tricks to provoke such a war a month ago. However, when the war started and the harsh Israeli attacks came to light, they became tongue-tied and started to say ‘We are against war’ with a sharp ‘U’ turn. The bombs that exploded in Beirut shook the foundations of the Palace in Beştepe. It seems that those who thought everything was as easy as slaughtering Kurds and women began to realise the seriousness of the matter with the Lebanon war. So, despite their warmongering, they thought that such a war would not happen. But when they saw the reality and realised that their turn was coming, they started to show childish behaviour.

First, the fascist chief Tayyip Erdoğan said ‘Israel will attack us too’ from the rostrum of the parliament. Having received or given the message, the fascist chief Devlet Bahçeli kissed the hands of DEM Party members in the parliament for no reason. Discussions on a ‘resolution process’ were raised again. KCK (Kurdistan Communities Union) Executive Council Co-Chair Besê Hozat, referring to Devlet Bahçeli, said, ‘İmralı is there, take Erdoğan and Özel with you, go and solve the problems with Leader Apo’. In response to this, Devlet Bahçeli addressed Leader Apo (Abdullah Öcalan) and called on him to ‘surrender and liquidate the organisation’. In other words, he once again repeated what he had been taught by heart since his youth.

A debate on these issues has been raging in the visual and print media, with the government and the opposition, the right and the left. For more than two weeks, everyone has been arguing day and night. People have been shouting at each other for hours. Countless fictions are made every day; some almost go to the point of saying that the PKK has liquidated itself, some utter threats from a high level, some call the prosecutors to duty and threaten to ‘shut down’ the DEM Party. As the saying goes, if you tell a lie forty times, the first person to tell it believes it to be true! This is how they are trying to make themselves believe their own lies. What is being done in the name of so-called debate is like whistling while passing through a cemetery.

In fact, they are trying to overcome their fear by talking and shouting so much. A great fear has fallen into them. Their anti-Kurdish, fascist-genocidal mentality and politics have completely collapsed. They are trying to deceive society and overcome their fear by deepening the special war in this way. When the effect of the bombs exploding in Lebanon is added on top of the defeat they have suffered in Kurdistan, they are beginning to see what will happen to them, albeit hardly. Why?

Because once they were defeated against the Kurdish freedom struggle, their fascist, colonialist and genocidal faces came out in the open and were thoroughly exposed. The Global Freedom Campaign [Freedom for Abdullah Öcalan, a Political Solution to the Kurdish Question], which aims for the physical freedom of Leader Apo, has spread this reality to the whole world. In the face of Kurdishness gaining freedom, it has become impossible to maintain the fascist mentality and politics in Turkey that is hostile to Kurds, women and the people. There is only one way out for Turkey, and that is democratisation based on Kurdish freedom.

Secondly, there is no longer any room for the existing Turkey within the system of capitalist modernity, of which it has been a part for a century. There was no existing Turkey in the global structuring of the capitalist modernity system. This Turkey, which has been alive for a hundred years, has existed on the basis of two things: The October Revolution in Russia and Kurdish support! Without these, there would not have been such a Turkey after the First World War. On the basis of these two forces, the Kemalist movement developed and gained strength, and on the basis of the two tasks assigned to it, it was recognised by Britain and France and became a state. One was to encircle the Soviet Union from the south, and the other was to serve as a model for the nation-state organisation in the Middle East and the birth of Israel by agreeing to the division of the Arabs!

In the last century, the Turkish Republic fulfilled both of these tasks. It stood against the Soviet Union and served the formation of the real Israel as a proto-Israel. The Soviet Union no longer exists, the present Russia is not the Soviet Union of the past, so this task of Turkey is over. After the Second World War, the real Israel was established and now, in the Third World War, the system of capitalist modernity wants to reshape the Middle East region on the basis of Israel-Arab reconciliation. It is trying to change the Middle East system, which was shaped under the leadership of Turkey and Iran after the First World War. Iran's extraterritorial forces are targets on this basis, but apart from these, Iran within its own borders exists within the global organisation of capitalist modernity. Turkey, on the other hand, which is not part of this organisation and has existed for centuries on the basis of additional tasks, is now the main power that needs to be changed. In other words, it is in contradiction with the system in which it exists. Whether it leans on NATO or begs Russia-China, it is not possible to change this fact. Turkey will change according to this system; Turkey will change according to the Kurds, women and working peoples. If it changes according to the latter, the current unity of Turkey can keep itself alive as an alternative democratic system. This is Turkey's only chance.

There is neither the Soviet Union nor Kurdish support to keep Turkey alive for the last century. Within the current system, it can only survive by serving Israel, as a servant-slave; it has no other chance. In this situation, the only real chance is to regain Kurdish support. The way to do this is democratisation on the basis of Kurdish freedom. The real situation is so serious and concrete. Therefore, there is no time to be spent on discussions based on speculation. Problems cannot be solved just by going to Imrali. Since it is desired that Leader Apo plays a role, then the conditions for this must be created immediately. The opportunity for Leader Apo to meet with everyone, including the PKK leadership, must be created, and, on this basis, Turkey's democratic change must be initiated. Those who really love Turkey must hurry. Because there may be no time left for change.

Source: Yeni Özgür Politika

Zilar Stêrk: A basis for dialogue should be established with Leader Öcalan

Zilar Stêrk, member of the General Presidential Council of the KCK, spoke about the current discussions surrounding the physical freedom of the Kurdish people's leader, Abdullah Öcalan, and the related Kurdish question.



ANF
NEWS DESK
Friday, 25 October 2024, 07:50

Zilar Stêrk, member of the General Presidential Council of the KCK, about the current discussions surrounding the physical freedom of the Kurdish people's leader, Abdullah Öcalan, and the related Kurdish question. Stêrk discussed the struggle for this as well as the games that some actors are playing in an attempt to renew the international conspiracy.

There are currently many discussions about the Kurdish question, the role of Kurdish people’s leader Abdullah Ocalan and his total isolation, which has now lasted for 26 years. What can you tell us about the overall situation? How should the current conflicts be understood?

Firstly, I once again condemn and curse the international conspiracy with all my hatred and anger as it enters its 27th year. Also, I commemorate all martyrs of the revolution by commemorating the martyrs that gave their lives in the "You cannot darken our sun!" struggle, who stood in front of Rêber Apo to protect him with their bodies.

We slowly leave the month October behind us, which is a month in which many women of our women’s movement fell martyrs. I once again commemorate all of our martyrs of the month of October with respect and gratitude, by commemorating comrade Beritan (Gulnaz Karatash), the pioneer and leading cadre of our women’s army.

Today, a great and glorious historical resistance is going on in the mountains of Kurdistan. I respectfully commemorate all the comrades who martyred, especially in the areas of Zap, Metina, and Avashin. Comrade Asmin Seyit, whose martyrdom was announced recently, again comrade Agir, comrade Besta, and comrade Cemal. I bow with respect in front of their memory. I also commemorate with respect and gratitude Ape Nemir, who fought and struggled shoulder to shoulder with the revolutionaries against the gangs and mercenaries of ISIS in the Battle of Kobane and was wounded several times. I express my condolences to his family and the entire Kurdish people.

It has been 26 years since the launch of the international conspiracy, and throughout these 26 years, Rêber Apo, who was held hostage in solitary confinement in the Imrali torture center, has been in a very historic resistance. I take this opportunity to salute Rêber Apo and his resistance, his glorious resistance, and send my greetings and love.

The main purpose of this conspiracy was the physical destruction of Rêber Apo. In fact, the aim of the physical annihilation of Rêber Apo did not only start with the conspiracy of October 9. Already on May 6, 1996, a great conspiracy was staged in Damascus, again aiming at the physical destruction of Rêber Apo. Thanks to the measures taken by Rêber Apo and his foresight, that conspiracy did not come to fruition.

In the face of the international conspiracy of October 9, Rêber Apo left the Middle East and thereby prevented physical annihilation. Rêber Apo is aware of the cruciality of his existence and how it is connected to the fate of the Kurdish people. He knows that his physical destruction would pave the way for the genocide of the Kurdish people. Based on this, thinking with a very strategic mind, he left the Middle East and thus frustrated the conspiracy’s aim of physical annihilation. At that time, when Rêber Apo went to Europe, during the period he spent in Rome, our people flocked to Rome in droves. Hundreds of thousands, millions of people, met and united around Rêber Apo. People set themselves on fire out in protest. They carried out big sacrificial actions. They sent the conspiratorial forces a very clear message: “Rêber Apo is us.” The existence of Rêber Apo means Kurdish existence. The main guarantee of Kurdish existence is the existence and freedom of Rêber Apo. The conspiratorial forces could not carry out physical annihilation through this, so they planned the international conspiracy of February 15. Rêber Apo was abducted and handed over to the genocidal colonialist Turkish state.

For 26 years, Rêber Apo has been resisting under conditions of absolute isolation and isolation in the Imrali torture center in order to prevent this conspiracy from achieving its goals and objectives and to defeat it. He is putting up a historical and glorious resistance. And this resistance is not only physical resistance. Rêber Apo has realized a great mental revolution. Of course, he did not start this while being in Imrali. Already before, Rêber Apo was constantly concentrating on every ideological, paradigmatic, and organizational dimension of this. But the conditions of war outside, again, the problems and agendas that had to be dealt with for the organization, posed difficulties in front of the mental revolution Rêber Apo wanted to realize. As Rêber Apo put it, the situation on Imrali changed circumstances.

Rêber Apo has a great style of struggle. It is in fact a legendary struggle. This needs to be grasped very well. As I pointed out, this is not only physical resistance. This is an intellectual, spiritual, ideological, paradigmatic resistance. One can say that Rêber Apo has created a form of resistance that complements other forms of resistance and therefore is in fact far superior to them. With the tremendous mental revolution, the paradigmatic change and transformation that he realized in his own person, he frustrated all the calculations of the conspiracy. What did Rêber Apo do? One by one, Rêber Apo analyzed both the mentality and the calculations of the five thousand-year-old statist civilization, a statist, power-oriented, male-dominated civilization system. One by one, he unmasked them in front of all of us. He created an enormous paradigm with the prison writings he presented to the courts. The prison writings enlightened us all. They revealed perspectives and system analyses that enlighten the whole of humanity about the reality of the five thousand years of male-dominated capitalist civilization. And we all benefit from this today. In other words, civilization called its gods to account. Rêber Apo judged them, called them to account, and put forward an alternative to this system.

There are other thinkers who have tried to solve the crisis of civilization. But Rêber Apo’s way of analyzing civilization is not an approach that is limited to theoretical analysis. He looked at the issue from a more revolutionary point of view, as a revolutionary leader. Before Imrali, there was already an enormous Kurdish freedom movement that he had created and developed. There was organized public opinion. With the new paradigmatic change, this multiplied itself even more and brought about much greater developments. For example, the Rojava revolution developed. The Rojava revolution developed and took shape on the basis of Rêber Apo’s tremendous paradigm based on the pillars of democracy, ecology, and women’s freedom. What are the revolutionaries of Rojava saying today? They say that they have taken Rêber Apo’s idea and his paradigm as their guide and that they are trying to implement it as a new system of democratic and free life. We all see this in a more concrete form day by day. Therefore, it also attracts the world’s attention.

What has developed during the past twenty-six years that Rêber Apo is held captive in Imrali? The inhuman ISIS gangs were created in order to cause a great war of peoples in the Middle East. They attacked Kurds in Kobane, and before that, they attacked our Yazidi (Êzidî) people. They attacked the Yazidi people in Shengal (Sinjar). Today, our Yazidi people in Shengal are also in great resistance and are broadly organized with the aim of establishing a new system and a new life model based on Rêber Apo’s democratic, ecological, egalitarian, libertarian, and for the freedom of women’s standing ideas. For this reason, the genocidal, colonialist, and sovereign powers, particularly the Turkish state, are constantly carrying out extermination attacks and operations against our Yazidi people.

One can say that in this twenty-six-year period, the international conspiracy has actually been frustrated to some extent. But one cannot claim that complete results have been achieved or that the conspiracy was defeated. Because all the struggle we have waged over the past twenty-six years has been aimed at developing a democratic solution to the Kurdish question. It is directed towards ensuring the physical freedom of Rêber Apo. Because the solution to the Kurdish question means the physical freedom of Rêber Apo. And the freedom of Rêber Apo means the solution to the Kurdish question. Both are two fundamental aspects that are as close to each other as possible.

Our people are aware of the nature of the problem. They are aware that the Kurdish question cannot be solved without the liberation of Rêber Apo. As long as Rêber Apo is imprisoned, the conspiracy, the international conspiracy, cannot be defeated completely. That is why every anniversary of the conspiracy, our people, together with their international friends, protest; they condemn the conspiracy and put up a great resistance against it. This resistance continues on every anniversary; it continues to rise on the anniversary. All the struggle we have waged together with our people during these twenty-six years is for the defeat of the international conspiracy, which started on October 9 and completed its first stage on February 15, with the captivity of Rêber Apo. But the conspiracy itself continues.

Of course, during all this time, the conspiratorial forces have not been idle. They tried to renew the conspiracy again and again. Both Rêber Apo, the Kurds, and we, as the Kurdish freedom movement, have tried to wage a great resistance and struggle against this conspiracy. The new concepts they tried to develop were always tried to be frustrated. Today, the conspiracy continues in certain dimensions. On which pillars does it weave itself? The genocidal, colonialist, genocidal policy of the Turkish state on the Kurds is being carried out most concretely on Rêber Apo in the Imrali torture center. They do not allow a single word of Rêber Apo to come out, so that the movement and the people do not get inspired by Rêber Apo. They are trying to ensure that nothing comes out of there. They prevent even the most human rights and legal rights of Rêber Apo. It is commonly known that Rêber Apo’s freedom is now legally due. They are trying to prevent this.

For example, they are not implementing the retrial decision taken by international European courts. They are afraid of this. They do not allow the voice of Rêber Apo to be heard. They are really afraid that Rêber Apo will gradually become physically free. As the struggle of the people, the movement, the society and the international friends of the Kurdish people grows, they see and fear that as the resistance and a certain level of resistance and willpower emerges, the physical freedom of the Rêber Apo is becoming increasingly possible. For this reason, they are not allowing Rêber Apo to implement the retrial decision, and they are not allowing Rêber Apo to exercise his legal rights, even the legal rights of a normal prisoner. This is a pillar of the conspiracy.

In addition to this, there are great extermination operations on the Kurdish freedom movement, again on the Kurdish freedom guerrillas. There are great liquidation and annihilation operations and attacks. The genocide and extermination attacks carried out today in the Kurdish mountains in Zap, Metina, and Avashin are one of the most fundamental pillars of the international conspiracy. Without the freedom guerrillas without the resistance of the guerrillas in Kurdistan, can the Kurds sustain themselves? Can the Kurdish freedom struggle survive? What guarantees the existence of Kurds today is, of course, the existence of the Kurdish freedom struggle in the mountains of Kurdistan. It is the existence of freedom guerrillas. We can say that the existence of the Kurdish guerrillas, its will, and its resistance are the basic guarantee of Kurdish existence. That is why they want to destroy it. Therefore, the genocidal attacks and extermination attacks on the guerrillas continue uninterruptedly both in northern Kurdistan and in southern Kurdistan. It continues in the most inhuman way, through chemical attacks and with the use of tactical nuclear weapons. The Kurdish guerrillas continue to put up a glorious resistance under genocide and extermination attacks.

In addition to this, also in other fields, the international conspiracy’s effort to sustain itself, to make it permanent, is going on as well. The genocidal attacks developed by the enemy are not only carried out against the guerrillas in the Medya Defense Areas or in the provinces of northern Kurdistan. The genocidal and extermination attacks are being carried out both on the leading cadres of our movement and on the people who work together with our movement around the struggle for freedom, who participate in the struggle, who support it, who are in solidarity.

Every day, the cities, villages, streets, and neighborhoods in Rojava are being bombarded under the pretext of attacking PKK cadres. It is our patriotic people that are attacked. This is also what they are doing with the continued genocidal attacks on Shengal. And at the same time, the genocidal attacks on the Makhmur refugee camp continue. These genocidal attacks take place everywhere in southern Kurdistan as well.

This needs to be seen as the continuation of the international conspiracy. The conspiracy has developed with significant protests on the occasion of the new anniversary. The time has come to not only frustrate the conspiracy but to defeat it once and for all. Twenty-six years have passed. And in these twenty-six years, it was shown that neither the Kurdish will be broken, nor the Kurdish existence could be wiped out, nor the Kurdish guerrillas could be destroyed, nor Rêber Apo could be compromised, nor the Kurdish people could be annihilated, nor the Kurdish freedom movement could be forced to kneel.

The struggle that has been waged in Kurdistan during these twenty-six years is a struggle that centers on the freedom of Rêber Apo. It needs to be understood this way. All the actions and activities that have taken place explicitly for Rêber Apo’s freedom anyway, but also all the other efforts of the Kurdish freedom struggle of the last 26 years, served the same goal: the freedom of Rêber Apo. The solution of the Kurdish question, the realization of the Kurdish freedom revolution, and the freedom of Rêber Apo are totally intertwined. They cannot be separated from each other. On various occasions, Rêber Apo saluted the actions carried out under the name of his freedom and pointed out that his freedom depends on the solution of the Kurdish question and the realization of the freedom revolution in Kurdistan.

There is a tremendous resistance that the Kurdish people have developed from the first day of the international conspiracy. At a magnificent level, people take on their responsibility towards Rêber Apo.

When the first process of the conspiracy developed, there was a tremendous struggle, there was a tremendous cohesion, a tremendous level of sacrifice emerged. And this continues today. The Kurdish people have never distanced from Rêber Apo. There was never the slightest weakening in their bond with him. We saw this most recently at the rally in Amed (tr. Diyarbakir) on October 13th. That unbreakable bond between the Kurdish people and Rêber Apo, which has existed since day one, is growing exponentially day by day. It is both widening and deepening.

During the past twenty-six years, many campaigns have been carried out. There was, for example, the “Enough is Enough!” (Edi Bese) campaign, or also the “Abdullah Ocalan is my political will” campaign. In that campaign, signatures were collected from both Kurds and their international friends, who claimed Rêber Apo as representative of their political will. Ten million signatures were collected. The international ruling powers were confronted with this.

The genocidal colonialist Turkish state was confronted with this. These campaigns, in some way, continue today. Again in 2019, there was the big hunger strike led by the hunger strikes in prisons, first and foremost by dear Leyla Guven. At that time, there was a tremendous campaign being carried out. Through that resistance, for example, a breach was opened in the absolute isolation and genocide regime in Imrali. And through that breach, talks with Rêber Apo started. There were a few meetings, but no results were obtained. It was interrupted again. It was sabotaged again. And it was the fascist AKP-MHP government, which still rules the genocidal colonialist Turkish Republic with its insincere approach, that sabotaged it. Still, to a high extent, both the Kurdish people and their international friends take on their responsibility towards Rêber Apo. If the conspiracy has not achieved its goals and objectives in these twenty-six years, this is primarily due to the spirit of resistance put forward by our patriotic people.

One pillar is the spirit of resistance shown by our people. It is the magnificent extent to which they take responsibility towards Rêber Apo. Another pillar is the resistance and struggle of the Kurdistan freedom guerrilla in the mountains of Kurdistan. And there is the, and I would say it is the most fundamental pillar, the tremendous resistance of Rêber Apo, who is in a position of absolute isolation and hostage in Imrali.












Thursday, August 01, 2024

 

Focus on Rojava

From Class War

The devastating effects of the lesser evil and anti-imperialism in anarchist circles (II)

May 2024 / waragainstwar@subvertising.org

Why a focus on Rojava in 2024? Both because of random discussions, but also because the most widespread form of military-revolutionary mythology about Rojava has reappeared as an ideological support for an “anarchist” commitment to the war in Ukraine, going as far as to valorize the career paths of people who have gone from one war to another. On this occasion, a military commitment in Rojava is “naturally” presented as an authoritative justification for joining the Ukrainian troops “in any case”, the case being understood as a leftist or “anarchist” cause.

Beyond this actuality, the range of issues raised by the “support for revolutionary Rojava” touches on all the essential aspects of this society with which revolutionary aspiration is confronted more than ever, such as the capitalist social relation, the nature of the State, the general course towards war.

The crux of the Rojava question and all its developments lies in its origins, hence the importance of reading again analyses from ten years ago. The presupposition of many supporters of “the Rojava revolution” is to conflate the contagion of the “Arab Spring” revolts in Syria in 2011 with its all-out burial, particularly within the Kurdish national framework. No, the “Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria” – as “Rojava” has been officially called on the international diplomatic scene since 2018 – is not the emanation of an emancipatory, revolutionary struggle, with its strengths and limitations; on the contrary, it is what has been organized politically to get control of this situation, within the State and capitalist framework. As Gilles Dauvé and Tristan Leoni pointed out in 2015:

The so-called Revolution of July 2012 corresponds in fact to the withdrawal of Assad’s troops from Kurdistan. Having disappeared the previous administrative and security power was replaced, and a self-government called revolutionary has taken things in hand. But for what “self” is it acting? [And] of what revolution?1

By 2005, the KCK2 had abandoned its goal of establishing a separate Kurdish State and argued instead for the famous democratic confederalism advocated in the writings of the founder of the PKK Abdullah Öcalan, imprisoned for life by Turkey in 1999. This project came to fruition in 2012, when the PYD took control of a large part of northern Syria and signed an agreement with the Syrian government. The sleight of hand consists in presenting this transfer of political and military power as the founding event of a revolution, while in fact it was all about ensuring the continuity of the State, against any revolutionary inclination. Left-wing romanticism notwithstanding, all the progressive, liberal, environmentalist and feminist ingredients that adorned this transfer of State power are more a sign of a first-class funeral than an expression of the struggle that preceded it.

We hear of a popular dynamic, admittedly paralyzed by war, but nevertheless one that could reappear again, later. We are told that it is necessary to remain hopeful and above all to believe that humanity (or the proletariat) will emancipate itself by making war first and only afterwards the revolution. This seems crazy to us. This is the choice allegedly made by the PYD, and which corresponds to the old ‘revolutionary’ schema (the classical transition phase that is limited to a ‘political revolution’). (…) In Rojava it is war that dominates — a popular war if you want — but war all the same.3

Of course, we must always bear in mind, then and now, that this takeover, this crackdown, this national reconfiguration, did not eradicate all desire for struggle, for emancipation beyond the imposed frameworks. Keeping this in mind means first and foremost refusing to pass off the reconstitution of the State as a continuation of the struggle, or, in other words, that there are common interests or any possible convergence between both.

Maintaining the confusion between the struggle and its burial, under the pretext of a “duty of solidarity”, is in fact the worst thing we can do with regard to any attempt of struggle that might be maintained or re-emerge against the current. This ideological matrix is as old as our defeats – particularly since the advent of social democracy, our gravedigger-in-chief – and it has always needed homelands to embody itself, from Bolshevik Russia to Maoist China or Castro’s Cuba, including national liberation struggles under various banners.

The struggle in Chiapas since the 90s was– and to some extent remains – a banner for this matrix, although this does not coincide with its complex and contradictory reality, a serious analysis of which would take up too much space here. Anyway, a superficial and left-wing vision of Chiapas is often provided by the zealots of “Revolutionary Rojava” in support of their theses, notably on these issues: autonomy, territory, civil society, democracy without a State, participative governance, armed struggle, gender. All these elements need to be critically examined, but the very nature of the ideological matrix is to make them unchallengeable, in a fearsome machine that has seen considerable expansion about Rojava. Instead of talking about the fate of the insurrectional struggle of 2011 and beyond, instead of seeing the Kurdish national movement as antagonistic to that struggle, we are being fooled with the people, militarism-feminism, collaborative economy and the glorification of “civil society”, as if the latter were not the space par excellence of class collaboration, the other face of the State, its guarantor and pillar.

International polemics on these questions, on the revolutionary or non-revolutionary nature of what’s happening in Rojava, on the meaning of solidarity to be activated with whom and what, against what, began in the first years after 2011, notably in anarchist circles (and beyond) and are still going strong today, when the issue is revisited.

We would sum up the important issues that are at stake as follows:

* What happened to the wave of struggle in the early 2010s against the constitution of the Rojava State (the “autonomous administration”), behind what they have been foisting up on us internationally?

* Similarly, how did this wave of struggle survive its militarization under international aegis, in a context of crushing the struggles and transforming them into a deep inter-imperialist mess, from the repression of the 2011 struggles in Syria to the international military reconfiguration “against Daesh”, at the cost of alliances with international oppressors?

* What is the social, political and emancipatory content and perspective of this “autonomy”, if it was anything else than a restoration of the State in a new form (popular democracy, community democracy…) and the arrival of new managers?

* In other words, what is the beginning of an attack – or even a critique – of the capitalist social relation and the State in the process we have been told about in Rojava since so many years?

The answers to these questions have been documented over the past decade, and unfortunately do not go in the direction advocated by the defenders of the “Rojava Revolution”. From a theoretical point of view, the reference to Murray Bookchin’s “libertarian municipalism” generally serves as a guarantee for anarchists, as if it was obvious that this self-management doctrine was revolutionary and that we could sign a blank cheque to the founder of the PKK, Abdullah Öçalan, who converted to it in prison thanks to a correspondence with the author and drew from it his own doctrine, the democratic confederalism. This ideological turnaround would ensure that what is being done in Rojava under the aegis of the PKK and its broader offshoot – the KCK – would no longer be part of the continuity of the classic conquest of the State by a Marxist-Leninist party, but would meet, even embody, the emancipatory aspirations of the 2011 movement. Here’s what Gilles Dauvé and Tristan Leoni analyzed in 2015 behind this seductive veneer:

The PKK has not given up the usual goal of national liberation movements. Even if it now avoids a word that sounds too authoritarian, the aim of the PKK is still today as it was yesterday, the creation of a central apparatus of management and of political rule over a territory — and there is no better word than State to describe this thing. The difference, apart from its administrative designation, is that it would be so very democratic, so much more in the hands of its citizens that it would no longer deserve the name of State. Here is ideology.

In Syria, the Kurdish national movement (under the influence of PKK) has replaced the demand for a state of law by a more modest and more “basic” [basiste — from the base, lit. ‘base-ist’] program: autonomy, democratic federalism, the rights of men and women, etc. What is put forward, instead of the ideology of socialism led by a single workers and peasants party developing heavy industry, or references to “class” and “Marxists”, is self-management, the cooperative, the commune, ecology, anti-productivism and, as a bonus, gender.4

Abdullah Öçalan’s democratic confederalism, implemented by the PKK and its avatars, found its first political transcription in January 2014 in the Charter of the Social Contract5, a veritable constitution defining the principles and overall architecture of the social and political organization of the territory, in other words of the State in Rojava. As any constitution, it is a democratic bulwark against any emancipation organized outside of the State and capitalist framework, and therefore against revolution. In its eloquent preamble, the text “recognizes Syria’s territorial integrity and aspires to maintain domestic and international peace”.

About this Charter of the Social Contract, let’s quote the text “Rojava: Fantasies and Realities” by Zafer Onat (2014)6:

On this point, it is helpful to examine the KCK Contract that defines the democratic confederalism that forms the basis of the political system in Rojava. A few points in the introduction written by Ocalan deserve our attention:

This system is one that takes into account ethnic, religious and class differences on a social basis.” (…) “Three systems of law will apply in Kurdistan: EU law, unitary state law, democratic confederal law.”

In summary, it is stated that class society will remain and there will be a federal political system compatible with the global system and the nation state. In concert with this, article 8 of the Contract, titled “Personal, Political Rights and Freedoms” defends private property and section C of article 10 titled “Basic Responsibilities” defines the constitutional basis of mandatory military service as it states “In the case of a war of legitimate defense, as a requirement of patriotism, there is the responsibility to actively join the defense of the homeland and basic rights and freedoms.” While the Contract states that the aim is not political power, we also understand that the destruction of the state apparatus is also not aimed, meaning the goal is autonomy within existing nation states. When the Contract is viewed in its entirety, the goal that is presented is seen not to be beyond a bourgeois democratic system that is called democratic confederalism. To summarize, while the photos of two women bearing rifles that are frequently spread on social media, one taken in the Spanish Civil War, the other taken in Rojava do correspond to a similarity in the sense of women fighting for their freedoms, it is clear that the persons fighting ISIS in Rojava do not at this point have the same goals and ideals as the workers and poor peasants that fought within the CNT-FAI in order to remove the state and private property altogether.

To say that the CNT, from 1936 onwards, was fighting to “remove the state and private property”, is a step that’s historically unacceptable, given its abandonment of libertarian communism, its compromise with the Republic and its submission to the logic of war as opposed to that of revolution. In the case of Rojava, as now in the case of Ukraine, as soon as “the society”, “the country”, “the people” and its variants such as tribes, ethnic groups, etc. become subjects in their own right in the discourse, this means that they have already agreed to give up the essentials, namely the class demarcation and the demarcation with the State. “The society” and “the people” are abstractions from the underlying capitalist social relation, from the class struggle and the oppressive nature of the State, but they take shape and materialize as concrete ideological forces through social peace, citizen servitude, national union…

If we analyze the propaganda in favor of war under the anarchist flag, we get the impression that war is not at all understood for what it is, a paroxysm of our defeat, but as a social circumstance like any other in which it is possible to participate “as an anarchist” or even as an extension of the struggle by another means, bringing emancipation, at the price of sacrificing our lives but not our principles. Consequently, the crucial issue of insubordination, refusal of conscription and revolutionary defeatism is removed, since in this view it doesn’t even arise, in a kind of total inversion of any subversive point of view. Once “some comrades” have decided “to go in as anarchists”, we should respect their “free will” and support them, otherwise we could be accused of “lack of solidarity” and “lack of internationalism”! Faced with the real antagonism between class war and imperialist war, between fighting against the State and borders, and fighting on the borders for the State, any evasion or wavering opens the way for the bourgeois-democratic horizon and its non-choices between war and peace, between military engagement and pacifism, between misguided, incantatory solidarity and resignation.

To succeed in this monstrosity of justifying war and national defense in the name of struggle and anarchism, it’s necessary, at the cost of remarkable contortions, to evade both the State and what would really be a class-based anti-war struggle, namely revolutionary defeatism, class war against the exploiters, against the war machine, on all sides. The fact that this struggle does not automatically erupt is no justification for joining the front. In Rojava, as in the Ukraine, we are assured that no comrade is fighting for the State, either because the State is virtually non-existent, as in Rojava, or because we are acting “alongside” the State and not “beside” it, as in the Ukraine, where the government and NATO are coping with the actions of black-flag armed groups who do not take orders from any General Staff! Both is supposed to be a vast movement of “resistance” and “self-defense”. The word “self” tends to indicate that comrades are fighting directly for their own collective interests, without the mediation of the State. However, the State is indeed at work, because by fighting against the onslaught of surrounding armies or Daesh under this or that flag, the proletarians enlisted are actually fighting for a new local management of Capital. We were talking about tactical flexibility, and a lot is needed to match the inter-imperialist mess, when “self-defense” has to go hand in hand with military alliances with local and international imperialist powers.

Thus, talking about “the struggle in such-and-such a region”, “such-and-such a region in struggle” or, in a more exalted way, “the revolution in such-and-such a region” is totally equivocal until the above is clarified. In October 2014, at the time of the attack on Kobane, the left-wing American economist David Graeber declared in an interview with “The Guardian” that it was indeed a revolution, as in Spain in 1936, and he urged international solidarity, reviving the model of the “international brigades” (in which his father volunteered in 1937), while obscuring in passing that they were organized by the Stalinist counter-insurgency, in parallel with the fatal militarization of revolutionary militias. Nothing new under the veiled sun of Capital, between communication and parallel diplomacy:

In December 2014, while lesser Rojavan officials were meeting with US activists Janet Biehl and David Graeber, the top PKK/PYD official, Salih Muslim, was discussing military collaboration with the US ‘neocon’ Zalmay Khalilzad.7

On this point, let’s take the following from “A Letter to ‘Rojavist’ Friends”:8

With regards to their diplomatic agenda, the representatives (sic) of the YPG are regularly sent to Western countries with the goal of establishing new contacts. The days in which they were represented as totally isolated, as victims of their revolutionary position (despite their commander being received at the Élysée Palace) have passed. Their presence at the negotiations in Geneva was prevented by the efforts of Turkey, whilst Russia’s presence there was favourable. Since then the government of Rojava opened a diplomatic representation in Moscow in February [2016], which was the occasion of a lovely little celebration (ditto in Prague in April).

From a political, diplomatic and military point of view the leadership of the PYD /YPG (wooed as much by the United-States as by Russia) has known how to opportunistically play its cards right, that is to say, reinforce its political weight by obtaining military support and quasi-international recognition.

With respect to media support, it is very widespread and particularly positive. In France, the combatants of the YPG (and above all those of the YPJ) are presented as models of courage, of feminism, and of democracy and tolerance. Such is the case with ‘Arte’ to ‘France 2’, passing by ‘LCP’. Likewise with the Radio, where from ‘Radio Libertaire’ to ‘Radio Courtoisie’ and ‘France Culture’ one hears the praises of the combatants of freedom.

While the PKK itself is still considered a “terrorist organization” by the so-called “great powers” (and which are indeed terrorist organizations), its Kurdish avatar the PYD and its armed branches the YPG & YPJ do exist on the international diplomatic and military scene. The reason is simple: beyond the rhetoric, the powers seek allies not on the basis of their capacities to implement liberal democracy (let alone “local” or “popular” democracy), but on their ability to control their region and to discipline the proletariat who lives in it. And yet, despite the clichés we hear, it’s not the neighborhood assemblies or the production cooperatives that represent the political force in Kurdistan (at most, they serve as an ideological smoke and mirrors), it’s the PYD and its armed branches. In the words of Gilles Dauvé and Tristan Leoni, “we have never yet seen a State dissolve itself in local democracy”.

This is what the partisans of the “Rojava Revolution” claim, particularly under the anarchist banner, echoing what the imprisoned PKK leader Abdullah Öçalan summed up in 2005:

Democratic confederalism of Kurdistan is not a state system, but a democratic system of the people without a state. […] It derives its power from the people and in all areas including its economy it will seek self-sufficiency.9

Talking that way about “democracy without a state” (a subtle oxymoron) or a “society without a state” in Rojava frankly doesn’t make much sense politically, institutionally or militarily.

Rojava does have a State “with a government led by the “single party” PYD, ministries, a multitude of mini parliaments, courts of justice, a “Constitution” (called “Social Contract”), an army (the YPG/YPJ militias increasingly militarized), a police force (the Asayish) which imposes internal social order.10

More generally, as the other text in the same brochure reminds us:

The State is also – mainly – the result of specific social relations. This means that it is based on the dynamics of the relation between social classes and their relation to property. Thus, where classes and private property are preserved, there is a State.11

It also denounces the fact of “giving up the vision of a social revolution as a global process and clinging to the idea of the revolution in one country”. The fact that Rojava’s democracy is “popular”, assemblyist, councilist… in no way detracts from its bourgeois character, which is quite simply conservative of existing social relations. This is where the question of radicality takes on its full meaning, neither as a self-assumed title nor as a value judgement. If we consider that the cause of our misery stems from a lack of equality, from a democratic deficit in the business management, from a problem of governance, then any progressive bourgeois project can pass as a revolution. If, on the other hand, we consider that the cause of our misery is the capitalist social relation itself, not how it is managed, and that the State and politics are merely its appendages and not a neutral tool to be seized… then it will become more difficult to recruit us under these flags.

Some anarchist texts only evoke Rojava in terms of local achievements and neighbourhood assemblies, almost never speaking of the PYD and the PKK, etc., as if they were only spontaneous actions. It would be a little like if, in order to analyse a general strike, we only spoke of the self-management of strikers and of strike pickets, without considering the local unions, or the manoeuvring of the union management, or their negotiations with the State and the bosses…

The revolution is increasingly seen as a question of behaviour: self-organization, interest in gender, ecology, creating links, discussion, affects. If we add here disinterest or carelessness regarding State and political power, it is logical to see well and truly a revolution — and why not “a revolution of women” in Rojava. Since we speak less and less of classes, of class struggle, does it matter that this is also absent from the discourse of the PKK-PYD?12

This is a very interesting point, which deserves to be developed further. The crucial question of affirming our community of struggle against all the false capitalist communities (political, social, cultural, religious, “ethnic”…) fully includes the dimension of emotions and behaviors (which are far from being collectively accepted), and to affirm this is to highlight what we have to reappropriate on this devastated terrain, by reinforcing ourselves and struggling together against individual and relational alienation, against the collective reproduction of all forms of alienation whose matrixes are racism, sexism and ableism.

The violent diversion of this vital need consists, on the other hand, in making the no less crucial question of the content of the struggle disappear by using that of emotions, behaviors and formal signs as a substitute, an artifice, a cover-up. That is the case with Rojava, with a profusion of highly emotional testimonies contributing to this ideological offensive. Not that these testimonies are necessarily false, but they are isolated from their general dynamic to make us forget that the true – the beginnings of liberation from certain social shackles – can be a moment of the false, in this case of the so-called “Rojava Revolution”. As a moment of the false, the true is then realized in the egalitarian performance of patriotic sacrifice. You can’t assault the sky with national lead in your wing.

This is the starting point for our analysis of the phenomenon of jineology, the “science of women” advocated as a component of democratic confederalism in Rojava, as the other side of the widely promoted “martial feminism”.

As Gilles Dauvé and Tristan Leoni rightly remind us:

The subversive nature of a movement or organization cannot be measured by the number of armed women — nor its feminist character either. Since the 1960s, across all continents, most guerrillas have included or include numerous female combatants — for example in Colombia. This is even truer amongst Maoist-inspired guerrillas (Nepal, Peru, Philippines, etc.) using the strategy of “People’s War”: male/female equality should contribute to the tearing down of traditional structures, feudal or tribal (always patriarchal). It is in the Maoist origins of the PKK-PYD that one finds the source of what specialists call “martial feminism”.13

It should be added that this confederalism is not at all about an overcoming of false capitalist communities (particularly “ethnic” ones), but as their reasoned arrangement, in an organized and systematic denial of class contradiction. By way of comparison, in Iran in 1979, even the Muslim leaders in opposition to the Shah’s regime spoke of class struggle, obviously in order to better bury the movement that was beginning to take an insurrectionary turn.

In the broad spectrum of “support for Rojava”, Marxist-Leninist organizations such as the Parti Socialiste de Lutte and Secours Rouge play an active role. The latter is supported in Brussels by quite complacent “libertarian” allies used as non-dogmatic, anti-authoritarian stooges, and it campaigns for “Support for the revolutionary struggle of the peoples of Rojava and elsewhere, against the Islamists, the USA, NATO and reactionary states!” and implicitly invites us to turn a blind eye – a tried and tested Marxist-Leninist habit – to all the military and geostrategic alliances that have belied this rallying banner. The “old disagreements” are thrown away, they are raising money for plasters and they spread their propaganda. Less naïve than the “anarchist” supporters, these organizations are perfectly aware (and even feel secure in knowing) that there is indeed a State in Rojava, a fortiori with their local counterparts at the helm. The strategic opportunism of these Marxist-Leninist organizations naturally mirrors that of the PKK, which, along with the PYD, they also consider to be “progressive”, in opposition to neighboring “reactionary States”, an old anti-imperialist platitude, while endorsing the eco-feminist-libertarian facelift as an ideological paradigm shift. If refusing the very foundations of such a support front is being purist, as we often hear, then yes, let’s be resolutely purist, more than ever and right to the end!

The question, as always, is not to be fooled while confusing social democracy with revolution, not to be recruited in a campaign of support for any kind of State, economic or even social restructuring under the guise of revolutionary internationalism. In the case of Rojava, as in the Ukraine, the argument that what is being done locally – including by “comrades” under “our” banner (the poverty of family!) – is more valuable than what we can think about it here, or the assertion that over there we act while here we theorize, is the very negation of the internationalist solidarity, its dissolution in the myth of free will and confinement in national camps. Any entry into the war has the potential to make social contradictions burst out, but there is no determinism, and what prevails, at least initially, is the obliteration of struggle and ideological subjugation. Being exposed to shrapnel doesn’t offer any extra clairvoyance.

These attempts at hierarchization, separation and atomization in the name of the status of “being concerned” actually have a very trivial origin. Whenever anarchism gives up being revolutionary, it loses its substance and degenerates into a zealous variant of leftism, while ignoring itself as such and rushing headlong into its most hackneyed clichés: self-determination of peoples, anti-imperialism, national liberation, separate armed struggle, minimum (“realistic”) and maximum (revolutionary rhetoric) programs, worldwide support for all class-collaborationist fronts.

Yet, to assert that the revolutionary movement is internationalist is to assert that “comrade criticism must flow in all directions in order to be a constructive part of the process of creating a common theory and practice.14

It’s one thing to analyze and understand the social dynamics that lead to demand or defend a “more cooperative” (market) management style against one more directly dictated by the imperatives of the global market, in other words, production that allows for a certain margin of subsistence against an economy that totally uproots us and chains us to industry… It’s another thing to accept it as a “revolutionary” program or a “step towards revolution”. Yet another thing is to promote the political transposition of this illusion, by defending a more “participatory” politics, and more concerned with social peace, against a more vertical and frontal politics. And finally, another thing is to defend a national union more accomplished as a “revolutionary self-defense”, without seeing how the State, and therefore capital, remain master of the situation. Because it is precisely in this way that we are repeatedly led back into the same catastrophic quagmire, back into the fold of politics; it is also in this way that the authoritarian character of the commodity and value reigning over our lives is fundamentally denied, as is any prospect of radical and definitive emancipation from them. This is what the “Rojava revolution” is all about, this is the lie we are supposed to swallow, either by political opportunism or by the need for exoticism as a palliative to a total loss of revolutionary meaning.

It’s also important to see that these programs of “popular democracy”, direct and participatory democracy or community of “good governance” play much more of a role of ideological mobilization, of propaganda, as a pseudo-revolutionary model to be defended to keep the ideological matrix of socialism in one country under perfusion (updated with ecologic, feminist, inclusive, anti-authoritarian tints…), than they would represent a significant real alternative for capitalism in terms of maintaining social peace around the world.

At the end of this brief update, we’d like to return to an issue that’s as much mistreated as it is vital: the solidarity. However valid our arguments may be, haven’t we put them up like a wall between ourselves and those towards whom we were called to show solidarity? Do we have the right to call to turn away from an “experiment” which, despite its weaknesses and ideological misleadingness, needs our support in the face of its enemies who will show no mercy? Wouldn’t it be better to endorse a solidarity front that’s a little too broad than to risk that we will miss, as David Graeber urged, a historic rendezvous with a need for revolutionary solidarity? However sincere the intention, these remarks nonetheless reflect a truncated, distorted vision of what our class solidarity should be.

Let’s embrace the fact that we have a rendezvous with History, even in the smallest events, but it all depends on which current – or counter-current – of History we intend to follow. From a revolutionary point of view, the alternative to which this question of solidarity confronts us is the following: either we resign ourselves to the seduction of “fronts of struggle”, by tarnishing our principles, or we start afresh from the content of the struggle and its perspectives, by affirming not only with what ruptures we are in solidarity – whether these are embodied in sporadic actions or are carried by a broader movement – but also against what. Contrary to what is spread by the prevailing relativism and cynicism, principles, from a subversive point of view, are not what dispenses from thinking; on the contrary, they are the way in which we think our own struggle in the historical thread of its antagonism to all the parties of Order that have succeeded one another in the course of History throughout the world, since the beginning of class societies, these societies of appropriation, exploitation, domination and alienation.

We spoke earlier of the shift of a certain impoverished and disoriented anarchism towards the most caricatured leftism; the question of solidarity is no exception. From an internationalist point of view, solidarity with any radicalizing rupture anywhere in the world is embodied above all in the struggle wherever you are, against “your own” exploiters, against “your own” State, against any sacrifice. In Rojava, as in the rest of the world, the supreme stage of leftist conception and practice of solidarity boils down to proxy recruitment and support: serving at its best “the cause” (here, or even there) and garnering “support” (fund raising and propaganda outlets) after having first accepted the frontism, the flags and the blurring of essential demarcations (class, State).

A quotation whose scope can be extended to the rest of the world will help us to conclude:

“(…) in order for the events in Rojava to become truly revolutionary, it is necessary to move beyond the existing content, which represents self-defense of lives, culture, language, ethnicity, territory, local economy, jobs, civic and religious rights. Events would have to move on. To the content that represents the offensive phase. It will not be about civic activism and mere democratic administration, but about proletarian class struggle.

“Events would have to move on”, but above all in a completely different direction to that taken in Rojava.

In practice, this presupposes expressions of struggle subverting the pillars of Capital, such as classes, property, exchange, labor, money, the market, the State – and at the same time the creation of not only different organizational forms, but above all of a different social content. This is not yet happening in Rojava. (…) The point is not to turn away from Rojava, but also not to accept the uncritical support of everything that is happening there. Neither rejection nor romanticism. Just keep a sober, non-propaganda view.15

Reconnecting with class, struggle and internationalist solidarity starts with refusing the ideological injunctions and non-choices that are presented to us as inescapable, and breaking with complacency towards catch-all support fronts in order to confront the crucial, delicate questions that are often also “the questions that make people angry”, especially when criticism of content, positions and practices is experienced or reversed as an “attack” or as a “betrayal”. It’s part of the struggle to highlight and try to help to resolve the deviations and contradictions experienced within our community of struggle. The targets of criticism, behind all this, remain those who knowingly use us in their “militant” political calculations and, beyond that, the State and the social order to which these calculations ultimately benefit.

English translation: The Friends of the Class War

1 Gilles Dauvé & Tristan Leoni, “Kurdistan?”, DDT21, 2015, https://ddt21.noblogs.org/?page_id=324English translation made by Notes from the Sinister Quarterhttps://thesinisterquarter.wordpress.com/2015/02/16/kurdistan/

2 The acronym KCK stands for “Kurdistan Communities Union”, a political structure emanating from the PKK, and serving as an umbrella group for Turkey’s PKK, Syria’s PYD, Iran’s PJAK and Iraq’s PÇDK, as well as a number of social organizations more or less linked to these sister parties. The KCK is led by a kind of parliament called Kongra Gelê or “Kurdistan People’s Congress”.

3 Excerpt from “A Letter to ‘Rojavist’ Friends”, signed TKGV, from the initials of its authors, in 2016, https://paris-luttes.info/lettre-a-des-amis-rojavistes-5649English translation by Pete Dunn with help from Anthony Hayes, August 2016: https://libcom.org/article/letter-rojavist-friends/

4 Gilles Dauvé & Tristan Leoni, “Kurdistan?”, op. cit.

5 The Contract can be read in English here: https://civiroglu.net/the-constitution-of-the-rojava-cantons/

6 This English-language critical text is taken from the now-defunct Turkish-language blog Servet Düşmani (“Enemy of Wealth”): https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/zafer-onat-rojava-fantasies-and-realities/

7 “‘I have seen the future and it works.’ – Critical questions for supporters of the Rojava revolution”: https://libcom.org/article/i-have-seen-future-and-it-works-critical-questions-supporters-rojava-revolution

8 “A Letter to ‘Rojavist’ Friends”, op. cit.

9 https://web.archive.org/web/20160929163726/http://www.freemedialibrary.com/index.php/Declaration_of_Democratic_Confederalism_in_Kurdistan

10 “‘Rojava Revolution’? ‘Anti-State’? ‘Anti-Capitalist’? Or a new mystification?”, in Class War 13/2021, https://www.autistici.org/tridnivalka/class-war-13-2021-rojava-revolution-anti-state-anti-capitalist-or-a-new-mystification/

11 “A View of Rojava or Criticism as an Opportunity for Growth and Development”, English translation in Class War 13/2021, op. cit.

12 Gilles Dauvé & Tristan Leoni, “Kurdistan?”, op. cit.

13 Gilles Dauvé & Tristan Leoni, “Kurdistan?”, op. cit.

14 “A View of Rojava or Criticism as an Opportunity for Growth and Development”, English translation in Class War 13/2021, op. cit.

15 “A View of Rojava or Criticism as an Opportunity for Growth and Development”, English translation in Class War 13/2021, op. cit.