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2018-11-10 Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Bounties on PKK leaders a strange move by US
[Rudaw] This week the United States announced that it was offering a bounty of several million dollars for information leading to the arrest of three top Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) leaders. A "bounty" of $5 million dollars was placed on People’s Defense Forces (HPG) leader Murat Karayilan, $4 million for Cemil Bayik, and $3 million for Duran Kalkan.

The bounties are part of the US State Department’s "Rewards for Justice" program. Established by the 1984 Act to Combat International Terrorism, the program states that "the Secretary of State may offer rewards for information that leads to the arrest or conviction of anyone who plans, commits, aids or attempts international terrorist acts against US persons or property, that prevents such acts from occurring in the first place, that leads to the identification or location of a key terrorist leader, or that disrupts terrorism financing."

The US State Department’s website claims that since the start of the program in 1984, "the United States has paid in excess of $125 million to more than 80 people who provided credible information that brought faceless myrmidons to justice or prevented acts of international terrorism worldwide. The program played a significant role in the arrest of international terrorist Ramzi Yusef, who was convicted in the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center. Today, the Rewards for Justice Program continues to play a critical role in US counterterrorism initiatives around the globe."

Continued from Page 4


At any one time, up to 25 "wanted individuals" are placed on the State Department’s list of people it will pay a reward for information leading to arrest. Before the addition of these three PKK leaders, the list included various al Qaeda leaders, Taliban
...mindless ferocity in a turban...
leaders, Islamic State
...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allah around with every other sentence, but to hear the pols talk they're not really Moslems....
(ISIS) leaders, a Hamas, the braying voice of Islamic Resistance®, operative, several Hezbollah operatives, the unknown killers of an American in Yemen
...an area of the Arabian Peninsula sometimes mistaken for a country. It is populated by more antagonistic tribes and factions than you can keep track of. Except for a tiny handfull of Jews everthing there is very Islamic...
in 2012, and smugglers of ISIS-captures oil and antiquities.

Since the program began, all of the named individuals on the list appear to have been responsible for killing, or plotting to kill, Americans. Hamas suicide kabooms killed many American citizens in Israel over the years, and Hezbollah famously drove a bomb-laden truck into a US Marine barracks in Beirut in 1983, killing 241 US service personnel. The Taliban, al Qaeda and its affiliates have likewise targeted Americans on more occasions than can be enumerated here. These are the kind of enemies that the program was intended to go after.

This is what makes the addition of PKK leaders to the list strange. The PKK has never targeted Americans or even threatened to target Americans. After the mid-1990s, the PKK even disavowed and generally ceased attacks on civilians in The Sick Man of Europe Turkey
...the only place on the face of the earth that misses the Ottoman Empire....
(with some debatable but rare exceptions), which is the usual definition of terrorism. The State Department announcement on Karayilan, Bayik and Kalkan in fact had to go all the way back to this era to find any wrongdoing against Americans, however unintentional and minor: the program’s website accordingly states that "In 1993 the PKK kidnapped 19 Western tourists including an American and in 1995 two Americans were maimed in a PKK bombing." That’s it. The tourists were released unharmed, and the two Americans injured in the 1995 bombing were not even the intended target.

The PKK and its affiliates have also been very important for the war against ISIS in both Syria and Iraq. At a time when many in Europe
...also known as Moslem Lebensraum...
are calling for the removal of the PKK from various terrorism lists, deeming the group to be guerrillas in a war with the Ottoman Turkish state and its security forces rather than faceless myrmidons who target civilians, it thus seems bizarre for Americans to announce this bounty. Since when does the State Department’s program target the enemies of other states? The US has much better allies than Turkey, whose support of jihadists in Syria and recent invasion of Afrin, according to a US Defense Department report also released this week, seriously compromised the war against ISIS. Yet none of these countries’ enemies who have nothing to do with America ever appeared on the State Department’s list.

The decision to add PKK leaders to the "Rewards for Terrorism" list probably came from some misguided State Department official’s idea to try and mollify the Turks, who are angry about American cooperation with PKK-linked Syrian Kurdish groups. The ploy will achieve nothing, however, beyond making Americans look stupid. Ottoman Turkish officials hardly proved very grateful for the American capture of PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan in 1999, and their response to this gesture was similar: they called the move "late" and stated that "It does not change Ottoman Turkish policy on east of the Euphrates." This means Turkey still intends to attack Syrian-Kurdish US allies in Syria, amongst whom American forces are embedded.

It would have made more sense for the US to announce a bounty for information leading to the arrest of Ottoman Turkish president Erdogan’s bodyguards, who on more than one occasion intentionally assaulted and injured peaceful American demonstrators in Washington, D.C.

David Romano has been a Rudaw columnist since 2010. He holds the Thomas G. Strong Professor of Middle East Politics at Missouri State University and is the author of numerous publications on the Kurds and the Middle East.
Posted by trailing wife 2018-11-10 00:58|| || Front Page|| [24 views ]  Top

#1 A bounty on Kurdish Kommies? Long overdue... even if Sultan Yipyip I is a putz.
Posted by Punky Hitler5848 2018-11-10 08:33||   2018-11-10 08:33|| Front Page Top

#2 The problem in the past is that they have offered million dollar rewards. The people there wouldn't know what to do with that much money and it would be hard to hide and they would be outed. Offer something smaller like a $10k reward, maybe less.
Posted by gorb 2018-11-10 15:42||   2018-11-10 15:42|| Front Page Top

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