So if it comes to war between our Turkish allies and our Kurdish proteges – which side is the U.S. on? Or is there some way we can avoid picking sides?
I keep hoping some farsighted U.S. administration will make Turkey an offer to outright buy the independence of Turkish Kurdistan. That’s probably the only way to solve the problem once and for all. (Well, that would still leave Iranian Kurdistan and Syrian Kurdistan – but at least there we would have no trouble picking sides.) But I doubt the Turks would sell at any price – national pride runs too high. How long has it been since any sovereign state willingly gave up part of its national territory? (Not counting the “velvet divorce” between the Czech Republic and Slovakia, each of which was already a going concern under their union anyway.)
Not explicitly, perhaps, but it would, at a stroke, eliminate a lot of the human-rights-record objections. Besides, the EU is probably not eager to take on an unresolved Kurdish question as the Union’s problem – which it would become, if Turkey were admitted with its current borders. There would be Turkish-Kurdish members in the European Parliament making demands to be heard.