I mean, it's not pretty much, it's the literal definition, but the international community hasn't appeared to give two short shits when Israel does it forcibly, so I don't expect Turkey would care too much about the reaction to them making life in that area shitty for Kurds and encouraging cross-border travel in one direction.Sandydragon wrote: ↑Sun Dec 08, 2024 10:21 pm Plus would a a Kurdish homeland over the border not want the land in Turkey currently occupied by Kurds? Forcibly moving out a entire group of people is pretty much ethnic cleansing, so unlikely to win too many friends.
Note that this is not me advocating this as a good, moral, or correct policy - I am assuming Erdogan to act like a dickhead (ie, in character) and what he might want to do from a practical standpoint of removing the PKK threat, given that it's shown throughout history that one cannot remove a terrorist threat with force.
Mind, I'm not actually sure how much power Turkey have to prevent a Kurdistan in the currently Kurdish-controlled part of Syria. The rest of the rebels don't exactly have any power in that area to re-establish is as part of Syria, so even if Turkey withdraws support completely, would that have any great effect on their control of Western Syria? I'm assuming Turkey isn't planning on using their military to annex the land into their borders, although I guess anything's possible in 2024.
A situation involving a completely different Turkish leader might look at this as the opening point of negotiations - support a homeland in exchange for relinquishing all future claim to Turkish land and have the inevitable happen on their terms.
Puja