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                                                                                            Updated January  10, 2025

Turkey (Tiirkiye), the PKK, and U.S. Involvement: Chronology


Turkey's (alt. Ttirkiye) decades-long struggle with the
Kurdistan Workers' Party (Kurdish acronym  PKK)  has
fostered both cooperation and contention between the
United States and Turkey. The PKK, a U.S.-designated
foreign terrorist organization (or FTO), represents one
among  many  strands of organized political and military
activity in the name of Kurdish nationalism.
Since 2015, the United States has partnered with militias
that include the PKK-linked Syrian Kurdish People's
Protection Units (Kurdish acronym YPG)  against the
Islamic State. Turkish military operations in northern Syria
to counter the YPG's militias and reduce its territorial
control have been a factor in complicating U.S. policy and
U.S.-Turkey relations. During a 2019 Turkish-led incursion
into Syria against the YPG, Congress debated sanctions on
Turkey, and the Trump Administration briefly imposed
some  (via Executive Order 13894, which remains in effect).
Since the December  2024 ouster of Bashar al Asad in Syria,
renewed  fighting between Turkey-backed and YPG-led
forces has prompted renewed congressional attention.
   PK  OIn -      (1978-1983)

The early Turkish Republic (founded in 1923) saw several
Kurdish-led rebellions and uprisings, leading the Turkish
state to generally repress Kurdish ethnic identity and
political aspirations. In this context, Abdullah Ocalan (born
about 1947 in southeastern Turkey's Sanliurfa Province)
and other Kurdish activists founded the PKK in Turkey in
the late 1970s as a Marxist-Leninist organization dedicated
to an independent Kurdistan. Ocalan built networks that
allowed PKK  militants to train with Palestinian groups in
Syria and Lebanon and base operations from camps in
semi-autonomous  Kurdish  areas of northern Iraq.
1978    Abdullah Ocalan  and others establish the PKK.

1979    Ocalan arrives in Syria to lead the PKK from exile.
1980    Military coup in Turkey; general post-coup crackdown
        on political opposition, including Kurds.
 1982   During the Iran-Iraq war, Iran persuades Iraqi Kurdistan
        Democratic Party (KDP) leader Masoud Barzani to allow
        the PKK to establish camps in northern Iraq.
        PKK also establishes camps in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley
        with the support of Syria.
Confct        e   ns,    uf     ar,  and ntia
U.S.   Terronst Desnaton ( 984- 998)
In 1984, with Ocalan based in Syria, the PKK launched an
armed  insurgency in Turkey. Using guerrilla tactics, the
PKK  primarily targeted Turkish military and other state
officials in largely Kurdish-populated southeastern Turkey.
The group also sought to supplant the traditional Kurdish
ruling class by attacking state-aligned collaborationists.
The PKK   insurgency reached its height in the mid-1990s;
fighting since 1984 has killed thousands of PKK fighters,


Turkish security forces, and civilians. After the 1991 Gulf
War, the PKK  entrenched itself further in northern Iraq,
prompting periodic Turkish military action.
1984     PKK begins armed insurgency in Turkey; Turkish
        government tightens security in southeast.
 1985   Turkey establishes the Village Guards, a Kurdish
         paramilitary group to counter the PKK.
 1987    KDP leader Barzani cuts ties with the PKK; PKK
         continues to use camps in northern Iraq and receives
         permission for some limited use of Iranian territory.
         Turkey declares state of emergency in southeast
 1991   After the Gulf War, Iraqi forces brutally suppress an
         Iraqi Kurdish uprising, prompting mass refugee flows to
         Turkey and Iran; the United States and others provide
         relief from Turkey, and establish a no-fly zone to
         encourage refugees' return.
 1993    Conflict intensifies in southeastern Turkey.
 1994    U.S. Congress enacts legislation withholding military
         loans to Turkey until the executive branch submits a
         report on alleged human rights violations related to
         Turkey-PKK violence.
 1997   Turkey lifts state of emergency in part of its southeast.
         State Department designates the PKK as a Foreign
         Terrorist Organization (FTO).
         Turkish forces enter northern Iraq to support Barzani
         against his PKK-supported Iraqi Kurdish rivals.
 1998    Facing Turkish military threats and other pressure,
         Syrian President Hafez al Asad expels Ocalan and closes
         PKK camps in line with an agreement known as the
         Adana Protocol.
Oca   an's   Capture, 2nd Iraq War, and
Renewed Conflict (I 999-2008)
Turkish authorities captured and imprisoned Abdullah
Ocalan in 1999, ending one phase of Turkey-PKK  conflict.
After the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003, Iraq's Kurdistan
Regional Government   (KRG)  received formal autonomy. In
2004, the PKK  restarted its insurgency, relying largely on
the camps it had established in the 1980s in what had
become  KRG-controlled  areas of northern Iraq. In response,
Turkey increased its operations in Iraq.
1999     Ocalan, in prison, calls for PKK to declare a cease-
        fire and pull out of Turkey; PKK largely obeys.
2001     State Department designates PKK as a Specially
         Designated Global Terrorist.
2003     U.S. invasion of Iraq.
         PYD  (Democratic Union Party) is founded as PKK's
         political offshoot in Syria.


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