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Syria/Iraq: What would an end of the PKK mean for the Kurds in the Middle East?

March 8, 2025
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Syria/Iraq: What would an end of the PKK mean for the Kurds in the Middle East?
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Kurds in the Middle East have been in a state of limbo since Abdullah Ocalan, the imprisoned leader of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK, gave his pioneering speech in late February.

In his historic address, he said, “Convene your congress and make a decision. All groups must and the PKK must dissolve itself.”

While an official date for such a congressional meeting is yet to be announced, the PKK already stated on March 1 that they would comply. They also declared a .

This could mark the beginning of the end of the PKK and their 40-year-old violent struggle for independence on .

However, until such an end of the PKK is confirmed,  will continue to consider not only Turkey’s PKK as a terrorist organization, but also the and affiliates in Syria.

Turkey expects , without exception.

In his speech, however, Ocalan did not specifically mention any of the Kurdish forces and administrations outside Turkey, although he did refer to ‘all groups,’ which could be interpreted as referring to Syrian affiliates also. 

He also failed to offer an alternative roadmap for the around 35 million Kurds who remain the without their own state.

The Kurds live in a vast territory, which is split across Turkey, Syria, Iraq, Iran, and Armenia. While they share a common ethnic identity and are predominantly Sunni Muslims, they do not have cross-border representatives, common policies or a joint military defense unit.

PKK spokespeople in Iraq and Syria had different reactions to Ocalan’s call.

Kurds in Iraq

Analysts widely agree that the PKK headquarters in northern  will most likely follow Ocalan’s call.

“Once the PKK’s congress formally declares it’s dissolution and renounces armed struggle, this decision would cover both southeast Anatolia in Turkey [where the Kurdish majority in Turkey live] and militants directly operating under the PKK leadership structure in north Iraq,” Nigar Goksel, Turkey and Cyprus project director at the conflict-prevention organization International Crisis Group, told DW.

The president of the semi-autonomous Iraqi Kurdistan region in Iraq’s north, Nechirvan Barzani, has already urged the PKK to “commit to and implement this [Ocalan’s] message.”

Hopes are that an end of the armed fight between Turkey and the PKK in Iraq will not only end ongoing strikes by the Turkish military in the area, but eventually  between Iraqi Kurdistan and Turkey.

Furthermore, the PKK’s dissolution would most likely also improve the political situation in Syria’s northeast where Turkey and  forces have been fighting for years.

“If these groups [in Turkey and Iraq] fully disband and undergo a DDR process [disarmament, demobilization and reintegration], this will unlock unprecedented opportunities for good governance and stability in northern Syria as well as alter the balance of power across the country,” Burcu Ozcelik, senior research fellow for Middle East Security at the London-based think tank Royal United Services Institute (RUSI), told DW.

Kurds in Syria

Yet, both analysts highlight that the  don’t see Ocalan’s call as ultimately binding for themselves.

Kurdish forces consist of the Kurdish Syrian People’s Protection Unit (YPG), who are at the core of the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, or SDF. 

According to Ozcelik, the YPG is organically and institutionally linked to the PKK, and it is unimaginable that Turkey would agree to the YPG’s survival as it currently stands.

However, Mazloum Abdi, the commander of the SDF, already said that the call to dissolve did not apply to his group.

“It is not related to us in Syria,” he stated.

He still welcomed Ocalan’s call.

“If there is peace in Turkey, that means there is no excuse to keep attacking us here in ,” Abdi said. 

“If the PKK genuinely and demonstrably lays down arms and disbands, meaning that the armed cadres physically hand over their weapons to state authorities as the process would demand, it will be the dawn of a new era,” Ozcelik stated.

She also said, however, that this “will not mean that PKK-affiliates operating in northeastern Syria will now have free rein.”

Is an end of the PKK a path to unity?

Ocalan’s call for an end of the PKK coincides with an unprecedented situation in that arose after the fall of Syria’s longtime dictator in December.

under President Ahmed al-Sharaa has called on the Kurdish forces to integrate into the national army.

However, the Kurdish forces insist to operate as an  within the army.

So far, the Syrian government has rejected this and also didn’t invite the SDF to the country’s first national dialogue conference in late February.

While it remains to be seen if, or to what extend the SDF might integrate, the focus of the Kurdish forces is “not on disarmament,” Nigar Goksel told DW.

And yet, once the  dissolves, the links between the Kurdish forces in Syria and the PKK would effectively be severed, she added.

In turn, Burcu Ozcelik sees that Ocalan’s call for an end of the PKK could actually help the Kurds in Syria to gain a .

“If the Syrian Democratic Forces is able to credibly distance itself from the PKK and its affiliates, and contest in the political space of the new Syria as a pro-democracy party through legal guarantees, it will open the path for political mobilization,” Ozcelik said.

DW’s Aref Gabeau contributed to this article.

Edited by: Carla Bleiker

The post Syria/Iraq: What would an end of the PKK mean for the Kurds in the Middle East? appeared first on Deutsche Welle.

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