Amazon cover image
Image from Amazon.com

Understanding insurgency : popular support for the PKK in Turkey / Francis O'Connor, Peace Research Institute Frankfurt.

By: O'Connor, Francis, 1984- [author.]Material type: TextTextPublisher: Cambridge ; New York, NY : Cambridge University Press, 2021Description: pages cmContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9781108838504Other title: Popular support for the PKK in TurkeySubject(s): Partiya Karkerên Kurdistanê -- History | Kurds -- Turkey -- Politics and government | Insurgency -- Turkey -- History -- 20th century | Insurgency -- Turkey -- History -- 21st century | HISTORY / Middle East / General | HISTORY / Middle East / General | Turkey -- Politics and government -- 1980- | Turkey -- History -- Autonomy and independence movementsAdditional physical formats: Online version:: Understanding insurgencyDDC classification: 956.6/703 LOC classification: DR435.K87 | O367 2021Other classification: HIS026000 | HIS026000
Contents:
Kurdistan in Twentieth Century Turkey -- Theories of Insurgent Support -- PKK Pre-conflict Mobilisation (1974-1984) -- PKK and Rural Insurgency -- PKK Insurgency and the City -- The PKK in Western Turkey.
Summary: "Insurgent movements need a degree of popular support to survive in the medium to long term. It's an insight long acknowledged and put into practice by both rebels and those tasked with defeating them (E. Ahmad 1982, 245; Trinquier 1964, 8). In the case of the PKK's armed campaign in Turkey, the importance of insurgent popular support has always been understood as a key dimension of the conflict. PKK leader Abdullah Öcalan stated 'society's support is crucial for us. If they didn't help us, it would be impossible for PKK to survive, we would be already dead by now' (in Birand 1994, 136; Serxwebûn 1984a).1 Conversely, prominent Turkish army commanders have stated that the key to breaking PKK strength was to inhibit or destroy physical interactions with its supporters (in K. M. Güney 2009, 87; Kurban 2012, 7). A key figure of the Turkish counterinsurgency strategy in the 1990s, General Pamukoğlu acknowledged the extent of reciprocal trust between the PKK and its supporters by stating that the 'public knows where they [PKK militants] are and even where and when they will be at least two days beforehand' (Pamukoğlu 2003, 58). The recognition that the PKK did in fact enjoy widespread popularity has however been politically inopportune and is inevitably accompanied by the qualifier that such support is the result of PKK terror and coercion (Pamukoğlu 2003, 52)"-- Provided by publisher.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books The BIAA David H. French Library
Shelf 63 - Reading Room
H2p O'CON 32722 Not for loan BOOKS-000000025853

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Kurdistan in Twentieth Century Turkey -- Theories of Insurgent Support -- PKK Pre-conflict Mobilisation (1974-1984) -- PKK and Rural Insurgency -- PKK Insurgency and the City -- The PKK in Western Turkey.

"Insurgent movements need a degree of popular support to survive in the medium to long term. It's an insight long acknowledged and put into practice by both rebels and those tasked with defeating them (E. Ahmad 1982, 245; Trinquier 1964, 8). In the case of the PKK's armed campaign in Turkey, the importance of insurgent popular support has always been understood as a key dimension of the conflict. PKK leader Abdullah Öcalan stated 'society's support is crucial for us. If they didn't help us, it would be impossible for PKK to survive, we would be already dead by now' (in Birand 1994, 136; Serxwebûn 1984a).1 Conversely, prominent Turkish army commanders have stated that the key to breaking PKK strength was to inhibit or destroy physical interactions with its supporters (in K. M. Güney 2009, 87; Kurban 2012, 7). A key figure of the Turkish counterinsurgency strategy in the 1990s, General Pamukoğlu acknowledged the extent of reciprocal trust between the PKK and its supporters by stating that the 'public knows where they [PKK militants] are and even where and when they will be at least two days beforehand' (Pamukoğlu 2003, 58). The recognition that the PKK did in fact enjoy widespread popularity has however been politically inopportune and is inevitably accompanied by the qualifier that such support is the result of PKK terror and coercion (Pamukoğlu 2003, 52)"-- Provided by publisher.