Under the guidance of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the government advocated the Islamist agenda as the backbone of the Republic of Turkey and was accused of impairing secularism. Freedom of speech, media, arrest of people's slander, human right restrictions are also rising. The Turks complain that their country is becoming a surveillant country monitoring the Internet. Conservative educational reforms are actively being conducted, and the Prime Minister announced that he would like to foster a "godly" generation.
The Turkish government urges it to increase violence against the Turkish Kurdish Labor Party and other Kurdish rebels and raises concerns that Turkish Kurdish politicians will promote their own independent referendum doing. Alternatively, some of the Kurdish towns on the Turkish side of the border with Iraq can declare independence and seek accession to a new and independent Kurdish state. In addition to obvious threatening military exercises, Turkish president Recep Erdogan also threatened to close the pipeline to Turkish Kurdistan oil. Because of Iraq's hostility, this prevents Kurds from exporting their oil - about 650,000 barrels a day, of which 550,000 barrels pass through Turkey - blocking its major economic lifeline
Do the Kurds of Turkey and Iran regard the referendum in Iraq as a motive and a rebellion? If Turkey began attacking, the US has protected Iraqi Kurdistan for 26 years, will it hinder it through NATO and Turkey? In the case of Iranian attack, will the US Iranian tanks use this as an excuse to start military operations against Iran? Will this vote divide the Islamic anti-Islamic alliance of Iraq - Kurdish - the United States? The Kurds are racial, such as Arabs and Persians. They have unique languages, cultures and history, and most of them are Sunni Muslims. Descriptions of Sunni, Shiite and Kurdish Iraq are accurate, but somewhat misleading. It is a three major group, but there are ethnic and religious duplicates: Sunni Arabs, Shiite Arabs, Sunni Kurds