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The Kurds' cunning plan: Good Actors
THE KURDS' CUNNING PLAN.Good Actors
The New Republic, DC July 25, 2006 By Spencer Ackerman Erbil, Iraq On the highway leading out of Erbil, the capital city of Iraqi Kurdistan, the only place to eat before reaching the city of Kirkuk is the Kurdistan Restaurant. The low-slung cinderblock building is in the Baghdad-controlled governorate of Tameem, but you wouldn't know it from the image on the restaurant's facade. Superimposed against the red, yellow, and green colors of the Kurdish flag is an impressive map of Greater Kurdistan, the ideational Kurdish homeland stretching from southern Turkey to western Iran. That such a map appears just outside of Kirkuk is no coincidence. Kirkuk, which Kurds call their Jerusalem, is a fundamental component of the dream of Greater Kurdistan. Every Kurd can recite the story of how Iraq's Arabs stole the city from them. Located about 150 miles northeast of Baghdad, Kirkuk had never been of great historic or political significance. But, in 1927, a consortium of oil prospectors headed by Calouste Gulbenkian, the legendary Armenian oil magnate, discovered that the city was afloat some of the richest oil fields on the planet. The then-fledgling Iraqi government started exerting control over Kirkuk, moving Kurds out and Arabs loyal to Baghdad's Hashemite monarchy in. For nearly 80 years, the city has been a symbol of the Kurds' fragmented and oppressed status. With Saddam Hussein gone and Iraq's Arabs mired in sectarian disarray, they intend to take it back. The reconquest of Kirkuk has begun not with an army but with a creeping of Kurdish settlers along the highway south from Erbil. Before Saddam was ousted in 2003, the Iraqi army prevented Kurds from living south of the Qushtapa checkpoint, just a few miles outside Erbil. As soon as the Iraqi army abandoned its positions during the U.S.-led invasion, however, defiant Kurdish civilians immediately occupied the barracks to mark their new frontiers. Over the last three years, they have pushed closer and closer to Kirkuk. Crumbling stone structures along the road have become new Kurdish villages, displaying red, yellow, and green flags. And, in the northernmost sector of Kirkuk itself, just beyond where plumes of fire illuminate some of the world's richest oil fields, the first outpost isn't an Arab area, but rather the Kurdish neighborhood of Rahimawa. What the highway from Erbil to Kirkuk reveals is that, for three years, while Sunni and Shia Arabs have bitterly fought one another--and the U.S. occupation--the Kurds have methodically established a presence on the ground. Any peshmerga--guerrillas who serve as Kurdistan's army--who travel south to take Kirkuk will be treated as heroes along the road. Any Iraqi soldiers who travel north to retain it will have to subdue a hostile population. There would seem to be few better moments for the peshmerga caravans to fly down the Erbil-Kirkuk highway. This week's orgy of violence--in which Sunnis bombed Shia shrines and Shia militiamen pulled Sunnis out of their homes for execution in broad daylight--underscores how Iraq is at a point of permanent sectarian emergency. But the independence of Kurdistan is not imminent. After the attack on the Askariya shrine in February, instead of exploiting increased sectarian tensions, Jalal Talabani of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), the president of Iraq, worked energetically to restart talks between Sunni and Shia leaders. Indeed, at every turn, the Kurds have opted not to declare independence but to keep the country united. "It's ironic," wrote Turkish columnist Cengiz Candar, "that Talabani ... long considered a secessionist, is now functioning as the glue most likely to make Iraq stick together and to prevent it from breaking apart." But Talabani's efforts aren't ironic. They're strategic. The current generation of Kurdish leaders has reached a consensus about Kurdistan's future: For the next several years, the Kurds must remain part of Iraq if they are to achieve statehood. That's because they need to convince Iraqis, often-hostile neighbors like Turkey, and foreign powers like the United States that Kurdish independence is a positive--or at least nonthreatening--development. The timetable for independence varies: Some Kurdish leaders suggest independence is only a few years away, while others see it in a decade or even a generation. The most important factor in winning recognition, however, will be the visible and consistent demonstration that they paid, in the words of one Kurdish leader, "more than our fair share" for building Iraq. But, in order to have a shot at independence, the Kurds must also set up an economic and political infrastructure that will make their dream of statehood viable. They must develop their copious oil resources. They must cement ties with bordering countries. And they must consolidate their hold over Baghdad politics. These moves run directly counter to the interests of Iraq, the country the Kurds are supposed to be paying more than their fair share. ver a dinner of grilled fish, Tariq Namiq, a bespectacled thirtysomething journalist, argues passionately that Americans are fooling themselves if they don't consider all Arabs terrorists. His virulence reflects a long-standing fear. Ever since British and French imperial machinations grafted a portion of the mountainous Kurdish homeland to the artificially created Iraq after the collapse of the Ottoman empire, the Kurdish experience in Iraq has been a story of relentless and bloody repression. That repression reached its apogee in 1987 and 1988 with the Anfal genocide, during which Saddam murdered 100,000 Kurds, destroyed hundreds of Kurdish villages, and evicted thousands of Kurds from Kurdish cities like Kirkuk. Namiq hosts a weekly TV program on the Kurdish network Zagros TV, which, he explains, reminds viewers that Kirkuk by rights belongs to Kurdistan, despite also being home to thousands of Arabs. When I ask if the Arabs can remain in the city--the Kurdish leadership insists they be relocated, and American diplomats have traced over 180 disappearances and kidnappings of Arabs to Kurdish forces--Namiq equivocates. Namiq is hardly alone in his distrust of Arabs. Despite Kurdish prominence in Baghdad, no one in Kurdistan has much faith that post-Saddam Iraq offers the Kurds anything more than the torments of the past. The entrance of the Sunnis into the political process in December was met in Kurdistan with apprehension that the formerly dominant minority is simply trying to use ballots as well as bullets to regain power. "Everyone has to have both legs in--not one leg in terror and one leg in the cabinet," says Fadhil Merani, the head of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) politburo who helped negotiate the sectarian character of the new government in Baghdad. Not that everyone thinks the Shia, with whom the Kurds allied against their mutual Sunni enemies, are much better. Many Kurds describe them as fanatical and backward proxies of Iran. Sunnis and Shia may not be able to find common ground in Baghdad, but, in Kurdistan, both are simply Arabs, and so both merit contempt. For the last three years, American and Iraqi officials thought they had a solution to the Kurdish problem: federalism. Transforming Iraq from a centrally administered state into one where the various regions enjoy considerable autonomy from Baghdad was intended to mollify the country's mutually suspicious factions and keep the country whole. Indeed, federalism has been a nonnegotiable demand of the Kurds, who have always said that, unless post-Saddam Iraq allowed them tremendous freedom of action, they would have no choice but to secede. Accordingly, both the interim and permanent Iraqi constitutions contained far-reaching guarantees for regional autonomy. The permanent constitution, approved in October, allows Kurdistan to nullify unacceptable national legislation; to retain the 100,000-strong peshmerga; and to control much, if not all, of Kurdistan's oil wealth. But federalism has proved unacceptable to the Sunnis, who rejected the constitution en masse and only agreed to participate in the December elections after receiving U.S.-brokered assurances that they could seek to amend the document this year. Defending the controversial provisions of the Iraqi constitution in October, American Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad explained, "You couldn't bring the Kurds back into Iraq without federalism." But, contrary to the White House's claim that federalism is "a prerequisite for a united country," federalism has stoked, not tempered, secessionism. In January 2005, as Iraqis voted to elect their first government, a referendum was held in Kurdistan asking respondents whether they would prefer independence. Nearly 98 percent of an estimated two million voters said yes. "Federalism is a fact that's imposed on us," explains Dilshad Farriq, a 27-year-old Persian-literature student at the University of Salahuddin. "Independence is something we want." http://www.tnr.com/doc.mhtml?i=200607 24&s=ackerman072406 |
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