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  • Kurds quietly angle for independence

    Christian Science Monitor
    April 26, 2006

    http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0426/p07s02-wo iq.html <http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0426/p07s02-woiq .html>



    Kurds quietly angle for independence

    Oil revenue could give Iraq's Kurds greater economic distance from
    Baghdad, experts say.

    By James Brandon | Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor

    ARBIL, IRAQ - As Iraq's government takes shape after months of
    political deadlock, the country's leading Kurdish politicians have
    promised to work toward a cohesive and peaceful Iraq.

    "If [Prime Minister Jawad] al-Maliki quickly establishes a powerful
    government that includes all groups, he will be an asset for the Iraqi
    people," said Jalal Talabani, the Kurdish president of Iraq, after
    Iraq's Parliament approved his second term and named Shiite politician
    Mr. Maliki to replace the embattled Ibrahim al-Jaafari.

    The Kurdish desire for independence, however, still runs deep. And
    with parts of Iraq increasingly unstable and growing more Islamic,
    experts say the Kurds, who are relatively secular, are working quietly
    to consolidate and extend the autonomy they have enjoyed since 1991.

    The Kurdish Regional Government, which has run the Kurd's autonomous
    zone in northern Iraq since the early 1990s, recently has signed
    contracts with foreign oil companies to explore for new oil fields in
    Kurdish-ruled areas of Iraq. Experts say they hope the revenue
    generated from these deals could provide greater economic, and thus
    political, independence from Baghdad.

    "The Kurds are offering attractive terms to companies that are willing
    to take a gamble on the legal situation," says Rafiq Latta, a Middle
    East editor of the Argus Oil and Gas report in London. "And some small
    oil companies are prepared to take the bait."

    The Norwegian oil firm DNO has been quickest off the mark, followed by
    Canadian firm Western Oil Sands. DNO began exploration in northern
    Iraq in 2004. But two weeks ago it announced that it would be able to
    begin pumping oil from one newly discovered field near the city of
    Zakho in early 2007.

    At present Kurdistan's annual budget comes from its share of Iraq's
    overall oil revenues, which are distributed according to
    population. As a result, the Kurds receive 17 percent of Iraq's
    overall $30 billion annual oil revenues.

    Iraq's oil exports, however, are mainly from the Shiite-dominated
    south - meaning that Iraq's Shiite rulers, theoretically at least,
    could shut down Kurdish northern Iraq's economy at will.

    Kurdish oil aspirations are also challenged by poor security and the
    Constitution, which states that, unlike oil exploration, contracts to
    repair existing oil fields must be negotiated by the Oil Ministry in
    Baghdad.

    Last week, Shamkhi Faraj, head of marketing and economics at the
    Ministry of Oil in Baghdad, estimated that Iraq's oil industry needed
    $25 billion to repair war damage and replace old equipment and
    infrastructure.

    So far the Shiite-controlled Ministry of Oil has been largely
    unsuccessful in signing contracts to repair the oil fields. Experts
    say that foreign companies are worried by possible insurgent attacks,
    but also by the political uncertainty of Baghdad.

    Consequently, the Kurds have been unable to fully repair the oil
    fields around Kirkuk, largely under Kurdish control since 2003. This
    is a source of frustration for the Kurds, as the fields contain around
    15 percent of Iraq's oil wealth.

    But even if the Kurds could fund the reconstruction of oil facilities
    in Kirkuk themselves - as some are now suggesting - this would mark
    only a start. The Kurds would also have to build new pipelines to
    export their oil.

    "Under Saddam the oil fields were very badly damaged," says
    Mr. Latta. "Water was pumped into them as cheap way to increase
    output, and a huge amount of foreign investment is going to be needed.

    "And even then it's not just a simple matter of having oil reserves
    and turning on the taps," he says. "Managing that investment will
    require a lot of expertise, which the Kurds simply don't have."

    The Kurds have, however, at least consolidated their physical control
    over Kirkuk's oil. Before the US invasion in 2003, Kirkuk was a mainly
    Arab city. Today Kurds are the majority, having driven out many of the
    Shiite Arabs brought in by Saddam Hussein to "Arabize" the city.

    "Those who were brought to Kirkuk by Saddam should leave and then
    there should be a referendum," says Azad Jundiani, head of the media
    office of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) - one of the two main
    Kurdish political parties.

    But a recent move by influential cleric Moqtada al-Sadr indicates that
    Shiites are trying to counter Kurdish control of Kirkuk. The
    Washington Post reported Tuesday that "hundreds of Shiite Muslim
    militiamen have deployed in recent weeks" there. The newspaper said as
    many as 240 fighters loyal to Mr. Sadr have arrived to the city.

    Almost as important to long-term Kurdish ambitions is Tal Afar, an
    Iraqi city that's ethnically Turkish but Shiite by religion. It lies
    between Mosul and the Kurdish enclave of Sinjar near the Syrian
    border.

    "Tal Afar is the Kurds' access route to Sinjar, and through Sinjar
    they have access to Syrian Kurdistan," explains Joost Hiltermann, a
    Middle East analyst at the Brussels-based International Crisis
    Group. In other words, if the Kurds can also take and hold Tal Afar,
    then their dream of a greater Kurdistan remains alive.

    "They claim Tal Afar to be a Kurdish area and a place where many
    Kurdish live but, in fact, it's an important milestone on the road to
    the creation of Greater Kurdistan," says Dr. Hiltermann.

    In the past few weeks fighting there has revived awareness of Kurdish
    vulnerability, especially as reports circulate that Iranian and
    Turkish troops are concentrating along the borders of Iraq's Kurdish
    north.

    Many Iraqi Kurds are increasingly aware of the obstacles to greater
    independence. Both Kurdish political leaders and ordinary citizens are
    resigning themselves to remaining part of Iraq for the foreseeable
    future.

    "The Kurds desire to rule themselves," says Farhad Auny, head of the
    Journalists' Syndicate in Arbil. "But at the same time it is not to
    the benefit of the Middle East, the international community or the
    Kurds themselves to ask for independence now."

    And to this end the Kurds are starting to think the unthinkable and
    begin a process of forgiving their Arab compatriots.

    "Since the establishment of Iraq 80 years ago the Kurds have been
    exploited and tortured by all Iraqi governments," says Mr. Auny. "We
    are not going to talk about what we have suffered from the Arabs but
    it has taught us that we must build a modern and developed country.

    "The Kurdish people are flexible and forgiving but they never forget,"
    he says. "To hate is to be weak. You cannot grow good crops in a soil
    of hatred."

    www.csmonitor.com | Copyright © 2006 The Christian Science
    Monitor. All rights reserved.
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