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Kurds: Armenians Win, We Pay The Price

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  • Kurds: Armenians Win, We Pay The Price

    KURDS: ARMENIANS WIN, WE PAY THE PRICE
    By Falah Mustafa Bakir

    Washington Post
    http://newsweek.washingtonpost.com/postglobal /needtoknow/2007/10/kurds_armenians_win_we_pay_the .html
    Oct 15 2007

    Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan is asking his country's parliament this
    week to unanimously approve a "mobilization" against the Kurdistan
    Worker's Party (PKK), an action that he and other Turkish leaders
    have signaled could include a Turkish military attack on the Kurdistan
    Region of Iraq. Such an attack would represent the gravest challenge
    to Iraq since our liberation from Saddam Hussein in 2003 and would
    jeopardize, perhaps fatally, the success of the American mission
    in Iraq.

    The Kurdistan Region is Iraq's safest and most secure. But we may
    soon pay a heavy price for the actions of the PKK in Turkey, and for
    a House Foreign Affairs Committee vote about Armenia in the U.S. -
    neither of which have anything to do with the Kurds of Iraq or the
    Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG.)

    The KRG seeks no conflict with Turkey. Quite the opposite: the KRG
    considers friendly relations with Turkey its top priority. We consider
    the Turkish people as close friends and neighbors with whom we have
    much in common. Turkish trade and investment has been instrumental to
    our region's economic growth. We are interested in pursuing stronger
    ties through direct dialogue with Ankara on any and all issues of
    common interest. Any problems or disagreements should be solved
    through diplomacy and dialogue, not threats of military force.

    We condemn the killing of innocent people and we do not believe that
    violence ever solves problems. The KRG has supported U.S. mediation
    efforts with Iraq and Turkey about the PKK, and has encouraged efforts
    toward a comprehensive political solution to the problem of the PKK,
    which cannot be solved solely through military means.

    The KRG does not and will not support the de-stabilization of Turkey
    or any of our neighbors. We respect and practice the principle of
    noninterference in the affairs of others, and expect the same in
    return. In that context, the Iranian intimidation and shelling of
    villages and towns along our eastern border must also stop. As with
    Turkey, we seek no confrontation with Iran. Since 1991, we have
    proven to Turkey, Iran and all of Iraq's neighbors that the Kurds
    are a stabilizing factor in Iraq and the Middle East.

    The stakes could not be higher for Iraq, and for the peace and
    prosperity of the Kurdistan Region, which has proven itself the
    model and gateway for a new Iraq. The Kurds are America's most
    loyal and trusted allies in pursuit of an independent, democratic and
    federal Iraq. The current crisis on our borders comes at an especially
    inopportune and sensitive time with regard to on-going efforts in Iraq
    toward national reconciliation. This is very much a work in progress,
    but there is progress.

    There is an emerging consensus among Iraqi politicians about
    federalism, which is Iraq's constitutionally mandated form of
    government. KRG President Masoud Barzani has called for a conference
    in Erbil among Iraq's political leaders to discuss how to implement
    a federal system of governance in our country. The diversity of Iraqi
    society is a source of strength, not division. Federalism has worked
    around the world - in the United States, the United Arab Emirates,
    and in many other countries. It should be seen as the solution,
    rather than the problem, for the deep governance challenges in Iraq.

    Federalism is not "partition," as some have misrepresented it. We
    appreciate those in the U.S. Senate who understand and have recognized
    the reality of a federal Iraq through an amendment to the U.S. Defense
    Authorization bill.

    Some neighboring countries see the shadow of independence falling
    across all that we do in the Kurdistan Region. When the Iraqi
    constitution was drafted four years ago, the Kurdistan Region's
    leadership made a firm decision to remain part of Iraq. Despite the
    national tragedy that has befallen much of the rest of Iraq, we remain
    committed to that course of action today. We believe today that our
    future is best secured by becoming an active participant in a federal,
    democratic and secular Iraq.

    Falah Mustafa Bakir is the Head of the Department of Foreign Relations,
    with Ministerial rank, in the Kurdistan Regional Government of Iraq.
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