Iraqi Kurds Expanded Their Territory By 40% In Hours
ARBIL,
Iraq (Reuters) -- Poets wrote songs about it for generations. Guerrilla
fighters holed up in the mountains trained for it for decades. But in
the end, when a Kurdish army finally took control of Kirkuk, they
realized the dream of their forefathers within hours, without having to
fire a shot. The collapse of Baghdad's control of northern Iraq in the
face of an onslaught by Sunni insurgents has allowed Kurds to take the
historic capital they regard as their Jerusalem, and suddenly put them
closer than ever to their immortal goal: an independent state of their
own.
After Sunni insurgents from the Islamic State of Iraq and the
Levant seized Iraq's biggest northern city Mosul and rampaged towards
the capital Baghdad, Kurdish fighters wasted no time in mobilizing.
They
seized full control of Kirkuk - and tracts of land besides. In all,
they expanded the territory they control by as much as 40 percent,
without having to fight a single battle.
The new territory
includes vast oil deposits the Kurdish people regard as their national
birthright and foundation for the prosperity of a future independent
homeland.
Kurds plundered bases deserted by the Iraqi army in
Kirkuk, making off with everything from guns to air-conditioning units,
armored vehicles and mattresses in a frenzy reminiscent of the scenes
that followed the fall of Saddam Hussein in 2003.
For now, Kurdish
officials are still weighing their options for next steps, but they
have made clear that the settlement that held Iraq together as a state
has been torn up.
"We have entered a new era in Iraq that is
completely different than before Mosul," Fuad Hussein, chief of staff to
Kurdish regional President Masoud Barzani, told Reuters. "We will see
how we are going to deal with this new Iraq."
The 30 million Kurds
- the world's largest stateless nation, divided between Iraq, Iran,
Syria and Turkey- have sought a state of their own since the mapmakers
of the modern Middle East denied them one last century.
Since
Saddam's fall, Iraq's 4 million Kurds have come the closest: ruling
themselves in a prosperous and comparatively peaceful autonomous region
of three remote mountainous provinces under a settlement that awards
them a fixed 17 percent of Iraq's total oil wealth, sent from Baghdad.
That
has provided enough of a windfall to turn the regional capital Arbil
into a boomtown, even as Baghdad remained an unreconstructed war zone
strewn with rubbish, barbed wire and concrete blast walls.
Kurds
have served since Saddam's fall as Iraq's figurehead president and as
foreign minister, and Kurdish political parties have acted as kingmakers
in Baghdad, helping to give the Shi'ite-led government an appearance of
inclusivity.
But disputes remained unresolved over the authority
to issue oil exploration rights, and over the territorial boundaries of
the autonomous region - demarcated between government troops and Kurdish
forces by an often tense "green line".
Kurds argued that much of
the disputed territory, including Kirkuk itself, had been illegally
"Arabised" in ethnic cleansing campaigns by Saddam, who pushed out Kurds
and settled Arabs, to ensure control over the land and the oil beneath
it. Now, the government troops are gone, and the Kurdish forces, known
as peshmerga, or "those who confront death", have effectively resolved
the main disputes in the Kurds' favour.
"All these areas are going
to be incorporated into the region," said Jabbar Yawar, Secretary
General of the Kurdish Ministry of Peshmerga. "Currently our border is
with ISIL, it is not with the Iraqi government".
NOTHING TO OFFER
The priority for now, Kurdish officials say, is to insulate the region from the violent fallout in the rest ofIraq.
Officials
in Kurdistan say they anticipated this week's assault by ISIL fighters
as long as a year ago, and warned Baghdad to no avail.
They built
up their own defenses by creating a security belt stretching more than
1,000 km (600 miles) from the Iranian border all the way to Syria -
skirting around Mosul, a city of 2 million people they appear to have no
intention of fighting for.
The Kurds "don't particularly care
about Mosul," said a former U.S. official in Iraq. "They are going to
expand further below the green line, and a lot of it is going to be
oil-related territory."
In the days after Mosul fell, some in
Baghdad suggested the peshmerga could come to the Iraqi government's aid
and retake the city, an hour's drive from Arbil, on Baghdad's behalf.
The
Kurds say they received no formal request for help from in Baghdad. But
even if Baghdad were to ask, it no longer has much to offer the Kurds
in return for the favour, since the Kurds have already taken prizes like
Kirkuk for themselves.
KURD-ARAB WAR?
Emma Sky, a former
political advisor to the U.S. military in Iraq, said some of Iraq's
Kurdish leaders may have been waiting all along for the governing system
in Baghdad to fall apart, helping to keep Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki
in power while betting that Iraq would crumble around him.
"On
the Kurd side, some leaders calculated that Kurdish independence would
come out of the collapse of Iraq - and that Maliki was the person most
likely to destroy Iraq. For them, independence is so close," she said.
However,
that also creates a risk that the Kurds could find themselves at war
with ISIL - dragging them into the sort of violence they have so far
avoided for more than a decade.
The disputed areas, including
Kirkuk itself, are still home to many Sunni Arabs. Some may accept
Kurdish rule if it brings piece, but some may look to ISIL for support
that the Iraqi army failed to give.
"The risk, of course, is that
ISIL presents itself as the defender of the Sunnis in the (disputed
areas) - and starts a fight with Kurds, marking the start of Arab-Kurd
war," said Sky.
But for Kurdish officials, the risk of a new conflict with the insurgents was clearly worth taking.
"Everyone
is worried, but this is a big chance for us," said a source in the
Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) on condition of anonymity. "ISIL
gave us in two weeks what Maliki has not given us in eight years."
Saturday, June 14, 2014
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment