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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Report warns of civil war spreading to Kurdish north of Iraq
By Peter Symonds
5 May 2007
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A detailed report published last month by the Brussels-based
think tank, the International Crisis Group (ICG), pointed out
that ethnic tensions brewing in the northern Iraqi city of Kirkuk
could rapidly become politically explosive. If Kurdish leaders
overrode the objections of other communities and pressed ahead
with a referendum this year on the towns status, the ICG
warned, the civil war [in Iraq] is very likely to spread
to Kirkuk and the Kurdish region, until now Iraqs only area
of quiet and progress.
The two major Kurdish nationalist partiesthe Kurdish
Democratic Party (KDP) and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK)fully
backed the illegal US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003 as the means
of guaranteeing their control over the Kurdish north of the country.
The PUK and KDP dominate the current Kurdistan Regional Government
(KRG), which rules over a quasi-independent state with its own
flag, constitution, militia and economic ties to international
investors.
The Kurdish parties insisted on a virtual veto over the constitution
drawn up under American supervision so as to maintain and extend
the KRGs powers. In particular, the PUK and KDP claimed
ethnically mixed Kirkuk as the capital of the Kurdish region and
demanded its inclusion along with its substantial oil reserves.
In the face of concerted opposition by Arab and Turkoman parties,
a compromise clause was inserted providing for a referendum on
the status of the city by the end of 2007. Prior to any vote,
Kurdish leaders insisted on a process of normalisationto
reverse the attempts under Saddam Hussein to alter the citys
ethnic mix by driving out Kurds and encouraging the settlement
of Arabs known locally as Wafidin or newcomers.
The push to include Kirkuk in the Kurdish region has not only
inflamed ethnic tensions in the city and surrounding districts,
but threatens to draw in Iraqs neighbours. Turkey in particular
fears that a Kurdish takeover of Kirkuk and its oil reserves would
lay the basis for an independent Kurdish state in northern Iraq,
which would fuel separatist sentiment among Turkeys substantial
Kurdish minority. The Turkish military has recently threatened
to intervene unilaterally against the bases of the Kurdistan Workers
Party (PKK) inside Iraq. While the US has warned against military
action, the armys strident nationalist stance is being fuelled
by the current political crisis in Ankara surrounding the presidential
elections.
Inside Kirkuk, ethnic rivalry has spilled over into clashes
between Kurdish army and police units responsible for security,
and various Shiite and Sunni militia, included Islamic extremists.
As the ICG reports explains, Kirkuk is increasingly resembling
Baghdad, with segregated communities of Arabs, Kurds, Turkomans
and Chaldo-Assyrians and escalating violence, including indiscriminate
car bombings that have claimed scores of victims.
Violence at first predominated downtown, where communities
commingled, as well as areas inhabited by Wafidin. But
in February 2007 it moved to the heart of Kurdish neighbourhoods
as if to show that the Kurdish parties control over Kirkuks
security apparatus did not guarantee safety for the Kurdish civilian
population, the report stated. As the deadline for the referendum
draws nearer, the crisis is certain to intensify.
Every step in the referendum process is bitterly disputed.
Arab and Turkoman leaders accuse Kurdish parties of settling non-Iraqi
Kurds in Kirkuk and driving out Arabs to stack the vote in their
favour. Kurdish officials brand opponents of the referendum as
unreconstructed supporters of the Hussein regime who, in league
with Syrian and Turkish intelligence, are responsible for violent
attacks in Kirkuk.
Some of the Wafidin have accepted offers of land and
compensation to leave Kirkuk, but others insist on remaining,
saying that as Iraqi citizens they should have the right to live
anywhere. The rules governing the normalisation process
also provide land and compensation for returning Kurds and annul
land grants made under Hussein to Arab settlers. These guidelines,
which were ratified in March, not only heightened ethnic resentments
in Kirkuk, but provoked divisions in the federal government in
Baghdad, where the ruling Shiite parties identify with the Wafidin,
many of whom were Shiites uprooted from southern Iraq.
No agreement has been reached on any aspect of the census or
referendum, including such vital issues as who will be permitted
to vote, who will oversee the poll and which areas will be covered
by the outcome. If the referendum goes ahead, Arab and Turkoman
leaders have threatened to organise a boycott and to resist with
force if need be. If the poll does not proceed, some Kurdish leaders
have threatened to precipitate a major political crisis in Baghdad
by pulling out of the Iraqi government. Others have hinted at
a unilateral takeover of Kirkuk and the expulsion of their Arab
and Turkoman opponents.
Washingtons role
The ICG report warns of the dangers of civil war, calls on
Kurdish leaders to cancel or at least postpone any referendum
on Kirkuk and appeals to the US to end its studied bystander
mode and develop a proactive strategy to defuse
the conflict. However, like the current sectarian violence perpetrated
by Shiite and Sunni militias, the ethnic tension erupting over
Kirkuk is a crisis of Washingtons making.
In the wake of the 1990-91 Gulf War, the US unilaterally imposed
a no-fly zone over northern Iraq, effectively barring the Hussein
regime from reasserting its control over the Kurdish regions.
In the name of defending the Kurds, Washington transformed
the zone into an autonomous Kurdish state presided over by KDP
and PUK, which were bitter rivals throughout the 1990s. The region
became a base of operations for the CIA and other intelligence
agencies and a hotbed of intrigue as each of the Kurdish parties
sought the support of the major and regional powers.
Following the 2003 military invasion, the Bush administration
relied heavily on the Kurdish parties to form a reliable puppet
government in Baghdad and in return gave full backing for an autonomous
Kurdish region in the north. With the prospect of greater power
and privilege, the KDP and PUK buried their differences and exploited
the opportunity to the hilt.
Offering a peaceful and stable north policed by their peshmerga
militia, the Kurdish leaders set out to attract foreign investment
to their region. At the same time, the KDP and PUK reaped the
benefits of an expedient alliance with Shiite fundamentalist parties
to secure a number of key posts in the federal government in Baghdadincluding
foreign minister and president.
A lengthy Washington Post article last month provided
details of Kurdish lobbying in the US to advertise Kurdistan
as a stable business gateway to Iraq and to ensure continued American
backing for Kurdish autonomy. The KPG maintains its own diplomatic
office in Washington headed by Qubad Talibani, son of the Iraqi
president, and spends millions on television advertisements and
political lobbyists and consultants. In February, US undersecretary
of commerce for international trade, Franklin Lavin, travelled
to the Kurdish city of Irbil to encourage American companies to
think about particular locales that might be fruitful environments
for starting a business.
Superficially, Kurdistan is a booming success. As described
in an article in Time last month: The plains around
Irbilonce a glaring semi-desert wastelandare exploding
with luxury housing developments. They have names like British
village, which resembles a gated California suburb, and Dream
City, which supposedly will have its own conference centre, supermarket
and American style school.... An American company wants to build
Iraqs first ski resort in the mountains near the Turkish
and Iranian borders. While citizens in Baghdad struggle to survive,
a sign in Irbil declares that the city is striving for perfection.
The emergence of a small wealthy Kurdish elite has only emphasised
the social divide between rich and poor. The bulk of Irbils
residents are struggling to cope with rising inflation and the
lack of basic services. Rural towns and villages are still mired
in backwardness and poverty. Ethnic divisions are compounding
social tensions as 150,000 Iraqi Arabs have come to the Kurdish
north looking for jobs and relative security. Iraqi Arabs seeking
to enter the Kurdish region are compelled to have a Kurdish resident
vouch for their character.
All of this has only engendered hostility among broad layers
of Iraqis who regard the Kurdish leaders as flunkeys of the US
occupation. According to US journalist Seymour Hersh among others,
the US military, the CIA and Israels spy agency Mossad,
have continued to use the Kurdish north as base of operationsin
particular for infiltrating spies and provocateurs into neighbouring
Iran. The recent deployment of Kurdish army units to assist the
US surge in Baghdad has only exacerbated the enmity.
Kurdish leaders are well aware that they require US backing
to maintain their privileged position and to extend their writ
to Kirkuk and other disputed districts in northern Iraq. Their
opposition to any delay in the Kirkuk referendum is conditioned
by concerns that a new US administration may not be as sympathetic.
I trust Bush, the president of the Kurdistan National
Assembly told the ICG. But who is going to be there in two
years? US policy is going to change, and then the best friend
we will have is ourselves. The Kurdish parties bitterly
opposed the US Iraq Study Group report, issued in December, which
urged the referendum be delayed.
Having backed the Kurdish nationalists and supported the establishment
of the Kurdish region, the Bush administration is clearly reluctant
to alienate its closest political allies in Iraq. The inevitable
resultmore likely sooner rather than laterwill be
a rapid escalation of ethnic conflict in Kirkuk and across the
Kurdish north.
See Also:
Iraq's "stable" south descends
into political chaos
[4 May 2007]
Mounting social crisis
in Kurdish Iraq
[14 October 2006]
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