Turkey and Iran's military offensive is about scuttling the
Kurdish dream of an independent state
By Mohammad Akef Jamal
Both Turkey and Iran are against the Kurdish project which proved to be successful in Iraq, where the Kurds set up their regional and federal entity inside the country.(AFP)
Border
areas in Iraqi Kurdistan are being shelled almost daily. Turkish and Iranian
forces also carry out other land and air offensives, as though Iraq were a
country without sovereignty. As a result of these military operations, many
villages adjacent to the Iranian and Turkish borders have been destroyed and
their inhabitants forced to flee, leaving everything behind.
Turkey
sees its national security as being supreme even if that means trespassing into
its neighbour's territory. The same applies to Iran. But how about Iraq, a
brutalised country?
For
a moment, let us overlook the political targets behind the ongoing military
operations in the Iranian-Turkish-Iraqi border triangle. Let us talk about the
hardship faced by the people living in the Iraqi villages in the area.
Let
us — for a moment — turn a deaf ear to official claims of these three political
entities on the assumption that they are biased, although Iraq is almost mute
regarding this military action. Let us try to seek a neutral party concerned with
the human rights of people.
In
this context, on September 2, Human Rights Watch described the situation in
this border triangle, based on evidence and reports it received: "The
evidence suggests that Turkey and Iran are not doing what they need to do to
make sure their attacks have a minimum impact on civilians, and in the case of
Iran, it is at least quite possibly deliberately targeting civilians."
Innocent
Kurds living in border areas have suffered for years as a result of the
shelling and military action. These people are not responsible for some Turkish
and Iranian Kurds crossing international borders and using mountainous
locations in Iraq as a base to carry out insurgency operations against their
countries of origin.
The
blame must lie with Iraqi officials — whether in the province of Kurdistan or
the central government in Baghdad — for failing in their duty to guard the
country's borders.
The
suffering of these people has doubled because the Iraqi authorities have always
turned a blind eye to these military actions. This has also infuriated the
Iraqi people and civil society organisations in the border governorates.
They
have carried out protest marches and gained a lot of sympathy in the rest of
Iraq. This embarrassed the Iraqi government and forced it to come out with a
timid condemnation of the military operations on Iraqi soil.
However,
there is a more important issue than just their own Kurdish separatists for
Turkey and Iran to attack Iraqi Kurdistan. The target is the Iraqi province
itself, and the Kurdish dream of an independent state.
Both
Turkey and Iran are against the Kurdish project which proved to be successful
in Iraq, where the Kurds set up their regional and federal entity inside the
country. The success of the Iraqi Kurdish model has become an inspiration to
the Kurds in other countries in the region. Kurds in Turkey and Iraq make up
the second-largest ethnic group, while they are the third-largest ethnic group
in Iran.
After
the downfall of the Ottoman empire and the redrawing of the region's map, the
Kurdish question became one of the time bombs that could easily explode,
threatening the stability of many countries.
The
Kurds lost the chance of gaining their own country after the war due to the
interests of the western powers. The four countries with a significant Kurdish
population (Iraq, Turkey, Syria, and Iran) are opposed to any independent
Kurdish state.
Over
the past decades, the nationalistic ideology of the biggest ethnic group
dominated policies in these countries, thus marginalising other ethnic groups
along with their rights.
And
although the refusal of all that is Kurdish was the common denominator in these
countries, Iraqi Kurds were more daring in their opposition to the status quo,
and they took part in armed struggle initiated by Mahmoud Al Hafeed before the
establishment of modern Iraq.
The
political situation in Iraq makes the Kurdish province closer to being an
independent state than a federal entity. Iraqi Kurdistan has a separate
constitution, budget, cabinet, judiciary, and executive authorities. It also
has its own armed forces on the border.
Iraqi
Kurds were successful in setting up political relationships with strong allies
such as the US. They have also grown in strength and are a force to reckon
with.
Countries
that are worried about Kurdish ambitions in their territories regard Iraqi
Kurds with suspicion and consider them responsible for the activities of
Kurdish nationalist organisations at home.
The
dual Turkish-Iranian shelling and military offensive in Iraqi Kurdistan gives
the impression that there is an undeclared agreement between the two countries
to deal with the Kurdish problem which is seen as a major threat to their
national security, despite the fact that both Turkey and Iran represent two
very different political trends in the region.
-This commentary was published in The GULF NEWS on 14/09/2011
-Dr Mohammad Akef Jamal is an Iraqi writer based in Dubai
-Dr Mohammad Akef Jamal is an Iraqi writer based in Dubai
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