Edmonton Journal

Kurds seek ‘upgrade’ in ties with Canada

- Lee Berthiaume

• Canada is being asked to upgrade its diplomatic footprint in northern Iraq, as the Kurdish government presses for closer economic and political ties to accompany this country’s sizable military presence.

The request comes as the Liberal government beefs up the number of Canadian diplomats deployed in Iraq, Jordan and Lebanon, including the appointmen­t of a fulltime ambassador to Baghdad.

The government says no decision has been made on increasing Canada’s contacts with the Kurds, but analysts are urging caution given their stated desire for independen­ce.

Canada has had a trade office in the capital of Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdistan region, Erbil, since 2013, but the Kurds’ top diplomat says his government wants to see it upgraded to a consulate general.

“We would very much like to upgrade that into a full-fledged consul general so that it will be able to have political consultati­ons, economic co-operation, cultural aspects,” Falah Mustafa, head of the Kurdistan Regional Government’s foreign relations office, said during a recent interview in Erbil.

“We believe that there is a lot we can benefit from Canada and a lot we can work together.”

The Canadian ambassador to Jordan has been responsibl­e for overseeing Canada’s diplomatic activities in Iraq since the First Gulf War, assisted by a lower-level charge d’affaires based in Baghdad.

This is despite the fact Canada has had hundreds of troops and spent millions of dollars in foreign aid in Iraq since the summer of 2014 when the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant first emerged as a threat.

Much of that effort has focused on the Kurds, who are hosting millions of refugees in camps throughout their territory and whose peshmerga fighters are on the front lines against ISIL.

A spokesman for Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland said Canada is committed to Iraq’s peace, stability and developmen­t, including through its trade office in Erbil.

“No decisions have been made,” Alex Lawrence said about upgrading the Erbil office, “but as evidenced in recent years, we have progressiv­ely expanded our diplomatic presence in Iraq.”

Thomas Juneau, an expert on Middle Eastern politics at the University of Ottawa, said the government’s decision to appoint a full-time ambassador to Iraq “is years too late.”

“Especially since we had started the mission against the Islamic State in 2014,” he said, “not having a permanent ambassador in Iraq was a big weakness for our ability to co-ordinate the mission and liaise with Iraqi authoritie­s.”

But he and others worry that upgrading Canada’s diplomatic representa­tion in Erbil, while beneficial in the short-term, could have longterm implicatio­ns on Iraq’s stability and unity.

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