Ottawa Citizen

Troops in Iraq will keep Kurdish flag on uniform

UNIT COHESION

- LEE BERTHIAUME

Canada’s top soldier has decided special forces troops in Iraq will continue to wear the Kurdish flag on their uniforms in addition to the Maple Leaf, despite questions about the practice.

National Defence says Gen. Jonathan Vance recently approved the flag patches in part to show solidarity with “a region facing existentia­l threats,” but that they should not be construed as support for an independen­t Iraqi Kurdistan.

That may be wishful thinking, say experts, one of whom compared it to a foreign military force wearing the Quebec flag in Canada.

The Kurds’ distinctiv­e red, white and green flag with a sun emblem has been on the Canadian soldiers’ uniforms since they arrived in northern Iraq to help the Kurdish peshmerga fight ISIL in 2014. The practice wasn’t publicly known until Vance led a group of Canadian journalist­s on a tour of the mission in April. At the time, Canada had several dozen special forces operatives in the region, though the Trudeau government is expanding the contingent to 200.

The military initially defended the flag patches, which are on one shoulder with the Canadian flag on the other. Officials said they were used for cohesion with Kurdish and allied forces, and to ensure Canadian forces could be easily identified by friends on the battlefiel­d.

Nonetheles­s, a review was ordered after experts warned that sporting the Kurdish flag, rather than the Iraqi flag, could be interprete­d by both Iraqis and Kurds as support for an independen­t Kurdistan.

National Defence spokesman Daniel Le Bouthillie­r said Friday the review was recently completed and Vance had decided to keep the Kurdish flag patches.

The flag “acts as an identifica­tion patch with our partner force, demonstrat­es solidarity with a region facing existentia­l threats for which we are there to help, and is in keeping with previous methods used by Canada and allies when working with partner forces,” Le Bouthillie­r said in an email.

“The flag is in no way a symbol of Canadian support for political disunity in Iraq,” he added.

But two experts say whether the military likes it or not, wearing the Kurdish flag is highly symbolic inside Iraq, with its ethnic and religious divides.

“It’s the optics of it on the larger political dimensions,” said Denise Natali, an expert on Kurdish politics at the Institute for National Strategic Studies in Washington. “Every time these types of things are done that support sub-state groups, it is actually underminin­g the idea that they need cohesion and unity.”

Bessma Momani, a Middle East expert at the University of Waterloo, put it another way. “Would we be comfortabl­e with other forces putting on a Quebec flag?” she asked. “This sends mixed signals to our political partners.”

 ?? FACEBOOK ?? The Kurdish flag has been on Canadian uniforms since troops arrived in northern Iraq in 2014.
FACEBOOK The Kurdish flag has been on Canadian uniforms since troops arrived in northern Iraq in 2014.

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