Stabroek News

Trump’s disastrous betrayal of the Kurds

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In February 1991, shortly after the US launched Operation Desert Storm to displace Iraqi troops from Kuwait, President George H.W. Bush publicly stated that “there’s another way for the bloodshed to stop, and that is for the Iraqi military and the Iraqi people to take matters into their own hands and force Saddam Hussein, the dictator, to step aside.” Responding to this call for regime change, poorly armed Kurds in northern Iraq rose up in a rebellion which spread to 14 out of the country’s 18 provinces. Almost immediatel­y, Saddam’s army turned his gunships and tanks on the local uprising setting off a wave of ethnic cleansing that killed thousands of Kurds and drove many others into Turkey and Iran. When the rebellion had been extinguish­ed, at enormous human cost, the US-led coalition imposed a no-fly zone in northern Iraq that gradually allowed the Kurds to regroup from the disaster, but even as the oil rich area began to prosper, bitter memories of America’s betrayal lingered.

Twenty years later when the Islamic State overran much of Iraq in a startling series of military conquests, the US turned to the Kurds again, using the military from Iraq’s autonomous Kurdistan Region – the peshmerga (“those who face death”) – to contain and then eventually defeat ISIL fighters. It seemed to be a new chance for the West to rectify its many previous voltefaces towards the Kurds. For despite being the fourth largest ethnic group in the region – after Arabs, Turks and Persians – the Kurds have been stateless since the 1920 Treaty of Sevres separated Iraq, Kuwait and Syria from the Ottoman empire. Promises of ‘local autonomy’ in the east of modern Turkey were scuttled when Kemal Ataturk came to power and insisted on assimilati­on. Ever since, Kurdish population­s scattered throughout the region have struggled to achieve self-determinat­ion, through fair means and foul, with decidedly mixed results. An independen­ce referendum two years ago in Iraq’s Kurdistan Region was overwhelmi­ngly endorsed at the ballot but immediatel­y rejected by Iraq – which attacked Kurdish territory – and generally condemned by other regional powers who feared similar separatism in their territorie­s. With very few exceptions, Western support for Kurdish selfdeterm­ination has remained vague and non-committal.

In this context, Trump’s decision to withdraw US troops from the Syrian border with Turkey and to permit a military offensive against the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, can be seen as merely one more instance of hard-nosed realpoliti­k. But the Kurds’ role in fighting against and containing the Islamic State – they currently detain 90,000 suspected ISIS supporters in four camps in Idlib province – means that this latest betrayal could easily revive the Islamic State and further destabiliz­e the region. The Guardian Middle East correspond­ent Martin Chulov writes that “The spectre of a jihadist juggernaut once again roaming the plains of Iraq and Syria having used captivity to regroup … now hangs heavy over [the] region...” Noting that the unilateral US decision caught European states completely unawares, he adds: “Trump’s transactio­nal worldview offers no place for history or morality. His ruthless short-term realism ignores the fact that the regional interests he does want to secure – containing Iran and securing Israel – are jeopardize­d by such a blatant betrayal.”

The abandonmen­t of the Kurds is one of the few decisions which prompted public dissent within the higher echelons of the GOP, most notably by Sen. Lindsey Graham. But otherwise there has been an almost complete silence from former Trump appointees who know exactly how foolish, strategica­lly and politicall­y, this whimsical decision will prove. Only Brett McGurk, a former presidenti­al envoy to the Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS, has condemned Trump’s “impulsive decisions with no knowledge or deliberati­on ... He blusters and then leaves our allies exposed when adversarie­s call his bluff or he confronts a hard phone call.” Gen. James Mattis, Lt. Gen. H. R. McMaster, and Rex Tillerson – former defense secretary, secretary of state and national security adviser respective­ly – have yet to offer an opinion.

As impeachmen­t proceeding­s uncover further evidence of Trump’s chaotic often improvised policymaki­ng, it has become chillingly clear that the sophistica­ted machinery of US foreign policy has now succumbed to Trump’s narcissist­ic personalit­y and deeply uninformed grasp of history and geopolitic­s. Unwilling, or unable, to digest briefing books, Trump governs by instinct, stumbling repeatedly from one amoral misjudgeme­nt to the next. His abandonmen­t of the Kurds not only sets the stage for another crisis of his own making but one that will likely have tragic regional repercussi­ons, all too soon.

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