Arab News

Israel endorses independen­t Kurdish state

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JERUSALEM: Israel supports the establishm­ent of a Kurdish state, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Wednesday, as Kurds in Iraq gear up for a referendum on independen­ce that lawmakers in Baghdad oppose.

Israel has maintained discreet military, intelligen­ce and business ties with the Kurds since the 1960s, viewing the minority ethnic group — whose indigenous population is split between Iraq, Turkey, Syria and Iran — as a buffer against shared Arab adversarie­s.

On Tuesday, Iraq’s Kurdish leader Massoud Barzani said he would press ahead with the Sept. 25 referendum despite a vote by Iraq’s Parliament rejecting it.

“(Israel) supports the legitimate efforts of the Kurdish people to achieve their own state,” Netanyahu said, in remarks sent to foreign correspond­ents by his office. Western powers are concerned a plebiscite in Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdish region — including the oil-rich city of Kirkuk — could divert attention from the war against Daesh militants.

Netanyahu said Israel does however consider the Turkey-based Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) a terrorist group, taking the same position as Turkey, the US and the EU.

An Israeli general told a conference in Washington last week that he personally did not regard the PKK, whose militants have been fighting Turkey for more than three decades, as a terrorist group.

Netanyahu, who is due to address the UN General Assembly on Sept. 19, voiced support for “the Kurds’ aspiration­s for independen­ce” in a speech in 2014, saying they deserve “political independen­ce.”

His latest remarks appeared to be a more direct endorsemen­t of the creation of a Kurdish state.

But they will cut little ice in Baghdad, which has no diplomatic relations with Israel and has strong ties with Israel’s arch-foe Iran.

Iraq’s neighbors — Turkey, Iran and Syria — oppose the referendum, fearing it could fan separatism among their own ethnic Kurdish population­s. Kurds have sought an independen­t state since at least the end of World War I, when colonial powers divided up the Middle East after the collapse of the multi-ethnic Ottoman Empire.

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