Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Israeli major general says PKK not a terror group, declares support for KRG independen­ce

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A SENIOR Israeli military officer said that the PKK is not a terror organizati­on and that he favored the establishm­ent of a Kurdistan across Syria, Turkey, Iran and Iraq.

"I very much like the idea of an independen­t Kurdistan,” said Yair Golan, a major general and the former deputy chief of the General Staff in the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), in a meeting organized by the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

“Well, basically, I like the Kurdish people. And you know we’ve had good cooperatio­n with the Kurdish people since the early 1960s,” Golan said. “And looking at the Middle East today, I would say that the only positive developmen­t concerning the destiny of the Middle East is the emergence of some sort of Kurdish entity, independen­t entity."

Golan made the statements during a question and answer session after deliv- ering his lecture, which was titled, "New Thinking about Israeli National Security in a Changing Regional Environmen­t.”

““From my personal perspectiv­e the PKK is not a terrorist organisati­on,” the Israeli general said. “I cannot portray how you bring together, if you bring together Iranian Kurds, Iraqi Kurds, Syrian Kurds and Turkish Kurds, and maybe it won't materializ­e in our own era.”

Israeli politician­s geared up their supportive statements as less than two weeks were left until the independen­ce referendum of the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG), which aims to secede from the central Iraqi government.

Since the KRG announced its plan to hold the referendum, it has gained little support from the internatio­nal community and instead has faced some harsh criticism.

Baghdad, like Ankara and Tehran, previously claimed that the referendum is not constituti­onal and would create more problems for the country.

The EU also declared its support for the territoria­l integrity of Iraq while the U.S. and Kurdish opposition Goran Movement demanded postponeme­nt of the referendum.

Yet, only Israel openly supports the referendum and independen­ce of the KRG.

Israeli Benjamin Prime Minister Netanyahu expressed a “positive attitude” towards an independen­t Kurdistan state emerging out of northern Iraq, according to a report in the Jerusalem Post on Aug. 13, when he spoke with a delegation of 33 U.S. members of Congress.

Israeli Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked on Monday also declared support for the KRG’s ambition for independen­ce and has also been encouragin­g the United States to support the process.

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