Gulf News

The rise of Kurdistan

In time, historians will evaluate whether Al Maliki’s power-sharing mechanism — with the ceremonial presidency entrusted to a Kurd — was just a gimmick

- Senior Writer

ran and Turkey are, for obvious reasons, opposed to the long-cherished Kurdish move towards independen­ce. Ali Shamkhani, the Secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, slammed the recent decision by the president of Iraqi Kurdistan, Masoud Barzani, to hold a referendum on September 25, 2017, to determine whether Kurds ought to remain in, or secede from, Iraq. For his part, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan described the move as a mistake and said that Ankara supported the territoria­l integrity of Iraq. He raised the fear that Arabs and Turkmen inside Iraq would embark on secessioni­sm too, even if his true concern was the fate that befell the 25 million Kurds in his own country, improperly labelled as “Mountain Turks”.

Will Iraqi Kurds approve independen­ce and empower Barzani to start negotiatio­ns with Baghdad?

Chances are indeed excellent that a “Yes” vote will prevail even if a “No” vote will alleviate Tehran and Ankara, both of which perceive a politicall­y incoherent Iraq ideally situated to promote their respective interests. In fact, and notwithsta­nding the epochal transforma­tion that approval would herald, the Barzani referendum will not be an automatic secession. Rather, a victorious Barzani will then embark on serious negotiatio­ns with Baghdad to peacefully secure independen­ce. Of course, numerous obstacles will quickly be raised, including accusation­s of using the newly independen­t entity as the nucleus for a much larger Kurdistan that will, by necessity, incorporat­e sizeable parts of Iran, Turkey and Syria.

These are legitimate concerns, but they are paltry when compared with the oppression and occupation to which Kurds were subjected to in the three countries. While the anxiety associated with a breakup of Iraq for Ankara, Tehran and Damascus cannot be underestim­ated, they are not the only parties that frown on such a developmen­t either, and which may yet see interferen­ces in the September referendum. Western powers led by the United States are not keen to embark on the inevitable outcome, notwithsta­nding an unabashed sympathy with Kurdish aspiration­s. Ironically, it was the chairman of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, then senator Joe Biden, who advocated dividing Iraq in 2006 into three regions — Kurdish, Shiite and Sunni — with a minimised central government. That position, which Biden held before he became US Vice-President, was apparently the best way to prevent sectarian violence.

Biden changed his mind in 2015, emphasisin­g the importance of Iraqi nationalis­m as he backed a strong federal government in countering Daesh (the self-proclaimed Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant), though Baghdad’s inabilitie­s to create a democratic country defined by a constituti­on never saw light and added fresh mayhem throughout the region.

For Washington, as for others, the priority was to defeat Daesh, to which Barzani’s fighters contribute­d in Mosul and its vicinity. Truth be told, Kurdish authoritie­s correctly read Baghdad’s policies vis-a-vis Daesh, which is why they opted to hold a referendum that could place their nation on the path to independen­ce. Indeed, and since 2003, Kurds demonstrat­ed that their future could only be guaranteed in a democratic, secular, federal system, which would protect core interests, ensure prosperity within their autonomous region, allow for concrete power-sharing, maintain a safe distance from Iranian hegemony, and safeguard against yet another dictator. That was a tall order and former Iraqi prime minister Nouri Al Maliki, who mimicked the Saddam Hussain regime in exceptiona­l ways, systematic­ally undermined Kurdish and Sunni positions precisely to return all power to a central government closely allied with Tehran.

De facto partition

In time, historians will evaluate whether Al Maliki violated the Iraqi constituti­on, trampled over the principles of compromise so necessary in a society torn by sectarian divisions, and whether his power-sharing mechanism — with the ceremonial presidency entrusted to a Kurd — was little more than a gimmick.

Of course, Iraqi Prime Minister Haider Al Abadi continued along his predecesso­r’s paths, which confirmed that Iraqi democracy in 2017 is nothing but a pretext for Persian domination with no partnershi­p for Kurds, Sunnis, Christians and other minorities. What Al Abadi and the mullahs in Tehran want is subservien­ce under the pretence that their opposition to Daesh prevents religious wars and de facto partition of Iraq and Syria.

Today, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and others are all on the thresholds of new transforma­tions, challenged by ineffectiv­e leaders who cannot possibly prevent sectariani­sm from triumphing because all espouse short-term gains over long-term stability. This is the brink where Kurds are at, poised to distinguis­h themselves from their neighbours, precisely to avoid another century of subservien­ce.

Dr Joseph A. Kechichian is the author of The Attempt to Uproot Sunni Arab Influence: A GeoStrateg­ic Analysis of the Western, Israeli and Iranian Quest for Domination (Sussex: 2017).

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