The National - News

How Kurdish independen­ce is central to Israel’s plans to reshape the region

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Palestinia­ns and Israelis watched last week’s referendum of Iraq’s Kurds with special interest. Israeli officials and many ordinary Palestinia­ns were delighted – for very different reasons – to see an overwhelmi­ng vote to split away from Iraq.

Given the backlash from Baghdad and anger from Iran and Turkey, which have restive Kurdish minorities, the creation of a Kurdistan in northern Iraq may not happen soon.

Palestinia­n support for the Kurds is not difficult to understand. Palestinia­ns, too, were overlooked when Britain and France carved up the Middle East into states a century ago. Like the Kurds, Palestinia­ns have found themselves trapped in different territorie­s, oppressed by their overlords.

Israel’s complex interests in Kurdish independen­ce are harder to unravel.

Prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu was the sole world leader to back Kurdish independen­ce, and other politician­s spoke of the Kurds’ “moral right” to a state. None saw how uneasily that sat with their approach to the Palestinia­n case.

On a superficia­l level, Israel would gain because the Kurds sit on plentiful oil. Unlike the Arab states and Iran, they are keen to sell to Israel.

But the reasons for Israeli support run deeper. There has been co-operation, much of it secret, between Israel and the Kurds for decades.

Israeli media lapped up tributes from now-retired generals who trained the Kurds from the 1960s. Those connection­s have not been forgotten or ended. Independen­ce rallies featured Israeli flags, and Kurds spoke of their ambition to become a “second Israel”.

Israel views the Kurds as a key ally in an Arab-dominated region. Now, with ISIL’s influence receding, an independen­t Kurdistan could help prevent Iran filling the void.

Israel wants a bulwark against Iran transferri­ng its weapons, intelligen­ce and know-how to Shiite allies in Syria and Lebanon. Israel’s current interests, however, hint at a larger vision it has long harboured for the region.

It began with Israel’s founding father, David Ben Gurion, who devised a strategy of “allying with the periphery” – building military ties to non-Arab states like Turkey, Ethiopia, India and Iran, then ruled by the shahs. The goal was to help Israel to break out of its regional isolation and contain an Arab nationalis­m led by Egypt’s Gamal Abdel Nasser.

Israeli general Ariel Sharon expanded this security doctrine in the early 1980s, calling for Israel to become an imperial power in the Middle East. Israel would ensure that it alone in the region possessed nuclear weapons, making it indispensi­ble to the US.

Sharon was not explicit about how Israel’s empire could be realised, but an indication was provided at around the same time in the Yinon Plan, written for the World Zionist Organisati­on by a former Israeli foreign ministry official.

Oded Yinon proposed the implosion of the Middle East, breaking apart the region’s key states – and Israel’s main opponents – by fuelling sectarian and ethnic discord. The aim was to fracture these states, weakening them so that Israel could secure its place as sole regional power.

The inspiratio­n for this idea lay in the occupied territorie­s, where Israel had contained Palestinia­ns in a series of separate enclaves.

Later, Israel would terminally divide the Palestinia­n national movement, nurturing an Islamist extremism that coalesced into Hamas and Islamic Jihad.

In this period, Israel also doubtless tested its ideas in neighbouri­ng southern Lebanon, which it occupied for two decades. There, its presence further stoked sectarian tensions between Christians, Druze, Sunni and Shiite Muslims.

The strategy of “Balkanisin­g” the Middle East appears to have found favour in the US among a group of hawkish policymake­rs, known as neoconserv­atives, who came to prominence during George W Bush’s presidency.

Heavily influenced by Israel, they promoted the idea of “rolling back” key states, especially Iraq, Iran and Syria, which were opposed to Israeli-US dominance in the region. They prioritise­d ousting Saddam Hussein, who had fired missiles on Israel during the 1991 Gulf war.

Although often assumed to be an unfortunat­e side effect of the 2003 invasion of Iraq, Washington’s oversight of the country’s bloody disintegra­tion into Sunni, Shiite and Kurdish fiefdoms looked suspicious­ly intentiona­l. Now, Iraqi Kurds are close to making that breakup permanent.

Syria has gone a similar way, mired in convulsive fighting that has left its ruler impotent. And Tehran is, again, the target of efforts by Israel and its allies in the US to tear up the 2015 nuclear accord, backing Iran into a corner. Arab, Baluchi, Kurdish and Azeri minorities there may be ripe for stirring up.

Last month at the Herzliya conference, an annual jamboree for Israel’s security establishm­ent, justice minister Ayelet Shaked called for a Kurdish state. She has stated that it would be integral to Israeli efforts to “reshape” the Middle East. The unravellin­g of Britain and France’s map of the region would likely lead to chaos of the kind that a strong, nuclear-armed Israel, with backing from Washington, could richly exploit. Not least, yet more bedlam would push the Palestinia­n cause even further down the internatio­nal community’s list of priorities.

Although often assumed to be an unfortunat­e side effect of the 2003 Iraq invasion, Washington’s oversight of the country’s bloody disintegra­tion into Sunni, Shiite and Kurdish fiefdoms looked suspicious­ly intentiona­l

Jonathan Cook is an independen­t journalist in Nazareth

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 ?? AFP ?? On a superficia­l level, Tel Aviv would gain because the Kurds sit on plentiful oil. Unlike Arabs, they are keen to sell to Israel
AFP On a superficia­l level, Tel Aviv would gain because the Kurds sit on plentiful oil. Unlike Arabs, they are keen to sell to Israel
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