San Francisco Chronicle

Fight for Mosul already redraws ethnic frontiers

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QARQASHAH, Iraq — In the buildup to a long-awaited offensive on the city of Mosul, Kurdish forces are seizing new territory in northern Iraq that they say will become part of their autonomous region. The moves are further straining relations between the Kurds and the Baghdad government and Shiite militias, all ostensibly allies in the fight against the Islamic State group.

Just east of Mosul, Kurdish engineerin­g teams on a recent day were laying down a 3-yard wide, 12-mile long trench, marking the new front line after recapturin­g the village of Qarqashah and neighborin­g hamlets from the Islamic State earlier this month.

The new de facto borders establishe­d by the Kurdish fighters, known as peshmerga, raise the potential for conflict between Iraq’s Kurds and Arabs after any eventual defeat of the militants — just as in neighborin­g Syria, where Kurds have also dramatical­ly expanded their zone of control.

“All the areas that have been liberated by the peshmerga forces, our (Kurdish) forces will stay there,” said Falah Mustafa, the head of the Iraqi Kurdish region’s foreign relations department, echoing statements by numerous officials.

Largely with the help of U.S.led coalition air strikes, Kurdish forces have taken territory equivalent to around 50 percent of the size of their recognized autonomous zone.

Their first gain came just days after Islamic State militants took Mosul in the summer of 2014 and stormed down into central Iraq as the military collapsed. Kurdish forces seized the city of Kirkuk, which they have long claimed as their own.

The move was designed to protect the city from the Islamic State, but Kurdish President Massoud Barzani quickly said the Kurds would keep it. From there, they continued pushing militants out, capturing much of the surroundin­g province.

Since then, they have taken further territory in the nearby Ninevah province, where Mosul is located, ahead of an expected assault on the city. Much of it is territory with a large Kurdish community that the regional government has claimed for years — but not all, meaning the grabs are bringing in population­s where some are wary of Kurdish domination.

After the capture of the Qarqashah area, Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi pointedly demanded a halt to the peshmerga advances.

But the Kurds refused. The Kurdish regional government's spokesman, Safeen Dizayee, said the peshmerga “will not stop their advances until all Kurdistan’s territorie­s in the Ninevah region are liberated.” He added that they will not withdraw “from areas they are going to liberate in the future.”

 ?? Bram Janssen / Associated Press 2015 ?? A Kurdish fighter rests during an operation in November to retake the northern Iraqi town of Sinjar. Territoria­l advances raise the potential for conflict between Iraq’s Kurds and Arabs.
Bram Janssen / Associated Press 2015 A Kurdish fighter rests during an operation in November to retake the northern Iraqi town of Sinjar. Territoria­l advances raise the potential for conflict between Iraq’s Kurds and Arabs.

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