The Sentinel-Record

Attack endangers remarkable democratic experiment

- AP’s The Conversati­on

Turkey’s attack on Kurdish-run territory in northern Syria will likely snuff out a radical experiment in self-government that is unlike anything I have seen in more than 30 years studying the Middle East.

In a surprise Oct. 6 statement, President Donald Trump announced the U.S. would withdraw its troops from northern Syria.

Approximat­ely 1,000 American soldiers had been stationed in that region as a buffer separating Kurdish forces

— who had been working with the Americans in the fight against the Islamic State — from Turkish troops. Turkey feared that the Syrian Kurds would link up with Turkey’s

Kurdish minority who have demanded autonomy or independen­ce.

On Oct. 9, the Turkish military began its assault, pummeling Kurdish-held territory with artillery and airstrikes. Kurds are rapidly evacuating the region and at least 24 people have been killed in northern Syria. Retaliator­y strikes from Syria have killed civilians in southern Turkey.

According to Turkish President Recep Erdogan, Turkey’s goal is to create a buffer zone separating Syria’s Kurds from the Turkish border.

But his country’s attack will do much more than that. If successful, it will destroy the most full-fledged democracy the Middle East has yet to see.

A different way to govern

The Kurds call their autonomous region in Syria “Rojava,” meaning “the land where the sun sets.”

Kurdish-led forces took possession of this swath of territory in northern and eastern Syria from direct Syrian government control in 2012. Then they successful­ly defended it against the Islamic State.

Kurdish Syria is a small portion of a territory, known as Kurdistan, that includes parts of Turkey, Syria, Iraq and Iran. Kurdistan is home to approximat­ely 25-35 million Kurds, a cultural and ethnic minority in the Middle East.

The key to understand­ing the Rojava project, as those involved often refer to it, is the notion of “confederal­ism.” In this form of government, local units — in this case, Kurdistan’s “autonomous regions” — come together in a federation

yet retain a great deal of autonomy.

Because sovereign power belongs to the local units and not to a central government, Kurdish confederal­ism differs from an American-style federal system.

The Kurds are so serious about devolving power to the local level that Rojava’s charter requires each of its three regions to have its own flag. And within each region, local elected councils are in charge. They organize garbage collection, adjudicate disputes and manage public health and safety.

Confederal­ism sets the Kurds apart from almost every other government in the Middle East.

Across the region, power is concentrat­ed at the top. Syria’s president, Bashar al-Assad, is an authoritar­ian leader who has ruthlessly crushed his opponents in the country’s eight-year civil war. Egypt has a military government. Saudi Arabia has a king.

But Rojava would be an exceptiona­l society almost anywhere. Rojava’s charter guarantees freedom of expression and assembly and equality of all religious communitie­s and languages. It mandates direct democracy, term limits and gender equality. Men and women share every position in government. Kurdish women have fought the Islamic State in Syria as soldiers in an all-female militia.

In a region where religion and politics are often intertwine­d, the Kurdish state is secular. Religious leaders cannot serve in politics. Rojava’s charter even affirms the right of all citizens to a healthy environmen­t.

Surroundin­g countries, including Syria, also have constituti­ons with eloquent endorsemen­ts of political and human rights.

In Rojava, however, the constituti­on is actually in effect. Syrian Kurds have realized the dream of the 2010-2011 pro-democracy uprisings across the Arab world.

Rojava’s downsides

Internal cleavages in Syria’s Kurdish community undermine the Rojava project — namely, the perpetual jockeying for power between rival Kurdish clans and the struggle for preeminenc­e among Turkish, Syrian and Iraqi Kurds.

The Kurds also have a troubled relationsh­ip with Syria’s Arabs and other groups. Beginning in the 1960s, the Syrian government began moving other population­s to Kurdish territory to challenge Kurdish dominance there, sparking Kurdish resentment.

The devastatio­n wrought by the Islamic State — such as the mass murder of the Yazidis, a religious minority within the Kurdish community, and sexual enslavemen­t of their women — further fueled these resentment­s.

There have been numerous reports of Kurdish soldiers taking violent revenge against captured Islamic State members, alleged collaborat­ors and even entire villages suspected of aiding the Islamic State enemy.

The Kurdish region of Syria also has some politicall­y problemati­c origins.

The Syrian-Kurdish Democratic Union Party — Rojava’s leading political party — played an outsized role in the creation of Rojava. The party is affiliated with the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK, a far-left militant group that has fought against the Turkish government, first for the independen­ce of Kurds from Turkey in the 1980s and 1990s, then — in the early 2000s — for their autonomy within Turkish borders.

Many Kurds in Rojava consider PKK founder Abdullah Ocalan a national hero. It was Ocalan who came up with the idea of confederal­ism in the first place, back in 2005.

But both Turkey and the United States consider the PKK to be a terrorist organizati­on. The PKK is currently conducting an insurgency against the Turkish government.

Danger ahead

The Rojava project is now in imminent peril.

Even if Turkey hadn’t launched its military offensive, Rojava would probably still have a tenuous future.

The Syrian-Kurdish Democratic Union Party has refused to take sides in the Syrian civil war. Its vision, now realized, lay elsewhere.

Neverthele­ss, it is doubtful that the Syrian regime will reward Kurds for their relative impartiali­ty during the civil war. Nor is it likely that the regime will reward them for limiting their goal to autonomy instead of independen­ce.

The reason: Rojava sits atop Syria’s largest oil fields.

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