. 24/7 Space News .
Analysis: Kurds Raise Flag Amid Fears Of War

A Kurdish child looks at between Kurdish flags in a store in the city of Arbil, 350 kms north of Baghdad, 02 September 2006. Photo courtesy of Safin Hamed and AFP.
by Claude Salhani
UPI International Editor
Washington (UPI) Sep 05, 2006
Verbal sparring between those who believe Iraq is in a state of civil war and the Bush administration, who insists it is not, may find the argument increasingly in favor of those who believe the country is affected by civil divisions, and may be slipping towards greater chaos.

Iraqi Kurds living in the semi-autonomous northern part of the country lowered Iraqi flags this past weekend, replacing them with Kurdish banners over official government buildings in Iraqi Kurdistan. Their actions sent immediate shock waves to Baghdad, where Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki derided the move by the Kurds, calling it "illegal."

And when Baghdad complained, the Kurds threatened to secede.

This move by the Kurds has also sent up red flags in neighboring Turkey, where Ankara eyes any move towards Kurdish independence with much trepidation, less it encourages its own Kurdish population to emulate their Iraqi brothers.

Addressing the region's parliament, Massoud Barzani, president of the Kurdistan region, said Iraq's flag was a symbol of his own people's past oppression. He asked the regional parliament to adopt the new flag.

Barzani told his parliament: "If at any moment we, the Kurdish people and parliament, consider that it is in our interests to declare independence, we will do so and we will fear no-one."

Baghdad reacted with a statement from the prime minister's office, saying that "the Iraqi flag is the only flag that should be raised over any square inch of Iraq, until parliament makes a decision as laid down in the constitution." The statement avoided any direct mention of the Kurdish flag.

Are the Kurds taking the first step towards independence? The Kurds, who are scattered between Turkey, Iraq, Iran and Syria, have long dreamed of an independent country. And more than once they were promised support in that dream by Western powers in exchange for their support. The Kurds repeatedly showed loyalty only to be repeatedly let down.

The first attempt in modern times by the Kurds to establish a homeland occurred at the end of World War I, when President Woodrow Wilson supported the notion of Kurdish self-determination. And despite the fact that the idea of an independent Kurdistan was mentioned in the 1920 Treaty of S�vres, an independent Kurdistan was omitted from being penciled in post WWI maps.

The new Turkey of Mustapha Kemal (Ataturk) rejected the treaty in 1923, denying the Kurds their state. This was the genesis of the Turkish-Kurdish conflict, a conflict which continues to this day. In fact, in recent days Kurdish separatists are believed to have been responsible for a number of terrorist attacks in Turkish tourist resorts.

In 1924, shortly after Ataturk rejected the idea of a Kurdish state, Turkey banned the Kurdish culture and prohibited the use of the Kurdish language. In Iraq, sporadic fighting between Kurds and the central government occurred from 1964 to 1975. That was when the Kurdish leader at the time, Mustafa Barzani, turned to the United States for help.

Appealing to then U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, Barzani asked for assistance, telling Kissinger: "Our movement and people are being destroyed in an unbelievable way." Relying on an agreement reached with the shah of Iran, the United States, once again, abandoned the Kurds to their fate.

Persecution of Kurds continued in Turkey, in Iran and most notably in Iraq, particularly under the regime of Saddam Hussein. One of the most horrendous acts against the Kurds was committed in the town of Halabja, in 1988, when mustard gas was used against the civilian population. More than 5,000 people, including women and children, died in the attack.

The 1990-1991 Gulf War changed the fate of Iraq's Kurds. In the aftermath of Iraq's invasion of Kuwait, the no-fly zone established by the United States to protect its pilots offered Iraqi Kurds an almost divine protection. In the years after the first Gulf War, Iraqi Kurdistan began to enjoy unprecedented autonomy as Baghdad pulled its administration out of the region, leaving the two main Kurdish political parties to establish a local government.

The Kurdish autonomous region in northern Iraq has prospered further since the U.S. invasion of Iraq. Kurdish leaders are closely watching Washington's attempts at pacifying Iraq and establishing a working democracy. Should Washington's efforts fail, the Kurds are prepared to breakaway from Iraq and live happily off revenues from the oil in the Kirkuk region.

That, however, is a point of contention with Baghdad and particularly with Iraq's Sunnis, who stand to lose more than Iraq's other major politico-religious group, the Shiites. The Kurds in the north and the Shiites in the south sit on top of large oil reserves. This leaves the Sunnis, who have ruled Iraq in the past, in the middle of the country with little or no oil revenues. And this is something they will fight for.

More likely than not, so too will Turkey be prepared to fight to prevent the Kurdish dream from becoming a reality.

Source: United Press International

Related Links
Follow the first techonology war of the 21st century at SpaceWar.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Democrats Push Bush To Sack US Defense Chief Rumsfeld
Washington (AFP) Sep 04, 2006
US Democrats on Monday stepped up pressure on President George W. Bush to sack Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld ahead of legislative elections in November. With Congress returning this week from a month-long holiday, the effort was spearheaded by US Senator Barbara Boxer, who announced plans to offer an amendment to a defense spending bill calling on the president to immediately appoint a new secretary of defense.







  • Malaysia Unveils Two Final Male Astronaut Candidates
  • Soyuz TMA-9 Arrives At Baikonur
  • NASA Tests Orion Like Parachute Recovery System
  • Solar Sentinels Could Stand Guard Against Flare

  • Returning To Sample Mars
  • Opportunity Mars Rover Inching Closer To Victoria Crater
  • Mars Express Images The Kasei Valles Outflow Channel System
  • Spirit Continues Mid-Winter Studies Of Martian Rocks And Soil

  • Sea Launch Delivers Koreasat 5 Satellite To Orbit
  • Canada Plans Its First Spaceport
  • Ariane 5 Is In The Launch Zone With JCSAT-10 And Syracuse 3B
  • Russia To Launch European Weather Probe In October

  • Renewed Volcanic Activity At The Phlegrean Fields Tracked By Envisat
  • China To Launch 1st Environment Monitoring Satellite
  • NG Demonstrates Synthetic Aperture Laser Radar for Tactical Imagery
  • MODIS Images Western Wildfires

  • The Fightback Begins To Save Pluto
  • Greek Astronomers Take On Xena The Warrior Princess In Planet Name Row
  • Pluto-Bound Camera Sees First Light
  • Pluto No Longer A Planet

  • Scientists Detect New Kind Of Cosmic Explosion
  • The Eternal Life Of Stardust Portrayed In New NASA Image
  • Cassiopeia A - The Colorful Aftermath Of A Violent Stellar Death
  • AKARI's View On Birth And Death Of Stars

  • Europe Hails Lunar Probe, Sets Sights On Next Goals
  • European Probe Smashes Into Moon After Successful Mission
  • SMART-1 Swan Song: Valuable Data Until Final Moments
  • Big Bang Afterglow Fails An Intergalactic Shadow Test

  • SWAN System to Help Blind and Firefighters Navigate Environment
  • EU And South Korea To Sign Cooperation Accord On Galileo Project
  • Glonass To Be Deployed In Full By 2010
  • Former Astronaut Sends T-cells Into Space

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement