KurdistanObserver.com
A New Threat In Iraq
By David Ignatius
April 18, 2007 Washington Post
While the Bush administration struggles to
stabilize Baghdad, a major new threat is emerging in the Kurdish areas of
northern Iraq. If it isn't defused, this crisis could further erode U.S. goals
in Iraq -- drawing foreign military intervention, splintering the country
further and undermining U.S. hopes for long-term military bases in Kurdistan.
The core issue is Kurdish nationalism, which
worries Iraq's powerful northern neighbor, Turkey, which has a substantial
Kurdish minority. The Bush administration has tried to finesse the problem,
hoping to keep two friends happy: The Kurds have been America's most reliable
partner in Iraq, while the Turks are a crucial ally in the region. But in recent
weeks, this strategy has been breaking down.
As with so many aspects of Iraq, the Bush
administration has wandered into a conflict that is encrusted with centuries of
ethnic hatred. Iraqi Kurds push their politicians toward defiant assertions of
independence; Turks are demanding that their leaders move to crush the Kurdish
upstarts. Meanwhile, the American public is increasingly fed up with the
fractious mess of Iraq and wants U.S. troops home yesterday.
The administration, realizing that it was
drifting toward a confrontation over the Kurdish issue, last year appointed
retired Air Force Gen. Joseph Ralston as a special emissary. His mission is to
urge the Iraqis to crack down on the militant Kurdish political party known as
the PKK, which uses Iraqi Kurdistan as a staging point. The Turks denounce the
PKK as a terrorist group and threaten that if the United States doesn't take
decisive action to suppress it, the Turkish army will.
Ralston is said to have warned top
administration officials in December that the Turks might invade by the end of
April unless the United States contained the PKK. Other knowledgeable officials
are similarly worried, and one analyst has predicted that the Turks may seize a
border strip about eight miles deep into Iraq. Ralston has tried his best to
defuse the crisis, clearing a Kurdish refugee camp of suspected PKK members and
talking regularly with both sides. But the time bomb continues to tick.
A flash point is Kirkuk, an oil-rich city
claimed by the Kurds, which the Turks regard as a special protectorate because
of its large Turkmen population. The new Iraqi constitution calls for a
referendum by December on the city's future, and the Kurds are confident they
will win the vote. The Turks, fearing the same outcome, want the referendum
delayed. The Bush administration seems to favor a delay but hasn't said so
publicly, to avoid angering the Kurds and undermining the constitution.
Turks and Kurds have fired heavy rhetorical
barrages the past few weeks. Kurdish leader Massoud Barzani warned that if the
Turks meddled in Kirkuk, "then we will take action for the 30 million Kurds in
Turkey." The head of the Turkish general staff, Gen. Yasar Buyukanit, responded
that "from an exclusively military point of view," he favored an invasion of
Iraq to clean out PKK havens. If the Turks do attack, counters one Kurdish
official, "their own border will not be respected. They will not be the only
ones to choose the battlefield."
A wild card in the Kurdish problem is Iran.
Like the Turks, the Iranians have a restless Kurdish minority and would be
tempted to intervene militarily against a militant group called PJAK that
operates from Iraqi Kurdistan. Indeed, top Iranian military officers met in
Ankara recently for discussions with the Turkish general staff about possible
military contingencies in Iraq, according to one U.S. official.
Kurdish sources report that the Iranians have
recently shelled Kurdish targets inside Iraq and that Iranian-backed Islamic
groups have attacked border posts in northern Iraq. The Iranians want to
destabilize Kurdistan, partly to damage America's wider policy aims in Iraq,
Kurdish officials argue.
Adding to this toxic brew is growing tension
between the United States and Kurdish leaders. The Kurds were furious when they
weren't given prior notice about a U.S. Special Forces raid in January that
attempted to snatch two top Iranian Revolutionary Guard officers at the Irbil
airport in Kurdistan. Unwitting Kurdish pesh merga troops at the airport nearly
opened fire on the Americans. Although the airport raid was a failure, U.S.
forces did manage to grab five Revolutionary Guard members at an Iranian
consular office, which embarrassed the Kurdish leadership. The Kurds feel their
friendship for America has been taken for granted.
Iraqi Kurdistan has been a success story, one
of the very few since the U.S. invasion four years ago. But its status as a
haven and future American base against Iran and al-Qaeda is in jeopardy. Of bad
news in Iraq, it seems, there is no end.