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KurdistanObserver.com
Do the Kurds Hold the Key to Peace?
By: William Tally
williamtally@go.com
actualitydog.blogspot.com
Feb 4, 2006
It is possible that the key to the multiple crises of
anarchy and civil war in Iraq, potential nuclear weapons in Iran, and the
promotion of Islamic terrorism by many Middle Eastern states lies with the
Kurds.
To explain this idea further it is necessary to
consider some (brief) history. Since being conquered in the 7th century by the
Ottoman Empire the Kurds have had no place to call their own. The global
struggles that shaped the Middle East and Africa from colonialism through World
War I resulted the in allocation of old Kurdish lands to the four modern
countries of Syria, Turkey, Iran and Iraq.
Many failed uprisings later, the Kurds are trapped as
pawns in the game of nation-states not their own. These states use the Kurdish
desire for independence against one another, knowing how to raise hopes just
enough to spurn an uprising here or a riot there. But there is no intention of
seeing it through.
In reality each of the states involved thinks there is
much to loose from the realization of an independent Kurdistan in their midst.
It is indeed one of the things that the governments of all four fear the most.
This is why spawning Kurdish uprisings is such an effective tool to be used
against one another.
Enter the United States (and allies) who dove headlong
into the Middle East without fully understanding it. The would-be “liberators”
are now faced with an unraveling equilibrium and a loss of strategic initiative
that threatens to unleash regional war.
An independent Kurdish state as a close ally of the
United States would begin a new equilibrium. The U.S. and the Kurds could
reclaim the initiative by aligning the heroic efforts of American troops with a
people who share the same vision. The Kurds do not want an all-powerful
theocracy. They do not want to dominate the Middle East. And, most
importantly, the scourge of Islamic terrorism has not infected their society.
They only want a safe place to call home; a place where they are free. If the
U.S. could help create such a place, it would earn an ally as loyal as Kuwait,
as powerful as Israel, and as strategically important as S. Korea.
In Iraq, the insurgency would loose steam as the focus
shifts from American “occupation” to Kurdish independence. Iran would find its
Kurds, the largest minority population, empowered to follow their dream. The
youthful Iranian majority might soon follow suit, wanting some liberty of their
own. Strategic leverage gained against Syria might finally be enough to force
that government to renounce terrorism and join the modern world—with a new
Kurdistan as its main trading partner.
This idea is not without potentially grave risks. For
example, Turkey would be severely alienated by any move to establish a Kurdish
state. Also, the Kurds themselves may not be capable of uniting so quickly.
However, a bold new approach is needed. Perhaps this is the vision that leads
to long-term resolution in the Middle East.
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