*Kurds
Ready to be Next N. Alliance
Mar 28, 2002
By Scott Peterson
CSM
SALAHUDDIN AND SULAYMANIYAH, NORTHERN IRAQ – High on a spring-green
escarpment in northern Iraq, elite Kurdish forces decked out in camouflage
and maroon berets are training for the day they hope they realize their
dream: helping US forces topple Saddam Hussein.
To the southeast, in another part of the divided US- and British-patrolled
"safe haven," a rival Kurdish force is gearing up for exactly the same
anti-Hussein mission. In the bright morning sun, soldiers gather around
120-mm mortar tubes and artillery pieces, practice with a rocket launcher,
and learn about the range of antiaircraft guns from veterans with stars
on their epaulets.
The shockwaves of the decisive US military campaign in Afghanistan
are reverberating here, and changing thinking among Kurdish chiefs and
Pentagon planners alike.
Spurred on by the Afghanistan example – in which a rebel group made
up of ethnic minorities seized Kabul, backed by a heavy US airstrikes –
Kurdish leaders have a new conviction that the road to their future security
leads through Baghdad.
This new, broader strategy coincides with thinking among some Pentagon
planners to use Kurdish forces to fight alongside American troops in any
push against Saddam Hussein.
Political leaders here say that to date they have received no US request
for military help, and that only a total US commitment to oust Mr. Hussein
will convince them to join up.
But if spit and polish is any measure, these forces are preparing to
play a key role, if Washington resolutely decides to apply the "Afghan
model" to change the regime in Iraq.
"America is the best friend of the Kurdish people, to help us get self-rule
and a voice in Baghdad," says Sheikh Jafar Mustapha, a senior commander
of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) forces. "If America attacks Saddam
... we can help the US achieve success in that battle."
With many Kurds within Iraqi artillery range – and the regime's ability
to re-occupy this entire region in a matter of days – Kurdish leaders must
publicly adhere to a careful non-confrontational line, and call only for
"democratic change" in Iraq.
But they have battled heavy-handed – at times even genocidal – rule
from Baghdad for decades. Target practice with sniper rifles is de riguer,
even for women of this Kurdish force called peshmerga, which means "those
who face death."
"We can't photocopy the Afghan cause, but we can benefit from it," says
Massoud Barzani, leader of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP), whose
family has been at the forefront of Kurdish opposition politics for decades.
The key lesson from Kabul, he says, is that minority groups "took full
control of the situation there, and have become owners of the cause." Kurds,
too, will now "focus on solving Iraq problems first."
Both Kurdish factions say they gave up aspirations for an independent
Kurdish state long ago. Ethnic Kurds are a minority in Iraq, along with
Arab Sunni Muslims – from which the regime draws most of its support. Iraq's
Shiite Muslims from the south make up a 60 percent majority, and have their
own rebel movement.
But the Kurds now recognize that to guarantee self-rule in their own
northern area will require powerful influence in Baghdad. That means taking
on Iraq-wide issues, being a vanguard for all the Iraqi opposition, and
possibly serving as Iraq's future powerbroker.
"We could be the magnet for all the opposition in Iraq," says Hoshyar
Zebari, a top KDP strategist. "We are not claiming statehood, but we want
a new Iraq where we can live in peace. The solution is in Baghdad. This
new momentum is gaining ground, and terrifies Baghdad."
Kurdish forces fought each other in the mid-1990s, and have since signed
a cease-fire that has allowed significant development in their territories.
Divisions still exist, but they do agree about Baghdad.
"If I want security in [the Kurdish capital of] Arbil, I must have a
powerful say in Baghdad," says Barham Salih, prime minister of PUK territory.
"For the first time in our history, we have a real opportunity to help
build a new Iraq."
That means fitting a version of the "Afghan model" to Iraq. Two chief
components may transfer easily. The air campaign could be far more successful
than the 42-day airstrikes of the 1991 Gulf War, since US capabilities
have improved, Iraqi air defenses are weaker, and targets in Iraq are easier
to find than in Afghanistan.
Likewise, analysts say, there is no reason that the use of US special
forces' spotters can't also be used in Iraq, to call in pinpoint strikes.
Far less certain are similarities between the Afghan alliance and Iraqi
opposition forces – which have virtually no tanks or armored vehicles.
And how to weigh the Taliban against Hussein's military and security apparatus,
which make up the largest conventional force in the Mideast?
"I don't think any Iraqi groups compare to the Northern Alliance, in
cohesion or battle experience, or knowing how to take on an urban target,"
says Geoffrey Kemp, a defense analyst and Mideast specialist at the Nixon
Center in Washington.
"In Afghanistan, the opposition basically collapsed and ran away, but
Baghdad is not Kabul," says Mr. Kemp. "What if Saddam makes a stand in
a city? Or his troops don't throw down their weapons? And he puts tanks
and artillery next to mosques and schools – as he will do.
"Then, even the most sophisticated air campaign will result in horrendous
TV coverage," Kemp adds. To be successful, any Iraq campaign will require
the very real threat of a "huge" US ground force – even if only to maximize
the chances that Hussein will capitulate before it needs to be used. "[President]
Bush can't afford to fail. This president will be finished if the bombing
goes on, there are civilian casualties, and Saddam emerges somehow."
Kurdish leaders insist that their forces can play a role that will prevent
just such an outcome. They say they are far better organized than the Northern
Alliance, have a more substantial territory from which to operate, and
have worked hard in the past decade to build on the remnants of the peshmerga
units that launched a failed uprising in 1991. "The Taliban were stronger
than Saddam – they had a political base and were committed to fight," says
the Kurdish opposition leader. "Saddam's power base is very narrow – he
is a minority within his own Sunni Arab group. People despise him, and
the military is unhappy. If you fight for Saddam Hussein, you do not expect
to go to heaven."
Kurdish officials claim that they can muster between 60,000 and 70,000
ready-to-fight peshmerga to confront Iraq's 400,000 troops. And Kurds of
both factions want to show they have regularized their guerrillas in the
past decade, and have hammered them into a willing fighting force.
But pursuing the "Afghan model" in Iraq is "not likely" to work, says
Kenneth Pollack, a former National Security Council analyst now at the
Council on Foreign Relations in New York. "In Afghanistan, the military
balance between the opposition and the Taliban was quite close, which is
why limited US actions were able to tip the scales decisively," he writes
in the latest issue of Foreign Affairs, in which he makes the case for
an all-out US invasion of Iraq.
By the end of the Gulf War, he notes, Iraqi forces were a "shadow of
their former selves. Yet weak as they were, they still had enough strength
to crush the largest insurrections in Iraqi history and keep Saddam in
power. Those who favor the Afghan approach against Iraq are therefore betting
that a US military effort significantly smaller would somehow produce much
greater results this time around." |