Posted on 04/08/2004 1:35:16 AM PDT by kattracks
Edited on 05/26/2004 5:20:32 PM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
April 8, 2004 -- AS violence in Iraq dominates the news, imagine a Middle Eastern country in which the government works in simple offices and spends its money on education, a state in which the prime minister still lives in his parents' home and builds libraries instead of palaces.
(Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...
John Kerry would have worked through to the United Nations to ensure that the Saddam gassed the Kurds and blamed it all on Uncle Sam and George Bush. (Bush I, II - your call.)
There is a great deal of violence towards women in Iraqi Kurdistan, and the original withdrawl of Iraqi state forces led to a wave of honour murders. I saw a documentary about it.
Ah, then it must be true. [/sarcasm]
Sad that we won't.
How about a Middle East in which young men and women study together at a university where no political party rules the campus, freedom of speech is encouraged and internet access is unrestricted.
Try, if you can, to imagine a Middle Eastern population that regards America with respect and gratitude.
It isn't a dream. It's a reality.
Welcome to free Kurdistan.
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The "impossible".
I susepct that the kurds share many of the same fooged up attitudes that many of their co-religionists do. Not as bad perhaps as the taliban...but probably not people we'd like to see married to our daughters, for the most part.
Yeah, that's part of it. But it's a valid consideration, after all, since Turkey (not withstanding it's recent, and self destructive, failure of will and foresight wrt the Iraq War) has been one of our most stalwart allies in the Muslim world for many decades.
It would, even more significantly, risk destabilizing Turkey and thereby potentially collapsing the only Muslim democracy in the region (and just about the only one period in addition to Indonesia). At the same time it might also destabilize Iran and Syria (which also have large Kurdish minorities) but, OTOH, since these countries are already despotic it might also provide pretext for continued or increased oppression.
More generally, and most gravely IMHO, the creation of an independent Kurdistan could lead to independence movements on the part of other ethnic minorities in the region. This sort of thing has typically, and to put it mildly, NOT been a good thing. See, for instance, The Balkans, WWI, WWII, Rwanda, etc.
Again, on general terms, although the record is certainly mixed, I think that (supra-ethnic, nation-state) nationalism has mostly been a positive force in the Middle East, as a counter to both ethnic strife on the one hand, and pan-Arab nationalism or pan-Islamism on the other. This is especially true in the Arab world since the modern nation-state is a secular institution, whereas alternative polities, including ethnically based super-states, are often not.
Finally, it is important to maintain the territorial integrity of Iraq and its neighbors because of the fact that, in consultation with Turkey and other states, the international community, Iraqi expatriate groups, and etc, we committed ourselves to this principle prior to the war. American credibility, constancy and commitment to its promises widely doubted in the region. We cannot afford to reverse ourselves on a basic commitment such as this one.
According to this article, the Kurds are no threat to them.
Ralph Peters does not quite say that. He says that Iraqi Kurds are (broadly speaking) ready to engage in a good faith effort to cooperate with other ethnic groups in the creation of a new, democratic Iraq (with the expectation, I might add, that they will have some local autonomy under a federal type system).
Peters himself does not advocate an independent Kurdistan, so far as I know, and says nothing in this article about Turkey. In recent historical fact the Kurds in Turkey fought a bitter terror war against the Turks, replete with numerous mass casualty bombing attacks against civilians. This went on for some 30 years until the Turkish army defeated the militant Kurds in their own mountain strongholds and captured their leadership.
Granted that the Iraqi Kurds were mostly or reluctant wrt supporting the Kurdish guerrillas in Turkey (or absorbed with their own woes) but to blithely claim that the Kurds are "no threat" to Turkey flies in the face of the last three decades of history.
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