Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki today warned of the danger of ethnic
conflict in Iraq, after negotiations between Baghdad and the Kurdistan autonomous
government stalled this week.
“If conflict erupts, it would be unfortunate and painful, and it will be an ethnic conflict not in the interest of Kurds nor Arabs nor Turkmen,” Maliki told a news conference in Baghdad. (AFP, 1 December)
“If conflict erupts, it would be unfortunate and painful, and it will be an ethnic conflict not in the interest of Kurds nor Arabs nor Turkmen,” Maliki told a news conference in Baghdad. (AFP, 1 December)
Kurdish leader Massoud Barzani has demanded that Baghdad scrap the
Dajleh (Tigris) Operations Command, a newly formed military command created by
Maliki to operate in disputed territories claimed by Kurds and Arabs. The talks
to find a negotiated settlement over the issue ended on Friday without any
agreement.
Maliki defended federal troop movements in the north, saying it is the
army's right “to be in any part of Iraq.” He did not, however, respond to
questions that if such moves were provocations against the Kurds. It seems
that Maliki’s tendency is to resolve the issue of disputed territories by
military force. The Kurds have vowed to defend their positions if attacked. And a military conflict in Kurdistan could push the Kurds to declare independence
from Baghdad.
File photo: Iraqi Premier Nouri al-Maliki (AFP)
I've said it many times: Iraq's security foci are to the west, northwest and north. Not east, as an unintended consequence of OIF.
ReplyDeleteIt would be good for Iran if the Kurds in Iraq, Turkey would separate themselves from those states.
ReplyDeleteThen Iraqi Shiites would have to cooperate closely with Iran and an access to Syria would be much easier.
Iran would obviously find proper solutions for its Kurds...
A-F
I believe that the Kurds are setting themselves for a losing conflict, which they will not win as all regional powers are against them. An old Kurdish proverb describes the Kurds as their own worst enemies. The Iraqi state simply can not allow a lawless illegal statelet in their North which supports terrorism, gun-running, smuggling and crime in the region.
ReplyDeleteConflict is only as matter of time as Iraq rearms and reasserts its authority over the Kurdish badlands. Mullah Mustafa Barzani harboured similar delusions and now his son is leading the Iraqi Kurds to disaster.