By The
Grace Of Israel - The Barzani Clan And Kurdish
"Independence"
By Moon Of
Alabama
September
29, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- The
Kurdish region in Iraq held a "referendum" about
splitting off from Iraq to form
an independent state.
The referendum was highly irregular and the outcome
was assured. That
such a referendum was held now had more to do with
the beleaguered situation of the illegitimate
regional president Barzani than with a genuine
opportunity to achieve independence. The referendum
was non-binding. It is now onto Barzani to declare
independence or to set the issue aside in exchange
for, essentially, more money.
We
first wrote about the
Kurdish problem and
Kurdish ambitions in Iraqi back in December 2005(!).
The problems of an independent Kurdish region we
then pointed out are still the same:
A
landlocked Kurdish state of some kind could
produce a lot of oil, but how would this oil
reach the markets, especially Israel? The
neighbors Turkey, Iran and Syria all have
Kurdish minorities and have no reason to help a
Kurdish state to enrich itself and see that
money funneled to their unruly minorities. After
[Kurdish] grabbing [of] Kirkuk, the Arab rest of
Iraq will also not support pipelines for then
Kurdish oil.
Arabs,
Turks, and Persians see the Kurds as a recalcitrant
nomadic mountain tribe and stooge of Israeli
interests.
In
the mid 1960s and 70s Israel cooperated with Iran,
then a U.S. ally under the Shah, to fight against
its Arab enemies - Iraq, Syria and Egypt. As part of
the cooperation the Mossad sent Lt. Colonel Tzuri
Sagi to develop plans for and
build up a Kurdish
army to fight Iraqi troops in northern Iraq. Tzuri
Sagi was also
responsible for the
Israeli assassination attempts against Saddam
Hussein. His Kurdish cooperation partner was the
leader of the Barzani clan, Mullah Mustafa Barzani.
The Kurdish army the Israelis created is now known
as Peshmerga. The son of Mullah Mustafa Barzani,
Masoud Barzani, is now the illegitimate president of
the Kurdish region of Iraq.
Lt. Colonel Sagi with Mustafa Barazani. Photo
reproduction: Yossi Zeliger -
source -
bigger
Sagi with Kurdish commanders -
bigger
Barazani with then-head of the Mossad, Meir Amit -
bigger
The
Barzani's are part
of a major Kurdish tribe and a leading clan in the
Kurdish region of Iraq. (The other major clan are
the Talabani, currently with much less power.) In
2005 Masoud Barzani, the son of Mullah Mustafa
Barzani, was elected President of the Kurdish region
in Iraq. His eight year term ended in 2013. The
regional parliament extended his presidency by two
years. But since 2015 he has ruled without any legal
basis. He prevented the parliament from convening
and formally ousting him. Masoud Barzani's son
Mazrour Barzani is chancellor of the region's
security council. He controls all military and
civilian intelligence. Nechirvan Barzani, a nephew
of Masoud Barzani, is prime minister of the Kurdish
region.
U.S.
oil interests helped to build the Barzani's power.
The Kurds pumped and sold oil without the consent of
Baghdad. Oil is exported through Turkish pipelines
and sold
mostly to Israel.
The family of the Turkish president Erdogan is
intimately
involved in the
business. But despite billions of income from
(illegal) oil sales the Kurdish region is heavily
indebted.
Corruption rules in Kurdistan and the regional
government had to
rob local banks to
find fresh money. That still wasn't enough to pay
salaries. The Barzani family mafia has robbed the
region blind. To keep going, the local government
needs to annex more riches and widen its business
base.
The
Barzani family has deep
religious-historic ties
with a Sunni spiritual order of Sufis, the
Naqshbandi. The
Army of the Men of the Naqshbandi Order
was one of the Sunni-Baathist resistance group of
the U.S. occupation of Iraq. In 2014 it
helped (or
didn't help?) the
Islamic State in the takeover of Mosul before being
shunned and defeated by it.
The Iraqi
Kurds, under Masoud Barzani, were complicit in the
mid 2014 Islamic State takeover of Mosul and the
Sinjar region inhabited by Kurdish speaking Yezidis.
They saw it as an opportunity to take more oil and
declare their own independence from Baghdad. Only
after the Islamic State marched towards the Kurdish
"capital" Erbil, where U.S. and Israeli intelligence
as well as western oil companies have their regional
headquarters, did the Barzani Kurds start to oppose
the Islamic State.
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They
then used the fight against the Islamic State to
widen the area they controlled by 40%. Minorities
like the Yezidi and Assyrians, which were driven
away from their homes by the Islamic State, are now
denied to return to their areas by Kurdish
occupiers. As NYT correspondent Rukmini Callimachi
reports from the
ground:
A common
refrain I hear is that the Iraqi army ran when
ISIS overran Mosul, whereas the Kurds stood
their ground. Sadly that's not true. One of the
areas that was under the control of Kurdish
troops was Mt Sinjar, home to a large share of
the 500,000 Yazidis living in Iraq. According to
the dozens of interviews I've done with Yazidi
survivors of ISIS' ensuing genocide, Kurdish
troops cut and ran when ISIS came. Adding insult
to injury, say community leaders, Kurdish troops
disarmed Yazidis. And did not warn them of ISIS'
advance. The result: Thousands of Yazidi women
were kidnapped by ISIS and systematically raped.
Many I spoke to partially blamed Kurdish troops
for their fate.
Callimachi further reports that Kurdish troops now
prevent Yezidis from returning to their homes.
Barzani has unilaterally annexed their land and
unilaterally declared it to be part of the Kurdish
region. The Kurds also
occupy land and villages,
already mentioned in the bible, that belong to
Assyrian Christians.
Another hotspot is Kirkuk. The oil rich city is an
original Turkman and Arab areas. The Kurds
snatched it in 2014
while the Islamic State marched onto Baghdad. The
move on Kirkuk was, allegedly, coordinated with the
Islamic State. They now want to annex it. The Iraqi
state is naturally vehemently against this and is
now sending its army. The Turkish government, which
sees itself as defender of all Turkmen, also
threatens to intervene.
After
the Kurdish independence referendum the Iraqi
government declared a partial blockade of their
region. Iraq is a sovereign state, the Kurdish
region has no independent legal status. This gives
Baghdad many ways to strangle Kurdish ambitions.
Starting Friday all international (civil) flights to
Erbil
are by order of
Baghdad prohibited. A land blockade and stoppage of
all trade and monetary transfers are likely to
follow.
Syria, Iran
and Turkey have all spoken out against Kurdish
independence and threatened retribution. Officially
the U.S. is also against an independent Kurdish
state. Israel was the only state that supported the
referendum. That sympathy (or politically
convenience) runs both ways:
In Kurdistan's Erbil, the Polling
Station Head Shouted Out: 'We Are the Second
Israel!'
Referendum rally in Erbil
Chuck
Schumer, Democratic Senate leader and a reliable
Zionist tool,
called on the Trump administration to recognizing
an independent Kurdistan. Trump can not do so
because it would put the U.S. in opposition to its
"allies" in the Turkish and the Iraqi government.
But the official position is different from what the
U.S. does on the ground. U.S. arms still flow to
Kurdish forces in Iraq and Syria.
Likewise Turkey is officially very concerned about
the independence move of Kurdish Iraq but it also
has commercial interests in it. Long term it fears
the independence movements in its own large Kurdish
population and sees the referendum in Iraq as a
U.S. move against
Turkish security interests:
[Turks]
believe the referendum is actually part of
Washington’s supposed long-standing desire to
establish “a second Israel” in the region.
Israel’s support for the KRG referendum has fed
into this perception.
According to the Iraqi prime minister Turkey
agreed to isolate
the Kurdish region. But Turkish companies, and
Erdogan's immediate family, have commercial interest
in oil from the Kurdish region. Turkey exports some
$8 billion per year in food and consumer goods to
the Kurdish region. While Ankara is anxious that its
own Kurdish population will follow the Iraqi Kurdish
example, near term greed
may well prevail
over long term national interests.
Without
Turkish agreement an "independent" Kurdish region in
Iraq can not survive. Such independence would
totally depend on Ankara's whims.
Should Masoud Barzani gain enough external support
and prevail with his independence gimmick, the
situation in Syria
would also change.
The Kurds in Syria are currently led by the PKK/YPG,
a political cult and militia which follows
Abdullah Öcalan's
crude philosophies. Politically they are opposed to
Barzani but they have similar interests and
attitudes. Though only 8% of the population, they
have now occupied some 20% of Syria's land and
control 40% of its oil reserves. Continued U.S.
support for Syrian Kurds and the example in Iraqi
could incited them to split from Syria. Damascus
would never agree to that.
Kurdish
independence, as Barzanistan in Iraq and/or as
anarcho-marxists Öcalan cult in Syria, would be the
start of another decade of war - either between the
Kurdish entities and the nations around them, or
within the ever disunited Kurdish tribes themselves.
This
article was first published by
Moon Of Alabama
|