Five myths about Kurds

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Ramzy Mardini and  Morgan L. Kaplan The Washington Post

No, they aren’t deserted and doomed.

November 1, 2019 at 6:00 a.m. EDT

The Kurds are the largest stateless ethnic group in the world. They were promised autonomy by world powers after the collapse of the Ottoman Empire, but the Allies rescinded and carved up their population, subjugating them as ethnic minorities across Turkey, Iraq, Syria and Iran. In each country, Kurds have experienced varying degrees and forms of oppression but have also encountered opportunities for political expression. “The Kurds” are not a single entity with one common political aim. And President Trump’s decision last month to pull back U.S. troops from the Syrian border, exposing the Syrian Kurds to a Turkish incursion, has revived a raft of myths about them.

Myth No. 1

The Kurds are a nation fighting for independence.

“Their century-old quest for independence is marked by marginalization and persecution,” a Council on Foreign Relations paper holds. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu described that quest categorically in a 2014 speech: “We need to support the Kurdish aspiration for independence.” (In fact, an independent Kurdish state briefly existed inside Iran in 1946 before Tehran crushed it.)

But while the Kurds in Iraq have sought to separate themselves from Baghdad, the aspiration for statehood is not held by all Kurds, and independence is not always an immediate goal. For the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) in Turkey, founded in 1978, the initial goal of its insurgency was to achieve an independent Kurdish state, but the PKK eventually dropped that ambition and now seeks equal rights and regional autonomy. In Syria, the Kurdish Democratic Union Party (PYD) has been explicit that it does not seek an independent state — just regional autonomy within Syrian borders. The Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) in Iraq commenced a process toward independence in 2017, approving a referendum, but since then it has moderated that goal after Baghdad responded to the vote with violence.

The broader political goals for Kurds are some form of regional autonomy, self-governance within the confines of the state and basic national rights, such as the recognition of their identity and language.

Myth No. 2

The Kurds are superior soldiers on the battlefield.

Given their long experience in armed resistance against governments in Iran, Iraq and Turkey, Kurdish populations have generated seasoned war veterans. A former U.S. military adviser who helped them in Iraq described them in a Washington Times op-ed as “Fearsome, fearless fighters.” As a U.S. officer who fought with Syrian Kurds told Foreign Policy magazine, “Both their competence in battle and their commitment to the mission have been proven over and over.”

But despite their bravery — the term “peshmerga” means “those who face death” — Kurdish military culture remains largely grounded in traditional guerrilla warfare, and units often lack the type of organization and resources required to fight conventionally. Syrian and Iraqi Kurds absorbed heavy casualties fighting the Islamic State and would have lost many more troops without foreign air support, training and military hardware. In fact, recent spurts of global security cooperation with the Kurds came at times when Kurdish forces faced potential collapse. This was the case in 2014, when American airstrikes helped the peshmerga in Iraq deflect an Islamic State assault and when U.S. support helped break the Islamic State siege of Kobane, a city in northern Syria.

Since then, with the help of foreign training missions, many units in Syria and Iraq have developed expertise in counterinsurgency and conventional warfare. But there is still wide variation between the different Kurdish armed groups, and from unit to unit within the same organizations.

Myth No. 3

The Kurds are friendless.

Kurds have a proverb: “Kurds have no friends but the mountains.” This lament is also the title of a 1993 history of the ethnic group by John Bulloch and Harvey Morris. It highlights their long and lonely struggle for domestic security and international recognition, especially at times when the Kurds have felt betrayed by foreign powers. Iraqi Kurds, in particular, have a long history of being deserted by Washington. In October 2017, they felt abandoned when the United States failed to keep Iraqi troops from advancing on peshmerga-controlled territory after the independence referendum. “The U.S. has now betrayed the Kurds a minimum of eight times over the past 100 years,” Jon Schwarz wrote in the Intercept last month.

Yet Kurdish leaders grasp that security politics in the Middle East is a shrewd business and have embraced a realist approach to foreign policy. Just as foreign powers sometimes use Kurdish groups to advance their regional goals, Kurdish groups are just as savvy in taking advantage of foreign partnerships to advance their interests at home. Some Kurdish organizations, particularly in Iraq, form important relationships, including with the United States and Russia, Iran and (unofficially) Israel, and Western Europe and Turkey. They have received security assistance and military training from the West and host a U.S. military base, even while they ink economic and energy deals with Turkish, Iranian and Russian companies.

Myth No. 4

The Kurds are stalwart pro-American allies.

When Trump announced his new policy last month, several dissenters lamented his betrayal of people who love America; Kurds are often eager to purvey this myth, too. “America represents freedom,” a resident of Iraqi Kurdistan told Fox News in 2014. “Our dream is to be eternally allied to America.” Mahmoud Othman, a Kurdish member of the Iraqi Governing Council, asked in a 2004 speech, “Have the Americans forgotten that the Kurds are their best friends in the Middle East?”

But U.S. relations with Kurdish groups vary widely across the four countries. In Iraq and Syria, Americans and Kurds have worked together closely. But in Turkey, the PKK — founded as a Marxist separatist group — has been designated as a foreign terrorist organization by the State Department since 1997. The other major Kurdish group in Turkey, the Peoples’ Democratic Party, is represented in parliament and has an office to promote its interests in Washington. Even Kurdish entities with strong ties to the United States have opted for an “open relationship”: During the Cold War, for instance, Iraqi Kurdish parties simultaneously solicited support from the United States and the Soviet Union. The same can be said for the military wing of the Syrian PYD, which has partnered with U.S. troops since 2015 but also courts U.S. adversaries in Moscow and Damascus.

Myth No. 5

Thanks to Trump’s betrayals, the Kurds are doomed.

By indirectly greenlighting a Turkish incursion against the Kurds, Trump effectively sold out his anti-Islamic State partners. “It appears to be the final days of Rojava, as the unique Kurdish political experience in Northeastern Syria is known,” said a report in Slate last month. A Turkish political analyst put it this way: “Winter is coming, and it’s going to be harder for the YPG to operate on the plains. Without American airpower they will easily be hunted down by Turkish planes and artillery.”

But Kurds will continue to make pragmatic choices for the sake of self-preservation, and this move does not even spell the end of Kurdish self-governance. The Syrian Kurds have already adapted, forging partnerships with Damascus and Moscow while making attempts to renegotiate their connections with Washington. Because it would be incredibly costly for the Syrian regime to try to dismantle Kurdish self-governing institutions and reimpose its own, inviting the state back in will probably not be the end of Syrian Kurdish self-rule.

Twitter: @RamzyMardini
@MorganLKaplan

 

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