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Terror Strike on the Kurds
Ximena Ortiz
Similarities between the bombing that ripped through
Iraqi Kurdistan Sunday and the November attacks in
Istanbul
are so striking that the earlier tragedy seems now to
foreshadow the latter.
Both
bombings were largely explained as being the work of Al
Qaeda. For most American observers, this settled the
matter succinctly: terrorism, Al Qaeda, Islamic
fundamentalism.
This
characterization may not be wrong, but it is so narrow
and distorts part of the reality – something central to
the risks U.S. soldiers and others face in Iraq.
Attacks
in Iraq's Kurdish region and in Istanbul were both
primarily homegrown -- a dynamic that could be obscured
given the possible ties with the internationally
connected Al Qaeda. Both were allegedly perpetrated by
ethnic Kurds (or at least groups that are mostly
Kurdish). Kurdish perpetrators share a similar Islamic
ideology that is widely at odds with that of their other
Kurdish brethren.
Also,
both groups are believed to have been financed at one
time by countries in the region. The financial support
for these unpredictable and dangerous groups
demonstrates how Byzantine national security strategy
can be in the Middle East. It also demonstrates to what
extent Kurdish issues are a vortex of regional concern,
particularly for Turkey, Iran and Syria—all of which
have Kurdish minorities.
Finally, they are also indicative of how fragile even
the currently unstable situation in Iraq remains, and to
what degree the current occupation inflames older
hostilities.
The
attacks in Kurdish Iraq are believed to have been
perpetrated by Ansar al-Islam, a mostly Kurdish Islamic
fundamentalist group that is opposed to the secular,
democratic, pro-American and pro-occupation stance of
Kurdistan's two main political parties.
Ansar
al-Islam is widely believed to have been partly financed
by Iran over the years to undermine Kurdish stability in
Iraq.
A successful, autonomous Iraqi Kurdish region could give
Iranian Kurds greater impetus to demand autonomy of
their own and provides an example of an effective,
secular state along Iran's border.
Iraqi
Kurdish officials aren't keen to acknowledge that the
attacks, which have killed at least 101 people, probably
involved Kurds themselves. The Wahhabi Islamic ideology
of Ansar is anathema to most Iraqi Kurds, and they have
been quick to point to a connection between the bombers
and Al Qaeda.
If this
connection is proven, it would be only part of the
story.
The
Kurdish bombers and planners in Turkey, meanwhile, were
part of Turkish Hezbollah (even if they have re-branded
themselves) and are also Islamic fundamentalists. These
terrorists, amazingly enough, are widely believed to
have been financed by the Turkish government itself
until about 1999 -- a strategy that seems akin to
extinguishing a fire with gasoline.
Why? In
the 1980s and 1990s, the Turkish government was mainly
concerned about another Kurdish militant group, known as
the PKK – a secular group seeking independence from the
rest of
Turkey.
When the Islamic Hezbollah fighters began battling the
PKK, the Turkish government is believed to have provided
Turkish Hezbollah with all the firepower and immunity it
desired.
In
1999, Turkey reached a cease-fire with the PKK -- and
with an eye on EU membership and significantly improved
its treatment of its sizeable Kurdish minority -- it
began cracking down on Turkish Hezbollah. The terrorist
attacks in
Istanbul
on Jewish and British targets are probably a reaction
against both that crackdown and the Iraqi occupation.
They also demonstrated the heightened ferocity of
fundamentalist Kurds -- something that should have set
off more alarm bells in Iraqi Kurdistan.
Although the past alliance between Turkish Hezbollah and
the Turkish government has been widely documented, many
news reports failed to point out this important dynamic,
which demonstrates how explosive Kurdish issues have
been in the region.
A Nov.
27 article in The New York Times points out that
the bombers had "strong connections to Turkish
Hezbollah," but fails to mention the connection of that
group to the Turkish government.
In
order to understand the risks to America and other
military personnel in Iraq, it is important to
understand the nature of native grudges. The combination
of old hostilities, anger over the occupation of
Iraq
and Al Qaeda's influence is combustible.
Resolving how to give Iraqi Kurds the autonomy they seek
without inflaming other countries in the Middle East
will be a complicated task for the Coalition Provisional
Authority.
The
question remains, then, just what did our "intelligence"
warn about these risks?
Ximena
Ortiz is the 2003-2004 recipient of the Pulliam
Editorial Fellowship. She is writing a book, "The War,
According to the World," on the global policy
repercussions of the
Iraq
war. This article first appeared in United Press
International.
This column appeared in
United Press International's Outside View and is used
with permission.
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