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Kurdish resistance may break the Syrian
rebels
30.10.2012
By Mike Giglio - The Daily Beast |
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Rebel fighters open fire in Aleppo, Syria on Oct.
28, 2012. Photo: Narciso
Contreras/AP •
See Related Articles
October
30, 2012
Bloodshed between Syrian revolutionaries and
Kurdish militiamen raises worry over a new front in
the months-long conflict.
When fighting broke out between rebel soldiers and
Kurdish militiamen in the Syrian city of Aleppo on
Sunday, rebels quickly downplayed the violence,
calling it a mistake and claiming that a government
ruse was to blame. “The problem,” read a statement
put out by the main rebel coalition, “was the result
of a misunderstanding that was created by a regime
plot.”
Rebels expected the government to continue its
military assault on Aleppo and other major cities
this past weekend, despite its promise of a
cease-fire for the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Adha,
and the truce was broken repeatedly before it
expired on Monday night. But the clash with the
Kurds was unexpected—and, as the rebel response
suggests, a cause for alarm among the opposition.
A conflict with the Kurds—who make up an estimated
10 percent of the Syrian population, have armed
forces of their own, and have so far managed to
remain unaligned in the grinding war—would likely be
damaging for the rebel coalition, which is already
hard-pressed in its struggle to overthrow Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad. “It would spell doom for
them,” says Shashank Joshi, a Middle East analyst
with the Royal United Services Institute in London.
“It would stretch them far too thin. They are
operating at the edge of their envelope.”
Thirty people died in the altercation between the
Kurds and rebels, and soldiers from both sides were
taken hostage, according to the Britain-based Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights. The bloodshed
reportedly started after some 200 rebels moved into
Ashrafiyeh, a strategically important district in
Aleppo with a high concentration of Kurdish
residents. Analysts dismissed the idea that the
government played a hand in inciting the violence.
Instead, they say, it was more likely the result of
suspicions between the two sides reaching a head as
the battle for Syria’s largest city continues to
unfold.
“Clearly this is not something that was orchestrated
by the regime. It’s a very awkward issue for the
rebels, because it underscores just how divided the
opposition remains,” Joshi says. “The rebels don’t
want to acknowledge this, but they’re viewed very
skeptically by large parts of the Kurdish population
in Syria.”
Unlike many in Syria, the Kurds do not necessarily
see the rebels as welcome liberators—even though
they have long suffered under Assad’s rule. Like the
country’s Christians, the Kurds seem to be wary of
reports of increasing religious radicalization
inside the rebel forces. And if the rebels do emerge
triumphant, many Kurds wonder where they’d stand in
the new Syria.
The Kurdish regions are dominated by the PYD party,
which many analysts tie to the PKK, the Kurdish
separatist group that has spent decades battling for
autonomy in Turkey. As the war intensified over the
summer, the Assad government pulled its forces back
from Kurdish-dominated areas, likely determining
that any conflict with the Kurds would be too
damaging to their fight against the rebels. The
Kurdish-controlled areas have pushed to keep out of
the conflict ever since.
One activist in the Kurdish city of Qamishli in
northeastern Syria [western Kurdistan] reports
taking part in a recent demonstration in which
protesters had the message: “No to the regime, and
no to the rebels.”
“What can you do when one side is killing you in the
name of the rebellion, and the other side is killing
you in the name of dictatorship?” the activist,
Barzan Iso, says.
“The Syrian Kurds have tried to stay out of this as
much as they can, and just look out for themselves.
They’ve tried not to get involved on either side,”
says David Pollock, a senior fellow with the
Washington Institute for Near East Policy. “There’s
a lot of suspicion and mutual mistrust between the
Kurds and the main Syrian opposition. There’s no
political agreement, and there’s a built-in rivalry
over who’s going to take control of those parts of
the country as the Assad regime weakens.”
Many Kurds are quick to point out that they have
opposed Assad’s government for years—and that in
2004 they even waged a uprising of their own that
resulted in a major government crackdown. And
despite their suspicions,www.ekurd.net
some Kurdish activists insist that Kurds and rebels
are on the same side—and have sought to downplay the
weekend clashes as well. “It’s a misunderstanding,
and they’re going to fix it,” says one long-time
Kurdish activist, who requested anonymity because of
the sensitivity of the situation.
So far, the details of Sunday’s fighting in
Ashrafiyeh have been hard to nail down. “It’s really
difficult to answer. Nobody knows, and nobody tells
the truth,” says one activist who monitors the
violence in Syria.
But Joshi, the RUSI analyst, points out that such
misunderstandings are more likely in Aleppo, where
control is fluid and the fighting is chaotic, than
in the Kurdish areas of the countryside that the
rebels have largely left alone. “Outside of Aleppo,
they’re giving the Kurds plenty of room. They know
what the ground rules are,” Joshi says. “There are
incentives on all sides to keep the Kurds out of the
conflict.”
Copyright ©, respective author or news agency,
thedailybeast.com
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