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Syria: An Alternative Choice
22.5.2012
By Joseph Puder - Front Page Magazine |
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Dr Sherkoh Abbas,
the President of the Kurdistan National Assembly of
Syria KURDNAS. Photo: Ekurd.net/AP/UKS
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May 22, 2012
In the midst of the current revolutionary chaos
in Syria, there is a clear voice of reason that
seeks to create a free Syria that is democratic,
Western-oriented and federal in structure. That
voice belongs to Sherkoh Abbas, President of the
Kurdistan National Assembly of Syria, and his allies
in the Syrian Democratic Coalition.
Secretary of State Hilary Clinton met late last year
with members of the Syrian National Council; these
members in exile are considered to be the opposition
leaders by the Obama administration. Unfortunately,
most of them were found to be associated with the
Muslim Brotherhood. Sherkoh Abbas and Dr. Zuhdi
Jasser, formidable leaders of the Syrian democratic
and secular opposition, were snubbed by Clinton.
Sherkoh Abbas was compelled to leave his native
Qamishli, Syria back in the 1980s because he
criticized the Hafez Assad regime. Abbas
subsequently came to the US as a student and
received advanced degrees in Technology,
Engineering, and Business.
As Abbas sees it, the current situation can only
lead to a civil war between the regular Syrian army,
which represents the Alawis and their associates,
and the Free Syrian Army composed of Sunni-Arab
officers and soldiers. The Kurds, he maintains, are
caught between these warring armies without an army
of their own. He fears that the Kurds will be the
principle victims of the unleashed violence, since
the Kurds are also the largest minority. According
to Abbas, “The free world has a moral obligation to
protect the Kurds of Syria not only because we have
been victimized and have been throughout the 20th
Century, but because we are natural allies of the
West, sharing such values as tolerance and
acceptance of minorities, and belief in an open and
free democracy.”
Asked to opine on what he would like to see in the
near future for his Kurdish people: an autonomous
region in Syria; joining the Kurdistan Regional
Government in Iraq – which borders the Kurdish
region in Syria; or perhaps an even larger Kurdish
state, Abbas said, “The Kurdish people, in all parts
of Kurdistan, seek the right to form an independent
Kurdish state. We can only achieve this cherished
goal with the help of the western democracies, and
first and foremost the U.S.”
Unlike the Palestinian Arabs who squandered numerous
opportunities to assert their self-determination as
a “people,” (in 1938, the Arabs of Palestine
rejected the Peel Commission plan for the division
of Palestine into a larger Palestinian state and a
much smaller Jewish state. In 1947, they rejected
the UN Partition Plan, and they have made a mockery
of the 1993 Oslo Accords). The Kurds,www.ekurd.net
a truly distinct people, with their own language and
culture, have been cheated out of an autonomous and
independent Kurdistan promised to them by the
victorious allies (Britain and France) in the Treaty
of Sevres (August 10, 1920). The 1923 Treaty of
Lausanne replaced the Treaty of Sevres, as the new
nationalist Turkey under Kamal Ataturk re-conquered
Anatolia and the land that was to have been the
Kurdish state.
If an independent Kurdish state is unattainable at
this juncture, Abbas would be satisfied with a
“democratic and federal system in Syria” in which
the Kurdish people would have the right to create
their own institutions, and disseminate their
cultural heritage – which has been forbidden and
outlawed by the “Arabizing” Assad dictatorships. The
Kurds reject the legitimacy of the Assad regime and,
parenthetically, the Ba’athist influence on the
political life of Syria in general and Kurds in
particular.
The democratic opposition group that Sherkoh Abbas
and Dr. Zuhdi Jasser represent has been sidelined by
the Obama administration, which has made its choice
for Syria by supporting the Syrian National Council
led by Burhan Ghalioun, who is backed by the Muslim
Brotherhood and the Islamist government of Turkey.
According to Abbas Obama administration officials
are pushing the Kurdish groups to join to Syrian
National Council. Only one group has complied thus
far.
And how does Sherkoh Abbas see the revolution in
Syria ending? “The Muslim Brotherhood, with the
support of President Obama and Turkey, will not
succeed in controlling all of Syria. The Alawis and
Hezbollah backed by Iran, and Russia and China, will
not give up power easily.” Sherkoh Abbas asserted
that the Alawis have been working to establish an
Alawi mini-state in the western region of coastal
Syria for quite some long time. That area, he
pointed out, is where the regime has stored most of
its assets and where weapons from Russia are
shipped.
Erdogan’s Turkey, Abbas maintains, will use the Free
Syrian army, currently based in Turkish territory,
to control the Kurdish region. The Christians in
Syria, numbering more than 10% of the population,
have been largely co-opted by the Assad regime, as
well as the Druze religious community in southern
Syria, who account for 2% of the population. The
Muslim Brotherhood does not trust either of these
groups because they have, for the most part,
refrained from joining the revolution in opposition
to the Assad regime.
Copyright © respective author or news agency,
Frontpagemagazine.com
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