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Kurds Take Center Stage in West Asia: A
Sleeping Dragon Awakes
13.6.2012
By James Dorsey, The Huffington Post |
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June
13, 2012
As popular uprisings and post-revolt transitions
change the political, economic and social structures
of the Middle East ,the struggle for Kurdish rights,
including autonomy if not independence, moved center
stage in the past week with a Syrian Kurd becoming
head of the opposition Syrian National Council (SNC),
Iraqi Kurdistan hosting an international tournament
for nations that world soccer body FIFA refuses to
recognize, and the hardening of attitudes of Turkish
Kurds.
The election of Abdelbasset Sayda, a Sweden-based
Kurdish activist and historian, is intended to unite
Syria's fractured opposition as the country reels
from mass murders of civilians believed to be by
militias loyal to embattled President Bashar al-Assad
and teeters on the brink of civil war. The attacks
on civilians and mounting armed opposition have all
but stymied the joint United Nations-Arab League
mediator Kofi Annan's efforts to put an end to the
16-month bloodshed in Syria.
Uniting Assad's opponents is no easy task. The SNC,
unlike the Libyan National Council on which it was
modeled, has not been able to build a consensus
among a myriad of opposition groups. Nor has it
succeeded in bridging the gap between Assad's
opponents in Syria and those in exile. As a result,
the SNC has failed to project itself as a credible
alternative to Assad's government despite backing
from the United States, the European Union, the Arab
League and Turkey. Critics claim that the SNC is
dominated by Islamists, which has allowed Assad to
either garner support from the country's religious
and ethnic minorities or ensure their neutrality.
By electing Seida, the SNC wittingly or unwittingly
has moved the struggle of the 26 million Kurds, who
are spread over Turkey, Syria, Iraq and Iran, into
the spotlight. For much of their post-World War
history the various Kurdish communities have
campaigned for greater political and cultural rights
rather than for independence from their host
countries. Even the Turkish Kurdish Workers Party (PKK),
the only major group to have called for a
pan-Kurdish state, has lowered its sights, calling
for greater freedom for Kurds in Turkey who account
for up to 20 percent of the population.
For its part, Iraqi Kurdistan has flourished under
the U.S. air umbrella that shielded it from deposed
Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein's wrath for 12 years and
has since the fall of Saddam in 2003 become a
country-in-waiting as it puts all the building
blocks of a state in place. Kurdistan last week
demonstrated its ability and intention to conduct a
foreign policy at odds with that of Baghdad with its
hosting of a World Cup for nations that world soccer
body FIFA refuses to recognize. It was significant
that Morocco protested against the inclusion of the
disputed Western Sahara in the tournament to the
Kurdish department of foreign relations rather than
the Iraqi foreign ministry, and negotiating a deal
under which the Saharans were not allowed to fly
their flag during ceremonies and matches.
Sayda's election offers the SNC an opportunity to
draw the Kurds, Syria's largest minority who account
for nine percent of the country's population, into
the anti-Assad front. They have been straddling the
fence until now because the Syrian leader's
opponents have been unable and unwilling to make
Kurdish rights a part of their vision for Syria's
future. Winning Kurdish support would deal a
significant blow to the Assad regime that until now
has been able to rely on the neutrality or support
of the country's minorities who make up an estimated
45 percent of the Syrian minority population.
Syria's minorities -- Alawites, Christians, Druze
and Kurds -- have remained on the side lines of the
revolt because of fear of what Syria may become in a
post-Assad era. The opposition's inability to set
aside internal differences and form a united front
has heightened minorities' sense of risk and
uncertainty. Alawites,www.ekurd.net
the religious sect to which Assad belongs, fear a
cycle of sectarian violence and revenge if the
Syrian leader were forced out of office. Christians
are concerned that their relative secure status
would be undermined in a post-Assad Syria that would
likely be dominated by Islamist forces.
The opposition has so far been unable to convince
Kurds, Syria's most disenfranchised minority, that
it would adopt a policy that recognizes the group's
minority rights by, for example, promising to
redefine Syria as a multiethnic, rather than an
Arab, state. Iraqi Kurds have advised their
politically divided brethren not to take sides in
the Syrian insurrection until the opposition takes
Kurdish concerns into account.
Winning the support of the Kurds whose grievances
include the stripping of hundreds of thousands of
Kurds of their citizenship in 1962, clashes with
security forces in 2004 after an incident in a
soccer stadium in Qamishli that left 60 people dead
and 160 wounded, and last October's assassination of
a prominent Kurdish opposition leader Mashaal Tammo,
would significantly strengthen the revolt against
Assad. Tammo's son Faris warned at the time of his
father's death that "my father's assassination is
the screw in the regime's coffin."
The Syrian president sought to prevent Kurds from
joining the revolt last year by promising to
reinstate Syrian citizenship for those who were made
stateless. However, only several thousand of the
more than 300,000 Kurds who were deprived of their
citizenship have seen it restored in the past year.
Even if Sayda's election fails to enable Faris to
make good on his promise to nail the regime's
coffin, Syrian Kurds may well see their opportunity
approaching soon. With no end to the violence in
sight, the likelihood that Syria will further
fragment politically and the possibility that the
revolt will eventually undermine the country's
territorial integrity, Syrian Kurds could well see a
chance to carve out a political entity of their own
on the model of Iraqi Kurdistan.
That would not go unnoticed in predominantly Kurdish
southeastern Turkey where attitudes are hardening
after last year's break-off of talks between the
government and the PKK and the killing of 34
mostly-teenage Kurds last December in a Turkish air
force strike that was supposed to target Kurdish
guerrillas. Similarly, it would likely reignite
fervor for autonomy in Kurdish-populated areas of
Iran just across the border from Iraqi Kurdistan.
Thus the rise of a Kurdish leader from the Kurdish
diaspora could awaken the sleeping dragon of Kurdish
nationalism across West Asia.
James M. Dorsey is a senior fellow at the S.
Rajaratnam School of International Studies at
Nanyang Technological University in Singapore,
author of the blog, The Turbulent World of Middle
East Soccer, and a consultant to geopolitical
consulting firm Wikistrat. This article first
appeared on The Turbulent World of Middle East
Soccer and as an RSIS Commentary.
Copyright ©, respective
author or news agency,
huffingtonpost.com
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