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- <text id=91TT0659>
- <link 91TT0605>
- <title>
- Apr. 01, 1991: Iraq:Getting Their Way
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Apr. 01, 1991 Law And Disorder
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 34
- IRAQ
- Getting Their Way
- </hdr><body>
- <p>The Kurdish revolt shakes Saddam, contributing to his decision
- to form a new Cabinet, and raises the question, Does the
- country face a breakup?
- </p>
- <p>By Lisa Beyer--Reported by Dan Goodgame/Washington, Scott
- MacLeod/Damascus and William Mader/London
- </p>
- <list>
- <item> If we had a king,
- <item> He would be worthy of his crown;
- <item> He should have a capital
- <item> And we would share his fortune.
- <item> Turk and Persian and Arab
- <item> Would all be our slaves.
- </list>
- <p> -- Kurdish verse popular in the 1920s
- </p>
- <p> The slaves are out of the question, but the capital and the
- fortune are looking more attainable than ever to Iraq's Kurdish
- minority. After struggling for most of this century for control
- of their homeland, which happens to sit atop some of Iraq's
- richest oil fields, the Kurds have wrested large portions of
- it from Saddam Hussein's disheveled forces. Though their gains
- are far from irreversible, this time the Kurds appear to have
- a chance of holding on and, in the end, winning at least a form
- of autonomy. Says a beaming Hoshyar Zebari, spokesman for the
- Kurdistan Democratic Party: "This is the nearest we've ever
- come to achieving our objectives."
- </p>
- <p> The successes of the Kurds in Iraq's north as well as those
- of predominantly Shi`ite rebels staging a simultaneous uprising
- in the south have plainly spooked Saddam. Last weekend in an
- apparent bid to soothe popular discontent, Saddam relinquished
- one of his posts, that of Prime Minister, and named a new
- 24-member Cabinet. The new Prime Minister, Saadoun Hammadi,
- formerly deputy PM, is a Shi`ite and, within the context of the
- ruling Baath Party, is considered a moderate. But the changes
- are unlikely to convince the Iraqi masses that the regime has
- truly turned over a new leaf, especially since the ironhanded
- Interior Minister, Ali Hassan Majid, has kept his job. "The
- Cabinet is window dressing," says a U.S. government expert on
- Iraq. "It doesn't make any decisions anyway."
- </p>
- <p> Saddam is not the only one worried about the Kurds; the
- allies, who, by enfeebling Saddam, made the Kurdish victories
- possible, are concerned too. The Kurdish leadership professes
- a modest aim--autonomy within a democratic Iraq. But
- suspicions run deep that the real agenda is, as it has been in
- the past, independence, a break from Baghdad clean and neat.
- That is an outcome none of the allies desire. For one thing,
- they do not want to be held responsible for Iraq's partition.
- For another, the Kurds in Turkey, Syria, Iran and the Soviet
- Union might come down with separatist fever as well.
- </p>
- <p> At the same time, the allies are rooting for Saddam's
- downfall, a result the Kurdish uprising may be making more
- likely. The conflicting objectives of keeping Iraq whole and
- bringing Saddam down have produced what a close adviser to
- President Bush frankly calls a "muddle" in U.S. policy. While
- refusing to give actual aid to the rebels, Washington has
- hampered Saddam's ability to subdue them by refusing to allow
- Iraqi warplanes to fly. The U.S. enforced that prohibition
- last week when it shot down two Iraqi Su-22 fighter-bombers in
- northern Iraq. Washington, however, has so far turned a blind
- eye to Iraqi helicopter attacks on the rebels.
- </p>
- <p> For the Kurds, the dearth of support for their cause is
- nothing new. They first began to seek independence for
- Kurdistan, which encompasses 28 million people in an area
- roughly the size of Thailand, when the Ottoman Empire collapsed
- after World War I. The Treaty of Sevres in 1920 promised them
- an independent state, but it was never ratified. Later that
- year, Britain annexed the oil-rich Kurdish region of Mosul to
- Iraq, then a British mandate. Intermittent insurgencies against
- Baghdad have followed ever since, and Kurds in Turkey, Iran
- and Syria have also remained restive.
- </p>
- <p> Life under non-Kurdish rulers has not been easy. Teaching
- the Kurdish language is prohibited in Iranian and Syrian
- schools. In Turkey singing a Kurdish ditty can bring a jail
- term. Syria has revoked the citizenship of many of its Kurds
- to punish their rebelliousness. Iraq has expelled tens of
- thousands of Kurds from their homes, and in 1988 gassed the
- town of Halabja, killing 5,000 people. The world community
- scarcely took notice.
- </p>
- <p> Over the years, the Syrians, Iranians and Turks have quietly
- supplied military aid to Iraqi Kurds. But the assistance was
- only enough to create a nuisance for Baghdad, never enough to
- enable the Kurds to break loose.
- </p>
- <p> In their latest campaign the rebels claim that in addition
- to their 30,000 fighters, called the peshmerga (those who face
- death), they have on their side some 20,000 defectors from the
- regular military and another 200,000 militiamen. But these
- figures are believed to be greatly exaggerated. "If you add
- them up," says a senior British diplomat, "the fighting should
- have ended some time ago."
- </p>
- <p> Yet there is no denying that the Kurds have made serious
- advances. After the relatively easy task of capturing barren
- countryside, last week they began to move on the cities,
- including Kirkuk, a metropolis of nearly 1 million people and
- the heart of Iraq's oil-producing north.
- </p>
- <p> The Kurds have always been tough fighters; Saladin, the
- nemesis of the Crusaders, was a Kurd. But this time, they have
- been helped by a convergence of propitious factors. Because
- Baghdad at first considered the unrest in the Shi`ite areas
- more threatening, it moved troops in the north southward,
- giving the guerrillas a more open field. Popular disgust with
- Saddam's disastrous Kuwaiti adventure fertilized the ground.
- "Uprising is an art," says Jalal Talabani, Damascus-based
- leader of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan. "There must be a
- climate for it."
- </p>
- <p> Though there is no indication that the Kurds are
- coordinating military tactics with the insurrectionists in the
- south, both Kurdish and Shi`ite groups belong to the Joint
- Action Committee formed by Iraqi opposition organizations in
- December. Still, the ambitions of the Kurds, who are Sunnis,
- and the Shi`ites, who want a fundamentalist government in
- Baghdad, are hopelessly in conflict. Last week Talabani said
- bluntly, "There will not be an Islamic regime in Iraq."
- Meanwhile, the Shi`ites suspect that in victory Kurdistan would
- bolt from the republic at the first opportunity. Outsiders are
- equally skeptical that the Kurds would settle for autonomy. "As
- the first step, yes," says Michael Lazarev, an expert on the
- Kurds at Moscow's Institute of the Middle East. "But I am sure
- they are still dreaming of a Kurdistan of their own."
- </p>
- <p> Such a prospect makes leaders in Turkey, Iran, Syria and to
- a lesser extent the Soviet Union uneasy. It is not that the
- Kurds spread across these countries are likely to join arms and
- fight en masse for a united homeland. Tribal loyalties have
- prevented the Kurds from developing that kind of cohesion. In
- fact, Kurds have at times betrayed their fellow nationals, as
- when Iraqi Kurds in the early 1970s conspired against Iranian
- Kurds in return for Tehran's support for the Iraqi group's
- fight against Baghdad. But the fear is that if the Kurds in
- Iraq succeed in gaining self-rule, Kurds elsewhere may be
- emboldened to fight harder for their rights as well.
- </p>
- <p> Turkey has put the Kurds on notice that it may use force to
- prevent the establishment of an independent Kurdish state in
- Iraq. Ankara has a historic claim on Iraq's Mosul province
- which it might use as a pretext for such a move. That might in
- turn prompt Iran and Syria to seize their own pieces of Iraq.
- Two weeks ago, Turkish officials met with Iraqi Kurdish leaders
- for the first time. In exchange for that rare acknowledgment
- of their legitimacy, the Kurds apparently promised Ankara that
- they would not foment rebellion among their brethren in Turkey.
- </p>
- <p> While Iraqi Kurds have been speaking with increasing
- confidence that their day has come, Saddam has surely not
- finished fighting them. If his forces are able to consolidate
- their gains in the south, they will soon turn their guns on the
- rebels in the north. After a permanent truce is reached with
- the allies, Saddam will presumably be able to fly his combat
- planes again and thus bomb the Kurds from the air.
- </p>
- <p> Of course, Saddam may not last long enough to see the battle
- out. The allies continue to hope that one of his officers will
- depose him. Many Kurdish leaders say they would be happy to
- work with a military junta. According to Zebari, his group has
- even written to army commanders pledging support for a military
- coup. Yet a new man in a uniform in Baghdad might not be any
- better for the Kurds than the old one. "The military
- establishment in Iraq has a very bad history," says Sami Abdul
- Rahman, leader of the Kurdistan Popular Democratic Party. "They
- are chauvinistic and dictatorial."
- </p>
- <p> The armed forces, which are dominated by Sunni Arabs, are
- also aware that both the Shi`ites and the Kurds are revolting
- not just against Saddam but against Sunni subjugation as well.
- Preserving Sunni predominance would thus require quashing the
- rebels' aspirations. For the Kurds, a capital and a fortune may
- yet prove as illusory as those slaves.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-