[lbo-talk] KR: Kurds actively preparing for military takeover of Kirkuk

Michael Pollak mpollak at panix.com
Thu Dec 29 10:58:13 PST 2005


[A Follow up on that last article]

[Juan Cole says today that the Shiites sound like they are getting ready to allow the secession of Kirkuk so long as they can do virtually the same thing in the South, not in name but in fact, hoarding all the oil wealth produced there for themselves. The two together have enough votes to run the government without any Sunni participation. And this division of riches would leave the Sunni triangle completely impoverished and forever without power.

[And this groundplan for civil war is emerging out of the areas the US thinks are going best. And are filled with our strongest allies. And the elected government we think is such a turning point.]

[It's really hard to see out of this how more of us is going to make things better.]

URL: http://www.realcities.com/mld/krwashington/13495329.htm

Posted on Tue, Dec. 27, 2005 Knight Ridder Newspapers

Kurds in Iraqi army proclaim loyalty to militia

By Tom Lasseter

KIRKUK, Iraq - Kurdish leaders have inserted more than 10,000 of their

militia members into Iraqi army divisions in northern Iraq to lay the

groundwork to swarm south, seize the oil-rich city of Kirkuk and

possibly half of Mosul, Iraq's third-largest city, and secure the

borders of an independent Kurdistan.

Five days of interviews with Kurdish leaders and troops in the region

suggest that U.S. plans to bring unity to Iraq before withdrawing

American troops by training and equipping a national army aren't

gaining traction. Instead, some troops that are formally under U.S.

and Iraqi national command are preparing to protect territory and

ethnic and religious interests in the event of Iraq's fragmentation,

which many of them think is inevitable.

The soldiers said that while they wore Iraqi army uniforms they still

considered themselves members of the Peshmerga - the Kurdish militia -

and were awaiting orders from Kurdish leaders to break ranks. Many

said they wouldn't hesitate to kill their Iraqi army comrades,

especially Arabs, if a fight for an independent Kurdistan erupted.

"It doesn't matter if we have to fight the Arabs in our own

battalion," said Gabriel Mohammed, a Kurdish soldier in the Iraqi army

who was escorting a Knight Ridder reporter through Kirkuk. "Kirkuk

will be ours."

The Kurds have readied their troops not only because they've long

yearned to establish an independent state but also because their

leaders expect Iraq to disintegrate, senior leaders in the Peshmerga -

literally, "those who face death" - told Knight Ridder. The Kurds are

mostly secular Sunni Muslims, and are ethnically distinct from Arabs.

Their strategy mirrors that of Shiite Muslim parties in southern Iraq,

which have stocked Iraqi army and police units with members of their

own militias and have maintained a separate militia presence

throughout Iraq's central and southern provinces. The militias now are

illegal under Iraqi law but operate openly in many areas. Peshmerga

leaders said in interviews that they expected the Shiites to create a

semi-autonomous and then independent state in the south as they would

do in the north.

The Bush administration - and Iraq's neighbors - oppose the nation's

fragmentation, fearing that it could lead to regional collapse. To

keep Iraq together, U.S. plans to withdraw significant numbers of

American troops in 2006 will depend on turning U.S.-trained Kurdish

and Shiite militiamen into a national army.

The interviews with Kurdish troops, however, suggested that as the

American military transfers more bases and areas of control to Iraqi

units, it may be handing the nation to militias that are bent more on

advancing ethnic and religious interests than on defeating the

insurgency and preserving national unity.

A U.S. military officer in Baghdad with knowledge of Iraqi army

operations said he was frustrated to hear of the Iraqi soldiers'

comments but that he had seen no reports suggesting that they would

acted improperly in the field.

"There's talk and there's acts, and their actions are that they follow

the orders of the Iraqi chain of command and they secure their sectors

well," said the officer, who refused to be identified because he's not

authorized to speak on the subject

American military officials have said they're trying to get a broader

mix of sects in the Iraqi units.

However, Col. Talib Naji, a Kurd serving in the Iraqi army on the edge

of Kirkuk, said he would resist any attempts to dilute the Kurdish

presence in his brigade.

"The Ministry of Defense recently sent me 150 Arab soldiers from the

south," Naji said. "After two weeks of service, we sent them away. We

did not accept them. We will not let them carry through with their

plans to bring more Arab soldiers here."

One key to the Kurds' plan for independence is securing control of

Kirkuk, the seat of a province that holds some of Iraq's largest oil

fields. Should the Kurds push for independence, Kirkuk and its oil

would be a key economic engine.

The city's Kurdish population was driven out by former Sunni Arab

dictator Saddam Hussein, whose "Arabization" program paid thousands of

Arab families to move there and replace recently deported or murdered

Kurds.

"Kirkuk is Kurdistan; it does not belong to the Arabs," Hamid Afandi,

the minister of Peshmerga for the Kurdistan Democratic Party, one of

the two major Kurdish groups, said in an interview at his office in

the Kurdish city of Irbil. "If we can resolve this by talking, fine,

but if not, then we will resolve it by fighting."

In addition to putting former Peshmerga in the Iraqi army, the Kurds

have deployed small Peshmerga units in buildings and compounds

throughout northern Iraq, according to militia leaders. While it's

hard to calculate the number of these active Peshmerga fighters,

interviews with militia members suggest that it's well in excess of

10,000.

Afandi said his group had sent at least 10,000 Peshmerga to the Iraqi

army in northern Iraq, a figure substantiated in interviews with

officers in two Iraqi army divisions in the region.

"All of them belong to the central government, but inside they are

Kurds ... all Peshmerga are under the orders of our leadership,"

Afandi said.

Jafar Mustafir, a close adviser to Iraq's Kurdish interim president,

Jalal Talabani, and the deputy head of Peshmerga for the Patriotic

Union of Kurdistan, a longtime rival of the Kurdistan Democratic

Party, echoed that.

"We will do our best diplomatically, and if that fails we will use

force" to secure borders for an independent Kurdistan, Mustafir said.

"The government in Baghdad will be too weak to use force against the

will of the Kurdish people."

Mustafir said his party had sent at least 4,000 Peshmerga of its own

into the Iraqi army in the area.

The Kurds have positioned their men in Iraqi army units on the western

flank of Kirkuk, in the area that includes Irbil and the volatile city

of Mosul, and on the eastern flank in the area that includes the

Kurdish city of Sulaimaniyah.

The Iraqi army's 2nd Division, which oversees the Irbil-Mosul area,

has some 12,000 soldiers, and at least 90 percent of them are Kurds,

according to the division's executive officer.

Of the 3,000 Iraqi soldiers in Irbil, some 2,500 were together in a

Peshmerga unit previously based in the city. An entire brigade in

Mosul, about 3,000 soldiers, is composed of three battalions that were

transferred almost intact from former Peshmerga units, with many of

the same soldiers and officers in the same positions. Mosul's

population is split between Kurds and Arabs, and any move by Peshmerga

units to take it almost certainly would lead to an eruption of Arab

violence.

"The Parliament must solve the issue of Kurdistan. If not, we know how

to deal with this: We will send Kurdish forces to enforce Kurdistan's

boundaries, and that will have to include the newly liberated areas

such as the Kurdish sections of Mosul," 1st Lt. Herish Namiq said.

"Every single one of us is Peshmerga. Our entire battalion is

Peshmerga."

Namiq was riding in an unarmored pickup in an Arab neighborhood in

eastern Mosul where Sunni Arab insurgents frequently shoot at his men.

As he leaned out the window with his AK-47, scanning the streets, he

said, "We will do our duty as Peshmerga."

Firas Ahmed, the assistant to the head of the Kurdistan Democratic

Party office in Mosul, invited a Knight Ridder reporter to inspect the

local Peshmerga brigade, motioning to a compound across the street.

It housed the headquarters of the 4th Brigade of the Iraqi army's 2nd

Division.

"We cannot openly say they are Peshmerga," Ahmed said. "We will take

you to see the Peshmerga, but they will be wearing Iraqi army

uniforms."

Ahmed's boss, Khasrow Kuran, grinned and chimed in: "We cannot say

`Peshmerga' here."

The 4th Brigade soldiers who met Ahmed at the front gate saluted him

and said, openly, that they reported to Afandi, the Kurdistan

Democratic Party's Peshmerga commander.

Col. Sabar Saleem, a former Peshmerga who's the head intelligence

officer for the 4th Brigade, said he answered to the Peshmerga

leadership. He also said he had little use for most Sunni Arabs.

"All of the Sunnis are facilitating the terrorists. They have little

influence compared with the Kurds and Shiites, so they allow the

terrorists to operate to create pressure and get political

concessions," Saleem said. "So they should be killed, too ... the

Sunni political leaders in Baghdad are supporting the insurgency, too,

and there will be a day when they are tried for it."

To the east, in the Iraqi army's 4th Division, is a brigade of about

3,000 troops in Sulaimaniyah that's also a near-replica of a former

Peshmerga brigade.

Because of a U.S. military mandate, the 4th Division battalion serving

in Kirkuk is about 50 percent Kurdish, 40 percent Arab and 10 percent

Turkmen. The battalion on the outskirts of Kirkuk is about 60 percent

Kurdish.

Capt. Fakhir Mohammed, a former Peshmerga and the operations officer

for the battalion on Kirkuk's edge, said he wasn't concerned that the

Kurds had only a simple majority in the two Kirkuk battalions: "It's

not a problem, because we have an entire brigade in Sulaimaniyah that

is all Kurd. They would come down here and take the Kurdish side."

Sgt. Ahmed Abdullah agreed.

"There are thousands of us Peshmerga, and it is our duty to protect

the borders of Kurdistan ... we will fight to hold Kirkuk at any

price," Abdullah said. "We will fight that battalion (in Kirkuk) if

they stand in our way."



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