Kurdistan-
The final chapter of the Empire’s plot against the Middle East
By
Aram Mirzaei
27
September, 2017
Last
Sunday, the Kurdish regional authority defied the world and went
forward with the scheduled independence referendum in Northern Iraq.
With the definite result of the referendum not being official yet,
there can be little doubt that an overwhelming majority of Kurds have
voted Yes to independence. Despite Kurdish leaders announcing that
the referendum is non-binding and that it is only the beginning of a
negotiation with Baghdad on secession, Kurdish leaders hope that
independence will be recognized by the central government sooner
rather than later.
In
the early stages of the Syrian conflict, and later during the rise of
the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) many Western leaders
claimed that the Middle East was facing changes. They were most
likely referring to the establishment of an “Islamic emirate” in
Eastern Syria and Western Iraq, which the Western powers helped to
create. Today, the jihadist threat is on the verge of annihilation
but peace still seems to be very far away from this conflict-ridden
region. Why?
Where
Moscow has had influence over the course of the Syrian war,
Washington has had influence over the Iraqi conflict. Washington has
used its influence in Iraq to exploit the situation in Syria in
numerous ways. According to reliable sources, before the battle of
Mosul began last year, the Iraqi military and its allies were
planning to liberate the western Al-Anbar province, the largest and
most troublesome province of Iraq. Only after liberating this crucial
province which happens to border Syria, were the Iraqi Armed Forces
to target the northern provinces of Kirkuk and Nineveh. According to
sources in Baghdad, the US military command however rejected this
idea and refused to offer any support if Nineveh (Mosul) was not
liberated before Al-Anbar.
The
US plan was simple: push ISIL towards Syria, lift the pressure of the
Kurds by preventing ISIL to flee north and stir more trouble Russia
and Syria’s way. Had Iraq decided to attack Al-Anbar first, ISIL
would have been severely weakened across the Syrian-Iraqi border and
pushed towards a well prepared Iraqi Kurdistan. This act would have
also supported the Syrian Army and prevented the US from threatening
to take Syria’s major oil fields in the eastern Deir Ezzor
province. But most importantly, the border area would have probably
been under Hashd Al-Shaabi control, thus preventing US troop movement
between Syria and Iraq.
It
is clear that the US has planned these moves and meticulously
implemented it piece by piece in order to delay the inevitable fall
of its ISIL proxies, only to be replaced by its newer and more
“legitimate” (in the eyes of Western audiences) proxies.
The
Kurdish narrative, one that has been hyped by the media to portray a
people, fighting against impossible odds in one of the most
“repressive regions” against the most “radical and violent”
regimes in the world, has been almost universally accepted in the
West. Today, many Western officials consider the Kurds as the only
serious partner in the fight against ISIL, despite Kurdish regional
government (KRG) president Masoud Barzani openly welcoming the ISIL
occupation of Mosul in 2014 because it presented him with an
opportunity to partition Iraq.
But
Barzani’s shady relationship to ISIL is not a concern for Western
powers when it comes to facts. Facts are that Kurds in Iraq control
20 % of Iraq’s oil resources and exports approximately 600 000
barrels per day via Turkey. The Oil has been a major source of
dispute between the central government in Baghdad and the KRG
especially since 2011 when the KRG signed a deal with US oil giant
Exxon Mobil without the approval of the Central government.
It
doesn’t take a genius to understand that the US goal of
partitioning Syria and Iraq is to push back Russian and most
importantly Iranian influence in the region, and tearing up the
century old Sykes-Picot agreement in favour of a sectarian and
ethnically divided Middle East is a perfect way to do it.
Establishing a Kurdish state in Syria and Iraq would also open the
path for further partitioning along sectarian lines – namely a
Sunni Iraq and a Shia Iraq. This would leave both Syria and Iraq as
severely weakened rump states and the Syria-Iraq-Iran-Hezbollah
alliance in danger, but above all, it would guarantee the survival of
Washington’s most precious gem in the region – Israel. It could
be argued that the establishment of a Kurdish state was the primary
goal right from the start of the Syrian and Iraqi conflicts, but that
doesn’t take into account that the primary goal in Syria was to
overthrow the Syrian government and control all of Syria rather than
just parts of it. Partitioning Syria and Iraq was an option only
after 2015 when it became evident that the Jihadist emirate project
would fail and that Syria would survive.
Washington’s
plan will however be challenged. Not only will the US have to deal
with Iranian, Iraqi and Syrian resistance, but it will have to deal
with its ally Turkey, who will not under any circumstances back down
on this question.
Iranian
opposition to the referendum has long been known and Tehran’s first
reaction was to close it’s airspace to the Iraqi Kurdistan region.
“With the request of Iraq’s central government, all Iranian
flights to Sulaimaniyah and Erbil as well as flights passing through
our airspace to the Kurdistan region have been suspended,” said
Kayvan Khosravi, the spokesman for Iran’s Supreme National Security
Council..
Several
Iranian officials have also called out Barzani and the Kurdish
referendum for what it is; a Zionist plot. Meanwhile, on Sunday, it
was also reported that Erdogan and Rouhani had held a phone
conversation discussing the referendum, while Iraq and Turkey have
agreed to hasty military exercises close to the Iraq-Turkey border.
This, coupled with Damascus opposition to the creation of a Kurdish
state, presents a unique situation where Tehran, Ankara, Damascus and
Baghdad are all united on a question. These countries can and will
overcome their differences and otherwise conflicting objectives in
Syria in order to prevent the creation of a Kurdish state.
Turkey,
Washington’s ally in the region has voiced strong opposition to the
Iraqi Kurdish referendum, despite the KRG-Turkish relations prior to
this being excellent. Turkish president Erdogan went as far as
threatening military intervention stating that “Our military is not
(at the border) for nothing. He also added: “We could arrive
suddenly one night.”
Whether
Erdogan will “arrive suddenly one night” or not is uncertain.
What however is for certain is that the US is not concerned about
Erdogan and Turkey’s reaction to the establishment of a Kurdish
state in both Iraq and Syria even though Washington and Ankara are
supposedly allies. Erdogan has since last year’s coup d’état
attempt been considered a loose cannon for Washington and applying
pressure on Ankara and a Turkish leader, who keeps cooperating with
Russia and Iran against Washington’s objectives might not seem a
bad idea for the US.
Turkey
feels that it has been betrayed by the US. Ankara seeks closer ties
to Tehran and Moscow because it feels that Turkish calls to halt
Syrian Kurdish advances on its southern borders are being ignored by
Washington and the West. As mentioned, Turkey, along with all
concerned states will do whatever it takes to prevent the creation of
Kurdistan. It is for this reason that Turkey sent its forces into
Al-Bab, disregarding Washington’s warnings and prevented Rojava
from linking up with the Afrin canton and occupying all of northern
Syria. It is also for this reason that Iran and the Hashd Al-Shaabi
forces closed the path for US forces in southern Syria, thus
preventing any further US occupation along the Syrian-Iraqi border.
In Syria, the Kurdish “federation” will likely push Damascus and
Ankara into deeper cooperation, setting aside their differences.
It
is clear why the Anglo-Zionist Empire wants to partition Iraq and
Syria. It is also clear that Barzani is not insane, he would not go
down this path if it was a suicidal one. He knows that he can count
on international recognition to protect his ambitions of a Kurdish
state when the time comes, despite verbal rejection from the US and
the UK today. Despite an independent Kurdistan being surrounded by
powerful hostile states, there are other countries in the region
ready to support it, namely Israel and Saudi Arabia. Israel has
openly declared its support for a Kurdish state, this should not come
as a surprise, but Saudi Arabia has often been overlooked.
The
Syrian Kurdish leader Salih Muslim Muhammad has already praised Saudi
Arabia’s role in Syria and attacked Iran, it is only a matter of
time before Barzani does the same with the KRG’ neighbours being
hostile and Saudi Arabia happily wanting to pull the Kurds into its
sphere of influence to use against Iran.
Project
Kurdistan is the final chapter of the Anglo-Zionist plan to change
the map of the Middle East. The US actions are polarizing the Middle
East beyond anything previously seen during our lifetime. The end of
the so called Islamic State by next year is certain, the future and
survival of the region however is in danger.
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