Baghdad on the brink of war with Iraqi Kurds
Considering that the U.S. has roughly 5,000 troops in Iraqi Kurdistan right now, it is almost criminal how little attention our politicians and news media has given the volatile situation.
Just today, Baghdad delivered a demand that is politically impossible for the Kurds to comply with.
Kurdish Peshmerga fighters say Iraq's central government has ordered them to surrender key military positions in the disputed city of Kirkuk within hours.
They were given a deadline of 02:00 on Sunday (23:00 GMT on Saturday) to quit military facilities and oil fields.
Brief clashes also erupted between Kurdish forces and Shia militia backing the Iraqi government.
Tensions have been on the rise since Kurds held a referendum on independence last month, which Iraq called illegal.
Kirkuk is like the Iraqi Kurds' Jerusalem. They will never willingly leave it.
It wouldn't be the first time they've fought each other.
Which is why the Kurds rushed 6,000 peshmerga to Kirkuk.
“These forces are [approximately] 3km from Peshmerga forces,” the KRSC tweeted. “Intelligence shows intention to takeover nearby oil fields, airport and military base.”
An unnamed Iraqi general was quoted yesterday by AFP as saying: “Iraqi armed forces are advancing to retake the military positions that were taken over during the events of June 2014.”
In response an estimated 6,000 Peshmerga forces have been sent to reinforce Kirkuk.
“Thousands of heavily armed [Pehsmerga] units are now completely in their positions around Kirkuk,” advisor to Kurdish President Masoud Barzani Hemin Hawrami wrote on Twitter. “Their order is to defend at any cost.”
Already the peshmerga has engaged with Shia militias.
#PMU firing at #Peshmerga frontlines in #Khurmatu. As you can see “Ali” is wrote on the wall. #Kirkuk pic.twitter.com/wXT0sQ58wI
— Lawk Ghafuri (@LawkGhafuri) October 13, 2017
In case there was any confusion how harsh the feelings are, consider this comment.
The spokesman of Iraq's state-sanctioned militias on Thursday described the Kurdish leader behind last month's vote for independence as "worse" than the Islamic State group, but said the militias have no immediate plans to take military action.
This situation isn't the only danger to U.S. forces in Iraq. Trump's stupid decision also places our forces in jeopardy.
"If the scattered news about the stupidity of the U.S. government regarding the IRGC as a terrorist group is correct, the Guards will also consider the American military all over the world, especially the Middle East, as equal to Daesh," Major General Mohammad Ali Jafari warned Sunday, using the Arabic-language acronym for ISIS.
Comments
As suspected way back
in Aug. 2002 when G. Dubya, in one speech or another, first officially mentioned a likely military action against Iraq, and a few of us vets said then (on a local web board), "we'll leave it worse than we found it, just like Vietnam."
Wasn't that we were geniuses, it was a no brainer. The MIC didn't give a damn how or if we ever left Vietnam. And, it was clear Dubya didn't care if we ever left the sandbox. Exit Strategy? Ha! None needed.
the little things you can do are more valuable than the giant things you can't! - @thanatokephaloides. On Twitter @wink1radio. (-2.1) All about building progressive media.
I saw articles in 2014 that saw this coming
I remember writing about it.
You would think that someone in the Obama administration would have tried to do something about this ahead of time, instead of just dropping bombs.
I also remember us talking about how the Kurds
@LaFeminista
Oh, super, Trump'll probably move to the Biggest, Greatest, Hugely Bigly Greatest bombs and start dropping them on their heads. Right after nuking Iran... and despite his sharing a bunker with Cheney, laughing together because incoming overhead can't possibly reach them.
Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.
A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.
Minor correction...
Is that really true? What seems to place our forces in jeopardy is this insane strategy of us fighting a shifting war with shifting goals with shifting allies. It seems to me that inherently such a situation is ridiculously perilous. How did Trump's "stupid decision" really change anything? What decision, in that context, would've been smart (other than, of course, full withdrawal).
A lot of wanderers in the U.S. political desert recognize that all the duopoly has to offer is a choice of mirages. Come, let us trudge towards empty expanse of sand #1, littered with the bleached bones of Deaniacs and Hope and Changers.
-- lotlizard
He is throwing even more oil onto an already explosive
"Deliberately"... Now there's a word I need to think about
This is Trump we are talking about. How much deliberation does he do? Mayhap "impulsively" would be more descriptive. Still, while there's no question that he's a match in a dynamite bin, he didn't put the bin there.
A lot of wanderers in the U.S. political desert recognize that all the duopoly has to offer is a choice of mirages. Come, let us trudge towards empty expanse of sand #1, littered with the bleached bones of Deaniacs and Hope and Changers.
-- lotlizard
It's criminal and expected that our politicians do nothing
to prevent war.
I am not sure if Council on Foreign Relations is a good source
Who Are the Kurds?
Well, I read a little further and found out that no one was responsible for the dispersal of the Kurds. It just happened after the fall of the Ottoman empire. "the fall dispersed..." yea. Colonial powers didn't have anything to do with it...
Saw that a recent survey in UK says that they think their colonial days were OK. They don't have the perspective of the targets. For example, they raped India for decades, over a hundred years, to support their empire. And UK split up India and Pakistan and look what joy that has given the world.
From wikipedia we find some more background
Does this sound like mafia dons dividing up the spoils?
@DonMidwest Yes.
Yes.
Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.
A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.
I have no faith in America's ability
to react either intelligently or compassionately to this looming crisis. The worst thing the USG could do, is to be drawn into fighting any of the Kurds' battles for them. Which might be exactly what our benighted State Department will want to do. As full of neocons and Zionists it is, I'm sure the temptation must be there. I'm guessing that Israel would fully approve of such a Kurdish revolt, and might even be instigating it.
The Iraqi Kurds are acting like their own worst enemy here. They wouldn't stand a chance against the combined forces of Iraq, Turkey, and Iran, no matter how brave they are. Is Barzani too stupid to know this? Or is he playing some other kind of game? I hope Trump will be smart enough to steer clear of it whatever it is, but I suppose we'll soon see.
native
Kirkuk as well as the Nineveh plains
Have always been religiously and ethnically diverse, and we're at no point in their history apart of the KRG.
Solidarity forever
How the British screwed up the Middle East
How the British Screwed Up the Middle East, in 10 Classic Cartoons
Maybe someone can do an article on the ongoing effects of colonization.
It is enough to do the British as a stand alone topic.
Then one could come to the US and go through how we pretend not to be an empire. Ask the Native Americans, Spanish, etc.