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Veteran Kurdish politician calls on Israel
to support the break-up of Syria
16.5.2012
By Jonathan Spyer - The Jerusalem Post |
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Dr Sherkoh Abbas, a veteran Kurdish politician and
the President of the Kurdistan National Assembly of
Syria. Photo: Picasa.com
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Dr. Sherkoh Abbas, a veteran
Kurdish dissident, calls for dismantling the country
into ethnicity based areas.
May 16, 2012
Sherkoh Abbas, a veteran Syrian Kurdish
dissident, called on Israel this week to support the
break-up of Syria into a series of federal
structures based on the country’s various
ethnicities.
Speaking from Washington, Abbas was also critical of
US attempts to induce Syrian Kurds to join and work
with the main opposition body, the Syrian National
Council. Abbas, who heads the Washington- based
Kurdistan National Assembly, said that dismantling
Syria into ethnic enclaves with a federal
administration would serve to “break the link”
between Syria and the Iran-led “Shi’a crescent.”
Syrian Kurdish, Druse, Alawite and Sunni Arab
federal areas, he suggested, would have no interest
in aligning with Iran.
At the same time, a federalized Syria would avoid
the possibility of a resurgent, Muslim
Brotherhood-controlled Sunni Islamist Syria emerging
as a new challenge to Israel and the West.
“We need to break Syria into pieces,” Abbas said.
The Syrian Kurdish dissident argued that a federal
Syria, separated into four or five regions on an
ethnic basis, would also serve as a natural “buffer”
for Israel against both Sunni and Shi’ite Islamist
forces.
Kurds are the largest ethnic minority population in
Syria. They number more than 10 percent of the
population, centered in the northeastern provinces
of Hasakeh and Qamishli.
There is also a large, partly Arabized Kurdish
population in the cities of Aleppo, Hama and
Damascus.
Despite the Assad regime’s determined counter-attack
in recent months, Abbas dismissed any possibility
that the beleaguered dictator could survive in the
long term.
“Whether it is one year, or even two, the regime is
finished,” he said.
The KNA leader pointed to the recent bloody terror
attacks in Damascus as an indication of President
Bashar Assad’s desperation, arguing that these were
the work of Sunni jihadis in the pay of of Assad.
“The regime is now unleashing its suicide groups,”
he asserted.
His remarks came in response to a meeting at the US
State Department last week between American
officials and representatives of the Kurdish
National Council, a Syrian Kurdish body. Robert
Ford, who left his post as US ambassador to Syria
earlier this year, and Fred Hof, the
administration’s special coordinator on Syria,www.ekurd.net
took part in the meeting. State Department Deputy
Spokesman Mark Toner described its purpose as part
of “ongoing efforts... to help the Syrian opposition
build a more cohesive opposition to Assad.”
Abbas, however, was more blunt in his description of
the meeting’s purpose. It was held, he said, so that
the US officials could tell the Kurdish
representatives, “You should be part of the Syrian
National Council.”
So far, only one Syrian Kurdish organization – the
Future Movement of Fares Tammo – has elected to join
the SNC.
Many Kurds distrust the SNC because of the strong
presence of Muslim Brotherhood members in its
leadership, and because of its close links to the
government of Turkey.
SNC leader Burhan Ghalioun has rejected the
existence of any region called “Kurdistan” within
Syria. He has called on Syrian Kurds to abandon what
he called the “useless illusion” of federalism.
Early Kurdish recruits to the council withdrew from
it after failing to secure a commitment to change
the name of a post-Assad Syria from the current
Syrian Arab Republic to the plain “Syrian Republic.”
The SNC has also made no commitment to Kurdish
autonomy in a post-Assad Syria.
Radwan Ziadeh, a prominent Washington- based member
of the SNC, said that the issue of the Syrian Kurds
could only be settled after the fall of the Syrian
regime, in the context of democracy.
Perhaps because of these positions, the Syrian
Kurdish attitude toward the uprising has remained
cautious. The Kurds have many deep grievances
against the Assad regime: It deprived many of them
of citizenship, it transferred Arab settlers into
northern Syria to break Kurdish contiguity of
population, and it suppressed Kurdish language and
culture.
But the Syrian opposition as currently constituted
seems to many Kurds to be insufficiently interested
in remedying this situation. The Kurds are also
divided among themselves. The KNC is dominated by
the Kurdish Democratic Party in Syria, which has
close links to the Kurdish Regional Government of
Massoud Barzani in northern Iraq. The PKK-linked PYD,
meanwhile, is, according to Abbas and others, now
working in cooperation with the Assad regime.
PYD-linked sources argue that the current Syrian
uprising is simply a battle between the regime and
an alliance of the Turkish government and the Muslim
Brotherhood. As such, they suggest, Syrian Kurds’
main interest is in protecting their own areas.
The bottom line, as Qubad Talabani, representative
of the Kurdistan Regional Government to the US, put
it in a recent speech, is that the “Syrian
opposition is not talking about Kurdish issues, is
not talking about the need to protect Kurdish rights
or to have the Kurdish identity as part of any new
Syria.” For as long as this remains the case, calls
for federalism, for separation, and for breaking
Syria “into pieces” are likely to grow stronger.
Copyright © respective author or news agency,
The Jerusalem Post | jpost.com
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