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Iraq Faces A New War That Threatens To Complicate Obama's Withdrawal Plans

First Posted: 3/26/09 Updated: 5/25/11

Mosul

A new war is threatening Iraq just as the world believes the country is returning to peace. While violence is dropping in Baghdad and in the south of the country, Arabs and Kurds in the north are beginning to battle over territories in an arc of land stretching from Syria to Iranian border.

A renewal of the historic conflict between Arabs and Kurds in Iraq, which raged through most of the second half of the 20th century, would seriously destabilise the country as it begins to recover from the US occupation and the Sunni-Shia civil war of 2005-07.

The crisis between the government of the Iraqi Prime Minister, Nouri al-Maliki, and the Kurds, who make up 20 per cent of the population, is coming to a head now because a resurgent Iraqi army is beginning to contest control of areas which Kurds captured when Saddam Hussein fell in 2003.

There has been a mounting number of clashes between predominantly Arab Iraqi army units and the Kurdish peshmerga forces along a 260-mile line that stretches diagonally across the northern third of Iraq, from Sinjar to Khanaqin in the south.

The tensions underpinning the conflict have always attracted less international attention than the US-Iraqi war or the Shia-Sunni conflict.

Yet if the conflict develops into a full-scale war it will complicate President Barack Obama's plan to withdraw 142,000 US soldiers from Iraq over 16 months and redeploy many of them to the US military effort in Afghanistan.

In some respects, the Arab-Kurdish war has already started. Kurdish leaders say that in Nineveh province, Sunni Arab gunmen have killed 2,000 Kurds and 127,000 Kurds have turned into refugees over the past six years.

Baghdad and Basra have become safer in the past year but Mosul, the capital of Nineveh and Iraq's third largest city, remains one of the country's most violent places.

Khasro Goran, the Kurdish deputy governor of Nineveh province, who operates from heavily-fortified headquarters in Mosul, said it was "not acceptable" for non-Kurdish military units to move into disputed areas. "If they try to do so we will stop them." On the streets outside Mr Goran's office, once a Baath party office and now the headquarters of the Kurdistan Democratic Party, an array of competing military forces holds power.

His immediate guards are tough-looking Kurdish peshmerga in uniform. As we left their compound, they fired a shot to deter a driver who got too close. The driver promptly slewed his car across the road.

Two hundred yards further on, we passed a small Iraqi Arab unit covering a crossroads with a light machine gun mounted on a cream-coloured Chevrolet pick-up truck.

Close by, a policeman in a blue uniform held an AK-47 assault rifle. He was part of a mostly Sunni Arab force recruited in Nineveh which changed sides during an insurgent offensive in 2004 and joined the anti-government guerrillas. The rebels captured 31 police stations.

Mosul is majority Sunni Arab but on the east bank of the Tigris river which flows through the city, there are large Kurdish districts that are overlooked by a mosque on a small hill, where the Prophet Jonah is reputedly buried.

Most of the Kurds living west of the Tigris have fled or have been killed. The Christian community was driven out by attacks last year, although some Christians are now returning.

There have been so many bomb attacks in Mosul that in many places damage is no longer repaired. Pieces of smashed concrete lie where they landed after blasts several years ago.

The city is al-Qa'ida's last stronghold in Iraq. Earlier this month, a bomb killed four US soldiers and an interpreter while gunmen killed two prominent local politicians. The police also come under frequent attack. Shortly before we arrived in Mosul, one officer was killed by a roadside bomb, the sound of which echoed across the city.

Yesterday, US and Iraqi government forces said they had launched a new military campaign to eradicate al-Qa'ida in the province, although US troops were being used only for back-up.

The Kurds in the oil province of Kirkuk and in Diyala province have also often been targeted by suicide bombers. For their part, Arabs in these areas accuse the Kurds of launching a campaign of ethnic cleansing against them.

The Kurdish regional prime minister, Nechervan Barzani, says that if the disputes are not settled by the time the Americans withdraw, "it will be war between both sides."

Another Kurd, who did not want his name published said: "This is the day the Kurds were always afraid of. As the Americans leave, once again we are left isolated and face to face with Baghdad."

What makes the situation so explosive in Nineveh and across the north is that over the past year the balance of power has been changing in favour of the Arabs and against the Kurds.

Minority Kurds had dominated the provincial government in Nineveh and Mosul after Sunni Arabs, despite being the majority of the population, boycotted the local elections four years ago. But new polls last month reversed the balance, sweeping an Arab Iraqi party, Al Habda, to dominance in the provincial council.

The Iraqi army is also becoming stronger. It contains both Kurdish and Arab units but it is the non-Kurdish units that are being sent north.

"The 12th division was sent to near Kirkuk without any consultation with us," said Safeen Dizayee, a senior official of the Kurdistan Democratic Party.

"There is an effort to move away Kurdish officers above a certain rank. Eighty per cent of the army in the north is Arab, including senior staff."

Iraqi Kurds: Unwilling citizens

*Iraqi Kurds, who speak their own language and have their own identity, did not want to be part of Iraq when its borders were drawn after the collapse of the Ottoman Empire in the First World War. They often rebelled in pursuit of independence or autonomy and suffered terribly under Saddam Hussein. During the Kuwait war they rose up but were defeated. They created an autonomous zone outside Baghdad's control and since the US invasion have had autonomy through the Kurdistan Regional Government, but they control a much larger area where Kurds are the majority - this is the area now disputed. The Kurds are also an essential part of Iraq's coalition government.

Related Article: Leading article: Renewed bloodshed shows peace remains elusive in Iraq

Read more from the Independent.

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A new war is threatening Iraq just as the world believes the country is returning to peace. While violence is dropping in Baghdad and in the south of the country, Arabs and Kurds in the north are begi...
A new war is threatening Iraq just as the world believes the country is returning to peace. While violence is dropping in Baghdad and in the south of the country, Arabs and Kurds in the north are begi...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Fein
And this too shall pass.
01:33 PM on 02/24/2009
Turks have promised for many years to prevent an independan­t Kurdistan, at any cost.

Any indication of an independan­t Kurdistan, and the Turkish military which is positioned on Iraq's border, will put an end to any possibilit­y of peace in that region for a long time.

The U.S. completely destroyed Iraq. It's only holding together temporaril­y.

The Repugs' 'Ace on the Hole' is that fact that when Obama withdraws the troops and the country folds,
Democrats will still get the blame and the Repugs can stage a comeback.
11:26 PM on 02/23/2009
When will we find out what happened to those three hundred fifty mile high stacks of 100 dollar bills.
11:18 PM on 02/23/2009
Here is a clue: the world does not believe Iraq is returning to peace.

This is a big lie that what passes for the media in this country spits out to the American public as news.

Those of us who read the independen­t and foreign news and watch/list­en to foreign radio know what has been and is still going on in Iraq.

AND IT AIN'T PEACE.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sueinmn
06:56 PM on 02/23/2009
A civil war is imminent there so why is this our problem? We must leave while we can and let them duke it out. This is an interior problem between their tribes or what ever they consider themselves­. Petreaus will have us there on his terms until he is readt to retire. job security for him is what matters!
12:20 PM on 02/24/2009
This is the US's problem because we are partly responsibl­e for causing it. As bad as things were, things were much more stable under Saddam and this new conflict is a direct result of our removing Saddam from power, which we did under completely false pretenses, so we owe it to the Iraqi people to make up for our mistakes
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checkmoot
We have met the enemy and he is us.
06:33 PM on 02/23/2009
Iraq is history. They can sort out their own problems, just like the Taliban are the Afghans problem. If they want the Taliban back in power, it will be so. If they do not want the Taliban in power the Afghans will kick them out without our help. And what business is it of ours who rules Afghanista­n ? Vietnam was Johnsons downfall, Iraq was George's and it looks as though Obama intends to go down the tubes with an unending occupation of Afghanista­n. You would think they would learn.
05:46 PM on 02/23/2009
The US has played the Kurds along, leading them to believe that they would someday have an autonomous state - a state with practicall­y all of Iraq's oil reserves. It was a fantasy scenario to have a puppet state with all that oil governed by a non-Islami­c ethnic group that would forever show their gratitude to the US for their "liberatio­n" by allowing an untrammele­d access to said oil. Dream on....

This is a fantasy scenario that will never occur. Turkey would never, ever allow an independen­t Kurdish state. The US needs Turkey as an ally and its strategic air base at Incirlik. The Iraqi Sunni and Shia would battle the Kurds to the death of all rather than letting them walk away with all of Iraqi's natural resource riches.

Does anyone ever wonder why Saddam Hussein was such a despotic leader? He had to be to control all the various ethnic, religious, and geographic factions to maintain a centralize­d power. My prediction is another Saddam type military dictator, backed by the US, will emerge soon and we will be back to square one, pre-invasi­on.
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checkmoot
We have met the enemy and he is us.
06:25 PM on 02/23/2009
Sorry Junior. The Kurds are not ethnic Arabs, but they are Sunni Moslems.
06:46 PM on 02/23/2009
The original religion of the Kurds was Yazidism, a religion greatly influenced by Jewish, Zoroastria­n, Christian and Islamic beliefs. This contribute­d to their being marginaliz­ed as an ethnic group.

Some Kurds are only recently Islamic - and this mostly for show, for survivals sake.
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MajorKong
If the pilot's good, see, I mean if he's reeeally
08:35 AM on 02/24/2009
Saddam barely kept the country together with a million man army and all the powers of an absolute dictator.
05:25 PM on 02/23/2009
these problems were in part caused by foreign powers who invaded then drew arbitrary lines between regions. We can't do the same thing in an effort to fix this. We need to focus on leaving Iraq with some measure of stability so it can reclaim its place as a sovereign nation.
04:32 PM on 02/23/2009
That's not our problem. We should leave Iraq, our being there, and our leaving, has nothing to do with how the Kurds and Iraqis get along. If we have concerns it's about the Terrorists­, not the kurds.
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04:21 PM on 02/23/2009
Bull. The commanders don't want to leave Iraq so........­..........­..........­.....
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03:44 PM on 02/23/2009
Just say NO to Betraeus and Odeirno!
05:11 PM on 02/23/2009
"Betraeus" ??? I can tell where you gi.t your Kool-Aid!
05:53 PM on 02/23/2009
that is "Betray Us" Monkey Genius gee I wonder where you get Kool-Aid myself
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
motoGpifupleez
watching with amusement
03:30 PM on 02/23/2009
There is no new war.
Democracy has succeeded.
The surge worked.
The military still needs to stay forever.
Funding must continue forever.
All the analysts on FOX News say this, so it must be true. They are Fair and Balanced.
I will now go back to polishing my Flag Lapel Pin until '24' comes on, 9:00pm eastern/8:­00pm Central.
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avvocato
CON-gress is the opposite of PRO-gress.
03:23 PM on 02/23/2009
Can u spell C-I-V-I-L war?
Not r problem!
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
truthynesslover
03:28 PM on 02/23/2009
Let them have it now or later.
Our choice.
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JoeBlough
The Horror. . .The Horror. . .
03:20 PM on 02/23/2009
We can't afford the old occupation­. We sure as heck can't afford a new occupation up to the north. Why don't we just let the neighbors who care deal with this mess.
02:55 PM on 02/23/2009
I agree. Pete wants to stay, and he's got friends -- destabaliz­ing a fragile fringe situation would be no problem at all. That civilians will die because of his machinatio­ns -- eh. They're just Iraqis, right? President Obama will eventually need to find other top brass to entrust with the world's safety, because most of the current crop have become addicted to swimming in blood.
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02:43 PM on 02/23/2009
Petraeus and Odernio's media blitz begins.
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JoeBlough
The Horror. . .The Horror. . .
03:20 PM on 02/23/2009
They are the one's that were stealing the rebuilding funds.