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Iraq, Turkey, Iran Vulnerable To Ethnic Conflict

Mas'ud Barzani, the president of Iraq's Kurdistan region

January 28, 2009
By Abbas Djavadi
Occasionally, I have heated discussions with my Turkish and Kurdish friends. Most of those from Iraq's Kurdistan region, emboldened by the region's semi-independence from Baghdad and its current relative stability, warn that it would declare independence if things fall apart in Iraq.

 

At this juncture, we have serious disagreements over whether the resulting small, landlocked country encircled by hostile neighbors (Arab Iraq, Iran, and Turkey) would be viable.

 

Even a "Greater Kurdistan," although seemingly an impossible project that would lead to decades of bloodshed and destruction, would not drastically change the geostrategic environment of that new independent state.

 

The Turks are certainly very strongly opposed to any manifestations of separatism and, no doubt, Turkey's strong and popular army would do its utmost to suppress any independent Kurdish state proclaimed on Turkish territory. Its reaction would be much harsher than the current efforts to contain the PKK.

 

The International Crisis Group recently published a report titled "Turkey and Iraqi Kurds: Conflict or Cooperation?" which I strongly recommend to all those with an interest in this region.

"At a time when Arab-Kurdish tensions still threaten Iraq's stability," the report says, "neighboring Turkey's approach toward Iraqi Kurdistan has been a study in contrasts: Turkish jets periodically bomb suspected hideouts of the banned Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) in northern Iraq, and Ankara expresses alarm at the prospect of Kurdish independence, yet at the same time has significantly deepened its ties to the Iraqi Kurdish region.

 

"Both Turkey and Iraq's Kurdistan Regional Government would be well served by keeping ultranationalism at bay and continuing to invest in a relationship that, though fragile and buffeted by the many uncertainties surrounding Iraq, has proved remarkably pragmatic and fruitful."

 

Heavy Shadow

I am not sure what percent of Turkey's estimated 10 million to 15 million Kurds would really favor Kurdish independence from Turkey. Probably not many. But I believe most of those who look beyond today's low-level conflicts and problems ask themselves how wise it would be to sever relations with a modern, Westernizing Turkey and join their ethnic brethren in a united but uncertain, if not dangerous, future.

Iran's Kurds are in a somewhat different situation.

Both Turkey and Iraq's Kurdistan Regional Government would be well served by keeping ultranationalism at bay and continuing to invest in a relationship that...has proved remarkably pragmatic and fruitful.
Most Iranian Kurds are Sunnis, while the Iranians are Shi'a, and the heavy shadow of Shi'a Islam pervades state ideology and practice. But despite their high ethnic awareness and strong feelings of kinship with the Kurds in Iraq and Turkey, with whom they want to enjoy close contact and trade relations, they do not seem to have strong aspirations to secede from Iran.

But although Iran's Kurds identify more closely with the state than do their co-ethnics in Turkey, the two groups share the same wishes and demands: to be able to use their own language in all spheres of public life, including education and courts of law; support for their ethnic and regional culture, which has been not only ignored but also suppressed in both countries; and some degree of local or provincial/regional autonomy.

Iran's Azeris, who live mainly in the provinces of eastern and western Azerbaijan and Iran's Ardabil and Zanjan, have been and still are a large and influential ethnic group with a strong commitment to the country's unity and territorial integrity. They are Shi'a, like most other Iranians. They speak a slightly different dialect of Azeri Turkish (as opposed to Persian, Iran's official national language) than that of the neighboring Republic of Azerbaijan to the north. The Turkish spoken in Turkey is also quite similar to Azeri Turkish.

Since the establishment of a unified and central education system in the 1920s, Iran has not permitted the official use of the non-Persian languages of other Muslim ethnic groups such as the Azeris, Kurds, Turkomans, Arabs, and Baluchis. This reflects both the drive to build a unitary and modern country, as well as the fear of potential separatism. But the use of the languages of some non-Muslim groups, notably the Armenians, has been tolerated.

Both under the late Shah and in the Islamic republic, Armenians have had their own schools in which subjects such as language, history, and religion are taught in Armenian. The main reasons for this discrepancy have been the perception that the relatively small Armenian community does not pose a separatist threat, and the historical understanding, which also holds good for Turkey, that all Muslims are one nation and that members of each nation need only one official, national language -- Persian in Iran and Turkish in Turkey.

Stronger Commitment


Although deprived of the right to use their mother tongue in education and state bodies, Iran's Azeris have demonstrated a stronger commitment to national Iranian affairs (politics, labor, economic activity, and trade) than to local or ethnic issues such as language and culture. Over the past three decades, the Republic of Azerbaijan has transformed itself into an independent country with a dominant Azeri language and culture, and Turkey has evolved into a modernizing republic with free media, elections, a liberal and Western-style government system, and a prospering economy -- a NATO member that aspires to join the European Union.

These developments in the immediate neighborhood and the international isolation of Iran have not given rise to much sense of pan-Turkic or separatist tendencies among Iranian Azeris, who still consider themselves strongly Iranian in the first place, and Azeri only second. Additionally, the national memory of a one-year (1945-46) pro-Soviet autonomous republic in Iranian Azerbaijan that aspired to become part of the Soviet Republic of Azerbaijan (and ultimately the Soviet Union) has created fears and strong reservations among Iranians (and most Iranian Azeris) that any demands by the latter for ethnic and cultural rights would ultimately be directed against Iran’s territorial integrity.

Still, especially after the fall of the Shah, there have been individual or collective calls for linguistic and cultural rights for Iranian Azeris launched by social movements that have increasingly enjoyed popular understanding or even sympathy among the Iranian Azeri public. The Islamic regime, however, views all such demands as ultimately harmful to the country's territorial integrity, and has suppressed them harshly. Even the implementation of a constitutional article granting the right to use non-Persian languages has been delayed since the establishment of the Islamic republic.

The Kurdish issue is currently a source of serious tension and danger for Turkey and, to some extent, for Iran, too. If Iraq disintegrates and Iraqi Kurds declare independence, neighboring Turkey and Iran may also be drawn into the resulting chaos and violence.

Although currently not an urgent threat, in the event that Iraq implodes, the Azeri ethnic issue in Iran has the potential to become a major source of regional instability that would affect not just Iran, but also the Republic of Azerbaijan, Turkey, and Armenia.

Abbas Djavadi is associate director of broadcasting at RFE/RL. The views expressed in this commentary are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect those of RFE/RL

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Comments page 1 of 2
by: Jerusalemite from: Israel
February 06, 2009 08:29
I think the Kurds have more of a moral case to demand their freedom than the Palestinians.
I also think that Iranian oppression of Ktuds, Azeris, Baluchis and other minorities should be stopped. Persians are barely half of Iran-so what gives them the right to rule others? The Shah dreamed of an Iranian Empire, today the call is for an Islamic republic- but for the oppressed it makes no difference what it is called.Freedom for all these down-trodden nations!

by: ken
February 01, 2009 10:23
going back to my comment on " Iran is nothing without azerbaijani turks." here i try to elaborate the importance of azeris living in Iran, Azerbaijanis not only make up iran's approx 70 to 80% of intellectuals, but also they are good warriors and have revolutionary spirits, just let me mention that in the last tow thousands years, iran has been rulled by arabs for approx 900 hundred years and by turks approx 1100 years till 1901 which was the end of azeri turks rulling iran.
all these time, persians were in the sideways and iran had three major languages, arabic was the language of science, persian was the language of poetry and turkish was the language of millitary and crown, its after 1901 with the comming of reza shah that things started to change,during 1945 iran's azerbaijan got its independent from iran, and kurds got their own as well but after one year, they were badly crashed by the central government.

this central government defines iranians persians and the language farsi, but as we all know iran is a multi-national country and in today's world you just can't deny people's basic right to read and write in their own antive language.

my projection is anti-cenralism will increas in the comming years for several reasons, i just mention some of them

1- persan language is a very fickle , abortive and mulformed language and can't grasp the modern concepts.

2- persan world lives through its dark ages where as neighboring countris such as turks and arabs, are advancing. this will cause especially young generation to look beyound persians understanding of the world.

3- persian history is losing its solid dogma and the non-persian nationalitis are asking the truthness of what they have been told about 3 thousands years ago

by: ken
February 01, 2009 08:51
after china, iran's ranks second in capital punishment, all these poor people being hanged in rian are journalist, kurd ,, azeri, balouch, arab, turkman activists, I would say iran is the last fachist state and the slauther house of human rights

by: ken
February 01, 2009 08:11
now lets compaire turkey to iran, turkey recently opend a kurdi channel, it's a channel that could be watched and seen all over the country,it's being aird 24/7, turkey abollished capital punishment and kurds activist are not in danger of being hung in case arrasted, kurd have partis in turkish parliament , i'm not saying these are enough, but at least in comparison to iran, if i was a kurd, i'd rather to live in turkey than in backword dictatorila iran..
as you all know, iran's regim barbarism have no limits, there's no weeks that sombody gets hung of stone if she's a woman, in today's iran, the freedome of free media is a taboo, in this atomosphere, it doesn't take a rocket scientist to realize and undersatnd, how harsh it could be to political activist, iran's kurdestan is has been under millitary check since the iranian revolution,iranian regim kills kurds like people kill animals, now this guy comes and says iranian kurds enjoy more freedom than kurds living in turkey, for all of your info, turkey last year had 25 million tourist and iran had just 5 thousands, you just see the and compair the atomosphere of oppeness in these two countris, do some reacherch on the internet as well, if these guy try to win us over twisting facts, ill show how badli kurds are treated in iran, kurds are not allowed to have govermental jobs in iran since they are sunnis and the shiiet regim of iran doesn't reflet that, just last week, iran banned a kurdish news paper soon ill let you know all about these

by: ken
February 01, 2009 07:45
socius claim to know a lot about azerbaijanis living in iran,lets see how much he knows and compaire the depth of his knowlege on iran, as I said, azeris are the elits of iran, here it comes,, iran's well-known and most magnificent mathmatician was an Azerbaijani turk, professor Hashtrouid,, the father of modern iranian education was Roshdiye, an azerbaijani turk, the father of modern iranian surgery was an azeri named Yahya adl, an azeri turk, the father of modern iranian heart surgery is professor Javad heyat, he's still alive and teaches at the university of tehran, iran's biggest theoresians are two azeris called Kasravi and arani, persians in any dialogue have absolutly nothing to offer except bringing something from these two in their reasonging and rationalization, iran's constitutional and parliamentari movement called mashrute in iran which is an arabic word, was formed in azerbaijan mostly by azeri leaders such as Sattar khan and Baqer khan ,

and azeris don't hate turks, 24/ 7 azeris of iran, wathch and enjoy turkish sattelite channls and totally ignore persian or farsi speaking channls since these chanels have nothing to offer,

by: Socius from: Canada
January 31, 2009 05:04
The people commending before my are complete political noobs.

To citizenearth: Sure, let's carve out a piece of land for the kurds from Malaysia

To Ken: Azeri's aren't elites. They don't claim to be. They simply want to be considered Iranian. They hate being called Turks. Your kind of talk leads to racism.

To Sorany: You're somewhat correct...but the Turks did it to the Armenians before as well. Not surprising. :P

To Dario: Racism exists. Utopia doesn't. Killing off ethnic/cultural divisions is the best way to kill off Racism and create a united country. Otherwise there will always be "ah...turks suck" and "oh fuck you Persians" talks going on. Just kill it all off and create a new identity derived from the collective roots of the people of the land.

To Magiozal: Democracy doesn't exist. It shouldn't exist. Democracy is not fair, nor good, nor existent. If you go to a hospital, and ask for medical advice, do you give the same weight to what is said by the Doctor who's studied and knows what he's talking about, or the janitor mopping the floor?

To Dennis: There are 2 ethnic groups causing issues in "those 3 countries." They would be the Kurds, who will never be allowed have their own country unless Iraq is donating land, and the Baluchi's (paki-origin). Of those...the Kurds in Iran and Iraq are doing well. Iraq has its Kurdistan province, and Iranian kurds at least have a sense of pride in their government...if not all that happy with all the ethnic rights issues. Turkey's kurds are the biggest problem group right now, and Turkey knows it. That's why they're pretty watchful of what's going on.

Anyway...please don't comment on Politics that you know nothing about. Remember, that which is morally right is politically wrong. I have SS Bolts on my car, and Sieg Heil my Jewish friends. I pull it off. I know a thing or two about race and racism. ;)

by: Ayiq Eller
January 30, 2009 23:41
Before 1925 Iran was not existed,Persians and other ethinc groups were under the rule of Azerbaijani Qajar. Also the langauge of North Azerbaijanis and South Azerbaijanis are exactly the same. We are one people and speak Turki(Azerbaijani Turkish). Only some borrowed Arabic or Latin words may use differently. Azerbaijani-Persians and other ethnic groups in Tehran,Qum,Arak,Hamadan,Gorve,Bijar and etc should not worry about becoming minorities inside the future Independent South Azerbaijan democratic state.

by: citizenearth from: malaysia
January 30, 2009 08:10
In the modern world, most countries are multi-ethnic. It depends on how the government or those in power handle the multi-ethnicity issues that may arise from time to time. IMHO I think the Kurds deserves their own country - they should come together from those countries which they currently resides in & carve a suitable land for themselves & their future generations.

by: ken
January 29, 2009 09:15
iranian azeris are the elites of the country, without them, iran is nothing, my guess is as persions and their languge fails to grasb the modern modern, Azerbaijanis will come to realize that they would better off without persians, just imagine who wants to speak farsi the language of afqanistan that produces 80 percent of world's opium

by: sorany from: germany
January 29, 2009 07:12
Abbas you are twisting the truth here.
Turkish constitution and laws that does not treat Kurds equally is currently a source of serious tension in Turkey and not the Kurdish issue itself. Kurds like any other nation in the world deserve to live in freedom and dignity. Currently They live under oppression and discriminative laws in Turkey
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