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  • SelfDetermination & Realpolitik, Reflections on Kurds & Palestinians

    Kurdistan Regional Government, Iraq
    Aug 24 2005


    Self-Determination and Realpolitik, Reflections on Kurds and
    Palestinians

    Shlomo Avineri

    Summer 2005

    Dissent Magazine(www.dissentmagazine.org): During the siege of
    Sarajevo in the early 1990s, the embattled Bosnian Muslim president,
    Alija Izetbegovic, visited Washington. He was looking for assistance.
    At that time, a UN-mandated arms embargo on all belligerents in the
    former Yugoslavia assured Serbian military dominance against
    outgunned Bosnians.

    Izetbegovic heard words of sympathy from official Washington, yet was
    offered no concrete help against Serb aggression. Dispirited, he met
    with a number of scholars and journalists at a Washington think tank.
    After describing the plight of his people and emphasizing that the
    Bosnian Muslims had met all European Union requirements for
    recognition of their independence, he first sighed and then burst out
    with a cri de coeur that was a searing commentary on many elegant
    theories of international relations.

    `Imagine,' Izetbegovic said, `that everything in Bosnia would be the
    same, except that we would not be Muslims but Nordic Protestants.
    Public opinion in Scandinavian countries would surely put pressure on
    their governments to send us arms or even help us with volunteers;
    perhaps U.S. senators from Minnesota and Wisconsin would lobby for
    U.S. involvement. Our problem is that we, Bosnian Slav Muslims, do
    not have any kin in the world, so it is not in anyone's interests to
    help us, either from strategic or solidarity considerations.'

    Noting that many of those present were Jewish (after all, Jews were
    prominent in calls for aid to Bosnian Muslims and later Kosovo
    Albanians), he added wistfully, `And if there would have been five
    million Bosnian Muslims in the U.S., American policy would certainly
    be different.'

    Izetbegovic put his finger on an aspect of modern history that many
    prefer to overlook: for a national movement to be successful, it
    needs geopolitical allies. National movements that lack them - for
    reasons of history, geography, or consanguinity - usually fail. Those
    allies are usually imperial powers, and so every war for national
    liberation is intertwined with realpolitik, a reality that usually
    makes the spokespeople of national movements uneasy, and makes the
    proponents of the right to national self-determination squirm. Yet it
    is undeniable.

    One has only to look at the history of European nationalism in the
    nineteenth and twentieth centuries. When Europeans recall the Greek
    national struggle of the 1820s, they think of the romantic, valiant
    (and unnecessary) death of Byron at Missolonghi. But there was more
    involved. Without British and Russian diplomatic support for Greek
    independence from the Ottomans (in the geopolitical context of `The
    Eastern Question'), Greek highlanders and Albanian-speaking seafarers
    from the island of Hydra would have been crushed. The same applies to
    the emergence of independent Serbia in later decades; public support
    in Britain as well as in Russia was later important in both cases.
    These were Christians fighting against Muslim Turks, which suggests
    that religious prejudices played as much of a role in the success of
    Greek and Serbian national liberation as did noble Enlightenment
    ideas.

    The same dynamic worked when Romania and Bulgaria gained their
    independence in the 1870s and 1880s. An unusual coalition took shape
    at the 1878 Congress of Berlin; Disraeli and Bismarck both backed
    these two (Christian) nations in their quest for independence from
    Turkish rule. Gladstone later garnered quite a lot of political
    capital by whipping up anti-Muslim prejudices with his campaign about
    `Bulgarian massacres.'

    World War I brought the dismemberment of three multinational empires:
    the Austro-Hungarian, the Ottoman, and the czarist Russian. In each
    case, a sometimes serendipitous coalition of great power politics
    decided at Versailles, Saint-Germain-en-Laye, Trianon, Sèvres, and
    Lausanne, where borders would be and which national movement would be
    satisfied and which left empty-handed. The tortuous history of the
    emergence of Poland, Czechoslovakia, and Yugoslavia, and the enlarged
    borders of Romania depended not on President Woodrow Wilson's lofty
    principles but on brutal diplomatic give and take. Sometimes
    independence was accompanied by mini-wars aimed to convince the
    diplomats of what was feasible and what was not. None of this is
    particularly new to historians of international relations, yet
    self-righteous spokesmen for various national movements today, as
    well as intellectual voices committed to the idea of
    self-determination, usually feel queasy when mention is made of the
    bricks and clay of `real' history.

    This applies to the Middle East, as well. Arab nationalism was weak
    before 1914. It was limited mainly to intellectual circles among
    Christian Arabs, who saw in it a ticket out of their marginal
    position as non-Muslims in the Ottoman Empire. It received an
    enormous boost when the Cairo-based British Arab Office decided to
    use Arab nationalism to motivate anti-Turkish sentiments. It was not
    easy to mobilize public opinion among Muslim Arabs against the Turks,
    especially because the Sultan was also the caliph and Commander of
    the Faithful. Consequently, the British-inspired movement known as
    the Arab Revolt was presented as a `jihad' against the corrupt ruler
    in Constantinople. T. E. Lawrence (`Lawrence of Arabia') personified
    this combination of imperial cynicism and romantic infatuation with
    the noble desert Bedouin. Arabs in Syria, Iraq, and Palestine soon
    felt betrayed by the British, but that does not alter the basic fact
    that Arab nationalism appeared for the first time on the world
    historical scene as a handmaid of British imperialism. There is not
    one national movement that is not tainted with some sin at its birth.


    This is also the case with Zionism. The Balfour Declaration of 1917
    used ambiguous language to promise British support for the
    establishment in Palestine of a Jewish `national home' (never
    specifying what this would entail). It thus fits well into the
    pattern in which national movements pushed their way onto the world
    scene by an alliance with a major power. By the 1930s and 1940s
    Zionists felt let down if not betrayed by the British, and this is
    another example of the built-in contradictions of unholy alliances.
    Because the British had sought to use both Arab and Jewish
    nationalism during World War I, people began to quip about `the twice
    Promised Land.'

    The Losers

    This brings us to the big losers. Primary among them - next to the
    Armenians - were, until recently, the Kurds. This people straddles the
    mountainous region where the borders of present-day Turkey, Iran,
    Iraq, and Syria meet. They speak an Indo-European language close to
    Persian and bristle when outsiders view them as `Turks' or `Arabs.'
    Their society has rested on a premodern tribal structure, and they
    have never had a state of their own, although Kurdish chieftains
    enjoyed relative autonomy under both the Ottoman and Persian empires.
    The most famous Kurdish historical figure was Saladin, who recaptured
    Jerusalem from the crusaders in 1187. He became an icon of Islamic
    identity and later of Arab nationalism (try to tell a pan-Arab
    intellectual that Saladin was `really' an ethnic Kurd - and then run
    for cover). Absent a state, they lacked schools promoting their
    language, national narrative, and common identity. It took decades
    before Kemalist Turkey stopped calling them `Mountain Turks.'

    The disintegration of the Ottoman Empire after World War I appeared
    to give Kurds a window of opportunity. Though many Kurds participated
    in the Turkish massacre of the Armenians during the war, the Allies,
    especially the British, thought the establishment of a Kurdish state
    would be useful to their imperial plans.

    Kurds lacked a coherent political organization and were represented
    at the Paris peace talks by a totally inadequate delegation.
    Nonetheless, the Treaty of Sèvres, signed between the defeated
    Ottomans and the Allies in 1920, envisaged a Kurdish state.

    Section III, entitled `Kurdistan,' spells out the details. Article 62
    stipulates that in `the predominantly Kurdish areas' in southeast
    Turkey, `local autonomy would be set up for the population,' under a
    commission made up of British, French, and Italian representatives.
    Institutions for the autonomous Kurdish area were to be established
    within six months. Moreover, the treaty goes beyond autonomy as
    stipulated in Article 64, which says, `If within one year a majority
    of the population in the [autonomous] area desires independence from
    Turkey . . . and if the Council of the League of Nations recommends
    that such independence be granted, then Turkey hereby agrees to
    execute such a recommendation, and to renounce all rights and titles
    to these areas.' In this event, the treaty specifies that `no
    objection will be raised to the voluntary adhesion to such an
    independent Kurdish State of the Kurds inhabiting that part of
    Kurdistan which has hitherto been included in the Mosul vilayet.'

    Although the operative language is conditional, the commitment to
    independent Kurdistan is unequivocal, dependent only on the wishes of
    the Kurdish population itself. Independent Kurdistan was to include
    not only Kurdish areas in Turkey proper but also Kurdish areas in
    northern Iraq in the province of Mosul. Article 88 of the Sèvres
    Treaty also reads, `Turkey hereby recognizes Armenia as a free and
    independent state.'

    None of this was to be. Sèvres represented the nadir of Turkish
    power. Like all post-World War I treaties, it was a victors' treaty
    imposed on the losers - Germany, Austria, Hungary, Turkey. A new war
    eventually annulled Sèvres. Before there was time to implement it,
    Italy and Greece tried to grab more territory from a crumbling
    Turkey. Initially they succeeded. Smyrna was occupied by Greek
    forces, which then began a march into the Anatolian highlands. But
    the humiliated Turkish military rallied and mounted counterattacks,
    which eventually brought Mustapha Kemal (later known as Atatürk) to
    power. He won a series of battles against the Greeks and Italians,
    abolished the caliphate, and proclaimed Turkey a national republic.
    The result was modern Turkey. The Treaty of Sèvres no longer
    represented the realities of power. A new treaty had to be negotiated
    between the Allies (including chastened Greece and Italy) and a
    robust, self-assured new Turkish state.

    Just as Sèvres represented Turkey's weakness, the Treaty of Lausanne,
    which superseded it in July 1923, reflected Turkish victories and the
    relative weakness of the Allies. Lord Curzon, the British secretary
    of state, remarked, `Hitherto we have dictated our peace treaties.
    Now we are negotiating one with the enemy who has an army in being
    while we have none, an unheard of position.' Gone was independent
    Armenia (its rump was incorporated into the Soviet Union, to emerge
    as an independent nation only in 1991). Similarly, gone was the
    mechanism that promised to establish independent Kurdistan. Turkey
    retains part of the Kurdish areas through today, and Mosul became
    part of Iraq. Neither Armenia nor Kurdistan exists in the Treaty of
    Lausanne.

    Dispossessed People

    The Kurds disappeared from the international political scene as a
    possible state-forming nation. They did not disappear from regional
    politics. In the 1930s, a number of Kurdish insurrections occurred in
    Iraq, and after the Second World War, a Soviet-supported autonomous
    Kurdish republic emerged in part of Iran. In the 1970s, the Kurds of
    north Iraq rose against the Baath regime, with the support of the
    shah's Iran (and indirectly Israel), blessed by the United States.
    But a shift in U.S. policy - and an Iraqi-Iranian deal - cut off Iranian
    support for the Kurds. Their insurrection collapsed. After Iraq
    attacked Khomeini's Iran in 1980, the U.S. government tacitly
    supported Baghdad, because Tehran was then viewed as a major threat.
    Washington barely responded to the infamous Iraqi poison gas attack,
    in March 1988, against the Kurdish town of Halabja, where at least
    five thousand civilians, mostly women and children, were killed.

    U.S. policy was not much different when the Turkish government
    launched its war against Kurdish insurrection within its own borders.
    The PKK - the Kurdish-Leninist guerrillas - used assassinations and bombs
    in public places both in Turkey and in Europe to further its cause.
    Its terrorism was comparable to that of the Palestine Liberation
    Organization. Yet the United States never confronted Turkey's harshly
    repressive response to these tactics for obvious reasons. The PKK
    started as a Soviet-backed organization, and the American attitude
    toward Turkey was - until recently - encapsulated in a simple dictum:
    `Don't upset the Turks.' European public opinion was equally silent.
    Israel's one brutal incursion into Jenin elicited more outcries in
    Europe than years of systematic Turkish counterterrorism measures
    against the Kurds, which emptied hundreds of villages of their
    occupants and caused tens of thousands of casualties. Never have the
    Kurds - a dispossessed people, deprived of statehood - elicited in Europe
    a fraction of the support enjoyed by the Palestinians.

    Why so much support for the Palestinians and so little support for
    the Kurds? Certainly the reason is not that Iran, Iraq, and Turkey
    have many friends and supporters, especially on the left. Arguing
    that the Kurds represent an `internal issue' (to Turkey, Iraq, Iran)
    only begs the question. It obviously does not provide an adequate
    answer when confronted with Halabja and poison gas. Neither did the
    UN - or any of its agencies - ever discuss those issues. The UN Human
    Rights Commission, which goes through a ritual of condemning Israel
    at annual meetings in Geneva, never even discussed the plight of the
    Kurds.

    The first time the UN passed a resolution referring - albeit
    obliquely - to the Kurds was Security Council Resolution 688 in April
    1991. It legitimized the `No Fly Zone' established over northern Iraq
    by the United States and its allies in the wake of Saddam's
    repression of the Kurds, after they rose up against him following his
    eviction from Kuwait. Saddam's reprisals forced hundreds of thousands
    of Kurds to flee toward the Turkish border. Television images of
    those refugees in the mountains in the middle of the winter pushed
    the United States to initiate Operation `Provide Comfort,' which
    created the No Fly Zone. This made it possible for the refugees to
    return to their homes without fear of another Iraqi reprisal. It was
    originally British prime minister John Major's idea to create a
    Kurdish enclave. This move was motivated as much by the worldwide
    outcry at the pictures of stranded refugees in the snow as by
    Ankara's fear that refugees would inundate Turkey, which was still
    battling its own Kurdish rebels.

    Eventually the protected Kurdish zone in Iraq gained some
    international legitimacy. Security Council Resolution 688 sharply
    criticized Iraq's repressive policies. Still, this resolution did not
    mention the Kurds by name and spoke only of repression of `Iraqi
    citizens' by Saddam's regime. After that, the Kurds lost the world's
    attention until Saddam's fall in 2003. In the meantime they managed,
    under Allied protection, to create a more or less functioning
    statelet in north Iraq. Their efforts received little notice at a
    time when the plight of the Palestinians under Israeli occupation was
    a major theme of international discourse and for human rights groups.


    Why this discrepancy? Perhaps Alija Izetbegovic's reflections in
    Washington provide part of the answer to this question. But it may be
    helpful to go back to history for a fuller answer - to the winter of
    1938-1939. At that time the British government, under Neville
    Chamberlain (he of Munich and of `Herr Hitler's promise') realized
    that appeasement, after all, had failed, and that Britain had to
    prepare for war. Mass production of aircraft and tanks was initiated
    at breakneck speed, and radar was developed. Britain also changed its
    policy in the Middle East. Rather than fight an Arab revolt in
    Palestine, which had begun in 1936 and was aimed at British rule and
    continued Jewish immigration into the country, London decided to
    appease the Arab side in order to prepare for war against Germany.
    Cabinet papers document the cruel realism that informed London's
    decision: the Arabs sit astride the imperial route to India; India's
    Muslims - the group most loyal to the raj - should not be alienated;
    there are more Arabs than Jews; and - last and not least - the Arabs have
    an option of siding with the Nazis, as exemplified by the pro-German
    mufti of Jerusalem or pro-Nazi nationalists in Iraq led by Rashid Ali
    al-Khailani. The Jews did not have a pro-German option.

    And so the British government issued its 1939 White Paper on
    Palestine. It stipulated that future Jewish immigration into
    Palestine would be limited to a total of seventy-five thousand over
    five years and then be stopped altogether. Jews were prohibited by
    law from buying land in Palestine, except along the coastal plain. In
    short, British policy endorsed perpetual minority status for Jews
    there. This was the basis for the British decision to refuse Jewish
    refugees admittance into Palestine during the Second World War, when
    refugee ships were turned back to Nazi-occupied Europe.

    That there were in 1939 - and are today - more Arabs than Jews tells us a
    great deal about world attitudes toward the Arab-Israeli conflict.
    That there are so many more Arabs (and Turks) than Kurds has
    determined attitudes toward the Kurdish people. The issue is,
    obviously, not only numbers. It is also a matter of the power of
    Arab - and Muslim - states. It entails concern for oil and Turkey's
    strategic location. And finally, it concerns the fact that the Kurds
    are not only a small people, they also do not have powerful friends.
    They are a nation without many cousins abroad or fraternal allies.

    One can understand why governments and chancellors respond to these
    dilemmas with realpolitik, but it is a scandal that liberal,
    left-wing opinion, supposedly motivated by humanistic and universal
    values has traditionally ignored the case of the Kurds. How often
    have left-wing intellectuals and protesters who condemn Israeli
    policies - sometimes rightly, sometimes less so - mobilized on behalf of
    the Kurds and against their oppressors - Saddam's Iraq, but also
    Turkey?

    This is a stain on the record of the European and American left. The
    only consolation may be that the present geopolitical situation,
    brought about by the toppling of Saddam, may perhaps give the Kurds
    in Iraq, for the first time in history, a place in the sun, either in
    a federal, democratic Iraq or, ultimately, in a state of their own.
    Should this happen, Kurdish self-determination would not be due to
    the support of the left, but to the questionable politics of the Bush
    administration. Perhaps some people on the left ought to examine
    their consciences. Those of us who share a belief in Hegel's `cunning
    of reason' - that is, the idea that great historical consequences don't
    always come from the intentions of historical actors - may, once again,
    and against our moral preference, be vindicated.

    Shlomo Avineri teaches political science at the Hebrew University of
    Jerusalem and has recently edited for Cambridge University Press an
    English translation of Moses Hess's The Holy History of Mankind, the
    first socialist tract to be published in Germany, in 1837. For the
    best account of the post-World War I peace treaties, the author
    recommends Margaret MacMillan's Peacemakers: Six Months That Changed
    the World (London, 2001; published in the United States by Random
    House in 2003 as Paris 1919: Six Months That Changed the World).

    http://web.krg.org/articles/article_detail.asp?LangNr=12&RubricNr=&Art icleNr=5509&LNNr=28&RNNr=70
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