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Law Professor Says U.S. Has Long-Standing Obligation To Protect Kurd

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  • Law Professor Says U.S. Has Long-Standing Obligation To Protect Kurd

    LAW PROFESSOR SAYS U.S. HAS LONG-STANDING OBLIGATION TO PROTECT KURDS, WON'T ALLOW THE KURDISH CAPITAL TO FALL TO ISIS

    Newswise
    Aug 8 2014

    Michael J. Kelly J.D.

    Professor of Law

    Michael J. Kelly is associate dean and professor of Law at Creighton
    University. An expert on genocide and the Kurds, Kelly has consulted
    with the Kurdish government on their constitution and is the author of
    the book "Ghosts of Halabja: Saddam Hussein & the Kurdish Genocide"
    (2008) and the article "The Kurdish Regional Constitution within
    the Framework of the Iraqi Federal Constitution: A Struggle for
    Sovereignty, Oil, Ethnic Identity, and the Prospects for a Reverse
    Supremacy Clause" in vol. 114:3 of the Penn State Law Review (2010)
    http://www.pennstatelawreview.org/articles/114/114%20Penn%20St.%20L.%20Rev.%20707.pdf

    Professor Kelly can discuss several areas on international law,
    genocide and the Kurds:

    U.S. airstrikes against ISIS and air drops for trapped Yazidi and
    Christian minorities in northern Iraq today are legal under the 1948
    Genocide Convention, which obligates member states to prevent and
    punish genocide. U.S. military actions to protect these minority groups
    are in furtherance of the "prevent genocide" prong of that multilateral
    treaty. Over 200,000 members of these groups are now fleeing into
    Iraqi Kurdistan as ISIS advances on Erbil, the Kurdish capital city.

    · The U.S. has a long-standing obligation to protect the Kurds, and
    it will not allow the Kurdish capital to fall to ISIS. Ever the U.S.

    encouraged the Kurdish uprising of 1991 but then failed to support
    them when Saddam Hussein's forces crushed it, American foreign policy
    has been focused on protecting and supporting the Kurds. The Kurdish
    government and people are the most ardent non-Jewish supporters of
    the U.S. in the Middle East.

    · It is time for the U.S. and the international community to make good
    on a 95-year old promise that the Kurds have their own state. Like
    the Armenians, the Kurds were promised a homeland in the aftermath of
    World War I, but the Western powers failed to make that happen and
    renegotiated the peace in the Middle East after the rise of Ataturk
    and the consolidation of power by Lenin. Consequently, their dreams
    of a Kurdish state evaporated.

    · The Kurdish people are a population of 30 million spread over an
    area the size of France, but they still do not have a country of their
    own. The Kurds of northern Iraq have functionally been a state since
    the U.S. established a "no-fly" zone over their territory to exclude
    Saddam Hussein's forces from massacring them after the 1991 uprising.

    While a de facto state with an independently functioning government,
    economy, border control, military, and educational and healthcare
    system, the Kurds remain formally part of the Iraqi federation.

    · Last month, the Israeli Prime Minister called for the establishment
    of an independent Kurdish state. Israel and Kurdistan are natural
    allies against various combinations of Arab Sunni and Shiite factions
    that have long been arrayed against them. Kurdistan has recently
    begun shipping petroleum through a pipeline out of Turkey from the
    reserves it controls, and Israel has received four of these shipments.

    · Located in the mountainous convergence of Iran, Turkey, Syria and
    Iraq, and independent Kurdistan would be a strategically important
    platform for U.S. foreign diplomatic and defense policy in the
    Middle East and would establish a new player in the region on the
    international stage that could alter the formula in favor of stability
    in that region. Since the 2003 invasion of Iraq, U.S. policy has
    favored a unified Iraqi state with a federal power-sharing structure;
    not independence for Kurdistan. The time has come to abandon this
    outmoded idea. Facts on the ground have dramatically shifted and
    American foreign policy on Iraq must catch up to this new reality. The
    Maliki government is collapsing and Iraq is reforming itself into a
    new configuration now. The U.S. needs to be ahead of this reformation,
    not behind it trying to support the preservation of what is quickly
    becoming a failed state.

    · Territorial guarantees must be made reassuring Turkey and
    Iran that the Kurdish areas in those states would not join a new
    Kurdistan state. Turkey and Iran have traditionally been opposed to
    an independent Kurdish state carved out of northern Iraq for fear
    of losing part of their own territory. Yet both have developed
    lucrative cross-border trade relationships during the past 20
    years with Kurdistan and have come to view the area as stable and
    reliable. Syria has also opposed an independent Kurdistan for the
    same reasons, but that is irrelevant at this point.

    http://www.newswise.com/articles/law-professor-says-u-s-has-long-standing-obligation-to-protect-kurds-won-t-allow-the-kurdish-capital-to-fall-to-isis


    From: Baghdasarian
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