Iraqi Kurds Detail Demands for a Degree of Autonomy
SULAIMANIYA, Iraq, Feb. 17 – From his snow-covered mountain fortress, Massoud Barzani sees little other than the rugged hills of Iraqi Kurdistan and green-clad militiamen posted along the serpentine road below.
The border with the Arab-dominated rest of Iraq is far off. Baghdad lies even farther off and, if Kurdish leaders like Mr. Barzani have their way, will fade almost entirely out of the picture here.
Since the fall of Saddam Hussein, the Kurds have made known their determination to retain a degree of autonomy in the territory they have dominated for more than a decade. Now, after their strong performance in the elections last month, Kurdish leaders are for the first time spelling out specific demands.
From control of oil reserves to the retention of the Kurdish militia, the pesh merga, to full authority over taxation, the requested powers add up to an autonomy that is hard to distinguish from independence.
“The fact remains that we are two different nationalities in Iraq – we are Kurds and Arabs,” Mr. Barzani said as he sat in a reception hall at his headquarters in Salahuddin. “If the Kurdish people agree to stay in the framework of Iraq in one form or another as a federation, then other people should be grateful to them.”
Full Article: nytimes.com