Since the June 2014 fall of Mosul many articles have been
written that the Kurds are the winner of the on-going conflict. For instance on
June 15 Time published “The
Only Winners in Iraq’s Chaos; the Kurds,” June 16 the Financial Times had “Iraq’s
Kurds look the biggest winners in militants’ push,” June 19 the Associated
Press printed “Kurds
win land and oil in Iraq’s chaos but face new challenges,” and July 16 the
Guardian ran “Revisiting
Kurdistan: ‘If there is a success story in Iraq, it’s here,’” They usually
talk about how the Kurds have finally been able to seize the disputed city of
Kirkuk and its oil wealth, and then the people’s desire for independence being
just around the corner. What many of those reports missed were the high costs
the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) is incurring during this period. It has
greatly expanded its territory and now borders the Islamic State (IS), which it
is getting into constant battles with. This is costing the KRG lots of money
during a period of financial crisis and almost daily casualties as well.
The Kurdish peshmerga moved into positions abandoned by the ISF during its collapse in northern Iraq in June (KNN)
The Kurdish peshmerga is now facing off against the Islamic
State (IS) across northern Iraq. When Mosul fell in mid-June 2014 most of the
Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) units in Ninewa, Salahaddin, Kirkuk, and Diyala
disintegrated. The peshmerga moved into this vacuum and secured the disputed
territories that had been abandoned by the army and police. Shortly afterward
fighting started with the Islamic State (IS) across this new border. On June 11 for example there
was a gunfight in Sinjar, Ninewa, and then another the next day along
the Dohuk border. That quickly escalated as two peshmerga were kidnapped in
Mosul on June
16, and a peshmerga captain was killed in Zahra, Ninewa on June
20 by a sniper. In Diyala the Kurds moved into Jalawla in the northeast,
which has been a constant flashpoint with insurgents. On June 13 gunfire was
exchanged there. After that there was constant fighting in that area. June 15 4
peshmerga were killed and 37 wounded in three different incidents, June 16
2 more died, and June
18 there was one more fatality and six injured in and around Sadiya and Jalawla.
In Salahaddin the peshmerga moved into the Tuz Kharmato district, and fighting
started there on June
21 with 2 killed and 7 wounded in Tuz
and 2 more injured in Sulaiman Bek.
Finally in Kirkuk, much of the conflict has been in the Hawija area with 2
Asayesh killed and 3
peshmerga wounded in two separate incidents there on June 11, and the
outskirts of Kirkuk City where an Asayesh was wounded June
12, and then 2 peshmerga killed and four wounded by an IED on June
15. Since then Diyala and Kirkuk have seen the most casualties by far. From
June 8 to July 14 34 peshmerga have died and 88 have been wounded in Diyala and
33 peshmerga and Asayesh killed and 98 injured in Kirkuk. That compares with 4
killed and 20 wounded in Salahaddin and 15 killed and 26 wounded in Ninewa
during that same period. In total 86 Kurdish fighters have lost their lives with
232 wounded across those four governorates over five weeks.
Peshmerga/Asayesh
Casualties In Diyala, Kirkuk, Ninewa, Salahaddin Since Insurgent Offensive
Date
|
Diyala
|
Kirkuk
|
Ninewa
|
Salahaddin
|
Weekly Totals
|
Jun 8-14
|
-
|
21 Wounded
|
-
|
1 Killed
|
1 Killed
21 Wounded
|
Jun 15-21
|
8 Killed
43 Wounded
|
16 Killed
41 Wounded
|
1 Killed
|
2 Killed
6 Wounded
|
27 Killed
90 Wounded
|
Jun 22-28
|
9 Killed
11 Wounded
|
11 Killed
20 Wounded
|
11 Killed
26 Wounded
|
1 Killed
14 Wounded
|
32 Killed
71 Wounded
|
Jun 29-30
|
2 Killed
5 Wounded
|
8 Wounded
|
-
|
-
|
2 Killed
13 Wounded
|
Jul 1-7
|
8 Killed
5 Wounded
|
4 Killed
5 Wounded
|
-
|
-
|
12 Killed
10 Wounded
|
Jul 8-14
|
7 Killed
24 Wounded
|
2 Killed
3 Wounded
|
3 Killed
|
-
|
12 Killed
27 Wounded
|
Total
|
34 Killed
88 Wounded
|
33 Killed
98 Wounded
|
15 Killed
26 Wounded
|
4 Killed
20 Wounded
|
86 Killed
232 Wounded
|
The human costs are only part of the story, because there
are financial ones as well. Before the start of the insurgent summer offensive
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki cut off Kurdistan’s 17% share of the national
budget starting in January 2014. This caused widespread problems as the KRG
relies upon Baghdad for 95%
of its own budget, and like the rest of the country the government is the
largest employer. While the premier ended up making two
partial payments since then, public employees and the peshmerga were going
without pay and many development projects were stopped. This led to almost
weekly protests for six months straight. Now the Kurds are spending more money
on the disputed territories to keep their forces deployed and mobilized there.
The attempt to sell oil via tankers has largely failed as only
one sold its cargo, while the other three remain at sea. The regional
government did get some
loans as a result, but the situation has forced the Patriotic Union of
Kurdistan and the Kurdistan Democratic Party to dip
into their own coffers to pay for government operations. The security
situation is therefore putting more strains upon the Kurds’ budget.
Many have talked about the acquisition of Kirkuk and other
disputed territories as the last step towards Kurdish independence without
examining the stress this is putting upon the regional government. Moving into
these areas has not been free as there have been over 300 casualties and near
constant fighting especially in Diyala and Kirkuk. The KRG has also been forced
to spend more money at a time when it is short of cash. This doesn’t mean the
Kurds aren’t moving towards independence, but some of the celebratory articles
about it are a little premature. Kurdistan now has a long border with the
Islamic State, which has proven it is no fan of the KRG, and is making the it
pay for its newly acquired territory. The Kurds are also not financially
independent at this time
SOURCES
AIN, "3 ISIL elements killed northeastern Baquba,"
6/18/14
-"14 Peshmerga elements killed, injured northeastern
Baquba," 6/15/14
- "Urgent……ISIL clash with Peshmerga in Dohouk," 6/11/14
Associated Press, "Iraq fights militants as foreigners feared
seized," 6/18/14
Barzinji, Shwan, “KRG asks international companies for loans
to make up for budget,” Bas News, 6/3/14
Bas News, "ISIS kidnap two Peshmerga officers near
Mosul," 6/16/14
Beauchamp, Zac, “A guide to the
bitter political fights driving the Iraq crisis,” Vox, 6/15/14
Buratha News, "Clashes between the Peshmerga and the Daash
terrorists in Sinjar west of Nineveh and the Peshmerga able to defeat the
terrorists," 6/11/14
- "Violent clashes between the Peshmerga and Daash terrorist
in Jalawla," 6/13/14
Dolamari, Mewan, "KRG: So far six Peshmerga has been killed
30 more injured," Bas News, 6/15/14
Hadid, Diaa and Matti, Emad, “Kurds win land and oil in
Iraq’s chaos but face new challenges,” Associated Press, 6/19/14
Harding, Luke, “Revisiting Kurdistan: ‘If there is a success
story in Iraq, it’s here,’” Guardian, 7/16/14
Kirkuk Now, "Gunmen Attacked an Asaish Checkpoint,"
6/13/14
- "ISIS Ask Residents to Nominate New Head," 6/11/14
KNN, "Kurdish Peshmarga Inflict Heavy Losses on ISIS
Insurgents," 6/22/14
Al Mada, “Experts warn of economic paralysis as a result of
the crisis in Kurdistan and Baghdad contend with: the Government of the
Territory of alternative solutions,” 3/2/14
- "Mayor of Tuz confirms the death and injury of 21 elements
of Peshmerga and Daash in clashes yesterday," 6/22/14
Al Masalah, "The death of a captain in the Kurdish peshmerga
shot by a sniper from the Daash organization north of Mosul," 6/20/14
Muhammed, Hussein, van den Toorn, Christine, and Osgood, Patrick,
"Clashes and tension along Kurdistan's new border," Iraq Oil Report,
6/26/14
Newton-Small, Jay, “The Only Winners in Iraq’s Chaos: the Kurds,”
Time, 6/15/14
NINA, "7 Peshmerga fighters killed, /36/ others injured in
Nineveh, Salahuddin and Diyala," 6/16/14
- "Six elements of Peshmerga and policemen wounded in
confrontations with the ISIS west of Kirkuk," 6/11/14
Osgood, Patrick, Van Heuvelen, Ben, and Lando, Ben, “UPDATE:
Kurdistan sidesteps Baghdad legal challenge to exports,” Iraq Oil Report,
6/28/14
Solomon, Erika, “Iraq’s Kurds look the biggest winners in
militants’ push,” Financial Times, 6/16/14
1 comment:
A good point Joel, but do recognize that independence is being forced on the KRG by Western policies dictating that they deal with sectarian and prejudicial partners within the post-2003 Iraq.
The KRG leadership, while desirous of independence, is not unconstrained as the popular sentiment picked up on within those simplistic media accounts you rightly critique. It is, however, heavily invested in the economy south of the KRG for potential development. The economy outside the energy sector is all focussed in that direction and incapable of developing without access to the Iraqi market (at least for the foreseeable future).
The political economy of independence as well as the state institutions necessary to provide an internal balance capable of withstanding external attempts to pull Kurds apart are not yet solidified in spite of Herculean efforts by many leaders across the KRG.
The peshmerga and other KRG security forces are once again conducting heroic actions to protect Kurds as well as many others across the so-called 'disputed territories'. Not conquerors or occupiers they are the salvation of the many Iraqis that the IS would murder or enslave.
I appreciate your effort to correct the record on the post-Mosul efforts of the KRG. Perhaps an expanded focus on their efforts is warranted.
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