Independent, UK
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/politics/story.jsp?story=379060

Kurdish leaders enraged by 'undemocratic' American plan to occupy Iraq
By Patrick Cockburn in Arbil, northern Iraq

17 February 2003

The US is abandoning plans to introduce democracy in Iraq after a war to
overthrow Saddam Hussein, according to Kurdish leaders who recently met
American officials.

The Kurds say the decision resulted from pressure from US allies in the
Middle East who fear a war will lead to radical political change in the
region. 

The Kurdish leaders are enraged by an American plan to occupy Iraq but
largely retain the government in Baghdad. The only changes would be the
replacement of President Saddam and his lieutenants with senior US military
officers. 

It undercuts the argument by George Bush and Tony Blair that war is
justified by the evil nature of the regime in Baghdad.

"Conquerors always call themselves liberators," said Sami Abdul-Rahman,
deputy prime minister of the Kurdish administration, in a reference to Mr
Bush's speech last week in which he said US troops were going to liberate
Iraq. 

Mr Abdul-Rahman said the US had reneged on earlier promises to promote
democratic change in Iraq. "It is very disappointing," he said. "In every
Iraqi ministry they are just going to remove one or two officials and
replace them with American military officers."

Kurdish officials strongly believe the new US policy is the result of
pressure from regional powers, notably Saudi Arabia and Turkey.

The US appears to be quietly abandoning earlier declarations that it would
make Iraq a model democracy in the Middle East. In Iraq, free elections
would lead to revolutionary change because although the Shia Muslims and
Kurds constitute three-quarters of the population, they are excluded from
power in Baghdad by the Sunni Muslim establishment.

Kurdish leaders are deeply alarmed by US intentions, which only became clear
at a meeting in Ankara earlier in the month and from recent public
declarations by US officials. Hoshyar Zebari, a veteran Kurdish leader,
said: "If the US wants to impose its own government, regardless of the
ethnic and religious composition of Iraq, there is going to be a backlash."

Mr Abdul-Rahman accuses the US of planning cosmetic changes in Iraq. "This
is to give the government on a platter to the second line of Ba'athists [the
ruling party]," he said.

The US appears to be returning to the policy it pursued at the end of the
Gulf War in 1991. It did seek to get rid of President Saddambut wanted to
avoid a radical change in Iraq. The US did not support the uprisings of Shia
Muslims and Kurdsbecause it feared a transformation in Iraqi politics that
might have destabilised its allies in the Middle East or benefited Iran.

The two Kurdish parties - the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP), which rules
western Kurdistan, and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan - are at the heart
of the Iraqi opposition. Together they rule four million people in an area
the size of Switzerland that has been outside President Saddam's control
since 1991. 

The change in American policy means marginalising the Iraqi opposition which
has been seeking to unite. In response to the US decision, the Kurds and
their allies have accelerated moves to hold a conference of opposition
parties in Salahudin, the headquarters of the KDP, now scheduled for
tomorrow. "We want to know if we are partners in regime change or not," Mr
Zebari said. 

He spoke scathingly of any attempt by America "to bring in an Iraqi from the
United States who has not seen his country for years and impose him by armed
force". 

The destabilising impact of the impending war is already being felt in the
mountains of northern Iraq. Turkey has demanded that its troops be allowed
to take over a swath of territory along the border inside Iraq. The
ostensible reason is to prevent a flood of Kurdish refugees trying to flee
into Turkey, but the Kurdish parties say they are quite capable of doing
this themselves. They say the Turkish demand, to which they suspect the US
has agreed in return for the use of Turkish military facilities, is the
first step in a Turkish plan to advance into Iraqi Kurdistan.

The Kurds fear that a US-led war against President Saddam might be the
occasion for a Turkish effort to end the de facto independence enjoyed by
Iraqi Kurds for more than a decade. One Kurdish leader said: "Turkey has
made up its mind that it will intervene in northern Iraq in order to destroy
us. 

__________________
Patrick Cockburn is a visiting fellow at the Centre for Strategic and
International Studies in Washington and the co-author of 'Saddam Hussein: An
American Obsession'.

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