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With the Kurdish peshmerga having retreated from Kirkuk could this be another example of the Kurdish leadership overreaching itself?

Kurdish forces withdraw from Kirkuk
An Sionnach Fionn with an interesting piece about the Kurdish peshmerga's retreat from the oil rich region of Kirkuk.
The precipitous withdrawal of forces nominally loyal to the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) in the oil-rich Kirkuk region of northern Iraq in the face of an advance by Iraqi troops has taken many foreign observers by surprise. Largely under the control of the Kurds since the summer of 2014, an initial series of clashes and military mobilisations in the area convinced most analysts that a major confrontation between the separatist and federal authorities, respectively, in Erbil and Bagdad was inevitable. In the event the famed Peshmerga, an umbrella term for various Kurdish armed groups affiliated with the KRG, retreated before hardly a shot was fired.

This has led to all sorts of conspiracy theories, speculation focusing on a deal between the military wing of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), a minority Kurdish political party founded and led by the late Jalal Talabani, and the central government. The PUK is the main rival of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) which has dominated the regional government in Erbil under the authoritarian rule of the Barzani family for over a decade. The decision by Masoud Barzani, the long-running KDP leader and disputed President of Iraqi Kurdistan, to hold a successful independence referendum in September seems to have brought to the fore internal rivalries dating back to the civil war of the 1990s (which, of course, was principally fought between the PUK and KDP movements).

A complicating element in this picture is the role of Iran, which has moved to fill the political vacuum in its war-torn neighbour left by the fall of Saddam Hussein and the Baathist regime in 2003, and the formal withdrawal of the United States-led coalition forces in 2011. Tehran now wields more power in Iraq than any other foreign nation, its military and intelligence services playing an important role in stalling and then driving back the expansion of the insurgent Islamic State (IS) towards Baghdad.

Iranian-backed militias, nominally under the authority of the central government through the amorphous Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF), have proved pivotal in asserting federal control over formerly lawless or rebellious areas of the country. These include Shia-majority groups like Kata'ib Hezbollah and Asa'ib Ahl al-Haq, whose weapons and equipment are only slightly inferior to that of the conventional units they serve alongside, In the Kirkuk zone the Peshmerga were facing the Iraqi Special Operations Forces (ISOF), badly mauled from encounters with IS during the nine month battle for Mosul, with these Iranian-led militiamen behind them. Militiamen with a well-deserved reputation for sectarianism and communal violence during fighting elsewhere in the country.

If, as (falsely?) rumoured, the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) has done a deal with the inept federal government in Baghdad, and beyond them with Tehran, to enhance its own position and damage that of its main rival in the governing Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) in Erbil, it is a deal that they may well come to regret. The Iranian military commander “advising” the Iraqi generals, Qasem Soleimani, has shown himself to be a master strategist in the past and there is some evidence to believe that he may have orchestrated events in Kirkuk over the last several weeks. Making Iran the biggest winner in the war to reunite fractured Iraq.
An Sionnach Fionn Blogs here.
More on this subject here:
"Woe betide the Kurds of northern Syria when the war is over"


This post first appeared on ORGANIZED RAGE, please read the originial post: here

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With the Kurdish peshmerga having retreated from Kirkuk could this be another example of the Kurdish leadership overreaching itself?

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