Kurds seek statehood amid regional unrest
• West Asia is experiencing a geo-engineering flux, with the Palestinian issue at a pivotal moment.
• The Israeli government’s hard-line stance is at odds with the Arab States’ insistence on a two-state solution for the Abraham Accords’ expansion.
• Iran has agreed to negotiate its nuclear programme after the loss of regional proxies and the resumption of American “maximum pressure” tactics and military threat.
• The toppling of the al-Assad regime has created new paradigms.
• Turkey’s ambitions to reshape Syria are battling an Intefadah at home.
• The decline of oil prices by a fifth in 2025 may upend the regional economic stability.
• U.S. President Donald Trump is set to visit the Gulf next month.
Kurds’ Quest for Statehood
• Kurds are the world’s largest ethnic minority without a state of their own.
• Their common identity is shaped by a shared history and the craggy geography of Asia Minor.
• Most Kurds are Sunni Muslims, but are linked to other regional ethnic minorities, such as Yezidis, Alevi, and Zoroastrianism.
• The Kurdish quest for a state has remained unrequited, with the nearest realization at the Treaty of Sevres in 1920.
• Turkish repression has led to the formation of PKK (Kurdistan Workers’ Party) by Abdullah Öcalan, which has waged a campaign for Kurdish independence.
Kurdish Self-Defence Force (SDF) and Iraqi Kurds’ Situation
• The 13-year civil war in Syria has given Kurds a chance to fill the politicostrategic vacuum.
• The Kurdish Self-Defence Force (SDF) was created with American support to fight the Islamic State and al-Qaeda.
• The SDF currently controls nearly 40% of Syria, causing threat perceptions in Ankara.
• Turkey has attempted to checkmate the SDF by creating exclusion zones and forming a militia against it.
• The SDF’s success may diminish with the planned attenuation of American military presence in Syria.
Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) and Iran’s Situation
• The Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) was formed in 1992 after the U.S. Operation Desert Storm weakened Iraqi hold over Kurds.
• The KRG has sought to assert its autonomy, often creating a conflict with Baghdad authorities.
• Turkish armed forces have been active in hitting alleged PKK targets in KRG.
Iranian Kurds’ Situation
• Iranian regimes have been marginally benign to its Kurds, mostly living in the northwest along the geo-strategic faultlines.
• There are strong ethnic and cultural ties between Kurds and Persians, and some modern Iranian dynasties were partly of Kurdish origin.
• With the weakening of the Iranian state and the U.S.-Israel military campaign against Tehran, Iranian Kurds may feel encouraged to secede.
Potential of Kurdish Statehood
• Recent weakening of central authority in Iraq and Syria has brightened the prospects of Kurdish statehood.
• These proto-states lack a unifying ideology or transnational political entity to dovetail their statehood to the emerging grand Western strategy for West Asia.