Showing posts sorted by relevance for query BARZANI. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query BARZANI. Sort by date Show all posts

Friday, April 15, 2022

COMPRADOR
Masrour Barzani visits Turkey, to meet Recep Tayyip Erdogan

Posted on April 15, 2022

Masrour Barzani (L) Iraqi Kurdistan prime minister shakes hands with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Ankara, Turkey, November 28, 2019. Photo: Turkish presidency/KRG/Twitter

ISTANBUL,— The prime minister of the Kurdish administration in Iraqi Kurdistan Masrour Barzani arrived in Istanbul, Turkey on Friday and is scheduled to meet with Turkey’s president Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

During the visit, the premier of so-called Kurdistan Regional Government KRG, Masrour Barzani, is expected to discuss strengthening bilateral ties as well as the recent developments in Iraq and the region, according to a statement from Barzani office.

According to analysts the talks will be focused on the plans to export natural gas from Iraqi Kurdistan region to Europe.

On March 13, Iranian forces launched 12 ballistic missiles at the Iraqi Kurdish capital of Erbil, claiming the attack was in response for an Israeli military attack in Syria that killed Iranian military personnel. Most of the missiles were fired at a villa owned by Sheikh Baz Karim Barzanji, the CEO of a major domestic energy company called KAR Group which close to the Barzanis.

According to Iraqi, Turkish, and Western sources, the strike was launched in response to plans to export Kurdistan natural gas to Turkey and Europe.

The Iraqi Kurdistan-ruling Barzani family have close business, economic, and energy ties with the Turkish government, which is an important oil, economic and political partner of Kurdistan Democratic Party KDP. Turkey’s pipelines transport most of the crude oil produced in Iraqi Kurdistan.

Masrour Barzani said on March 29, 2022, that Kurdistan has the capacity to make up for at least some of the energy shortfall in Europe – and that oil and gas development in Kurdistan might not be in the interest of major regional energy producer Iran.

On February 22, Iraq’s Supreme court deemed an oil and gas law regulating the oil industry in Iraqi Kurdistan unconstitutional and demanded that Kurdish authorities hand over their crude supplies. Despite the court verdict, KRG premier Masrour Barzani, who seems to defy the ruling, stated his administration remains committed to its oil and gas contracts.

The Barzani-dominated KRG has no authority in areas which is controlled by Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, where the most gas fields are located. The KDP is not even sharing oil revenues with the PUK, according to critics.

In February 2022, Turkey’s president Recep Tayyip Erdogan met with the president of Iraqi Kurdistan Nechirvan Barzani in Ankara where they discussed a possible natural gas pipeline and gas supply agreement between Turkey and Iraqi Kurdistan.

Masrour Barzani’s last official visit to Turkey was in November 28, 2019.

Iraqi Kurdistan is not a unified region; it is divided politically and geographically into the Yellow and Green zones, which are led by the KDP’s Massoud Barzani and the PUK’s Talabani family. The Barzanis govern Erbil and Duhok, while the Talabanis govern Sulaimani.

AND OCALAN'S PKK FIGHT TURKEY'S DOMINANCE OF KURDISTAN

This is a developing story…

Copyright © 2022 Ekurd.net
 All rights reserved

The U.S. must stand up to Barzani blackmail in Iraq

Posted on April 14, 2022 by Editorial Staff 















Tribal leader and the head of KDP party Massoud Barzani (R) along his son Masrour (L), Duhok, Iraqi Kurdistan, 2018. 
Photo Michael Rubin | The National Interest

For almost twenty years, the U.S. State Department has allowed its fear of Barzani’s intransigence to shape American policy in Iraq.

On May 12, 2018, Iraqis went to the polls to elect a new government. Then, as now, political maneuvering consumed months as Iraqis sought first to select a speaker, then a president, and finally a prime minister. Behind the scenes, individuals and party leaders engaged in political horse-trading and brinkmanship, while diplomats from Washington and Tehran sought to ensure that candidates more sympathetic to their interests, if not worldview, found their way into top positions.

During the struggle to form a new government in 2018, Brett McGurk was the U.S. special envoy to counter the Islamic State. But, by dint of his experience in Iraq and personal relationships with Iraqi politicians across the political spectrum, President Donald Trump and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo relied on him to shape U.S. Iraq policy. While the Americans, Europeans, Arabs, and Iranians all largely agreed that Barham Salih was the most capable and politically moderate candidate, McGurk urged Iraqi politicians to choose Fuad Hussein, chief of staff to Kurdistan Democratic Party leader Massoud Barzani.

Fuad’s achievements were negligible, and Iraqis perceived his capabilities as lackluster. According to Iraqis present in the meetings, McGurk’s reasoning was that picking anyone besides Barzani’s man would lead Barzani to undermine the broader Iraqi system. This was no idle concern; the year before, Barzani, his uncle, Hoshyar Zebari, and his son Masrour had held an independence referendum across both Iraqi Kurdistan and disputed territories claimed by both Baghdad and Erbil.
















US Secretary of State Michael Pompeo (R) shakes hands with Massoud Barzani leader of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) in Erbil, Iraqi Kurdistan, on January 9, 2019. Photo: Public Domain/US Secretary of State

For almost twenty years, the State Department has allowed its fear of Barzani’s intransigence to shape American policy in Iraq. In the era of the Coalition Provisional Authority, some current and former U.S. government officials used their contacts in the State Department or Pentagon to run interference for the Barzanis while simultaneously pursuing their own personal business interests. Many other diplomats and military officers—a notable exception being David Petraeus, the commander of the 101st Airborne at the time—would undermine or soft-pedal efforts to instill democracy or punish corruption for fear of upsetting Barzani.

While other Iraqi political leaders would meet high-profile American leaders in Baghdad, Barzani demanded they visit him at his cliff-top palace complex outside of Erbil. The fact that many did allowed Barzani to depict Americans as supplicants. Ironically, assuaging Barzani in this way only increased his ego and sense of entitlement.

This deference to Barzani did not serve U.S. interests. Russian firms benefited disproportionately from Kurdish oil, and both Massoud and Nechirvan Barzani leaked word of impending operations to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. Masrour Barzani—the regional government’s current prime minister—is best known among U.S. intelligence authorities for pestering them on citizenship issues for family members and requests for other inappropriate personal favors.

Nor has this deference brought regional stability. Nearly two decades after Saddam’s fall, Iraq needs talent. Barzani’s nepotism—and U.S. deference to it—undercuts recognition of that talent by signaling that only the Barzanis are capable. This is one of the reasons why, in November 2021, so many Iraqi Kurds traveled to Belarus—many dying en route—in order to try to cross into Poland. Likewise, those who drowned in the English Channel last November were not refugees fleeing war, but rather Iraqi Kurds seeking to escape the Barzanis’ regime of corruption. It is quite telling when supporters of Shia cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, whose followers often engage in corruption, criticize Sadr for the unseemliness of a political alliance with a family as corrupt as the Barzanis.


Brett McGurk, Baghdad, Iraq, June 7, 2017. Photo: Reuters

To look at the problem from the opposite perspective, it is clear that a willingness to stand up to the Barzanis at any point from 2003 to the present would have very likely bolstered Iraq’s stability. There are legitimate reasons to criticize Barham Salih—the people of Sulaimani, his hometown, are not shy about doing so—but the United States is lucky that McGurk’s maneuvering failed in 2018. There is simply no way Fuad Hussein could have navigated Iraq through the crisis of nationwide protests, the aftermath of Qassem Suleimani’s assassination, and the COVID-19 pandemic. Nor would he have been able to advance Iraq on the world stage in the way that Barham did. Moreover, Barzani proxies would have been unable to act and be accepted as an honest broker by Iraq’s various sectarian, ethnic, and political constituencies, let alone Washington, Tehran, Abu Dhabi, and Ankara.

As McGurk, newly-confirmed ambassador to Iraq Alina Rominowski, and others in the White House, State Department, Pentagon, and CIA work to help Iraq secure itself and set itself on a trajectory for economic stability, it is essential that they stop allowing fear of Barzani intransigence undermine U.S. interests and Iraq’s future. It is time to call Barzani’s bluff and allow him to retire into the dustbin of history where he belongs.

Michael Rubin is a former Pentagon official whose major research areas are the Middle East, Turkey, Iran and diplomacy. He is author of “Dancing with the Devil: The Perils of Engaging Rogue Regimes” (Encounter, 2014). He is a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute AEI. His major research area is the Middle East, with special focus on Iran, Iraq, Turkey, and Kurdish society. Read more by Michael Rubin.

The article first published at The National Interest.

Copyright © 2022, respective author or news agency, nationalinterest.org



Saturday, November 05, 2022

U.S. Should Stop Funding Iraqi Kurdish Peshmerga militias



Massoud Barzani (R) with his son Mansour Barzani and KDP party Zerevani. Peshmerga militias, Iraqi Kurdistan, 2016. Photo: Peshmerga/KRG/FB

Michael Rubin | 19fortyfive.com

Almost a year ago, President Joe Biden signed the 2022 National Defense Authorization Act that included $260 million for the Iraqi Kurdish Peshmerga. Two months ago, the White House signaled its intention to continue its financial support for the Kurdish militia. This is par for the course.

While the revival of the Islamic State is a real threat, throwing money at the Peshmerga now does more harm than good. In the history of funding the Iraqi Kurdish militias, investment has seldom met the promise. The Islamic State seized Jebel Sinjar and enslaved the Yazidis living there because the Peshmerga abandoned their posts and fled. As the Islamic State marched on Erbil, many Peshmerga and top lieutenants to Kurdish leader Massoud Barzani rushed to Erbil airport to escape on the last flights out of the Kurdish capital. To date, the Kurdish government refuses to release the manifests of passengers because of the political embarrassment such cowardice would expose. In juxtaposition to Barzani’s actions, the Syrian Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) and, subsequently, the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) stood and fought; they represented a good investment for security.



Barzani’s Kurdish KDP Peshmerga fighters flee from the Yazidi Sinjar area in northwest Iraq just before ISIS attacks on the Yazidis, on Aug 3, 2014. Photo: Screenshot/Ronahi TV

Unfortunately, the initial retreat of the Iraqi Kurdish Peshmerga in the face of the fight was not the only time when the Peshmerga refused to live up to their reputation borne from the fight against late Iraqi President Saddam Hussein. At the height of the fight against the Islamic State, for example, Kurdish leader Massoud Barzani warehoused the equipment the Pentagon provided and used it only as a show of force against his political opponents. This was a major reason why Iraqi Shi’ite militias took the lead against the Islamic State and liberated nearly every Iraqi city that had fallen. At the same time, the Kurdish Peshmerga guarded the lines around Kirkuk and Mosul.

Following the transfer of power from Massoud to his eldest son Masrour, the situation worsens. It is ironic that Masrour arrests and charges journalists with treason for meeting with the American consul-general in Erbil even as he demands the United States subsidize the Peshmerga. Over the past year, as the Kurds have locked in American funding, the politicization of the Peshmerga has increased.

Gone is the two-decade-long but never-concluding discussion of unifying the Peshmerga to end their current division between the leaders of the two largest political parties. Masrour and his younger brother Waysi treat the Peshmerga as personal enforcers. They have become a new generation’s Uday and Qusay and are implementing a reign of terror.


PUK party Peshmerga commander Sheikh Jaafar 2018. Photo: FB

It is doubtful that the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) will now even form a joint administration for the Kurdistan Regional Government. Kurdish journalist Renwar Najm has highlighted some astounding developments. Regional Vice President Sheikh Jaafar Sheikh Mustafa, for example, had declared the relationship between the two parties to be at its “worst since the civil war” of 1994-1997 when intra-Kurdish fighting killed more than 3,000. In recent days, an armed group answering to Azhi Amin, a former member of an Al Qaeda affiliate who now works for Masrour and Waysi, surrounded the house of deputy prime minister and PUK member Qubad Talabani. Qubad has long done Masrour’s bidding, but Massoud’s eldest son no longer wants to share power outside his immediate family let alone tolerate the illusion of plurality.



Iraqi Kurdistan PM Masrour Barzani (R) shakes hands with his Deputy Qubad Talabani, 2021. Photo: AFP

What occurs now in Iraqi Kurdistan with regard to American funding of the Peshmerga has a parallel to what occurred in Somalia between 2018 and 2021. At the time, U.S. Ambassador Donald Yamamoto lavishly coordinated the funding of Somalia’s armed forces in the name of fighting the Al Qaeda-affiliated Al-Shabab. Then-Somali President Mohamed Farmajo, however, diverted the funding and used the armed forces as a personal militia to attack his rivals rather than fight terrorists.

Lobbyists may have assured Congress and the State Department that money meant security. Still, the opposite was true: The more money given to corrupt leadership, the worse the security situation became. Only with Farmajo’s ouster did the Somali armed forces direct themselves to their core purpose and fight al-Shabab.

It is now time for some tough love on the Peshmerga. Congress if not the White House should remind Masrour and Waysi that American assistance to the tune of more than a quarter-billion dollars is no entitlement. Rather than advance the fight against the Islamic State, such funding today greases instability and is a death blow to Kurds’ hope for democracy. It is time to stop funding the Peshmerga.

Michael Rubin is a former Pentagon official whose major research areas are the Middle East, Turkey, Iran and diplomacy. He is author of “Dancing with the Devil: The Perils of Engaging Rogue Regimes” (Encounter, 2014). He is a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute AEI. His major research area is the Middle East, with special focus on Iran, Iraq, Turkey, and Kurdish society. Read more by Michael Rubin.

The article first published at 19fortyfive.com

Copyright © 2022, respective author or news agency, 19fortyfive.com

Clan-based KDP party reelects Massoud Barzani as president at the 14th KDP congress




Massoud Barzani (C) with his nephew Nechirvan Barzani (L) and son Masrour Barzani (R) at the 14th KDP party congress, Duhok, Iraqi Kurdistan, November 3, 2022. Photo: K24

DUHOK, Iraqi Kurdistan region,— Massoud Barzani was re-elected president of the clan-based Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) on Thursday as the winner is already known to public, with Iraqi Kurdistan region president Nechirvan Barzani re-appointed as his first deputy and prime minister Masrour Barzani elected as his second deputy.

The 14th KDP congress began on Thursday in Duhok city and is scheduled to last two days. The KDP has not held a congress since December 2010, the longest period the party has ever gone without holding one.

“KDP’s congress is mainly for appointing Masrour vice-president along with Nechirvan. Masrour has further consolidated power within the party and the KRI. The KDP had a non-Barzani Vice President till last 2014, and then Nechirvan took the position and now Masrour was added.” senior political analyst Kamal Chomani said in a tweet.

“KDP also elects 51 Leadership Council members and later the political bureau. Masrour Barzani will have the majority of the Leadership Council members. Nechirvan will have less than 15 out of 51. Nechirvan has been squeezed by Masrour, but he can’t do much as Massoud is still alive.” Chomani added.

The KDP is the largest party in Iraqi Kurdistan, with 45 seats in parliament and top government roles such as president, prime minister, and deputy parliament speaker.

In August 2022, 600,000 KDP members selected 800 members to participate in the 14th KDP Congress.

The KDP was founded in Iranian Kurdistan on August 16, 1946, by the late Mustafa Barzani, the father Massoud Barzani.

“It is a joke to meet and reelect the same person without challengers. Mustafa Barzani used the same technique during Kurdish war with Iraq. No one dear to challenge him for the leadership, so what is the congress for anyway?”, “KDP congresses are not different from Saddam Hussein Ba’ath congress” senior political analyst Hamma Mirwaisi said in 2010.

“The Barzani clan established political party to serve the family. They are calling it Kurdistan Democratic Party without understanding the word democrat. The Talabanis have similar political party of Patriotic Union of Kurdistan PUK to serve their own family. It is a joke to meet and reelect the same person without challengers. Mustafa Barzani used the same technique during Kurdish war with Iraq. No one dear to challenge him for the leadership, so what is the congress for anyway?”, “KDP congress is not different from Saddam Hussein Ba’ath congress” senior political analyst Hamma Mirwaisi said in 2010.

“The leadership in Barzani family is goes from father to son not to nephew. Nechirvan Barzani knows that more than others.” Mirwaisi added.

For decades, the KDP and PUK have lorded over the region. The clan is routinely accused of corruption.

The Barzani clan, known as the Kurdish oligarchs, have been routinely accused by critics and observers of neptunism and amassing huge wealth from oil business for the family instead of serving the population.

Massoud Barzani, remains the most powerful leader in the shadow according to analysts. Massoud’s son Masrour is the Kurdistan region’s prime minister and his nephew Nechirvan Barzani is the president of Kurdistan.

Iraqi Kurdistan is not a unified region, it is divided politically and geographically, known as the Yellow and Green zone, between the KDP led by Massoud Barzani and PUK led by the Talabani’s family. Erbil and Duhok governorates are controlled by the Barzanis and Sulaimani by the Talabanis.

Read more about The Monarchy of Iraqi Kurdistan

Copyright © 2022 Ekurd.net. All rights reserved


Saturday, April 20, 2024

How Kurds Missed Their Opportunity to be an Independent Nation

 THE BARZANI KLAN RUNS IRAQI KURDISTAN

Published: April 20, 2024
April 19, 2024
Author Rauf Naqishbendi
Exclusive to Ekurd.net


Retired US Lt General Jay Garne raises arms with PUK leader Jalal Talabani, left, and KDP leader Massoud Barzani, in Dukan, Sulaimani governorate, Iraqi Kurdistan on April 22, 2003. Photo: AP


After the American Invasion of Iraq, the climate matured for independent Kurdistan. It was the responsibility of Kurdish leaders to react, preparing the nation and leaving America with no choice but to submit to our national demand. But our national agenda took a backseat to the leader’s personal gains, prejudices, and tribal ambitions. For over sixty years of current leaders’ reign, they added nothing positive to our lives, but they detracted enough to be lamented for generations to come.

We must understand that independent Kurdistan must be a divine miracle given enormous stumbling blocks in a way. But the American invasion of Iraq was God’s long-awaited gift bestowed upon Kurds. That was one of a rare opportunities in the life of our nation; and made Kurds’ dream for independence come to fruition should Kurdish leaders were to pursue it prudently. The role of leadership is to prepare the nation for all occasions; study risks and plan for emergencies, react to opportunities, march, and galvanize the nation toward its aimed destination. But our leaders went after their personal gains ignoring our national ambition. They accumulated wealth beyond anyone’s imagination to become one of the wealthiest people not only in Kurdistan but the world. They engaged in the assassinations of journalists, suffocating the voice of their opposition, and expanding their criminal enterprises.

Kurdistan occupiers for centuries have been persistent to our subjugation to their dominion, but the American invasion of Iraq rendered them irrelevant on this occasion. Iran and Syria were on American Hit List, and Turkey an old American friend, when America called for its assistance when invaded Iraq, it refused to assist and proved itself perfidious.

America has never favored Independent Kurdistan. But the American invasion of Iraq had ashamed America in the sight of the world and was ready to make concessions to save its faith; besides American casualties were piling up; the economic cost was exuberance; and support for the war at home was fading away as more and more dead and lame soldiers delivered home. At the same time, the Iraqi government was unstable and incapable to fight insurgency and was crippled. That was when Kurds could have taken advantage of the situation and acted accordingly. But their leaders failed them miserably. When they reacted with the referendum of independent Kurdistan, it was too late as they rushed to action and caused the Iraqi government to re-assert its authority over the country’s internally disputed territories, particularly Kirkuk.

It has been six decades since Kurds took arms and fought against Iraq for free Kurdistan. Kurds sacrificed their lives and properties, supported the revolution, endured death, imprisonment, destruction, genocide, and gave everything they had in support of the revolution. Looking back in history, Kurds would have been better off without this bloody and futile revolution which became an i
nstrument to fuel the greed of the two Kurdish dynasties and divide the nation.

                              Members of the Barzani clan and close supporters. Photo: Ekurd.net/SM/FB/AFP

After all the atrocities committed by the two ruling dynasties, they perceived they were immune from prosecution. Considering what had happened recently in the United States, proves their assumption is invalid. They accumulated wealth by robbing the nation and expanding their criminal enterprises, for example, please visit Michael Rubin from American Enterprise Institute, his article titled “Did the Barzanis kill a US government employee in cold blood?”

According to Mr. Rubin The Kurdistan Victims Fund, a charity incorporated in Wyoming, filed a lawsuit against the Kurdistan Regional Government Barzani’s family for (A) Murder of a United States Agent (B) U.S Immigration fraud and perjury (C) Extrajudicial murders and disappearance (D) Genocide and human rights abuse (E) torture of a U.S. citizen (F) illegal exile of Kurdish citizens (G) international narcotics trafficking.

I heard similar lawsuits have been filed against Barzani’s family in the EU, but I couldn’t confirm it. Based on Mr. Rubin’s analysis, Masrour Barzani, son of Masoud Barzani can’t evade prosecution based on legal precedents before the United States Supreme Court. Let it be known to Talabani’s and Barzan’s clan there will be no hideout places for them, and people in Kurdistan will follow them no matter where they land.

For Iraq to re-assert its control over Kurdistan is dreadful. But how these two dynasties have been bleeding Kurds for six decades is even more tragic. Assuredly, they will not be forgiven, and people will not let them escape unpunished. Unarguably, nothing good comes from the two ruling dynasties, and no good can happen during their reign. Therefore, these corrupt leaders and Mafia thugs must be toppled, let the new page of our history start, and let us give their opposition Goran, New Generation, and others a chance to shape our future.

Regardless of what happens people will not be silenced, and nothing can take away their inspiration for freedom and liberty. The last sixty years of the two dynasties have been deplorable and futile episodes of our history. Let us hope the future years will be different with a new leadership unifying Kurdistan, devoted to our wellbeing and our interest rather than compromising our national inspiration for their own personal gains; and with their creativities transforming our nation from its primitive status to one of the advanced societies. This transformation will be long in the making and painful. Sadly, I will not see it, but I pray my children and grandchildren will.


Death of Kurdish Independence and the Beginning of Kurdish National Nightmare

 April 19, 2024




Massoud Barzani, the tribal leader of the Barzani clan, and the head of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) (left) with PUK party president Bafel Talabani in Erbil, Iraqi Kurdistan, February 24, 2024. Photo: Barzani’s Pess Office/X/via Ekurd.net

Rauf Naqishbendi | Exclusive to Ekurd.net

Barzani and Talabani’s dynasty complacently thought they could drill oil and natural gas forever without challenges. The most they shared with people was paying public employee wages which is a small fraction of the proceed and a lion share of proceed from oil and revenue sharing with Iraq funneled into their bank accounts abroad.

They ignored the needs of people and social services. As a result, the education system, healthcare, infostructure and social services in general suffered. They felt secure and invincible for they had American’s backing, but now they can’t drill oil and American will not be able to protect them as Iraqi government is about bringing back Kurdistan under Iraqi government control. As a result, their reign is in doubt and so is the fate of the nation.

Good leadership is a conrnerstone of achieving economic health and social justice, integrity is in the core of leadership. These leaders acted like Mafia thugs and corrupt authorities involved in power abuse, looting natural resources, assassinating, and jailing their oppositions. When a nation is ruled by wicked authorities like these, it warrants the collapse of society with tragic consequences.





Lina Barzani, the daughter of Sirwan Barzani, who is the nephew of Massoud Barzani and the managing director of Korek Telecom, a company worth over $2 billion, with millions of subscribers and close to 3,500 towers across Iraq, Erbil, Iraqi Kurdistan region, 2023. Photo: X/via Ekurd.net

Since American invasion of Iraq money has been flowing to Kurdistan unprecedented from Iraqi revenue sharing, American fund for the reconstruction of Kurdistan, and oil-for-food. Where did that money end up? Here is an example where some of that money is landed:

As reported by Shan Press, the daughter of Sirwan Barzani admitted her family’s investment in America as the followings:

27 companies, 14 hotels, 6 manufacturing companies, 287 cafeterias, 540 condominiums, 48 restaurants, 8 swimming facilities, a bank, and holding company and several hospitals.



Sirwan Barzani, the nephew of Massoud Barzani and the managing director of Korek Telecom, September 2023. Photo: Barzani’s office/via Ekurd.net


Those abovementioned enterprises are owned by only one member of Barzani’s clan, and there are dozens of them. Add to that Talabani’s clan who is also complicit, should we sum all the stolen money we talk about hundreds of billions of dollars.

After American invasion of Iraq, President George W. Bush initiated an agreement for Baghdad to share the revenue of oil with Kurds. His formula was 20% of Iraqi’s oil revenue to be allocated to Kurdistan region, about $20 billion at that time; accordingly, $10 billion check to be written to both Talabani and Barzani.

From Left: Masrour, Massoud, US president George W. Bush, and Mansour Barzani, October 25, 2005. Photo: Barzanis’ fb

The problem with that agreement was it didn’t stipulate checks and accountability but rather left it to vices natural to men. This is an example of how America exported corruption to Kurdistan as it can be traced wherever America engaged. Should George W. Bush be at the helm, that fund would have been deposited into people’s account rather than Talabani’s and Barzani’s account; and have a group of respected citizens along with the United Nations representatives to monitor the allocation of that fund.

Kurds has been suffering at the hand of these two clans and their leaders for many decades. The deep-seated smoldering resentment would have exploded to topple authoritarian mobs, but their actions has been muted by brutalities of authorities who have been willing to gun down any numbers of people to maintain the status quo.

Iraqi government encumbered Kurdish authorities from selling oil & gas, as a result Kurdish authorities are left without revenue. Now it has been months public employees have not paid their salaries. This has resulted in financial difficulties for people. For lack of a private sector, the government is primary employer, and the public employee’s wages trickle down through the economy supporting the region.



Thousands of teachers protest over unpaid salaries in Sulaimani, Iraqi Kurdistan, Jan 3, 2024. Photo: Screengrab/Rudaw TV

Recently, Iraqi supreme court ordered federal government to pay Kurdistan public servants, the Supreme Court said the central administration would pay government workers, employees at public institutions, that means the Kurdish Regional Government will not be involved. That will discard the shadow payroll whereby thugs of Barzani and Talabani have been enrolling their family members and cronies to draw salary from multiple departments.

Gradually, Iraqi government will regain control of Kurdistan, at the end, Talabani and Barzani will be at the edge of demise. Thanks to Barzani and Talabani, not only the independent Kurdistan but the notion of autonomous Kurdistan is a dead dream without hope of resurrection in the foreseeable future.

Kurdish authorities were in their mission to abuse power and accumulate wealth with impunity and felt invincible for they had American backing. Surely, America counted on Kurds to be a beacon of freedom in the Middle East and has invested it’s hope and money knowing the rise of a democratic Kurdistan would justify its invasion of Iraq. For a few years after American invasion of Iraq, Kurds were well-respected internationally and gained sympathy from the western world for keeping their country safe and fighting terrorism. But American faith on Kurds soon evaporated after they found Barzani’s corroboration with ISIS and genocide of Yazidi Kurds; and knowing that Kurdish authorities are not only undemocratic but further one of corrupted and dictatorial authorities. Now, knowing their demise is near Barzani clan pleading for American support. Any American support to these abominable authorities is betrayal of Kurds; and investment in a country whose failure is warranted due to the wicked leaderships and lack of support from their own people.



Jalal Talabani (L) with Mala Mustafa Barzani (R), 1960s. Photo: Creative Commons/wikimedia


Now you Talabani’s and Barzani’s have invited these dreadful and sorrowful days to the life of Kurds. You both know your end is neigh, and you betrayed your people. At the end, you may not be able to exit as your ancestor did, hopefully you will be judged in a court of law. If not, like your ancestors Mustafa Barzani and Jalal Talabani will be forced to flee the country with your treasures hoarded abroad and leave your people at the mercy of their enemies. Congratulations on how you did so well for yourselves; and left your people with grievances and teras of sorrows in their coming days and years. Last but not least, nothing new under the sun, it’s Kurdish history keeps on repeating itself.


Rauf Naqishbendi is a retired software engineer in the San Francisco Bay Area. A long-time senior contributing writer for Ekurd.net. His memoirs entitled “The Garden Of The Poets”, recently published. It reads as a novel depicting his experience and the subsequent 1988 bombing of his hometown with chemical and biological weapons by Saddam Hussein. It is the story of his people´s suffering, and a sneak preview of their culture and history.

The opinions are those of the writer and do not necessarily represent the views of Ekurd.net or its editors.Read more about Independent Kurdistan state

Copyright © 2024 Ekurd.net. All rights reserve









Saturday, July 06, 2024

Barzani’s Visit to Baghdad Angers Pro-Iran Factions

KDR; RIGHT WING BARZANI CRIME FAMILY 


Iraqi PM Mohammed Shia al-Sudani receives leader of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) Masoud Barzani in Baghdad. (Iraqi government media)

Baghdad: Hamza Mustafa
-5 July 2024 AD Ù€ 29 Thul-Hijjah 1445 AH


The visit by leader of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) Masoud Barzani angered pro-Iran Shiite factions that claimed the trip reflects the United States’ role in the country.


For two days, he held talks with government officials and senior leaders, with the media reporting that the Kurdish leader resolved several pending problems between Baghdad and Erbil.

Barzani said the visit sought to consolidate the efforts exerted by Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani to resolve disputes between the federal government in Baghdad and the Iraqi Kurdistan Region.

Political sources told Asharq Al-Awsat that the meetings in Baghdad closed the chapter of deep disputes between Baghdad and Erbil.

They added however that “talk of permanent solutions depends on mutual commitments.”

Deputy parliamentary speaker Shakhoun Abdullah said Barzani’s visit paved the way for a new phase and aimed “to activate agreements, bolster cooperation and unify visions between parties of the political process.”

Local media said Barzani sought to discuss with leaders of the pro-Iran Coordination Framework the danger of “becoming involved in the escalation in the region, such as a potential war” between Lebanon and Israel.

Iraqi journalists quoted political sources as saying that Barzani met with leaders of Shiite parties to discuss American warnings of sanctions should Baghdad fail in containing the activities of the factions in the region.

Bangen Rekani, Iraqi Minister of Construction and leading member of the KDP, denied the reports.

Prominent Sunni politician Mashaan al-Jabouri said Barzani did not carry any American messages, but “expressed his personal concerns over the expansion” of the conflict in Gaza to the region.

Barzani made his statements in his capacity as a political leader, he remarked.

Despite the denials, Kataib Hezbollah military spokesman Abou Ali al-Askari criticized Barzani, saying it “reflects America’s role in the Iraqi political arena.”

“We believe that exerting pressure on American interests, especially organizations that claim to play a political role – even though they are involved in espionage – will be determined at the right time,” he added in a statement.

Notably present at the meetings Barzani held in Baghdad were leaders of some armed factions, such as Kataib Sayyid al-Shuhada head Abu Ala al-Walai and Asaib Ahl al-Haq head Qais al-Khazali.

In contrast to the positions of the armed factions, Iranian ambassador to Iraq Mohammed Kazem al-Sadeq, who met Barzani, said: “Iran’s relations with the Kurdistan Region are old and deep-rooted and they are being strengthened.”