Kurdish secession tops Erdogan's agenda in Iran visit
Analysts say Turkish president has much more at stake in his meeting with his Iranian counterpart Hassan Rouhani.
On Iran's part, even if it shuts down its border with Iraq's Kurdish region, it will still have other trade corridors going into Iraq, she said.
"So they can still continue to sell their products through the central government in Baghdad. So Iran is not going to lose in this case."
Within Iran, there are an estimated six to eight million ethnic Kurds, but there have been no significant separatist movement among the ethnic population within its own border.
Iran has also maintained longstanding relations with Iraqi Kurds, supporting Kurdish armed groups during the rule of the Shah before the 1979 Islamic Revolution. The KRG President Masoud Barzani was born in the Kurdish region of Iran.
During the Iran-Iraq war, the Kurds sided with Iran against Saddam Hussein, and Iran opened its doors to the families of Kurdish leaders during that conflict. Saddam also targeted both the Iranian and the Kurds with chemical weapons.
In recent years Iran's peshmerga fighters fought alongside Iranian-backed militia forces against ISIL.
Uneasy alliance
The Kurdish referendum crisis has pushed Turkey and Iran to set aside their differences for the time being, Rohollah Faghihi, a Tehran-based journalist and political analyst told Al Jazeera.
"There have been no sign of secessionism seen in Iran in the two past decades," Faghihi said. "But when a crisis occurs next to Iran's borders, it is natural for Tehran to get worried about them."Still he said, that a number of politicians and experts in Iran have argued that Tehran should not react "too harshly" like Erdogan did in recent days.
In response to the referendum, Erdogan warned of military action to stop the KRG splitting from Iran and "ethnic and sectarian war".Faghihi said that despite the warming up of relations, there remains a mutual mistrust between Tehran and Ankara.
"They are actually saying that Erdogan could not be trusted and we shouldn't follow Turkey's footsteps for countering Kurdistan, by showing muscles and military power."
Meanwhile, Sadegh Ghorbani, a Tehran-based analyst, agreed that while the Kurdish issue has drawn Turkey and Iran together, Iran "has the least concern about Kurds".
""Unlike in Iraq and Turkey, in Iran many Kurds consider themselves original Iranians," he said.
"I think the main reason behind Iran's opposition is that cessation of Kurdistan will harm the integrity of Iraq, and can create a new conflict near Iran's borders and will also distract everyone from combating ISIL."
Source: Al-Jazeera News
Post Comment
No comments