jojo22 wrote:. wrote:The Kurds live in a region called Kurdistan, which covers parts of Iraq, Turkey and Iran.
The Kurds have long desired to create an independent nation in Kurdistan.
Militant Kurdish separatists have been fighting for decades with the aforesaid governments further to their goal of nationhood.
So have these militant separatists being striking out with terror attacks on those Governments?
Big time.
Any time you read about a terrorist bombing in Turkey -- and there have been many over decades now (the most recent was a couple months ago) -- the perpetrators are a Kurdish separatist group called PKK. Although to a lesser extent than Saddam, the Turks have massacred Kurds and razed hundreds of Kurdish villages in Turkish Kurdistan. The approximate number of Kurds killed (including women, children and the elderly who all die when a village is burned to the ground) is in excess of 30,000. Other than its illegal occupation of Cyprus, Turkey's human rights violations against the Kurds are a major reason it is being kept out of the EU.
The Kurdish separatists in Iraq and Turkey (and to a lesser extent in Iran) are not only relentless in their terrorism, but also naturally adept guerilla warriors who have mastered the topography of their region. It must be frustrating for a government to have such an incessant destabilizing element within its borders.
Save for three military coups since the founding of modern Turkey in the 1920's, Turkey has been a democracy. Turkey is the most secular and cosmopolitan Muslim country. Not blessed with massive reserves of a valuable commodity such as oil, Turkey's economy is dependent on international trade. Consequently, Turkey is necessarily sensitive to world opinion. As a result, even with the human rights violations, Turkey has been relatively restrained in dealing with Kurdish separatists -- and I mean relatively.
Saddam was a different story. As a dictator of a major oil-producing country who didn't care about world opinion, Saddam was not subject to any constraints in dealing with Iraq's Kurdish separatists. Saddam's solution to Iraq's Kurdish problem was to wipe out all the Kurds within Iraq. Figuring he could kill two birds with one stone, Saddam decided to use Kurdish villages as testing grounds for Iraqi chemical weapons. The “tests” were successful – the chemical weapons worked.
The following excerpt from a March 14, 2003 U.S. State Department report that I posted previously describes what happened:
Saddam Hussein is the first world leader in modern times to have brutally used chemical weapons against his own people. His goals were to systematically terrorize and exterminate the Kurdish population in northern Iraq, to silence his critics, and to test the effectiveness of his chemical and biological weapons. Hussein launched chemical attacks against 40 Kurdish villages and thousands of innocent civilians in 1987-88, using them as testing grounds. The worst of these attacks devastated the city of Halabja on March 16, 1988.
5,000 civilians, many of them women, children, and the elderly, died within hours of the attack. 10,000 more were blinded, maimed, disfigured, or otherwise severely and irreversibly debilitated.
Link: http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/rls/18714.htm
The actions of Kurdish separatists do not excuse or justify Saddam's butchery and barbarity, but they do explain what was afoot.