Don2 (Don1 Revised)
Contributor
Reading news articles, I have observed a trend when discussing Kurds, those people from the border region of Iran/Iraq/Turkey who want an independent Kurdistan or at least not to live as minorities with no power in other countries. When the context of the article is about Iraq, the Kurds are praised, as freedom-loving people, almost secular even, our allies against the tyranny of Saddam and now ISIS. But when the context of the article is about Turkey, we hear that the Kurds are terrorists, suicide-bombers, extremists. One of these versions of the Kurds is compatible with our long-term interest in the Middle East, but the other is not.
I think that this dichotomy correlates to American involvement in the Greater Middle East (to include Afghanistan), thusly: the enemy of my enemy is my friend. We supplied Arabs and others with arms and resources in the World Wars to rise up against the Ottoman Turks but this made the extremists take power over the areas as dictators. Then, we supplied Mujahadeen with arms and resources back in the day and then we had to fight them later and we're still fighting in Afghanistan without a real end in site. In Iran, "we" gave power to Muslim fascist extremists to fight against socialism. Now, we face Iran and have been for decades. Likewise, with the Kurds, we have been arming them to the teeth because they're our "allies" for now.
When ISIS is finally pushed back to obscurity, which Kurdish people will we be facing next? How does our military involvement in the Greater Middle East make any sense at all when it perpetually comes full circle from ally to enemy for each group we empower?
I think that this dichotomy correlates to American involvement in the Greater Middle East (to include Afghanistan), thusly: the enemy of my enemy is my friend. We supplied Arabs and others with arms and resources in the World Wars to rise up against the Ottoman Turks but this made the extremists take power over the areas as dictators. Then, we supplied Mujahadeen with arms and resources back in the day and then we had to fight them later and we're still fighting in Afghanistan without a real end in site. In Iran, "we" gave power to Muslim fascist extremists to fight against socialism. Now, we face Iran and have been for decades. Likewise, with the Kurds, we have been arming them to the teeth because they're our "allies" for now.
When ISIS is finally pushed back to obscurity, which Kurdish people will we be facing next? How does our military involvement in the Greater Middle East make any sense at all when it perpetually comes full circle from ally to enemy for each group we empower?