Home
Archive
Newsletters
Video
Blogs
Discuss
About
Search
Donate
Advertise

Bush & Co., Iran and the Girl Guerrillas

By Reese Erlich, Mother Jones. Posted April 19, 2007.


At the moment, a group of Iranian Kurdish guerrillas -- about half of them women -- may be the closest thing the Bush administration has to an ally in its confrontation with Tehran.
Advertisement
Upcoming AlterNet stories on Digg

The green and brown scrub brush in the Qandil Mountains acquires a thick layer of snow by late fall. In happier times, these peaks at the border between Iraq and Iran would offer tourists spectacular views, but these days the only sightseers are men and women with AK-47s slung over their shoulders. They are Iranian Kurdish guerrillas based among their Kurdish brethren in northern Iraq, and at the moment, they may be the closest thing the Bush administration has to an ally in its confrontation with Tehran.

Kurdish and American sources say the United States has been supporting guerrilla raids against Iran, channeling the money through organizations in Iraqi Kurdistan; last fall, The New Yorker's Seymour Hersh reported that Israel is also providing equipment and training. When I arrived in Sulaymaniyah, the Kurdish city closest to the Iranian border, it was hard to miss the Green Berets in civvies walking down the main street. "Suli is like some Balkan city years ago," one U.S. officer told me. "You've got spies everywhere. Everyone wants to know what everyone else is doing." The seedy Ashti Hotel looked like something out of a Graham Greene novel, its smoke-filled lobby a meeting place for obscure diplomats, businessmen, soldiers, and spies. Men sat around staring at glasses of strong tea; every now and again they'd pour a bit of tea into their saucers, let it cool, and slurp it down. I met a Kurdish military adviser at the Ashti, and when the U.S. Army came to escort me for a story on its operations, Humvees pulled up by the hotel.

Getting to the actual guerrilla camps was relatively easy. Kurdish officials unconvincingly insisted they had no idea how to find the fighters, but cabdrivers had no trouble pinpointing the camps. As my four-wheel-drive vehicle climbed the mountainside, young women in green pants and the distinctive twisted Kurdish headscarf appeared along the road. They were fighters with the Party for a Free Life in Kurdistan, or pjak, which claims its troops are almost 50 percent female.

Part underground movement, part cult, pjak requires its fighters to eschew sex and study the teachings of Abdullah Ocalan, a Nietzsche-quoting Turkish Kurd who is its spiritual leader. Ocalan's political organization, the radical Kurdistan Workers Party (pkk), is classified as a terrorist organization by the U.S. State Department. pjak's relationship with the party is supposed to be arm's length, but I had to pass through two pkk checkpoints on my way to the guerrillas' camp, each of them relaying information up the line via walkie-talkie. Finally, the fighters welcomed me into a room with a threadbare carpet on the floor and a kerosene stove blasting heat; posters of Ocalan hung on the wall along with the pkk flag. While waiting for their leaders to descend from the mountains, I asked one of the women what they did to stave off boredom. "We watch satellite TV," she said, insisting that they cared only for news programs before confessing, with a shy smile, "We like Brad Pitt and Mel Gibson."

That was about the only American influence anyone at the camp would admit to. The fighters' commander had recently died in a flash flood, and his replacement -- a forty-something man with prematurely gray hair who stood perhaps 5 feet 5 inches -- introduced himself as Zenar Agri. He informed me that in 2006 the guerrillas had killed about 100 Iranians in their cross-border skirmishes. He said they were not getting U.S. help, then smiled, "But we would love to have American support." He also told me that before the pkk's emergence, "the Kurds didn't know about their history and how to struggle," but now Kurds could follow Ocalan's road to liberation.

Back in the valley, I found a different kind of Kurdish organizing at the University of Sulaimani, where many Iranian Kurdish activists have come to study. The scene could have been any U.S. campus; almost everyone wore blue jeans, and only a few of the women had their heads covered. I sat down with two Iranian students who said they had come to Iraq illegally, following smugglers' trails over the mountains. They talked openly about the competition between Iranian Kurdish parties to attract U.S. support. Hiwa, a film student who described himself as the future Stanley Kubrick of Kurdistan, told me Washington ought to be ecumenical: "All parties should have connections with the U.S."

So far, Washington seems to feel the same way. The two main Iranian Kurdish parties, Komala and the Kurdish Democratic Party of Iran (kdpi), have been allowed to operate openly in northern Iraq; both say their focus is on political organizing within Iran. "We have not opposed armed struggle," Mustafa Hejri, leader of the kdpi, told me. "But for now we believe political activity benefits the party more." Hejri, along with other top kdpi and Komala officials, went to Washington last year for meetings at the State Department and on Capitol Hill. They "listened to us and asked questions," Komala leader Abdullah Mohtadi told me. "It was a step forward." Most other Iranian opposition leaders I spoke to were critical of U.S. policy toward Tehran and said the administration's allocation of $85 million to "promote democracy" in Iran had backfired by making the population rally around the embattled Islamist government. The Kurdish Iranian parties, on the other hand, told me they were looking forward to getting U.S. funding. "We're pragmatists," Mohtadi told me. The United States "can't make democracy by force, but it can topple dictators."

Editor’s Note: Since this article originally appeared in Mother Jones, ABC News and other media have confirmed U.S.-sponsored terrorist attacks inside Iran. U.S.-financed, Pakistan-based terrorists blew up Revolutionary Guards and civilians in Baluchistan Province in February. In his upcoming book, Reese Erlich looks at such attacks in greater detail. The Iran Agenda: The Real Story of US Policy and the Middle East Policy will be published by Polipoint Press in October 2007.

Digg!    Share on facebook   submit to reddit    Bookmark on Delicious   Stumble This  

See more stories tagged with: iran, bush, kurdish guerrilas, tehran

Reese Erlich's book, "The Iran Agenda: The Real Story of US Policy and the Middle East Crisis," will be published in October 2007. See his interviews with Nobel Laureate Shirin Ebadi and other Iranian opposition leaders at: motherjones.com/iran_dissidents.

Liked this story? Get top stories in your inbox each week from World! Sign up now »


Advertisement
Advertisement

 

Comments Turn comments off sitewide Give us feedback »
Comments closed.
The comments for this story have been closed. Thank you to everyone who participated.
View:
CIA fiddles, Iraq burns, Turkey ready to invade
Posted by: Moonray on Apr 19, 2007 5:43 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's odd that the U.S. government is bankrolling a group that it officially labels as terrorist. But it's part of a long tradition of convoluted and usually counterproductive wheeling-and-dealing by U.S. intelligence agencies.

If the usual pattern is followed, the Kurds will be lavished with cash and seduced with inspiring words about building democracy, then dropped like a bad habit when the political winds shift and the U.S. leaves the area. Ask the tribesmen of Southeast Asia.

In the meantime, the Turks -- once our allies before the Bushies soured that relationship -- are increasingly irked by the Kurds' guerrilla activity and are preparing to invade northern Iraq, perhaps with Iranian assistance. How delightful that would be for the Bushies: Another excuse to rattle sabers and extend the U.S. romp in the Iraqi quagmire.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Another wheel on the axis of evil: the United States.
Posted by: HughScott on Apr 19, 2007 8:57 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When the Pentagon funds designated terrorists like Kurdistan's female PKK "freedom" fighters, no matter what the reason, America sinks deeper into the cesspool of international disrepute.

Clearly any common sense that existed in the Bush administration has been replaced by a born-again obsession to bring on Armageddon sooner than later, which may happen if the Iraq War spills over into Iran and Turkey.

Hugh E. Scott, editor of King-George.biz -- the only website with hardcopy proof of White House corruption.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Kurdish Caldron
Posted by: brainvib on Apr 19, 2007 9:09 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Kurds have been at war with Iran, Iraq, Turkey and Russia as far as I know since 1956 when I was in that part of the world, I recently picked up a National Geographic dated, "1973" and found a lenghty article, with pictures, covering the Kurd fighting Iraq and Iran saying this had been going on for 25 years. The author of this item is really reporting old news. Kurds gained autonomous rule, within Iraq, after the Gulf War and the "no fly" zone was set up to protect them. The zone maintained by both Bush and Clinton was really a "no go" zone for Sadaam. The people who Sadaam gassed were Kurds not Iraqi. They were his people in the sense that they lived in Iraqi territory. The constitution of the current Iraq contains an escape hatch for the Kurds and, I think allows Kurdish indepedance in 7 or 8 years. This is all bringing the caldron to boil. Turkey has flatly stated it will go to war if and when the Kurds become self-standing. They are ready to invade now. Iran will do the same. I don't think Russia will stay out of it and since this is all in Iraq's back yard, they too will jump in. Another Bush recipe for complete and total chaos as war death and destruction spread across the region. Of course Bush will be out of office and this will be someone else's problem. Feel very sorry for the next U.S. president who will have to try putting Humpty-Dumpty together again.!!! The question is can what Bush has cast asunder ever be restored?

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: Kurdish Caldron Posted by: adp3d
Kurdish Defense is The Right of Kurds, Not the US
Posted by: waterislifeaguaesvida on Apr 19, 2007 4:52 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Mr. Reese seems to miss the action the is going on all around him. The Turkish military now have 250,000 of their troops on the southern Kurdistan border. The Islamic Republic of Iran fired artillery against the Kurds in Iraq in August 2006 along with the Turkish military. The matter between the Kurds and Iran rests on a historical record. It is not simply the action of the US in opposing Iranian militarism. After the Khomeini overthrow of the Shah 10,000 Kurds were murdered in a jihad. The growth of Kurdish resistance in Iran is just one aspect of resistance by sectors of the Iranian population against mass executions, denial of democratic rights and the expansionist and provocative foreign policy of Iran.

While the Turks attempt to provoke conflict with the Kurdish Regional Government. In Turkey itself, the Turkish military is responsible for 30,000 deaths and the resettlement of 3,000 Kurdish villages in its 30 year civil war against the Kurdish Workers' Party in the rural regions. Within Iraq Shi'a militia leader al-Sadr, suspected of now being in Iran, has attempted to deny the Kurdish Regional Government the authority to govern in their own territory for their own people. The Iranian government has its hands in the region where it has no business. It has not been welcomed by the Kurdish people. Likewise, the Turkish military would be advised to respect the existing political boundaries and not invade on the weak premise that it stands threatened by 3,000 "PKK" fighters in southern Kurdistan. For there stands ready in the defense of the Kurdish nation and peoples an estimated 175,000 peshmerga troops prepared to defend their people against Iranian and Turkish assaults. And there stands military and political Kurdish organizations in both Turkey and Iran prepared to unify for the common defense of Kurdistan.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

  • AlterNetYour turn

Support AlterNet
Do you value the information you're getting from AlterNet? Please show your support with a tax-deductible donation.


Feedback
Tell us how we're doing.

Advertisement
Advertisement