Iraqi Kurdish Civil War

Iraqi Kurdish Civil War

Infobox Military Conflict
conflict=Iraqi Kurdish Civil War
partof=


caption=
date=May 1994 - November 24 1997
place=Iraqi Kurdistan
result=Washington Agreement, cease-fire
combatant1 = flagicon|Kurdistan Kurdish Democratic Party
flagcountry|Iran (until 1995)
combatant2 = flagicon|Kurdistan Patriotic Union of Kurdistan
flagicon|Iraq|1963 Iraqi National Congress
flagicon|United States United States
Kurdistan Workers Party
flagcountry|Iran (from 1995)
commander1= flagicon|Kurdistan Massoud Barzani
commander2= flagicon|Kurdistan Jalal Talabani
flagicon|Iraq|1963 Ahmad Chalabi
flagicon|United States Anthony Zinni
strength1=KDP: 25,000 active, 30,000 reserves [http://etd.lib.fsu.edu/theses/available/etd-11142005-144616/unrestricted/003Manuscript.pdf Willing to face Death: A History of Kurdish Military Forces - the Peshmerga - from the Ottoman Empire to Present-Day Iraq] , Michael G. Lortz]
Iraq: 30,000
strength2=PUK: 12,000 active, 6,000 reserves
casualties1=
casualties2=

The Iraqi Kurdish Civil War was a military conflict which took place between rival Kurdish factions in Iraqi Kurdistan in the mid 1990s. Over the course of the conflict, the various factions drew Kurdish factions from Iran and Turkey, as well as Iranian, Iraqi, American and Turkish forces into the fighting.

Background

After the 1991 uprisings in Iraq and the western intervention during Operation Provide Comfort, Iraqi Kurdistan had attained "de facto" independence and was free from Saddam's control. Although no nation recognized Kurdistan as a independent country, the American and British governments guaranteed protection against aggression by Saddam and maintained a no-fly zone over northern Iraq. The Kurds held parliamentary elections in 1992, which held sessions in Irbil. The seats in the parliament were split evenly between Jalal Talabani's Patriotic Union of Kurdistan and Massoud Barzani's Kurdish Democratic Party. [http://www.slate.com/id/1032/]

Kurdistan's economy suffered heavily because the United Nations embargo on Iraq was still in place, preventing trade between Kurdistan and other nations. Also, Saddam Hussein forbid trade with the breakaway Kurdish provinces. This meant that all trade between Iraqi Kurdistan and the outside world was done through the Black Market. The PUK and KDP jockeyed each other for control over smuggling routes.

Fighting begins (1994)

Fighting broke out between the two factions in May of 1994. The clashes left around 300 people dead. [http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/para/kdp.htm] Over the next year, around 2,000 people were killed on both sides. [http://www.slate.com/id/1032/] According to CIA agent Robert Baer, members of the Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps provided limited support to the KDP and allowed the KDP to launch attacks from Iranian territory.

Attacking Saddam (1995)

In January 1995, CIA case officer Robert Baer traveled to northern Iraq with a five-man team to set up a CIA station. He made contact with the Kurdish leadership and managed to negotiate a truce between Barzani and Talabani.

Within days, Baer made contact with an Iraqi general who was plotting to assassinate Saddam Hussein. His plan was to use a unit of 100 renegade Iraqi troops to kill Saddam as he passed over a bridge near Tikrit. Baer cabled the plan to Washington but did not hear anything back. After three weeks, the plan was revised, calling for an attack by Kurdish forces in northern Iraq while rebel Iraqi troops leveled one of Saddam's houses with tank fire in order to kill the dictator. Baer again cabled the plan to Washington and received no response. In the meantime, on February 28 the Iraqi Army was placed on full alert. In response, the Iranian and Turkish armies were also placed on high alert. Baer received a message directly from National Security Adviser Tony Lake telling him his operation was compromised. This warning was passed on to the Kurdish and Iraqi allies. With this new information, Barzani backed out of the planned offensive, leaving Talabani's PUK forces to carry it out alone.

The Iraqi Army officers planning to kill Saddam with tank fire were compromised, arrested and executed before they could carry out the operation. The PUK's offensive was still launched as planned, and within days they managed to destroy three Iraqi Army divisions and capture 5,000 prisoners. [ [http://www.wmassociation.com/reports/spkers/baer.html Robert Baer speech at World Media Association] ] Despite Baer's pleas for American support of the offensive, none was offered, and the Kurdish forces were forced to withdraw. Baer was immediately recalled from Iraq and, incredibly, briefly investigated for the attempted murder of Saddam Hussein. He would later be cleared. [ [http://www.wmassociation.com/reports/spkers/baer.html Robert Baer speech at World Media Association] ]

Renewed fighting (1996)

Although the Kurdish parliament ceased to meet in May 1995, the fragile cease-fire between the PUK and KDP held until the summer of 1996. Talabani concluded an alliance with Iran, and helped Iran conduct a military incursion into northern Iraq on July 28 aimed at the Kurdish Democratic Party of Iran. [http://www.slate.com/id/1032/] [http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/para/kdpi.htm]

Faced with the prospect of fighting both Iran and the PUK, Barzani "made a deal with the devil" and asked for assistance from Saddam Hussein. Eager for an opportunity to re-assert his control over northern Iraq, Saddam accepted. On August 31, 30,000 Iraqi troops, spearheaded by an armored division of the Republican Guard] attacked the PUK-held city of Irbil in conjunction with KDP forces. Irbil was captured, and Iraqi troops executed 700 captured soldiers of the PUK and the Iraqi National Congress dissident group in a field outside Irbil.

This attack stoked American fears that Saddam intended to launch a genocidal campaign against the Kurds similar to the campaigns of 1988 and 1991. This move also placed Saddam in clear violation of United Nations Security Council Resolution 688 forbidding repression of Iraq's ethnic minorities. In response, American forces in the region launched Operation Desert Strike on September 3, American ships and B-52 Stratofortress bombers launched 27 cruise missiles at Iraqi air defense sites in southern Iraq. The next day, 17 more cruise missiles were launched from American ships against Iraqi air defense sites. The United States also deployed strike aircraft and an aircraft carrier to the Persian Gulf region, and the extent of the southern no-fly zone was moved northwards to the 33rd parallel. [http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/ops/desert_strike.htm] Details|Operation Desert Strike

After installing the KDP in control of Irbil, Iraqi troops withdrew from the Kurdish region back to their initial positions. The KDP drove the PUK from its other strongholds, and with additional Iraqi help captured Sulaymaniyah. Jalal Talabani and the PUK retreated to the Iranian border, and American forces evacuated 700 Iraqi National Congress personnel and 6,000 pro-Western Kurds out of northern Iraq. [http://www.slate.com/id/1032/] [http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/para/kdp.htm]

Turkey enters the war (1997)

Fighting continued throughout the winter between the KDP and PUK. Complicating matters, the anti-Turkish Kurdistan Worker's Party or PKK was present in Iraq. On friendly terms with the PUK, the PKK began attacking ethnic Assyrians and civilians who supported the KDP. [http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/para/puk.htm] In response, Turkish forces launched Operation Hammer in May, in an attempt to root out the PKK from northern Iraq. This operation caused heavy PKK casualties, however the PKK continued to operate in northern Iraq.Details|Operation Hammer (1997)

On September 25, Turkish forces re-entered northern Iraq. This time they were allied with the KDP and attacked PUK and PKK positions in an attempt to force a cease-fire between the factions. The operation once again resulted in heavy PKK casualties, and a cease-fire was negotiated between the PUK and KDP. [http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/para/puk.htm] Details|Operation Dawn (1997)

Despite the cease-fire, renewed fighting broke out along the armistice line between the KDP and PUK in October and November. In this round of fighting, 1,200 combatants were killed on both sides and 10,000 civilians fled their homes. A lasting cease-fire was finally established on November 24. [http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/para/puk.htm]

Aftermath

In September 1998, Barzani and Talabani signed the U.S.-mediated Washington Agreement establishing a formal peace treaty. In the agreement, the parties agreed to share revenue, share power, deny the use of northern Iraq to the PKK, and not allow Iraqi troops into the Kurdish regions. The United States pledged to use military force to protect the Kurds from possible aggression by Saddam Hussein. At the same time, implementation of the U.N. Oil-for-Food Programme brought revenue to northern Iraq, allowing for increased standards of living. [http://www.thewashingtoninstitute.org/templateC05.php?CID=1219] Iraqi Kurdistan became a relatively peaceful region, before the terrorist group Ansar al-Islam entered the area in December 2001, bringing renewed conflict.

Around a month later, U.S. President Bill Clinton signed the Iraq Liberation Act into law, providing for military assistance to Iraqi opposition groups, including the PUK and KDP.

The KDP estimated that 58,000 of its supporters had been expelled from PUK-controlled regions from October 1996 to October 1997. The PUK says 49,000 of its supporters were expelled from KDP-controlled regions from August 1996 to December 1997. [http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/para/kdp.htm]

The PUK and KDP later co-operated with American forces during the 2003 Invasion of Iraq, routing Iraqi forces with the help of American air power and overrunning much of northern Iraq including the cities of Kirkuk and Mosul.

After the invasion, Massoud Barzani was later elected president of Iraqi Kurdistan while Jalal Talabani was elected President of Iraq.

Notes

Bibliography

*cite book|id=ISBN 140004684X|title=See No Evil: The True Story of a Ground Soldier in the CIA's War on Terrorism |last=Baer |first=Robert |publisher= Three Rivers Press|year = 2003
*cite book|id=ISBN 0375509283|title=The Threatening Storm: The Case for Invading Iraq |last=Pollack |first=Kenneth |publisher= Random House|year = 2002


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