29.10.2014

How important is Kobane?


Ziad Haydar  As-Safir

Media outlets are currently preoccupied with the battle raging in the Syrian town Kobane (Ayn al-Arab). A joke has been recently invented wherein “Syria is located south of Kobane.”

The media interest in this humble town bordering Turkey is fed by political developments and exciting elements such as the female Kurdish fighters with long braids and the “watching” hill on the side of the Turkish border town of Mursitpinar.

Politics, however, remains the main player there; it is the reality of the picture that is hiding behind the colors and the details. “The symbolism of the battle, which temporarily put the spotlight on the international coalition,” as a senior Syrian source told As-Safir, “is one of the most important factors behind the media excitement about the battle.”

The source said, “By historical coincidence,” this battle was probably fed by other factors, including “the proximity to the Turkish-Kurdish border, the Kurdish issue and of course the steadfastness of Kurdish fighters, who, in turn, represent a minority in Syria and the region.”
Kurdish female fighters 12
The battle in Kobane has provoked many. Chief among these is Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his prime minister, Ahmed Davutoglu, who issued dozens of statements during the past two weeks criticizing the media’s focus on this particular battle.

These statements were not limited to criticizing the “fuss” raised by the battle, but were accompanied by explicit nervousness in the political performance of the Turks, who set several political and field conditions to enter the international coalition against IS (Islamic State], among them the military targeting of Syrian Army sites and the establishment of a buffer zone within Syria. Turkey finally promised to facilitate the passage of 1,300 fighters from the FSA (Free Syrian Army) to help Kurdish YPG (People’s Protection Units) fighters, following a similar promise to allow 200 members of the peshmerga to pass through Turkey to support their nationalist brothers in the battle, knowing that Erdogan explicitly described the YPG as “part of a terrorist organization.”

The Turkish proposal to allow the movement of troops from the FSA to Ayn al-Arab highlights the Syrian concern more than any other, in an attempt to build a hidden strategy that this media-grasping battle has yet to have.

According to the above mentioned source, the “suspicious Turkish initiative” to send elements of the FSA to the battle makes the Kobane issue go beyond its Kurdish symbolism. Although Kurdish leaders now recognize the existence of fighters from the FSA in Kobane belonging to the “Euphrates volcano” formation, the agreement on the entry of “formations under Turkish influence” is what worries the Kurds and the Syrian government.

Syrians dread the success of the Turkish initiative, which would rapidly pave the way for the transformation of the process to “deter IS from Kobane into an attempt to fill its gap by a well-defined force run by the Turkish intelligence.”

But there are various complications; many factions of the FSA refuse to work under the command of the Turks, while others refuse to work with the Kurds, and others openly abstain from fighting IS. The source believes that this “disparity in alliances” will affect the circumstances after the battle, but no one knows how it will unfold.

According to one of the looming scenarios, a Kurdish victory, which would be in one way or another also a victory for the international coalition, would turn into a base that consolidates Syrian Kurdish politics, in itself based on the achievement of autonomy in Kurdish areas. It was surprising to have the Russian Foreign Ministry welcome this project in a statement, commenting on the recent “unity” agreement between the KNC (Kurdish National Council) and the PYD (Democratic Union Party) in Dahuk.

The statement said that such a move is “a model of unity against IS,” and pointed out at the same time to “Moscow’s interest in the convention on the establishment of a management and of unified forces in Kurdish areas in Syria.” The statement described the agreement as “a model for all Syrian political parties and forces, which guarantees the sovereignty and unity of the country, facing international terrorism and extremism through unity” despite recognizing “that the agreement needs further in-depth study.”
Kurdish female fighters 11
The “self-management” components can be found in the northern areas, where there seems to be a public solidarity on the part of the Syrian authorities, which observers believe hides an “implicit and circumstantial alliance between the two parties.”

The management elements in the three Kurdish provinces of Jazia, Afrin, and Kobane go beyond the existence of YPG and police forces, to the teaching of the Kurdish language in schools, obligatory recruitment, and forming labor unions. It should be noted that state institutions remain active in those areas, knowing that the salary scale across the “self-management” regions depend on the Syrian state.

The Syrian state does not dread “the Democratic Union Party” project for now. The news anchor of the Syrian state TV channel speaks with daily enthusiasm about “the Syrian Kurdish YPG’s defense” of the city of Kobane.
Commenting on earlier official statements about the Syrian government’s support for Kurdish fighters in Kobane, a media source yesterday had to “remind the Kurds that Syria did not stop supplying them with weapons, be it directly or indirectly,” knowing that some Kurdish fighter groups denied that.

Amid this tug of war, there were reports in the last two days that security leaders in the city of Hasakah asked the Kurdish YPG forces to remove their security checkpoints in the city, similarly to what the Syrian army did, as “the city is safe and the real battle is raging outside.” Other information reported IS mobilization near Ras al-Ain in a way that could change the priorities of the battles, as the Syrian Army has already abruptly done.

For now, the bickering will not turn into a problem, as sources indicate. It only aims at reminding the Kurds of their internal alliances before they start “to change their accounts in accordance with the ongoing battle,” especially in light of the Turkish factor and the Kurdish Dahuk agreement, without this implying that a “Kurdish phobia” is being developed on the Syrian side.

In this context, Khurshid Delli, a journalist who specializes in Kurdish affairs, said that the battle of Kobane has highlighted “the Kurdish national character” and “inflamed the Kurds’ feelings in Iraq, Turkey, Iran and outside the region, in a way that can lead to the eruption of the Kurdish nationalism case.”

According to Delli, the battle of Kobane will constitute a milestone in two directions: The first is the “direction or the context of the war against IS in the next stage,” where the Kurds are seen as potential allies on the ground, and the second is “the context of the Kurds’ relationship with the Syrian crisis parties in the form of a challenge to deal with the Kurdish movement and its demands,” without turning a blind eye to the fact that reviving the Kurdish nationalism case is now associated with the problem of the Syrian national situation, be it on the part of the government or the Syrian Opposition Coalition.

Delli believed that the government, by virtue of the absence of a military presence in that region, seemes without real influence, and therefore not concerned with the issue, while the Syrian Opposition Coalition positions were torn between supporting the Turkish stance, especially as it considers the DYP (Democratic Union Party) as an ally of Bashar Al-Assad, and an ambiguity in terms of the failure to take a clear position on the Kobane battle. As a result, most Syrian Kurds felt like the Syrian Opposition Coalition was with the IS attack to control the city.
BESTPIX Syrian Kurds Battle IS To Retain Control Of Kobani

27.10.2014

Save the Syrian forests


Alaa Halabi As-Safir 

Trees in Syria die too

The war that is ravaging Syria for more than three years has caused major destruction and affected the Syrian civilization on all levels. It has spared neither humans, animals, or plants, and especially affected forest, be it directly or indirectly. The war has at times set Syria’s green forests on fire, while it has subjected them to woodcutting for heating at other times.

Even though there are no large forests in Syria and natural forests in Syria cover just 232.8 hectares, the forests that existed before the start of the war served as a lung for this Mediterranean state. Syria sought to expand the forest area patches before 2011. It granted them major attention amid perceived security and prosperity in the country. This attention turned natural habitats into one of the priorities of the government, as well as into the scene of social and cultural events.

Then war broke out and let this wealth gradually disappear.

There are no statistics about the extent of the damage to forest areas in Syria, the agricultural country whose citizens always appreciated the value and importance of trees. However, according to estimates of the Ministry of Agriculture, there is “major damage” in forest areas, be it caused by war fire or by woodcutting.
Syrian trees 1
A source in the Ministry of Environment told As-Safir that the border areas with Turkey, where there were many forests, are the most affected, either due to the war or to arson. The largest fire broke out in the Zainiyeh forest on the western end of Jisr al-Shughour.

The source explained that even the initial loss estimates were colossal, knowing that the economic value of the trees is estimated at about 200,000 US$. The source pointed out that the restoration of this forest requires hundreds of years.

Another fire broke out in Kassab, on the border with Turkey in the countryside of Latakia. The fire reached the 4,500 hectare (11,120 acre) Foronlok reserve and destroyed about 150 hectare (371 acre) of pine trees and old semi-virgin oak trees.

The Abu Qubeis area was victim to a fire that affected 6 hectare (15 acres) of forest trees, including Pinales and Pistacia atlantica. In Quneitra province, several fires broke out in 2012 in the areas of Bir Ajam, Bariqa, Ayn al-Tineh, al-Hamedia and the Taranjah forest. Hundreds hectare of oak trees were burnt.
forest fire 1a
While initial estimates of the Ministry of Environment in Syria showed that losses due to fire had reached billions of dollars, the same estimates showed very substantial losses, as citizens and criminal gangs cut down trees either to turn them into charcoal or to directly use them for heating.

According to estimates, a lot of reserves, forests and forest areas are exposed to excessive woodcutting, including the al-Belas reserve in the province of Hama, where hundreds of old forest trees, of about 100 years of age, were cut down, in addition to the forests extending from the Tel Kelekh area down to Tartous province.

The estimated number of trees that have been cut down in Hama and Tel Kelekh is about 7,000. In Hasakah, the number of trees that have been cut down is about 7,500 — most of which are from the Mount Abdul Aziz reserve — where there are two types of pistacia, the Pistacia atlantica and the Pistacia khinjuk. The infringements have also affected the Assad forest and other forest areas in al-Saraka area in Maghlooja, as well as afforestation sites in al-Shahidi.

In Quneitra, the Jbata reserve suffered woodcutting of entire woods. The initial estimate is between 100 to 300 forest trees. About 100 stone pine trees aged 15 to 20 years were chopped down in al-Shahar in south Jbata.
Syrian trees 2
As the Ministry of Environment focuses in its estimates on forest areas and forests, it should be noted that public gardens and parks located within the cities are the hardest-hit areas, as most of the parks in the battle-ridden cities or outside government control are witnessing wood-cutting operations for heating purposes.

The source in the Ministry of Environment said that there were major fears of infringements this year, especially in light of the continuing war on the one hand, and given the fuel and electricity crises on the other. The government lost control over oil wells, and power transformer stations were subject to several infringements that caused power cuts and longer rationing hours. This portends a harsh winter that will prompt citizens to commit further infringements in search of warmth.

Cutting down wood to sell as firewood or charcoal is a profession practiced by a number of citizens, organized into “gangs” that cut down trees and sell them in the market in many ways. The preferred method is the initiation of forest fires as a prelude to burning the trees, according to a source in the fire station.

The source asserted that Syria’s forests and forest areas had turned, amid the state of lawlessness in some areas and the absence of sufficient control in other areas, into lucrative “mines,” especially after the government had lifted the price of diesel to 80 Syrian pounds (0.50 US%). The cost of storing 1,000 liters (enough for a small family in winter), if available, has reached 80,000 Syrian pounds (500 US$), which is the equivalent of a four-month salary for an average employee who earns about 20,000 Syrian pounds. This will inevitably prompt citizens to look for heating alternatives. Firewood and charcoal are the most easy choices.

Although discussing the major environmental damage caused by the destruction of forests may seem pointless and futile in light of the ongoing war in Syria — with all its human, social, and cultural implications — the source in the Ministry of Environment stressed that the effects of the environmental devastation on Syria would be extensive.

The source pointed out that the return of forests and forest areas to the state they had been in before the war might require hundreds of years and affect various aspects of life. Meanwhile, desertification seems to be creeping in from the east to the center of Syria under black clouds resulting from the primitive oil extraction and refining. The source stressed the need for various sides and parties to take action and end the disaster.
Syrian trees 4

23.10.2014

Heroism and Hypocrisy


The Kurdish defenders of Kobane have held out more than a month against the heaviest assault the IS (Islamic State) terror group has launched against any target until now. Between 9,000 and 14,000 IS terrorists with about 40 tanks, rocket launchers, and heavy artillery are stationed around Kobane and IS constantly sends reinforcement into the area. It is estimated that IS has concentrated 60 percent of its forces around the town.

The stubbornly resistance of only lightly armed Kurdish fighters, 40 percent of them women, against a more than 10 times superior terrorist force equipped with heavy state of the art US made armor has not surprisingly caught global media attention. This is the stuff historical myths are made off, and the image of Kobane’s defenders has already reached mythical proportions.

It is a make or break event for both warring parties. If the city falls, the courageous experiment of decentralization and direct democracy, which the Kurds have launched in three northern districts (Kobane, Jazira, and Afrin) of Syria will be finished, if IS can be defeated, it’s Caliphate will fall apart, the foot-soldiers will be demoralized and less willing to blow themselves up and meet their 72 virgins, the professionals will move to other terrorist groups, the enigmatical leaders will mysteriously disappear — shortly before the disconcerted and frustrated foot-soldiers turn on them.
Kurdistan map 4
The praise of Kobane’s heroic defenders is sung across all media channels, rightfully though, even the most skeptical observer has to admit, and more or less appropriate comparisons with the siege of Fort Alamo, the battle of Stalingrad, the Trojan war, and the Turkish siege of Vienna are made.

Never let a good (and heartwarming) story of bravery and self-sacrifice go to waste.

The siege of Vienna is an interesting parallel because the defeat of the Ottoman Army outside the gates of Vienna 331 years ago is usually regarded as the beginning of the decline of the Ottoman Empire and one has to wonder if the defeat of IS in Kobane could similarly end the neo-Otttoman ambitions of Turkeys President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Turkey has done everything to block supplies and reenforcement for the Kurdish defenders of Kobane, while at the same time facilitating and coordinating the flow of fighters and arms for IS. Only after a worldwide outcry it has allowed 200,000 Kurdish civilians, who were fleeing the Islamist onslaught, to pass the Turkish border.

Turkish tanks have taken position in Suruc, a few hundred meters from the fighting and watch detached and apathetic. US airplanes initially were not allowed to enter a 10 kilometer safety corridor which Turkey declared along the border, this restriction has ended, but US jets are still not allowed to use Turkish airspace.

This has some significance, because Turkey is a NATO ally.

There is ample evidence of Turkish involvement with IS, most recently Sky News correspondent Stuart Ramsay obtained documents showing that the Turkish government stamped passports of foreign militants seeking to cross the Turkey border into Syria to join IS.

Turkish hospitals were always treating wounded IS fighters and are now reluctantly also treating Kurdish fighters, yet the MIT (Turkeys spy agency) regularly questions patients which are suspected of ties to the PKK (Kurdistan Workers Party) and disappears them.
Serena Shim
The international press has descended on Suruc, the town opposite to Kobane on the Turkish side of the border, to watch the fighting from a front row seat. The journalists will miss their colleague Serena Shim from Press TV, who was killed when the car which brought her back from Suruc to her hotel crashed into a truck. Car and driver have since disappeared. This accident raises every possible red flag, because Serena Shim had been threatened and accused of spying by MIT after she discovered that IS terrorists crossed from Turkey into Syria on trucks bearing the symbols of the World Food Organization, of IHH (Humanitarian Relief Foundation), and other NGOs. IHH is an Islamic charity group with close ties to the Erdogan family, it is banned in several Western countries because of links to terror groups.

President Erdogan’s aversion against the defenders of Kobane and his sympathies for IS have not only geopolitical reasons, they are also a matter of heartfelt personal convictions. Erdogan’s AKP party is affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood who’s ideology is not far away from the Wahhabism of IS, while the grassroots democracy experiment of Syria’s Kurds is clearly unacceptable for an autocrat like Erdogan. But most disturbing if not outright frightening for Erdogan and his fellow misogynists are the gender equality of Kurdish society and the significant role of women in the Kurdish militia. 
Kurdish women fighters 15
Misogyny and male-chauvinism may also have played a role in severe miscalculations of the US military top brass.

Military officials including CENTCOM commander Lloyd Austin and General Martin Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, warned and continue to warn that the town may fall, though Austin has high praise for the Kurds.

The US administration initially tried to do downplay the Kobane siege, asserting that the town was not of significance. The plan was to let the terrorists seize Kobani before Turkey would send in tanks and troops to fight IS in a bid to capture and possibly annex the Syrian Kurdish territory.

As the battle raged on, the US administration invented one excuse after another for leaving the Kurds to face the IS attack all by themselves.

Rear Admiral John Kirby: “We don’t have a willing, capable, effective partner on the ground inside Syria. It’s just a fact. I can’t change that.”

This is nonsense, because one would be hard put to find a better light infantry than the YPG YPJ (Kurdish Protection Units and Women’s Protection Units) anywhere in the world. They are disciplined, well trained, and motivated. They are rational and not crazy psychopaths like their counterparts from IS.
Kurdish militia 4
Admiral Kirby kept “warning,” which is to say, “hoping and praying,” that Kobane was going to fall one of these days. Kirby was worse than an end-times preacher, just as eager for the disaster he was supposed to be preventing. Here’s Kirby, preaching Armageddon in a briefing on October 9: US airstrikes “are not going to save” the key Syrian city of Kobane from being overtaken by IS. “I think we all should be steeling ourselves for that eventuality.”

Meanwhile US Secretary of State John Kerry: “Kobane does not define the strategy for the coalition in respect to Daesh (IS). Kobane is one community and it is a tragedy what is happening there. And we do not diminish that.”

Of course, no one diminishes a tragedy of mass murder by beheadings and rapes, but the message from Washington DC nevertheless was clear: “Die, Kurds! Die, and do it on-camera and soon!”

While officially wringing hands the US was waiting eagerly for the town to fall. The “brave, doomed defenders of Kobane” were worth much more dead than alive, much more in defeat than in victory. If they lost, they’d be beheaded by the vicious loons in IS, and those severed-head videos would be great US agitprop, just right to let Turkey invade Syria.
Kurdish women fighters 14
But Kobane didn’t fall and the Kurds put up an incredible resistance. The Kurds are phlegmatic, stoic people, they don’t make much of a fuss about things, which is unusual in this part of the world, which could be called “The Yelling Crescent.” They don’t yell, the Kurds, but they don’t panic, either. And they held on, expecting very little from their ostensible allies, and they weren’t disappointed in that expectation, either, and waiting until the ammunition ran out, or IS brought in another batch of Chechens, Tunisians, or Iraqis too numerous to be stopped. They knew very well what would become of them in this case.

But as it inevitably happens when a force like IS cultivates a reputation for insane brutality, it meant that negotiation and surrender was impossible anyway. No one was gonna be spared. There was no choice. So the Kurds simply fought on.

Kobane was just another dusty town when Syria blew up three years ago. No one in Kobane was strutting around trying to be a hero and when the Islamic psychos came along the locals merely tried to keep their town alive. And, to everyone’s surprise — and to the big players’ annoyance — they succeeded. It’s the rarest thing in the world, a truly heroic story. But that’s what this is, and one can’t do much but be awed by it.

Global media outlets rushed to the scene and reported around the clock about the heroic defenders and public sympathy grew exponentially, making the Kurds cause a personal matter of concern for all good hearted people of the earth who have access to a TV or a computer.
Kurdish women fighters 11
As said before, the siege of Kobane became a myth, compared and set side by side with the siege of Fort Alamo, the battle of Stalingrad, the Trojan war, and the Turkish siege of Vienna.

It sure helped that women have a big say in the Kurdish militia (how cute) and airwaves, magazine pages, and websites have been flooded with pictures of YPJ and PKK girls. Fashion designers will for sure take the cue.

Several Kurdish women have been lionized for the bravery and determination they displayed in attacking IS. One woman known as Rehana became a social media star after she reportedly single-handed exterminated more than 100 jihadists. Dilar Gencxemis, known by her nom de guerre Arin Mirkan, was a 20-year-old mother of two who detonated herself as she ran towards IS fighters, killing as many as 23 of them.

Mayssa Abdo, known by the nom de guerre of Nalin Afrin, is the female commander who co-ordinates the Kurdish resistance together with her male colleague known by the pseudonym Mahmud Barkhodan.

A woman in charge, what a contrast to the misogynistic monsters of IS, who indulge in child rape, sex-slavery, and forced short term “marriages.”
Kurdish female fighters 7
The USA may have the biggest spy agencies on the planet and they throw money out the window in a way that puts nabobs and parvenues around the world to shame but all their information gathering and “big data” analysis is worth nothing because they don’t understand how other societies work.

They didn’t it get right in Afghanistan, in Iraq, in Somalia, Yemen, Libya, Syria, they didn’t even get it right in the Ukraine. The “mystery of Putin” became proverbial when Putin was the only player in the tragedy who acted rational. If he wouldn’t have initiated a ceasefire (the Minsk protocol) just in the right moment the Ukraine would be in flames now.

The “mystery of Putin” is a mystery only for US minds and their kremlinologists are a hapless bunch of idiots.

The Yankees are naive rubes and muddlers who most of the times behave like bulls in the china shop. They tap wide-eyed and ignorant in every trap and mess up every business they get into. They can be outwitted easily, that is why the Israelis love them so.

If the Yankees would be clever and rational they wouldn’t spend nearly a trillion dollar for weapons, spying, and bribing, while denying their own people basic healthcare, cutting their water off (Detroit) or poisoning it by fracking, making education unaffordable, and letting 47 million US-citicens beg for food stamps.
Kurdish women fighters 12
But the Americans are good in propaganda. Propaganda, deception, hype, a good Hollywood story, John Wayne riding into the sunset with a sweat lady in his arms. This is the art which they have mastered, this is the one thing they understand well.

The global media coverage meant that the US tacticians suddenly realized that they had maneuvered themselves into a corner. Leaving the heroic Kurds at the mercy of the IS monsters would have been a global embarrassment, letting IS capture Kobane would also have increased the risk that the whole IS scheme could become uncontrollable and take on a life of its own.

IS, though a joint creation of Mossad, CIA, and MIT, is not dear to the heart of US policy makers, they regard IS as an entrapment scheme, used to concentrate the Islamic freaks of the world in one point and then blow them up. For Turkey IS is a pet project, IS is their baby which they want to nurture and grow as long as possible.

This is a significant difference which could complicate the relations between Washington and Ankara a lot.

Behind the scenes, top US officials concluded that Kobane had become too symbolically important to let it fall, the excuses of forsaking the Kurds had become too flimsy, IS had gotten out of control, and the Kurds were the more desirable “boots on the ground” than the Turks.

The Turks needed a reprimand anyway, they had gotten much too daring and unruly.

The US generals rushed to clarify their position:

Rear Adm. John Kirby: “There’s been no strategic shift here, as far as I know, at least from the military perspective, about Kobane or any other town … We never said Kobane didn’t matter … What makes Kobane matter for us from an airstrike perspective is that IS is there, and that they want it.”
Kurdish woman fighter 16
It was not until October 10 that the US air raids against IS started in earnest, before that the US just bombarded empty IS positions. For two weeks, as IS threw all its Iraqi reinforcements and armor at the town, the US made only token strikes around Kobane. It was very odd, reading the stories at the time, because if there’s one thing the US does well, it’s air strikes on open desert terrain.

The strikes clearly were only meant as a show of fake good will, so to speak — kinetic good will that would send a lot of desert flying into the air without dislodging IS, and bleeding IS a little in the process.

Well, the Kurds did’t play their designated part in the game, they were bleeding IS horribly.

Until now IS has lost more than 1,000 fighters in the battle. Every street of Kobane is littered with corpses of IS fighters and the stench of the decaying corpses becomes unbearable in some areas. The Kurds were able to collect hundreds of weapons from the killed jihadists.

The YPG YPJ has established a field hospital in the city, where injuries which are not life threatening can be treated.

IS still occupies the eastern parts of Kobane, which constitute roughly a third of the city. IS has been forced from many parts of the city, but still controls key buildings including the hospital and the important Asayish building in the middle of Kobani, which served as YPG headquarter.

IS is also entrenched in strategic positions around Kobane. Thousands of mortars rain down on the defenders, there is not a single house of Kobane which has not been struck by mortars. IS has reportedly used mustard gas during street to street fighting.

IS suicide car bombers constantly attack Kurdish positions though the Kurds most times are able to detonate the cars before they reach their targets.

The US military coordinates the air strike now directly with the Kurds.

YPG spokesperson Polat Can: “We have a direct relation with the coalition without any intermediaries. A YPG representative is physically ready in the joint operation command center and transmits the coordinates. Indeed, no airstrikes would be possible militarily without YPG taking part in the process because the clashes are ongoing and the situation on the ground changes rapidly.”

But Polat Can also admitted “Had these attacks started a couple weeks ago, IS would not have been able to enter Kobane at all. IS would have been defeated 10-15 kilometers away from the city, and the city would not have turned into a war zone.”
Bomber B-1B Lancer
US forces have conducted more than 140 air strikes against IS in Kobane.

Because of the Turkish blockade the US tries to supply the Kurds from the air. Three C-130 planes dropped 27 bundles of small arms, hand grandees, ammunition, and medical supplies, yet two consignments landed in the hands of IS.

Iraqi Kurdish leader Massoud Barzani and officials from the KNC (Kurdish National Council) have pledged to send fighters and weapons and Turkey is said to have agreed to a transit. This is only show, because Iraq’s Peshmerga are thin stretched and the YPG YPJ will not accept a rival military force in their zone of control unless it falls under their chain of command.

The US admitted that they met PYD (Democratic Union Party) representatives in Paris. The PYD is the political wing of the YPG YPJ militia. It was the first time US officials directly met with the PYD, although the two sides have communicated in the past through intermediaries.

US Department of State Deputy Spokesperson Marie Harf said during a press briefing that the PYD is not a terrorist organization under US law despite its affiliation with the PKK. Harf stressed that, contrary to Turkey, Washington was making a distinction between the PKK and the PYD, as the latter does not figure in the list of terrorist groups.

Media spin is starting to sanitize the YPG YPJ, downplaying the connections with the PKK and the Syrian government.

The participation of the Shams Al Shimal Battalion, which is regarded as a part of the FSA (Free Syrian Army), in the defense of Kobane is cited as a proof, that the Kurds are a part of the Syrian “moderate” opposition (the fantasy moderates created by US propaganda), yet just one year ago the brigades parent organization Liwa al-Tawheed colluded with IS against the YPG in Aleppo province. The FSA fighters are just 200 people and their loyalty is questionable.

Warning voices are raised about the Kurdish socialist system. Grass-roots democracy is of course socialism, common goods are socialism, this are all dangerous ideas impeding profits and wealth accumulation. But, as the pundits wisely predict, the Kurdish leaders will mature and eventually embrace capitalism with all its benefits (especially benefits for the leaders).

We will see.

Further reading:

16.10.2014

Rojava has no friends


Rojava, consisting of the three autonomous self-governing cantons Afrin, Kobane, and Cizire, with a mainly Kurdish population, is threatened not only by IS (Islamic State) and Turkey. The USA and most European countries show no sympathy for the plight of the population and have forsaken the Kurdish and Christian self-defense units of Rojava.

Why is Rojava disliked, why limit the USA their air strikes around Kobane, although IS tanks and artillery are easily to detect? Why can Turkish President Erdogan uncontested call the self-defense units YPG and YPJ terrorists, who will not be supported by Turkey?

Erdogan: “We will never tolerate any terrorist organization in our country, in our region or in the world. We are open and ready for any cooperation in the fight against terrorism. But everyone should understand that Turkey is not a country that pursues temporary solutions, and Turkey will not tolerate that others benefit from it!

Turkey uses the current situation in Kobane to pursue a buffer zone on Syrian soil, protected by Turkish soldiers, which in fact would be equivalent to the occupation of Kurdish areas in Syria.

President Erdogan declared that he sees no difference between PKK and IS. 

Rojava has many foes 

Turkey: The example of Rojava is not liked, because it may be the blueprint of a federal Turkey with Kurdish autonomy and it challenges the existing central government.

USA: Because Rojava cannot be used against Bashar Al-Assad, the United States are not interested to support it.

Northern Iraq: The autonomous Kurdish province in northern Iraq under the rule of tribal leader Barzani boycotts Rojava because the conservative and autocratic Barzani clan has no interest in a democratic model in its neighborhood.

Most of the regional neighbors are against Rojava because the Arab states have a patriarchal society and emancipatory movements are undesirable and viewed as a threat to the social fabric.
Female Kurd battalion b
The following text explains the model Rojava with its political structure and objectives and also tries to make clear, why this democratic experiment is not supported by anyone except to a limited extent the Syrian government.

Model Rojava

Rojava, the Kurdish word for “west,” stands for West Kurdistan. For centuries the region offered a unique cultural, ethnic, and religious diversity: Kurds, Arabs, Turkmens, and Armenians lived peacefully together. Syriacs / Assyrians, Chaldeans, Yezidis, and Muslims practiced their faith without discriminating each other.

This social harmony could end by new from outside incited sectarian division.

At the moment 3.6 million people inhabit this region, including 1.2 million refugees (mainly internal displaced people from Syria and Yezidis from Iraq).

Rojava is an experiment of a direct local democracy. The patriarchal clan society, characterized by authoritarian control, obedience, and unquestioning loyalty, is replaced by grassroots structures involving all ethnic and religious minorities, and by the equal participation of women in all political and social institutions. 

A new health system with health centers has been established and an education system is emerging, where in addition to Arabic and Kurdish also Aramaic is taught. The first Kurdish university was opened in August 2014 in Qamisli. Organic farming cooperatives and a grass roots democratic legal system have been established.
Kurdish female fighters 7
Rojava exists since 2012 and the political and social organization is based on Abdullah Ocalan’s ideas of a “democratic confederalism.” Ocalan, since 1999 held in captivity on the prison island of Imrali in the Sea of ​​Marmara, turned away from Marxist-Leninist revolutionary theories of revolution and embraced the vision of a democratic, ecological, and gender-liberated society. He was mainly inspired by the American libertarian theorist Murray Bookchin.

Excerpts from Ocalan’s text “Democratic Confederalism:

This form of administration can be described as a non-governmental  administration or a democracy without the central state. Democratic decision-making processes are not to be confused with the usual processes of a public administration. States administer only, however, democracies govern. States are based on power, democracies are based on collective consensus. State officials are appointed, even if they are partially legitimized by elections, while democracies cast officials by direct elections. The state uses coercion as a legitimate means, democracies are based on voluntary participation.

Democratic confederalism is open to other political groups and factions. It is flexible, multicultural, anti-monopolistic and consensus-oriented. Ecology and feminism are central pillars of society. Under this type of self-government an alternative economic system is required, building and increasing the natural resources rather than unsustainably exploiting them, and thereby meeting the diverse needs of society.

In contrast to a centralized bureaucratic view of administration and use of power, confederalism is a kind of political self-government in which all social groups and cultural identities participate in regional meetings, general meetings, and councils. This understanding of democracy opens the political space for all of society and takes into account the formation of various and diverse political groups. In this way, it promotes the political integration of society as a whole. Politic becomes a part of everyday life.

Democratic confederalism can be described as a kind of self-government, contrasting the administration of a nation state. Nevertheless, under certain circumstances, a peaceful coexistence is possible as long as the nation-state does not interfere in central issues of self-government. Any such interference would cause the self-defense of civil society. Democratic confederalism is not at war with any nation-state, but will be vigilant against assimilation efforts. A violent revolution or the founding of a new nation will not create sustainable change. In the long term freedom and justice can only be achieved within a dynamic democratic confederal process.
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Democratic confederalism in Kurdistan is simultaneously an anti-nationalist movement. It aims for the self-determination of people through the expansion of democracy in all parts of Kurdistan, without questioning existing political boundaries. The goal is not the creation of a Kurdish nation state. The movement intends to establish federal structures in Iran, Turkey, Syria, and Iraq, in concurrence with the formation of an inter-confederation for all four parts of Kurdistan. 

Cemil Bayik, a major PKK leader, in the Turkish daily “Radikal: ”It becomes clear that the Kurds by their demands for autonomy in principle want to achieve the same status as, for example, South Tyrol in Italy has … It must be understood that the PKK does not chase for a piece of land or a state. We do not even separate the Kurds from all other peoples of the region. We are concerned with the creation of a democratic society, based on the brotherhood of nations, where each group with their idiosyncrasies, their language, and their culture can organize itself freely and nevertheless be part of the whole.”

On July 19, 2012, the cornerstone was laid for the uprising of Rojavas population. They occupied initially a few state institutions. When the security forces wanted to quell the uprising, they soon realized that their situation was hopeless, because the population had surrounded them and started to overtake further administrative buildings.

Subsequently the government officials either left the cities or resigned and continued their lives as ordinary citicens.

On January 6, 2014, a social contract for Rojava was adopted in Qamishli and on January 18 a democratic autonomous self-government was proclaimed. Center of the social system is the municipality, similar to the Swiss cantonal Model.
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There are gender quotes for decisions of local authorities and in all councils in Rojava at least 40 percent women must be involved in the discussions. In these councils current administrative issues, like for instance electricity and food supplies, but also social problems, like domestic violence and family disputes, are discussed and resolved if possible. There are special commissions which deal with social and political issues, like military defense, judicial questions, economic development, building cooperatives (bakeries, textile workshops, agricultural projects). Ecology commissions take care of waste disposal and habitat preservation.

Excerpts from Rojava Social Contract 

Article 2: 
a) The source of power is the population, the population rules. The administration is ensured by institutions and elections. All hierarchies, which are directed against the social contract of the democratic autonomous administration, are illegitimate. 
b) The owner of the democratically created councils and executive bodies is the population. The monopolization by a group or class will not be tolerated.

Article 4: 
The leadership of the democratically-autonomous administration in the cantons consists of: a) the Legislative Council, b) the Executive Council, c) the High Electoral Committee, d) the High Constitutional Court, e) the regional councils. 

Article 8: 
All cantons of the democratically-autonomous administration have the right to any regional activity as well as establishing their own government and councils, as long as they do not violate the social contract. 
(This makes clear that Rojava, does not pursue a separate state like the Kurdish autonomous government of Barzani in northern Iraq, but wants to be part of a federal system in Syria) 

Article 12: 
The democratically-autonomous administration is a model for and will be part of a not centrally organized Syria. Federalism is the most appropriate system for Syria, and the relation between the autonomous administrations and the central government of Syria will be based on this model.

Article 15: 
1) The people’s defense units (YPG YPJ) are a national institution responsible for the safety of all three cantons. They serve for the interests and security of the population. The YPG YPJ act according to the principle of self-defense. Their relationship to the army of the central government is determined by the laws of the Legislative Council. 
2) The Asayiş forces are linked to the Commission of Homeland Security. 

Article 23: 
a) Everybody has the right to live his/her ethnic, linguistic, sexual, religious, and cultural identity.
b) Everybody has the right to live according to the principles of an ecological society. 

Article 25: 
a) The freedom of the individual is assured. No one may be arrested except by law.
b) The dignity of man is inviolable and must be protected. No one shall be subjected to physical or mental torture. Those who practice torture will be punished.
c) For detained and imprisoned persons human conditions have to be created. Prisons should not be places of punishment, but centers for education and rehabilitation. 

Article 26: 
a) The social contract guarantees the right to political activity and prohibits the death penalty. 

Article 27: 
a) Women have all political, social, economic, cultural rights, and the right to life. These rights are to be protected. 

Article 28: 
a) Women have the right to self-defense and the right to oppose and eradicate any gender discrimination. 

Article 29: 
a) The social contract guarantees the rights of children and prohibits child labor, physical and psychological torture of children, and child marriages. 

Article 31: 
a) The right to practice religion is guaranteed. Abusing religion for political purposes, sparking disputes over religion, and discriminating religious opponents will not be tolerated. 

Article 39: 
All mineral resources and natural resources belong to the society as a whole. Their exploitation, processing, and use is regulated by law. 

Article 40: 
In the democratically-autonomous administrations any property and land is owned by the population. Use and distribution are regulated by law. 

The legislative branch is regulated in Article 45: 
The Legislative Council is the High Council of the democratically-autonomous administrations. Its members are elected by the people every four years.

In other articles press freedom, freedom of expression, and equal opportunity are guaranteed.

The main institutions 

It is evident from the articles of the social contract, that Rojava is not a Western style representative democracy, where the deputies have a clear mandate, but rather a grass roots democratic model with imperative mandates. Which means, the decisions will be made from below, and not, as in Western democracies, from the top. 

The political structures with their councils were created under a situation of war and are still under construction. Consequently there are inconsistencies in the system: On one hand a parliament (the Legislative Council) has to be elected, on the other hand exists a district council system as a kind of parallel parliament.

Most important institutions: 

In the districts exist municipalities which are responsible for approximately 1,000 residents. These municipalities form the district councils, which in turn from their ranks elect the city council and select the regional councils management. The district councils also include seats for parties and other relevant organizations. 

The regional councils administrations have their own executive boards and hold the Canton Presidency. The High Council / Legislative Council is the supreme body and passes laws. The Executive Council has administrative and executive function. It is accountable to the Legislative Council and consists of members from regional council administrations. 
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Parties in Rojava 

PYD – Party of the Democratic Union (Partiya Yekîtiya Democrat) 
KDP – Kurdistan Democratic Party (Barzani’s party) 
SUP – Unity Party of the Assyrians (Syriacs) 

Security forces 

YPG – self-defense units (Yekîneyên Para Tina gel) 
YPJ – women’s self-defense units (Yekîne yen Para Tina Jine) 
Asayiş – police 
Sutoro – Assyrian police

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