Intense fighting
between ISIS and Kurdish Peshmerga fighters over the past month for control of
the strategic city of Kobani on the Turkish-Syrian border threatens not only
domestic stability within Turkey, but also the peace process between the
Turkish government and the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).
Showing posts with label Kurdistan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kurdistan. Show all posts
Wednesday, October 22, 2014
Friday, August 8, 2014
The Road Back to Baghdad Part 3: The Reckoning
Early this morning US time, two 500-pound,
laser-guided bombs were dropped by US forces on Islamic State (IS) targets
outside of Erbil, Iraq. Overnight, the Obama administration shifted its policy
of non-military intervention in the ever-expanding conflict with the Islamic
State, citing both humanitarian and strategic concerns. Since June 2014,
Islamic State has made several alarming advances in Iraq and Syria, claiming
major cities such as Fallujah, Ramadi, and Mosul, and re-engaging Syrian
government and rebel forces across the border.
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Islamic State positions. Courtesy NY Times. |
The capture of key territory in both
countries has reinforced the extremist group’s financial and military
resources, and in IS strongholds, a strict form of Islamic law is being
enforced. The US airstrikes come on the heels of the displacement of tens of
thousands of Yazidi Iraqis, whose religion has been deemed “devil worship” by
IS and who were warned to “convert or die.” In his statement last night, US
Pres. Barack Obama indicated that the decision to expand humanitarian and
military aid was based on fears that “acts of genocide” may soon be carried out
against Iraqi Yazidis, approximately 40,000 of whom are trapped without food or
water on Sinjar Mountain in Kurdish Iraq.
Wednesday, April 16, 2014
The Ones the World Forgot: The Syrian Refugee Crisis
The following is an adaptation of a presentation I gave on April 12, 2014 at the Boston Consortium for Arab Region Studies conference:
Since last writing on this topic in February, the news emanating from
the Syrian refugee crisis has only gotten worse. There are now close to 2.7 million
refugees who have fled the Syrian conflict, the majority of whom have settled
in Iraq, Turkey, Lebanon, and Jordan. There are almost 14 million people who
are in need of aid in the region as a result of the conflict, and funds from
the international community have hardly been forthcoming: the UNHCR’s appeal
for 4.2 billion dollars is only 14% funded, while UNICEF’s 222 million dollar
appeal is less than 12% funded. Without these desperately needed resources, UN
agencies as well as over one hundred other humanitarian agencies can do little
to mitigate the devastating effects of the Syrian conflict on the region.

Labels:
Bekaa,
Iraq,
Jordan,
Kurdistan,
Lebanon,
Syrian civil war,
Syrian refugee,
Turkey,
UN,
UNHCR
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