04 June 2004
KurdishMedia.com
June 1, 2004
His Excellency President George W. Bush
President of the United States of America
The White House
Washington, D.C.
Dear Mr. President:
We are writing this letter to your Excellency to present
our views and concerns on the new Iraqi Interim Government,
the Kurdish position and the future of the country.
America has no better friend than the people of Iraqi
Kurdistan. A year ago, our peshmerga forces fought side by
side with the American forces for the liberation of Iraq,
taking more casualties than any other US ally. Today,
Kurdistan remains the only secure and stable part of Iraq.
We note that, in contrast to the Arab areas of Iraq, no
coalition soldier has been killed in the area controlled by
the Kurdistan Regional Government.
The people of Kurdistan continue to embrace American
values, to welcome US troops, and to support your program
for the liberation of Iraq. Our Kurdistan Regional
Government has given up many of its current freedoms in the
interest of helping your administering authorities reach
compromises with other Iraqis. We were therefore bitterly
disappointed when your special representative advised us
that a Kurd could be neither Prime Minister nor President of
Iraq. We were told that these positions must go to a Shiite
Arab and Sunni Arab respectively.
Iraq is a country of two main nationalities, Arabs and
Kurds. It seems reasonable that the Arabs might get one of
the top jobs (of their choice) but then the other should go
to a Kurd.
We also believe the decision to use sectarian quotas for
the top two jobs directly contradicts the Coalition’s
repeatedly stated position that democratic Iraq’s government
should not be based on ethnic or religious criteria, a
position the US wrote into the Transitional Administrative
Law.
The people of Kurdistan will no longer accept
second-class citizenship in Iraq. In Saddam’s time and
before, Kurds were frequently given the Vice President or
deputy positions, which were window dressing without power.
We had hoped the new Iraq would be different for the Kurdish
people.
Ever since liberation, we have detected a bias against
Kurdistan from the American authorities for reasons that we
cannot comprehend. At the outset of the occupation, the
coalition seized the oil-for-food revenues that had been
specifically earmarked for Kurdistan and redistributed them
to the rest of Iraq-in spite of the fact that Kurdistan
received far less of these revenues per capita than other
Iraqis and notwithstanding the fact that our region was the
one most destroyed by Saddam Hussein. CPA actively
discouraged the equality of the Kurdish and Arabic
languages, and repeatedly tried to “derecognize’ the
Kurdistan Regional Government (Iraq’s only elected
government ever) in favor of a system based on Saddam’s 18
governorates. US officials have demeaned the peshmerga,
calling this disciplined military force that was America’s
battlefield comrade in arms, “militia”. In official
statements, it is rare for the US government or the CPA even
to refer to Kurdistan or the Kurdish people.
We will be loyal friends to America even if our support
is not always reciprocated. Our fate is too closely linked
to your fortunes in Iraq. If the forces of freedom prevail
elsewhere in Iraq, we know that, because of our alliance
with the United States, we will be marked for vengeance. We
do ask for some specific reassurance for this transitional
period so as to enable us to participate more fully in the
interim government. Specifically, we ask that:
The Transitional Administrative Law (TAL) be incorporated
into the new UN Security Council Resolution or otherwise
recognized as law binding on the transitional government,
both before and after elections. If the TAL is abrogated,
the Kurdistan Regional Government will have no choice but to
refrain from participating in the central government and its
institutions, not to take part in the national elections,
and to bar representatives of the central Government from
Kurdistan.
The United States commit to protect the people and
government of Kurdistan in the event insurrection and
disorder lead to a withdrawal from the rest of Iraq.
The Coalition carry through on commitments to reverse the
Arabization of Kurdish lands and move forward to settle the
status of Kirkuk in accordance with the wishes of its
people, excluding settlers but including those ethnically
cleansed by Saddam Hussein.
The oil-for-food revenues unfairly taken from Kurdistan
last year be restored in the entirety, and that Kurdistan
receive its per capita share of the $19 billion in
reconstruction assistance appropriated by the Congress.
The United States support our plans to own and manage
Kurdistan’s natural resources, and in particular our efforts
to develop new petroleum resources in the Kurdistan Region,
where the previous regime sought to block all exploration
and development that might benefit the Kurdistan people.
The United States open a consulate in Irbil, and that it
encourage other coalition partners to the same. For the
people of Kurdistan, it is vital that we maintain our direct
links to the outside world and not solely dependant on a
Baghdad where we are not considered fully equal citizens.
The United States and the United Nations state clearly
that the use of ethnic and confessional criteria for the
selections of the interim government does not set a
precedent for a future Iraqi government, and that Kurds are
eligible for the posts of Prime Minister and President.
If ethnic criteria are to be used to exclude Kurds from
the top two positions in the interim government, we think it
fair that Kurdistan be compensated with a disproportionate
share of relevant ministries in the interim government.
Mr. President, we know that these are difficult days for
all of us who believe the cause of Iraq’s freedom was worth
fighting for. The Kurdish people continue to admire your
confident leadership, your vision of a free Iraq, and your
personal courage. We are certain that you will agree that
Kurdistan should not be penalized for its friendship and
support for the United States.
Sincerely yours,
Masoud Barzani
Kurdistan Democratic Party
Jalal Talabani
Patriotic Union of Kurdistan