The Kurds: A People in Search of Their Homeland

Front Cover
Macmillan, 2006 M03 7 - 390 pages
Kevin McKiernan has reported on the Kurds of Iraq, Iran, Turkey, and Syria since 1991, but he began his career as a journalist in the 1970s covering armed confrontations by Native Americans. In The Kurds: A People in Search of Their Homeland he draws parallels---using examples of culture, language, and genocide---between Native American history and the experience of the Kurds. With a population of more than twenty-five million, the Kurds are the largest ethnic group in the world without their own state, but until recently their long struggle for autonomy has received relatively little attention. Following World War I, the Kurds were promised a homeland, but the dream collapsed amid pressures of Turkish nationalism and the Allied realignment of the Middle East. For the remainder of the century, the story of the Kurds was one of almost constant conflict, as Middle East governments repressed Kurdish culture, language, and politics, destroyed thousands of Kurdish villages, "disappeared" and even gassed the Kurds---often as the West provided military assistance or simply looked away.

The Kurds are politically and ideologically diverse and were never a "nation" in the modern sense, but their struggles for self-determination have been repeatedly betrayed by outside powers. Yet in 1996, a Syrian Kurd would boldly inform the author that the Kurds "were a key to the stability of the Middle East"---prophetic words today, McKiernan writes, as the fallout from the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq and other developments join to make Kurdish independence a likely, if not imminent, prospect.

McKiernan mixes Middle East history with personal narrative, as he comes face-to-face with Kurdish refugees in the mountains of Iraq and Iran, a hidden war in Turkey, guerrilla safe houses in Syria and Lebanon, backpacking trips behind army lines, scrapes with hostile soldiers, and, finally, the discovery that his personal translator during the Iraq war was also a spy for Saddam Hussein. His complex portrait of the Kurds includes interviews with Jalal Talabani, the first Kurdish president of Iraq, members of the legendary Barzani family, and Abdullah Ocalan, the now-imprisoned leader of the lengthy Kurdish uprising in Turkey. Interwoven throughout is the story of the author's charming and resilient driver who survived a terrorist attack in Iraq, and the American doctors who nursed him back to health.

McKiernan's coverage of the war in Iraq includes a visit to the camp of militants linked to al-Qaeda who were responsible for a series of suicide bombings in the Kurdish region, and he examines how U.S. preoccupation with toppling Saddam Hussein allowed many of these insurgents to escape to Iran, regroup, and later turn their jihad against the American occupation. McKiernan also examines the role of journalists in the run-up to the war as he tells how his Kurd-provided "scoop" about Iraqi scientists came to be used in U.S. claims that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction.

From inside the book

Contents

A Second Visit to Kurdistan
25
Atrocities
35
The Leadership
46
Illusory Borders Part I
63
Illusory Borders Part II
77
Passing Down Revolution
89
Turkey 1993
97
Turkey 1995 Ground Level
109
Ashti Hotel
249
Abducted Scientists
260
Kurds Reign in the Press
269
End Game
280
The War in Kurdistan
288
Road to Tikrit and Home
294
Return to Iraq
301
Karzan at Home
312

The Business of Killing
115
PKK Visit 1996
139
WellFounded Fear of Persecution
164
Stranger in My Cab
184
October 2002
200
Ansar alIslam
212
Palace Hotel
221
AlQaeda in Kurdistan?
229
WMD and Tipsters
241
Kirkuk and Civil War
323
Spies and Blame
329
The Dodger
337
After Halabja
350
Epilogue
357
Notes
363
Sources
373
Index
379
Copyright

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About the author (2006)

Kevin McKiernan has been a war correspondent for over thirty years. He covered the Iraq war for ABC News in both Kurdish and Arab areas. Prior to that, he coproduced "The Spirit of Crazy Horse" for PBS Frontline and wrote and directed" Good Kurds, Bad Kurds," the award-winning PBS documentary. McKiernan has published articles about and photographs of the Kurds in the "Los Angeles"" Times, "the "New York Times, Newsweek, Time" and other publications. He lives in Santa Barbara, California.

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