Author: Tinti A.  

Tags: international relations   iran   oil   kurdistan   iraq  

ISBN: 9780367751265

Year: 2022

Text
                    Oil and National Identity
in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq

Examining the interplay between the oil economy and identity politics using
the Kurdistan Region of Iraq as a case study, this book tells the untold story
of how extractivism in the Kurdish autonomous region is interwoven in a
mosaic of territorial disputes, simmering ethnic tensions, dynastic rule, party
allegiances, crony patronage, and divergent visions about nature.
Since the ousting of Saddam Hussein, the de facto borders of the Kurdistan
Region of Iraq have repeatedly changed, with energy interests playing a
major role in such processes of territorialisation. However, relatively little
research exists on the topic. This book provides a timely, empirical analysis of
the intersections between extractive industries, oil imaginaries, and identity
formation in one of the most coveted energy frontiers worldwide. It shines a
light on relations between the global production networks of petro-capitalism
and extractive localities. Besides the strained federal relationship with the Iraqi
central government, the transformative effects the petroleum industry has had
on Kurdish society are also explored in depth. Moreover, the book fills a gap
in the literature on Kurdish Studies, which has devoted scant attention to
energy-related issues in the re-imagination of Kurdish self-determination.
This book will be of great interest to students and scholars of the extractive
industries, energy studies, conflict studies, Middle Eastern politics, and political
ecology.
Alessandro Tinti holds a PhD degree in Political Science and International
Relations from the Sant’Anna School of Advanced Studies, Italy. He is currently
Research Fellow at La Sapienza University of Rome and Adjunct Professor at
the University of Bologna, Italy.


Routledge Studies of the Extractive Industries and Sustainable Development Energy, Resource Extraction and Society Impacts and Contested Futures Edited by Anna Szolucha Regime Stability, Social Insecurity and Bauxite Mining in Guinea Developments Since the Mid-Twentieth Century Penda Diallo Local Experiences of Mining in Peru Social and Spatial Transformations in the Andes Gerardo Castillo Guzmán Resource Extraction, Space and Resilience International Perspectives Juha Kotilainen Our Extractive Age Expressions of Violence and Resistance Edited by Judith Shapiro and John-Andrew McNeish The Impact of Mining Lifecycles in Mongolia and Kyrgyzstan Political, Social, Environmental and Cultural Contexts Edited by Troy Sternberg, Kemel Toktomushev and Byamba Ichinkhorloo Oil and National Identity in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq Conflicts at the Frontier of Petro-Capitalism Alessandro Tinti The Anthropology of Resource Extraction Edited by Lorenzo D’Angelo and Robert Jan Pijpers For more information about this series, please visit: www.routledge.com/series/ REISD
Oil and National Identity in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq Conflicts at the Frontier of Petro-Capitalism Alessandro Tinti
First published 2022 by Routledge 2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon OX14 4RN and by Routledge 605 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10158 Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business © 2022 Alessandro Tinti The right of Alessandro Tinti to be identified as author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. Trademark notice: Product or corporate names may be trademarks or registered trademarks, and are used only for identification and explanation without intent to infringe. British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Tinti, Alessandro, author. Title: Oil and national identity in the Kurdistan region of Iraq: conflicts at the frontier of petro-capitalism/Alessandro Tinti. Other titles: Routledge studies of the extractive industries and sustainable development. Description: Abingdon, Oxon; New York: Routledge, 2021. | Series: Routledge studies of the extractive industries | Includes bibliographical references and index. | Summary: “Examining the interplay between the oil economy and identity politics using the Kurdistan Region of Iraq as a case study, this book tells the untold story of how extractivism in the Kurdish autonomous region is interwoven in a mosaic of territorial disputes, simmering ethnic tensions, dynastic rule, party allegiances, crony patronage, and divergent visions about nature. Since the ousting of Saddam Hussein, the de-facto borders of the Kurdistan Region of Iraq have repeatedly changed, with energy interests playing a major role in such processes of territorialization. However, relatively little research exists on the topic. This book provides a timely, empirical analysis of the intersections between extractive industries, oil imaginaries, and identity formation in one of the most coveted energy frontiers worldwide. It shines a light on relations between the global production networks of petro-capitalism and extractive localities. Besides the strained federal relationship with the Iraqi central government, the transformative effects the petroleum industry has had on Kurdish society are also explored in depth. Moreover, the book fills a gap in the literature on Kurdish Studies, which has devoted scant attention to energy-related issues in the re-imagination of Kurdish self-determination. This book will be of great interest to students and scholars of the extractive industries, energy studies, conflict studies, Middle Eastern politics, and political ecology” – Provided by publisher. Identifiers: LCCN 2021025962 (print) | LCCN 2021025963 (ebook) | ISBN 9780367751265 (hardback) | ISBN 9780367751289 (paperback) | ISBN 9781003161103 (ebook) Subjects: LCSH: Petroleum industry and trade – Political aspects – Iraq – Kurdistān. | Kurds – Iraq – Kurdistān – Politics and government – 21st century. | Nationalism – Iraq – Kurdistān – History – 21st century. | Kurdistān (Iraq) – Politics and government – 21st century. | Kurdistān (Iraq) – Ethnic relations. Classification: LCC HD9576.I73 K878 2021 (print) | LCC HD9576.I73 (ebook) | DDC 338.2/728095554 – dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2021025962 LC ebook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2021025963 ISBN: 978-0-367-75126-5 (hbk) ISBN: 978-0-367-75128-9 (pbk) ISBN: 978-1-003-16110-3 (ebk) DOI: 10.4324/9781003161103 Typeset in Bembo by Apex CoVantage, LLC
in loving memory of Carla & Franco

Contents List of abbreviations Acknowledgements Introduction: the trail of oil 1 The nature of conflict: on oil and violence viii x 1 9 2 The Kurdistan Region of Iraq: borders, identity, oil 52 3 The gate to statehood: Kurdish nationalism and the oil dream 86 4 A nation divided: Kurdish infighting and black gold 121 5 No friends but the mountains: extractivism and social control 152 Conclusions: the making of oil environments 175 Appendix Index 187 188
Abbreviations ANT – Actor-Network Theory APOC – Anglo-Persian Oil Company AUIS – American University of Iraq – Sulaimani BP – British Petroleum bpd – barrels per day CDJ – Coalition for Democracy and Justice EITI – Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative GDP – Gross Domestic Product INOC – Iraq National Oil Company IOC – International oil company IPC – Iraqi Petroleum Company IR – International Relations ISF – Iraqi Security Forces ISIS – Islamic State of Iraq and Syria KDP – Kurdistan Democratic Party (Partiya Demokrat a Kurdistanê) KEPCO – Kurdistan Exploration and Production Company KIU – Kurdistan Islamic Union KNA – Kurdistan National Assembly KNOC – Kurdistan National Oil Company KODO – Kurdistan Organisation for Downstream Operations KOMO – Kurdistan Oil Marketing Organisation KOTO – Kurdistan Oil Trust Organisation KRG – Kurdistan Regional Government KRI – Kurdistan Region of Iraq MNR – Ministry of Natural Resources NGC – North Gas Company NOC – Iraqi North Oil Company PKK – Kurdistan Workers’ Party (Partiya Karkerên Kurdistanê) PMU – Popular Mobilisation Units (Hashd al-Shaabi) PSA – Production Sharing Agreement PSC – Production Sharing Contract PUK – Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (Yekêtiy Niştîmaniy Kurdistan)
Abbreviations ix PYD – Democratic Union Party (Partiya Yekîtiya Demokrat) SOMO – State Organisation for Marketing of Oil TEC – Turkish Energy Company UPP – Un Ponte Per
Acknowledgements It is commonplace to start a book by saying that the author is greatly indebted to all who in various ways contributed to its realisation. However, I truly am and beyond all measure. Firstly, my heart goes out to my Kurdish friends and the people of Kurdistan, whose hospitality and kindness touched me deeply. I never felt like a stranger. I hope my research did justice to the stories of sorrow and hope they shared with me. Foremost among them is Nabil Musa. His commitment and dedication to environmental protection in the endangered waterways of his beautiful region, even in the toughest conditions, truly inspired me. I am honoured to be your friend, kaka. To all the Kurds of the diaspora, I express my sympathy and respect. I was welcomed with the greatest warmth, always and everywhere. My greetings extend to Heyva Sor a Kurdistanê and all its branches. This book is based upon the PhD research I carried out at the Sant’Anna School of Advanced Studies in Pisa. I am grateful to my supervisor, Francesco Strazzari, for his support in the project. I would like to thank Alessandra Russo, Chiara Certomà, Arturo Marzano, Jan Selby, Matt McDonald, Joost Jongerden, Filippo Menga, Francesca Borri, Linda Dorigo, Marina Calculli, Maria Fantappie, Yaniv Voller, Kevin Dunn, Nancy Peluso, Fidan Mirhanoglu, Hussam Hussein, Irene Costantini, Luca Raineri, Alice Martini, Benedetta Argentieri, Zeinep Kaya, Alberto Tonini, Clemens Hoffmann, and Ruth Hanau Santini for the precious suggestions, critiques, and feedback. I would also like to thank Christine van den Toorn for hosting me twice at the American University of Iraq – Sulaimani, and Sarah Mathieu-Comtois, Jacqueline Parry, Bahra Saleh, Zainab Mera, Renad Mansour, Kerem Usslaki, Mohammed Fatih, and all staff at the Institute of Regional and International Studies for their patient and tireless assistance in every aspect of my stay. My second period of fieldwork in Iraq was made possible through a grant from POMEPS. The moment I received the news, at 3 a.m. in the morning, I was ecstatic. Since the very beginning, Un Ponte Per was my best ally on the ground. Thank you Toon, Ismaeel, and Martina for including me in the organisation of an extraordinary event – the Mesopotamian Water Forum.
Acknowledgements xi The visiting period I spent at the Institute of Environmental Science and Technology in Barcelona was a breath of fresh air. My thanks go to Mariana Walter, Leah Temper, Daniela Del Bene, Lena Weber, Joan Martinez Alier, and Rania Masri for the empathy and interest they have genuinely shown. Serena was my greatest supporter throughout the journey. This book would have never come into being without her. I owe her a debt of gratitude for this and more. The many conversations with Alice and Luigi were crucial in inspiring me to think outside the box and develop the research. Most importantly, they are amazing friends. I am also grateful for the countless coffee breaks with Clara and Edoardo, and for being there for each other during our doctoral studies. I will never be able to thank enough Elizabeth for proofreading the manuscript with such love and care. Her help was invaluable. I feel blessed to have her by my side. I wish Carla and Franco could read these pages. This book is dedicated to them.

Introduction The trail of oil I arrived in Kirkuk in the early morning, driving from Sulaymaniyah. It was June 2017, during Ramadan. The temperature would go up to over 40 degrees in a matter of hours. Flames burned from flare stacks and black smoke poured from facilities on the outskirts of the “oil city.” The smell of refining was all around. As I got closer to central districts, I went through the security controls of several checkpoints managed by the Iraqi Federal Police and no longer Kurdish Peshmerga. Different uniforms, different languages. Whilst the counteroffensive against the Islamic State1 (ISIS) was inching towards the last few jihadist pockets in Mosul, ethnic acrimony was mounting again as the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) geared up for an explosive referendum regarding the independence of the autonomous region. Although Kurdish factions were immersed in their own feuds, the referendum campaign blew on the groundswell of deep resentment against the central government in Baghdad and mutual accusations of betrayal and deceit. Once again Kirkuk was the symbolic and military frontline in-between Arabs and Kurds, if not the ultimate embodiment of the historic hatred fragmenting Iraq into ethno-sectarian components. In mid-October, the central government would respond to what appeared to be the prelude to secession with the bloody re-deployment of the Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) and Shi’a militias in the disputed territories, controlled by Peshmerga. I would once again return to Kirkuk a year later, after the dust from the political fallout had settled. At the time of my first visit, dark clouds were gathering on the horizon, with the KRG President Masoud Barzani extending the scope of the referendum to all the “Kurdistani” areas outside the administrative authority of the autonomous region and making it clear that any alteration of actual borders, redrawn with the blood of the many martyrs who had sacrificed their lives to tackle the ISIS insurgency, would not be tolerated. Despite the assertiveness of the KRG top brass, a breaking point was not yet in sight. Barzani also warned that federal negotiations would resume after the vote (an obvious yes vote) in order to reach a new, comprehensive agreement over borders, water, and oil. Those three issues of bargaining so clearly stated in one sentence were meaningful for the research interests that had brought me there. I was in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq (KRI) to understand precisely how resource politics DOI: 10.4324/9781003161103-1
2 Introduction had been implicated in the re-articulation of Kurdish self-determination since the downfall of Saddam Hussein in 2003. It is no doubt that hydrocarbons have provided sustenance for institution building in the Kurdish enclave. The Kurdish de facto state emerging out of the end of Ba’athism is oil dependent as much as its parent state. The ruling oligarchy inherited the same mentality of building state legitimacy upon oil-driven economic development, so much that optimism and confidence that Kurdish leaders have about the future is largely linked to the chance of generating income from oil and gas production. After all, modern Iraq was carved out as an independent country under the British colonial mandate because of energy interests in no small part. Iraq has 145 billion barrels of proven oil reserves (BP, 2020), which make the country the fifth largest holder in the world. Added to these are 112 trillion cubic feet of proven gas reserves. In light of these staggering figures, it is no surprise that the petroleum industry has dominated the Iraqi economy since its nationalisation in the early 1970s, either directly or indirectly. According to the World Bank (2018), oil accounts for more than 65% of GDP and 90% of government revenue. Oilfields are located for the most part in the Shi’a-populated southernmost province of Basra along the Shatt al-Arab, in the ethnically mixed disputed areas around Kirkuk, and in the Kurdish autonomous region in the north. During the Ba’athist autocracy, deposits lying in Kurdish-inhabited territories were kept out of development plans to curb local claims of political autonomy. Kurds suffered violent persecutions, ruthless assimilation policies, and economic marginalisation throughout the republican history. The UNenforced no-fly zone after the first Gulf War, to begin with, and the regime change following the second US-led military campaign in Iraq commenced a new era. Kurds took charge of their own destiny and made the exploitation of oil and gas resources as the mainstay of economic independence from Baghdad to the extent that the KRI is now touted as one of the most coveted energy frontiers worldwide. This book tells that story. It does so by relating the wild creation of an extractive economy to a composite mosaic of long-held grievances, territorial disputes, simmering ethnic tensions, dynastic rule, tribal allegiances, crony patronage, and the intimate bond with the natural environment. Such intersection at the heart of Kurdistan, even more so in the current historical conjuncture, sparked my interest. Oil is woven into a contentious texture delineating multiple geographies: the KRI is a new hub on the global energy market; a rentier economy in the hands of patrimonial elites split along party lines; a purported haven of stability in the midst of disorder for foreign investors in the West; the closest thing ever attained to the long-cherished dream of an independent Kurdish state for millions of Kurds, not only in Iraq; and an unruly, breakaway region for the Iraqi central government. These geographies are riven by contestation. Oil acts as a catalyst for situated memories of ethnic persecutions and foreign domination, warfare and rebellion, statelessness and exile, and nationhood and citizenship.
Introduction 3 The viscous trail of petroleum is ubiquitous and tangible everywhere in Iraq. It arrived much later to Kurdistan, but its pervasive presence is etched deep into the fabric of the region. The endless line of trucks and petrol stations along the way, the air fresheners carrying (with a hint of black humour) the logo of Rosneft inside taxis, the acrid smell released by makeshift refineries and smoke plumes billowing dark in the sky, the shiny five-star hotels and fancy shopping malls standing next to skeletons of empty buildings and junkyards in Erbil (a contrast that is striking evidence of the bust-boom cycle of petrodollars), even the street protests of teachers and civil servants over unpaid salaries and vanished revenues – all these convey the impression that oil has left a trace in everything. This does not mean that everything is about oil, of course. However, the petroleum industry has had a deeply transformative effect on the region and casts a long shadow on its future. Despite the federal structure of the country, all Iraqi governorates largely depend on budgetary transfers from the central government, including the KRG. The semi-autonomous region, which is approximately the same size of Switzerland and has a population of 5.2 million people (KRSO, 2018), is the only sub-state authority collecting revenue directly through taxation, custom duties, and independent oil sales. However, the legal validity of the latter has been harshly contested, thus opening a crack between the centre and the periphery. The central government feared that the KRG’s oil policy would undermine the integrity of the country. This dispute has intensified over time, escalating exponentially since the suspension of revenue transfers from the centre in early 2014. The liquidity crunch was also compounded by the conflict against ISIS, the resulting influx of 1.8 million refugees and IDPs, and the illtimed sharp fall in oil prices. As a result, the oil-driven economic boom has swiftly faded. The KRG case allows a more general point to be made. Oil runs into the veins of industrial societies to such an extent that no other commodity has had a comparable impact on modernity. Despite the urgency to move towards a carbon-neutral energy future, we currently live in a fossil-fuelled world that is still powered by conventional, carbon-intensive energy sources. For all its economic and strategic importance, a barrel of crude is worth far more than the price it commands on the market. As the common saying goes, oil is thicker than blood, all the more so for producing countries oil is tinged red with identity. Grounded in extensive empirical research and based on a rich theoretical account, this book aims to reverse the traditional way of understanding the nexus between oil and politics by showing the mechanisms through which the extractive industry influences identity making. In Culture and Imperialism, Edward Said suggested that the struggle over geography “is not only about soldiers and cannons but also about ideas, about forms, about images and imaginings” (1993: 7). In the same vein, this research challenges the assumption that oil is merely a high-yield commodity imbued with extraordinary corrupting power. The oil commodity chain is considered here as a relational setting within which political subjectivity is renegotiated in
4 Introduction new forms. Applied to the analysis of national identities in extractive countries, oil taps into memories and symbols that define the criteria of collective identification. Put differently, the ways natural resources in general are imagined, territorialised, commodified, and governed enter the fluid re-composition of collective identities within the political community. This argument might sound postmodernly vague. Barrels, pipelines, revenues, and export quotas are the usual buzzwords of energy talks. When approaching the modus operandi of the petroleum industry, one gets familiar with maps illustrating the location of fields underground and the ramification of hubs and spokes aboveground that display conduits, pumping and metering stations, transhipment centres, storage facilities, processing plants, and refineries. The geography of oil production looks very concrete, and it is. The “magic touch of oil” (Fuccaro, 2013) on collective identities is no less tangible. The transformative reach of black gold goes beyond the monetary rent and the circuits of rent circulation it generates. Indeed, it goes to the point of restructuring politics as a whole. It is certainly the case with Iraq, where disputed soil and nationalist narratives are soaked with oil. The recent Kurdish experience elucidates it even better, showing that the seemingly impersonal commodification of crude is actually embedded into an ideological milieu of discourses that translates into everyday practices of identity formation. These are rather uncharted waters in International Relations (IR), which is the discipline I was trained in. As is evident with the influential oil curse theory, in most cases, IR scholars have looked at oil as either an object of geopolitical competition or a trigger of domestic instability, thus indulging into deterministic assumptions that cannot see anything but a causative role. I, however, had a different viewpoint when I set foot in Kurdistan. As the rationale behind this study was to explore how the petroleum industry has influenced the evolution of the Kurdish question in Iraq, I was interested in locating the material forces of wealth accumulation within a broader perspective. In a nutshell, I wanted to investigate the mutual exchange between resource materialities and practices of signification. Formulated as such, the research question deviates from the traditional agenda in IR. The upshot is an interdisciplinary, critically committed, and ethnographically oriented piece of research that is aimed at re-politicising oil environments through imports from political geography, anthropology, and ecological economics. Far from the beaten track, in particular, the book draws inspiration from a political ecology approach to extractive industries and related conflicts. It also embraces progressive understandings of identity and power in light of critical theory. It is my hope that this syncretic endeavour may encourage a reengagement between IR and the matter of nature. As climate change is high on the international agenda, and there is an emerging widespread awareness on the need for global action to reduce greenhouse emissions, IR is increasingly confronted with environmental and energy issues. A re-appraisal of the politics of nature is therefore needed to uncover political agency in often blurred and decentred processes. As an epistemological project that proceeds through the
Introduction 5 deconstruction of techno-political knowledge on nature, political ecology is attentive to the taxonomies of winners and losers of natural resource use that would otherwise go unnoticed. The analysis of the extractive regime implanted in the Kurdish governorates gives an insight into the full breadth of relationships binding together resource ecologies, economic development, and governance. Although the idiographic approach used here refrains from ready-made generalisations, the same approach is suitable for application to other empirical cases. Whilst extractivism surely needs to be contextualised in time and space, extractive localities are embedded in global production chains underpinning the contemporary industrial paradigm. For this reason, the story told in these pages says something about the “glocal” dynamics that characterise the infrastructure of petro-capitalism everywhere. Just as importantly, this book is intended to help fill a gap in the literature on Kurdish Studies. Scant attention has been paid so far to the role energy issues have played in the re-imagination and re-territorialisation of Kurdish self-determination. This is notwithstanding the fact that the KRG has consolidated autonomy upon crude exports bypassing Iraq’s State Organisation for Marketing of Oil (SOMO). Opposed by Baghdad, the production sharing contracts (PSCs) negotiated unilaterally by Kurdish elites have become the battleground for federal disputes. After the independence referendum held on 25 September 2017, the tug of war took a violent turn with the military confrontation between ISF and Peshmerga two weeks later, with the latter ones forced to withdraw from Kirkuk and surrounding areas. However, relatively little academic research exists on the topic. To make the story even more complicated, the Syrian civil war and its spillovers have set into motion the Middle Eastern security architecture in such a way that Kurdish national mobilisations have had momentum both in Syria and in Iraq. The “Kurdification” of the geopolitical scenario is the mirror image of the withering of state legitimacy in the host countries. In the Syrian Rojava, the TEV-DEM movement led by the Kurdish Democratic Union Party (PYD) managed to fight off ISIS and simultaneously put into practice a model of radical democracy (democratic confederalism) inspired by the writings of PKK’s leader Abdullah Öcalan. This caused great concern in Turkey, which occupied militarily Afrin and Azaz to break the territorial continuity of Kurdish-held areas. Turkish troops entered northern Syria first in August 2016 and again in January 2018, whilst a two-year ceasefire with the PKK had already been broken in June 2015. Against this picture and the profound changes underway, the following chapters discuss the frantic re-making of political identities in Iraqi Kurdistan and how oil has played an important part in all of it. The book is based on multi-sited field research conducted between 2016 and 2017. Empirical material includes over 50 semi-structured and in-depth interviews, documentary analysis, and participatory observation. After three years of musings on the myriad of issues involved, these pages are an attempt at interpreting what oil has meant for Kurds in Iraq.
6 Introduction Structure of the book Chapter 1 calls into question the environmental determinism ingrained in mainstream IR theories on natural resource conflicts. Based on the epistemological rejection of binary distinctions that separate human and non-human domains, it presents the added value of a political ecology approach to environmental issues. This implies dropping the state- and Western-centric assumptions that abound in the literature on this topic, as along with entering an interdisciplinary dialogue. In line with well-established research, it is argued that conflicts in extractive areas need to be understood within the commodity chain, from local to global. At a theoretical level, the geography shaped by oil production is seen as a relational setting involved in fixing a collective identity in time and space. Exploring the nexus between identity formation and natural resource governance is precisely the original contribution laid down in the book. Given the case at hand, considerable attention is paid to resource nationalism. Besides setting the theoretical framework of the inquiry, the chapter also briefly explains how an interpretive epistemology was translated into a methodological roadmap. Chapter 2 is an introduction to the turbulent history of Kurds in Iraq and the strained relationships with Baghdad, from the fall of the Ottoman Empire and the foundation of the Kingdom in the aftermath of World War I to present days. Without losing sight of transnational aspects and the mythology of the Greater Kurdistan, the chapter reconstructs origins and evolution of Kurdish political self-identification, from diluted ethnic consciousness to the emergence of nationalist mobilisations. In line with modernist theories, Kurdish nationalism is explained as a reaction to the coercive assimilation into nation-state institutions. Concentrating on Iraqi Kurdistan, the construction of a Kurdish nation is explored through the lens of territorial identity and competition with Arab nationalisms. Against this background, the chapter details the transformation of the insurgency into a state-building project supported by the international community after the Gulf War. A detailed excursus on the birth of the petroleum industry in the country is also provided. In that respect, the ousting of Saddam Hussein marks a watershed. Once a symbol of oppression, oil becomes a symbol of redemption. On the heels of re-privatisation of the oil and gas sector across the whole country, the exploitation of hydrocarbons has offered Kurds an economic base to push forward in their quest for self-determination. The main part of the book consists of three empirical chapters. Each of them is devoted to a different level of analysis. Based on biographical interviews and secondary sources, Chapter 3 places the KRG oil nationalism within federal disputes. Since the Kurdish de facto state is in need of external recognition, independent oil deals have served as a fundamental carrier of legitimation. Resource sovereignty promises indeed to solve the problem of statelessness: energy diplomacy is deployed by ruling elites to reclaim the birthright to self-determination. At an ideological level, the exploitation of hydrocarbons goes deep into the re-imagining of the nation
Introduction 7 itself. The populist discourse underpinning the rhetoric of the “Dubai dream” is thoroughly examined and read in connection to the emotional attachment to the mountainous homeland upon which Kurds’ sense of belonging is defined. In more pragmatic terms, the analysis points out that the PSCs signed with international oil companies (IOCs) have contributed to further territorialise the KRG authority, even in disputed areas beyond de jure borders. Finally, the journey of a barrel of crude shows current opportunities and limitations of such strategy – from the disadvantageous landlocked position and related salience of the Khurmala-Fish Khabur pipeline to the role of international traders and key importing countries. Chapter 4 explores the symbiotic relationship between a dynastic political regime and the extractive economy inside the region. The oil rush after the end of Ba’athism offers an interesting angle to read the rivalry between the two ruling parties, the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK). Both are direct emanation of Barzani and Talabani families, respectively, which keep thriving thanks to extensive patronage and control over paramilitary forces in their areas of influence. The crony and violent traits of the KDP–PUK duopoly are discussed in the perspective of a neo-tribal and neo-patrimonial rule. It is argued that the lust of petrodollars was behind the establishment of the KRG. Through interviews with key informants, the manipulation of the revenue stream and the illicit involvement of party leaders in the oil business are pictured in detail, whilst competition on Kirkuk is taken as an example of inter- and intra-party fighting. Chapter 5 brings into light the wide-ranging consequences of petrolisation on Kurdish society. Based on a discussion on environmental imaginaries and petro-capitalism, extractivism is seen as a tool of social control. Two case studies illustrating the dispossession of rural communities in remote areas due to extractive projects are presented. It is argued that ruling elites have strengthened dependency relationships through the establishment of the oil economy with the purpose of weakening civil society and bankrolling one-party rule within each territorial constituency. The transnational capitalist relation between local enclaves and the global economy is explained as the most distinctive characteristic of the petroleum industry. Grassroots resistance against the state-corporate nexus draws attention to the emergence of alternative environmental imaginaries rejecting the commodification of nature. This suggests rethinking Kurdistan (and possibly the Middle East as a whole) as a cultural space crossed by multiple notions of development and sustainability. Furthermore, the ways the political community looks at nature are connected to alternative models of governance. This latter argument is elaborated with more theoretical breadth in the conclusions, which wraps up findings and discusses future research directions. Note 1 Also referred to as Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), or with the acronym Da’ish (which stands for “al-Dawla al-Islamiya fi
8 Introduction Iraq wa al-Sham,” literally Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant), the insurgent militia rose from the ashes of al-Qaida in Iraq and the convergence with former officials of the Iraqi Ba’athist regime. ISIS asserted itself as a proto-state over a contiguous area stretching between Syria and Iraq by taking control of informal economies and securing a stream of cash flow to financially support the proclamation of the so-called Islamic Caliphate in June 2014 with the seizure of Mosul. After the loss of the city in July 2017, ISIS lost momentum and reverted to low-intensity insurgency, which, at the time of writing, is still active. References British Petroleum. (2020). “Statistical Review of World Energy”. Fuccaro, N. (2013). “Introduction: Histories of Oil and Urban Modernity in the Middle East”. Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East, 33(1), 1–6. KRSO. (2018). “Demographic Survey, Kurdistan Region of Iraq”. Said Edward, W. (1993). Culture and Imperialism. Vintage Books. World Bank. (2018). “Iraq Economic Monitor: From War to Reconstruction and Economic Recovery: With a Special Focus on Energy Subsidy Reform”.
1 The nature of conflict On oil and violence An interpretive approach Can we really see the world in a grain of sand, as William Blake wrote in the opening line of Auguries of Innocence? Whatever the answer, in View With a Grain of Sand, Wislawa Szymborska replies that human experience cannot emancipate from the irreducible variety of perceptions through which the world is sensed and interpreted. We call it a grain of sand, but it calls itself neither grain nor sand. It does just fine, without a name, whether general, particular, permanent, passing, incorrect, or apt. Just like the view from a window looking out over a lake does not view itself, as another stanza of the poem goes, the representation of inanimate objects around us does not grasp their ontological status. Our knowledge of them is imperfect, incomplete, and inconsistent. This implies that a lasting consensus on what passes as “reality” is actually beyond human reach. Szymborska’s insight puts into question naturalistic theories of knowledge upon which a monocular vision of science is built and thus introduces some decisive questions on scientific authority that, in my view, have plagued the common conceptualisation of environmental issues in IR. Overall, most studies on the relationships between natural resources and violent conflicts are firmly rooted in the positivist canon. As I see it, this large body of research suffers from some serious shortcomings – starting with the Malthusian framing of nature as an apolitical entity limiting human action, while modernity is instead defined by the purposive production of nature in culturally competent and politically charged ways. The polysemy of nature recommends embracing a phenomenological approach, which ought to consider natural resources as social constructs embedded in the power relations surrounding the commodification of material substances. In so doing, the ostensible de-naturalisation of natural resources is in fact conducive to the DOI: 10.4324/9781003161103-2
10 The nature of conflict re-politicisation of the many ways these are framed, valued, and exploited. A critical reconsideration of the politics of nature allows putting resource conflicts into a richer perspective, thus avoiding the deterministic assumptions of mainstream theories on environmentally induced or driven conflicts (the wording is telling). The debate on the “oil curse” is a good example. The implications are not limited to the bounded space of academia. As the matter of nature lies at the confluence of knowledge production and policy prescriptions, it also goes to the heart of the politics of science itself. This consideration stems from certain dissatisfaction with the solipsistic boundaries of IR. The need for imports from other fields calls into question statute and boundaries of the discipline. Nevertheless, I should like to make it clear that such judgement is not for the sake of dispute nor reflects antagonism between schools of thoughts at war with each other. It rather comes from an effort of harmonising the themes that are central to this piece of research, and tells about the routes I took to solve these theoretical puzzles. My hope here is to indicate a productive terrain of convergence where the cross-fertilisation of ideas emerges as added value. Truth be told, this was quite a destabilising exercise since it runs counter to the increasing specialisation of labour within academia that we are accustomed to. As any researcher is well aware, scientific work is evaluated according to the standards set by each epistemic community (Haas, 1992). The compartmentalisation of knowledge leads to the formation of hyper-specific professional identities, but this comes at the expense of communication across fields of study. When dealing with multifaceted phenomena such as climate change that cannot be reduced to a single method of inquiry, theoretical pluralism is instead required in order not to find ourselves “endlessly trapped in narrow, discipline-specific fields of inquiry, reinventing the wheel again and again” (Bourbeau, 2015: 4). From this perspective, this chapter first lays down a critique of the spatial ontology underpinning IR and then takes its cue from political ecology to offer a more nuanced approach to resource-related conflicts. The point of arrival is the conceptualisation of oil environments as relational settings within which political identities are called forth and re-negotiated. I take a long road to support this argument. This paragraph, in particular, sets out the epistemological foundations of the work, which followed an interpretive logic of inquiry focusing on inter-subjective meanings, or rather on “how meanings are embodied in the language and actions of social actors” (Schwandt, 1994: 222). Interpretivism fundamentally deviates from the positivist presuppositions that undergird mainstream studies in search of law-like universal generalisations. The interpretive bent is rooted in hermeneutic phenomenology and reflexive positioning in line with a time-honoured epistemological tradition, which is however still at the margins of IR.1 In my view, interpretivism provides the tools for grounding a context-sensitive analysis of meaning-making processes, without falling into either the barren empiricism running through much positivist research or the postmodern radical dismantling of every claim to knowledge.
The nature of conflict 11 Having laid out these preliminary considerations, what does it mean to embrace an interpretive approach in the first place? According to Weeden, despite the whole variety of voices within the so-called “interpretive turn,” interpretivists agree on four features at least: i) the conception of knowledge “as historically situated and entangled in power relationships”; ii) the baseline idea that the world we live in is socially made; iii) the rejection of rationalchoice and behaviourist theories of social action; and (iv) a semiotic practical approach centred on symbolic systems (Wedeen, 2009: 80–81). All these lines converge towards a critical viewpoint that overturns the usual dialectic between subjectivity and objectivity, at least according to how positivism propounds it. The first two points in particular are worthy of note here. Social constructionism as famously introduced by Berger and Luckmann’s sociology of knowledge, which elaborates on Schuzt’s social phenomenology, emphasises “the empirical variety of knowledge in human societies” and draws attention to “the processes by which any body of knowledge comes to be socially established as ‘reality’” (Berger & Luckmann, 1991: 15). According to this formulation, the heart of the matter concerns the knowability (i.e. epistemology) of social world more than its reality status (i.e. ontology): to be more precise, it deals with the perception of what exists outside the knowing subject, how that perception is manufactured in manifold ways, and ultimately what are the appropriate means to represent those ways. Whereas the Durkheim-inspired classic sociology pretends to study given and observable facts (that is to say, self-evident and independent from human mind) waiting to be explained, social constructionism claims that the “theoretically constituted entities” – to borrow from Hawkesworth (1988) – around us cannot be accessed prior to any cultural mediation. This crucial difference breaks down the Cartesian duality between subject and object, which is central to the notion of knowledge as accurate representation. Positivism rests on the belief that if the object is observed scientifically, representation equals replication. Then, the whole issue of objectivity boils down to a matter of methods and how to employ them properly. However, if we accept instead that cognition cannot be abstracted from the conscious and lived experience of the reality “out there,” then there is the need, as Richard Rorty suggests, to eliminate the “contrast between contemplation and action, between representing the world and coping with it” (Rorty, 2009: 11). Thinking along these lines, any claim of depicting the world “as it really is” is a mystification given that an external vantage point is unreachable to human sight. In fact, the world comes into view through cultural and social filters that make it intelligible, and every form of knowledge is necessarily incomplete insofar as it is bounded in time and space. This epistemological angle owes much to Heidegger’s phenomenological erosion of Western philosophy, which postulates the ontological accordance between observation and representation. Phenomenology maintains, indeed, that a theory-free observation of real-world objects is not possible since the observer cannot place themselves out of their own categories of representation. Taking an external view from an Archimedean point wherein the knowing
12 The nature of conflict subject can see the whole order of things while being detached from it, “keeping the eye steadily fixed upon the facts of nature and so receiving the images simply as they are” (Bacon, 1620), as positivism purports to do, would be therefore no more than “an illusion, a God trick” (Haraway, 1988: 582).2 Put differently, positivism does not problematise the very conditions of knowledge, reducing social reality to semantics of variables, mathematical modelling, and laboratory-like rules of conduct – showing a fascination for certainty that from the side of social scientists reflects the desire to compete with so-called hard sciences on equal footing. Quite the contrary, post-positivist research is by definition anti-foundational, meaning that no philosophical principle or belief is thought to ground legitimate claims to knowledge. Rorty, in particular, developed the historicist legacy of Wittgenstein, Heidegger, and Dewey into a paramount critique of foundationalism, stressing that “the foundations of knowledge or morality or language or society may be simply apologetics, attempts to eternalise a certain contemporary language-game, social practice, or self-image” (Rorty, 2009: 9–10). Consequently, there are no independent and unbiased criteria to assess whether a particular representation of reality is objective or subjective, with this same distinction resting upon a contestable judgement. Even science, Rorty points out, cannot be considered “the mirror of nature.” Therefore, the ways in which knowledge claims are accepted as accurate are value-laden in a twofold sense: they are situated in the specific context in which they arise and also part of the “general politics of truth” structuring and disciplining society (Foucault, 1980: 131–132). Seen in this light, what is considered to be a true statement is not only a social construction that acquires gravity in the social world through a process of objectification but also a manifestation of power. In the Foucauldian deconstruction of modern political theory, power is impersonal and diffused in society, instead of being possessed and located in the sovereign authority as contractualism maintains. The “battle around truth” is then understood as a power field in which dominant apparatuses organise the social body through the institutionalisation of multiple strategies of control. What is relevant for this epistemological excursus is that truth is not a universal and extra-linguistic account of reality to be discovered but a historically contingent representation of reality in “which the true and the false are separated and specific effects of power attached to the true” (Foucault, 1980: 132). Hence, discourses are not to be understood as the ever-shifting mirror of the bourgeoisie, to put it in Marxist terms, but as the necessary epistemic basis for grounding shared knowledge – be it variously typified into norms, institutions, or mechanisms of exclusion. Interpretivism is born out of the encounter between these various philosophical underpinnings (social constructionism, phenomenology, anti-foundationalism, and post-structuralism) that I have briefly touched upon in these pages, without doing enough justice to their complex trajectories. Since the path-breaking anthropological work of Clifford Geertz (1973), the interpretive turn has spread across social sciences (for a summary, see Rainbow & Sullivan, 1979; see
The nature of conflict 13 also Denzin, 2008), moving qualitative research towards the purpose of understanding context-dependent meaning “rather than seeking generalized meaning abstracted from particular contexts” (Yanow & Schwartz-Shea, 2012: 23). In this perspective, getting into the dynamics of social action in the Weberian sense3 is interpretation all the way down; an “attempt to clarify the foundation of knowledge in everyday life, to wit, the objectivations of subjective processes by which the intersubjective common-sense world is constructed” (Berger & Luckmann, 1991; original emphasis). Of borders and orders The state of the art in IR is quite poor concerning environmental issues, broadly intended. These were brought under the light cone only after the end of the Cold War, at a time where IR scholars were busy with the unorthodox threats ensuing from the end of the bipolar confrontation. It might be said that the natural environment was securitised, as if the spectre of “resource wars” (Klare, 2001) in the anarchic peripheries of the globe would replace the peril of a nuclear war. Kaplan (1994) dubbed it “the coming anarchy.” That security language influenced the way the environment was incorporated in the research agenda. Attention was paid to the role of environmental stressors such as water scarcity in contexts of organised violence.4 As will be shown later, that debate has faded away over time because of some dead-ends. In my view, those have a great deal to do with the spatial ontology ingrained in the discipline. It is interesting to note that all the “turns” through which IR has evolved over time (from the constructivist turn to more practice-oriented approaches, up to the most recent aesthetic turn) are somewhat the product of theoretical imports from tangential fields in social sciences. The opposite does not hold true though, meaning that the innovative capacity of IR has been very limited in comparison. For a discipline “concerned with the delineation of borders, the inscription of dangers and the mobilisation of defences” (Walker, 1993: 15), this arguably results from the in-built temptation of determining the horizons of political imagination through the reification of historically specific spatiotemporal understandings, with the principle of state sovereignty on top. The quite problematic corollary is that IR theories may be read as part and parcel of the discursive framing of the modern state and “a constitutive practice whose effects can be traced in the remotest interstices of everyday life” (ibidem: 6), rather than plausible explanations of world politics. Beier agrees that IR tends to internalise “the restrictive hegemonic concepts, categories, and commitments of the dominating society” (2005: 215). With the term “hegemonologue,” he highlighted the universalist and selective pretensions of the Western cosmology, whose “disciplinary ears” remain attached to the constant reproduction of the colonial encounter with the rest of the world and are thus inattentive to difference, if not in derogatory or exclusionary terms. The critique of a paternalistic knowledge system that replicates the colonial logic of erasure or enclosure of other forms of knowledge is not isolated.
14 The nature of conflict Inayatullah and Blaney (2004) dedicated a widely-cited book to it, according to which the original trauma with cultural differences continues to haunt main tendencies in IR since the modern intellectual origins of the field align it “with a legacy of colonialism and religious cleansing” (ibidem: vii). Stuck into a Westphalian narrative, the Western worldview is hence pervaded by notions of stability, safety, and order that conceive difference as “a dangerous aberration” from the norm. The problem of difference remains: The bounded political community constructs (and is constructed by) the other. Beyond its boundaries, the other lurks as a perpetual threat in the form of other states, antagonistic groups, imported goods, and alien ideas. The other also appears as difference within, vitiating the presumed but rarely, if ever, achieved “sameness”. The other within the boundaries of the political community is “managed” by some combination of hierarchy, eradication, assimilation or expulsion, and tolerance. The external other is left to suffer or prosper to its own means (though its poverty or prosperity may be experienced as a threat); it is interdicted at border crossings, balanced and deterred; it is defeated militarily and colonized if need be. (ibidem: 6) Contrary to some expectations, in a globalised and interconnected world characterised by the circulation of goods, capitals, people, and information, the divisiveness of political forms has not disappeared into imperial uniformity or been superseded by a cosmopolitan order. Despite global expansion of modes of power (such as petro-capitalism, which is one of the concepts hinted in the empirical analysis), differences have been accentuated even more by the emergence of a polycentric scenario by virtue of the loss of unitary strategic interdependencies, regional fragmentation, and discrepancy between military, institutional, economic, and social spaces (Colombo, 2010). Against this background, realist and liberal prevalent traditions appear ill-equipped to make sense of alternative political imaginings from the “Westphalian commonsense” (Grovogui, 2002). According to critical theorists, this occurs because of unreflective background assumptions and a constitutive theory– practice relationship that idealise a contingent representation of world politics. On this basis, post-modern and post-structural insights have gradually deconstructed key concepts such as sovereignty, nation-state, security, and the binary oppositions domestic-international/order-disorder (see Booth, 1991a, 1991b, 1995; Campbell, 1992; Cox, 1981; Linklater, 1998; Krause & Williams, 2002; Walker, 1993; Jones, 1999). This critical injection has emancipated a broad range of dissenting voices encompassing postcolonial, subaltern, and feminist research agendas. What does it mean to be critical, anyway? As a manifesto, since the seminal work of those gathered around the Institute of Social Research in Frankfurt in the first-half of the 1930s, critical scholars have refuted positivism in epistemological and methodological terms: knowledge is neither objective nor
The nature of conflict 15 impartial, but embedded in historical development, hence, the call for casting a critical eye on “what is prevalent” (Horkheimer, 1972) and de-essentialising the abstractions that represent the dominant political order. In other words, critical research strives to make visible the invisible through the hermeneutical reconstruction of meanings-in-context (Ciutǎ, 2009). Marxist in origin, this line of thinking is also normative in kind as it is aimed at enabling emancipatory changes through the immanent analysis of the contradictions lying at the heart of society. If “theory is always for someone and for some purpose” (Cox, 1981), critical theory subscribes to a philosophy of liberation, which is not limited to the description of the world as it is, but seeks to actively improve it by freeing space for less exploitative relations. A critical approach debunks the axiom of the state as the exclusive actor, referent object, and site of politics. State-centrism is regarded indeed as empirically unhelpful, a justification of the status quo, and a source of structural violence (Peoples & Vaughan-Williams, 2014). More generally, a critical viewpoint takes exception from the Schmittian logics of absolute antithesis that corresponds to the spatial ontology mentioned before: whilst inside the state is the realm of law and authority, outside its boundaries is the realm of anarchy and violence (Walker, 1993). Under the realist paradigm, this fear of allegedly “empty” and “ungoverned” spaces paves the way for a self-fulfilling prophecy. As Agnew and Corbridge observe, this spatial delineation “has led to the definition of political identity in exclusively state-territorial terms,” thus obscuring processes operating at different scales and dismissing the “remarkable flowering of alternative political identities of a sectoral, ethnic and regional character” (Agnew & Crobridge, 2002: 86). Another point worth highlighting is that IR theories are Western-centric (or, more specifically, Anglo-American-centric) for the most part. This calls for a problematisation on the sites of knowledge production and the hegemony – in Gramscian terms – of what from time to time has been designated, hastily but effectively, as the Global North. Among others,5 Acharya and Buzan (2009) noted that the Western dominance in IR is manifested through Eurocentric assumptions. After all, the intellectual grandfathers of the discipline all belong to the Western political philosophy and historiography – from Thucydides, Machiavelli, Hobbes, Kant, and Clausewitz all the way up to Foucault and Bourdieu. Despite contributions from non-Western scholars, these roots remain the canon through which the baseline worldview is articulated. As is the case for the somewhat arbitrary difference between languages and dialects, the reason for such hegemony to persist is the army behind it, to put it bluntly. In other words, the universalist representations of the global order still embody the animus dominandi of Western powers, who have proved successful in retaining primacy despite “the rise of the rest” (Zakaria, 2008). Higher education flows from the Global South towards prestigious universities and think tanks in the North, for instance, is one of the mechanisms of incorporation that have slowed down the emergence of a non-Western IR.6
16 The nature of conflict The “postcolonial moment” was a reaction to Western-centrism (Barkawi & Laffey, 2006; Acharya & Buzan, 2009). From Fanon and Said onwards, attention has been given to how ideologies of progress and civilisation were based on the attribution of opposite features to the non-West (e.g. barbarism and backwardness). As a result, the “other” is simultaneously objectified and disempowered. In reflexive terms, postcolonialism interrogates the role IR theories play in the normalisation of such hierarchy of values. A close look at the imaginative geographies of other cultures in the “colonial present” we live in reveals that a colonial praxis has never waned, as the recent chronicles of war and subjugation in Afghanistan, Palestine, and Iraq violently remind (Gregory, 2004). International action under the herald of the “global war of terror” after the 9/11, as well as the discourse on “rogue states,” bears witness to the translation of the powerknowledge nexus into ad hoc spatial metaphors tailored for the US military and counterterrorism strategies. It is no surprise that the eye-catching metaphors of “the lonely superpower” (Huntington, 1999), “the end of history” (Fukuyama, 1989), “the unipolar moment” (Krauthammer, 1990), or the “clash of civilizations” (Huntington, 1996), which set the terms of debate on the evolution of international politics during the 1990s, offered short-sighted predictions at a time of “temporal accelerations” and “territorial fluidities” (Walker, 1993: 2). When the Berlin Wall came down, all that was solid apparently melted into thin air, and the discipline bore the brunt of a static spatial imagination. The limits of political imagination Rather, what is needed is a geographical imagination that takes places seriously as the settings for human life and tries to understand world politics in terms of its impacts on the material welfare and identities of people in different places. (John Agnew, quoted in Dalby, 2002: 101) Geography is anything but separate from politics. Rather, political imagination occupies space through its representation. It should be remembered that geography was born at the service of statecraft as “a necessary instrument of spatial analysis in the toolbox of security practices” (Le Billon in Bourbeau, 2015: 63): locating threats, policing borders, or deploying force illustrate the entanglement of geographic praxis with military apparatuses and devices of surveillance. Classic geopolitical formulations such as Mackinder’s heartland theory and Kennan’s containment strategy add strength to the argument. In the words of Ó Tuathail and Agnew, “geography is never a natural, non-discursive phenomenon which is separate from ideology and outside politics; rather, geography as a discourse is a form of power/knowledge itself ” (1992: 192). In this light, geography does not strive for the mimesis of reality but concurs to its partition. Evidence of this process is the history of colonial expansion, as postcolonial geographers have pointed out in the footsteps of Said (Sidaway, 2000; Blunt & McEwan, 2002; Robinson, 2003).
The nature of conflict 17 Whilst colonialism as historical phase ended, colonialism as practice of domination is not consigned to history. This stands out when considering the endurance of “Middle East” as a geopolitical notion. Coined by the British Colonial Office during the 19th century, the vast area designated as such – encompassing Mashreq, Anatolia, Iran and being delimited northeast by the Caucasus and southwest by Egypt – was halfway London and overseas possessions in the Indian Ocean. Hence, it was a notion of strategic projection that conformed to the British Empire. Although Western Asia would be a more appropriate label, the term has continued to be used even after the end of formal colonial dependencies and is now socialised as a category of belonging by the same people living in the area. All regions are geopolitical inventions suited to the interests of hegemonic powers.7 In the case of the Middle East, it is also clear that geopolitical discourses operate as epistemological enforcers. As a quick overview of IR textbooks and foreign policy blueprints would confirm, security in the region is defined from an outsider’s perspective “in terms of the uninterrupted flow of oil at a ‘reasonable’ price to ‘Western’ markets, the cessation of the Arab – Israeli conflict, and the prevention of the emergence of a regional hegemon” (Bilgin, 2008: 99). This formulation has set the ground for the militarisation of the region and the recurrent intervention of offshore balancers. It was also enriched with orientalist environmental narratives inasmuch as the Middle East is portrayed as naturally prone to ecological degradation,8 and this has served as a pretext for a paternalistic intervention “to improve, restore, normalize, or repair” a supposedly fragile and neglected environment in need of care (Davis, 2011: 4). It is hard not to see that such imaginary conveys a message of cultural subordination. Kurds suffered the same fate. Culcasi (2010) shows that the cartographical representations of Kurdistan in US newspapers from 1945 to 2002 are imbued with geopolitical and orientalist notions: Kurds were portrayed as tribal rebels looking for Soviet support during the Cold War and then backward victims of Ba’athist persecutions during the Gulf War. The disjuncture between authority and territoriality that characterised stateformation processes in the Middle East during the decolonisation phase is perhaps the most vivid illustration of the “irredeemable plurality of space and the multiplicity of possible political constructions of space” (Dalby & Ó Tuathail: 2). As Del Sarto observes, “[considering] that the Westphalian state model never fully corresponded to reality – not even in Europe, where it originated – its conceptual strength for analysing past and current developments in the Middle East remains questionable” (Del Sarto, 2017: 770). The “exceptionalism” of the region9 is predicated precisely upon the mismatch with the one-fits-all benchmark of liberal democracy. Anything that falls short of that threshold is accounted as vulnerable, ungoverned, and conflict-prone. The discourse on fragile and failed states is a case in point, which shows that the Western concept of sovereignty entails “an ethos of hierarchy and privilege, on the one hand, and corresponding mechanisms of subordination and discrimination, on the other” (Grovogui, 2002: 323). It is in this sense that Ferguson has the wellfounded suspicion that the imagining of Africa – with all its emphasis on lacks,
18 The nature of conflict failures, problems, and crises that somehow recycles old clichés of savagery – insists much on what the many African realities are not, thus “in negative relation to normative standards that are external to them” (2006: 7–10). The way political theory has traditionally looked at borders “as passive territorial markers” (Diener & Hagen, 2010: 9) is a corollary. Whereas imperial and feudal authority faded into vaguely defined frontier zones, modern borders instead are exact territorial demarcations associated with the rise of nationstates. Though performing different functions, borders preserve intact the same military dimension of the frontier by acting as the defensive bulwark against a hostile, alien, and anarchic outside. Without a border, there cannot be a state: the exercise of sovereignty (i.e. the legitimate power) and the right to citizenship (i.e. the political subjectivity) within the territory it delimits are unthinkable otherwise for political theory. Although a borderless world is a misnomer (Newman & Paasi, 1998), static and neat borders exist only on a canvas. In fact, borders are crossed, blurred, and transcended in everyday reality. IR scholars tend to lose memory of the artificiality of all borders.10 It often would not be possible for the modern political imaginary to get caught in the “territorial trap” of sovereignty (Agnew, 1994). The crux of the matter is to acknowledge that borders are contentious by definition (Del Sarto, 2017), being “tied up with the politics of identity” (Newman, 2003: 124). Agnew suggests to historicise the territorial state and decouple political identities from the loci of sovereignty. If identity formation needs a territorial base on which to take roots, an anti-essentialist theoretical framework is required not to miss non-statist configurations of power and rule. From transnational non-state actors to global capital flows, a broad range of phenomena are poorly intelligible through the lens of mainstream theories. Both the Kurdish question and the oil value chain, meaning the two poles discussed in this book, demonstrate this argument in a very clear and practical way. Besides those already cited, the works by Ed Soya, David Harvey, Doreen Massey, Nigel Thrift, and many other critical geographers offer grounds for a beneficial reconceptualisation of key themes of inquiry, most notably the spatial texture of contemporary modes of domination and practices of resistance. If we accept that the epoch we live in is the epoch of space (Foucault, 1971), this will sound all the more necessary. Blessings and curses “The problem is that the good Lord didn’t see fit to put oil and gas reserves where there are democratic governments,” Dick Cheney said at an energy conference in 1996. At the time, Cheney was the top executive of Halliburton, one of the world’s largest service companies in the industry. He later became the powerful US Vice-President under George W. Bush. During Operation Iraqi, Halliburton was awarded with a billionaire no-bid contract to restore and operate the many oil wells set on fire during the military intervention. The portrait of the American superpower as a “garrison state” (Lasswell, 1941) whose foreign policy objectives are steered by a bulky industrial-military
The nature of conflict 19 complex is commonplace (see early works by Mills, 1956; Lens, 1970; Melman, 1970). Energy is frequently added to the equation. Cheney’s statement brings to mind the rationale behind the two wars fought in Iraq beyond the official justifications that mixed up stocks of weapons of mass destruction, linkages with international terrorism, and the urgency of implanting democracy. IR theories generally jump to linear explanations framing oil conflicts as geopolitical scrambles for valuable resources. The limitations of this understanding are discussed in the following pages. The overview is by no means exhaustive but shows some well-known lines of research and, most importantly, justifies the choice of an alternative approach. As mentioned, environmental issues entered the debate on new security threats after the Cold War (Barnett, 2001, 2003; Dalby, 2002; Buzan & Hansen, 2009). Two contrasting viewpoints emerged: a “neo-Malthusian” resource-pessimistic model, which connected resource scarcity to the onset of conflict, and a resource-optimistic “Cornucopian” response, which pointed out adaptive strategies to cope with short-term scarcities through multilateral trade and technological innovations (Gleditsch, 2003). Others picked resource abundance as an independent variable to demonstrate that resource-rich countries are more prone to civil strife. Collier and Hoffler, in particular, argued that “the extent of primary commodity exports is the strongest single influence on the risk of conflict,” especially because in the context of civil wars, resource-dependent economies give rebel movements easy access to a stream of cash (Collier & Hoeffler, 1998, 2004). Accordingly, greed is considered to be a more compelling conflict factor than social grievances. The greed vs. grievance dichotomy has received attention by several scholars (De Soysa, 2000, 2002; De Soysa & Neumayer, 2007; Fearon, 2005; Fearon & Laitin, 2003; Humphreys, 2005; Le Billon, 2001, 2008; Mildner, Lauster, & Wodni, 2011; Ross, 2004). Nowadays these perspectives are somewhat out of date given that little empirical evidence was found to support direct causal relationships (Gleditsch, 2012; Selby, 2014). Rather, “the effect of environmental changes on violent conflict appears to be contingent on a set of intervening economic and political factors that determine adaptation capacity” (Bernauer, Böhmelt, & Koubi, 2012). This is now well accepted in the literature (Barnett & Adger, 2007; Raleigh & Urdal, 2007; Gleick, 2014), but the black box of intervening factors has remained unspecified. After all, correlations do not constitute explanations by themselves, and even the most sophisticated inferential model is inevitably reductionist. Hence, saying that “oil predicts civil war risk” (Fearon, 2005: 483) is actually an empty statement, which does not explain anything nor foresees the future. Selby levelled a thorough criticism at the research agenda (quantitative in methods, positivist in epistemology) dominating the study of environmental conflicts. He highlighted that discretionary coding and causal assumptions make findings “more [the] product of choice, judgment and artifice, than of actual causal relations between nature and society” (2014: 12). In the same vein, Arezki and Brukner commented that “most of the literature has been either anecdotal
20 The nature of conflict or is plagued by endogeneity biases related to difficult-to-measure (and often unobservable) cross-country differences in institutional arrangements, culture, tastes, or other deep historical factors that are often neglected in cross-country analysis” (2011: 3). As a result, recent works have gradually shifted from overarching theories towards more contextualised approaches. Nevertheless, the debate on oil and violence continues to be dominated by the resource curse thesis, which dates back to the 1980s and has gained formidable influence in policy circles since then. According to its formulation, countries that depend on oil exports are more likely to suffer from economic stagnation (Auty, 2001; Leite & Weidmann, 1999; J. D. Sachs & Warner, 2001), authoritarianism (Ross, 2001; Wantchekon, 2002), and civil war (Collier & Hoeffler, 1998, 2004; Fearon, 2005; Ulfelder, 2007). Therefore, what might be seen at first sight as a blessing (oil abundance) turns out to be a curse, which affects prospects of democratisation and development. Otherwise known as the paradox of plenty, the theory elaborates on the rentier-state paradigm, introduced by Mahdavy (1970) and later systematised by Beblawi and Luciani (1987). A rentier state derives the largest share of GDP from the export of a single commodity. Contrary to production states subtracting resources from society through taxation and re-allocating them for the common interest, rentier states are instead autonomous from society: “in oil-exporting countries the state is paid by the oil rent, which accrues to it directly from the rest of the world, and supports society through the distribution or allocation of this rent, through various mechanisms of rent circulation” (Luciani, 2005: 91). Being revenue distribution the primary function of the state, the fiscal social contract binding citizens to elected governments pales into insignificance: taxation is no longer the traditional source of political legitimacy, while generosity replaces accountability as the essential virtue of the ruler. In the absence of democratic check and balances, ruling elites are encouraged to earmark welfare subsidies and bolster up a position of primacy at the expense of political participation. The rentier state “[asserts] its legitimacy by reference to a constituency that is larger than its own population – Islamic in Saudi Arabia or the Islamic Republic of Iran; Arab in Iraq and Libya; technocratic in Dubai” (ibidem: 97). As a consequence, oil dependency hinders democracy (Ross, 2001) by enabling repressive autocracies to remain in power. Among other things, elites would have no interest in reforming the economy as long as they can extract surplus from oil production given that investments in other sectors are less remunerative and less controllable, and thus politically risky. With reference to oil-producing countries in the Middle East and North Africa, the argument goes on: the longevity of autocracies, economic underperformance, and instability are all wired to oil, simply put. After all, five Arab petro-states across the Persian Gulf and the Arabian Peninsula (Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Kuwait, Qatar, and Yemen) hold together more than one-third of total oil proven reserves globally, and as a matter of fact the stream of oil has bankrolled draconian policies and corrupted patronage. From a broader perspective, however, many oil-producing countries were not doomed to go through the
The nature of conflict 21 perverse effects of the curse. This is true for both mature democracies (such as the US, Canada, Norway, and UK) and countries in transition (Mexico and Indonesia). The many exceptions to the rule indicate that variation is too large to generalise a curse effect, Middle East included. If one looks at the UNDP Human Development Index, for instance, it can be noticed that all the Gulf monarchies have actually improved more than resource-poor neighbours in terms of literacy rates, life expectancy, and other indicators (Rutledge, 2014). Luciani himself admitted that recent evolutions in the Persian Gulf run counter to the thesis: “several rentier states engaged in the road towards wider political participation, while the non-rentier states have further barricaded themselves behind their security apparatuses” (2005: 94). Likewise, Ross (2001) commented that the original theory was too general to be analytically valid, suffering from a “bad case of conceptual overstretch” that fundamentally derives from the absence of variation on the dependent variable and the lack of specification in falsifiable terms of the causal chains. This has suggested a reconsideration of rentierism and the attendant curse thesis (Springborg, 2013). Should we blame oil for the lack of democracy? There is actually no reason to believe that corruption in Iraq, for instance, goes beyond the political agency of the elites themselves, as much as “oil did not produce the regime of Saddam Hussein nor the predatory state of Iraq, nor the tragic conflicts currently being witnessed between its constituent racial and religious communities” (Rutledge, 2014: 17). Otherwise, that would mean to accord to a material substance the immaterial (magical) quality to do evil (Weszkalnys, 2013). Why then, despite glaring evidence of the contrary, does the oil curse still retain such an influence in the contemporary discourse? Cyril Obi contends that “the curse is a political and economic construct, a product of a particular constellation of extractive transnational social forces, histories and hegemonic power relations built upon the commoditization of oil for the global market” (2010: 489). The Nigerian case, with which Obi is most familiar with, shows indeed that IOCs have fanned the flames of local contentious dynamics (for instance, by making payments to armed groups and bribing government officials). In this sense, the curse is false consciousness about the actual factors that are conducive to a rent-seeking environment. The “smoke and mirrors” of such technocratic narrative prevents from taking those into account. Michael Watts gets to the heart of the matter: Much of the resource curse analysis runs the risk of imputing enormous powers to oil (without grasping its specificity), conflating petroleum’s purported Olympian powers with pre-existing political dynamics, and . . . misidentifying a predation-proneness for what is in fact the dynamics of state and corporate enclave politics. What is striking in so much of what passes as “resource politics” is the total invisibility of both transnational oil companies (which typically work in joint ventures with the state) and the specific forms of rule associated with petro-capitalism. (Watts, 2003: 5091)
22 The nature of conflict Obi adds that the labelling of African wars after natural resources (such as diamond, or timber, or cocoa), coupled with the security discourse on weak states, is an expedient to feed an idea of connatural instability. The environmental determinism, thus reproduced as self-evident truth in the policy prescriptions of global financial institutions, guarantees the principle of a competitive and open oil market. It is not by accident that the curse theory made its appearance when the nationalisation of energy assets by newly independent countries was feared by Western powers. Rutledge (2014) reminds that the call for reopening the resource frontiers was laid out in the policies of the US National Petroleum Council during the years of the Reagan presidency. In this light, spreading the concern for an inescapable sideslip into underdevelopment and authoritarianism was meant to oppose state-owned exploitation in developing countries and push the latter to accept marketisation of subsoil endowments. According to this interpretation, the very declaration of a looming curse served the purpose of liberalising the energy market and encouraging oil-rich countries to relinquish a “proprietorial” role. Since openness and reliability of fossil fuel sources are pillars of the liberal geopolitical order, the argument cannot be discredited on the spot. In any case, the critique shines the spotlight on some peculiar features of global oil production that the curse theory instead fails to capture: multiple core-periphery dependencies, the infrastructure of material and financial flows, and the head-to-head between liberal norms and resource nationalism. All these elements are invisible to raw data, and during fieldwork emerged as the effective context of resource politics. All the more reason to approach the nexus between environment and conflict from radically different assumptions. The matter of nature Any theory of knowledge revolves around making sense of nature. The modern conceptions of science all assume the existence of an external and independent non-human world that is knowable to human intellect. Scientific knowledge is gained through observable, replicable, and impersonal methods representing reality as it is. However, the epistemological line that separates nature from culture (and by extension the environment from society, and non-humans from humans) is actually blurred and contingent on practices of signification. Michael Watts observes that “the two words [nature and culture] are often assumed to be opposites – the material and the ideal, the biological and the semiotic, a realm of law and a world of contingency – but on closer examination their polarities are tangled, difficult and intractable” (2005: 142). The polysemy of both concepts has kept geographers, sociologists, anthropologists, and philosophers of science busy in open debates on placing nature within culture, and vice versa. As geographers in particular have pointed out, “nature” can be associated with multiple (and even contradictory) meanings (Fitzsimmons, 1989; Soper, 1995; Cronon, 1996; Eder, 1996; Phillips & Mighall, 2000). By nature we may refer to i) “intrinsic nature” – the essential quality or defining property of something;
The nature of conflict 23 ii) “external nature” – the non-human physical environment separated from human society; iii) “universal nature” – the entire living world, human beings, and non-human entities included; and iv) “super-ordinate nature” – the primal, immanent force or organising principle “animating living phenomena and operating in or on inanimate phenomena” (cf. Castree, 2014: 9–10). Based on the widely cited Raymond William’s classification (1980), this semantics can be found in the giusnaturalistic tradition ingrained in Western political theory. In the Leviathan, for instance, Hobbes uses the adjective “natural” in all the denotations mentioned earlier to describe the innate passions of men, the state of anarchy and misery preceding the social covenant, and the fundamental laws behind all human and non-human phenomena. Whether subjugated to human mastery or setting absolute limits to the political community, nature is understood as physical environment and thus portrayed in terms of ontological separation with society. According to this prevalent view, to speak of nature, as Kate Soper puts it, is to speak of those material structures and processes that are independent of human activity (in the sense that they are not a humanly created product), and whose forces and causal powers are the necessary condition of every human practice, and determine the possible forms it can take. (1995: 132–133) From this perspective, culture is defined by difference – as “nature’s other” (Watts, 2005): where one ends, the other begins. Against this position, critical geographers have questioned the very existence of a cognitive (and spatial) distinction between human and non-human domains. Among them, Margaret Fitzsimmons argues that the common sense of nature is actually grounded in the historical and geographical transition from feudal relationships to capitalism, which marked “the division of labour of those who work with nature from those (scientists) who work on Nature” (1989: 108). As a consequence of urbanisation and industrialisation processes, “nature [became] one pole of all the great Enlightenment antinomies” (ibidem: 108). Through the deconstruction of the nature-culture divide, Fitzsimmons stresses that situated social practices sustained a certain geographical imagination, which in turn led to the abstraction of nature as external and prehuman. In her view, the creation of urban spaces and the differentiation of labour within the industry carved an epistemological space through which the human/non-human separation was filtered anew. In the same vein, though from a more pronounced Marxist framework, David Harvey (1985) maintains that nature is nothing more than a “concrete abstraction.” If one embraces an anti-foundational line of thinking, both perception and experience of the natural world are discursively mediated. Put differently, “nature cannot pre-exist its construction” (Haraway, 1992: 296). From this premise, interpretive sociological approaches have explored the discursive construction of nature through semiotic practices (Eder, 1996; Hannigan,
24 The nature of conflict 2014). The thesis of the social construction of nature includes a wide array of positions, encompassing both middle ground and radical construction talks (Demeritt, 2002), but all of them share the programmatic denaturalisation of “ideologies of nature” (Smith, 1984). This does not mean to deny the ontological status of materiality. It rather underlines that understandings of nature are stabilised as object of knowledge by means of discursive practices (Braun & Wainwright, 2001). According to Macnaghten and Urry (1998), these embedded social practices are discursively ordered, embodied, spaced, and timed, involving models of human activity, agency, and trust. The implications are twofold. Firstly, representations of nature cannot be outside culture given that the cognitive process of making reality intelligible rests upon some cultural background providing inter-subjectively shared meanings. Secondly, the idea of socially constituted discourses of nature challenges the modern conception of science, which is predicated on an assumption of logical consistency between knowledge and existence. As Demeritt points out, if “nature cannot provide an independent foundation against which to test our knowledge claims . . . the upshot is that scientifically valid knowledge must inevitably be partial, in the sense both of incomplete and biased” (2001: 26). For this reason, Braun and Wainwright warn that attention should be paid on “what cognitive failures are necessary” to make the nature-society demarcation a widely accepted point of departure (2001: 50). In so doing, the discursive practices involved in the stabilisation of meaning would be noticeable, thus uncovering the power-laden underpinnings of environmental knowledge. To make an example, the concept of “wilderness” shows that the idea of nature may well carry images of power. The representation of a pristine and gendered nature to be tamed and mastered was long instrumental to legitimise Western domination over the rest of the world, whereby the definition of backward, irrational, uncivilised native populations created the rationale of the “white man’s burden” (cf. Peet, 1985; Cronon, 1996; Howitt, 2001). This colonial heritage is not a relic of the past: the vision of wild, tropical, untouched areas at the margin of human progress still pervades discourses of international cooperation and humanitarian aid, thus reinforcing a core-periphery power structure. Space does not allow for a review of all the different streams and currents in the vast amount of literature on the topic. To make a long story short, the weakness of constructivist accounts is “the cancellation of the natural by the social” to borrow from Judith Butler (1996: 5). In other words, an equal and opposite primacy is established: from the domination of nature over society to the incorporation of materiality into the cultural and the textual. In recent years, non-dualistic theories have emerged to find a way out of the impasse between these irreconcilable poles. In the spirit of hybridity, this strand of research has addressed the reciprocities between human and non-human domains by collapsing all modernist great dichotomies (nature/culture, subject/object, and agency/structure). Along these lines, wondering whether nature acts on society or is produced by society is a wrong assumption. Bruno Latour’s (1993) Actor-Network Theory (ANT) is perhaps the proposal that has had better luck
The nature of conflict 25 in terms of diffusion. No less important, though, are the works by Donna Haraway (1991) and Erik Swyngedouw (1999) on socio-natural entanglements. Bakker and Bridge comment that these approaches programmatically share the redistribution of agency “away from human agents” (2006: 19), thus broadening the spectrum to non-human subjects. From another point of view, studies on material culture have attempted to re-materialise the “things” through which social relations take place. Appadurai’s perspective (1988) on the circulation of commodities is a benchmark work, which signalled renewed attention to materiality. The material turn arises from dissatisfaction with textual approaches and the decreasing returns of “the dominant anti-realist strain of continental philosophy,” in relation to which the primacy of ontology on phenomenology is invoked (Bryant, Srnicek, & Harman, 2011). Badiou, Zizek, and again Latour are referred to as key inspirers. A thorough discussion of this debate is out of the scope of this book. As a general remark, it might be said that the material turn moves towards a resurgence of natural realism by other means. This preliminary excursus can be summarised in two main points. Firstly, what counts as nature is a historically and socially contingent product of knowledges (in the plural). Secondly, since it is impossible to disentangle the natural and the social, a fluid epistemological line dividing two realms of reality is not an adequate visual metaphor as it brings us back to a dualistic logic. Deleuze’s rhizome suggests instead a non-binary “image of thought” to resist the urge of ordering disorder into symmetrical structures, which lies at the heart of Western metaphysics from Plato and Aristotle onwards. Following in these footsteps, nature and culture encounter and intersect through a malleable membrane whose rhizomatic ramifications are a-centred, non-hierarchical, and expansive. Such a horizontal model opposes the verticality of the “tree logic,” which develops linearly from roots to branches, whilst “the rhizome proceeds multiplicitously,” with no origin and no direction (Dronsfield, 2012), and in so doing reflects a relational mode of thinking. The translation of nature into resource The root of the problem with mainstream theories on environmental conflicts is precisely the untenable ontological disconnection between materiality and human society. IR made inroads in the study of environmental issues by adhering to natural realism, which defines the environment as an external reality to be appropriated. This understanding was certainly the most suitable for a discipline whose overriding concern is war and, by extension, geopolitical competition over strategic commodities. On the contrary, geographers, economists, and anthropologists working on natural resources have come up with more nuanced ways of thinking socio-natural assemblages. Erich Zimmerman (1933) was among the first ones to convey the idea that “resource are not: they become.” As the history of coal (or any other mineral ore) suggests, a resource is classed as such not because of the physical properties of the substance; rather it “depends on the way it is related to other things, to knowledge, to the
26 The nature of conflict opportunity to realize value by exchange, and to other materials that can fulfil the same function” (Bridge, 2009: 1220). Lying in-between the human and the non-human, natural resources are irreducible to purely physical or cultural lenses. According to Richardson and Weszkalnys, “resources are inherently distributed things whose essence or character is to be located neither exclusively in their biophysical properties nor in webs of socio-cultural meaning” (2014: 8). This is key to understanding that ontological oppositions are misleading. The resourcefulness of petroleum, for instance, is not determined by natural properties alone. In fact, to think about oil as resource presupposes “a state of knowledge and practice – that is social, technological, and historical” (Watts, 2005: 158). Natural resources are then properly intended as “cultural appraisals about utility and value” of non-human materials (Bridge, 2009: 1219) that are purposively transformed to serve a social function. As Le Billon points out, diamonds are a good example: otherwise useless or with limited industrial applications, like all precious gemstones, the exorbitant exchange value is economically and discursively constructed “through the manipulation of markets by a cartel and the manipulation of symbols such as purity, love, and eternity through marketing” (Le Billon, 2001: 565). The recognition that value is not encapsulated in objects but assigned to goods was common ground for modern philosophers, from Adam Smith to Karl Marx and Georg Simmel. However, Zimmerman’s functional insight paved the way to approaches to natural resources with a more pronounced constructivist orientation. Sociological research explored the discursive construction of nature through semiotic and claims-making practices (Eder, 1996; Demeritt, 2001; Hannigan, 2014). Marxist scholarship, on the other hand, turned attention to the production of nature within capitalistic societies in the folds of commodification processes (Smith, 1984; Harvey, 2002; O’Connor, 1998), highlighting that the commodity status is not intrinsic to material things. In summary, two considerations are worth pointing out: i) the attribution of value is a necessary and prior condition for the determination of any resource and ii) value is extrinsic to raw physical properties and, moreover, extends beyond functional utility, encompassing also moral, spiritual, and aesthetic qualities. As seen, non-dualistic frameworks opened a new route to avoid the trap of hyper-constructionism Butler warned of, but giving agency to material things remains controversial. After all, the agency/structure dialectic complicates matters, being in itself another latent source of disagreement in social sciences. To mention an interesting contribution to such an ongoing debate, Zubrzycki studies nationalism through material culture by looking at how the sensorial, everyday experience of mundane objects shapes identity formation. She clarifies that this approach sees materiality neither as “embodiment of values and ideational systems” (following Durkheim) nor as “a physical snapshot of social relationship” (Zubrzycki, 2017: 5). Objects ought to be understood not as reflective of “national visions deployed by elites and consumed by the masses, but as inscriptive, ultimately productive of those very visions” (ibidem: 9).
The nature of conflict 27 Zubrzycki claims that the inner properties of things create imaginaries independent of human signification. Whilst I endorse the call for a more complete sociology of the mechanisms of identity formation, I have reservations about this last point given that individual perceptions cannot be separated from the cultural frame in which they are embedded. To use an aesthetic analogy, beauty is not an absolute concept but a fluid category that varies across time and space. However, the criticism that the humanisation of nature is blind to material properties should be taken into account. In fact, recent research has stressed that physical characteristics do matter. Le Billon (2001) explains that geographical location (proximate or distant from the political centre) and spatial concentration (point or diffuse) of valuable natural resources determine the type of conflict. Copper mines or phosphate deposits, for instance, are quite different resource environments. Anyone familiar with the political economy of oil would agree that crude is not easily lootable by rebel groups or insurgents, unless these prove capable of securing control over entire segments of the value chain. The ISIS war economy – which was backed by a state-like bureaucracy, smuggling trade routes, and shadow agreements with international traders – gives a good illustration. Mitchell (2011) argues that the coal-based economy was a key factor of democratisation in Europe and North American because of the related socio-economic transformations (such as changes in land ownership, the development of transportation networks, the reorganisation of industry, booming urbanisation, and the restructuring of labour relations) which were conducive to greater demands for political rights. The argument is a bit deterministic but, contrary to the oil curse model, derives a resource effect from the production network and not the monetary rent, thus highlighting that the processes of extraction and trade have a bearing on socio-political dynamics. In this sense, Mitchell suggests that the different value chains of coal and oil end up shaping different geographies of power. The petroleum cycle is a good example of the process of co-constitution of material and discursive practices. Drawing crude from the bowels of the earth is just one link in the long commodity chain leading to petroleum products. Already at the point of extraction, upstream activities occur within a composite setting of concession contracts, geological surveys, advanced technologies, transportation infrastructures, security services, military deployments, skilled labour, capital-intensive investments, and commercial agreements. In brief, a multi-centred and multi-scalar relational space whose material practices, nonetheless, presuppose certain discursive articulations: at the very least, regulatory frameworks, technical expertise and knowledge, risks assessments, geopolitical strategies, energy and development policies, financial instruments (the list is not exhaustive). Further up on a ladder of abstraction, also situated economic rationalities, social imaginaries, and imaginative geographies filling up contemporary petro-cultures. As said, the determination of any resource through the purposive transformation of nature encapsulates a broader spectrum of meanings than those derived from natural properties alone.
28 The nature of conflict Therefore, finding a middle ground between constructivist and materialist positions is challenging. Even hybrid approaches hardly evade the question of whether nature acts on society or, conversely, is produced by society. Richardson and Weszkalnys’ anthropological outlook on the distributed character of resource materiality stands out as a mature theoretical basis for analysis. In their view, resource politics cannot be understood without “the combined examination of the matters, knowledges, infrastructures, and experiences that come together in the appreciation, extraction, processing, and consumption of natural resources” (2014: 8). For this reason, the notion of resource environments is preferable not to subscribe to essentialist arguments and, instead, place attention on the complex socio-natural arrangements through which material substances come into being as resources. As Zimmerman would put it, resources are a category of becoming and not of being. Out of the mainstream Based on the previous discussion, does it really make sense to talk of “resource conflicts”? The quick answer is no. Resource-related (Turner, 2004) or resource-linked (Le Billon, 2001) conflicts seem to be more precise expressions. As signalled in the previous paragraph, the empirical investigation of contentious dynamic within resource environments ought to be attentive to the discursive and the material, the cultural, and the natural. Accordingly, the core chapters of this book string together several levels of analysis: the articulation of dominant and antagonistic resource imaginaries, the opening up of an energy frontier by the transnational forces of capitalist expansion, and the overlap of the extractive economy with the survival strategies of political actors. From a theoretical point of view, a political ecology approach allows the giving of a longer answer to the opening question. Political ecology (Blaikie & Brookfield, 1987; Nesmith & Radcliffe, 1993; Sachs, 1993; Peet & Watts, 1996; Rocheleau, Thomas-Slayter, & Wangari, 1996; Bryant & Bailey, 1997; Bryant, 1998; Leach, Mearns, & Scoones, 1999) came into view during the 1980s and the 1990s as a body of research moving a critique to apolitical views about ecology. Eccentric to disciplinary boundaries, Robbins defines it as “a field that seeks to unravel the political forces at work in environmental access, management, and transformation” (Robbins, 2011: 3). Critical geographers from the Marxist tradition gave initial contribution by calling into question the technocratic constructs about nature that underpin environmental policies, especially those built upon the neo-Malthusian assumption about the carrying capacity of the environment. That argument was straightforward: if population growth exceeds the ecological threshold, there will be shortages, starvation, and strife. Against this apparently self-evident statement, Marxist scholars such as David Harvey (1979) opposed that the nature-society separation is an ideological cover to conceal the global inequalities of capitalism, a smokescreen to divert attention from the uneven distribution of environmental goods to population control. In Marxist theory, labour mediates the
The nature of conflict 29 metabolic interaction between nature and society: what we experience is not a material reality setting limits to society, but a “second nature” produced by human activities (Smith, 1984). Postcolonial, post-structural, and feminist scholars later joined the fray and dismantled power-laden explanations on desertification (Thomas & Middleton, 1994), forestry management (Hecht & Cockburn, 1989; Peluso, 1992), famine (Watts, 1983), natural hazards (Hewitt & Burton, 1971; Wisner et al., 1994), soil erosion (Zimmerer, 1993a, 1993b), conservation policies (Moore, 1993), and peasant-herder conflicts (Bassett, 1988) – just to mention a few classical studies of a fairly abundant literature. The common thread that connects them can be summarised with a question laid down by Martinez Alier: “who has the power to simplify complexity, ruling some languages of valuation out of order?” (2003: 217). The view of plural epistemologies and valuations implies contestation between and across groups. It is precisely in this sense that Peluso and Watts (2001) see the environment as “an arena of contested entitlements” within which a substratum of material assets is entangled with discourses about power and development. Political ecology can be defined as a way of thinking struggles over access, ownership, control, and use of natural resources that is attentive to how power relations mediate interactions between society and nature. The premise is that the nature–society interplay needs to be understood within the political processes it is part of. From this viewpoint, it is apparent that the analysis of global warming, the melting of glaciers, mass deforestations, species extinctions, or pollution cannot be detached from the anthropic processes of appropriation and commodification of nature at their source. Despite disparate heterodox influences, political ecology owes its coherence to three commitments: i) theoretically, to critical theory and post-positivist understanding of nature; ii) methodologically, to the in-depth and direct observation of a context “through intensive, open-ended, qualitative methods”; and iii) normatively, to social justice and structural political change (Perreault, Bridge, & McCarthy, 2015: 1). It is therefore a field of inquiry, a research programme, and a practice at once. Political ecologists share “the understanding that there are better, less coercive, less exploitative, and more sustainable ways of doing” (Robbins, 2011: 20) and explicitly take the side of those groups or populations suffering the price of socio-environmental changes given that these are disguised as collateral externalities of modernisation. Although rooted in patterns of production and market forces, environmental conflicts are also seen as reverberations of the knowledge-power nexus (Escobar, 1996, 2006; Peet & Watts, 1996). The post-structural turn in political ecology was cognizant that material and non-material realms are interwoven. A purely Marxist analysis would be somewhat blind to the phenomenological side of the matter. There lies the risk of stretching the analysis too much, beyond the competencies a single researcher would plausibly achieve in a lifetime, or getting lost in high-level abstractions that would be at odds with the empirical contextualisation political ecology strives for. As evidenced by biotechnology
30 The nature of conflict and the hotly debate about patent seeds and land grabs by multinational food companies, “many society-nature relations extend ‘all the way down,’ even to the level of genetic modification” (Braun & Wainwright, 2001: 1). Therefore, it is not an easy task to bridle the ever-expanding complexity of the human/ non-human interface, at least in the sense of balancing theoretical breadth with empirical detail. Single case studies are one remedy for it. Back to violence, political ecology moves away from the flawed hypotheses of resource scarcity or abundance to look into the thick texture surrounding contestation over natural entitlements. Peluso and Watts (2001) gave one of the most convincing reconsiderations of the environment-violence nexus. The starting point is a critique of Kaplan and Homer Dixon’s narrow understandings of environmental security, which see the resort to organised violence as a mechanical response to (presumed) environmental triggers and disequilibria. Their approach, instead, combines anthropological sensitiveness to historical and cultural factors with Marxist attentiveness to the political economy of resource exploitation. As mentioned before, the environment is described as “an arena of contested entitlements, a theatre in which conflicts or claims over property, assets, labour, and the politics of recognition play themselves out” (ibidem: 25), and within which violence can happen. Environmental processes, hence, should be read through three complementary angles: i) the patterns and regimes of accumulation; ii) the forms of access to and control over resources; and iii) the actors that emerge from the social relations of production. In this light, violence is appraised “as a sitespecific phenomenon rooted in local histories and social relations yet connected to larger processes of material transformation and power relations” (ibidem: 29). Attention is given to the specific ways in which environmental struggles occur within context. Questions of rights and social justice are brought back centre stage. In addition, Peluso and Watts broaden the view on what counts as violence by including institutional coercion and symbolic violence. Along the same lines, and by embracing the historicisation of nature-society relations, my view is that resource environments are socially constituted spaces in which environmental imaginaries of resource usage and material patterns of wealth accumulation intersect with the politics of identity. Applied to oil environments in particular, this proposition has two corollaries. Firstly, it suggests rethinking energy as a set of social relations that are historically and geographically situated (Hoffmann, 2018). This reveals that the “material, calorific, geological or topographic dimensions of energy” alone fail to grasp what makes energy “a field of social change and contestation” in contemporary societies (ibidem: 39–40). The re-politicisation of energy relations eludes the deterministic arguments amassing in mainstream literature, especially with regard to the Middle East where curse-like theories go hand in hand with cultural stereotypes. Secondly, it draws attention to political economy. Selby (2005) lists five key features. As “the least labour-expensive, most efficient, and hence cheapest energy form,” oil is the vital fuel for capitalist expansion and is set to continue serving the global needs for energy in the medium term. Albeit cheaper than other sources, the underground physical location makes it a relatively
The nature of conflict 31 inaccessible, unevenly distributed, capital- and technological- intensive resource. As a consequence, oil is a “primarily internationally rather than domestically traded commodity.” The economy of scale, as well as price volatility, creates incentives for the vertical integration of the industry and oligopolistic tendencies. Lastly, the extraordinary profits generated by oil production make it a source of power consolidation for political and economic elites. The cumulative effect of these factors is that the political dynamics within oil environments are both rooted in local histories and embedded in a global web of interdependencies between producing areas and end markets. Identity politics in oil environments The idea behind this book is that value creation processes implicated in the commodification of nature are also at play in the negotiation and contestation of collective identities within the political community. In the last part of the chapter, I wish to clarify in what ways resource environments relate with identity formation. How, if at all, do these apparently distant domains of human activity relate to each other? There may be legitimate reasons for being sceptical. Even when accepting in some abstract sense that natural resources are cultural appraisals of the physical world, in much more prosaic terms, we fundamentally experience them as things – inanimate, material objects providing sustenance. Why would things be relevant to our sense of belonging to whatever social grouping? Why would political identity, in particular, be influenced by interaction with commodities of everyday use? The wording of the second question is tendentious in that it already reveals the point to be made. Simply put, commodities do matter because “people make an identity as they make a living” (Robbins, 2011: 224). Identity gets constituted through and is socialised within a material setting whose characteristics and modes of production have a bearing on one’s subjectivity. Livelihoods, in the widest sense, along with their far from obvious resource ecologies, mediate the relational space we inhabit. Even if I feel I am Kurd because of linguistic, cultural, and territorial markers that root myself in a place referred to as Kurdistan, regardless of any other consideration, the socio-economic function oil has gained for the reproduction of my community adds new attributes to that shared sense of belonging. Resource nationalism, for instance, is one of the many doorways through which the relationship between materiality and political subjectivity can be explored. Just like the utility of gasoline for transportation or the gratification for a diamond engagement ring is based upon socially constructed values and norms (mobility and marriage) that have nothing to do with the intrinsic properties of both substances, the materiality of resources is inseparable from their symbolism. This also implies that people within a group do not necessarily share the same imaginary. Following the examples, I may refrain from using cars to pollute less or not give marriage any importance. That being said, the treatment of identity in political science, though ubiquitous, is problematic. Even sophisticated theoretical elaborations are often of
32 The nature of conflict little help for empirical analysis. Brubaker and Cooper (2000) warned that proliferation of the concept came at the expense of the analytical purchase. The use and abuse of identity is “riddled with ambiguity, riven with contradictory meanings, and encumbered by reifying connotations.” By making a case for more attentiveness to particularity, they notice: Qualifying the noun [identity] with strings of adjectives – specifying that identity is multiple, fluid, constantly re-negotiated, and so on – does not solve the Orwellian problem of entrapment in a word. It yields little more than a suggestive oxymoron – a multiple singularity, a fluid crystallization – but still begs the question of why one should use the same term to designate all this and more. (ibidem: 34) Truth be told, the present research is hardly immune to the same remark. Yet, a few comments are in order. Aronoff and Kubik (2013) propose a distinction between materialistinstitutional and symbolic-cultural ways of thinking about politics. The former refers to the Weberian institutional-legal definition of power, which is central in the conventional paradigm of the modern state. The flagship translation of such conceptualisation in political theory is March and Olsen’s definition of politics as competition over resources: “the organizing principle of a political system is the allocation of scarce resources in the face of conflict of interests” (1989: 47–48). The problem with this proposition, Aronoff and Kubik comment, is that “the struggle over collective identity, including often deadly contests over the meaning of symbols signifying this identity” is entirely missing (2013: 24). Going through the funnel of realism, we lose sight of political agency. Therefore they recommend abandoning the assumption of fixed (somewhat pre-political) identities and embracing the opposite understanding, which is best illustrated by a striking metaphor from which he draws on: “if identity is decentred, politics is about the attempt to create a centre” (Dirks, Eley, & Ortner, 1994: 32). This spatial representation captures the essence of identity politics beautifully, in my view. It conveys the idea of gathering a collective around some core elements, which define the extent of a group. The centre is not only the axis of rotation of the political community; it also presupposes a circumference whose outer boundaries set the line between sameness and difference. The assertion of identity entails indeed the distinction of a self from one or many others. A question remains pending: why identity is posited as decentred? It is so because identity formation is an unstable and open-ended process. The fact that identity and difference are specular sides of the same coin is not disputed in social sciences: belonging to a group, a class, or any other socially category means asserting a condition of difference from all other possibilities. As Connolly puts it with clarity, “identity requires difference in order to be, and it converts difference into otherness in order to secure its own self-certainty” (2002:
The nature of conflict 33 xiv). By reversing the order of conventional definitions, Connolly argues that we first belong to difference (what I am not) in order to declare our identity (what I am). Hence, identity is performed discursively as an utterance that is expressive of alterity (Guillaume, 2002). This implies that identity formation is relational (Somers, 1994), in that it connects plural constituencies and criteria of identification (e.g. gender, sexual identity, ethnicity, class, age, and so forth). At the same time, identity formation is also dialogical given that the figuration of Self is constructed upon the Other. Framed in these terms, political actors behave in a certain manner and pursue certain interests according to their own identity, not the other way round as realism maintains. There is more. Identity is not an immutable or universal essence reproducing itself over time; rather, the relational and dialogical characteristics indicate its contingency. As regards nation-states, for instance, identity “should be understood as ‘tenuously constituted in time . . . through a stylized repetition of acts,’ and achieved, ‘not [through] a founding act, but rather a regulated process of repetition’” (Campbell, 1992: 9). Transcending the fixity of essentialist accounts urges locating self-narratives in their spatial and temporal configurations (Somers, 1994). McDonald (2012) emphasises the mutual constitution of security and identity through negotiation and contestation across multiple axes within a community, and not solely in antagonistic terms. In the same vein, Bleiker (2005) argues that the security dilemmas on each side of the barbedwire fence separating the Korean peninsula along the 38th parallel reproduce the defining values and boundaries of both political communities. He crucially adds that the conventional ethics of difference can be countered by an ethics of dialogue for which the other’s identity may be seen not as incompatible or threatening. These examples come from security studies, but the topic is all too broad for an exhaustive discussion in these pages, which cannot be very insightful or innovative in this respect. It was important, nonetheless, to specify what a decentred ontology of identity is and why I subscribe to it. Another thing to be specified is that handling identity as an analytical category does not mean to reify its empirical content, but rather objectify it provisionally to spell out how identity is practiced in context. For instance, national identity is not imbued with absolute and timeless attributes. Albeit with “true” effects for real people in real places, national identity is a historically contingent construct that is not necessary to human societies to exist. Truth-effects –“a doing, an activity and a normalised thing in society” (Brown, 2005: 63; quoted in Dunn, 2008: 81) – are inherently fragile since they vary widely across time and space, as well as among people and groups within the same community. Therefore, what an interpretivist researcher does is reconstruct how natives describe themselves, and provides second- or third-order interpretations of those same descriptions. This is crucial to abstain from methodological nationalism, “the naturalization of the nation-state by the social sciences” (Wimmer & Glick Schiller, 2002; see also Smith, 1983), which normatively commands the congruence of national identity, political community, and territory. This tendency arises from conflation between the state as a form of
34 The nature of conflict political organisation and nationalism as ideology, which merged into modern nation-states almost becoming indistinguishable. First and foremost, it should be noted that the State, “for all the omnipotence of its apparatuses, is far from being able to occupy the whole field of actual power relations” (Foucault, 1980: 122). Violations of sovereignty, “the crucial modern political articulation of all spatiotemporal relations” (Walker, 1993: 6), are actually more illustrative of international politics than the norm itself (Krasner, 1999). The critique of sovereignty does not amount to saying that the State is in decline. Yet, it should encourage to “[bear] witness to the irredeemable plurality of space and the multiplicity of possible political constructions of space” (Tuathail & Dalby, 1998: 3). As the Kurdish question shows best, sub-state and trans-state topographies of power are effective identity carriers. Kurdistan resembles indeed the image of a “multisite nation” (Laguerre, 2016) by virtue of connections between a large and politicised diaspora, a transnational network of activism, and a divided homeland eliciting the view of a common ethnos albeit in the absence of political cohesion. In a contemporary world of “increasingly globalized webs of influence, dependence, and assistance” (Kubik, 2009: 44), the Greater Kurdistan stands out as a virtual and mythical space, which is articulated through disjointed and even opposed national visions. In this sense, Kurdish transnational identity can be read in the terms of a “multi-locale, dispersed identity” (Marcus, 1998: 63). Methodological nationalism, instead, places individuals and national communities within nation-states by default, thus institutionalising a spatial bias and also creating confusion between the state as actor and the state as territorial space or arena (Adamson, 2016). Secondly, national identities get constituted through a variety of discursive practices, “such as pledging allegiance to the flag, singing the national anthem, drawing a map, or using the word we to talk about a country’s foreign policy” (Wedeen, 2009: 89). This repertoire is performed inside a broader semiotic space that is also crossed by other symbolic struggles. As ideology, nationalism translates it into political resolve and endows a shared national identity “with an aura of naturalness” (Kubik, 2009: 37). This intersubjective process of meaning making is not immune from inconsistencies, ambiguities, and contestation. Resource politics is studied here as further arena within which this process is played out. The next paragraph illustrates resource nationalism more in detail. The choice is appropriate for the case study, as will be shown in Chapter 3. Nevertheless, it should be stated that ethno-national identities are neither the only nor the primary identity constructs for resource politics. Although the state frequently has a fundamental role in the appropriation and transformation of nature, and accordingly access and control over natural resources has been studied in relation to state-formation since Wittfogel’s hydraulic hypothesis, non-state forms of resource governance are equally prominent. This is to say that the emphasis on resource nationalism does not mean a comeback of state-centrism by other means. On the contrary, the empirical analysis shows that local, national, and global scales are interdependent in extractive industries.
The nature of conflict 35 Resource nationalism Defined as the “tendency for (nation-)states to assert economic and political control over natural resources found within its sovereign territory” (Childs, 2016: 1), resource nationalism frequently comes into play in resource-rich countries as a discourse backing state-led extractive development policies against foreign intervention. It is a mode of governance that recasts nationhood upon the extractive industry and asserts claims of national ownership over natural resources. Economic returns are not the only drivers behind the establishment of property regimes under state control. Resource sovereignty “imagines an inward territorial focus and a particular sovereign actor with the capacity to control resources in isolation from external relations” (Emel, Huber, & Makene, 2011: 71). Historically, such understanding has been attached to the nationalisation policies undertaken by newly independent states in the late 1960s and throughout the 1970s. With regard to the petroleum industry, for instance, the foundation of OPEC was a watershed event in that sense. Resource nationalist frames gave elites in oil-producing countries greater legitimacy (Rosales, 2017). Hence, the definition includes all those “efforts by resource-rich nations to shift political and economic control of their energy and mining sectors from foreign and private interests to domestic and state-controlled companies” (Bremmer & Johnston, 2009: 149), typically through the renegotiation of taxes and royalties paid by foreign companies and the nationalisation of extractive industries, as well as by redirecting benefits locally (with procurement contracts, energy subsidies, or programmes of poverty alleviation for instance). In other words, resource nationalism has been the “response by extractive peripheries to the persistence of colonial control or the domination of foreign (monopoly) capital over their rich natural resource bases” (Kaup & Gellert, 2017: 277). Despite nationalisation policies effectively changing the rules of the game, a series of exogenous factors (e.g. price volatility, high capital expenditure, inter-connectedness of global markets, and production chains) prevented the demise of private corporations. The opposition public vs. private is actually misleading. In fact, joint venture between state-owned companies and private companies is common. Resource nationalist policies quite often coexist with the involvement of private investments: while resource nationalism is a powerful tool to exercise self-determination and reclaim ownership on resources extracted within the state jurisdiction, it does not exclude partnerships with foreign actors to run extractive projects. It has been pointed out indeed that after A period of more inward looking “national” development based around sovereignty and self-determination, the majority of independent postcolonial states commenced a widespread liberalization of their economies that, rather than seeking to keep foreign capital outside, actively constructed a set of legal, fiscal and political incentives to attract foreign direct investment toward the development of internal resources. (Emel, Huber, & Makene, 2011: 71)
36 The nature of conflict Hence, resource-rich countries have often continued to act as landlords while creating favourable business conditions for external investors. From a theoretical point of view, the concept stresses the relevance of resource imaginaries for the articulation of nationhood practices – i.e. the “acts to create nation-space and nation-time, the projection of imaginary community, the homogenization of nation-space and pedagogization of history” (Tuathail & Dalby, 1998: 3) – and geopolitical visions “concerning the relation between one’s own and other places, involving feelings of (in)security or (dis)advantage (and/or) invoking ideas about a collective mission or foreign policy strategy” (Dijkink, 2002: 11). Resource nationalism offers an angle to analyse the relationship between resource governance and nationhood. A review of the literature found that extractivism participates in the ideological metamorphosis of national communities on the heels of development and modernisation programmes. Resource-based imaginaries tend to shape development policy to a great extent, “infused as they are by cultural ways of understanding the world geographically, environmentally and geopolitically” (Childs & Hearn, 2017: 4). Moreover, the nation is naturalised and imbued with a teleological connotation (“oil nation”). Natural endowments are indeed considered a national patrimony to be used for the benefit of the nation (Jaffe, 2011). Notably, resource nationalist policies gather, mediate, and transform a multiplicity of imaginaries and images (Childs, 2016). The assertion of national rights of ownership and exploitation, the enforcement of territorial control over subsurface resources, and the reconfiguration of economic relations have an impact on the political community as a whole. As Perrault and Valdivia summarise in one sentence: “the re-making of the nation occurs through a redefinition of the relationship between state, population, territory and resource” (2010: 691). Since the 1960s Latin America, in particular, has been a laboratory for development strategies geared towards the national exploitation of mineral ores and fossil fuels. It is not by chance that most geographers and ecologists working on resource nationalism have an expertise in that region, although single-case studies have increasingly touched African and Asian countries as well. On the contrary, the concept has not been used much with reference to oil-producing countries in the Middle East and North Africa, quite surprisingly given the geopolitical representations attached to the broader region. Coronil (1997) and Watts’ (2004) ethnographies on the relationship between oil exploitation and nation-building in Nigeria and Venezuela are milestones in the literature. Perreault and Valdivia (2010) illustrate that leftist governments in Ecuador and Bolivia placed hydrocarbon development at the centre of their plans. As a result, a petro-state ideology reframed nationhood and citizenship. Childs and Hearn (2017) similarly examine the resource-based development imaginaries in Ghana and, again, Ecuador (“la Patria nueva”). Regarding the latter, Rosales (2017) points out that the dominant notion of development followed the rise of military elites during the 1970s. The mobilisation of the same discursive frames is addressed by Kohl and Farthing (2012) in the case of Bolivia. Moving to Asia, Jackson (2015) analyses the re-definition of Mongolia
The nature of conflict 37 as a mineral country (“Mine-golia”), whereas Lahiri-Dutt (2016) of India as a “coal nation.” Territory and the natural resources within are understood as essential properties of the territorial state, which extends its jurisdiction on them. In other words, they are central objects of the state apparatus (Whitehead, Jones, & Jones, 2007). Yet, at the analytical level, attention must be made not to reify such national isomorphism. The public–private partnerships in the extractive industries are an example. The same can be said about the nationalisation of water territories. Despite impetus in UN policy circles on integrated planning and management across different jurisdictions, nationalism runs deep into predominant formulations of water governance. This reflects the central role modern states have had in developing hydraulic infrastructures. Historically, the emergence of nation-states and central administrations led to the partition of water bodies into national segments (Allouche, 2005). In so doing, waterscapes are constructed as integral parts of the homeland: not only a strategic resource, kept inside sovereign borders, but also a figurative element belonging to the national community. Through this process of material and symbolic territorialisation, which breaks the hydrological continuity of transboundary basins, water was made into a national resource, thus becoming a non-negotiable primary good. Water is seen as something to “be appropriated, annexed, secured” (Lankford et al., 2013: ix) by state actors in competition for dwindling resources. In short, rights to water are subsumed under governmentality practices connected to the historical process of power centralisation into national administrations. However, the state-centric perspective is hardly historicised. The conflation between water territories and national imaginaries has practical consequences. For one thing, the rights of local communities are marginalised (Boelens, Getches, & Guevara-Gil, 2010: 17–19). State-centric policies, which misconceive water resources as a feature of sovereignty, put rights-based inclusive approaches to water governance on the sidelines (Tinti, 2020). Concrete illustration is the relentless damming in upstream Turkey and Iran at the expense of downstream Iraqi communities. It is therefore not surprising that international diplomacy has fallen short of securing peaceful solutions to looming water deficits and the potential conflicts that may arise within transboundary river systems. Following the same example, the Tigris-Euphrates basin is not governed by any multilateral agreement between riparian countries, thus leaving water issues at the mercy of unilateral actions. This book applies the conceptual lens of resource nationalism to the KRG by focusing on oil-driven policies and discourses to mobilise a shared national sentiment. It is argued that oil geography has influenced the evolution of Kurdish national identity in Iraq. As a sub-state regional government in pursuit of greater autonomy within Iraqi federalism, the KRG is a test case connecting resource nationalism to the question of statelessness. It also gives a snapshot of the multiple relations within extractive communities. As already underlined by Perreault and Valdivia (2010), struggles over hydrocarbon governance involve transnational oil and gas firms, local governments, social movements,
38 The nature of conflict and regional elites, which all intervene in the re-configuration of the nation. The crucible of resource politics shows that conflict “imbricate not only the spatiality of resources and populations, but also the particular histories and geographies of resource governance, and the broader political economies that connect resource producing zones with centres of resource processing and consumption” (ibidem: 690). Methodological notes A few comments on my engagement with the subject of study are in order. Methodology does not merely tie the theoretical to the empirical, but also reflects one’s understanding of how, and for what purposes, knowledge can be produced. By reading previous pages, it is somewhat implicit that the problematisation of oil environments and political identities as social constructs favours interpretation over explanation, constitution over causation, and partial knowledge over truth claims. My inquiry was interpretative and focused on intersubjective meanings that emerged from the relational context I walked in, or rather on “how meanings are embodied in the language and actions of social actors” within said setting (Schwandt, 1994: 222). Far from being a synonym of qualitative methodology, interpretivism deviates from the positivist search of law-like universal generalisations; instead, it looks at situated ways of knowing and requires deep contextualisation in order to understand the meaningmaking processes at play. The interpretive approach is rooted in hermeneutic phenomenology and reflexive positioning in line with a time-honoured tradition. Translated into a research cycle, an interpretive study is theory-informed and not theory-driven: data collection and analysis are given priority to the ex-ante formulation of theoretical models to be tested. Although this book cannot be described as ethnographic through and through, due to the relatively limited amount of time spent in the field, I proceeded ethnographically since its inception. When carving out the boundaries of the research design at the beginning and even while writing these pages, I have always kept in mind Caroline Nordstrom’s definition: “ethnography must be able to bring a people and a place to life in the eyes and hearts of those who have not been there” (2004: 14). As both a research practice and a genre of writing, ethnography is an attempt at entering the “webs of significance” in which the individual is suspended and providing a “thick description” of such social discourse, to borrow from Geertz (1973). Disciplined, intensive immersion in the field of research and sensibility “to the meanings attributed by those observed to their political reality” are its core principles (Schatz, 2009: xi). Not a disinterested and aloof observer, the ethnographer is empathetically immersed in the context with the purpose of seeing things from the insider’s point of view. This is what is called emic perspective11 in the anthropological jargon. I embraced such goal as my own and treated ethnography as a privileged way to understand how political identities are remodelled upon oil: a research strategy to reconcile overarching narratives and situated practices, and a method to
The nature of conflict 39 gather and interpret data. From a political perspective, ethnography promises to shed light on the “invisibilities of power” (Nordstrom, 2004: 15),12 which is to say small facts and stories that nonetheless speak to larger issues. Although there is a dearth of ethnographic works in IR13 (Salter & Mutlu, 2013: 53), I considered ethnography to be a hermeneutic antidote to the application of preconceived theories and hypotheses or unified methods of inquiry, rather than a threat to the validation of findings (and the scientific status of the discipline with it). The interpretation of meanings-in-context casts aside if-then hypotheses, causal relationships, and a language of variables. In other words, it does not proceed through the “cascading path approach” of positivism (Aradau et al., 2014: 2). Rather than testing a theoretical statement based on a priori concept formation and using supposedly agnostic methods, the epistemological commitment to situated knowledge(s) insists on reconstructing agency in its conditions of possibility. Even though social facts do not speak for themselves and we always frame the empirical through socially mediated understandings (what Kant called categories of thought), theory ought not to assert itself over the direct experience of social reality. To borrow from Blumer, a founding father of symbolic interactionism, what is needed is a call for a direct examination of the empirical world, which is to say the world of everyday experience (1986: 34). Framing research from the bottom, from the native’s or insider’s perspective, means taking off the desire for an objective and complete representation of social reality as if it were fixed in unmalleable patterns, and embracing one centred on intersubjective interpretations of unstable social constructs. That being said, doing research may prove to be unpredictable and strenuous beyond expectations. In my experience, limited funding and time, long delays in visa processing, unavailability of sources, protracted warfare in the country, and the escalation of tensions after the independence referendum with the consequent embargo on international flights were actual hurdles, which forced me to make adjustments in itinere. Not to mention the feeling of “stranger-ness” (Yanow & Schwartz-Shea, 2012: 29) that any researcher experiences once in the field. The material presented in the core chapters of the book is the result of two short stays in the KRI (April to June 2017, May to June 2018) and extensive engagement with the Kurdish diaspora in Europe. The American University of Iraq – Sulaimani (AUIS) and the Italian NGO Un Ponte Per (UPP) were my entry points in the region. Both partners turned out to be essential gatekeepers on the ground. As an AUIS research fellow and a UPP volunteer, I had the chance to get a broad perspective on the local context. Accordingly, fieldwork was an alternation of settings: militarised party headquarters, crowded administrative offices, government buildings, shiny hotel lobbies, cultural cafés, or oil-soaked farmland – to name just a few. In practical terms, I triangulated several sources of evidence: in-depth and semi-structured interviews, participant observation, and texts.14 Interviewees were selected according to purposive sampling and in some cases with the
40 The nature of conflict assistance of key informants. They included party members, KRG representatives and bureaucrats, academics, foreign consultants, civil society organisation practitioners, and social and environmental activists. The type of interview varied as well: more structured with KRG officials and biographical and openended with activists. Apart from interviews, informal talks, side conversations, and everyday interactions with a greater number of people made a decisive contribution to the analysis. Conducting research on sensitive issues in a very politicised environment within a war-torn country, the safety of my informants was a major concern. I set out a strict procedure to safeguard confidentiality to make sure not to disclose any information that might harm or stigmatise them. All the interviews were transcribed with anonymous identifiers, later encrypted, and finally stored on a cloud server, with separate coding sheets so that no one besides me could identify the interviewee. In a few cases, transcripts were returned upon request: member checking was a requisite of transparency but also a tool of internal control for validating data. Although I kept track of all interviews, fieldnotes, and analytic memos to provide an audit trail, accountability to research participants came first. This is the reason why I use pseudonyms when referring to my closest informants in this book and I eventually decided not to include a list of interviewees. I often shared preliminary interpretations with my closest informants to cross-check facts and views. Putting myself in a listening position was a reflexive restraint on a first-person perspective and also quite an enriching experience. After all, if not co-researchers, they participated in co-constructing interpretive knowledge within the artificial space of my inquiry. What from time to time caught their attention or conversely was taken for granted was particularly instructive to reading primary data in retrospective along with fleshing out a more trustable narrative. The concern of not exposing them to potentially dangerous situations became real during a fleeting visit to Kirkuk, where two assistants had managed to organise a few meetings with provincial authorities. Kirkuk was a different setting from those I was accustomed to. The politicians I spoke with were irritated by my questions. They were evasive and impatient, hiding themselves behind cosmetic declarations and shutting down the conversation every time I rebutted with some contradictory evidence. A military commander declined to meet at the very last moment after several phone calls. I was cautious, but I also felt excitement. However, at some point, my assistants asked me to stop asking questions. “If you live here, you don’t talk about these kinds of things,” one of them warned with a worried look, “if you do, you may not live long.” I knew he had received intimidations and I realised that I had overstepped a line. Only a few weeks before unknown gunmen had killed the deputy director of the North Gas Company (NGC) at a checkpoint. A news leak was the likely reason for the assassination, according to some. Kirkukis are confronted with a highly fraught security situation due to inter-communal grievances and disputes over the vast oil riches of the province. Attacks against energy
The nature of conflict 41 infrastructures and Iraqi forces patrolling oilfields continued even after most areas were cleared from ISIS due to the clash of local militias with interests in the local oil economy. However, party officials wanted me to report that everything in Kirkuk was clean and safe. After my assistants cautioned me about not pushing further, I cancelled all other appointments without hesitation. When we drove back to Sulaymaniyah at sunset, one of them was visibly relieved and told me with a smile he had kissed his child ten times before leaving in the morning. I felt terribly guilty. From that moment on, not putting anyone at risk became even more of a priority. Despite visa delays, the timing of my stays in Iraq happened to be propitious. The first period took place while the offensive against ISIS in nearby Mosul had entered the last phase. In those weeks, the KRG President Masoud Barzani began beckoning independence for his people. When I came back almost one year later, in the run-up to the Iraqi parliamentary elections, that dream was in tatters and the geography of power had changed because of the escalation of federal disputes after the referendum. The loss of disputed territories had been a blow to the credibility of Kurdish elites. Anti-establishment resentment bubbled to the surface, while the KDP–PUK enmity reached a new peak. In many ways, the referendum was a watershed for Kurdish politics, and oil was very much involved in the political dynamics. I had therefore the chance of making a relevant comparison. Notes 1 Although prevailing methodologies in IR are firmly rooted in the positivist canon, with qualitative ones under the aegis of KKV’s influential hallmark Designing social inquiry: Scientific inference in qualitative research (King, Keohane, & Verba, 1994), critically oriented books on research methods have blossomed in recent years (see, for instance, Ackerly, Stern, & True, 2006; Yanow & Schwartz-Shea, 2006, 2012; Salter & Mutlu, 2013; Aradau et al., 2014). 2 Denying the existence of “facts of nature” does not amount to endorsing an anti-realist ontology. Phenomenology is rather an epistemological viewpoint on the making and circulation of meanings through which reality becomes knowable. As a consequence, phenomenologists argue with Nietzsche that “[there] are no facts in themselves. It is always necessary to begin by introducing a meaning in order that there can be a fact” (quoted in Jenkins, 1997: 121). 3 For the sake of clarity, I stick to the definition of action as behaviour imbued with meaning: “running in the streets aimlessly is mere behavior, running after a thief is an action endowed with meaning” (Adler & Pouliot, 2011: 5). 4 For two early critiques, see Deudney (1990, 1991) and Dalby (1996). 5 See, for instance, Waever (1998) and Tickner and Waever (2009). 6 The is a kind of a paradox in the fact that the most prestigious university programs in African Studies are taught in London, Oxford, or Leiden. 7 To take another example, Ferguson (2006) questions whether we can speak of Africa as a unitary place in any meaningful sense: “looking at the range of empirical differences internal to the continent – different natural environments, historical experiences, religious traditions, forms of government, languages, livelihoods, and so on – the unity of a thing called “Africa,” its status as a single “place,” however the continental descriptor may be qualified geographically or racially (“Sub-Saharan,” “black,” “tropical,” or what
42 The nature of conflict 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 have you) seems dubious.” Nonetheless, the global discourse on Africa and Africanness is still there. It is so, quite simply, because it offers a radical counterpoint to Western societies. To use another formidable sentence by Ferguson, Africa “has served as a metaphor of absence – a ‘dark continent’ against which the lightness and whiteness of ‘Western civilization’ can be pictured” (ibidem: 2). “Representations of the Middle East,” Diana Davis writes in the opening of her edited volume Imperialism, Orientalism, and the Environment in the Middle East (2011), “nearly inevitably include desolate scenes of empty and parched deserts, punctuated, perhaps, with a lonely string of camels, a verdant but isolated oasis, or a beach with large dunes of golden sand, sometimes with a pyramid, an oil derrick, or a minaret in the background.” The debate on the endurance of authoritarianism in the Arab world – the “region’s political hallmark” (Bellin, 2012: 127) – is a clear indication of a presumed anomaly. Anticipated in Huntington’s comment (1999) on the resistance of Middle East and North Africa to the third wave of democratization unfolding during the 1970s, according to many area specialists the exception still stands. Cronyism, corruption, colonial legacies, oil rents, weak civil societies, coercive apparatuses, tribal norms, and religious factors are some of the often-interrelated explanatory factors to which the debate has resorted, especially after the so-called Arab Spring. I agree with Achcar (2016) that the theories of Arab exceptionalism resonating in Western media and scholarly works embody culturalist understandings, which take the pulse of regional politics based on its distance from the liberal model. The juxtaposition “spring” to the unrest crossing several Arab countries is of significance. By contrast, Achcar reminds that the upheaval started in 2011 “[was] not – or not only or even primarily – a democratic transition,” but “a thorough social revolution that seeks to overturn a whole socioeconomic order after a protracted state of developmental blockage” (ibidem: 5–6). “All borders, whether they appear oddly contrived and artificial, . . . or appear to be based on objective criteria, such as rivers or lines of latitude, are have always been constructions of human beings. As such, any border’s delineation is subjective, contrived, negotiated, and contested” (Diener & Hagen, 2010: 3). Opposed to an etic perspective, which applies the observer’s external categories (which Geertz calls experience-distant concepts) to a social group. Carolyn Nordstrom authored a beautiful ethnography across warzones and beyond frontlines uncovering the interplay between armed conflicts and illicit economies, or to use her striking words “the intersections of power, profit, survival, and humanity – in the shot of a gun.” She offers a remarkable characterization of what ethnography is: “Ethnography is a discipline sophisticated in its simplicity: it travels with the anthropologist to the front lines and across lights and shadows to collect these stories; to illuminate strange bedfellows, and, if one were to put it bluntly, to care” (2004: 3). There are notable exceptions. See, for instance, Scott (1977), Aronoff (1989), Gusterson (1998), Wedeen (1999), Barnett (2002), Nordstrom (2004), Khalili (2007), Pachirat (2011), Neumann (2012), and Autesserre (2014). Some of these works fall outside the traditional research questions defining the IR field but are mentioned here as evidence for excellent ethnographic studies at the intersection of political science more generally and anthropology. The corpus of texts included: speeches and statements delivered by KRG President and Ministries at national and international summits; press releases and reports published by KRG Ministries (namely, the Ministry of Natural Resources, MNR, and the Ministry of Planning); laws and legislative documents; and oil and gas contracts. References Acharya, A., & Buzan, B. (2009). Non-Western International Relations Theory: Perspectives on and beyond Asia. Routledge.
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2 The Kurdistan Region of Iraq Borders, identity, oil Kurds in Iraq. A historical overview Look, from the Arabs to the Georgians, The Kurds have become like towers. The Turks and Persians are surrounded by them. The Kurds are on all four corners. Both sides have made the Kurdish people Targets for the arrows of fate. They are said to be keys to the borders Each tribe forming a formidable bulwark. Whenever the Ottoman Sea [Ottomans] and Tajik Sea [Persians] Flow out and agitate, The Kurds get soaked in blood Separating them [the Turks and Persians] like an isthmus. (Ahmad-i Khani, Mem-u-Zin, 1692; as translated in Hassanpour, 1992: 53) The Kurdish question The idea of Kurdistan – “the land of the Kurds” – is as evocative as elusive. From northwest to southeast, the Kurdish homeland runs for approximately 200,000 square miles along the steep flanks and fertile valleys of the Taurus and Zagros mountainous arch (Izady, 2015): it starts from the heart of Central Anatolia and the headwaters of Tigris and Euphrates to the east, laps on the Aras River and the foothills of the Lesser Caucasus in the Armenian highlands to the north, lowers gradually to the Mesopotamian Plain down to the province of Kirkuk to the south, and extends beyond the city of Kermanshah to the east. Across this vast geographic area, a diverse mixture of semi-nomadic tribes, mainly shepherds driving livestock seasonally from one mountain pasture to another or peasants cultivating the lowlands whose roots are lost deep in the Medes ancestry, at some point in history began to be recognised as Kurds. These pastoralist communities preferred to call themselves by their tribal or clan name and did not use the label “Kurd” in a political sense until the 20th century (Özoğlu, 2012: 27). The word Kurdistan first appeared in the DOI: 10.4324/9781003161103-3
The Kurdistan Region of Iraq 53 12th century to designate the administrative province inside the Seljuk Empire on the eastern ridge of the Zagros Mountains near Hamadan in today’s Iran (McDowall, 2003: 6; Özoğlu, 2012: 26). Similarly, the territory of Diyarbakir was named Kurdistan by the Ottomans due to its sizeable Kurdish population (van Bruinessen, 1992: 11). The imaginative geography of Kurdistan hinges on a circular analogy between ethnicity and territory, which are thought to coincide: just as the homeland is defined upon ethnic presence, Kurds achieve ethnic distinctiveness because of territorial rootedness. Whether drawn on a map or practiced into habit, the lines of ethnicity or more broadly identity remain blurred since their referents (ethnos and territory) are projects perpetually in the making and not absolute entities. This consideration may be applied to any political community. However, it is even more revealing in the case at hand given that Kurdish political identity has been traumatically marked by displacement – first through incorporation into the successor states of the Ottoman and Persian empires and then in the form of cultural and political subjugation. Known to be the largest stateless nation,1 undeniably Kurds “remained marginalised, suppressed, and oppressed in every state in which they found themselves” (Stansfield & Shareef, 2017: xviii). A “Kurdish question” (Elphinston, 1946) came to rise in the aftermath of World War I (WWI), when the Allies dissected the Ottoman Empire (and Kurdish inhabited areas with it) through a series of consecutive settlements. During post-war conferences, Kurds had been acknowledged as unitary people worthy of national recognition, but the extent of that right was object of debate in the negotiations following the signing of the Mudros armistice in 1918, which sanctioned the Ottoman surrender. Although the Treaty of Sèvres in 1920 had instructed a commission to draft “a scheme of local autonomy for the predominantly Kurdish areas,”2 Wilson’s principle of self-determination soon got lost in the reorganisation of former Ottoman territories.3 Britain, which brokered the present-day regional architecture through the acquisition of a colonial mandate on Mesopotamia and Palestine as envisaged in the Sykes-Picot formula, was never convinced of supporting Kurdish claims in full. British policy was inconstant: whilst at the 1921 Cairo Conference the then Colonial Secretary Winston Churchill maintained that “purely Kurdish areas should not be included in the Arab state of Mesopotamia” (Yildiz, 2007: 11), both the Turkish aspirations over Mosul and the perceived unreliability of Kurdish clans produced a change of heart. With the crumbling of the Ottoman Empire and the British occupation of the three Mesopotamian vilayet (provinces) of Basra, Baghdad, and Mosul, Kurdish tribes were initially encouraged to plead national self-determination in the northernmost area around Mosul, even though at the time “the primary sense of identity [laid] with their clan or their religious order” (Tripp, 2002: 34) and their political outlook was rather local. The Vilayet of Mosul corresponded approximately to the southern arc of Kurdistan, also known as Bashur.4 However, the High Commissioner of Iraq, Sir Percy Cox, later warned the Colonial
54 The Kurdistan Region of Iraq Office against Mahmud Barzanji’s clannish leadership. In parallel, an international commission contested Turkish claims on the province. The subsequent resolution adopted by the League of Nations in 1925 agreed upon annexation of Vilayet of Mosul to the nascent Kingdom of Iraq, already handed to Faisal bin Hussain bin Ali al-Hashemi (crowned as Faisal I) in 1921. The response was not long in coming. Mahmud Barzanji, a Kurdish Sheikh who had been appointed by the British High Commission as the governor of Sulaymaniyah in 1918, led repeated uprisings. At the same time, the outcome of the Turkish war of independence contradicted what had been stipulated with the Treaty of Sèvres. The replacing peace treaty, signed in July 1923 in Lausanne by Turkish nationalists, drew the contemporary Republic of Turkey without taking Kurds into account. The settlement frustrated hopes (if there ever were any) of gaining an independent Kurdish state in a remodelled Middle East: the Turkish opposition to any cession of sovereignty over south-eastern Anatolia was echoed by British reluctance to endorse the consolidation of Kurdish rule in Mesopotamia. Hence, Kurds’ path to autonomy became “one of conflict, betrayal and dashed promises” (Yildiz, 2007: 14). Kurdistan was no longer an inaccessible buffer zone on the fringes of mighty empires in competition (O’Shea, 2004; Ünver, 2016) as Ahmad-i Khani’s poem reminds. Kurds found their ancestral homeland partitioned into four pieces and were forcefully integrated into the boundaries of emerging nation-states geared to be ethnically homogeneous and whose governments began considering Kurdish-held tribal territories as rebellious peripheries to be denied of any autonomy. As a consequence, the liberation struggle took separate paths. Kurds were confronted with various constraints and opportunities within each host state. For this reason, although transnational aspects have been and still are relevant, the evolution of Kurdish nationalism should be read through the lens of local histories. Accordingly, without implying the naturalisation of state boundaries, the present work focuses on the Iraqi side of Kurdistan only. The journey that has brought Iraqi Kurds from early Sheikh Mahmud Barzanji’s insurrections to the recognition of an autonomous region resembling a de facto state within contemporary Iraq is illustrated in what follows.5 The rise of the national liberation movement A lot of time has passed since the British mandate on Mesopotamia, but the consequences of the rejection of Kurdish claims are still there, namely, the segmentation of the country along ethnic lines that was ingrained in Iraqi politics from the very beginning. When the Kingdom acceded to full independence in 1932, Sheikh Mahmud Barzanji had been fighting the Hashemite rulers and their British protectors for more than a decade before being forced into exile that same year. Unrest broke out also in the Turkish and Iranian sides of Kurdistan, but retaliations of central governments from both countries were tougher than the revolts. However, it must be bore in mind that the aghas (the title for Kurdish
The Kurdistan Region of Iraq 55 landlords and tribal chieftains) were neither all against the Anglo-Iraqi administration nor united under the banner of a nationalist cause. In fact, a national sentiment was yet to rise. Furthermore, just as Britain had successfully played on the feudal lineage of Kurdish society to obtain the collaboration of the upper class, the Iraqi government fanned the flames of tribal divisions to weaken popular mobilisation. It was not rare to find aghas forging temporary and tactical alliances with Baghdad to prevail over local rivals; according to van Bruinessen (1994), Kurdish collaborationists (known derogatorily as Jahsh, “mule”) were the same number of liberation fighters (Peshmerga, “those who face death”). Even Barzanji’s self-proclamation as “King of Kurdistan” was resisted and defied by many. During the 1930s, Mullah Mustafa Barzani replaced him as the most prominent and charismatic leader of the nationalist movement. From his eponymous town (Barzan, located on the banks of the Greater Zab south of the TurkeyIraq border, where the Barzanis were revered for fighting prowess and as religious authorities of the Naqshbandi order), he managed to mobilise a broad tribal base and lead an intermittent guerrilla for over half a century, which made him a legendary nationalist figure. In 1946, Barzani was offered the presidency of the newly founded KDP and participated to the short-lived experiment of the Republic of Mahabad in Iran, which fell to the Shah forces after barely a year. Barzani and about 500 fighters were then forced on an epic march across the mountains until they crossed the Aras River and found shelter in the Soviet Union. However, for his many internal opponents, Mustafa Barzani was a power-hungry warlord seeking to subdue Kurdish tribes to his will. Tribal infighting was not secondary to the revolt against Baghdad. Anti-Barzani positions soon emerged inside the KDP, in particular from one of the factions, known as the Politburo, headed by Ibrahim Ahmed and his son-in-law Jalal Talabani. Antagonism broke out in armed conflicts from mid1960s onwards. It was not all about power. Kurdish society was anything but cohesive, and its internal conflict reflected the socio-cultural rift between different constituencies: Mullah Mustafa Barzani embodied the traditional, landowning, and conservative elites of Kurmanji-speaking rural tribes in the northwest; the Politburo gathered the intellectual, Marxist, and urban-based wing of Sorani-speaking areas in the south-east who nevertheless had left the door open for Barzani to come in as the most authoritative spokesperson of the liberation struggle. Despite the nationalistic aura, Barzani was never able to secure the allegiance of non-tribal Kurdish peasants: fearing to lose grip on his resource base, he took up arms against the land reforms of central governments, with the result that “Kurdish nationalism in Iraq . . . never developed into the peasantproletarian, leftist mass Kurdish movement epitomized by the PKK in Turkey” (Romano, 2006: 189). It is worth noting that these same features – the personification of nationalist mobilisation, party factionalism, tribal infighting, and the mass-elite cleavage – have survived as markers of Kurdish politics until today. Abd al-Karim Qasim’s military coup and the overthrow of the monarchy in July 1958 commenced a new phase: the Interim Constitution of the Republic of Iraq recognised Kurdish national rights for the first time, the KDP was no
56 The Kurdistan Region of Iraq longer a clandestine political organisation, and Barzani returned after a decade in exile. Such peace gestures, however, were not intended to be enduring and Kurds-Arabs relations soon worsened through mutual recrimination. Once again in September 1961, shots were fired. A pattern emerged, whereby Baghdad would withdraw from initial concessions to take up arms against Kurds until either political change in central government or military considerations would coax belligerents to resume negotiations (Owtram, 2018). Throughout the 1960s, the Iraqi–Kurdish war killed tens of thousands of people. Meanwhile, Barzani kept on removing dissidents to his hegemony both inside and outside the KDP. On the other front, the rise in Baghdad of the Ba’ath Party, which had toppled and executed Qasim in February 1963, laid the ideological foundations of a more pronounced persecution against Kurds. Nonetheless, in March 1970, Ba’athists initially made a settlement offer accepting in principle most KDP demands, from the recognition of Kurdish as official language to proportional participation in state affairs and unification of Kurdish areas into a self-governing region, in exchange for the integration of Peshmerga into the Iraqi army (Marr, 2012). Already in the 1940s, the KDP had abandoned secessionist intentions moving to the less ambitious goal of self-administration. What came to be known as the March Manifesto was “the best deal the Kurds of Iraq had been offered” (McDowall, 2003: 327). However, Saddam Hussein, then General Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr’s deputy, negotiated the agreement out of necessity at a time when Iraqi forces were recovering from costly military campaigns and the Ba’ath Party had still to consolidate its position. In point of fact, Kurdish national rights were seen in Baghdad as an unacceptable blow to Arab unity. A military solution was only delayed. It is no wonder, hence, that the Manifesto was never implemented. Disagreement over the demarcation of the autonomous area due to the inclusion of Kirkuk and Khanaqin was the harbinger of further distance, which became apparent by the several assassination attempts on Barzani, the deportation of 45,000 Faili Kurds6 in Iran, and the mutual arms race (Marr, 2012). As Romano sumps up, “both sides were preparing for war” (2006: 193), which eventually erupted in 1974 as Barzani rejected the Autonomy Law. By that time the wind had turned though: the nationalisation of petroleum industry and the heavy weaponry supplied through the 1972 Iraqi-Soviet Treaty of Friendship provided Ba’athists with the means of crushing the much lighter Kurdish resistance. Peshmerga were aided by Iran, with the CIA and Mossad also dispensing weapons, but the military imbalance drove the Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi to reach out to Saddam Hussein in secret. At the margins of the OPEC Conference in Algiers in March 1975, they announced the settlement of border disputes between the two countries. The unexpected pact also implied cessation of Iranian support to Mustafa Barzani, who was left with no other option but to accept a ceasefire that was tantamount to defeat. In so doing, Saddam Hussein had cleared the way for harsh policies of ethnic assimilation. With Kurdish forces in disarray, the regime forged ahead with the purpose of “Arabizing” Kurdish inhabited territories. The bitter time of
The Kurdistan Region of Iraq 57 ethnic cleansing began. The following 15 years would be seared into memory by the escalation of Ba’athist oppression: the systematic destruction of villages within a forbidden zone along the northern and eastern borders and the resettlement of deportees anticipated far harsher measures, which Ali Hassan al-Majid (the Secretary of the Northern Bureau of the Ba’ath Party disgracefully remembered as Chemical Ali) led to the extreme of genocidal campaigns. The codenamed al-Anfal (“Spoils”) onslaughts started in February 1988 with the siege of the Jalafi valley and the massacre of Halabja, where the Iraqi air force dropped chemical bombs on civilians resulting in thousands of deaths (Hiltermann, 2007). It was neither the first, nor the last time Ba’athists used chemical weapons against Kurds. Around 700–1,000 villages were razed to the ground and between 50,000 and 100,000 people were killed during the al-Anfal operations, though some estimates go up to 180,000–200,000 casualties.7 Within two decades (1970–1990), this scorched earth policy tore down about 4,000 villages, thus bringing down “an economy, a culture, a way of life, a moral order” altogether (van Bruinessen, 2000). Amid displacements and slaughters, the Peshmerga resumed guerrilla from the mountains. Inside the national movement, after the death of Mustafa Barzani in 1979, his son Masoud took the lead of the KDP, while Talabani and his closest associates (including Nawshirwan Mustafa and Fuad Masum) had founded the PUK following the Algiers agreement. The scission was a watershed in Kurdish politics. From insurgency to state-building The Gulf War changed the course of events. Whereas Ba’athists’ authoritarian excesses had largely gone unnoticed to Western powers, the invasion of Kuwait and its large oilfields could not be forgiven. The US-led military intervention drove out the Iraqi army in a few weeks. Right after the defeat, a popular uprising broke out in the Kurdish north and was matched by a parallel uproar in the Shiite south. Kurdish parties remained on the sidelines; protests were staged by “the numerous urban Kurds who had long stood aloof from overt politics or who had even collaborated with the Baath regime” (van Bruinessen, 1992: 44). Saddam Hussein suppressed the revolt with an iron fist but this time in full view of the international community. When almost two million Kurds fled to the Turkish and Iranian borders hunted by Iraqi helicopters, the Operation Provide Comfort belatedly enforced a no-fly zone north of the 36th parallel under the resolution n. 688 of the UN Security Council. In October 1991, Saddam Hussein pulled back security forces and administrative officers from the governorates of Erbil, Sulaymaniyah, and Duhok, which were subsequently sealed off from the rest of the country. Despite protection against a military reaction from Baghdad, Kurds were not in peace: the KDP–PUK enmity plunged soon into a bloodbath, which locked up in civil war an already devastated and impoverished region. The Barzani and Talabani houses were unwilling to share power. Triggered by a skirmish related to a land dispute in Qal’at Diza, the “Brothers War” (as it is remembered) went
58 The Kurdistan Region of Iraq on for almost four years and left a heavy trace on Kurdish society. Notwithstanding this, the internationally established safe haven created conditions for Kurds to take effective steps towards self-rule. During 1992, parliamentary and presidential elections were held ahead of the formation of a regional administration, the KRG, which consisted of the sum of KDP and PUK separate administrations in the respective areas of influence. The KRG was a landmark achievement: the Kurdish insurgency turned into a civilian government and “Kurds practically ceased to be a minority in Iraq” (Voller, 2014: 68). These developments were condemned promptly by Baghdad (and neighbouring countries) as an illegal drive towards secession, but commitment to democratic values and opposition to the Ba’athist regime gave Kurds a credit line at the international level: while Iraqis were still under the yoke of tyranny, Kurds instead were taking the first steps towards democratisation. Hence, the KRG became an interlocutor of Western powers and, even more importantly, a recipient of substantial foreign aid delivered through the UN Oil-for-Food Programme, which sustained post-war reconstruction and accentuated economic differentiation with Iraq (Natali, 2010). By the time Saddam Hussein was ousted in 2003, Kurds had enjoyed self-rule for more than a decade and acquired some fundamental attributes of statehood: a military force exerting control over territory, separate authority from the parent state, a stable leadership embodied in the Barzani and Talabani clans, institutional structures providing services to local population, diplomatic missions and consulates in Erbil, representative offices abroad, and social cohesion based upon identification with the nationalist cause. Added to these were the softer aspects of nation-building (Kolsto & Blakkisrud, 2005, 2008): a national flag, a national anthem, a capital (Erbil, Hewlêr in Kurdish) that is home to executive and legislative bodies, an education system with curricula taught in Kurdish, a media system with local newspapers and TV stations, and a stock market.8 Therefore, it is generally accepted in the literature that the KRG is a good example of a de facto state lacking in international recognition (Kolsto, 2006; Caspersen & Stansfield, 2011; Caspersen, 2013; Voller, 2014; Gürbey, Hofmann, & Ibrahim Seyder, 2017; Riegl & Doboš, 2017). The Kurdish case is quite unique in that international support was a decisive factor for state formation (Kingston & Spears, 2004). The external military intervention unleashed great opportunities for Kurdish self-determination, though within a hybrid institutional framework that legally recognises the KRI as an autonomous and constituent part of a federal country. KDP and PUK militias enthusiastically backed the Anglo-American invasion and broke the Green Line within which Saddam Hussein had confined Kurdish aspirations. Following the fall of the regime, Kurds found themselves in the unprecedented position of being able to play a role in the stabilisation of the country. The federalist design enshrined in the 2005 Constitution aimed to bring together regional decentralisation and national integrity within a federal framework, most notably through fiscal dependency and proportionate representation of all Iraqi components in central institutions. However, what was designed to be the main guarantee of pluralism – a quota system based on ethnic
The Kurdistan Region of Iraq 59 and religious criteria – went the opposite way: the “one Iraq policy” laid down in Washington DC ended up heightening sectarianism and communal violence. As a result, the tentative implementation of federal dispositions raised mistrust and strengthened hardliners soon. Meanwhile, Kurdish parties manoeuvred a two-way agenda, which combined a principled commitment to federalism with the more pragmatic pursuit of autonomy. On the one hand, Kurds rose to the rank of power brokers drafting the new Constitution and divvying up government posts with Shi’a parties: Jalal Talabani was appointed as President of Iraq in 2005, a position retained until 2014 when his party comrade Fuad Massum succeeded to him; Barham Salih (PUK) was nominated as Deputy Prime Minister and Hoshyar Zebari (KDP) Minister of Foreign Affairs. On the other hand, the formation of a Kurdish coalition in Baghdad was key for the KRG to further consolidate state-building9 inside the region. A specification is needed though: “the primary aim of the coalition was to secure access to power and the related profits,” not the construction of viable state structures (Jüde, 2017: 849). This orientation has long shaped not only the tug of war with central government but also internal power dynamics, with the KDP–PUK oligarchy swinging between revenue sharing and fierce competition, according to the circumstances. Kurdish self-determination accelerated fast over the last ten years to culminate in the independence referendum in September 2017. By holding it, the KRG claimed to exercise an inalienable right and questioned the fragile basis of what was perceived as stillborn federalism. However, the call for an independent Kurdistan backfired dramatically. Both the standing acquired upon crude supplies to the global markets and the blood spilled against ISIS on behalf of Western allies had led Kurdish elites to overestimate their room for manoeuvre. Despite international objections, as well as crossfire of neighbouring Turkey and Iran who feared a chain reaction in their Kurdish-inhabited provinces, the KRG staged the referendum. Unsurprisingly, it was a “yes” vote: 93% of voters agreed with the goal of making KRI and Kurdistani areas outside the region an independent country. The addition was not wishful thinking given that the consultation took place also in disputed districts under Peshmerga control. The tear was too deep to fix. After clearing the last ISIS stronghold in Hawija, on 16 October 2017, the Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi ordered a military attack, as a result of which Kurdish forces handed over all disputed areas, including the symbolic city of Kirkuk. As will be explained in the following chapters, oil was both trigger and context of the escalation. Out of the map Sitting around an old table they drew lines across the map dividing the place I would call my country (Choman Hardi, Lausanne, 1923)
60 The Kurdistan Region of Iraq For Kurds, the basic political fact is that Kurdistan is nowhere to be found in any world atlas. The absence amounts to historical injustice and enduring marginalisation. However, it arouses more a sense of possibility than a limitation: cutting Kurds out of the political map expresses an unfulfilled potential yet to be realised. As Herman Melville suggests in Moby Dick, a novel with a strong geographical hue, “true places” are not down on any map. After all, Kurdish nationalists have crossed swords with Iraqi authorities on the cartographic representation of Kurdistan to negotiate the extent of autonomy since the beginning of the liberation struggle. For this reason, the historical overview mentioned earlier is supplemented with a brief digression on the politics of space underpinning the Kurdish question. Maps exert a territorial function by making rule over space visible and legitimate. The act of representing translates land into territory and power into authority. Any legal order relies on a cartographic representation of some sort. Therefore, maps are never descriptive in the sense of replicating, scientifically, a static spatial reality. Rather, maps assert particular “geographical imaginations” (Gregory, 1994) through the naturalisation into seemingly rigid and unchangeable spatialities of a political world that, on the contrary, is fast-paced, mutable, and riven by contestation. This implies that what cannot be found on the map either does not exist or is treated as a violation of the status quo: a myth in the former case, an illegitimate defiance in the latter. From this perspective, cartography is an exercise of dominance historicising a certain order while eradicating all other possibilities. It is worth noting that cartography as practice came into being in the context of military and commercial ventures, just like the establishment of geography as academic discipline in the second half of the 19th century was integral to the colonial expansion of European empires. However, this practice of discrete objectification of space goes often unquestioned. Borders are socialised as faithful to reality, which is to say that the orderly distribution of equivalent political entities on the earth’s surface is perceived as “natural” and devoid of partisan interests. Quite the contrary, the subliminal influence of mapmaking on the reproduction of geographical knowledge sustains power-laden narratives. Postmodern thinking, in particular, has focused on the discursive formations embedded in and enacted through maps (Harley, 1989; Edney, 1993, 2009; Black, 2000). The struggle over geography, Edward Said wrote, “is not only about soldiers and cannons but also about ideas, about forms, about images and imaginings” (Said, 1993: 7). Said meant that the production of geographical knowledge has long been the ideological foundation of imperialism inasmuch as it contributed to separating the metropolitan core from subaltern peripheries to be conquered, controlled, and “civilized” by the force of arms. Imaginings of distant places and primitive cultures supported the construction of “other” subjects, thus setting up their hegemonic incorporation. Said’s reflection on power and representation has not lost explanatory breadth over time and casts instead of a long shadow on how discursive practices are infused in any spatial ordering. Along these lines, recent work in the sub-field of critical geopolitics
The Kurdistan Region of Iraq 61 stressed that geographical representations are tacitly involved in the reproduction of a colonial present (Gregory, 2004) and power hierarchies more generally (Toal, 1998; Agnew, 2004). Despite Kurdistan appearing to be a fascinating example of the unsolved struggle over, surprisingly there is a dearth of spatial studies on Kurds (Gambetti & Jongerden, 2011; Kaya, 2020). Whilst the post-Ottoman state system bears the marks of deception and dispossession to every Kurd, the map of the Greater Kurdistan (Kurdistan Mezin) straddling over present-day boundaries and reuniting the lost homeland into a single entity is “the most visible weapon in the Kurdish nationalist arsenal” and “the most visible form of discourse about Kurdistan” (O’Shea, 2004: 7). Yet, a pan-Kurdish state was never even close to being attained and not even claimed as such (van Bruinessen, 1992). The Mahabad Republic established in Iran was the only and ephemeral attempt. In the past, autonomous Kurdish principalities or emirates were allowed to thrive under the Ottoman indirect rule from the 16th century on and mould a security belt along the open frontier with Persia, but were annexed after the fall of the Safavid dynasty in late 18th century (Izady, 2015). Although the Ottoman’s “unite and rule” policy had encouraged Kurdish clans to exercise significant authority over their territories, no principality was never strong enough to emancipate fully from imperial control (Özoğlu, 2012). Moreover, tribes were often at loggerheads with each other over local supremacy. The Safavid dynasty in Persia was less malleable in comparison; resultantly, many Kurdish principalities made their oaths of allegiance to the Ottomans. The provision of garrisons in return for land sets the basis of centre–periphery relations, but Persians remained wary of Kurdish autonomy and opposed the formation of large tribal confederations. Kurdish tribes exploited to some degree their strategic location, lying across overland trading routes: support of one side or another was fickle and easily swayable. Nonetheless, Kurdish-inhabited borderlands ended up being choked in the power struggle between Sunni Ottomans and Shiite Safavids. Poor imperial control and marauding armies crossing the region were amongst the reasons why the “tribal nomadic mode of life [continued] longer than in surrounding areas” (O’Shea, 2004: 81). It is not accidental that the Greater Kurdistan has no political centre. Furthermore, in contrast with the image of a prosperous nation deprived of its rightful position at the heart of the Middle East, Kurdistan has never been a homogenous region – economically, religiously, and even linguistically (van Bruinessen, 1992: 2). Quite tellingly, there is no agreement on its geographical extension even amongst Kurds themselves. Notwithstanding this vagueness, the cartographic representation of the Greater Kurdistan gives substance to an explicit political project. In other words, the “mental map” (Gould & White, 2012) drawing the Kurdish homeland carries with it “a real geopolitical and national existence” (Culcasi, 2010: 107). Given these premises, a few comments are in order. Firstly, the overlap of mythical and practical interpretations of Kurdistan (McDowall, 2003: 3) reveals that the shared idea of what the Greater Kurdistan looks like is declined in different shapes, adapted to suit the host state.
62 The Kurdistan Region of Iraq Despite the partial disconnection of Kurdish nationalist movements, a panKurdish identity binds all four portions to transnational solidarity. Such sense of brotherhood becomes tangible indeed in times of trauma, as demonstrated by reactions to the ISIS siege of Kobanî when the KRG sent military reinforcements to protect the town regardless of antipathy with the TEV-DEM coalition governing the Democratic Federation of Northern Syria (Gourlay, 2018). Secondly, depicting an ideal Kurdish heartland on an alternative canvas of the Middle East exerts a normative function: stylised on a map, contiguity becomes continuity, and continuity creates the impression of cultural homogeneity (Farinelli, 2009). In so doing, mapmaking has the same effects of logical inference since it upholds the claim for an independent state based upon a “historical myth of continuous inhabitancy” that, in fact, cannot not be found in the past (O’Shea, 2004: 57). This is the clearest illustration of what was argued at the beginning: maps do not make intelligible the outer edges of a frozen world, but rather fill space up with arbitrary representations, which remain fluid and contestable. To sum the argument up, by asserting a counter representation of Middle Eastern political geography with the Kurdish nation at its centre Kurds have reacted against geopolitical marginalisation and built up international legitimacy in order to gather external support. It might be argued that Kurds have fallen victim to the historical evolution of the notion of territory. When the indefinite frontiers in-between empires (the Ottoman to the west; the Safavid and Qajar to the east; the Russian to the north) solidified into sovereign borders, the high-lying Zagros and Taurus Mountains that are home to Kurdish tribes served as physical barriers to delimit national homogenisation within emergent nation-states. Territory ceased to be the recipient of authority and became the source of jurisdiction. According to Farinelli, Kurdistan is exception to the geographic pattern of the modern state that subordinates mountains and depressions to the domination of plains (ibidem: 90–93). The Treaty of Lausanne symbolically sealed up a radical transformation of the condition of peripherality: from periphery of transnational empires to periphery of nationstates, Kurdish mountains were swallowed by surrounding flatlands. With the stroke of a pen, “Southern Kurdistan becomes Northern Iraq” (ivi). Even nowadays labelling the region with different geographical connotations is used to uphold territorial claims.10 McDowall shares the same understanding: Except to its own inhabitants Kurdistan must be considered a peripheral region, lying along the geopolitical fault line between three power centres of the Middle East. Until the beginning of the twentieth century no one cared very much about the boundaries of Kurdistan, or the numbers of people who lived there. . . . All that changed in the twentieth century. One reason has already been given: the anxiety of the new states to impose their identity on all peoples within their territory. Another reason is strategic: the mountains certainly provide Iran and Iraq with a defensible strategic frontier; to move the boundary either west or east of Kurdistan would
The Kurdistan Region of Iraq 63 not make strategic sense to either state. Turkey’s attitude to its frontiers in Kurdistan is special. It has an emotional and ideological view that its frontiers (except with Iraq) cannot be changed without threatening the foundations of the republic. (McDowall, 2003: 7) This transition explains much of the genesis of Kurdish nationalism. What is notable, though, is that the oil and gas potential has provided Iraqi Kurds with the means to counter the cartographical elimination and become a true place on the global map of energy transactions. In pursuit of nationhood Despite the many Kurdistan-s and the separate self-determination strategies within each country, the digression on the cartographic discourse shows that Kurdish nationalists have nurtured the idea of a culturally cohesive and politically united people through territorial continuity. This ethnicist view exaggerates both extent and consistency of Kurdish-inhabited areas to the disadvantage of other ethnic groups (Kaya, 2020): Kurdistan is presented as an ethnic territory through a process of symbolic manipulation equating the history of the geographical region to the history of the Kurdish nation. This is crucial to understand Kurdish nationalism. As noted by van Bruinessen (1994), Kurdish leaders had clear in mind that the dream of a unitary and independent Kurdistan would serve the purpose of stitching up internal divisions and raising a powerful ideological flag, but nationalist movements in practice “refrained from openly embracing pan-Kurdish ideals” and restricted the scope of selfdetermination to the boundaries of the host states. In this light, cross-border cooperation with “sister organisations” in Turkey and Iran during the 1970s “was to support the struggle of the Iraqi Kurds, not to organise pan-Kurdish activities” (ibidem). Notwithstanding this, the Greater Kurdistan has genuinely remained the ideal long-term image to which any Kurd would aspire. As seen, correspondence between a people definable in ethnic terms and a territory is a logical stretch for the sake of creating a specific subjectivity – the Kurds – vis-à-vis other collective groups. Among the various criteria upon which this dialectic relies, territorial rootedness is a compelling marker of differentiation, while the multi-religious and multilingual heterogeneity of Kurdish tribes diluted the significance of other markers. As a consequence, nationalist myth making insisted much on the identification with the mountainous homeland in order to substantiate legitimate aspirations for self-determination.11 Whether or not the homeland is possessed alters none of the symbolic potency: as Anthony Smith points out, territory is relevant to ethnicity “because of an alleged and felt symbiosis between a certain piece of earth and ‘its’ community,” so much so that “a land of dreams is far more significant than any actual terrain” (1986: 28). The passage seems to be tailored to the Kurds. Ba’athists’ effort
64 The Kurdistan Region of Iraq to de-territorialise Kurdish settlements is further evidence. Furthermore, displacement and resettlement operations were not an Iraqi prerogative: in comparable ways, de-Kurdification policies were enforced in Turkey, Iran, and Syria “to dismantle the tribal structure and crush Kurdish resistance” (Gambetti & Jongerden, 2011: 377). It is somewhat surprising that Kurdish nationalism has not been explored extensively in relation to territorial identity, with the exception of O’Shea’s book (2004) and few other studies. The literature available has typically devoted attention to the ethnic origins of Kurds – upon which elements their identity is premised, what are the boundaries of ethnic inclusion, and whether a Kurdish nation exists or ever existed. It is no wonder that scholarly work has often been used for ideological purposes.12 For a group denied of ethnic distinctiveness that “did not begin writing their own history until the sixteenth century” (Özoğlu, 2012: 41), ethnographic and historical inquiries have had a fundamental role to reclaim political agency and legitimise liberation struggles across the region. It is a twist of fate that one of the first anthropological studies on Kurdish tribes is owed to Sir Mark Sykes (1908), the English diplomat who would have later shaped with François Picot the geopolitical equilibrium that eventually shattered Kurdistan into pieces. As further demonstration of the tremendous influence of geography, Ünver comments that since Sykes’ account “identifying and predicting Kurdish politics through the use of geographic designations has become somewhat of a regular practice” (2016: 66). The concepts of nation, nationalism, and ethnicity would need separate discussion. The reader may find much better companions in the works that are cited throughout the book. My approach was empirical rather than theoretical, meaning that the analysis presented here contemplates those dense concepts in their contextual manifestations. Having said that, however, theoretical rigor is needed in any case. As a prime example, it is fundamental not to conflate ethnic consciousness with national identity. If ethnicity is “a matter of myths, memories, values and symbols” (Smith, 1986), the appeal to the nation13 evokes a richer universe of meaning than a narrative of the origins or belonging to a culturally-defined group: it declares the collective aspiration to achieve political rights to rule itself. In other words, if self-represented in national terms, an ethnic community strives to get recognised as polity. Ethno-nationalism, both an ideology and a movement, bridges the “leap of imagination” in between (Strohmeier, 2003: 3). In this sense, a world of nations should not be taken for granted. By making this recommendation, Brubaker warned against substantialist views that “presuppose the existence of the entity that is to be defined” (1996: 14). This approach is problematic because it mixes up categories of practice and categories of analysis: the practice of nationalism and its epiphenomenon (the nation) are reified at the theoretical level, as a result of which a political fiction ends up being misconstrued as a real entity outside time and space. Brubaker suggests thinking of the nation “not as substance but as institutionalized form; not as collectivity but as practical category; not as entity but as contingent
The Kurdistan Region of Iraq 65 event” (ibidem: 16). This is key for a number of reasons. In the first place, it frames nationhood as a political construction. This is all the more relevant in the case of Kurdish nationalism given that its advocates hold quite the opposite belief: the nationalist cause is thought of stemming from the ancient Kurdish nation. The narrative of a great awakening gathering force from a glorious past is obviously understandable, but it is inaccurate in that it creates explicit tension between the objective modernity and the subjective antiquity of nations (Anderson, 2006: 5). As Brubaker puts it plainly, nationalism is “governed by the properties of political fields [and] not by the properties of collectivities” (1996: 17). In the second place, Brubaker adds an equally important corollary: nations happen, they do not develop. This runs counter to the argument that nations mechanically dawn upon ethnic belonging. Conversely, Brubaker proposes an “eventful perspective” in order to grasp the processual dynamics leading a national vision to crystallise in a specific historical context. Brubaker’s perspective is a friendly reminder against some shortcomings one might run into when approaching the complexity of identity formation, namely, fixing a people to a place through ethnic and territorial anchors. To some extent, that is inevitable. However, it is worth reiterating that collective signifiers such as Kurds and Kurdistan are not self-evident objects of study but categories of belonging through which a community describes themselves. The point is not inconsequential in that it cautions from naturalising categories of practice. It also suggests decoupling Kurdish ethnic self-representation from the far more recent national projects built upon that basis. As the genealogy of Kurdish national identity (kurdayeti14) shows, the construction of nationhood was not a linear process, nor can it be reduced to the political blossom of ethnic consciousness (referred to as Kurdishness). The birth of Kurdish nationalism is much more akin to a sudden rupture with the past than a gradual transition from ethnic to national consciousness. Nonetheless, Kurdishness itself is not a fixed and exact entity. On the contrary, from a historical viewpoint, it should be intended as the “ground for a hegemonic struggle between internal groups” in competition (Tekdemir, 2019: 878). Tribalism and the emersion of Kurdish nationalism Van Bruinessen (1994) points out that during the interwar period, Kurds went through two processes of incorporation “involving the same peasant, lowerclass urban and marginal tribal populations”: one into emerging nation-states and the other into the Kurdish ethnie, which nevertheless lacked sufficient “integrating structures” to be considered a nation at the time. With reference to Smith’s concept of ethnie,15 he argues that at the beginning of the 20th century, Kurds resembled the ideal type of an aristocratic-lateral ethnie given that the upper stratum began incorporating the subaltern peasantry into a common ethnic category, though this interpretation is disputed by other scholars who have preferred the opposite notion of demotic-vertical ethnie (cf. Maxwell & Smith, 2015). Either way, it is crucial to note that Kurdish ethnocentrism had
66 The Kurdistan Region of Iraq no nationalist connotations. Put differently, the idea of a common destiny was not there yet. The kaleidoscopic composition of the Kurdish ethnos, with its mixture of dialects and religious confessions, is one reason for the relatively slow emersion of a nationalist mobilisation, so much so that according to McDowall we cannot talk of proper ethnic consciousness before WWI. Besides cultural variety, the tribal structure is a factor that deserves even greater attention. Under the Ottomans, local chieftains were typically coopted into the bureaucracy and had quite a feudal vision of political and military affairs (Özoğlu, 2012). The oaths of allegiance to aghas and sheikhs upon which Kurdish society hinged up on were largely inconsistent with a national narrative (Gunter, 2009: xxx). In-group solidarity was based upon kinship – rooted in a myth of common ancestry, which usually traced back to the early Islamic period – and territoriality. Kurds with no tribal connections were for the most part peasants subject to landlordism. McDowall (2003) describes tribal chieftainship as incompatible with the expansion of state administration, which would interfere with the arbitration of disputes and the allocation of resources within the clan – in a nutshell, the levers of power over tribesmen. Interestingly McDowall adds that the “conflict between the role of the tribe and that of the state [makes] one sceptical about tribal chiefs whose utterances are apparently aimed at a Kurdish state, as opposed to an independent tribal entity” (ibidem: 15). Simply put, the rule of tribal chiefs did not extend beyond the reach of kinship relations and territorial roots. Aghas were not seen nor considered themselves, as representatives of the Kurdish people. Whilst a sense of ethnic consciousness emerged in the aftermath of the post-WWI punitive settlement, that spark translated into ethno-nationalism at a much later stage. Although notables and intellectuals had sowed nationalist sentiments already at the beginning of the century (Özoğlu, 2012), Sheyholislami (2011) clarifies that a mass movement came to prominence not earlier than 1960s in Iraq and the mid1980s in Turkey. Although urbanisation and migration have eroded the feudal lineage over time, tribal affiliations have remarkably persisted over time and still retain a considerable influence. Izady provides a list of all major tribal organisations for each of the four axes of Kurdistan, specifying that in most cases, “these tribes have been in existence – with the same names – for several thousand years” (2015: 74). According to McDowall, the endurance of tribal descent is the legacy of state discrimination against Kurdish minorities. Anyway, the tribal texture of Kurdish society helps us understand why these “primordial loyalties do not suddenly cease to function” when the notions of nation and class came to light (van Bruinessen, 1992: 6). A clarification on terminology is necessary though. In common usage, tribalism is shorthand for pre-modern societies. I use it here in a different way. Tribalism should not be understood as a stage prior to state formation, but as a form of social organisation that may also be found in modern-day societies. As an illustration of this, the proliferation of nationalistic themes from small elite circles to mass involvement was driven by obedience to tribal authorities that capitalised on
The Kurdistan Region of Iraq 67 the national cause to maintain their status (van Bruinessen, 1992). The coexistence of tribal and national loyalties has permeated Kurdish politics since then. It is enough to consider KDP and PUK constituencies, which McDowall equates to “contemporary neo-tribal confederations” (McDowall, 2003: 16). Back to assimilation into new polities, the late emersion of kurdayetî was triggered by the traumatic encounter with the political and administrative centralisation of newly founded states,16 when the ethnic pluralism that was distinctive of the Ottoman and Persian empires gave way to the reconstitution of citizenry upon exclusive nationalities defined in ethno-cultural terms. Kurdishness was subordinated to the Turkish, Arabic, and Persian cultures upon which the nation-building projects were established (Sheyholislami, 2011). As the suzerainty model faded away, centre–periphery relations were modified to accommodate the rise of nation-states, whose logic could not be reconciled anymore with state–tribe relations as was at the time of Kurdish principalities. The consolidation of national armies and central bureaucracies made military outsourcing and tributary decentralisation unnecessary. The forceful homogenisation of multicultural areas was anything but conciliatory. Rather, it was based on the violent integration of ethnic minorities in order to prevent any rival claim to rise. Any community identified as a minority was forced to merge into a national body that reflected the ethnic majority. Therefore, the modernisation of traditional institutions was invested with authoritarian traits insofar as local autonomies were targeted as anti-historical and dangerous relics of the past (Vali, 2014: 5). Against this background, nationalist movements in the host countries arose in opposition to the denial of Kurdishness. This is a point well worth bearing in mind because it indicates the reactive character of Kurdish nationalism, which Abbas Vali describes as the result of “socio-economic and cultural dislocations” (2014: 1). This common pattern proved to be unable to overcome the fragmentation of Kurdistan. Vali (1998) attributes the failure of putting together a pan-Kurdish vision to the chronic weakness of civil societies, as a consequence of which kurdayetî turned to “abortive regional autonomist movements” that relied on tribal clientelism and foreign patronage. As a matter of fact, a unitary pan-Kurdish nationalism spanning across four sovereign states was unlikely to happen. Moreover, the varying intensity of incorporation policies set Kurds on discontinuous paths. The outcome, however, was the emergence of local autonomist movements without a political culture beneath – as Vali sums up effectively, nationalists without nationalism. Vali’s interpretation follows in the footsteps of Ernest Gellner, who conceptualised nations as modern phenomena tied to the transition from agrarian to industrialised societies in Western Europe. According to this line of thinking, nationalism is an ideology forging the nation upon a principle of congruity. In this regard, ethnicity serves as benchmark to legitimise the right of a people to self-determination within corresponding political boundaries. If we accept this, “by implication ethnic relations in their pre-political mould were no more than a means of individual identification, essentially devoid of
68 The Kurdistan Region of Iraq historical significance” (Vali, 2014: xiv). For Kurdish nationalists, instead, the nation amounts to a “real biological ancestry” (Smith, 1986) existing from time immemorial and thus abstracted from historical forces. Contrary to primordialist understandings, as is often the case nationalist memories are fictional and even contradictories in some measure, being the result of a selective historical reconstruction that serves the purpose of creating the Kurds as a political subject. After all, “the conflicting territorial claims of Kurds, Armenians and Assyrians make it clear that the conflict of interests is indeed more complex than that simply of politically dominant ethnic group or imperial power against the voiceless Kurdish minority” (O’Shea, 2004: 9). From this perspective, it should be noted that the Kurdish national narrative flattens an ethnic demography that, in fact, is as much wavy and rough as the mountainous landscape of the homeland. The act of demarcating the Greater Kurdistan along national lines therefore produced the parallel exclusion of other, more “powerless” groups (ivi). Within Kurdish Studies, the debate between modernist and primordialist views has been heated.17 It goes without saying that the idea of a pre-modern nation backs the image of foreign occupation more effectively. However, advocates on both sides share a basic assumption: whether a modern creation or a timeless entity, Kurdish ethnos is thought to be “isomorphic with the nation it eventually becomes” (Maxwell & Smith, 2015: 778).18 As problematic as this statement may be, it should be highlighted that the correspondence of these fluid catalysts of identification (ethnos and nation) with their empirical referents cannot be stable. This leaves the debate open, albeit essentialist perspectives – “a long-dead horse that writers on ethnicity and nationalism continue to flog” (Brubaker, 1996: 15) – are generally dismissed nowadays (Eller & Coughlan, 1993) and I find myself in line with such critique. Otherness in a divided country The perpetual suppression of Kurdish identity is the condition of the Kurds’ “otherness” in these societies, their positions as strangers in their own homes. That the Kurds remain unrepresentable is the fundamental cause of their obsession with their identity. (Vali, 1998) Otherness defines the Kurdish cause in the same way as the absence from the map locates Kurdistan in the collective imaginary. Kurdayetî was shaped by the heavy-handed suppression of Kurdishness in the host states. Kurdish nationalists themselves have reproduced this condition of difference. As identity formation is a relational process, the collective self-representation as separate nation came from the degradation to an ethnic minority that was not entitled to act or speak at such. At a time when national self-determination began to be considered internationally as the quintessential principle of political legitimation
The Kurdistan Region of Iraq 69 and the nationalisation wave hit the British-French mandate systems, Kurdish elites imported the same ideological repertoire of their stronger counterparts. A diluted sense of ethnic belonging was gradually socialised along national lines to stand against the official national identities of the host countries. Expressed differently, the spread of Kurdish nationalism was an equal and opposite reaction to the propaganda and policies of central governments in Baghdad, Ankara, and Teheran. It was not just about Kurds. In Iraq, the same happened to Shiite and Sunni Arabs, whose local histories and social strata were equally at odds with the idea of politically cohesive communities and, consequently, were urged to remodel their self-image to capture the state apparatus (Tripp, 2002). Unlike Turkey and Iran, Iraqi institutions did not rest upon imperial foundations: loyalty to and identification with the state was not widespread, but concerned only the upper segment of urban elites and local notables (Marr, 2010). As illustrated by Batatu, Iraq “consisted to no little extent of distinct, self-absorbed, feebly interconnected societies” (1978: 6). In a monumental work on the evolution of the country from the birth of the Kingdom until the Ba’ath Party, Batatu explains that social stratification was not limited to conventional divisions based on ethnicity, religion, prestige, or wealth, but found expression in different social imprints within the same class.19 This was due to expansion of private property and commercial ties with the world market on the one hand, and the salience of “older social forms attaching value to noble lineage, or knowledge of religion, or possession of sanctity or fighting prowess in tribal raids” on the other hand. Whilst state formation occurred at the intersection of these somewhat contradictory tendencies, localism was still the dominant form of political aggregation. The urban–rural divide, the tenuous bonds between cities, sectarian differentiation inside cities, and the variety of currencies were evidence of many subnational realities.20 Inevitably, these realities carried distinct visions of national integration (Lukitz, 2005: 73). In the “formative years” following the British occupation (Kirmanj, 2010), Iraqi statesmen (for the most parts Sunni landowners who had administered the Mesopotamian vilayets on behalf of the Ottomans) picked Arab nationalism in the Nasserist version invoking a larger pan-Arab polity (qawmiyya) as the most promising ideological carrier to consolidate the state-building process. Nationalism came to be the ideological hallmark of urban bourgeoisie and new classes ascending to power. However, pan-Arabism was unattractive for non-Arab segments. Also, Shiites contested the secular orientation. As further demonstration of the Iraqi divisiveness, most denizens in Kirkuk voted against Faisal and the prospect of centralisation he embodied in the countrywide referendum the British held to provide the newly enthroned Hashemite family with a popular imprimatur (Bet-Shlimon, 2012: 917; Natali, 2008). The gradual integration into global markets was shifting the loci of the economy and expropriating landowning classes of their traditional social status (cf. van Bruinessen, 1992; Tripp, 2002; Vali, 2014; Marr, 2012). In parallel to these socio-economic changes, a new hierarchy of values came into view.
70 The Kurdistan Region of Iraq Throughout the country, loyalty to the state was given in view of benefits and resources the apparatus promised to distribute, regardless of an overarching ideology. When the Free Officers led by General Qasim overthrew the proBritish monarchic regime in 1958, resentment against Western domination suggested the Army, who had acted as the bulwark of sovereignty, to propound a more patriotic nationalistic discourse (wataniyya) that insisted on Iraqi peculiarity (Lukitz, 2005). Both variations (qawmiyya and wataniyya) coexisted, but the latter eventually took hold under the Ba’athist autocracy. Saddam Hussein, in particular, forged an Iraqi-centric doctrine to amalgamate Shi’a and Kurdish components into a unified political community by appealing to a common Mesopotamian legacy (Baram, 1983, 1994), but the incipient sectarian segmentation of the state revealed the rather ambiguous nature of the operation. As Sunni Arab elites had managed to keep the reins of key institutions such as the military, the judiciary, and the bureaucracy, Ba’athist officials had a pragmatic vision of what was at stake. Iraqi nationalism was never meant to be plural under the skin. The Arabisation of Iraqi identity was the ultimate goal. The new political space forced Kurds to reconsider organisational structures and political actions. Although Kurds had never been assembled in state-like institutions, statelessness became the symbol of their inability to gain political subjectivity. The Kurdish national movement gradually took form through confrontation with the central government in what might be read as a dialectic between a nationalising nationalism, which institutionalised the state upon a core nationality, and a national minority, whose self-understanding headed towards the demand for state recognition and collective rights (Brubaker, 1996). Arab and Kurdish national identities were mirror images feeding off each other within a divided polity. Seeds of discord were sowed in the 1958 Interim Constitution that outlined a fragile and unbalanced coexistence on which successive formulations have been based upon (van Bruinessen, 1992: 27), such as the 1966 al-Bazzaz’s declaration that recognised the bi-national nature of the state (Yildiz, 2007: 17). The modern history of Iraq is characterised by the unsuccessful integration of these alternative identities, which have fuelled far more pronounced sectarian divisions, especially after the end of the monarchy. After all, Iraq was a recent invention. Kirmanji emphasises that the original Ottoman provinces were administered separately “and each province had little in common with the other two” (2013: 2). The British colonial administration pieced together communal groups that had never been united nor saw themselves as parts of a whole. The monarchic, first, and republican, then, institutions failed to create a common basis to transcend those divisions possibly because of the dominance of Sunni Arabs, who had been power brokers in Baghdad since the Umayyad Caliphate and kept that role in spite of being about one-fifth of the Iraqi population. At the beginning of the republican period, divergent national visions were in competition: on the one hand Arab nationalism, defined in ethnic (qawmiyya) or territorial (wataniyya) terms, with the former calling for a broad pan-Arab unity and the latter one filling up into the narrower (but more inclusive towards ethnic
The Kurdistan Region of Iraq 71 minorities) boundaries of the state; on the other hand, Kurdish nationalism (kurdayetî), which recovered a distinct heritage from that of Arab and Islamic cultures. The latter, however, was a reaction to the marginalisation occurring as a result of assimilation policies. Owtram (2018) uses Hallyday’s concept of post-colonial sequestration to describe the plight of Kurds, who found themselves on the wrong side of history and ended up being imprisoned in a state that they had not contributed to. This sense of malaise is indeed very much present in the collective imaginary. The tribal texture adds nuance to the nationalist framing, which served as prism through which Kurdish parties would articulate parochial interests. Crude power If nearly a decade of US military occupation had already paved the way to Kurdish autonomy, when Iraq was once again on the brink of collapsing under the blows of the Islamist insurgency raging across large swathes of the country in 2014, Kurds were prepared to seize opportunities and rewards coming their way. The enfeeblement of central authority in Baghdad afforded Kurds with the chance of challenging the status quo to their advantage. In this sense, taking control of hydrocarbon reserves and developing the oil industry was the brightest opportunity. This is hardly surprising when considering that Iraqis sit upon the world’s fifth largest proven reserves of crude, with estimated 145 billion barrels (British Petroleum, 2020). Throughout the modern history of the country, the oil economy has moulded decision-making to a significant degree. Furthermore, petroleum largely defined the environment in which foreign relations have taken place, let alone the involvement of external actors in the country’s affairs. What is less intuitive is that, albeit a tangible tool of power, oil has exerted an equally tremendous influence on the mechanisms of identity formation. These last pages trace the transformation of Iraq into a petro-state and discusses the influence oil has had on Kurdish liberation struggle. The oil Kingdom From a structuralist perspective, the industrialisation of Iraq was the biggest of changes.21 Oil played an overwhelming role in that. Not only “the outpouring of oil money . . . made the government to a great extent economically autonomous from society, and thus increased its possibilities for absolutism,” but it also led to a steady increase in public employment to the extent that in late 1970s one-fifth to one-fourth of Iraqi population was dependent on the emoluments paid with the oil income (Batatu, 1978: 1116–1123). The oil economy is one of the three major factors shaping modern Iraq according to Tripp (2002), the other two being patrimonalism and violence, which were both tied to the petroleum industry in one way or another since petrodollars guaranteed the stability of the political regime through the funding of patronage networks and enabling coercive power. It might be argued that crude glued the Iraqi components together.
72 The Kurdistan Region of Iraq Faisal Bin Hussain Bin Ali Al Hashemi was rewarded by Britain with the areas lying along the shores of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers (from which the etymology of the word al-Iraq comes from22) for the role he and his father Hussein, the Sharif of Mecca, had played in leading the Arab Revolt against the Ottomans during WWI. The resulting Kingdom of Iraq was a pro-Western client state ruled by a royal family coming from the Hijaz and thus with low popular acceptance, especially amongst Kurds and Shiites who made up most of the population. This operation suited the strategic needs of the British Empire. In the first place, Britain wanted to secure an additional passage to the Suez Canal for shipment routes from colonial possessions in India. The fall of the Ottoman Empire was opportune for establishing indirect rule over a safe corridor from the Mediterranean Sea to the Persian Gulf, running through the territories of Palestine, Transjordan, and all the way down to Mesopotamia. In the second place, the Anglo-Persian Oil Company (APOC, later AngloIranian and finally British Petroleum) begun drilling in neighbouring Persia in 1907 and extending oil explorations eastwards seemed prospective (Sluglett, 2007). Winston Churchill, who at the time was First Lord of the Admiralty, realised the advantages oil combustion as compared to coal propulsion in order to keep naval superiority at a global level, from higher acceleration to easier refuelling, and his proposal for modernising the fleet was approved in Westminster two weeks ahead of the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand (Muttitt, 2012). During WWI, the Royal Navy was all equipped with combustion engines. However, Britain was still dependent on the US, a potential competitor, for oil imports (Anderson & Stansfield, 2011: 21). This prompted the government to become the 51% shareholder of APOC, which opened the first oil refinery in Abadan, south-west Persia, in 1913. The British strategy for controlling oilfields in the Middle East23 and protecting the imperial communication routes was far-sighted but implied the overall political re-composition of the region. In the spirit of the bilateral agreement signed in 1920 at the San Remo conference to delimit British and French oil interests in the Levant, the mandate system carved up colonial borders in such a way “to accommodate engineered paths of oil” (Havrelock, 2017: 411): the pair of pipelines departing from Kirkuk and bifurcating at Haditha into divergent routes to reach the ports of Tripoli in Lebanon and Haifa in Palestine24 on the Mediterranean exemplify that the subterranean map of oil concessions was implicit in the Sykes-Picot scheme. Predictably, the ruling elites enthroned in the new countries under European tutelage agreed upon foreign ownership of mineral resources without objection. In Iraq, the Hashemite family handed over sovereignty on the entire commodification chain from exploration to pricing in exchange for a meagre fixed royalty paid for each metric ton of output. As early as 1920, seven years before oil was first struck nearby the “eternal fire” at Baba Gurgur,25 the Iraqi Petroleum Company (IPC, formerly Turkish Petroleum Company) was accorded with exclusive rights of exploration over most of the country. On the contrary, regardless of its demands for an ownership share, the role of the Iraqi
The Kurdistan Region of Iraq 73 government would be limited to receiving royalty payments. Except for a minor participation in infrastructural projects, a joint partnership was never brought to the table. Despite its name, IPC was owned in equal shares by foreign operators only: APOC, Royal Dutch Shell, Compagnie Française des Pétroles (the forerunner of Total), and a US-based consortium consisting of Standard Oil of New Jersey and Mobil (Tripp, 2002: 58). British holdings in the venture demonstrated that national interests were well represented (Sluglett, 2007). After all, the establishment of the concessionary regime economies went hand in hand with the militarisation of the mandated territories, so much that “IPC air bases formed the nucleus of the Iraqi, Jordanian, and Israeli air forces” (Havrelock, 2017: 412). In 1928, IPC shareholders formalised a “self-denying clause” for which future oil discoveries inside the red line demarcating the Ottoman inheritance could not be done independently (Yergin, 2011). The so-called Red Line Agreement created a London-based powerful cartel that would monopolise oil production in the Middle East until the 1970s. By 1938, IPC and local affiliates in Basra and Mosul won a series of 75-year-long contracts covering the Iraqi soil in full. The profit-sharing agreement with the government was revised in 1952 to introduce a 50–50 formula, which made royalties dependent on the actual level of production and not fixed ex ante as before, thus yielding Baghdad a much higher revenue (Alnasrawi, 1994). However, Baghdad had no say in determining output and prices on the trading market. McDowall contends that oil was not a factor until the discovery of the Baba Gurgur field in October 1927: in view of unsatisfactory geological surveys, in 1923, Britain offered half of APOC’s holdings in the Mosul Petroleum Company (which was associated to IPC) to the Standard Oil of New Jersey in return for US support against Turkish claims on Mosul (McDowall, 2003: 143–146). In turn, Turkey offered exclusive exploitation rights as a last resort to override the arbitration by the League of Nations, which had subscribed to the British position. Sluglett (2007) maintains instead that the “vigorous public denials” of British statesmen, upon which McDowall backs his argumentation, were meant to hide in plain sight that the oil affair was inseparable from negotiations on the northern frontier. Had it not been for oil, Anderson and Stansfield (2011) agree, British would have probably been open to a Kurdish state. In any case, there is no doubt that the huge deposits unearthed in Kirkuk changed the whole perspective on Iraq and would dreadfully complicate any future discussion on Kurdish autonomy. Oil leaks and sectarian fissures As the oil sector was getting traction driven by booming global demand, Iraqi elites sought the long-term goal of building a national and integrated petroleum industry. Signs of defiance began appearing during the 1950s after the nationalisation of Iranian oil, although the removal of Prime Minister Mossadegh at the hands of the US and British secret services was a warning against potential consequences. The foundation of OPEC in 1960 was a stronger shake against
74 The Kurdistan Region of Iraq the concessionary system. A year later, through the enactment of the Public Law n. 80, the Iraqi government assumed regulation of all the areas that had not been exploited yet under IPC concessions (Alnasrawi, 1994). The creation of the Iraq National Oil Company (INOC) in 1964 was the second step towards national ownership, which was fully achieved in 1972. The Iraqi government portrayed the nationalisation as a way to earn sovereignty back: the face-off with foreign oil majors was not only about revenues; it was about “control of the country by means of control of its primary sources” (Saul, 2007: 749). However, the decision to make oil the mainstay of the economy “bound rather dangerously Iraq’s prospects of economic development to only one sector, the performance of which is ultimately beyond the control of the government” (Alnasrawi, 1994: 13). Although nationalists had successfully broken foreign domination on oil assets, a rentier attribute was ingrained in the economic structure: Iraq became reliant on oil rents in order to sustain livelihoods and development at the expense of other productive sectors (Marr, 2012). Cognizance of dependency on international markets made it necessary at least to gain public control on foreign owned country’s natural resources. Negotiations with IPC began under Qasim’s tenure and precipitated with the announcement of Law. n. 80, which set the Iraqi government against the company. Following the establishment of INOC, Baghdad signed a service contract with the French state-owned Entreprise de recherches et d’activités pétrolières and a letter of intent with the Soviet Union to develop the southern field of Rumaila, which the Basra Petroleum Company (an IPC subsidiary) had managed until then. In response, IPC refused to recognise the expropriation of territory and cut production by 44% in Kirkuk, whose oil was still being extracted by the company. The Ba’ath Party completed the nationalisation process, thus bringing the dispute to an end. Propelled by the concomitant price surge in the wake of the 1973 Yom Kippur War and the embargo of Arab OPEC members, nationalisation meant unprecedented economic growth for the country. Dependency on crude exports became apparent in the 1974 National Development Plan, the last five-year investment plan adopted by Ba’athists. Two-thirds of the budget was allocated to the industry and 86% of such appropriation was invested in the petroleum sector, thus granting INOC enough funds to purse a more effective national oil policy (Alnasrawi, 1994: 66). Oil revenue to GDP increased from 16% in 1970 to 50% in 1974. The flood of petrodollars, however, had a distortive effect on state institutions and the social contract between government and citizens, in a twofold sense. Firstly, “oil displaced productive sectors as the chief source of the national income” and turned Iraq into a consumer society whose population “became increasingly accustomed to state-supplied benefits” (Marr, 2012: 158). Under the rationale of socialist planning and driven by crude export earnings, the public sector rose to 80% of domestic production in 1977 (ibidem: 160). Secondly, in line with the rentier paradigm, oil wealth made political elites autonomous from society. This, in turn, hardened the autocratic mentality of the regime, which was in a position to deter any threat to its survival with even more resolve and growing amounts of violence. Ba’athist Iraq
The Kurdistan Region of Iraq 75 is the quintessential case of a repressive welfare state (Leezenberg, 2006). When Saddam Hussein seized power in 1979, the management of natural resources was centralised further, and oil was often behind the aggressive foreign policy of the regime: it was the backdrop of the invasion of Khuzestan, which began a costly war with Iran in 1980; it lied at the root of tensions with Kuwait as slant-drilling26 in Rumaila and production over OPEC quotas offered the casus belli for the Iraqi aggression in 1990. The Kurdish question got soaked in oil as well. Deprivation of natural riches by foreign occupants (first the British, then the Arabs) is a theme of the nationalist discourse. Quite interestingly, the first exploration well ever drilled in the entire Middle East was in Chia Surkh inside present day’s KRI (Mackertich & Samarrai, 2015). Whilst revenue accruing from central and southern fields bankrolled brutal repression campaigns in the north, central governments in Baghdad left the industrial sector underdeveloped in the Kurdish region to maintain a core–periphery relationship (Aziz, 2011). Beginning with the revolt against the rule of Abd Al-Karim Qasim, Kurds engaged in demonstrative attacks against the Iraqi oil infrastructures. In August 1962, Peshmerga blew up the Kirkuk-Baniyas pipeline (Wenner, 1963: 72). Again in 1969, this time to welcome the newly formed Ba’athist government, Kurds shelled IPC installations in Kirkuk (McDowall, 2003: 326). Energy facilities, more so those located in contentious areas, were a high premium target for the guerrilla to exert pressure on Baghdad, though taking care not to antagonise Western interests. Throughout his leadership, Mullah Mustafa ceaselessly required the inclusion of Kirkuk, Khanaqin, and northwest Mosul oilfields into the Kurdish autonomous region, plus a share of revenue from those fields (ibidem: 313–314). Discussions with Ba’athist delegations ran aground on those demands, which were not negotiable for both sides.27 The nationalisation of the petroleum industry exacerbated such sticking point even more: oil windfall allowed Baghdad to build up a daunting war machine that closed the door to any compromise. Outnumbered and outgunned, Peshmerga fell back to the mountains and Kirkuk was no longer in their artillery range. From the Kurdish perspective, black gold was a symbol and instrument of coercion. The regime change that occurred in 2003 would completely reverse this image. The KRG on the energy market On 1 June 2009, Masoud Barzani and Jalal Tabalani opened a ceremonial golden valve to figuratively launch crude exports through the Iraqi pipeline. United in celebration, the two Kurdish leaders inspired a sense of historic achievement, which was echoed by the inaugural speech of Prime Minister Nechirvan Barzani: In another country, today’s event would be only a typical economic and technical achievement. But for the people of the Kurdistan Region, it marks a dramatic departure from our recent past. (MNR, 2019)
76 The Kurdistan Region of Iraq On that occasion, allowing oil from the KRI to reach international markets was announced as the way forward for the restoration of a prosperous country for all Iraqis. Revenue sharing would have prevented power centralisation and a resurgence of genocidal violence as it had been in the years of Saddam Hussein. However, hope for a fresh start was only wishful thinking. As it was clear to everyone attending the event, crude exports and revenue management would have pitted the KRG against the central government. Although the 2005 Constitution makes general provision for decentralised decision-making, the distribution of federal competences is ambivalent on the matter of oil and gas resources (Zedalis, 2009, 2012). This is not surprising given that the new constitution stemmed from the need to overcome substantial mistrust and reconcile opposite positions. As the largest deposits of hydrocarbons are located in northern and southern areas, which are ethnically politicised as Kurdish and Shiite respectively, underlying was the fear that decentralisation would have opened up Pandora’s box, thus plunging a fragile country into national disintegration.28 As a result, the uncertain or inconsistent outcome incorporated in the Constitution is “a conception of resource sovereignty that is both national and regional” (Havrelock, 2017). Whilst article 111 provides that ownership of oil and gas resources belongs to “all the people of Iraq in all the regions and governorates,” the subsequent one is at best vague on the role of federal and regional levels: The federal government, with the producing governorates and regional governments, shall undertake the management of oil and gas extracted from present fields, provided that it distributes its revenues in a fair manner in proportion to the population distribution in all parts of the country, specifying an allotment for a specified period for the damaged regions which were unjustly deprived of them by the former regime, and the regions that were damaged afterwards in a way that ensures balanced development in different areas of the country, and this shall be regulated by a law.29 The specification of “present fields” seems to restrict federal management over the oilfields that were already in operation at the time of the promulgation whilst giving regional governments a free hand for new discoveries. This framing was influenced by Kurdish MPs in view of exploiting the untapped resources inside the autonomous region (Voller, 2013). This interpretation is reinforced by article 115, which gives priority to the regional level in case of dispute over shared powers. Similarly, article 121 recognises the right of regional governments to amend national legislation with regard to matters that are outside exclusive federal authority: oil and gas issues are not listed among the powers reserved to the federal level, although the central government is responsible for “formulating foreign sovereign economic and trade policy” and “regulating commercial policy across regional and governorate boundaries in Iraq.”30 However, these clauses are silent on a number of crucial points (e.g. revenue distribution, oil contracting, investment policies, and compensation
The Kurdistan Region of Iraq 77 of damaged and deprived regions), which were left to bargaining (Al Moumin, 2012). In the absence of a revenue-sharing law, which is indicated in article 112, in reality the issue has been regulated through bilateral negotiations between Baghdad and Erbil since June 2009. Not quite in the spirit of a “gentlemen’s agreement” wished for by Jalal Talabani, though. In this climate, all oil-for-budget agreements have proved short-lived indeed. To compound controversy further, the lack of a comprehensive settlement on contested land is related to oil in no small part. Labelled as “disputed territories”31 in the 2005 Constitution, the borderland areas south of the KRI in the four governorates of Nineveh, Kirkuk, Salah ad-Din, and Diyala are rich in hydrocarbons. The super-giant32 oilfield in Kirkuk, in particular, counts as over three-quarters of the total output capacity of northern Iraq, with ultimate recoverable oil estimated in 9 billion barrels, which makes it the second largest after the Rumaila field near Basra. Although production is likely to decline in the near future after over 80 years of exploitation, it still retains high strategic importance. These “in-between” spaces (Meier, 2020) were “Arabized” under the Ba’ath Party: in successive waves, Arab settlers from central and southern Iraq replaced persecuted Kurds and Turkmens who were forced to flee in numbers. Local politics remains filtered through demographics to this day. In post-2003 Iraq, ethnic contention resurfaced as many Kurds returned to the province and the KRG sought to expand the de facto jurisdiction over disputed land by offering welfare and paying salaries to officials in Kurdish-populated areas (Kane, 2011: 9). Albeit aimed at restoring the situation to as it was before the Arabisation policy and compensating those who were forcefully relocated elsewhere, this re-Kurdification process raised resentment, coupled with political feuding even within the same ethnic community (the KDP–PUK rivalry is a case in point as will be shown later). Kane explains that “the net result is a tangled web of administrative and security arrangements that sit atop poorly defined administrative boundaries amid a toxic legacy of mistrust” (ivi). Amid uncertainty about population figures, with the last credible census dated 1957, the determination of the administrative status is still pending due to the nonimplementation of local referenda envisaged by article 140 of the Constitution. The re-privatisation of the petroleum industry urged by the Anglo-American occupation gave Kurds the chance to gain a share in a market whose access had been closed by previous regimes in Baghdad. From 2005 onwards, the development of a separate oil and gas industry inside the region has been impressive. The KRG triggered an exploration race and became one of the most active onshore frontiers on the global stage (Mackertich & Samarrai, 2015; Auzer, 2017), despite a disadvantageous infrastructural isolation and economic backwardness. Prior to 2003, less than 30 exploration wells had been drilled nearby Iraqi oilfields, and no seismic data covering the rest of the region were available (Mackertich & Samarrai, 2015). Production from Khurmala and Taq Taq fields was limited and discontinuous, while other formations (such as Demir Dagh, Khor Mor, and Chamchamal) were still underdeveloped. During the 1990s, under the shield of the internationally enforced no-fly zone, small quantities
78 The Kurdistan Region of Iraq of crude from Taq Taq supplied local consumption. The newly established KRG sought to create a national oil company called KurdOil, but it lacked financial means and technical knowledge to set it into motion (Voller, 2013). It was a declaration of intent, but at the time the region was closed to international operators. With the crumbling of the regime a decade later, all barriers to foreign enterprise were removed. This marked the start-up of the oil and gas sector in the Kurdish enclave. The creation of the Ministry of Natural Resources (MNR) in 2006 and the promulgation of the Oil and Gas Law in 2007 were key passages to attract upstream independents. Despite legal disputes with Baghdad, the KRG pushed forward to sign production-sharing contracts (PSC) with small and mid-tier foreign companies. The entry of ExxonMobil in November 2011 dragged in other oil majors, thus leading the KRG to consolidate its standing on the energy markets. By the end of 2012, all exploration blocks were licensed, and by 2014, about 160 new wells had been drilled with an exceptionally high commercial success rate (55–60%), although it has been in decline (Mills, 2016). The KRG MNR estimates that the region contains up to 45 billion barrels of oil. That amount is equivalent to one-third of Iraq’s total reserves, but it is much more likely to be an overestimation. More conservative and plausible figures published by energy operators range in between 6 and 15 billion barrels (Mackertich & Samarrai, 2015; Mills, 2016) depending on how the oil in place is calculated, the amount of recoverable oil, and the reassessments of carbonate reservoirs. If included, the oilfields in the Kirkuk province would increase the production potential by 40%. If it were an independent country, the KRG would be the seventh largest oil holder in the Middle East surpassing Oman, Egypt, Yemen, and Syria (Mills, 2016). Moreover, the KRG persuaded foreign investors to bet on a largely unexplored market in rapid expansion by virtue of safer security conditions and more favourable commercial terms than those offered throughout the rest of Iraq, which has been mired in protracted instability. Suffice it to say that when the ISIS offensive paralysed the Iraqi energy infrastructures oil operations inside the KRI continued undisturbed. ISIS irruption on the scene commenced a new phase, as the KRG broke out from dependency on federal infrastructures to export crude independently. The rushing into unilateral exports drove a wedge in an already damaged relationship. Quarrels reached the apex at the beginning of 2014, when the central government decided to withhold the 17% share of the budget to which the autonomous region is entitled. An agreement in October 2016 led to restoration of exports from the North Oil Company-run fields in Kirkuk through Ceyhan, up to 150.000 barrels per day (bpd) and a 50/50 revenue sharing. The US Envoy Brett McGurk facilitated the temporary appeasement. The Iraqi PM al-Abadi had no other option but to accept since crude could not be exported without passing through the KRG-held pipeline. However, financial flow came to a new halt in the aftermath of the ISF takeover of disputed territories in 2017. At that point, Baghdad no longer needed to please Erbil. After a long standoff, a new arrangement was tentatively struck in November
The Kurdistan Region of Iraq 79 2018, but both sides have kept working the constitutional loopholes to their own advantage. Notes 1 In absence of official statistics, Kurds are believed to number between 36 and 45 million according to the Kurdish Institute of Paris. Taking this source as a benchmark, Kurds are unevenly distributed in Turkey (15–20 million), Iran (10–12 million), Iraq (8–8.5 million), Syria (3–3.6 million), and the diaspora in Western Europe (1.2–1.5 million). The CIA World Factbook rounds the total down to 30–35 million. 2 Treaty of Sèvres, Art. 62. 3 The 12th of the 14 Points made by the US President Woodrow Wilson provided that “[the] Turkish portion of the present Ottoman Empire should be assured a secure sovereignty, but the other nationalities which are now under Ottoman rule should be assured an undoubted security of life and an absolutely unmolested opportunity of autonomous development.” 4 The Greater Kurdistan is comprised of four sub-regions, each fitting into the boundaries of a “host state”: Bakur, in southern Turkey; Rojava, in northern Syria; Bashur, in northern Iraq; and Rojhelat, in eastern Iran. 5 Unless otherwise specified, I mainly draw on two milestones that will sound familiar to anyone versed in Kurdish Studies: Van Bruinessen’s Agha, Shaikh and State (1992) and McDowall’s A Modern History of the Kurds (1996). 6 Faili Kurds are an ethnic group historically located along the Iraqi–Iranian borderlands on the Zagros Mountains who speak a sub-dialect of Luri. Unlike most Kurds, Faili Kurds are predominantly Shia Muslims, for which they were persecuted by the Ba’athist regime even more strongly. 7 One of the best evidence-based sources on the al-Anfal genocide is the Human Rights Watch’s report Genocide in Iraq: The Anfal Campaign Against the Kurds (1993). For a more recent one, see Leezenberg (2012). 8 These criteria are in line with the definition of de facto state (Pegg, 1998), which is to be preferred to that of quasi-state (Jackson, 1987, 1993) that was also used to describe the KRG (Natali, 2010). As Pegg explains the distinction: “the de facto state is illegitimate no matter how effective it is, . . . the quasi-state’s juridical equality is not contingent on any performance criteria.” The proliferation and overlap of alternative prefixes (such as unrecognised, pseudo, or informal) to describe state-like entities that do not fully comply with the requirements of customary international law, as codified in the 1933 Montevideo Convention, reflect confusion between empirical and juridical statehood (for a review of the literature, see Pegg, 2017). 9 In this work, I use Kolsto and Blakkisrud’s (2005, 2008) definitions of state-building – “the establishment of the administrative, economic, and military groundwork of functional states” – and nation-building – “the construction of a shared identity and a sense of unity in a state’s population, through education, propaganda, ideology, and state symbols.” In this terminology, the two processes are understood as interrelated but distinct. 10 The draft of the 2018 federal budget law sent to the Iraqi parliament for approval, which inter alia proposed a reduction of the KRG share from 17% to 12.67%, labelled the KRI as “Northern Iraqi Provinces” to the fury of Kurdish MPs. 11 Acknowledging the importance of myth making is not to say that Kurds and Kurdistan are historically baseless nor more artificial entities than the surrounding nation-states. Being sameness and difference social constructs transmitted over generations, ethnicity and nations are fictional and contingent in any case, though carrying an actual meaning for those who define themselves by reference to such categories (Smith, 1986: 4). Therefore, it is not a matter of true or false communities, but of how these are imagined, to use Benedict Anderson’s language (2006: 6). In line with a constructivist approach,
80 The Kurdistan Region of Iraq 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 this research rejects any ontological foundation for the concepts above. Rather, attention is paid to how such concepts are socially framed and employed purposefully to fabricate political realities. Given the sensitive status of Kurdish issues, it is not unusual for scholarly works to be blamed for supporting partisan interests and be discredited as political. Without entering into this discussion, suffice to say that the difference “between ‘seeing through the eyes of the other’ and buying into the world view of the other” (Kaplan, 2015: 4) should be well clear to any reader approaching a scientific contribution. Anderson’s definition of nations as imagined political communities is now customary and somewhat overused. According to his view, nations are cultural artefacts that are imagined, limited, and sovereign. Kurdayetî properly describes pan-Kurdish patriotism, or “the idea of and struggle for relieving the Kurds from national oppression by uniting all parts of Kurdistan under the rule of an independent Kurdish state” (Hassanpour quoted in O’Shea, 2004: 131). Contrary to Arab nationalisms, it is characterised as secular, despite the historical importance of religious affiliations in Kurdish society. In his reflection on nations and ethno-cultural communities, Smith briefly defines ethnie as “named human populations with shared ancestry myths, histories and cultures, having an association with a specific territory and a sense of solidarity” (1986: 32). One of the many paradoxes surrounding the Kurdish question is that one amongst the most influential theorists of Turkish nationalism, Ziya Gökalp, was of Kurdish origin and came from Diyarbakir, the would-be capital of Bakur (North Kurdistan). Most of the authors cited in this paragraph converge on modernist readings of Kurdish nationalism, though with different accents. For a brief review of the debate, see Sheyholislami (2011). Izady, instead, is among those scholars upholding an essentialist view: the Kurdish nation is based upon a “long common historical experience, their common worldview, common national character, integrated economy, common national territory, and collective future aspirations” (2015: 183). His position places emphasis on discourses and techniques used by sovereign powers to erase Kurds: “They have glossed over the Kurdish past, denying the originality of this ancient culture, and preventing original research on any topic of national importance to ethnic Kurds. They have created and foisted false identities onto the Kurds – such as the labels ‘Mountain Turk’ in Turkey, and ‘Umayyad Arab’ in Syria and Iraq for the Yezidi Kurds. They have simply denied the Kurds separate ethnic existence in Iran, Soviet Azerbaijan, and Turkmenistan. In doing this these modern nation-states have done plenty to confuse even the Kurds themselves.” (ibidem: xiii). The stereotype of primitive bandits from the Zagros Mountains plundering the plains predates the formation of nation-states and was indeed recurrent in both Western and Muslim accounts (O’Leary, 2018). However, O’Shea rejects Izady’s work as “one of the most outstanding [and] astonishing attempts to create a complete Kurdish history by using a combination of remembered, recovered, invented and borrowed history” (2004: 59). The fundamental flaw lies in the professed coincidence between a geographic area and a chosen people. Izady follows a syllogism for which the communities inhabiting Kurdistan that “are not unequivocally connected with another identifiable nation” are Kurdish. Pushing the argument to extremes, Kurdish ancestors are lost in the mists of time. O’Shea rightly reproaches the influence of a mythological theme disguised as the “accepted version of events.” Maxwell and Smith produced an excellent meta-analysis of Kurdish historiography pointing out the predominant influence of Anthony Smith’s model of singular transformation from non-yet-national ethnie to national community, so much so that the terminology offered by other renowned theorists of nationalism (e.g. Benedict Anderson’s imagined community or Eric Hobsbawn’s proto-nationalism) is cited interchangeably. For Kurdish experts and sympathizers, they argue, the concept of ethnie “fulfils a deeply felt longing for national antiquity,” which better sustains a narrative of national awakening, thus
The Kurdistan Region of Iraq 81 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 resolving tension between a modern nation and its primordial roots (2015: 784). Despite that, there is no consensus on the historical point of departure of Kurdish nationalism. On the divisiveness of Iraqi population and the process of national integration, see also Lukitz (2005). “The journey from Baghdad to Basra took a week, and traveling was in itself an adventure. Partly as a consequence of this, the cities differed in their economic orientation. The ties of Mosul were with Syria and Turkey, and those of Baghdad and the Shi’a holy cities with Persia and the western and south-western deserts. Basra looked mainly to the sea and to India” (Batatu, 1978: 16). “Old local economies, based on the handicraft or boat-building industries and the traditional means of transport (camels and sailing ships), declined or broke asunder; a tribal tillage, essentially self-sufficient and subordinate to pastoralism, gave way to a settled, market-related, tribal agriculture; the communal tribal land and extensive tracts of state domain passed into the hands of ex-warring shaikhs and aghas without ground of right or any payment whatever; tribes, guilds, and mystic orders lost cohesion or disintegrated; vast masses of people moved from the country and provincial towns to the big cities to enrol in the new army, bureaucracy, or police force, or to find employment in the new businesses that supplied the needs of these institutions, or to swell the ranks of unskilled labourers and noticeably depress their earnings; old ties, loyalties, and concepts were undermined, eroded, or swept away” (Batatu, 1978: 1113). Just like Kurdistan, also Iraq came into being as geographical denomination even though prevalent territorial identities in use at the time were rather attached to locality and at odds with national boundaries. For instance, Mosul inhabitants looked more towards Aleppo and Istanbul than Baghdad by means of tribal relations and economic influence in today’s north eastern Syria (Marr, 2010). However, such local identities were less politically effective than those built upon kinship and religion. The strategic importance of setting a foothold in the Middle East to control a large oil supply at the source comes out clearly from memos of British officials and advisers. As a way of example, the High Commissioner for Iraq Sir Henry Dobbs wrote in October 1927, few days after the Baba Gurgur oil gusher: “The discoveries of immense quantities of oil . . . make it now impossible to abandon control of Iraq without damaging important British and foreign interests” (Muttitt, 2012). The Kirkuk-Haifa pipeline was operational from 1935 to 1948, when the Iraqi government stopped pumping oil through it in retaliation to the first Arab-Israeli war. A new conduit connecting Kirkuk to Banias in Syria replaced the line. The “eternal fire” at Baba Gurgur is a natural gas seep that has been constantly burning for over 4,000 years and was worshipped as a religious site by local inhabitants. More prosaically, the surfacing indicates the southern dome of the super-giant oilfield of Kirkuk. Also known as directional drilling, it is an extractive technique for drilling non-vertical wells. Besides the economic loss, Ba’athists also feared that a Kurdish administration in the oilproducing province of Kirkuk would have been a Trojan horse at the mercy of Western powers to regain control on lost assets. Given strained relations with Iran and the fact that Kurds were militarily supported by the Shah, the Iraqi veto was made stronger through a closer partnership with the Soviet Union, which was formalized in 1972 (van Bruinessen, 1992). This does not apply to the KRG only. Governorates in Nineveh and Basra made similar claims for an independent energy policy, which were rejected promptly in Baghdad. Constitution of the Republic of Iraq, Article 112, first paragraph. Ivi, Article 110. Article 140 of the Constitution placed upon the Iraqi transitional government the responsibility of concluding the process of normalization “in Kirkuk and other disputed territories” as already stipulated in Article 58 of the 2004 Transitional Administrative
82 The Kurdistan Region of Iraq Law, which stated the need “to take measures to remedy the injustice caused by the previous regime’s practices in altering the demographic character of certain regions, including Kirkuk, by deporting and expelling individuals from their places of residence, forcing migration in and out of the region, settling individuals alien to the region, depriving the inhabitants of work, and correcting nationality.” In this regard, article 140 prescribed that citizens within the areas concerned should decide on the administrative status through local (district- or provincial-wise) referenda “by a date not to exceed the 31st of December 2007.” However, such areas are not defined geographically in the document, and the nebulous wording is evidence for bitterness over territorial controversies, which remain unsolved. In absence of an official definition, “disputed areas tend to describe an undifferentiated 300-mile-long swath of territory from the Iranian to the Syrian border with oil-rich Kirkuk as its centre” (Kane, 2011: 5). The expiration of the constitutional deadline was interpreted as a sign of bad faith by the KRG, which contends that the entire governorate of Kirkuk and 13 districts in Nineveh, Salah ad-Din, and Diyala should be annexed to the region, though claims are not unequivocally supported by local inhabitants given significant non-Kurdish minorities. The list of disputed districts includes those of Sinjar, Mosul, Tal Afar, Akre, Shaikhan, al-Hamdaniya, Tuz Khurmatu, Makhmur, Kifri, and Khanaqin. 32 Oilfields are designated as “super-giant” if the amount of proven or recoverable reserves exceeds five or ten equivalent billion barrels, and as “giant” if it is more than 500 million barrels. In most cases, however, data on underground deposits are scant and estimates may be imprecise. References Agnew, J. (2004). Geopolitics: Re-Visioning World Politics. Routledge. Al Moumin, M. (2012). “The Legal Framework for Managing Oil in Post-Conflict Iraq: A Pattern of Abuse and Violence over Natural Resources”. In Lujala, P., & Rustad, S. A. (Eds.). High-Value Natural Resources and Post-Conflict Peacebuilding. Routledge. Alnasrawi, A. (1994). The Economy of Iraq: Oil, Wars, Destruction of Development and Prospects, 1950–2010. ABC-Clio. Anderson, B. (2006). Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism. Verso Books. Anderson, L., & Stansfield, G. (2011). Crisis in Kirkuk: The Ethnopolitics of Conflict and Compromise. University of Pennsylvania Press. Auzer, K. A. (2017). Institutional Design and Capacity to Enhance Effective Governance of Oil and Gas Wealth: The Case of Kurdistan Region. Springer. Aziz, M. (2011). The Kurds of Iraq: Ethnonationalism and National Identity in Iraqi Kurdistan. IB Tauris. Baram, A. (1983). “Mesopotamian Identity in Ba’thist Iraq”. Middle Eastern Studies, 19(4), 426–455. Baram, A. (1994). “A Case of Imported Identity: The Modernizing Secular Ruling Elites of Iraq and the Concept of Mesopotamian-Inspired Territorial Nationalism, 1922–1992”. Poetics Today, 279–319. Batatu, H. (1978). The Old Social Classes and the Revolutionary Movements of Iraq. Princeton University Press. Bet-Shlimon, A. (2012). “Group Identities, Oil, and the Local Political Domain in Kirkuk: A Historical Perspective”. Journal of Urban History, 38(5), 914–931. Black, J. (2000). Maps and Politics. University of Chicago Press. British Petroleum. (2020). “Statistical Review of World Energy”.
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84 The Kurdistan Region of Iraq Kingston, P., & Spears, I. (2004). States-Within-States: Incipient Political Entities in the Post: Cold War Era. Springer. Kirmanj, S. (2010). “The Clash of Identities in Iraq”. In Zeidel, R., Baram, A., & Rohde, A. (Eds.). Iraq between Occupations: Perspectives from 1920 to the Present. Springer. Kirmanj, S. (2013). Identity and Nation in Iraq. Lynne Rienner Publishers. Kolsto, P. (2006). “The Sustainability and Future of Unrecognized Quasi-States”. Journal of Peace Research, 43(6), 723–740. Kolsto, P., & Blakkisrud, H. (2005). Nation-Building and Common Values in Russia. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. Kolsto, P., & Blakkisrud, H. (2008). “Living with Non-Recognition: State- and NationBuilding in South Caucasian Quasi-States”. Europe-Asia Studies, 60(3), 483–509. Leezenberg, M. (2006). “Urbanization, Privatization, and Patronage: The Political Economy of Iraqi Kurdistan”. In ʿAbd-al-Jabbār, F., et al. (Eds.). The Kurds: Nationalism and Politics. Saqi. Leezenberg, M. (2012). “The Anfal Operations in Iraqi Kurdistan”. In Totten, S., & Parsons, W. S. (Eds.). Centuries of Genocide: Essays and Eyewitness Accounts. Routledge. Lukitz, L. (2005). Iraq: The Search for National Identity. Routledge. Mackertich, D. S., & Samarrai, A. I. (2015). “History of Hydrocarbon Exploration in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq”. GeoArabia, 20(2), 181–220. Marr, P. (2010). “One Iraq or Many: What Has Happened to Iraqi Identity?”. In Zeidel, R., Baram, A., & Rohde, A. (Eds.). Iraq between Occupations: Perspectives from 1920 to the Present. Springer. Marr, P. (2012). The Modern History of Iraq. Routledge. Maxwell, A., & Smith, T. (2015). “Positing ‘Not-Yet-Nationalism’: Limits to the Impact of Nationalism Theory on Kurdish Historiography”. Nationalities Papers, 43(5), 771–787. McDowall, D. (2003). Modern History of the Kurds. IB Tauris. Meier, D. (2020). “‘Disputed Territories’ in Northern Iraq: The Frontiering of In-between Spaces”. Mediterranean Politics, 25(3), 351–371. Mills, R. M. (2016). “Under the Mountains: Kurdish Oil and Regional Politics”. Oxford Institute for Energy Studies. https://doi.org/10.26889/9781784670498 MNR. (2019). “Speech by KRG Prime Minister Nechirvan Barzani at the Ceremony Celebrating the Start of Kurdistan Region Oil Exports”. Erbil, June 1. http://mnr.krg.org/ index.php/en/press-releases/117-prime-minister-barzani-s-speech-at-start-of-oil-exports Muttitt, G. (2012). Fuel on the Fire: Oil and Politics in Occupied Iraq. The New Press. Natali, D. (2008). “The Kirkuk Conundrum”. Ethnopolitics, 7(4), 433–443. Natali, D. (2010). Kurdish Quasi-State: Development and Dependency in Post-Gulf War Iraq. Syracuse University Press. O’Leary, B. (2018). “The Kurds, the Four Wolves, and the Great Powers”. The Journal of Politics, 80(1), 353–366. O’Shea, M. T. (2004). Trapped between the Map and Reality: Geography and Perceptions of Kurdistan. Routledge. Owtram, F. (2018). “The State We’re in”. In Gunter, M. (Ed.). Routledge Handbook on the Kurds. Routledge. Özoğlu, H. (2012). Kurdish Notables and the Ottoman State: Evolving Identities, Competing Loyalties, and Shifting Boundaries. SUNY Press. Pegg, S. (1998). “De facto States in the International System”. Working Paper no. 21, Institute of International Relations, The University of British Columbia. https://doi. org/10.4324/9780429354847
The Kurdistan Region of Iraq 85 Pegg, S. (2017). “Twenty Years of De facto State Studies: Progress, Problems, and Prospects: Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics”. https://doi.org/10.1093/ acrefore/9780190228637.013.516 Riegl, M., & Doboš, B. (2017). Unrecognized States and Secession in the 21st Century. Springer. Romano, D. (2006). The Kurdish Nationalist Movement: Opportunity, Mobilization and Identity. Cambridge University Press. Said, E. W. (1993). Culture and Imperialism. Vintage Books. Saul, S. (2007). “Masterly Inactivity as Brinkmanship: The Iraq Petroleum Company’s Route to Nationalization, 1958–1972”. The International History Review, 29(4), 746–792. Sheyholislami, J. (2011). Kurdish Identity, Discourse, and New Media. Springer. Sluglett, P. (2007). Britain in Iraq: Contriving King and Country. Columbia University Press. Smith, A. D. (1986). The Ethnic Origins of Nations. Blackwell Publishing. Stansfield, G., & Shareef, M. (Eds.). (2017). The Kurdish Question Revisited. Oxford University Press. Strohmeier, M. (2003). Crucial Images in the Presentation of a Kurdish National Identity: Heroes and Patriots, Traitors and Foes. Brill. Sykes, M. (1908). “The Kurdish Tribes of the Ottoman Empire”. The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, 38, 451–486. Tekdemir, O. (2019). “The Social Construction of ‘Many Kurdishnesses’: Mapping SubIdentities of ‘EU-ising’ Kurdish Politics”. Ethnicities, 19(5), 876–900. Toal, G. (1998). Rethinking Geopolitics. Psychology Press. Tripp, C. (2002). A History of Iraq. Cambridge University Press. Ünver, H. A. (2016). “Schrödinger’s Kurds: Transnational Kurdish Geopolitics in the Age of Shifting Borders”. Journal of International Affairs, 69(2), 65–100. Vali, A. (1998). “The Kurds and Their ‘Others’: Fragmented Identity and Fragmented Politics”. Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East, 18(2), 82–95. Vali, A. (2014). Kurds and the State in Iran: The Making of Kurdish Identity. IB Tauris. Van Bruinessen, M. (1992). Agha, Shaikh, and State: The Social and Political Structures of Kurdistan. Zed Books. Van Bruinessen, M. (1994). “Nationalisme Kurde et Ethnicités Intra-Kurdes”. Peuples Méditerranéens, 68–69, 11–37. Van Bruinessen, M. (2000). “The Kurds in Movement: Migrations, Mobilisations, Communications and the Globalisation of the Kurdish Question”. Working Paper no. 14, Islamic Area Studies Project. http://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/20510 Voller, Y. (2013). “Kurdish Oil Politics in Iraq: Contested Sovereignty and Unilateralism”. Middle East Policy, 20(1), 68–82. Voller, Y. (2014). The Kurdish Liberation Movement in Iraq: From Insurgency to Statehood. Routledge. Wenner, L. M. (1963). “Arab-Kurdish Rivalries in Iraq”. Middle East Journal, 17(1/2), 68–82. Yergin, D. (2011). The Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money & Power. Simon and Schuster. Yildiz, K. (2007). The Kurds in Iraq: The Past, Present and Future. Pluto Press London. Zedalis, R. J. (2009). The Legal Dimensions of Oil and Gas in Iraq: Current Reality and Future Prospects. Cambridge University Press. Zedalis, R. J. (2012). Oil and Gas in the Disputed Kurdish Territories: Jurisprudence, Regional Minorities and Natural Resources in a Federal System. Routledge.
3 The gate to statehood Kurdish nationalism and the oil dream Exiled in their own land I was seated in a windowless office inside the MNR in Erbil. My interviewee, a high-profile bureaucrat with a long career behind him, kindly offered me a glass of steaming hot chai with some sugar cubes on the side. That very gesture opened most of my interviews, as if it would be unthinkable to have a conversation without a glass of tea. On a busy day, I would drink countless cups depending on how many meetings I had scheduled. In Kurdistan, sharing tea is beyond courtesy. It is an act of care and openness. I sometimes had the palpable feeling that that traditional ritual contributed to ease suspicion or at least create a more relaxed atmosphere. This meeting was no exception. It was my first time inside the MNR, and for the first time I was not allowed to use a recorder, but the interview flowed pleasantly. “We are entitled to stay there,” the official cut it short. I had asked him about the uncertain future of Kirkuk, the city of black gold. Our meeting took place in Spring 2017, months before the ill-fated independence referendum and the consequent showdown over the disputed territories. Then, he took the long road and began schooling me on the Arabisation policies undertaken during the tyranny of Saddam Hussein, at a time when subsidies and land allotments had been given to Arab settlers from other parts of Iraq in order to replace Kurdish residents. To make his argumentation more convincing, he took a piece of paper and drew a map on the fly. A thicker line followed the ridge of the Hamrin Mountains, well below the borders of the autonomous region. “This is the natural separation between Kurds and Arabs,” he said with quiet determination, as if it was an indisputable truth. He then went on listing some seemingly objective qualities as evidence to the fact that the line delimited ethnically different ecosystems – such as that the lush and wooded mountains of Kurdistan gradually disappear into the desert plains of central Iraq. Whether such a comparison is accurate or not is irrelevant. What struck me most was the instrumental use of topography to naturalise ethnic divisions in territorial terms and thus convey the idea of a perfect match between physical and cultural barriers. I had a similar experience in a later interview with a representative of the Kirkuk Provincial Council. On that occasion, the meeting occurred DOI: 10.4324/9781003161103-4
The gate to statehood 87 in a more comfortable environment – a café inside a gigantic and rather empty mall in Sulaymaniyah. Again, my interlocutor raised a similar point about the administrative status of Kirkuk and, just like the MNR official, backed his explanation by sketching an improvised map:1 Oilfields are exactly in-between Kurdish and Arab areas, with the Kurdish ones having much more oil. Most Arabs living in the province came no longer than 60–70 years ago. They were not here before. Down to the Hamrin Mountans it was all Kurdish land, but Kurds did not settle south of Kirkuk because of the lack of water. The Iraqi government built irrigation canals to make this area fertile for agriculture in order to move people from Baiji, Tikrit, Mosul, and the south. Concomitantly they started displacing Kurds, Turkmens, and Assyrians. They seized land, kicked people out, and put everything under the control of the Iraqi North Oil Company. They did everything they could to reduce the number of Kurds in this area. Entire villages were destroyed. (Anonymous, interview #8) This long excerpt from that (recorded) conversation shows some junctions tying collective identity and imaginative geographies together, and how deep-rooted mistrust and unsolved territorial issues keep fuelling a frontline mentality. In both interviews, the assertion of ethnic alterity was mixed with apprehension about the worsening of federal relations. Given a past of military occupations, forced displacements, and attempts of assimilation including the atrocious extreme of genocide, questions about the contentious management of natural resources in those grey areas in-between federal and regional jurisdictions brought up a palpable state of anxiety. I would have later learned to read it as a form of sorrowful alienation from a contested homeland. As seen in the previous chapter, the modern history of Kurds is marked by displacement and the unfulfilled search for political recognition. The intertwined themes of exile and statelessness are therefore very much present in the Kurdish self-narrative. Kurdish Studies have devoted attention to the politics of exile, with particular reference to the large, scattered diaspora in Western Europe (Wahlbeck, 1998; Østergaard-Nielsen, 2003; Alinia, 2004; van Bruinessen, 2000). The feeling of being exiled in their own land continues to exert a considerable influence even inside the autonomous region in spite of the achievements made in terms of self-rule. I remember chatting with an ordinary man from Dohuk who had spent half of his life as a refugee in Iran. I asked him what it means to be Kurd. He replied in a hard-hitting manner that I was not expecting: “being a Kurd means to be forever alone, escape from different enemies, and grow up in a place where you will always be kept under control.” The right to have a place in the world was the mirrored image of loneliness and persecutions. Hence, to any Kurd, the homeland bears the scars of a denied and even displaced identity. That became clear to me since my first stay in the region. At the end of May 2017, the so-called Golden Division, the Iraqi elite forces
88 The gate to statehood wearing skull-like masks, were ready for a final assault against ISIS militants in Mosul, the last major stronghold still under control of the Salafi-jihadist group. All the international attention was on the offensive. I was not covering the story in first person as it had little to do with what had brought me to Iraq, but I was following developments on the ground closely since my best informants were fixers escorting freelancers to and from the frontlines. During the siege, ISF ranks were decimated because of booby-traps and snipers, who managed to halt the Iraqi advance in the narrow streets of the Old City. One morning, I shared my concern with Soran, a local environmentalist whom I collaborated with at first and who then became a good friend, while walking through the alley behind his house in Sulaymaniyah. “My entire life has been a war,” he interrupted me with an expressive shrug. There was no sad inflection in his voice. It was an accurate description. Soran grew up in war times indeed. His family comes from Khanaqin, which was one of the epicentres of the Ba’athist ruthless Arabisation policies. He left the country in the early 1990s when the KDP–PUK antagonism blew up into fratricidal warfare. After years of deprivation, as well as countless arrests for entering the European borders illegally, he finally reached the UK with the prospect of a better future. He managed to rebuild his life and even obtain British citizenship, but a sense of denial remained with him. Because of that, when the regime fell he came back home, without finding a pacified land though. Soran’s biography is not unique. Kurds are not strangers to the thought of having come through a perennial state of war, which has taken on different forms and faces over time. As the ISIS insurgency was on retreat, Soran looked further ahead to the moment after the liberation of Mosul wondering what would happen in the disputed territories since the root causes that had led disenfranchised Sunni Arabs to join the ranks of the Islamic Caliphate were still in plain sight. Once more events would have proven him right. Sense of place and nation-building For an ethnic group denied of national rights in any country, the intimate bond to the motherland became the primary identity marker. Kurdish selfrepresentation is anchored to a rich imaginative geography filled with national symbols. Aziz is right in saying that Kurdistan “has always been assessed as a territorial community” (ibidem: 45). Although a Kurdish state was never a reality, territory presupposes sovereignty. Therefore, national themes are all interwoven with a sense of place that defines the common belonging to a Kurdish nation primarily in terms of emotional attachment to native land. In line with a phenomenological approach, sense of place can be defined as a process of signification “involving both an interpretive perspective on the environment and an emotional reaction to the environment” (Hummon, 1992: 262) through which a set of affective, moral, and aesthetic qualities is attached to a place.2 The concept therefore refers to the relational experience, either conscious or unconscious, connected to a location or site (Relph, 1976; Tuan, 1977; Cresswell,
The gate to statehood 89 2004; Agnew, 2014). Such rootedness of self in a geographical setting may be of varying intensity and of different kinds: it can be biographical but can also be constructed through a mythology of the origins, which may sustain a feeling of identification even in the absence of direct experience, as often happens with second-generation diaspora members. Radcliffe and Westwood stress the importance of place in the making of the nation, which is intended as “the context within which national identities are called forth” (1996: 7). From their perspective, the nation is enacted and practiced precisely through the experience of national places. The representation of historical battlefields or the monumental graves of “unknown soldiers,” which associate the sacrifice for the homeland to the highest patriotic values (Raivo, 2015), are clear illustrations of this process. A history of identity suppression flows through Kurdistan and is fixed in everyday spaces. Places are constructed as “lieux de memoire” (Nora, 1989) through a symbolically coherent landscape of monuments, artistic artefacts, and rituals of remembrance evoking a tragic heritage to be recalled and a collective destiny to be achieved, for instance, the cult of martyrdom. The portraits of fallen Peshmerga are on display in squares and streets, and their bravery is often lauded during political rallies to mobilise emotional support. Martyrdom has been a powerful signifier of nation-building since the dawn of the liberation struggle. The celebration of martyrs who sacrificed their lives for the right of a Kurdish nation to exist, as well as the nostalgic representation of heroic warriors of a glorious past, is the proud response to a feeling of deprivation. On this point, McDowall alludes to the ideological attempt of “tracing a national continuity fixed upon heroes of the nation across the centuries” (McDowall, 2003: 5; see also Laizer, 1996; Strohmeier, 2003). The labelling of Peshmerga as martyrs insists on the same mythology, which recounts a struggle that is fundamentally unchanged from the times of Mullah Mustafa Barzani. As Fisher-Tahir puts it, “as powerful symbols of the Kurdish liberation movement, Peshmerga and martyrs served to legitimate the Kurdish Government in Iraq” (2012: 93). Such symbolic apparatus, coupled with the cult of Masoud Barzani and Jalal Talabani, is intrinsic to the hegemonic strategies of ruling parties. Nonetheless, it also effectively awakens a national sentiment. Heroism and martyrdom take centre stage in public discourse.3 To take one example, border checkpoints are covered with flags, banners, and slogans to visually signal that you are entering into a culturally different space from the rest of the country, not only a separate administrative authority. This contributes to ritualise and sacralise collective memory by placing it into a spiritual dimension but also keeping it tangible and very tied to the present. The same can be said of memorials, relics, and commemorations of the al-Anfal campaigns launched by Saddam Hussein in 1988 to crush the Kurdish minority. The Amna Suraka heinous prison in Sulaymaniyah is one example. The symbolic capital infused into these places of memory reiterates the image of a “common external enemy” – the parent state (Kolsto, 2006) – and unifies Kurds within a “representational space” (Lefebvre, 1991), though with an
90 The gate to statehood emotional tone stressing victimhood instead of resistance.4 The “al-Anfal catastrophe” is presented by the KRG (which established a Ministry of Martyrs and Anfal Affairs) as a key historical landmark in the nation-building narrative, for several purposes: preserve autonomy vis-à-vis Baghdad, promote allegiance to regional institutions, and draw international attention to the enduring violations of Kurdish rights. In this sense, Baser and Tovainen argue that al-Anfal became the Iraqi Kurds’ chosen trauma “to underwrite a sense of shared history and a collective belonging to a nation that has fallen victim to genocidal persecution” (2017: 17). In post-2005, Iraq claims for genocide recognition are used then as a legitimisation tool to advance and internationalise the Kurdish quest for self-determination. Tejel points out that, beyond many omissions, the KRG hegemonic discourse “tends to link [al-Anfal] to present political issues at stake” with the central government (2015: 2577), reproducing ethnic enmity. The rendition of the past therefore bestows new meanings in order to nurture a nationalistic imaginary. The bond between place and collective identity is not solely reproduced topdown.5 Oftentimes my Kurdish friends showed me the place where a relative had fallen in battle. “My father died on that hill behind the village, in 1991. He fought against Saddam’s army,” Karwan said while we were driving to Kirkuk. We stopped there for a while. “Beritan’s father was killed here too. Every family has lost someone. War never ends here.” When introduced to a circle of people, I was usually told about their martyrs: “Fazel has an important reputation because his older brother was a great fighter who killed many Iraqi soldiers. When he was taken to Amna Suraka and tortured to death he demonstrated his courage one last time.” These comments shape an affective geography of loss and sorrow, passed down from generation to generation. War remnants are also inserted into that symbolic repertoire. Thousands of unexploded landmines cover large swathes of the region, especially in the mountainous areas along the Iranian border, and are a real threat that perpetuates a deep-seated sense of struggling for survival.6 The separation between cleared and contaminated areas not only brings people back to war memories but also disrupts access to what are considered to be time-honoured ancestral birthplaces. Likewise, the regular shelling on PKK headquarters in the Qandil Mountains by Turkish and Iranian air forces renews the idea of an endless strife upon Kurds. The examples mentioned earlier underline that land and bloodline are inextricably bound inasmuch as the image of a torn homeland is constantly renegotiated with a collective memory of violent marginalisation and oppression. There is a sense of historical continuity, which sustains a narrative of national redemption. A general point can be made: all those places of memory, to borrow Pierre Nora’s beautiful expression, bear witness to the dialectic of denial and resistance Abbas Vali recognises to be the distinctive feature of Kurdish nationalism. A significant body of literature does exist showing that memory making can serve the purpose of forging a national self. Besides the vast work by Nora on the modern re-articulation of French national identity with the passing of peasant societies (2010), a large number of studies across disciplines
The gate to statehood 91 brought into focus the performative role memory has in grounding or recasting a national imaginary in time and space (see, for instance, Gillis, 1996; Atkinson & Cosgrove, 1998; Osborne, 1998; Azaryahu & Kellerman Barrett, 1999; Zubrzycki, 2017). In the Kurdish case, the foundations of national identity tend to be negative in the literal sense since they are based more on the absence of recognition than some other features in order to arouse a shared sense of national commonality. As explained at length in the previous chapter, this is not surprising given that Kurds seized the concept of nation as a response to the aggressive nationalisms of emergent neighbouring states during the 20th century, which had fragmented Kurdistan into national blocks. External pressure – namely, the ideological assimilation of heterogeneous tribes into the normative and territorial body of emerging nation-states that replaced loosen forms of imperial control – solicited Kurdish leaders to promote the idea of an equally legitimate nation. Until then, Kurdish collective identification had not defined upon a political basis and laid instead in ethnic self-consciousness. In other words, nationalists politicised the Kurdish ethnos at a later stage. The ways of seeing world fabricate political reality. The geographical perceptions surrounding the Kurdish national imaginary add a sense of complexity to the discussion of energy issues within the federally reconstituted Iraq. The struggles over natural resources are infused with a legacy of warfare, cultural segregation, and material dispossession. A famous poem by Bashir Mustafa associates the flame of Kirkuk, “the city of black gold,” to the “grief and rebellion” its citizens (and by extension Kurds in general) have suffered.7 The next part of this chapter explores the road the KRG has taken to redeem past injustice and strengthen the Kurdish nation upon the oil dream. The road to one million barrels Since 2003 achieving the status of energy exporter has been the single most important carrier of legitimation for the KRG. Whilst oil had cursed Kurdistan for decades as many KRG officials emphatically told me, after the fall of Saddam Hussein, the (re)appropriation of hydrocarbons became the gate through which Kurds were finally given a chance to pursue national sovereignty. Oil was soon translated into a symbol of national unity, earned sovereignty, international recognition, deterrence, and even citizenship. To borrow a passage from Kapuscinski’s story on the last Shah of Iran, “oil [created] the illusion of a completely changed life” (1982: 35). Ascending as a new hub in the global energy markets opened the front door to the international stage, capturing a flow of investments into the Kurdish region. This has had a paramount political value prior to any economic consideration. Developing the petroleum industry away from Baghdad was primarily driven by the pursuit of external legitimation (Voller, 2013). The leadership was aware that without international support the fragile autonomy of the three Kurdish governorates would have been at the mercy of the central government. As unrecognised states are compelled to seek the favour of the international community by demonstrating their compliance
92 The gate to statehood to accepted norms and practices (Caspersen, 2013), the commitment to democratic values, religious tolerance, and good governance are to be read in that same spirit. As banal as this may sound, getting the world to take interest in Kurdish self-determination was foremost. Energy diplomacy proved to be the strongest argument they had available. Seen in perspective, the establishment of a viable and internationally competitive industry from scratch was an extraordinary achievement. In less than ten years, the KRG established itself as a reliable supplier on the oil market. That, however, was far from easy. KRG officials lacked expertise and experience in the sector. Moreover, no pre-existing infrastructures were available for use. The prospect that Kurds could extract oil in the autonomous region therefore raised eyebrows in Baghdad at first. Early approaches with foreign operators were very much improvised. Then, Ashti Hawrami stepped in. A petroleum engineer who had held senior oil executive positions in the Iraqi National Oil Company and several UK-based firms, he was appointed as the Minister for Natural Resources in May 2006. Under his guidance and thanks to a pool of external advisers, the KRG set up a business-friendly environment to attract IOCs. The long-serving MNR Minister brought professionalism and an insight into the commercial incentives to entice investors. The KRG began offering more favourable contractual terms than those set out by the Iraqi central government, which has historically been distrustful of Western energy companies since the nationalisation of the industry: unlike the standard technical service contracts (TSCs) that place all costs and risks of upstream operations upon the contractor in return for a remuneration fee per barrel, the PSCs grated by the KRG provide the contracting part with a share of profits for up to 30 years. Enhanced by a more stable security situation and within the legislative framework of the 2007 Oil and Gas Law, the PSC model allowed the KRG to quickly level up their energy strategy and cash out hundreds of millions USD without producing a single barrel of oil. By the end of 2007, a considerable number of PSCs had already been signed with small- and medium-sized private companies – amongst others, the Norwegian DNO, the Turkish Genel, the UAE Dana Gas, the Canadians Western Sands and Heritage Oil, the British Sterling Energy, the American Hunt Oil, the French Perenco, the Indian Reliance Oil, the German OMV Petroleum Exploration, and the Hungarian MOL (Zedalis, 2009). The spate of multimillionaire deals faced growing opposition in Baghdad. The Iraqi Minister of Oil, Husain al-Shahristani, announced that the independent oil contracts negotiated by the KRG had no legal foundation and threatened to take actions against foreign companies partnering with Erbil. On their side, Kurdish elites countered that the agreements were fully consistent with constitutional provisions, especially given the noticeable absence of a federal law on the management of hydrocarbons. Iraqi lawmakers were well aware that the development of a separate oil and gas sector, with its own legislation, transcended the scent of petrodollars. What was at stake was the very nature of Iraqi federalism. The MNR divided the autonomous region into 48 blocks and eight border areas without leaving a
The gate to statehood 93 single square metre of land.8 Visualised as a prospective oil-producing area, the KRI as a whole was re-engineered as a supply zone for the interest of foreign investors. Once again, mapping turned out to be a formidable discursive device, which declared both extent and purpose of KRG’s oil nationalism, in a twofold sense. Firstly, IOCs and trading houses were encouraged to take an active interest in supporting Kurdish autonomy. The success of this operation provided the regional government with an aura of international legitimacy. It is hardly an exaggeration that reassurances from the MNR on the constitutionality of the energy policy were primarily addressed to the audience of private buyers operating in the energy markets. Suffice it to say that MNR press releases are generally published in English or to notice the high-profile participation to the KRG-sponsored CWC Kurdistan-Iraq Oil and Gas Conference,9 which every year gathers oil majors and energy services companies in London. After all, the international standing of the region fundamentally comes down to its attractiveness as a new energy frontier to be added to the portfolio of IOCs and the success rate returned to investors. Secondly, on a symbolic level, the extractive regime envisaged on map gave practical shape to territorial continuity. The KRG acted as a landowner by dealing PSCs directly with IOCs, thus availing itself of a sovereign right over land. In some cases, such exercise of power exceeded the letter of the Constitution. In September 2007, for instance, before the ink of the newly enacted Oil and Gas Law dried, the MNR had struck an arrangement with Hunt Oil for exploration rights in Ain Sifni (Wikileaks, 2007), outside the reach of KRG administrative authority. That was not a one-off. Three out of six blocks licensed to ExxonMobil in 2011 were located in contested borderlands: Bashiqa and al-Qush near Mosul and Qara Hanjer near Kirkuk. By awarding oil concessions in disputed territories, Kurds openly defied the Green Line, which is to say the ceasefire line that since October 1991 has marked the borderline between the region and the rest of the country. Minister Hawrami repeatedly explained that both history and de facto administration in those areas denied any “hard line” of separation.10 Accordingly, the MNR requested IOCs and their sub-contractors to remove the Green Line from their maps (Crisis Group, 2009: 11). The fait accompli was key to redraw contentious borders in unredeemed lands and uphold territorial control. Put differently, “territorialisation [established] authority” (Rasmussen & Lund, 2018: 2), rather than the other way round. Vetoes in Baghdad did not stall the process. The KRG raised the bar to the ambitious goal of reaching a production capacity of 1 million bpd by 2015 (MNR, 2013). Minister Hawrami explained the rationale behind the figure while addressing the 2013 European Energy Summit in Istanbul with concise and incisive words: “nowhere in the world does 1 million barrels per day remain stranded” (Reuters, 2013). One year later, at the MERI Forum in Erbil, Hawrami returned to this point. On that occasion, the MNR Minister revisited the journey made since 2006, from a backwater region to just a step away from economic self-sufficiency. Hawrami spoke of federal decentralisation,
94 The gate to statehood genuine revenue sharing, and the mutually beneficial partnership with Turkey, thus delineating the geopolitical profile of the KRG in full. He ended his speech by reminding the audience, with well-founded confidence, that “when there is oil, it will flow.” Exporting one million bpd would equal the production level of Oman, thus ranking the KRG among the top 20 oil-producing countries, ahead of Azerbaijan, Algeria, and UK to name a few solid suppliers. Reaching that output target was therefore seen as the strongest assurance for the long-term acquisition of an international status. In these terms, Hawrami’s consideration was not naïve at all. As “petroleum is one the most fundamental building blocks of twentieth century hydrocarbon capitalism” (Watts, 2001: 189) or “the lifeblood of the world’s industrial economies” (Yergin, 2011), and only a handful of exporters sustain the insatiable global thirst for energy, maintaining the oil flow sustains the international order. This is demonstrated by the longstanding US commitment to the free movement of oil from the Middle East, which first inspired the “twin pillars” policy towards Saudi Arabia and Iran since the British withdrawal from the Persian Gulf in late 1960s and was then set out in the 1979 “Carter Doctrine.”11 The same strategic principle eventually led Washington to send boots on the Iraqi ground in 1991 and again in 2003, with the dire consequences dramatically exposed by an almost decade long military occupation. Despite peak- or post-oil narratives, the global hunt for oil supplies still drives the logic of accumulation of a fossil fuels-based industrial paradigm. The goal of scaling up the export capacity, however, ran into difficulties. Pipeline politics and federal disputes The landlocked position has set the bandwidth of KRG foreign policy (Mills, 2013; Paasche & Mansurbeg, 2014; Natali, 2015; Romano, 2015). Caught in-between historical enemies of Kurdish self-determination, Iraqi Kurds were mindful of the limited room for manoeuvre and have pragmatically cultivated amicable relations with neighbouring countries, and particularly Turkey. As seen, when the leadership bet on the petroleum industry, securing export routes was made a priority. As a matter of fact, the lack of direct access to outside markets through sea lines penalises an export-oriented oil producer because of higher fixed costs and transit agreements with third countries. Furthermore, economic peripherality from the rest of Iraq accentuated a condition of physical insularity given by the rocky topography along the northern and eastern borders. The Syrian civil war and the international sanctions applied on Iran narrowed down options. Despite being entitled to 17% of the federal budget and lobbying for a foreground position in Baghdad, the KRG has sought to achieve economic independence from the central government since the beginning of the federalist experiment due to a bitter history of ethnic animosity. Therefore, integrating the nascent Kurdish oil and gas sector in the Iraqi energy infrastructures was not in the scheme of things. However, when the two flagship oilfields of Taq
The gate to statehood 95 Taq and Tawke started production in June 2009, the KRG was forced to agree upon the federal management of oil sales through the Kirkuk–Ceyhan pipeline, with all revenues deposited into the Development Fund for Iraq (Crisis Group, 2009: 18). The Iraqi North Oil Company (NOC) connected both fields to the federal transportation grid. At the same time, the central government refused to recognise the agreements signed by the KRG with the companies running operation in Tawke (DNO) and Taq Taq (Addax Petroleum and Genel Energy), and demanded regional authorities to put crude sales from oilfields located within KRI under federal control. However, KRG officials turned a deaf ear. The scenario changed radically in a few years. In early 2014, ISIS repeatedly attacked and eventually knocked out a key section of the Kirkuk–Ceyhan pipeline that linked the super-giant Kirkuk oilfield (which encompasses the domes of Khurmala, Baba Gurgur, and Avana, plus the adjacent fields of Bai Hassan, Khabbaz, and Jambur) to the refinery in Baiji and from there back to the main conduit. Before its complete halt, the pipeline was operating at a capacity of about 550.000 bpd (Reuters, 2017). With no other remaining option, crude extracted in Kirkuk began to be shipped through the parallel 970 kilometres long pipeline opened in December 2013 to connect the Khurmala field to the Turkish portion of the Kirkuk–Ceyhan line via the Fish Khabur border crossing. Renamed “Kurdish pipeline,” the conduit running within the autonomous region created a powerful sense of national unity amongst Kurds. The decisive push, however, occurred in March 2014 when the central government led by Nouri al-Maliki decided to withhold the share of the federal budget owed to the KRG as a retaliation against the refusal to export oil through the State Oil Marketing Organisation (SOMO) (Mills, 2016). In January, the MNR had announced the sale of its first crude cargo from the port of Ceyhan (MNR, 2014a) in line with previous deals signed with Ankara, and was negotiating pre-payments with major international trading houses, such as Trafigura, Glencore, Petraco, and Vitol. Baghdad denounced the move as illegal and turned off the tap to wreck plans in Erbil: federal allocations were reduced by a half in January and drastically stopped by March (Reuters, 2015). Any financial transfer from the centre was frozen. The first tanker loaded with over 1 million barrels officially left Ceyhan on 23 May, with proceeds being deposited into an escrow account at Turkey’s state-run Halkbank and “treated as part of the KRG’s budgetary entitlement” (MNR, 2014b).12 Before that, the amount of unrefined petroleum exported to Turkey and on a much smaller extent Iran via trucks was limited, ranging between 30,000 and 50,000 bpd. Baghdad had not opposed those cargoes. In November, the Iraqi Minister of Oil Adil Abdul Mahdi agreed upon the KRG’s handling of exports from Kirkuk through the northern route for an amount of 150,000 bpd in exchange for a one-time payment of 500 million USD (Aresti, 2016). A month later, a new agreement was struck under which the KRG would deliver 550,000 bpd to SOMO and federal transfers would resume, but both quarrelling sides failed to respect their obligations during the first months of 2015, partly owing to the concomitant
96 The gate to statehood slump in oil prices with Brent plummeting from over 110 USD per barrel in mid-2014 to less than 70 USD per barrel at the beginning of the year. The budget dispute dragged on for months and much animated the nationalistic rhetoric, not least because after the fall of Mosul in June 2014 and the ISF retreat from disputed territories the Peshmerga stepped in to set up a barrage against ISIS. The KRG bore the brunt of conflict also in areas under federal administration. Against what was perceived as a breaching of constitutional commitments, the KRG claimed the obligation towards any Kurd living outside the region and exposed to jihadist violence. At that point, under extenuating fiscal duress and with millions of dollars in arrears to oil companies, Kurdish ruling parties decided to export oil independently from Baghdad in order to survive economically. The conversation I had with the High Representative of a KRG mission in Europe illustrates that position: Payments of government salaries lagged behind because of the budget cut. Then ISIS came and the Iraqi army collapsed. As Kurdish authorities, we had two options: either allow them to fall into the hands of Daesh or protect our people. That is what happened. It was not to protect oilfields in the first place. We decided to secure the perimeter of those areas and at the same time we kept our borders open. Despite the economic burden and a de facto embargo from Iraq, we hosted 1.8 million refugees and internally displaced people from Mosul, from Baghdad, from Fallujah. From everywhere and without discrimination. While running a costly war and caring for refugees, all of the sudden the oil prices dropped and we were already selling below the market price because Iraq was chasing us. We managed to resist only because of the oil we could export and thanks to our allies. We received nothing from Baghdad. (Interview #3) The betrayal of the true partnership between the people of Iraq, as enshrined in the preamble of the Constitution, is implicit in the aforementioned passage. The KRG has often underlined its willingness to join a democratic and pluralistic Iraq so long as the other constituents adhered to the same principles. This notion of voluntary union, however, has been rejected in Baghdad throughout the Iraqi history to preserve territorial integrity given that it evokes an insurmountable confrontation between a subjugated Kurdistan and the Arab occupier (Rafaat, 2016). The “failed experiment” of federalism, as Masoud Barzani called it (Asharq al-Awsat, 2017), witnesses the enduring perception of a threatened or denied legitimacy. In such context of alternative national projects, the Kurdish pipeline took on the meaning of a vested right of economic self-sufficiency, even more so under exceptional war conditions that once again were raging at the borders of the Kurdish enclave, while central government seemingly relinquished its role. The pipeline appeared to be nothing less than a lifeline.13 While the budget dispute was unfolding, the KRG proved to be an essential partner on the ground for the US-led international coalition to counter
The gate to statehood 97 ISIS. At the same time, Erbil felt anxious to reassure foreign investors that oil shipments marketed through the port of Ceyhan on the Mediterranean were rock-solid and constitutionally lawful. As seen, energy diplomacy was meant to maintain international support. The KRG also defended the protection and management of oilfields located in disputed Makhmour, Kirkuk, and Nineveh. “Had we not had that oil, had we not developed that industry, it would have been very difficult to survive. We exercised a constitutional right.”14 The KRG High Representative to the UK, Karwan Jamal Tahir, began with these words when I asked him about the deterioration of federal relations upon energy issues. Until 2009, the High Representative had served as a senior advisor to the MNR and later held the post of Deputy Head of the Department of Foreign Relations. During the interview, he stressed that Iraqi federalism had been emptied of its contents in no time, as demonstrated not only by obstructionism in complying with Article 140, which was supposed to settle the administrative future of disputed areas through local referenda in a clear timeframe, but also by the non-delivery of the due share of weapons and budget to Peshmerga and not least by the unsuccessful oil-for-budget agreements15 to resume fiscal transfers. In his view, energy decentralisation had the potential to enrich Iraq as a whole overcoming historical inequality given that additional revenue extracted by producing fields inside the region would have been distributed between regional and federal treasuries as envisaged by article 112 of the Constitution. “We fully and firmly committed ourselves to a federal, democratic, pluralistic, and free Iraq, at the end of the day we found to be more Iraqis than the other Iraqis,” he added. All the government members I interviewed offered the same version given by the High Representative, regardless of party affiliation.16 It goes without saying that such discourse cannot be anything but partial and biased but pinpoints a number of elements of KRG’s oil nationalism. The lust of the commodity frontier For many newly independent countries, Iraq included, the nationalisation of the petroleum industry during the 1970s helped to further distance themselves from former colonial powers. For the KRG, resource nationalism provided a solution to the long-standing question of statelessness by securing an international commitment towards Kurdish self-rule. This would tackle vetoes of neighbouring countries and a violent resurgence of ethno-sectarian conflicts inside Iraq. International recognition, which echoes the sense of exile discussed in the opening, is therefore seen as essential for maintaining a condition of semi-statehood, let alone backing the quest for obtaining de jure sovereignty. This point came out frequently during my conversations with KRG officials. Minister Bakir spelt it out with an explicit statement: We knew the importance of oil and we adopted energy diplomacy in a way to prove ourselves internationally through this commodity. We were able to put Kurdistan on the energy map of the world thanks to that vision. (Interview #41)
98 The gate to statehood The “energy map of the world” is a recurrent image in KRG official discourse that exhibits a sense of historical accomplishment by envisioning the autonomous region at the centre of global energy flows. Once again, it exemplifies the importance of cartography in the construction of Kurdish irredentism. As Farinelli puts it, “managing reality comes through its geographical expression” (2009: 29). Already in 2010 Nechirvan Barzani, then Vice President of the KDP, took a stand for the constitutionally safeguarded right of developing the energy sector using the same image: And now, the KRG is in a position that would enable it to contribute to securing the energy supplies needed by foreign countries, particularly through gas exports to Turkey and Europe. We will continue with this policy until Kurdistan has a place on the map of world’s energy supplies. (quoted in Govari Gulan, 2010) The KRG put to its utmost advantage global energy trends. In recent years, the exhaustion of conventional fields and the overall increase in the global demand have brought out a new geography of investment favouring either conventional deposits in unconventional locations (e.g. offshore reservoirs) or unconventional resources in accessible and stable jurisdictions (e.g. shale formations in Alberta) (Bridge & Le Billon, 2017). Deepwater drillings and unconventional extraction, however, come with higher production costs and a number of side issues, from legal controversies about extraction from seabed in international waters (well illustrated by the debate on oil explorations in the Arctic) to related environmental hazards (such as the Deepwater Horizon disaster in the Gulf of Mexico). Moreover, with regard to unconventional crude, lower quality is an additional issue that generates costs to the producer by virtue of more expensive refining. Against this background, the untapped resources in the Kurdish north stood out as a valuable onshore and conventional source of hydrocarbons. Sidelined and delayed for most of the Iraqi republican history due to political reasons, the materialising of an oil and gas sector inside the autonomous region was welcomed as a rare opportunity by international investors and operators. For this reason, the attempt of touting and recasting Kurdistan as an uncharted commodity frontier proved to be successful, as it bet on the entropic social metabolism17 of industrial societies and the constant growth of conventional energy supplies. The concept of commodity frontier was formulated by Jason Moore (2000) to illustrate the expansionary drive of capitalism. Based on Wallerstein’s worldsystem theory on the spatial division of labour in the global economy (1989), Moore argues that the commodification of nature is the essential mode of capital accumulation feeding industrial cores upon the availability of resource-rich, powerless peripheries. Resource extraction replaced the earlier “trading-post imperialism” that had characterised early capitalism. In my view, the concept is key to locate KRG’s energy-driven policies into broader perspective and understand their relationship with the global petroleum industry.
The gate to statehood 99 Frontier is not the same as border. While the latter draws a neat separation between territories on a contiguous canvas, the former delineates a more indefinite area of encounter. Not necessarily a buffer zone or a contentious borderland, the frontier is seen as “a diffuse zone of transition” (Korf & Raeymaekers, 2013: 12) or a relational space (Barney, 2009: 146). As highlighted by Eilenberg, “the frontier concept has a long and ambiguous history and has been widely applied (often unreflectively) as a heuristic device to describe processes of transition, exclusion, and inclusion, both physically and figuratively” (Eilenberg, 2014: 161). In this sense, the frontier was the ultimate heuristic device of Western colonial projection. In his discussion on the genealogy of wilderness, Cronon describes it precisely as the edge of a “savage world at the dawn of civilisation” (1996: 16), situating its conventional usage in the folds of an epistemological separation between a civilised space and terra nullius – an empty, unruly, and disordered space awaiting for a benevolent conqueror. By analogy, Moore’s commodity frontier sheds light on the colonial expansion of capitalist modes of production and knowledge systems in “virgin” (i.e. underexploited) areas, with the transformation of land, labour, and rule that comes with it. Drawing a parallel with Turner’s overused frontier thesis (1893), just as the continuous movement from east to west of European settlers in North America was portrayed as the epic conquest of wild lands inhabited by native primitive communities, it might be said that the capture of raw materials and workforce in remote areas of the globe nowadays epitomises the equally violent movement of capitalism. In the same vein, Bridge (2001) claims that post-industrial narratives of “resource triumphalism” reconstitute distant places into commodity supply zones, which are conceived as remote badlands denied of any ecological and historical specificity, through a regulative mechanism that reinforces the material practices undergirding consumer societies in the Global North. The idea of a resource frontier – “a space of desire” to use Tsing’s evocative expression (2003: 5102) – is as old as capitalism. Enclosure, predation, and exploitation of land take centre stage in Marxist theory on the primitive accumulation of capital (Harvey, 2003).18 Political ecologists, in particular, have paid attention to the patterns of dispossession and environmental degradation engendered by exploitation of natural resources, from the Amazon (Hecht & Cockburn, 1989; Schmink & Wood, 2010) to Southeast Asia (Barney, 2009; Tsing, 2011), from the Niger Delta (Watts, 2004) to the Arctic (Nuttall, 2010). Moore’s argument is built upon the same terrain but more accurately focuses on the commodity chain, which is to say the “network of labour and production processes whose end result is a finished commodity” (Hopkins & Wallerstein, 1986). These processes operate transnationally. Therefore, global commodity chains go beneath and beyond state jurisdictions. The KRG case itself is emblematic of interconnections between substate and global dynamics. Another general consideration to be made is that the coercive disengagement from local ecologies and livelihoods at the frontiers of capitalism by means of
100 The gate to statehood extractive industries goes hand in hand with replacement and replenishment of local systems of knowledge and rule (Tsing, 2011). This means that “as new types of resource commodification emerge, institutional orders are sometimes undermined or erased outright, and sometimes ‘taken apart’ and then reinterpreted, reinvented, and recycled” (Rasmussen & Lund, 2018: 2). Commodity enclosures do not only extract economic value out of appropriated land and alienate that value to local population but also end up overturning institutions and norms embedded in land – from property rights to political jurisdictions. Rasmussen and Lund provide an insightful understanding of these two-faced “frontier dynamics,” which dissolve existing social orders and territorialise new ones at once. In their view, frontier spaces are seen as “transitional, liminal spaces in which existing regimes of resource control are suspended” (ibidem: 1). The transformation of Kurdish society upon the extractive imperative is in tune with such intuition. Read in conjunction with global energy trends, the concept of commodity frontier is therefore helpful to understand that hydrocarbon reserves have vested the KRG with sought-after qualities that international traders and importing countries look for. On their side, Kurdish elites encouraged the opening up of a frontier at a steady pace with the purpose of outsourcing political autonomy to global market demand. It should be borne in mind that investors are more permissive than state chancelleries in engaging with sub-state entities: strained political relations with the central government are part of a risk investment assessment and may actually ease profitable opportunities for business operators. Kurdish elites took advantage of these incentives at the appropriate time when the Iraqi state was near collapse. However, what happened after the referendum on independence shows the limits of relying on profit-oriented actors to support the Kurdish cause to the extreme of full secession. This is nothing new: overconfidence on external patrons has dangerously characterised all Kurdish history (McDowall, 2003). The belief that political autonomy literally passes through energy routes is well consolidated in the mindset of regional elites and is most likely to steer the KRG trajectory in the foreseeable future as well. It is perhaps surprising that Kurdish leaders are still firmly convinced that putting the KRG on the energy map is the best way forward, notwithstanding a number of warnings. As international recognition is crucial to Kurds’ survival, it could not have been otherwise. Petro populism The toxic federal confrontation upon energy issues can be understood as deepseated antagonism between irreconcilable nationalisms locked in a stalemate. This book focuses on the Kurdish side of the story only. Looking at the KRG discourse, resource sovereignty mediates belonging to the homeland and territorialises rule by defending the existence of a pre-political jurisdiction, which is figuratively inscribed in land and justifies subsequent claims of autonomy.
The gate to statehood 101 Oil ceases to be merely an object of struggle between central and regional levels of government; rather, energy policies provide a terrain for the pursuit of political legitimation. Furthermore, the so-called “Dubai dream” – the aspiration to making the Kurdish region a prosperous petro-state on the model of oil monarchies in the Gulf – passed for a manifestation of national destiny. The appropriation of hydrocarbons was presented by ruling elites as organic to national existence, thus binding the nation-building process to the extractive imperative. The exploitation of natural resources therefore became a national right to be incorporated into the nationalist narrative. This ideological reconstruction of self-determination garnered acclaim amongst Kurds, not least because it grabbed onto some cultural features of the Kurdish iconography such as the lush mountainous landscape. That is where the processes of landscaping and “mindscaping” (Whitehead, Jones, & Jones, 2007: 11) the nation meet. However, a contradiction prevented the full transfiguration of the KRI into an oil nation: extractivism created pockets of wealth that fuelled the exclusions of many. Despite its impact on the construction of nationhood, the oil economy led to dismemberment, at times violent, of rural communities and the explosion of social inequalities. As a result, the Dubai model has become increasingly untenable over time. The following two chapters revolve around this contradiction. This paragraph explores, instead, the ideological foundation of KRG’s oil nationalism, which links the narrative of national redemption to the abundance of hydrocarbons. The extractive imperative championed by ruling elites frames oil wealth as the shelter of Kurdish autonomy. Such imaginary was then used to mobilise consent around the state-building endeavour. From the KDP angle, it also served the purpose of gathering favour to Masoud Barzani’s leadership. Beyond instrumental reasons, however, making the petroleum industry the main source of income internalised deep assumptions about the right development model to pursue. Arsel, Hogenboom, and Pellegrini refer to the extractive imperative as a “broadened, deepened and self-sustained form of extractivism” (2016: 2). The concept can be broken down into three ideological themes, which are central in the developmental plans of many resource-based economies worldwide: i) the belief that resource extraction is an indispensable stage to start up economic growth; ii) the identification of the state as the appropriate level of governance for regulating extractive industries, in particular, and the economy, in general; and iii) poverty reduction as a policy priority. The same elements can be found in the KRG discourse. The goal of harnessing the vast geological potential was unanimously considered to be the driving force for a povertystricken region to take off economically. Nevertheless, the resultant exceptional cash windfalls nourished a makeshift patrimonial welfare run by the two major parties in place of proper redistributive policies. Diversification in other sectors came out belatedly when falling oil prices hit the nerves of what had been already restructured as a rentier economy. Booming double-digit growth and unbridled urbanisation were soon betrayed by a rough downturn just as
102 The gate to statehood quickly. The oil bonanza turned into a fairy tale for most Kurds, “and like every fairy tale [into] a bit of a lie” to borrow again from Kapuscinski. There is no doubt that the assertion of resource sovereignty has had a strong imprint on the recent evolution of Kurdish self-determination in Iraq. Suffice it to say that the very notion of citizenship was reoriented upon the extractive imperative. A case in point is the Oil and Gas Law of the Kurdistan Region (n. 22/2007) whose final provisions set out that a share of revenue would be allocated for special purposes to the benefit of all citizens of Kurdistan, future generations, and the families of martyrs.19 These general principles of revenue management were already delineated in full in an explanatory memorandum, which recognises “special moral obligations that the Kurdistan Region’s petroleum wealth places on the KRG.”20 In greater detail, the memorandum specified that 20% of future oil proceeds had to be allocated to the following non-negotiable areas: An annual cash dividend for citizens of the Kurdistan Region; a special fund for the future to ensure that the Kurdistan Region has income when the petroleum resources of the Kurdistan Region and Iraq are in decline; a dividend for citizens who suffered greatly under the previous Iraqi regime; funds to support the requirements of the Kurdistan Region’s ethnic and religious minorities to provide their own social, cultural and governmental services; and funds to restore the natural environment of the Kurdistan Region. Such provision shows that the setting up of a legislative framework for the oil and gas sector was reflected in re-negotiating the conception of citizenship itself. The entitlement to a share of revenue, to be put “straight into the pocket of the citizen” as stated in the memorandum, could not be clearer. The oil rent returns to the people in the form of generous monetary subsidies and sustained economic development. Furthermore, governance on national natural resources is framed as the means to redress nearly a century of discrimination and earn a long-awaited sovereignty. In so doing, oil is translated into a constitutive element of the national community. The KRG much indulged in this rhetorical practice to give the regime international support and cultivate popular legitimacy,21 but petro-populism actually encouraged a vicious cycle of unchecked government spending and rent-seeking behaviour that were not conducive to poverty reduction and backlashed on the credibility of ruling elites. The notion of petro populism begs an explanation. In recent years, scholars have resorted to it to illustrate the relationship between populist leadership and public overspending in oil-producing countries (Parenti, 2005; Looney, 2007; Alizadeh & Hakimian, 2013; Lyall & Valdivia, 2019), without providing an in-depth conceptual discussion though. Matsen, Natvik, and Torvik (2016) loosely define it as the economically excessive use of oil revenues to buy political support, but the aspects emphasised in the definition (resource
The gate to statehood 103 over-extraction and the instrumental use of oil rent as political lever) say nothing about the ideological texture behind. Truth be told, populism is quite a difficult concept to handle. Its multifaceted and chameleonic character, its heterogeneity over time and across space, and the prevalent negative connotation in the common usage make it difficult to agree upon an unequivocal definition (Tarchi, 2004). Whether a weak ideological manifesto (Mény & Surel, 2000; Zanatta, 2002; Mudde, 2004), a political regime (Germani, 1978; Mair, 2002), or a political style or mentality (Canovan, 1982, 1999; Taguieff, 2002), there is no consensus on how to deal with the broad inventory of empirical phenomena that have been variously typified as populist.22 Such discordance has resulted in the abuse of a catch-all label of uncertain content and with reduced analytical sharpness. Notwithstanding this, efforts to find common traits have been made. Among others, Tarchi (2004) distinguishes three core features: i) the idealisation of the people as a pure, homogeneous, and organic community, which is morally superior to its various components; ii) the opposition against a number of enemies; and iii) a message of reassurance to heal the wounds inflicted upon the community. These keep together protest (the reaction against the moral decay or social disintegration of a natural order) and identity (the reinstatement of a common good in the rightful place). Populists sense community as a cohesive and undifferentiated totality, regardless of class or ideological divisions. On the contrary, those who are not in line with the values upon which the community is traditionally built are represented as threats to its unity and integrity – be they a ruling elite that betrayed the popular mandate, immigrants, conspirators of various kinds, or social groups inciting class struggle (ibidem). Nevertheless, the “people” is not a given, but a fictional plural entity that cannot be observed empirically. Claiming to speak on behalf of the people is rhetorically meant to mobilise masses and instil a feeling of belonging. However, this happens in democracies and autocracies alike. Given the many different referents it may have, the promiscuous appeal to the people is therefore disorienting. What does the “people” in the KRG discourse stand for? In my view, it does not mean demos – the sovereign foundation of the polity from which political legitimacy ensues, but rather ethnos – a timeless national community that has firm roots in an ethnically defined homeland, relies upon forms of mechanical solidarity, and needs to be protected against external enemies. In these terms, the primacy of the people leans on a plebiscitary (if not caesarist) vision of political representation that places national destiny on the shoulders of the two hegemonic political parties. In fact, if considered in the limited sense of a symbolic register, the KRG discourse might be seen as populist. However, as will be described further on, the two-party rule established by Masoud Barzani and Jalal Talabani more accurately resembles a demagogic autocracy, which took some tentative steps towards democratisation. This makes it incompatible with a strong version of the concept given that the will of the people tends to be purely cosmetic in authoritarian settings without acting as an effective check on the rulers. As Canovan puts it, “populism is a shadow cast by democracy
104 The gate to statehood itself ” (1999: 3), despite the fact that its outspoken illiberal vocation has led some scholars to associate it with peronism and other so-called national-populist regimes in Latin America (Germani, 1978). Notwithstanding this, I argue that petro-populism offers an adequate key to interpret the ideological dimension of oil nationalism in the Kurdish enclave. As the whole is more than the sum of its parts, the prefix “petro” is s not as selfevident as it may at first seem and needs to be taken into proper consideration. Terry Karl’s The Paradox of Plenty (1997) is a milestone in the literature on petro-states. With reference to Venezuela, she explains the malaise of boomand-bust cycles suffered by the country on the basis of the “petrolisation” of state institutions. According to Karl, the cash flow of petrodollars from oil sales has had overwhelming effects in that it redesigned the decision-making apparatus, generated “specific types of social classes, organised interests, and patterns of collective action,” and produced “a distinctive type of institutional setting.” The economic dependence on oil exports goes deep into the very structure of the state, rebalancing authority and reshaping its symbolic images. The end result of petrolisation is often unfortunate: petro-states are equated to a modern King Midas dying of starvation because of the greedy appetite for black gold. The institutional metamorphosis (or degeneration) to which Karl refers sheds light on the fetishisation of petroleum in energy-intensive modern societies, which keeps fuelling mighty fantasies of power and wealth. The concept of commodity fetishism comes from the Marxist critique of value-form, according to which the exchange value of a commodity is not determined by its use-value arising from intrinsic properties. This brings to mind Adam Smith’s theory of value, a pillar of classical economics, and the famous comparison between water and diamonds, which is discussed in Chapter 1 of this book. Marx took it a step further by highlighting that in capitalist societies commodities are turned into fetishes “endowed with a life of their own” (1990: 165). Taussig’s (2010) inquiry on everyday rituals in sugarcane plantations in the Cauca Valley and tin mines around Oruno in Bolivia is a remarkable, recent study on the fetishisation of natural resources. In his anthropological writings, Taussig recounts that the symbolism of the devil was invoked by landless peasants and miners alike with the hope of increases in production and, consequently, in their wages.23 Many scholars have similarly pointed out the mysticism embodied in petroleum-derived products. Fernando Coronil’s (1997) ethnography of the Venezuelan state along the bumpy road of oil-led “magical” transformation during the 1970s is a widely cited example. In a thorough discussion over the fetishist qualities bestowed upon oil, Michael Watts comments that Coronil “illustrates the importance and the mystification of natural resources in the modern world” (2004: 53): oil, in particular, is coveted as a treasure to jump-start development and achieve unprecedented power (“a harbinger of El Dorado”) on the one hand; and cursed as a deceptive and evil temptation (“the devil’s excrement,” to use the more colourful statement of Juan Pablo Pérez Alfonso, the Venezuelan co-founder of OPEC) on the other hand.
The gate to statehood 105 These resource imaginaries spread across extractive peripheries in oilproducing areas craving for economic growth at the frontiers of capitalist expansion but equally resonate in metropolitan cores. The “American way of life,” with its exceptionalist hubris and the imagination of free spaces, is precisely constructed through a repertoire of symbols (open roads, cars, and gasoline stations) entailing “access to and control over cheap gasoline as a natural, commonsensical right” (Huber, 2009). Huber suggests that the seemingly endless consumption of fossil fuel has long guided the US security strategy and also defined the American culture at large. From Edwin Drake’s first oil discovery in Pennsylvania in 1859 to the latter-day “Drill, baby, drill!” slogan, the history of petroleum and the US political culture have been inextricably bound together. Taken to an extreme, oil shaped the very cult of individual mobility and commanded the openness of the multilateral trading system, which represent a key feature of the American self and a durable postulate of the overseas projection of the country, respectively. This is hardly an exaggeration when considering that the US alone burns about half of all gasoline on the planet and accounts for almost 20% of world’s energy consumption. These few examples tell us that the influence of “petro-cultures” (Wilson, Carlson, & Szeman, 2017) on dominant social imaginaries has been pivotal and pervasive throughout the 20th century. Nevertheless, this influence frequently goes unnoticed, concealed by the fetishisation of oil. Put differently, the petro-culture we live in makes us oblivious to the systematic presence of petroleum products in everyday life and dissociates commodification processes from consumption patterns (Black, 2014). Such cognitive dissonance is displayed by the lack of resolve on effective mitigation measures to counter the climate change, by the way. Despite these mimetic manifestations, petroleum triggers a dazzling symbolic universe that mesmerises political visions. The loop closes here. Petro populism is one possible outcome of the interaction between politics and resource imaginaries. More precisely, in my understanding, petro populism denotes an ideological scheme that i) inserts oil wealth into the re-imagining of the nation, ii) provides a sense of organic unity between natural entitlements and national ethos, and iii) tightens the manifested destiny of the community upon a gift of nature. Applied to the present study, petro-populism gives a solution to the overarching Kurdish question insofar as it pledges to solve the issue of statelessness. Moreover, it brings a reconciling message against the perils of modernisation, though the ramifications of hydrocarbon exploitation have actually engendered even more severe forms of social exclusion. On the surface, this discourse appears to be a tool in the hands of the oligarchy. At a closer look, it rather intercepts a widespread cross-class mindset channelling political competition and social demands. Even though Kurdish factions are not in full agreement about the way the oil and gas sector should be managed, the extractive imperative is not disputed indeed. The region is imagined as “blessed” because of its natural resources. As a KRG high official told me: “if the Greater Kurdistan were united politically, it would be the richest state in the Middle East by virtue of its copious raw materials.”24
106 The gate to statehood Although such a patriotic argument is well rooted in popular imagination, in point of fact the oil wealth is dis-embedded from the local economy and tied to transnational capital. For this reason, the dominant petro-populist discourse has been resisted by sections of the population, as illustrated in Chapter 5. The same ideological dimension features prominently in the literature on resource nationalism, especially in Latin America. For instance, Perrault and Valdivia emphasise that “political economy and cultural politics are inseparable in resource conflicts, as contests over the distribution of rents and the objectives of national economic policy are infused with struggles over the meanings of development, citizenship and the nation itself ” (2010: 697). In an another work, Valdivia (2008) uses the notion of “petro-citizenship” to explain that petroleum delimits the perimeter of political subjectivity in Ecuador given that natural resource governance mediates relations between state institutions and the citizenry. A number of similar studies on the energy-informed formation of spatial identities were already reviewed in the opening chapter. Back to the Kurdish case, it should not be forgotten that the framing of oil as national good harkens back to a collective memory of oppression. In the memorandum of the Oil and Gas Law, cash dividends are explicitly linked to the hardship suffered by “the many Kurdistanis whose lives were unjustly damaged as a result of the genocide, war and terrorism of the Saddam regime.” Even more than a promise of future prosperity, oil wealth is therefore conjured up in terms of restoration of violated rights. Although the final version softened the aforementioned passage (which remained dead letter much like many other provisions), the proposal of delivering a monthly cheque of about 500–1,000 USD to every family in Kurdistan was showcased again by PM Nechirvan Barzani during the 2013 parliamentary elections campaign, at a time when the KDP was already criticised in public for the accumulation of revenues in party coffers (Hawlati, 2013), and on several other occasions. Once again intentions were a long way away from actual deeds, but that electoral trope showed that, in the short space of a few years, the extractive imperative had become part of the Kurdish political culture. Chokepoints To sum up previous paragraphs, since the regime change in Baghdad oil has backed, Kurdish renewed aspirations for political autonomy by granting a seat amongst global energy suppliers. Despite strained federal relations, the KRG managed to increase its legitimacy on the sudden and unprecedented economic growth triggered by crude exports. On the one hand, the energy gamble won the acquiescence of importing countries. On the other hand, the oil dream influenced the reproduction of Kurdish collective identity itself by re-negotiating belonging to the national community and re-territorialising ethno-national claims to sovereignty. The flipside of it was resentment towards the central government, whereby both Erbil and Baghdad began exchanging mutual accusations over land and oil grabs in disputed territories. Although riding on the groundswell of historical ethnic distrust, oil has stirred up acrimony further.
The gate to statehood 107 For all the importance identity formation has for this work, the discussion would be incomplete without taking into account what Gavin Bridge calls “the materialities of oil” (2010: 315), meaning the geographical, infrastructural, and commercial conditions in which oil is produced and marketed. Some of them were already mentioned, such as the landlocked position and the related strategic importance of the Kurdish pipeline. “Geography is our main adversary,” Minister Falah Mustafa Bakir agreed. We were sitting on opposite golden leaf sofas, as opulent as uncomfortable, in a large hall inside the Department of Foreign Relations. The Minister emphasised that the landlocked issue had been already broken by the evolution of geopolitical dynamics and savvy adjustments to a mercurial landscape. There may be different opinions on whether those adjustments hit the spot or not, but what is certain is that when Iraq plunged into ethno-sectarian turmoil after the removal of Saddam Hussein, the KRG was given new credentials. The void of power encouraged foreign countries to reach out to Erbil without going through Baghdad,25 hard-pressed by the desire of carving new areas of influence. For its part, the KRG actively supported those intents by presenting itself to the international community as a beacon of hope in midst of chaos – a safe, stable, and business-friendly proto-state at the crossroads of Middle East, blessed with plentiful, untapped natural resources. Or more concisely, the “Other Iraq,” as the KRG advertises.26 One could argue that the turbulent post-referendum scenario puts into question the reliability of such a strategy. Nevertheless, Minister Bakir shared a different interpretation: We were not expecting Iran and Turkey to be so aggressive against us because we thought we had assured our neighbours that the referendum was not against them. However, both countries kept their consul generals here. Even more importantly, Turkey did not close the border, nor shut the pipeline. Had they done so, it would have been a disaster, but there was an understanding that the sanctions already in place were enough to send a message. After all, it was mutually beneficial because Turkey benefits from what we have: oil and gas in the first place, but there are also about a thousand Turkish companies active in Kurdistan nowadays. Therefore, the pipeline remains the soft channel to keep relations open. (Interview #41) The statement tends to exaggerate Kurdish leverage vis-à-vis neighbours given that it does not take into consideration the uncertain financial standing and decreasing oil production capacity. By reading between the lines of the extract, some other elements come to light. These are discussed in what follows. International traders and clandestine routes Ashti Hawrami would certainly agree that international traders have played a vital role for the KRG’s oil policy to work. As seen, independent oil sales put a landlocked sub-state regional government on the more malleable map of
108 The gate to statehood energy trade. This never would have happened without the collaboration of international trading houses, which have been keeping the ailing economy of the region afloat with cash-for-crude prepayments since 2014. Since the KRG in not entitled to secure international loans to encourage capital investment (Natali, 2010), in the absence of federal allocations, upfront payments negotiated with oil traders became “the most important single metric of the KRG’s financial health as a de-facto fiscally independent government” (Osgood, 2018). Although data on crude sales are opaque at best due to their high sensitivity, the three major purchasers combined (Vitol, Glencore, and Trafigura) are rumoured to have loaned about 3.5 billion USD (Financial Times, 2017). Furthermore, trading companies rose to prominence as crucial commercial intermediaries to move and trade Kurdish barrels. Given legal disputes and political tensions with Baghdad, there was actually no guarantee that exports would ever reach destination. During 2014, the tanker United Kalavryta, which carried more than 1 million barrels of oil, was stuck 60 miles off the coast of Texas for six months before sailing back to the Mediterranean due to the fact that the Iraqi central government filed a court case in a U.S. District Court (Reuters, 2014a). Earlier that year, another tanker had not been allowed to discharge oil at the Moroccan port of Mohammedia. Baghdad hired Vinson & Elkins, one of the most authoritative international law firms with an expertise in the energy industry, to pursue buyers of Kurdish crude. That action of disturbance to ward off KRG’s customers seemed to be working at first. The Greek shipping company Marine Management Services was sued by the Iraqi government for “its willing and active participation in the KRG’s illegal crude oil export scheme” (Reuters, 2014b). However, Kurdish barrels never remained stranded in Ceyhan but found their way through clandestine channels and thanks to the world’s largest trading firms operating in the energy markets. Kurds were new to the game, as candidly admitted by Hawrami (Reuters, 2015). The MNR Minister himself had no direct experience in trading oil shipments. His expertise was confined to the upstream segment of the value chain, which fundamentally means extracting crude out of the ground. Therefore, the MNR relied on external agents to actually implement the export phase. One of them in particular, Murtaza Lakhani, became the dealmaker who opened the doors of global oil trade. The former trader of Glencore in Iraq, in the early 2000s, Lakhani got busted for paying over 1 million USD illegal surcharges to Saddam Hussein’s government outside the UN-administered Oil-for-Food Programme. When in 2014 the question of how to access market arose amongst Kurds, Lahkani positioned himself as the ideal middleman and offered his services. He quite literally walked the MNR through the nuts and bolts of the industry by providing them with a framework of what was commercially acceptable for shipping companies and by putting his book of contacts to good use. Hawrami trusted him so much that Lakhani handled banking transactions with trading giants such as Rosneft and Vitol and transferred hundreds of millions of dollars through his company’s account on behalf of the MNR (Bloomberg, 2020). He was basically running the whole show. And still is.
The gate to statehood 109 This made it possible for Kurdish cargoes to be lifted in the Turkish port of Ceyhan on a regular basis. Crude oil tankers usually go offline once in international waters to fool SOMO’s tracking; then cargoes are either unloaded at the Israeli port of Ashkelon or loaded on different vessels offshore Malta via shipto-ship transfers to reach refineries in Europe. In February 2018, for instance, the Malta flagged Valtamed first delivered 300,000 barrels to Greece and then went off the grid eventually reappearing in Israeli waters to make another delivery. These shady shipping routes help disguise final buyers. Israel is a busy mid-point for selling oil worldwide out of sight of Baghdad. After all, Iraq does not have diplomatic relations with Israel and this circumstance prevents legal actions against KRG cargoes, which thus fall into a cone of shadow. Moreover, Israel is a large and convenient market to the extent that about three-quarters of the domestic energy demand is covered by Kurdish oil. Unsurprisingly, the Netanyahu government was a lone voice in enthusiastically supporting the independence referendum. The journey of a barrel of crude is then quite informative of the commercial relations that are in favour of KRG’s independent sales. Oil trading is a clandestine business with decoy ships, murky transactions, and straw buyers. On the other hand, such conditions of dependency give traders power to dictate terms, which does not amount to having a strong commercial position in the market. With only a certain number of foreign investors willing to take risks and no spare wells left, the KRG was in dire straits and slipped into borrowing funds from private lenders to cover current expenditure at an unsustainable pace. The net result was an expanding debt estimated in 4 billion USD. When the KRG lost the oilfields in Kirkuk and some 300,000 bpd went up in smoke overnight, the MNR requested trading houses to re-negotiate their obligations, which in addition had been sealed at high oil prices. Despite backlogs, traders accepted but set the terms of the new arrangements. With IOCs having billions of USD worth of projects underway, traders will not walk away from the region, but what is owed to will be paid at some point and this shrinks the range of options for the cash-strapped regional government. That also reverberates back into the political sphere. The KDP-dominated MNR drew a veil of secrecy over renegotiations not to let PUK and opposition parties’ exact data about the debit position of the regional government. As discussed in the following chapter, opacity strengthens the lack of accountability in the sector. Notwithstanding his mastery of deal making, Minister Hawrami could not win over the rocky geology of Kurds’ beloved mountains, which turned out to be more difficult to tame and less profitable to exploit than originally expected. On the one side, the mountainous terrain raised extractive costs and discouraged new drillings in remote areas; on the other side, downward estimates about recoverable reserves from producing fields impacted on commercial prospects. Far from initial optimism, falling profits and unsatisfactory discoveries have led to diminished investments in recent years. Between 2014 and 2016, IOCs relinquished 19 exploration blocks (Iraqi Oil Report, 2016): ExxonMobil pulled out from Arbat East, Betwata, and Qara Hanjer while also scaling
110 The gate to statehood down operations in al-Qush, Pirmam, and Bashiqa; Chevron walked away from Rovi; Total abandoned both Baranan and Safeen. Likewise, minor companies (such as Genel Energy, Repsol, TEC, KNOC, Marathon, Hess, Gulf Keystone, and MOL) followed suit. The lack of infrastructures, debt arrears, plummeting oil prices, water saturation of reservoir rocks, and the downgrading of reserves in some fields (e.g. Taq Taq) were amongst the main reasons given by operators (Mills, 2016), besides the tumultuous political scenario amid the ISIS insurgency and the Erbil-Baghdad row.27 Seen in this light, the economic lifeline of the KRG seems to be rather frayed and precarious. External patrons The entrance of Rosneft was a turn of events. Since February 2017, the Russian state-owned company has struck a series of pre-financed deals with the KRG. An initial off-take contract for the purchase and sale of crude evolved into a stronger investment agreement signed in June 2017 and then complemented with additional deals in September, just a couple of weeks before the referendum. As a result, Rosneft became the majority shareholder of the Khurmala–Fish Kabur pipeline by buying $1.8 billion stocks (which amount to about 60% of the share value), raised the effective carrying capacity of conduit to 1 million bpd, began the development of five exploration blocks (Batil, Darato, Qasrok, Zawita, and Harir-Bejil) that other operators had relinquished, and committed to expand the regional infrastructures with a gas pipeline that is intended to export up to 30 billion cubic metres (bcm) per year to Turkey (and from there to the European markets through the Southern Gas Corridor) by 2020. The aggregate value of such investments signals a long-term engagement alongside the Kurds. This is in line with renewed Russian stakes in the Middle East, which became apparent with the military intervention in the Syrian civil war. Amid mounting skirmishes after the independence referendum held by the KRG, it is worthy of note that President Putin warned about the inconvenient consequences that the disruption of oil exports from the Kurdish enclave would cause on the energy markets, whereas Western countries fell back on more cautious stances. The Russian footprint is further substantiated by the desire to lay hands on disputed oilfields in Kirkuk. Hours after the ISF took over the city and ousted Peshmerga, the Iraqi Minister of Oil Jabar al-Luaibi revived old contacts with BP to re-develop oil production under federal control, despite the serious constraint of not having an operative export route. However, the circumstance that BP owns 19.75% of Rosneft share capital and that, in turn, the Russian energy giant owns the Kurdish pipeline soothed oppositions against the contracts independently approved in Erbil, thus setting favourable conditions for the resumption of exports through the Kurdish-controlled northern route. The CEO, Igor Sechin, acted as a mediator in Baghdad (Reuters, 2018b). When the state-building endeavour was falling apart in tatters, Rosneft supported the KRG financially with some $4 billion, establishing itself as the first investor by
The gate to statehood 111 far in the region, and also politically by acting as influential third party in the head-to-head against the central government. Not least, the Russian backing restored a piece of reputation in the eyes of international markets. Whilst trading houses seek profit margins, the Russian assistance follows the more traditional rationale of power projection. Generally speaking, it might be argued that the strategic exposure of state actors is less uncertain and more durable than the interests of private firms, whose convenience may swing and vanish rapidly. The argument looks compelling when considering the relationship with Turkey and the price Barzani’s upper cadres agreed to pay for market access. Dependence on Turkey was seen as an acceptable risk for the purpose of solidifying economic discontinuity with the rest of Iraq. The partnership seemed to be at odds with history given Turkish repression of brethren in Bakur, but Erbil had no other outlet to disengage exports from the Iraqi federal infrastructure. Accordingly, the KRG was savvy in not provoking Turkey into reaction while stepping up self-rule in northern Iraq, until the referendum at least. Barzani spent much effort to drop suspicions about potential repercussions to internal affairs, especially with the raging of the Syrian civil war against the southern Anatolian border, which historically is considered as the bulwark of Turkey’s territorial integrity. The KRG stood back from the Kurdish insurgency in northern Syria and turned a blind eye on Turkish anti-PKK raids over the Qandil Mountains. Moreover, Ankara was offered the opportunity to retain a strategic presence in Iraq at a moment in which relations with the Shi’a-led governments in Baghdad were deteriorating because of Iranian influence. At the same time, President Erdoğan took advantage of the alliance with Masoud Barzani to delegitimise the PKK. A number of factors encouraged the Turkish gradual rapprochement towards the KRG (Tol, 2014). From an energy perspective, unexploited oil and gas reserves in the autonomous region came in handy for pursuing energy diversification in view of a rising domestic demand, which was mainly met with Russian and Iranian supplies (Morelli & Pischedda, 2014). It is noteworthy that the KRG signed the first PSC ever with the Turkish companies Petoil and Genel Energy in 2002. Saddam Hussein was still in power. Successive deals between Barzani’s KDP and Erdoğan’s Justice and Development Party created the framework of the KRG–Turkey relationship. From 2010 onwards, President Masoud Barzani was welcomed several times with the honours befitting a head of state and with the Kurdish flag flying alongside the Turkish and Iraqi ones. The “friendship pipeline” evolved into an even closer partnership with a 50-year-long energy agreement signed with the state-backed Turkish Energy Company (TEC) in November 2013. The agreement has never been disclosed publicly. It is highly likely that former PM Nechirvan Barzani and former MNR Minister Ashti Hawrami28 are the only KRG members with full knowledge of the terms. This policy-making happened in a very close circle around the Barzani family and bilateral protocols have thus remained confidential, as further demonstration of a patrimonial rule.
112 The gate to statehood There is no doubt that the deal was a milestone achievement. Since 2011, TEC had been teaming up with ExxonMobil in their exploration blocks. The 2013 agreement laid the groundwork for a full-fledged and enduring collaboration, which provided Ankara with considerable dividends: a preferential share of exports at a discounted price, easy access to unexploited gas resources (with the Miran and Bina Bawi fields currently being developed by the Anglo-Turkish Genel Energy), transit fees levied on shipments from Ceyhan, and plans for expanding the pipeline with further branches. Furthermore, a 2.5 billion USD bilateral trade volume, which is utterly skewed towards the massive import of goods from Turkey, and the transfer of oil revenues via Turkish banks complete the picture. Notwithstanding this, the geopolitical aspect of it has very much impacted on the health of Kurdish politics. The inauguration of the Khurmala–Fish Khabur pipeline reversed the scenario in favour of Erbil, but this is not without risks given that Turkey has the capacity of breaking the thin bottleneck of the oil-based economy at any time. The KRG relies on its neighbour not only for crude shipments but also for imports of food and goods, let alone an estimated $4 billion debt to be paid off (Bloomberg, 2017). Such precarious reliance on an external patron also implied deepening internal divisions given that the PUK has been historically close to Iran. Moreover, the Barzani–Erdoğan alliance undermined pan-Kurdish solidarity. The KRG has been careful in distancing from Kurdish national mobilisations in other host countries in order to not alienate international support.29 After all, after Iraqi Kurds inked “yes” (often with a drop of blood) on the ballot for independence in September 2017, Turkey, Iran, and Iraq took coordinated countermeasures to cripple secessionist temptations. President Erdoğan, in particular, got to the point of threatening the closure of the Khurmala–Ceyhan pipeline. At the same time, Baghdad resumed the dialogue with both Ankara and Teheran to plan additional conduits from Kirkuk in a move to shut Erbil out. Although any infrastructural project would require years to become operational, the landlocked condition came back to the fore. In conclusion, these chokepoints tell where the short-termism of Kurdish leaders comes from. Dependency on external sponsors is seen as a necessary evil to maintain autonomy, whereas wariness toward any form of arrangement with the central government imparts centrifugal forces to federal relations. These considerations leave a series of questions unanswered. For one thing, future oil sales might not be enough to pay back obligations to creditors. Even when there are no more loans to be repaid or debt to be refinanced, at current oil prices, the KRG will be break-even at best, without being able to generate income. In short, the oil dream seems to have dragged the region to the bottom of explosive contradictions. This requires an in-depth analysis of how the history of the two ruling dynasties came to be intertwined with oil politics. After all, the goal of autonomy voiced on the surface has often concealed the agendas of hegemonic Kurdish parties underneath.
The gate to statehood 113 Notes 1 The map is included at the end of the book. 2 The concept of place and the relationship between place and self are central in human geography, although according to divergent sensibilities and traditions of thought that are not reviewed in the present work. The phenomenological notion adopted here, for instance, does not take into consideration the debate around the “time-space compression” of late modernity (Harvey, 1989) and the progressive re-articulation of place at the time of globalization (Massey, 1994), which nevertheless would be relevant for a full understanding of Kurdishness given the large and heterogeneous diaspora. 3 Martyrdom is worshipped all across the Greater Kurdistan. Koefoed (2017) sees the cult of martyrs as an act of emotional resistance that is part of everyday lives in Bakur (North Kurdistan). 4 Fischer Tahir investigated how Kurds dealt with the narration of al-Anfal and noted an interesting shift in the gendered symbolism used in the Kurdish nationalist discourse: in order to grieve the defeat of brave Peshmerga, typically portrayed as protectors of Kurdish rights, “the ruling parties introduced the image of rural women dressed in black, mourning the fate of their disappeared husbands and sons” (Fischer-Tahir, 2012: 93). Women who survived persecutions later rejected this imaginary already in early 1990s: “they organized their social lives and constructed counter-narratives that incorporated the complicity of former regime supporters” (ibidem: 94). For a gender-sensitive reconstruction of the al-Anfal aftermath through women’s memories, see also the excellent book by Choman Hardi (2016). 5 Furthermore, top-down discourses are sometimes resisted by subaltern discourses (Till, 2003). Nicole Watts (2012) takes the destruction of the Halabja Martyrs Monument following the killing of a young protester by police forces in March 2006 as a powerful example of elite-mass tensions. The memorial was built as a sacred place to commemorate the 1988 devastating chemical bombardment, which is emblematic of Ba’athist repression. Nevertheless, the KRG official representation of the Halabjan martyrdom overshadows local memories that recriminate a complicity of PUK leaders, blamed by some for having put the lives of Halabja residents at risk. On the backdrop of grievances and historical inconsistencies, when anti-government protests stormed, the Sulaymaniyah governorate during 2006 protesters chose that site to raise demands and mobilize shame against the KRG. 6 According to the International Campaign to Ban Landmines (ICBL) and Cluster Munition Coalition’s (CMC) Landmine and Cluster Munition Monitor, around 1000 square kilometres in Iraq are contaminated by tons of unexploded antipersonnel mines and cluster munition remnants (ICBL-CMC, 2018). Such a legacy tells the different phases of a prolonged state of warfare across the country: from repression of Kurdish revolts in the 1970s, to the Iraq–Iran war throughout the 1980s, until the First Gulf War and ensuing civil war between Kurdish factions during the 1990s. Since the end of 2013, a total of 13,423 mine casualties in the KRI have been recorded. Despite the declining rate of victims, the psychological, social, and economic impact of landmines on affected communities is severe (Heshmati & Khayyat, 2015). 7 “O city of black gold, / this flame of yours does not have a hearth / as though your insides burned/ blazingly, bursting forth from a closed heart / that complains with tongues of flame superiorly / and the superiority of the complainers is the greatest glory / and it draws with the lights the clearest picture / of what grief and rebellion it suffers” (Bashir Mustafa, Al-Nar al-Khalida, 1958; as translated in Bet-Shlimon, 2012). 8 A series of maps illustrating the energy infrastructure and licensed blocks inside the KRI are available on the MNR website at: http://archive.gov.krd/mnr/mnr.krg.org/index. php/en/oil/oil-maps.html 9 Here is the link of the event: www.cwckiog.com/
114 The gate to statehood 10 “There is no hard line drawn somewhere that says this is KRG controlled territory and these are disputed territories, it is all gray areas. . . . We provide the security; administratively we run the towns and villages in that area. It is and has always been under control of KRG, under our security” (quoted in Lando, 2007). 11 President Carter made explicit the doctrine that bears his name in January 1980 by warning that any threat to oil seaborne trade in the Middle East would be considered a threat to US national interests. Zbigniew Brzezinski, then National Security Adviser, formulated that passage as follows: “An attempt by any outside force to gain control of the Persian Gulf region will be regarded as an assault on the vital interests of the United States of America, and such an assault will be repelled by any means necessary, including military force” (State of the Union Address, 21 January 1980). In fact, the preservation of the status quo in the Middle East was a strategic principle that President Truman had already laid down in 1947 as a corollary of the programmatic support to “the free peoples of the world,” at a time when the two power blocks of the Cold War were thickening (Address of the President to Congress, 12 March 1947). However, the emphasis placed by Carter was prompted by the series of watershed events that in 1979 changed the rules of engagement with the region: the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, the Iranian revolution, the takeover of the Grand Mosque in Mecca by Islamist opponents to the House of Saud, and the start of Saddam Hussein’s presidency in Iraq with the bloody purge among the higher ranks of the Ba’ath Party. 12 With the Kurdistan Region Financial Compensation Law (n. 5/2013), the KRG had granted itself the authorization to sell oil in the event of unpaid dues from the federal government. 13 This is the reason why, while withdrawing from Kirkuk almost without firing a shot during the convulsive night of 16 October 2017, KDP Peshmerga fought off the ISF 40 kilometres south of Fish Khabur, before reaching a truce. Although an escalation would have implied a violation of the autonomous region, the military attack demonstrated the vital role of having access to the border crossing. 14 Interview n. 39 15 By way of example, see MNR (2015). 16 Although relevant variations can be found in the KPD and PUK positions with regard to federal relations, it should be noted the consistency of the oil discourse over time and along the political spectrum. The then PM of KRG and senior PUK member Barham Salih said in 2010: “Some look at the Oil and Gas Law as a Kurdish demand. But let me tell my Iraqi brother in Basra and my people in Baghdad, al-Ramadi, and other places, that seven years after the fall of the regime, our oil production and exports continue to be very low. . . . We are producing 100,000 barrels per day and these are being exported. This is the oil of the Iraqis and not our oil. It belongs to all Iraqis. The revenues are not deposited in Kurdistan’s account but in the Iraqi treasury. Each barrel of oil that is not exported is a loss for Iraq.” (quoted in Al Iraqiya, 2010) 17 Mentioned in the Capital with reference to human-nature relations “as mediated by the labor process” (Healy & Walter, 2013: 38), social metabolism is a key concept in ecological economics. It conceptualizes the economy “in terms of flows of energy and materials” (Martinez-Alier, 2009: 64) and draws attention on how industrial societies have reproduced through increasing demand of raw materials (see also Fischer-Kowalski & Haberl, 1993). 18 Rosa Luxemburg’s diagnosis is still appropriate to highlight that the unrestricted exploitation of nature is a material requirement of capital accumulation: “Thus, if it were dependent exclusively, on elements of production obtainable within such narrow limits, its present level and indeed, its development in general would have been impossible. From the very beginning, the forms and laws of capitalist production aim to comprise the entire globe as a store of productive forces. Capital, impelled to appropriate productive forces for purposes of exploitation, ransacks the whole world, it procures
The gate to statehood 115 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 its means of production from all corners of the earth, seizing them, if necessary by force, from all levels of civilization and from all forms of society. The problem of the material elements of capitalist accumulation, far from being solved by the material form of the surplus value that has been produced, takes on quite a different aspect. It becomes necessary for capital progressively to dispose ever more fully of the whole globe, to acquire an unlimited choice of means of production, with regard to both quality and quantity, so as to find productive employment for the surplus value it has realized. The process of accumulation, elastic and spasmodic as it is, requires inevitably free access to ever new areas of raw materials in case of need, both when imports from old sources fall or when social demand suddenly increases.” (quoted in Moore, 2000: 430). Oil and Gas Law of the Kurdistan Region – Iraq, Law No. (22), 2007; see, in particular, Chapter 17 and art. 57. Explanatory Memorandum for the Draft Petroleum Act of the Kurdistan Region of Iraq, KRG Council of Ministers, 22 October 2006, p. 9. It is worthy of note that the discursive register in Baghdad was not different in kind. In February 2016, for instance, the Iraqi PM Haider al-Abadi offered to pay the salaries of KRG civil servants in exchange for handing over oilfields in Kirkuk. For a more comprehensive and accurate overview of the concept, see Chiapponi (2012). Taussig interprets devil-beliefs not as manifestations of “desire for material gain,” but rather as a collective opposition against the proletarisation of indigenous communities and the process of alienation it arouses. In other words, the reinterpretation of esoteric symbols is a reaction to the destructive forces that supplanted traditional livelihoods and beliefs: “the devil represents not merely the deep-seated changes in the material conditions of life but also the changing criteria in all their dialectical turmoil of truth and being with which those changes are associated – most especially the radically different concepts of creation, life, and growth through which the new material conditions and social relations are defined” (2010: 17). Interview #17. As a former Minister noted while commenting on the growing confidence of KRG leadership: “They [regional and global powers] would appease Baghdad. They would make a phone call, but they are not waiting for permission; they are just informing.” Interview #9 See the website of the campaign at: www.theotheriraq.com/ Chevron, for instance, halted drilling operations in Sarta in October 2017 due to the stand-off between ISF and Peshmerga after the referendum and resumed them in February 2018 (Reuters, 2018a). Involved in a series of corruption scandals, Ashti Hawrami left his post at the MNR in July 2019 to be appointed as PM Masrour Barzani’s Assistant for Energy Affairs. In such a capacity, Hawrami will be joining the Regional Council for Oil and Gas Affairs as an additional member, which raises doubts about the relinquishment of an executive role. Although the KRG policies put a distance with the rest of Kurdistan, it would be simplistic and inaccurate to ascribe the lack of pan-Kurdish nationalism to the agenda devised in Erbil. In point of fact, no Kurdish reality can lift itself out of the host country. From time to time, this circumstance has resulted in divergent alliances with regional powers. The pragmatic and fluid re-composition of national movements inside such narrow space is at odds with the image of the Greater Kurdistan. Rather than the frequently evoked metaphor of toppling dominoes, Kurdish mobilizations across the region resemble more the one of communicating vessels: containers of different ideological shapes and political directions, though filled with a shared sense of ethnic belonging.
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4 A nation divided Kurdish infighting and black gold The unredeemed Kurdish nation has a fissure at its heart that rises from deeprooted antagonism between two long-governing dynasties fighting for its soul. The KRI is divided into two mirrored political constituencies: the KDP-held “yellow zone” encompassing the Erbil and Duhok governorates, and the PUKcontrolled “green zone” in the Sulaymaniyah one. If you drive from the fertile mountains surrounding Sulaymaniyah to the dry plains of Erbil and stare at the changing landscape unfolding out the window, there is almost a feeling that the geography of power chromatically follows suit. As roadside banners in green depicting PUK martyrs are replaced by corresponding KDP portraits and logos in yellow, military checkpoints along the way draw borders between competing areas of influence. The KDP–PUK division is more than the legacy of the bloody civil war that wreaked havoc and despair during the 1990s, nor does it reflect only the territorial partition ensuing from the power-sharing agreement between the oligarchs. Beyond that, the two areas are also socialised as containers of different values and different people. “Dry people in a dry land,” a taxi driver from Sulaymaniyah so described his countrymen in Erbil while we were on our way to the capital and had just passed Koya. Similar mockeries are commonplace on both sides. Localism is everywhere, but the relevance of these mutual collective perceptions in the ordinary language much surprised me given the powerful Kurdistani identity uniting the region under the “colourful flag” (alaya rengîn), whose burning golden sun pledges for the long-wished independence of Kurdistan. It allowed me a glimpse into the fascinating complexity of Kurdish society. In fact, the political division draws on long-time tribal structures and cultural attributes. Linguistically, for instance, KDP- and PUK-held territories are characterised by the two main dialects spoken in the region: Bahdinani, a variation of Kurmanji, in the northwest and Soranî in the southeast, with several other sub-dialects. Ideologically, the PUK has opposed KDP’s conservatism by inserting Kurdish nationalism into a more progressive and Marxist inspired platform. To some extent, the ruling class has capitalised on these identity markers in order to tighten party control over their heartlands. As a consequence, subregional political groupings have fuelled two different nation-building visions. However, it would be misleading to portray the KDP–PUK feud as sociological DOI: 10.4324/9781003161103-5
122 A nation divided in nature or to exaggerate personal rivalries between leaders: as pointed out by Leezenberg (2006), intra-Kurdish fighting has been instrumental in maintaining a war economy on which the survival of those in power is dependent. From this perspective, it can be said that unity of purpose outweighs differences and divisions. This chapter is devoted to illustrate the hegemony of ruling elites and how this has been implicated with the creation of the oil and gas sector in the Kurdish enclave. A history of violence The territorial configuration represents the traditional power bases of the two dynastic ruling families: whilst the Barzanis enjoy a position of supremacy in the western part of the region, the Talabanis are hegemonic in the eastern one, though within a more volatile political environment. Military checkpoints and patches on Peshmerga uniforms give substance to such division, which relies upon mutual mistrust and enduring competition. The colours attached to each zone come from party emblems. As said, chromatic differences do not go unnoticed: wearing yellow or green is a political statement, and every city and town in the region is crammed with colourful party flags and logos. This visual overrepresentation is not limited to electoral campaigns but permanent in that it makes party influence visible. Although both parties enjoy some electoral consent in the opposite zone, territorial control is not projected across the internal boundary to comply with a tacit accord that has been in effect since 1992.1 The political regime consolidated in the Kurdish region is defined by the twoparty duopoly, which has roots in the tribal ascendancy of Barzani and Talabani’s clans. Similar to Masoud Barzani, Jalal Talabani – fondly known as Mam Jalal (Uncle Jalal) to his supporters – was heir to a family of sheiks belonging to the Qadiri order. First under the mentorship of his father-in-law Ibrahim Ahmed, Talabani then took the lead of the leftist wing within the KDP and eventually founded the PUK in 1975 after the schism with the Barzani’s faction. The two main Kurdish political organisations have competed against each other ever since, at times very violently. Until the Gulf War, the common purpose of fighting back the Iraqi army and acquiring national rights prevented inter-party rivalry to plunge into full-blown warfare, which nevertheless broke out in May 1994. Only two years earlier, the Kurdistan Front consisting of both KDP and PUK had set up regional institutions and held the first regional elections under the shield of the UN-mandated no-fly zone. Barzani and Talabani had agreed upon the equal division of all ministerial posts according to a 50–50 formula (Stansfield, 2003). As said in the previous chapter, international protection offered Kurds the unprecedented chance of enjoying effective autonomy. Although safe from bombing raids, skirmishes between the two major Kurdish parties soon turned into open conflict. Coupled by a double blockade (the UN embargo plus the closure of the region from the rest of the country), the fratricidal confrontation was overly destructive and left about 3,000 people dead (Rogg & Rimscha, 2007). It is common saying that Kurds became their own
A nation divided 123 worst enemies, proving themselves unable to set down a constructive path to self-determination. Intra-Kurdish animosity reached a point where opposition against Baghdad was secondary, so much that the KDP forged a temporary alliance with Saddam Hussein to drive the PUK out of Erbil in August 1996. The US-brokered Washington Agreement in September 1998 ended a fouryear-long bloodbath. A sense of exasperation and external pressure had created an environment for ceasefire, inducing the belligerants to bury the hatchet and normalise relations. The consequence of the civil war was to cut regional institutions in half: two different administrations, two separate territories, two decision-making processes, and two judicial systems – each resembling Masoud Barzani and Jalal Talabani’s fiefdoms. On the contrary, the ideological differences of the origins were no longer significant (Jüde, 2017). The division is still there: despite the reunification in 2006, finances were not merged and the parallel administration in Sulaymaniyah not dismantled. Therefore, nationbuilding was reintegrated in the process, albeit with a heavy burden to bear. The fall of Saddam Hussein was the turning point that pushed Kurdish leadership to make the most of an opportunity that was far bigger than anything they had had in terms of political influence and economic rewards. The moment was then propitious to set controversies aside, and efforts to bring the two zones into a unified structure were done. Although long-time rivals, KDP and PUK found a ripe ground for cooperation, with the consequence, that party interests have continued to bare more weight than the public one. It can be argued that the KRG has served the primary purpose of intercepting and distributing financial flows pouring in the region either via federal allocations or foreign investments, thus leaving the two partners free to run the respective territories as they please. A unitary stance was required to make a difference in Baghdad and negotiate with international players though. Accordingly, the bipartisan agreement in 20062 expressed commitment to reactivate the unified government and deal with federal issues on equal footing. The injection of petrodollars made such byzantine pact to work – at least until oil prices remained high. The alliance was later challenged by the rise of Gorran (Movement for Change), which entered the Kurdistan National Assembly (KNA) in 2009 with an electoral breakthrough that made it the second parliamentary bloc after the Kurdistani List made up of KDP and PUK, thus establishing itself as the main contender of the duopoly. The movement was founded by the charismatic Nawshirwan Mustafa,3 the Sulaymaniyah-born former leader of the Marxist-Leninist Komala that had merged into the PUK and one of the initiators of the uprising against Saddam Hussein in March 1991. At the subsequent elections in 2013, Gorran garnered 24 seats out of 111 and overtook the PUK (18 seats), which had presented its own list for the first time, as the second biggest party in the parliament behind the KDP (38 seats). Gorran ran on a vocal anti-corruption and reformist programme, winning a deluge of votes especially in the green zone at the expense of PUK. However, Gorran’s electoral thrust was not a serious blow to the hegemony of the twin dynasties. Given that real decision-making has continued to go through KDP and PUK politburos bypassing ineffective representative institutions, the
124 A nation divided entrance of a third major party did not undermine the traditional elites’ hold on power. Suffice to think that when the opposition resisted Masoud Barzani’s intention of deferring the presidential tenure in office, which was set to expire in August 2015 after a two-year extension, Gorran’s four ministers were sacked and the Speaker of Parliament, Yousif Mohammed Sadiq, was prevented from entering Erbil by KDP forces (Iraqi Oil Report, 2015a). The KDP justified the move by holding the movement responsible for the arson attacks against party offices occurred throughout the Sulaymaniyah Governorate during three days of rage over delayed salaries, though without evidence to substantiate any involvement (Iraqi Oil Report, 2015b). Gorran had joined a short-lived government of national unity in June 2014 when the region was confronted with the threat posed by ISIS. Although rewarded with key ministerial posts (Finance, Peshmerga Affairs, Investment and Trade, and Religious Affairs) and the KNA presidency, Gorran’s participation in the cabinet only scratched the surface of the power-sharing agreement originally laid down by Barzani and Talabani. Instead, it would have jeopardised the reputation of the opposition movement thereafter. The removal (and later replacement) of Gorran ministers in October 2015 was followed by the closure of the KNA for two years.4 Oil issues were also implicated in the institutional paralysis, as will be shown in a few pages. Two considerations are in order. Firstly, the two dominant families have alternated overt competition and behind-the-scenes cooperation, this latter revealing a substantial continuity of interests. The extractive economy highlights this aspect even more. The strategic pact between ruling elites is cemented by the privatisation of force. Although Law n. 5/2009 passed by the KNA made provision for party militias to be integrated into a unified army (in line with article 117 of the Iraqi Constitution), Peshmerga remain instead a collection of politicised armed groups under separate control of party bureaus (Van Wilgenburg & Fumerton, 2015). The military apparatus is organised along partisan lines with brigades taking orders from and being loyal to party leaders rather than regional institutions.5 Once the embodiment par excellence of the national liberation struggles, Peshmerga represent the security ring around ruling families and party upper cadres, with the consequence that violence is used to secure cabinet positions and achieve economic gains. Secondly, and relatedly, KDP and PUK dominate a political process that functions on a personal and neo-patrimonial basis (Marr, 2012). My Kurdish Oppressor6 We live in an illegal state of exception, which is not regulated by any law and ripples through a crisis of legitimacy. What is worse is that this extreme state of emergency does not follow any constitutional provision. (Anonymous, interview #13) After the fallout of the ill-fated independence referendum, discontent against the elites was clearly visible throughout the region. In December 2017, a rush of anger surged in Sulaymaniyah, Ranya, and Halabja with protesters setting
A nation divided 125 fire to party buildings and banners. The uproar was suppressed right at the onset by party-affiliated police forces, leaving six dead and over 100 wounded (CNN, 2017). In March, civil servants and youth took to the streets to demonstrate against delays and cuts in salary payment,7 even in Erbil where the KDP one-party rule had always been strong enough to prevent the outbreak of antigovernment protests. On the eve of the Iraqi general elections in May, it was apparent that the legitimacy of the ruling class was in jeopardy. As a sign of the enfeeblement of PUK hegemony in its heartland, two newly founded parties came out on the scene: the Coalition for Democracy and Justice (CDJ), former PM Barham Salih’s card to obtain political virginity after leaving the PUK, and the New Generation Movement (Naway Nwe), founded by the businessman Shaswar Abdulwahid. Although Sulaymaniyah is renowned for a rich literary tradition that has translated into a more liberal and tolerant political culture, such fragmentation of the political landscape was a byword for the dangerous cracking of the PUK power base. On 12 May 2018, the electoral process was tainted with widespread allegations of ballot rigging and irregularities related to the electronic balloting system (van den Toorn, 2018). Backdated voting receipts, the fact that electoral results were made available hours before the official closing of polling stations, and intimidations gave the impression of a charade orchestrated by ruling parties.8 The presence of Qasem Soleimani, the then Commander of the Iranian Quds Forces, also raised suspicion of foreign interference. On the same day, Gorran, Kurdistan Islamic Group (Komal), Kurdistan Islamic Union (KIU), CDJ, and the Islamic Movement issued a joint statement that denounced the tampering of votes and requested a new vote under international supervision (Kurdistan 24, 2018b). During the night, heavy gunfire hit the Gorran headquarters at Zargata Hill in Sulaymaniyah, a couple of miles from the place where I lived. At the time, I was still in the region for a last batch of interviews. I witnessed the attack from the balcony of my apartment. A PUK convoy of pickups with mounted machine guns at the orders of Jaafar Sheikh Mustafa (Commander of the 70th Brigade later appointed as Nechirvan Barzani’s vice president) fired incessantly for almost half an hour on the main building of the opposition party (Hawramy, 2018). Meanwhile, ballot boxes were stolen to avoid manual recount. Next morning, there was an air of anger and frustration. PUK officials and party media belittled the aggression as celebratory gunfire. Lahur Talabani denied that any attack had even taken place. Followed by the declaration of the state of emergency by the Sulaymaniyah Provincial Council and the consequent deployment of Asayish along streets and public spaces the days after, the punitive expedition was an obvious warning against any change to the status quo. Despite the rushing of hundreds Gorran supporters vowing to protect Nawshirwan Mustafa’s grave on Zargata Hill at all costs, the events did not escalate further and PUK later apologised for the attack. The anecdote gives a snapshot of the state of exception mentioned by a member of an opposition party during an interview. The extra-legal resort to violence is indeed hardwired in the hegemonic strategies of governing parties. Quite differently from the image of a thriving democracy that the KRG
126 A nation divided has projected to the outside world, the privatisation of security forces and the deadly repression of dissent reveal a draconian reality. In point of fact, KDP and PUK leadership has never been reluctant to use whatever means necessary to safeguard their survival. Already in 2011 the so-called Kurdish Spring, a two-month-long street protest inspired by the wave of upheavals that spread across much of the Arab world in later 2010, was crushed in blood and in a climate of impunity. The unrest broke out on 17 February 2011 when a gathering in Sara Square in downtown Sulaymaniyah to celebrate the resignation of Ben Ali and Hosni Mubarak after decades of tyranny turned sour as security forces shot dead two youths who had joined other protesters in throwing stones against the KDP local headquarters on Salim Street (Watts, 2012). The shooting sparked clashes and sit-ins across the Sulaymaniyah Governorate for 62 consecutive days until KRG authorities forcibly banned all gatherings. Arbitrary arrests, abuses of power, severe restrictions of civil liberties, and harassments and murders of activists or journalists have been documented several other times since then.9 Notwithstanding the crackdown, public protests calling for reform have flared up at regular intervals, becoming widespread when the fiscal crisis made the KRG unable to pay the public sector salaries. According to Nicole Watts, the protests were a watershed in Kurdish state– society relations as “they signalled a clear shift from local demands to calls for broad-based systemic reform” to the extent of proffering an alternative national identity leaning on democratic values. I elaborate on this point at the end of the book. Definitions of the political regime in the Kurdish enclave range from managed democracy (Knights, 2014) to sultanistic system (Hassan, 2015). Either way, the supremacy of the ruling coalition is underlined as a fundamental trait. Two decades of self-rule shows that the KRG has acquired some institutions and procedures of democracy while retaining certain illiberal traits typical of authoritarianism. In line with many other examples of “competitive authoritarianism” (Levitsky & Way, 2002), the form of electoral democracy fails to meet the substantive test (Diamond, 2002). Despite a formally inclusive political process with regular and relatively fair elections in a multi-party system, the presence of veto players (Tsebelis, 2002) restricts the arena of contestation so much that a change in government is not realistic. The literature on hybrid regimes points out that in contexts of electoral authoritarianism, the establishment takes advantage of ballots to legitimate the regime domestically and internationally (Diamond, 2002), distribute resources and broaden the support base through patronage networks (Blaydes, 2008; Lust, 2009), and reduce contestation with occasional reshuffles of government coalitions (Gandhi & Przeworski, 2006). Caught in between electoral practice and undemocratic rule, the KRG is no exception. High levels of coercion, lack of accountable and autonomous institutions, and violations of fundamental freedoms by hegemonic parties tell that competition over the levers of power is out of the game. It could be said that Bellin’s argument on the robustness of authoritarianism in the Middle
A nation divided 127 East – “extraordinary access to rent and international support, combined with the less extraordinary proliferation of patrimonially organized security forces and low levels of social mobilization, together gave rise, in the lion’s share of countries, to coercive apparatuses that were endowed with extraordinary capacity and will to repress” (2012: 129) – finds continuity in the Kurdish case too. Diamond (2010) also pointed out that a mixture of repression and mechanisms of representation, consultation, and co-optation is at work in many countries in the region. From macro to local, it is hard not to agree with Watts (2014) that the legacy of the party-state regime inherited from Ba’athist Iraq, the patron-client nature of state–society relations, and foreign interests together account for the democratic deficit in the KRI. For historical reasons, the armed movements of the national liberation struggle took the lead of political transition, after the withdrawal of the Iraqi Army, from the region and transferred traditional tribal authority into the newly founded state institutions. In the absence of counterweights, the long period (1992–2006) of split governance was not conducive to democratic consolidation inasmuch as it did not allow for neutralisation of party militias and development of private interests groups. The role of paramilitary forces is of particular importance. Recruited from the poorest and less educated strata of society, Peshmerga are the hammer and the anvil in the hands of ruling elites. Since 1991, KDP and PUK have been the largest employers in the region through clientelism and party militias (Leezenberg, 2006). Even today enlisting in the ranks of Peshmerga is the most reliable income for many youths. Moreover, it also offers a culturally prestigious status to live (and die) for. The outsized military reflects the “continuing expansion of patronage-based recruitment” (Van Wilgenburg & Fumerton, 2015: 5) and acts as the strongest bulwark against non-armed oppositions and public discontent. This stands out when looking at the criteria through which the KRG reduced government spending during 2016 to cope with the fiscal crisis. Austerity measures included heavy cuts in the wage bill of public servants with the budget being reduced by one-quarter, but the salaries of Peshmerga were barely touched (World Bank, 2016). Despite cuts across all ministries, the oligarchy kept feeding the security apparatus at full capacity. As a member of the Finance and Economic Affairs Committee commented, “the math is pretty simple: whenever an uprising happens, the military will nip it in the bud.” Civil–military relations inevitably suffer from the KDP–PUK balance of power, which makes it difficult to envisage anything other than privatised armed wings tied to the fortunes of patrimonial elites. The oppositions put the goal of a regular armed force under depoliticised command on the public agenda, but the gradual integration of military units was halted after a few tentative steps in that direction, in spite of the appointment of Gorran’s Mustafa Sayid Qadir to the Ministry of Peshmerga Affairs. The continuing subordination of Peshmerga to party interests relapses into low mass mobilisation against the political regime. This is being compounded by patron-client patterns of rent accumulation and circulation,
128 A nation divided whereas class-consciousness pales into insignificance when compared to party membership. Dynastic rule and crony capitalism Besides the mixing of the civilian with the military, KDP and PUK occupy the regional economy through ubiquitous patrimonial ramifications. Both ruling families have their own large conglomerate of media outlets and business companies. In a nutshell, the power base of regional power-holders falls within the large perimeter of patronage. As commented by former Speaker of Parliament, Yousif Mohammed Sadiq, the oligarchy needs to monopolise the economy in order to survive.10 First of all, such an overlap has a great deal to do with the endurance of tribal customs, for which leadership is handed down from father to son. Despite formal election procedures, in both KDP and PUK, the offspring are leaders by birthright. Not only does leadership in ruling parties remain within the Barzani and Talabani families, but it also extends into government areas to such an extent that it is not out of place to talk about the progressive “Saudification” of KRG institutions (Aziz, 2017). The sway of traditional parties on public affairs is clear from appointments to top government positions, which are based on kinship for the most part. If one looks at the KRG structure, there is indeed striking evidence of nepotism. Even without holding formal public responsibilities after his resignation, Masoud Barzani still is the undisputed leader of KDP and the apex of a family-based power structure. His son-in-law, Nechirvan, who is also Mullah Mustafa’s grandson, formally succeeded him as President of the KRG. He had previously served as PM since the reconciliation between KDP and PUK in 2006 until taking on the presidency in June 2019, except for the brief interlude of Barham Salih’s cabinet (2009–2012). Masoud’s eldest son, Masrour, was promoted at the helm of the government after leading the Kurdistan Security Council (KRG’s primary intelligence agency) for years. Masoud’s other son, Mansour, heads the Gulan Special Forces, while his nephews Sirwan and Rawan are also notable Peshmerga commanders. The Barzanis fill top political and military posts. Albeit in a less invasive and systematic manner, the same dynastic tendency is mirrored in the green zone, where Hero Ahmed, Ibrahim Ahmed’s daughter, holds a preeminent position in the PUK Politburo after the passing of her husband, Jalal Tabalani. Her younger son, Qubad, has been serving as the deputy PM since 2014 safeguarding Tabalanis’ interests in government affairs. The older son, Bafel, is on the rise as one of the most influential figures in the PUK, of which he holds the co-presidency alongside his cousin Lahur. Both founded the Counter Terrorism Group and led PUK’s intelligence services. Bafel is married to the daughter of Mala Bakhtiar a senior PUK leader. Lahur’s brothers, Polad and Aras, are military commanders. Hero’s sister, Shanaz Ibrahim Ahmed, was the KRG representative in the UK and is said to oversee the finances of the party-run Nokan Group; she
A nation divided 129 is married to Abdul Latif Rashid, the influential former Iraqi Minister of Water Resources. Mam Jala’s niece, Ala, has long headed the PUK bloc in the Iraqi Parliament. The list is not exhaustive, but sufficient to get an idea of the sultanistic regime maintained by the Barzani and Talabani royal houses under the facade of pseudo-democratic regional government. As Rubin (2020) points out in detail, nepotism fuels extreme corruption from the top down. Allegations of public funds amassed by the two families abound indeed. At a lower extent, senior KDP and PUK members are equally prone to clientelist practices, with inflated payrolls and scores of ghost employees. Besides the distortion of political institutions, family connections also resonate in a crony economy that extends party allegiance into business empires, without independent checks on the private use of public monies. KDP and PUK leaders are owners or shareholders of most enterprises. A confidential cable from the US Consulate in Kirkuk from early 2006 reports that “leading private companies in Kurdistan are all vertically integrated cross-sectoral conglomerates” run by politically connected entrepreneurs, and that related “godfathers” in the local ruling party typically take a 10–30% stake in the project or business (Wikileaks, 2006). According to the source, family clans and second-tier Peshmerga leaders warp the economy by funnelling government contracts through corruption networks, with no substantial difference between the two zones if not in terms of degree. Diyar Group, Eagle Group, Falcon Group, KAR Group, Nasri Group, Sandi Group, Silver Star Group, and Ster Group figure as examples of KDP-affiliated companies in the Erbil area. Headquartered in the eponymous tower in Erbil, Ster Group, for instance, is a large conglomerate with a number of subsidiaries in different businesses (construction, security, oil and gas, communications, insurance, and manpower among many others). Its founder and chairman, Sarwar Pedawi, served as the economic advisor to former President Masoud Barzani and acts as a treasurer of the American University of Kurdistan, which Michael Rubin (2020) describes, without mincing words, as PM Masrour Barzani’s “vanity project, modelled after [his] own experience of basically buying a degree via lavish donations during his own student career.” The strong influence of the Barzani family on the corporation is well acknowledged. In some cases, the connections are quite straightforward: for instance, Sirwan Barzani founded and has chaired Korek Telecom, Masoud’s nephew Saman owns ZagrosJet Airlines, and the Zagros Group as a whole has been led by another Barzani, Aram, for 23 years. The same holds true in the green zone, where the Nokan Group is considered to be the Talabani’s financial outlet (Rubin, 2018: 332). The Nokan Group has 23 subsidiary companies and an estimated net worth of 4–5 billion USD (Abdulla, 2012). The co-founder and main shareholder of the conglomerate, Deler Saeed Majid, is also PUK financial officer. Not by chance, the Nokan Group is headquartered in the PUK General Management building in Sulaymaniyah, which leaves little doubt about the political connection with the party. Likewise, the Sulaymaniyah-based telecommunication giant Asia Cell is under PUK control.
130 A nation divided Even though there are no direct links to party members, it is known that PUK Politburo members levy a percentage of profits (Wikileaks, 2006). In conclusion, to say that the KRG is a family business would be no exaggeration. The regional institutions cannot be disentangled from the dominance of two ruling parties, which were tailored in the image and likeness of their leaders and family clans. Then, there is oil. Party politics and the extractive regime The agreements in place to export crude from Kurdish oilfields were a recurring topic during my interviews. “That word [agreement] has lost its meaning,” a foreign consultant to the MNR told me. In a politically volatile environment with very poor institutional oversight, oil negotiations tend to be ever changing and flimsy. “Sometimes both sides stick with each other, most of the times not,” he added. The more I inquired into deals between the many stakeholders involved (federal and regional governments, Kurdish political parties, militias, IOCs, traders, and foreign countries), the more I understood what he meant. Data and information are indeed piecemeal and partial. Moreover, percentages and barrels swung widely depending on the source. Even if you put all the pieces together, the fleeting picture that emerges is therefore one of the contradictions. Conducting field research in disputed areas was anything but easy as the escalation of federal tensions and massive paranoia had reinforced the screen of secrecy around certain issues. A further complication was the high turnover in local administrations, most notably in Kirkuk, after the ISF takeover. Nevertheless, I also discovered that there is always someone willing to talk. What follows is the analysis of the extractive regime run by KDP and PUK leaders based on in-depth interviews with selected informants (MPs from the entire political spectrum, MRN insiders, oil and gas professionals, and journalists who asked to remain anonymous) and secondary sources. There are two interpretations to the relationship between the oligarchy and the petroleum industry. The prevalent one is that oil management, in all its aspects, is dominated by the KDP only. This would make the Barzani family capable of retaining power by disbursing allocations to clients and allies while closing doors to anyone else. The second interpretation, instead, places equal responsibility on KDP and PUK, both accused of feasting on a flood of petrodollars for their own benefits. The relatively short story of extractivism in the KRI seems to support the latter in view of a series of considerations that make the one-party rule thesis inaccurate or at least incomplete. The Kurdish oil saga is one of many twists and turns. It is worth noting that the PUK actually initiated oil exploitation during the early 1990s. At the time, the KDP controlled most border crossings and taxation of smuggling routes11 was a substantial source of income estimated in 750 million USD annually (Chorev, 2007). In particular, the semi-clandestine petrol trade through the KDP-held Ibrahim Khalil checkpoint was a much lucrative business, in which Nechirvan Barzani was personally involved (Leezenberg, 2006).
A nation divided 131 From a comparatively disadvantageous position, the PUK turned the attention to oilfields in the green zone as a viable alternative. Between 1994 and 1996, two wells in the Taq Taq oilfield, plugged in late 1950s but abandoned during the Iraq–Iran war, were reactivated. Small amounts of crude (3.000–5.000 bpd) began to be refined in Sulaymaniyah for domestic use only. It is worth remembering that the region was embargoed and isolated. With the ousting of Saddam Hussein at the hands of US-led forces in 2003, Kurdish major parties were poised to explore new opportunities and raise ambitions, which led KDP and PUK to sign separate contracts with foreign upstream investors (Genel Enerji and Addax in Taq Taq; DNO in Tawke). The balance of power between the two parties was soon reversed. Geopolitics was not neutral given that the KDP-held border crossing into Turkey via Zahko and Fish Kabur was the only prospective export route for the KRG. Another key factor was the irresistible rise of Abdullah Abdul Rahman Abdullah, commonly known as Ashti Hawrami, a senior oil engineer with long experience at the head of UK-based consulting firms. Hawrami was requested by then PM Barham Salih to lead the newly established MNR. After some hesitation, Hawrami accepted the appointment and held the position for 13 years without interruption, designing the oil and gas sector from scratch. When he first set foot inside the ministry, Hawrami was not credited yet as Barzani’s right-man. However, the KDP won him over in a timely fashion. At the time, the PUK was pushing for Jalal Talabani’s candidacy to the Iraqi presidency and ceded ground in exchange for support in Baghdad. Masoud Barzani played his cards right, so to speak: the MNR would have quickly become the actual treasury of the KRG, and Hawrami managed to bring the ministry under his personal authority. As a PUK member told with some regret, “we passed from owning the oil dossier to begging for charity.” Despite the KDP always having the upper hand in shaping and running the governance over the oil and gas sector, the PUK has held senior positions within the MNR as well. From 2007 until 2014, ruling elites worked in synergy to lure foreign investors and auction exploration blocks. Negotiations with IOCs were based on a colour-coded map that explicitly followed the division between yellow and green spheres of influence. That was somewhat necessary in order to ensure internal coordination given that both parties were suspicious of each other. When approached by an IOC, Minister Hawrami would mediate preliminary meetings with KDP or PUK local brokers, depending on where the exploration block was located, prior to drawing up a contract. Once a deal was reached, the Minister would officially invite company representatives to larger meetings and greet them as if they just met for the first time. Although prone to clientelism, the rules of the game were thus clear. Inter-party cooperation broadly worked out for quite some time. All PSCs in the period 2002– 2011 have the double signature of the KRG PM and of the MNR Minister “on behalf of the Regional Council for the Oil and Gas Affairs.” The reference is worthy of attention. Introduced by Law n. 22/2007 (better known as the Oil and Gas Law of the Kurdistan Region), the Regional
132 A nation divided Council is the bipartisan negotiating table approving petroleum contracts. Given that the PSC model typically includes upfront payments for the concession of exploration and production rights to IOCs, the approval of a contract implies cashing in billionaire cheques. In the absence of parliamentary oversight, the Regional Council is therefore vested with extensive decisional power. Its entitled members are: the PM, the deputy PM, the Minister of the MNR, the Minister of Economy and Finance, and the Minister of Planning. Since other parties are excluded from these top government positions, the Regional Council is a prerogative of KDP and PUK only. This is further evidence of the alliance between ruling elites. Depending on the cabinet composition, the PUK occasionally had more seats than the KDP, which suggests that the former has been fully involved in devising the KRG oil policy. This framework was partially upended by the worsening of federal relations during 2014, when the Kurdish leadership suddenly found itself under extraordinary duress and began exporting crude independently. As said, the freezing of budget transfers from central government and collapse in oil prices put the KRG in dire financial straits. Moreover, the country was in turmoil because of the ISIS outbreak. For the rentier nature of the economy, the fiscal crisis could not also have repercussions on the mechanisms through which the extractive regime had been shaped and regulated until then. Oil management was further centralised through the MNR and with a small group of KDP trusted intermediaries to whom the PUK had no direct access. Since Baghdad was chasing on KRG exports, extending the circle of trust by one degree was a long shot and Barzani preferred to bring everything under his control. At that point the PUK fundamentally lost sight of the KDP-run process, from contracting to trading. Changes in the political landscape also played a role. At the end of 2012 Jalal Talabani had suffered a stroke leaving his party prey to internecine competition. Besides succession problems, the electoral inroads of Gorran and the formation of a grand coalition government led to an incremental loss in terms of both popular support and influence over the government. The Talabani family kept exerting considerable pressure on revenue management. Reportedly, from the outset the profit-sharing mechanism has complied with the formula for the allocation of federal funds, which are split pro-rata according to the size of population under the different parties’ control. There is no publicly available information on how the money comes in, where it goes, and how it is spent. The cash flow partly disappears internationally in Turkish, Swiss, or Lebanese bank accounts to get around Baghdad monitoring. The KRG has used clandestine mechanisms to bring that money offshore and put it back into circulation via grey currency exchange markets. At the time of the budget dispute with the central government, bagmen throughout Iraq were busy finding ways of disguising petrodollar recycling as non-oil trade transactions to get access to dinars. The Kurdistan International Bank (chaired by Salar Mustafa Hakim, Nechirvan Barzani’s uncle) is the recovery point where physical cash is accumulated. Only a handful of senior members in KDP and PUK bureaus handle the cash flow. A KDP–PUK two-member commission
A nation divided 133 was formed in 2008 to ensure the equal distribution of the “hidden revenue” falling outside the PSCs approved by the Regional Council (Awene, 2008). The high commission is an informal body outside the KRG structure. At the time, it was made up of then PM Nechirvan Barzani and PUK’s treasurer Deler Saeed Majid. Therefore, both major parties benefit from sharing the petroleum revenues, and every drop of crude is exported through the KRG pipeline without prejudice to the area from which it is extracted. But there is more. In each zone the hegemonic party thrive on the underbelly of the industry, meaning that the midstream and downstream segments of the supply chain (e.g. refining, warehousing, trading, transport, and retailing) are swallowed through affiliated companies. This is consistent with the overall pattern according to which the two dynasties monopolise the economy. As described before, vertically integrated conglomerates connected to KDP and PUK party bureaus dominate the regional economy. Albeit at a lower scale than that of the large advance payments received from oil traders, the satellite activities of upstream operations are highly profitable. Many KDP and PUK officials have shares in the business – be it through a security firm, a construction company, or procurement services.12 As mentioned, deals with local sub-contractors were cut even before the actual signing of PSCs with IOCs. Given the mammoth size of patronage, ruling elites hold the higher ground by licensing oil-related activities to their networks. This implies that giving a slice of the pie may serve as a reward to encourage loyalty or settle disputes within the party. The Erbil-based KAR Group and the Sulaymaniyah-based Qaiwan Group are the major Kurdish oil services providers with a diversified portfolio of activities encompassing refining, energy trading, power generation, real estate construction, and other business sectors. Despite political ties are not openly acknowledged, it is no secret that the former is close to the KDP, while the latter to PUK. In 2004, KAR won a 25-year contract for the rehabilitation of Khurmala oilfield, the northernmost dome of Kirkuk formation that lies within the borders of the autonomous region. Production started in 2009, thus making KAR the first (and so far only) local operator with upstream capabilities and assets. The high-quality crude extracted in Khurmala supplies the Kalak refinery, which is the biggest production plant in the region with a refining capacity of 100,000 bpd and is owned by the KAR Group itself. The extensive footprint of the company across the yellow zone and full participation in the MNR strategy (demonstrated, for instance, by company shares in the KRG-Rosneft projects) reflect close connection with the KDP. After the fight against ISIS changed the energy map in a way that allowed for the expansion of KRG holdings in disputed territories, the KAR Group replaced the North Oil Company (NOC) in Bai Hassan and Avana domes, but was later banned by the Iraqi Parliament when the security situation returned to normal (Reuters, 2018). Since 2009 the Qaiwan Group has operated the Bazian refinery, which is the second largest with a capacity of 34.000 bpd and is owned by WZA Petroleum. This latter company can be considered as the subsidiary of the Nokan Group in the oil and
134 A nation divided gas sector. Parwen Babakir, former Ministry of Industry in the PUK separate administration from 2003 to 2006, serves as both WZA Petroleum’s CEO and Chair of the Executive Board of the Nokan Group. As is apparent from the comparison, the 50–50 formula ingrained in the Washington Agreement has modelled the structuring of the extractive regime along partisan lines.13 In the same fashion of KAR and Qaiwan, all other Kurdish private companies in the sector (e.g. Ster Petroleum, Zagros Oil & Gas, UB Holding, Eagle Group, and Sher Oil to mention but a few) are linked to one of the two blocks. At times, affiliated companies turned out to be a battleground for inter-party competition. A recent example is the serious dispute over a tender for the distribution of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG, propane) from the Dana Gas-operated Khor Mor field in the Sulaymaniyah Governorate. During 2019 Sorgas won the contract at the expense of another domestic company, Golden Jaguar, which had purchased and resold LPG and condensate from Dana Gas to customers across the region since 2015. Following the tendering process, unidentified gunmen raided Sorgas’ headquarters and fired on trucks transporting LPG to Erbil and Dohuk (AFP, 2020). According to the KRG spokesperson, “a few influential individuals in Garmiyan and Sulaymaniyah” were behind the attacks, which caused local shortages and a price hike (Rudaw, 2020). As Golden Jaguar allegedly has links with the PUK and lost the bid to a KDP-sponsored company, it may well be assumed that the contract awarded to Sorgas was seen as an interference by local PUK factions previously involved in the business. Not by chance, the dispute was resolved with the intervention of Deputy PM Qubad Talabani. To summarise, the complex relationship between ruling parties and governance in the oil and gas sector can be broken down in three different levels. At the outermost level of federal relations, KDP and PUK forged an alliance to stand united against the central government. This has taken place by holding out a more investor-friendly environment for IOCs and by selling crude at deep discount despite the price drop (as in the case of the 50-year long energy partnership with TEC), which stands as a demonstration of the importance attached to maintaining access to energy markets. Such goal is shared by ruling elites regardless of political divisions. At the regional level, KDP and PUK are equally committed to reserve the dividends of hydrocarbon exploitation for themselves and set a barrier against any threat to their hegemony. Whilst party militias are a life insurance against anti-government upheavals, decentralisation and parliamentary oversight on the management of the oil and gas sector was prevented through legal and extra-legal means. Further down to the innermost level, oil issues have fuelled cutthroat competition between ruling parties and exasperated intra-party factionalism. Opacity, enclaveness, predation Law n. 22/2007 was intended to set up a comprehensive institutional framework that would decouple the oil and gas management from partisanship.
A nation divided 135 Before its promulgation, 16 PSCs had already been signed off without passing through the KNA or any regulation. The Law made provision for the establishment of five public entities “with independent finance and management”: i) Kurdistan Exploration and Production Company (KEPCO) “to compete with other companies to obtain authorisations regarding future fields” and enter into joint ventures, inside and beyond the region; ii) Kurdistan National Oil Company (KNOC) to participate with other companies in the management of fields already in commercial production; iii) Kurdistan Oil Marketing Organisation (KOMO), “to market or regulate the marketing of the production from petroleum operations”; iv) Kurdistan Organisation for Downstream Operations (KODO), to manage all the petroleum-related infrastructures owned by the KRG and create subsidiaries operating in the downstream sector; and iv) Kurdistan Oil Trust Organisation (KOTO), as the safe box for revenue collection into accounts that “shall be subject to regular independent audit [and] be available for public viewing”. Unfortunately, none of these has seen the light of day. The board members of all bodies provided for by the law were to be appointed by the Council of Ministers, and then approved by the KNA, within 90 days from the enactment, but nominations were not done and draft laws for the execution of the new legislation remained pending. Had it received effective political backing, the institutional framework would limit the competence areas of the MNR to supervision and regulation of petroleum operations, and negotiation and implementation of contracts. Instead, the non-fulfilment of provisions concerning the establishment of the aforementioned public entities left the MNR with oversized authority and no countervailing powers. The only institution introduced on the basis of the law was the Regional Council for the Oil and Gas Affairs, which formalised the political preponderance of ruling parties in setting terms and conditions of the petroleum policy as well as approving PSCs. It is hard not to recognise the reluctance of Barzani and Talabani clans to give up exclusive control over the sector behind the failure of the implementation of Law n. 22/2007. According to some, the closure of the KNA had much to do with the attempt of resuming the aborted process within the parliament. In fact, the institutional gap has paved the way to manipulation of the revenue system to suit the needs of the oligarchy. This is also corroborated by the reliance of MNR on foreign staff. High-level advisors to the Minister are often from UK or US. Whilst recruitment of local staff in the petroleum industry is generally low and skewed towards low-skilled jobs in many producing countries, the rationale for such high share of foreign managers in top managementlevel appears to be political rather than technical.14 Although justified on the grounds of employing specialised professionals, this might be seen as an additional way of further insulating decision-making. Initially, the MNR published very detailed and reliable monthly bulletins on output and exports levels, with field-by-field production data and the list of tankers loading KRG crude at the port of Ceyhan. Even in the absence of third-party control, according to some external consultants with whom I came
136 A nation divided into contact, shipping data were consonant with what the MNR was reporting: every single cargo going in and out from Ceyhan was included in the reports. In comparison with the Iraqi central government, the KRG exhibited a surplus of transparency with the purpose of building investor confidence. Furthermore, in September 2011, almost all PSCs were published on the MNR website, which is quite rare in commodity trading anywhere. Under enormous amounts of political pressure, the KRG later took a step back. This was due to various reasons, but two in particular come to mind. First, commercial confidentiality. When Exxon came in, the company dictated Ashti Hawrami not to publish the contract, thus setting a precedent for all subsequent PSCs. For a super-major like Exxon, such a high level of visibility was unacceptable. Second, oil disputes with Baghdad. After the KRG decided to go its own way with independent crude oil sales and the central government threatened to sue buyers of Kurdish barrels, international trading houses requested lower exposure in order to avoid potential legal actions against them. In mid-2016, the MNR stopped publishing monthly reports and has never resumed consistent public reporting since then. It is interesting to notice, then, that exogenous circumstances had an influence on how opaque and patchy the oil and gas sector would eventually become. This does not alter the fact that the lack of transparency is obviously tilted in favour of ruling elites. The KRG brings weak excuses for not revealing oil data. The argument that secrecy is meant to avoid sensitive information falling into the hands of Baghdad or whoever may take advantage of them to hamper Kurdish autonomy was sound, but has grown weaker over time. KDP and PUK are much more afraid of prying eyes at home given that the disbursement of side bonuses from oil trade underpins the patronage machine upon which their grip on power relies. Since Iraq joined the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI, a non-profit organisation promoting transparency standards for petroleum and mining industries) in 2008, the KRG has not shared data to be included in the EITI reporting process on the country. As goodwill gesture, the MRN belatedly released an independent audit conducted by Deloitte in January 2018. However, the exercise was a long way from being a proper audit since the final report was scant in detail and did not take into account other sources than those provided by the KRG itself (Osgood, 2018). In recent years, the disclosure of information has been sporadic and inconsistent at best, thus “[failing] to instil public or political confidence in the probity of the KRG’s oil policy or administration” (ivi). The Head of the parliamentary Finance Committee, Ali Hama-Salih, highlighted discrepancies between export volumes and sales, for which on average about 500 million USD would go missing each month (KNN, 2015). The Oil and Gas Revenue Fund Law, passed by the KNA in April 2015 after a long parliamentary procedure, would establish transparent accounting mechanisms for the revenue accruing from oil exports, but once again the law has not been implemented to any practical extent. The circumstance that the KNA did not pass a regional budget law for years completes the picture.
A nation divided 137 As the saying goes, too many coincidences are not a coincidence anymore. To call a spade a spade, opacity is the most salient feature of the ruling elites siphoning off public resources at an appalling scale for the purpose of financing patrimonial relations. The result is endemic corruption at all levels, rent-seeking behaviour, and high factionalism. Furthermore, the institutional vacuum was conducive to the coercive capture of the petroleum value chain. The 1.6 billion USD lawsuit filed by Dynasty Petroleum at the UK Royal Courts of Justice on 14 August 2019 is a good illustration of the KRG modus operandi to stifle private competitors who do not abide by the rules of the game. The case alleges a series of claims against the KRG and former MNR Minister Ashti Hawrami, including “conspiracy to injure Dynasty by unlawful means, unlawful interference, unlawful intimidation, and inducement to breach contract” (Watkins, 2019). According to the documentation placed before the Court, the executive chairman of Dynasty Petroleum, Hiwa Awat Ali, suffered harassment and systematic intimidations by the deputy PM Qubad Talabani and Minister Ashti Hawrami after he refused to pay illegal sums of money. The Kurdish company had begun negotiations with Spanish Repsol to acquire the latter’s assets in Topkhana and Kurdamir fields. Dynasty Petroleum claims that Minister Hawrami conditioned KRG consent for the change of control transaction on a bribe. Given the company’s refusal to accept, Hawrami allegedly asked Lahur Talabani, then Head of PUK’s intelligence agency, to put pressure on Ali to call off the sale and purchase agreement with Repsol, even by force. At the time of writing, the trial has not started yet, but the corruption scandal sheds light on a pattern that MNR insiders would seem to confirm. In fact, the accusation does not stand alone. Embezzlement and pay-to-play bonuses were described by my informants as regular practices. Hence, not only are the lines between political and economic elites blurred, but the same distinction between legal and illegal is seemingly evanescent as well. To give another example, the large number of small-sized topping refineries throughout the region is evidence of poor law enforcement at the back end of downstream business. When interviewed on this issue, MNR officials did not hide frustration about connivance of private and party interests within these murky bubbles of impunity (see also Othman, 2017). On a much larger scale, the Kalak refinery was actually at the centre of legal issues.15 At least a dozen of unlicensed plants can be found in the area surrounding Sulaymaniyah. Despite the fact that the quantity of refined petroleum products is negligible, illegal refineries are politically relevant in that they constitute a reward to cronies in order to obtain loyalty. I visited one on the southern outskirts of the city, in a poor suburb nearby the municipal dumpsite on the banks of the Tanjaro River, with a local environmental activist. We walked around the refinery from a distance. We could see oil runoff spilling into irrigation canals nearby and seeping through blackened farmland, thus polluting waterways all the way down to the Darbandikhan Lake, which not by accident is heavily contaminated despite being the main source of drinking water for some 500,000 people. We approached
138 A nation divided two farmers who were ploughing bleak patches of land nearby. One of them handed me a bunch of loquats, which looked beautiful but were too bitter to be eaten. “Farmland has become unproductive because of the refinery, but this piece of land is all I have.” The farmers also complained about pollution and related health problems. The sub-urban area had suffered a disproportionate impact from industrial expansion. Uncollected piles of waste of all kinds, inadequate sanitation, and lack of access to water sources portrayed a general state of disrepair. We were told that the owners of all private companies in the area were connected to PUK strongmen, thus preventing public intervention and a collective mobilisation. Fear of repercussions was tangible. A local environmental NGO later confirmed not having access to most factories. Albeit concerned, the farmers said that residents were unable to leave because of economic hardship. Besides refining, illegal oil trade is also worthy of attention. KDP and PUK have exchanged allegations against each other of crude smuggling on many occasions. In November 2017, PUK officials denounced that KDP authorities extracted crude in the Makhmour district, refined it at the Lanaz refinery, and trucked it out into Turkey via the border crossing of Ibrahim Khalil. Vice versa, the PUK was accused of facilitating Hashd al-Shaabi militias in sneaking cargoes from Daquq, south of Kirkuk, to Iran (Kurdistan 24, 2018a). What is certain is that intense oil trucking is in full view every day on both routes, with the clear involvement of Peshmerga commanders. In September 2016, the Head of the Committee of Natural Resources, Sherko Jawdat, alleged that PUK-linked companies were involved in smuggling about 30,000 bpd from Kirkuk to Iran and illegally refining an equal quantity of crude in Dukan, with public revenue estimated in 60 million USD going into private pockets. According to Jawdat, all this occurred unbeknown to the KRG yet with the agreement of the Iraqi central government and the NOC (Rudaw, 2016). These claims are unlikely to be completely baseless. In 2015, the Russian Ministry of Defence released some documentation suggesting KDP’s complicity in ISIS oil sales on the black market. At the time, the offensive against the Islamic Caliphate was in full swing. Allegations were rejected by the KRG. Similar charges were brought against the PUK as a subsidiary of the Nokan Group, Meer Soma, was rumoured to transport refined products from ISISheld refineries (Ahmed, 2015). There is no doubt that crude did not remain stranded in the oilfields occupied by Islamist militants but found its way thanks to a vast array of local middlemen along transit routes crossing the Anbar desert towards the Syrian province of Deir ez-Zor (Solomon, Kwong, & Bernard, 2016) as well as KRG checkpoints on the Turkish and Iranian borders (Hawramy, Mohammed, & Harding, 2014). It can be said that border control turned out to be quite porous, to say the least. The involvement of party members from both KDP and PUK was later determined by a KRG commission of inquiry, according to which the illegal trade with ISIS amounted to 1 million USD a day (Rudaw, 2015).
A nation divided 139 Fuelling the frontline Despite revenue sharing, the fact that the lion’s share of KRG oil production comes from fields located in the yellow zone and petrodollars flow through KDP-held institutions strengthens an imbalance between ruling parties. The Barzanis are in a position to exercise disproportionate bargaining power and pick winners in the PUK ranks. Especially after Mam Jalal’s death, the party has lagged behind the long-standing rival and has grown feeble with internal spats. The recent crisis on Kirkuk exemplifies these aspects and connects them both to oil issues. A fascinating mosaic of cultures, Kirkuk, is home to Kurds, Turkmen, Arabs (and other minorities) – all of whom see the city as a pillar of their ethnic identity. The expression “Kurdish Jerusalem,” for instance, is commonly used amongst Iraqi Kurds: for many, an autonomous Kurdish nation is unthinkable without Kirkuk at its centre, despite the fact that the city has never been exclusively Kurdish. Beside multi-cultural richness, since ancient times Kirkuk has been known to local inhabitants and foreign travellers for the many oil seeps and bitumen accumulations that can be spotted in its environs. From 1931, when the IPC headquartered its operations in Kirkuk, onwards, the petroleum industry has driven urbanisation and modernisation trends of the city, to the extent that the evolution of the urban landscape is considered a prominent example of oil urbanism (Bet-Shlimon, 2012, 2013; Fuccaro, 2013). In parallel, however, the abundance of petroleum resources has also inflamed intercommunal tensions, leading the largest ethnic groups to compete with each other over control on oilfields and distribution of profits. From this perspective, oil is imbued with a powerful symbolic value upon which ethnic and religious fault lines have coalesced. Despite internal infighting and pressure of external actors, Kirkukis have nevertheless maintained a distinct urban identity alongside ethnic and party affiliations (Natali, 2008). Not only the fuse of inter-ethnic rivalries, Kirkuk became the contested frontline between Arabs and Kurds. Peshmerga were deployed in disputed territories from May 2003, when KDP and PUK signed with US commanders a memorandum of understanding for the deployment of 6,000 Peshmerga outside the autonomous region (Crisis Group, 2009), until October 2017, when the ISF took back control. Right after the downfall of Saddam Hussein’s regime and the disbandment of the Iraqi Army, Peshmerga turned out to be very precious partners on the ground for US troops to counter the low-intensity insurgency gathering Ba’ath loyalists and a broad array of Salafi-jihadist militant groups.16 When the US eventually withdrew from the country in 2011, Kurds remained in contested areas and their military footprint went deeper to protect local population against the escalation of sectarian violence, especially with the rise of ISIS. In June 2014, ISIS raided Baiji, the largest Iraqi refinery, and got entrenched in the town of Hawija southwest of Kirkuk, from where they repeatedly
140 A nation divided attacked oil wells in Khabbaz. Insurgents also took hold of the Qayyarah field south of Mosul. The exploitation of energy facilities came to be the primary source of income of the terrorist group. Albeit requested by the Iraqi central government and endorsed by the international community, the security role that Peshmerga performed against ISIS was poorly tolerated in Baghdad given that it jeopardised federal authority over disputed territories and seemingly legitimated the infringement of the Green Line. As a matter of fact, the KRG began expanding its influence in all “Kurdistani” areas, not least by licensing oil exploration blocks beyond the de jure border of the autonomous region. Already in 2008 and 2009, occasional skirmishes with ISF had occurred along the ill-defined borderlands of Ninewa and Diyala provinces. The 2017 KRG referendum was a new peak. When the 12th Division fled Kirkuk and Peshmerga took their place, President Barzani declared that the Iraqi army would never again return, stressing that the city was soaked in the blood of the Kurdish martyrs who had fallen against Daesh. As was to be expected, however, with ISIS gradually falling apart, the stalemate on Kirkuk was pushed again into the centre of the storm. In the run-up of the referendum, Barzani announced that the governorate would be granted a special status within an independent Kurdistan. The Iraqi PM Haider al-Abadi was even more resolute by issuing a 48-hour ultimatum for the restoration of federal authority on October 12. Both sides entrenched in irreconcilable positions. However, oil was a prime motive leading Peshmerga and ISF face to face. KRG elites were mindful that without Kirkuk oilfields, economic independence from Baghdad was beyond reach. In fact, with the surrender, the KRG lost about 27,500 square kilometres, 36 wells, and more than half of the total oil production. The loss was catastrophic by all means: Kurdish flags were lowered across the governorate; Arab officials replaced Kurdish mayors in Kirkuk, Daquq, Taz Khurmatu, and Sargaran; and the same happened with Kurdish staff within NOC (Awene, 2017). Marginalisation in the decision-making process was compounded by resurgence of Arabisation practices (Kurdistan 24, 2018c) and displacement of some 100,000 Kurdish residents (UNOCHA, 2017). On a more internal dimension, the old fracture between major Kurdish parties flared up as Bafel Talabani ordered PUK Peshmerga to withdraw from Kirkuk on the night of October 16 and Masoud Barzani accused the rivals of backstabbing the nationalist cause. A step back is needed to understand how the whole thing even got that far. In the wake of the ISIS offensive, the unique opportunity to secure crude exports from the oil-rich province led KDP and PUK to put in place new arrangements. Although the Talabani family had a stronger following than any other political faction in Kirkuk, the PUK could not cash in and get the most benefit from the situation. Since crude had to be pumped anyway into the KDP-controlled pipeline, cooperation with the rival party was in the order of things. PUK Peshmerga clashed with ISIS militants in Jawlawla in the Diyala Governorate. The KDP sat on the sidelines at first, but when the ISF withdrew from Kirkuk, PM Nechirvan Barzani deployed his own forces in the western
A nation divided 141 part of the super-giant oilfield. Aso Almani, the Head of the local PUK branch, subsequently deployed troops in the eastern part. In greater detail, KDP forces occupied Bai Hassan and Avanah oilfields, where the KAR Group replaced NOC, while PUK forces took hold of Khabbaz, Jambur, and Baba Gurgur, though letting NOC run operations with the involvement of the Nokan Group. Such deployments stabilised, but the military situation on the ground remained fluid. Moreover, the events made it necessary to revisit thorny questions in a climate of distrust. A sense of threat grew on both sides. In March 2017, a PUK special police unit (known as “Black Force”) at Almani’s orders occupied NOC headquarters and seized a pumping facility in the eastern side, thus halting exports temporarily (Rudaw, 2017). The irruption was intended to solicit the establishment of a refinery in Kirkuk, as long promised but not yet delivered by the Iraqi central government. At the time, most of crude extracted locally was diverted to the KAR-owned refinery in Kalak to the advantage of KDP only. The Iraqi PM al-Abadi later defused the situation in a meeting with PUK leaders in Sulaymaniyah. The episode, as well as the Jaguar vs. Sorgas dispute discussed before, is emblematic in itself of PUK’s diminished leverage in the decision-making process: instead of grand bargains negotiated on an equal footing, the party’s action has seemed to be relegated to bursts of warlordism. Besides inter-party feuding, oil has also inflamed the splintering of the PUK into several wings vying for leadership. This became apparent when, in September 2016, Hero Ahmed sent a private letter to PM al-Abadi demanding to block exports from Kirkuk and instead sell oil through Iran (Goudsouzian, 2016). Beyond lukewarm reactions in Baghdad, Hero’s initiative much angered the then PUK’s deputies Barham Salih and Kosrat Rasul, who hurried in turn to establish a decision-making body within the party to limit a “controlling group” openly blamed for benefiting from oil bonuses dished out in Erbil (Ekurd, 2016). The implicit reference was to Mam Jalal’s widow and heirs, who have the support of the majority of Politburo members and are in control of party finances. Compared to the KDP, the PUK has always been a more decentralised and less cohesive organisation crossed by smouldering rivalries. The split of Nawshirwan Mustafa’s group leading to the formation of Gorran in 2007 was the first outcome of internal bickering. After the end of Jalal Talabani’s 41-year-long tenure at the head of PUK, factionalism has degenerated into inconsistent policies and contradictory positions to the point of paralysing the party’s functions (Hama, 2019). Despite Iranian mediation, such turbulent in-house confrontation has remained latent and undermined PUK standing, thus giving Masoud Barzani free rein. The prologue to the independence referendum and its aftermath laid it bare. Despite official support to Barzani’s decision to hold the referendum on 25 September, the PUK leadership did not have a unitary stance: whilst Kosrat Rasul, Mala Bakhtiar, and Qubad Talabani actively campaigned for it, another group led by Bafel and Lahur Talabani attempted to postpone the vote without success (ibidem). Most PUK members in Kirkuk were against taking part in the referendum, banned by the central government as unconstitutional,
142 A nation divided but Governor Najmiddin Karim brought the Provincial Council to adopt the KRG line, while Kosrat Rasul deployed some 3,000 Peshmerga to strengthen the resolve. The former head of Jalal Talabani’s medical staff, Najmiddin Karim, had carved out a space of autonomy within the PUK during his term as the governor. In late 2015, the Governor negotiated with PM Nechirvan Barzani a Turkish-brokered deal that allowed the KRG to independently export and sell oil from the province through the Kirkuk–Ceyhan pipeline in exchange for a 10 million USD monthly allowance (Iraqi Oil Report, 2015a; Iraqi Oil Report, 2015b). The allocation of petrodollars was meant to close the fiscal gap caused by the suspension of federal payments. According to a parliamentary investigation about 60 of 182 million USD poured by the KRG would have been deposited to Karim’s personal account at the Kurdistan International Bank. Masoud Barzani never planned on formally annexing Kirkuk into the autonomous region, not least because the PUK leverage across the province would have changed the balance of power between ruling parties. Najmiddin Karim’s enthusiasm for the independence referendum demonstrated amicable relations with the KDP, which earned him in turn the antipathies of the Talabani family. Not by chance, shortly after the removal from office by the Iraqi Parliament, the former Governor fled to Erbil and the PUK Politburo promptly revoked his party membership. The escalation of events in response to the vote has to be placed within this context. With the ISF at the gates of Kirkuk, the KRG had no choice but to surrender and withdraw from the city, but the burden was borne by the PUK due to its local clout. When the US gave Baghdad the green light to the operation and Qasem Solaimani warned that the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps would have sided with the Hashd al-Shaabi, the PUK realised that they were outnumbered, outgunned, and isolated on all fronts. Under these premises, picking up the fight against the Iraqi Army and allied militias would have been tantamount to a military and political annihilation. The most influential PUK faction decided to hand over disputed territories, but the lack of unified decision-making and military command within the party made the capitulation ruinous, nor did it avoid bloodshed. Whilst loyalists to Lahur and Bafel Talabani retreated, Kosrat Rasul’s brigade refused to withdraw without fighting and suffered heavy casualties during clashes with Baghdad forces. Although KDP units had not fired a shot to protect the city, Masoud Barzani placed the blame for such bitter national humiliation on a deeply factionalised PUK, which was also wounded by the loss of one of its most important strongholds (Hama, 2019). The leaders of both parties had met in Dukan just the day before without reaching a united stand, as further demonstration of mutual mistrust. Within PUK itself, even Commander Jaafar Sheikh Mustafa later accused the Talabanis of treason. Hence, despite resigning from the presidency, Barzani managed to capitalise on PUK internal fractures, and his supremacy inside the autonomous region paradoxically emerged stronger than ever.
A nation divided 143 Dissenting voices In the green zone, the independence referendum was welcomed half-heartedly and most people gave a lukewarm yes, mindful that after the expiration of the presidential mandate, Masoud Barzani was planning on stirring up the ardent struggle for self-determination to pursue a personal goal – namely, forging an oil emirate based upon his leadership. Disdain against the political class as a whole was reflective of a widespread malaise. Notwithstanding this, for many the referendum still represented a historic opportunity to speak up for Kurdish existence and practice that right. Nonetheless, Kurds were less cohesive on independency than one would expect. Whilst KDP officials drew on the ready-to-use patriotic arsenal and maintained that Baghdad had buried the spirit of the federal constitution, the PUK conditioned its support to the re-activation of the KNA. Minor parties were more vocal instead in condemning the KDP-inflected political process. During my interviews with MPs from the oppositions, many shared the fear that the referendum would pave the way to the balkanisation of the region and interpreted the rush towards a non-binding declaration of independence as a means of diverting attention from the paralysis of the political system. In this regard, many interviewees considered the shutdown of the Parliament instrumental in halting the approval of the draft laws that would make parliamentary oversight on the oil and gas sector operational (especially through KODO). Institutions are empty vessels. The KDP literally took over all the ministries and the MNR in particular. Without a watchdog or regulator, issues of national security and national interest are monopolised by party politics. I cannot emphasise enough how fundamental the Parliament is, because it links everything we are talking about: oil, referendum, Constitution. (Anonymous, interview #18) Before any step towards political independence, it is of utmost necessity to have economic capacity, infrastructures, and effective institutions. The KRG has failed to use natural resources, and oil in particular, to serve other economic sectors. In fact, just the opposite happened. This would be wrong for any country; it is twice as wrong for Kurdistan because we are landlocked. (Anonymous, interview #25) Barzani’s KDP never called for independence in history. Not even federalism, but self-autonomy. Barzani wants a kind of emirate on the model of the Gulf monarchies. This is not about Kurds and Kurdish nationalism. It is about getting more oil to exploit [in disputed areas]. (Anonymous, interview #34) The oil sector affected negatively the democratization process. From the beginning we had very poor performance in terms of transparency, with
144 A nation divided systematic frauds. Problems have not been solved, and people lost trust towards the government. The political battles out there look like covert energy battles. Political parties should be kept far away from meddling in the oil sector, which should be institutionally organised. (Anonymous, interview #17) Among opponents, therefore, frustration with the institutional deadlock is inseparable from severe criticism of the landlord mentality within the KDP, which is blamed for appropriating oil revenues for party interests, as was the case in the past for custom duties. Given the balance of power, PUK is held jointly responsible of the same policies and practices. Those views were much in line with the public debate and did not really surprise me. Moreover, antiestablishment parties themselves have resorted to the same resource imaginary. They consider the lack of institutional capacity in the oil and gas sector to be the bottleneck of a corrupted economy in disarray, and blame the KDP–PUK oligarchy for that but rarely question the idea of oil-driven national prosperity. For instance, I was told several times that “oil assures that there is a place for us in the future” or “supports our sovereignty,” thus using the same tropes of the KRG official discourse. Therefore, despite political differences, oil nationalism somewhat binds together all Kurdish parties. On the contrary, conversations with KRG bureaucrats shined a light on some less debated points, revealing quite a different viewpoint on independence. In my personal view we cannot manage our natural resources without Baghdad. We need Iraq, and Iraq needs us. We still are a federal region. It is not economic independence to rely on less than 1 million bpd with falling prices, with lack of transparency, with a huge budget constraint, and with the lack of income-generating activities. You need reforms, and a cut in the unlawful spending [of main parties]. The route for independence goes through Baghdad, not without it, nor through Teheran or Ankara. . . . At the time of the Ba’ath Party we had one of the most advanced Ministry of Planning in the Middle East, but warfare and ideology prevented Iraq from becoming a developed country. I am in favour of coexistence, but some people here get chauvinist in being so nationalistic. (Anonymous, interview #2) Our region is small. And the market in our region is small as well. The natural and bigger market for our products is the rest of Iraq. The rest of Iraq needs us too. This relationship must continue because we depend on each other more than we should depend on neighbouring countries. . . . Independence should allow us to decide what is the best thing for our region, for our people – not to be influenced and forced to accept solutions by anyone else, whether they are neighbouring countries or Baghdad. Either way, we have a mutual interest in making the country stronger, whether or not we are part of it. (Anonymous, interview #9)
A nation divided 145 The line between bureaucrat and party member is muddled. As explained, the KRG hinges on a blatant spoils system, for which political affiliation and kinship are prerequisites to enter the administration, especially at the upper levels. It is a matter of wasta.17 The first person interviewed professed to be independent. I knew that the second person was close to the PUK instead. Either way, not having to represent the party line, their views were based on pragmatic considerations. Both made a case for coexistence within the federal framework. When asked about the most sensitive issues (such as the status of disputed areas), they stressed the need to provide first and foremost technical solutions in order to then beget political results. Although functionalist thinking goes inert very quickly, and technical is anything but neutral, the careful assessment of limits and potentials of federal cooperation gave depth to the argument. Stepping outside the agitated state of Kurdish infighting allowed me to see a different side of the matter. Neo-patrimonialism and survival strategies In Max Weber’s understanding, the ideal type of the modern state implies a legal-rational authority, impersonal power, abstract norms, and neutral bureaucracies. These features set it apart from traditional patrimonial systems, which are defined instead by personal rulership with no differentiation between public resources and private property of the leader. In the latter, civil servants are selected on the basis of loyalty and the bureaucracy at large is an extension of the ruler, whose legitimacy ensues from tradition. Recent literature has called Weber’s paradigm into question by presenting evidence that patrimonialism can be found in any modern society and political system (Erdmann & Engel, 2007). One example is Shefter’s (1977) seminal work on patronage politics. As a result, scholars began using the notion of neo-patrimonialism to stress the persistence of patrimonial practices within legal-rational bureaucratic orders in which the line between public and private spheres does exist (Bratton & van de Walle, 1997). Clapham aptly defines it as “a form of organisation in which relationships of a broadly patrimonial type pervade a political and administrative system which is formally constructed on rational-legal lines” (1985: 48). According to Erdmann and Engel (2007), neo-patrimonial relations describe a type of political domination that latches onto institutionalised societal uncertainty. From their perspective, the distribution of favours to individuals (clientelism) or groups (patronage) for political support reduces insecurity “about the behaviour and role of state institutions (and agents)” (ibidem: 105). This creates room for the informal privatisation of formal structures and procedures. It is worth noting that insecurity is designed by neo-patrimonial rule in order to guarantee the elites’ survival. This very mechanism explains the inner logic of the KDP–PUK duopoly. The misappropriation of public funds and the distribution of prebends sustain the hold on power of Barzani and Talabani dynasties. Against the background of subordinate institutions to party agendas, such patron–client model
146 A nation divided is reinforced by deep-rooted tribal mentality and constitutes an impediment to democratic transition. Hassan distinguishes four pillars supporting a sultanistic political regime: crony capitalism that is the result of blurred boundaries between the ruling party and the state, and between the public treasury and private wealth; personalism and dynasticism, even though the regime is not necessarily a monarchy; a kind of hypocrisy in which the constitution and laws are manipulated in the interests of ruling parties; and a narrow social base that means the ruling elite can exert its will independent of society. (2015: 7) Patronage is actually pervasive and institutionalised throughout Iraq, but what is peculiar of the KRG case is that the quota-based allocation of state resources and government positions (known as muhassassah system) is organised around party interests and not ethno-sectarian divisions as in the rest of the country (Ali Saleem & Skelton, 2019). Most importantly, the patronage system “is founded upon a deprivation relationship” that has been tying Kurds to the domination of two major parties that historically benefited from the institutional vacuum to establish themselves as “the only institutions in the region with any measure of consolidated resources” (ibidem). Besides conjunctural circumstances, the tribal texture of social relations should also be taken into account. As suggested by McDowall (2003), KDP and PUK remain tribal in essence: not in the sense of tribal mores, pre-modern loyalties, or blood feuds (which nonetheless are important), but rather in that party leaders act as chieftains exerting power on a tight and territorialised support base. Leezenberg (2006) argues that traditional loyalties in Iraq were transformed into patron–client relations because of state’s active intervention during Ba’athism. Patronage is therefore neither the result of a weak or absent state nor the remnant of a traditional society. In the context of KDP–PUK competition, Leezenberg rather sees patron–client relations as modern, informal, and unstable means of capital accumulation, which leave the unequal relationship between patron and clients untouched. As illustrated with the discussion on dynastic leadership and nepotism, a tribal mentality has survived to these days, albeit in disguise, and continues to be a key driver of social stratification. It might be argued that neo-tribal allegiances are still effective in incorporating population into patrimonial structures. Amongst other things, it is interesting to note that such a feudal model is at odds with the free-market principles that the KRG has displayed on the global stage. How does the oil and gas sector relate with the survival strategies of the oligarchy? As seen, the industry has been a magnet to patrimonial relations by virtue of its enclave nature and unequalled profitability. Despite the centralisation of MNR into KDP hands, the PUK has had access to revenue management. The Barzani–Talabani agreement has pretty much survived on both sides. Notwithstanding distrustful relations, the yields of joint management have kept the front united against external opponents and domestic winds of discontent.
A nation divided 147 This is not to say, however, that oil politics is neutral ground. The two rivals have been fighting over and because of oil issues, as the escalation on Kirkuk during Fall 2017 demonstrates in a most striking manner. Furthermore, rival wings and free riders within each ruling party have pursued their own agendas through murky sub-contracts, feats of strength, and a wide repertoire of illegal activities including blackmailing private energy operators. The frantic race to wealth accumulation is more intense within the PUK because of a decentralised structure and factional struggles. For both ruling parties, the stability of their hegemony depends on feeding concentric circles of mercenaries and clients. In this context, black gold soon turned out to be the primary source of survival. It other words, petroleum is the economic glue upon which the KDP–PUK interdependency is based. If one expands their gaze, everyone wants a piece of the oil pie in Baghdad too, and oil smuggling and party involvement in the oil and gas sector are equally obvious in the southern oil-rich province of Basra for instance, but no Iraqi party could ever get a similar territorial control or influence on government affairs than that enjoyed by KDP and PUK within the autonomous region. Here lies both strength and weakness of the oligarchy, though. Ruling elites appear to have nothing but oil to maintain power and crush reforms, which makes them vulnerable in a twofold sense. In the first place, the oil-fuelled patrimonial economy is reliant on external conditions and actors (such as obligations with international traders and Turkish cooperation to get market access). In second place, despite the closure of the political regime, economic differentiation is a necessity. In this sense, the protracted inability to pay the salaries of civil servants was a serious blow to the elites-masses bond of dependence and, in the medium term, may erode the structural foundation of neo-tribal partisanship. Notes 1 In disputed areas, which comprise a larger land area than the KRI, KDP is more popular across the Ninewa plain northeast of Mosul, while PUK has long been the main party in Kirkuk, which nevertheless lies at the centre of bitter competition. 2 See “Kurdistan Regional Government Unification Agreement,” 23 January 2006. http://previous.cabinet.gov.krd/a/d.aspx?r=223&l=12&a=8891&s=02010100&s= 010000 3 Nawshirwan Mustafa died in May 2017 a few months before the passing of Jalal Talabani. 4 The KNA reopened in September 2017 at the request of PUK in order to give a parliamentary imprimatur to the KDP-led referendum process. 5 The Ministry of Peshmerga Affairs was established in 2011 and has an estimated force of about 40,000 fighters organised in 14 Regional Guard Brigades, but the bulk of Peshmerga fall under direct control of the two major parties. The KDP’s 80th Brigade and PUK’s 70th Brigade number 120,000 fighters in total (Van Wilgenburg & Fumerton, 2015). Furthermore, prominent leaders (such as Nechirvan Barzani, Kosrat Rasul, Hero Talabani, and Bafel Talabani) have their personal security brigades. 6 I am indebted to Waziri (2018) for the title of this section. His article gives a first-hand account of the crackdown of peaceful protests that broke out in Erbil in March 2018 and in which the author was personally involved. In a comparative perspective, Waziri places
148 A nation divided 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 emphasis on the perilous drift towards a “republic of fear” whose autocratic tendency brings back memories of the atrocious persecutions suffered under the Ba’athist rule. The charge of oil robbery levied on the pockets of citizens was on the background of protests. Gorran tweeted: “You rig your side and we will rig ours” – the cheats are united on one thing only – “dividing our oil, our region and now our votes.” Amnesty International called on KRG authorities to investigate the killings of two journalists: Kawa Garmyani, shot dead outside his house in Kalar in 2013, and Wedat Hussein Ali, kidnapped and found lifeless in Duhok with marks of torture on his body in 2016. All the fixers and journalists I worked with had been threatened and intimidated for political reasons. For further reference, see these reports released by Human Rights Watch, “Iraqi Kurdistan: Free Speech under Attack,” 9 February 2013); “Iraqi Kurdistan: Ruling Party Forces Fire on Protesters,” 21 October 2015; “Iraq/Kurdistan Region of Iraq: Troops Shot at Protesters,” 30 March 2017; “Kurdistan Region of Iraq: Protesters, Journalists Detained,” 28 February 2018; “Kurdistan Region of Iraq: Protesters Beaten, Journalists Detained,” 15 April 2018; “Kurdistan Region of Iraq: Detained Children Tortured,” 8 January 2019; “Kurdistan Region of Iraq: Media Offices Shut Down,” 6 October 2020. In-person interview, June 2016. The illegal cross-border trade of goods has historically been prosperous and still is one of the main sources of income for local economies, particularly on the Iranian side where thousands of cross-border porters (known as kolbar) rely on it. An informant explained: “[KDP and PUK] leaders hand out money to smaller parties to keep them quiet. If someone is moving up within the party, they will offer them a service company. If a problem comes out, it is because someone wanted a bigger cut. And they will receive more in the end. There is no difference between yellow and green zones, even though the KDP avoid washing dirty laundry in public.” Reportedly, territorial projection in the plain of Nineveh was also meant to please rival factions within KDP. Most oilfields in both KDP and PUK areas are linked to high-ranking officials with either direct or indirect investments, in complex but traceable ways. Occasionally, intra-party divisions have had an effect on the development of extractive projects. For instance, according to one of my sources, the commencement of production operations in the Atrush block in the Dohuk Governorate was delayed for years due to frictions between PM Nechirvan Barzani and MNR Minister Ashti Hawrami on the one side and the main operator – Abu Dhabi National Energy Company (TAQA) – on the other side. When Masrour Barzani succeeded his cousin Nechirvan, Atrush became one of the most prioritised oilfields in the region with a record-high output of 50,000 bpd in 2019, reportedly because of Masrour’s good relations with the UAE-based company and a consistent stake in the project. Kurds employed at the managerial level are about 10% of the total (MNR, 2015). The KAR-owned refinery was transferred under the authority of the KRG Investment Commission in December 2015 and, consequently, was exempted from paying taxes for 10 years. According to the Oil and Gas Law, the refinery will be under control of the MNR instead. Reportedly, a 2 million USD budget was approved for its construction when the refinery was already in place. Such as Tanzim Qaidat al-Jihad fi Bilad al-Rafidayn, founded by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi and better known as the branch of al-Qaida in Iraq, from which ISIS later ensued. In Arabic, wasta refers to one’s personal connections facilitating a favour or a service. Not necessarily illegal, its ethical connotation is usually licit. References Abdulla, M. (2012). “Nokan Group and the PUK Business Empire”. Kurdish Tribune, May 26. Accessed on March 29, 2021.
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A nation divided 151 Shefter, M. (1977). Patronage and Its Opponents: A Theory and Some European Cases. Cornell University. Solomon, E., Kwong, R., & Bernard, S. (2016). “Inside Isis Inc: The Journey of a Barrel of Oil”. Financial Times, February 29. Stansfield, G. R. (2003). Iraqi Kurdistan: Political Development and Emergent Democracy. Routledge. Tsebelis, G. (2002). Veto Players: How Political Institutions Work. Princeton University Press. UNOCHA. (2017). “Humanitarians Are Reaching Thousands of Recently Displaced People”. Press Release, October 21. Van den Toorn, C. M. (2018). “Was Iraq’s Recent Election a Democratic Success? Depends Whom You Ask”. The Washington Post Monkey Cage, May 23. Van Wilgenburg, W., & Fumerton, M. (2015). “Kurdistan’s Political Armies: The Challenge of Unifying the Peshmerga Forces”. Carnegie Middle East Center. Watkins, S. (2019). “Rampant Corruption in the World’s Last Oil Frontier”. OilPrice, August 20. Watts, N. F. (2012). “The Role of Symbolic Capital in Protest: State-Society Relations and the Destruction of the Halabja Martyrs Monument in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq”. Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East, 32(1), 70–85. Watts, N. F. (2014). “Democracy and Self-Determination in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq”. In Romano, D., & Gurses, M. (Eds.). Conflict, Democratization, and the Kurds in the Middle East: Turkey, Iran, Iraq, and Syria. Springer. Waziri, H. (2018). “My Kurdish Oppressor”. The New York Review, April 16. Wikileaks. (2006). “Corruption in the Kurdish North”. US Embassy Baghdad. Wikileaks Cable: 06KIRKUK37_a; February 16. https://bit.ly/2HZJS02 World Bank. (2016). “The Kurdistan Region of Iraq: Reforming the Economy for Shared Prosperity and Protecting the Vulnerable”. World Bank.
5 No friends but the mountains Extractivism and social control We went up the Kanishok gorge along steep, rocky slopes spotted with white and purple flowers. The mountain stream below us became clearer as we continued, in single file, the trek towards the small waterfalls where we would encamp. Soran and I had decided to go on a last hike prior to my departure, joined by three of his friends. I tried to keep up with the pace of these mountaineers who ascended with quick and steady steps over the rugged terrain. They all had smiles on their faces and sang traditional Kurdish songs. Soran turned to me and spread his arms out wide: “This is my mosque. It is the only place where I feel spiritually connected.” Soran used to spend the whole day by the river when he was a kid. He is now an environmental activist protecting endangered watercourses across the region. The sound of the waterfalls got louder with every step and the narrow footpath opened into a riverbed with many natural ponds. “I feel sometimes that I am not getting anywhere with my work, but I cannot afford not to fight every single day because it is an unequal fight. Nature is my therapist and my source of inspiration. When I go to nature I find renewed motivation. It is what keeps me going.” Soran wanted me to see first-hand what he is fighting for. After a three-hour walk, we sat in silence under the shadow of a reddish rock face soaring above crystalline water. I realised that his way of thinking and acting cannot be fully understood away from such connectedness to nature. Ethnic consciousness and environmental imaginaries As a community, Kurds are a niche-oriented people. Their history and culture are so intertwined with the mountains that the ethnic identity of a Kurd on the plain becomes a contradiction in terms. Kurds themselves have a saying: “Level the mounts, and in a day the Kurds would be no more.” . . . To a Kurd the mountain is no less than the embodiment of the deity: mountain is his mother, his refuge, his protector, his home, his farm, his market, his mate, and his only friend. This intimate man-mountain relationship shapes the physical, cultural, and psychological landscape of Kurdistan more than any other factor. Such a thorough attachment to and indivisibility from their natural environment is the source of many folk beliefs that all mountains are inhabited by the Kurds. (Izady, 2015: 188) DOI: 10.4324/9781003161103-6
No friends but the mountains 153 It is common knowledge that Kurds have always perceived themselves as people belonging to the mountains. Topophilia towards their “forbidding mountains” (van Bruinessen, 1992) is perhaps the most powerful marker of Kurdish identity (O’Shea, 2004). Poems and tales on the human–nature bond are pivotal in the Kurdish mythology of the origins.1 Mountains are acknowledged as the transcendent source of the ancestry. McDowall alludes to some of these stories: The myth that the Kurds are descended from children hidden in the mountains to escape Zahhak, a child-eating giant, links them mystically with ‘the mountain’ and also implies, since the myth refers to children rather than one couple, that they may not all be of one origin. A similar story suggests that they are descended from the children of slave girls of King Solomon, sired by a demon named Jasad, and driven by the angry king into the mountains. (2003: 4) Historically, the rugged topography of their highlands protected Kurdish tribes from hostile incursions. Peshmerga came to be known for mastering guerrilla tactics in what were inaccessible terrains for the Iraqi army and that gave to the Kurdish resistance the character of an indomitable spirit. Stories of Peshmerga coming down from the mountains and attacking government outposts are invested with an epic aura. The attempts of de-legitimisation by neighbouring nation-states, which reduced Kurds to primitive nomads or lawless bandits living in remote areas and lacking a cultural specificity, somehow reinforced such identification.2 “No friends but the mountains”3 is a widely used saying to describe Kurdish misfortunes. The expression is not of Kurdish origin but has entered the symbolic universe underpinning the Kurdish question, especially in Bakur. Many proverbs, songs, and literary works indeed convey the vision of the mountain as refuge. Nowadays this protective bond is more ritualised than practiced. The mountain is no longer the shelter for freedom fighters or the primary economic resource for tribesmen. It is not even the setting of social life for most Kurds, who have predominantly moved to cities in the plains, and stargazing is no longer social practice. Urbanisation has inevitably shifted the centre of gravity of livelihoods. Although a physical connection went lost for most Iraqi Kurds, who are not nomadic dwellers or guerrilla fighters hiding in the mountains (with the notable exception of PKK fighters), the mountain imaginary remains an extraordinary magnet for ethnic consciousness and the nationalist endeavour. In a nutshell, “the mountain image loses nothing of its potency, for nations are built in the imagination before they are built on the ground” (ibidem: 3). The nationalist liberation movement capitalised on such an idyllic landscape to the extent that “much of the nationalist creation of Kurdistan depends on its perceived topographical features rather than on its inhabitants, institutions or other particularities” (O’Shea, 2004: 5). Notwithstanding this, the mountainous geography that is precious to every Kurd has actually obstructed territorial
154 No friends but the mountains continuity across the Greater Kurdistan and prevented pan-Kurdish integration to emerge. This fascinating paradox is pointed out well in the literature. To quote Gunther among many, “their mountains and valleys have divided the Kurds as much as they have ethnically stamped them” (Gunter, 2018: 4). How does this image of nature relate with the transformation of the Kurdish enclave into a resource environment? In order to answer this question, it should be noted first that the foundation of the extractive regime has not happened in isolation. Oil has been pivotal in the political economies of the Middle East for almost a century, regardless of haves and have nots. The lure of petrodollars has designed a predominant mode of communication with the outer world and shaped internal mechanisms of rent circulation between “rich” and “barren” countries. Glass skyscrapers built on underground treasures, mighty tales of oil kingdoms and oil sheiks, the web of energy hubs in the Persian Gulf at the crossroads of global routes entered the imagination of modern Middle East, giving it a peculiar geo-economic and also cultural connotation. When oil talks belatedly hit the KRG in post 2003-Iraq, ruling elites drew on that same vision. As the catch phrase “the Dubai dream” evokes, the nationalist discourse attached prospects of economic prosperity and hopes for political independence to resource governance. We have seen that the extractive imperative breathed new meaning into nationhood and citizenship. Furthermore, the establishment reinvented patrimonial geometries, symbolic repertoires, and relations between economic and extra-economic realms in such a way to accommodate the landing of the petroleum industry. This is not to say, however, that Iraqi Kurds were all in agreement, nor that the oil-dependent development model was the only option available. In fact, the KRG oil policy relied upon a specific and contested resource imaginary. An environmental imaginary is “a way of imagining nature, including visions of those forms of social and individual practice which are ethically proper and morally right with regard to nature” (Peet & Watts, 2004: 226). In short, it is the discursive texture within which normative visions of nature organise social relations with the natural world. Imaginaries are constructed through intersubjective processes of meaning-making: values, symbols, norms, and institutions are given a place in the image of a social whole. In my understanding and in a more limited sense, a resource imaginary is situated knowledge about ethics, aesthetics, and teleology of resource use. In other words, resource imaginary concerns the ways in which the transformation of nature into resources is thought and practiced by a group. It is worth remembering that material modes of production and exchange are discursive at their roots. As Bridge points out, “resources ‘become’ only through the triumph of one imaginary over others” (2009: 1221). From a political ecology standpoint, what matters most is that a political community never shares a single or unitary imaginary: just like “one group’s natural resource can be another’s dispossession” (ivi), hegemonic views go hand in hand with subordinate ones. This tension may engender resistance, which is intended here as a “collective action directed at blocking further alienation, expropriation, and environmental degradation” that “represents a mass
No friends but the mountains 155 project of restitution and self-determination” for disadvantaged or affected groups (Obi, 2010: 220). Understood as a mode of accumulation based on the exploitation of primary commodities to be exported on global markets with no local value-adding, extractivism typically entails dispossession of local communities. The topdown enforcement of an extractive regime in Kurdistan is no exception, and it is the lesser-known part of the story. Whilst oil disputes with Baghdad are all over the news and accusations against political parties of pocketing petrodollars are common in the public debate, the socio-environmental impact of the petroleum industry is often overlooked. On the surface of things, oil wealth was translated into a sovereign property of the Kurdish nation and a symbol of collective upheaval to redeem the plight of historical injustices. Underneath, however, the oil economy serves as a tool of social control in the hands of major parties. This last empirical chapter brings to light grassroots resistance against the extractive imperative. Embracing a critical commitment to emancipation, during field research, I was attentive to the disproportionate exposure to economic and environmental harm, and the mechanisms of social exclusion related to it. I looked for silenced and marginalised voices to see what changes a decade of hydrocarbons exploitation has had on Kurdish society and whether alternative resource imaginaries have emerged. Smoke and mirrors They left us with nothing but smoke. (Hassan, a farmer from Kirkuk, June 2017) Kirkuk is unbearable. You cannot live there. Since oil was found the city has never been pacified. It’s like a boulder on the shoulders of people. Erbil completely changed in recent years. Before the oil boom, there was nothing there beyond the Citadel. It was a piece of land in the middle of desert. Now, it’s better than Sulaymaniyah, but they’ve been following this model of the Iraqi Dubai. I cannot understand what such a model would be good for. Just think at all the Asian people enslaved in Dubai or Doha. (Kani, undergraduate student, on a taxi ride near Koya, May 2018) As described in the introduction, the perception of living in an oil country is very much sensorial. The acute smell of refining was one of the first things that caught my attention. Sometimes my interlocutors shared the same sense of discomfort. “The air is so polluted. You feel that something must be wrong.” Rebwar is a project manager of a local NGO. At the time we met, he was running an education programme in the IDP camp of Arbat. We were drinking tea in an aseptic and lavish mall in Erbil. When I asked him what was wrong Rebwar described in detail how oil explorations had threatened rural villages lying in geologically prospective areas. I heard the same story several other times thereafter, and with the same sequence of phases: first, de-mining and seismic acquisition in the license area; then, the setting-up of camps to accommodate
156 No friends but the mountains working personnel, followed by enclosure and militarisation of exploration sites; finally, initial testing and start of production, in parallel to construction of processing and transportation facilities. In most cases, traditional means of subsistence were disrupted or damaged throughout the process: loss of farmland, soil depletion, diversion and degradation of water resources,4 and restricted freedom of movement due to road blockades and forbidden areas were typical collateral effects of extractive activities. IOCs were usually assisted by local contractors (e.g. housing companies, mine action groups, and private security firms), linked to influent party members, and escorted by KRG security forces. I was surprised that the most vivid and recurrent image in Rebwar’s illustration was the unpleasant odour of refining, as if that revealed the nefarious consequences of crude commodification. When I visited some endangered sites few miles out of the town of Chamchamal with Ako, a young hydraulic engineer from Sulaymaniyah, I had a similar experience. The area is known for substantial gas reserves managed by the UAE-based Crescent Petroleum. Over time the lack of public monitoring on extractive operations has exposed farmland and farmers to heavy pollutants. One of these sites was a bizarre irrigation well with sulphurous water bubbling on the surface. Water was mixed with high flames – an apparently contradictory phenomenon caused by combustion of hydrogen sulphide, a poisonous asphyxiant that can be easily detected because of a poignant odour of rotten eggs. For Ako, that sinister attraction at the edge of ploughed fields was evidence of neglect towards local inhabitants, abandoned to dangerous exhalations and a contaminated food chain. I had asked him how the oil boom had changed the region. He brought me there so that I could see the answer with my own eyes. Obviously, the petroleum industry is not the sole determinant of the socioecological crisis unfolding in Iraq. The country has experienced at least three decades of continuous warfare, and heavy metal poisoning due to war remnants is a dramatic indicator of a compromised environment. This comes on top of persistent droughts, which have drained once fertile farmland along the Mesopotamian floodplains at an increasing pace.5 The post-conflict environmental deterioration placed an extreme strain on local communities. The toll of suffering reached a new peak on the heels of the ISIS insurgency given that the Salafi-jihadist group made ruthless use of scorched-earth tactics by “weaponising” water infrastructures (King, 2015) and setting oil wells on fire (Zwijnenburg & Postma, 2017). It is undeniable that oil and gas exploitation has operated as a threat multiplier to the livelihood of Iraqi people. Such pressure on socio-ecological processes draws attention to the fact that resource governance is mingled with issues of democratic participation and economic inclusion. Writing that the oil economy is the upshot of the KDP– PUK oligarchy is nothing new, but spotting the contours of the extractive regime underneath is quite problematic. You can smell it, but it is much harder to see it clearly. Political dynamics remains on the surface since the oppositions do not distance themselves from the tropes of the official discourse nor
No friends but the mountains 157 represent marginalised positions. Furthermore, when it comes to oil and gas issues, the institutional level is unresponsive: just like regulatory and monitoring bodies are mostly inoperative or ineffective, bureaucrats and party members are generally unwilling to go off script during interviews. Truth be told, most MPs I talked with were not even knowledgeable on such issues. That was not surprising: as illustrated in the previous chapter with the digression on affiliated service companies, the energy business is more accurately the extension of a tight oligarchy. Beyond centralisation of revenue distribution, the microcosm of actors and makeshift deals appears untidy and liquid, and the suspension of the rule of law makes it difficult to disaggregate the fluid relationships that govern the sector. To give one example, suffice it to mention crude smuggling into Iran via the three border crossings of Bashmakh, Parwezkhan, and Haji Omaran: although limited in terms of barrels exported daily, the cross-border traffic of trucks is done in plain sight and reveals the politically dense involvement of party militias, service companies, and politicians both in Erbil and in Baghdad. The illegal trucking of unrefined crude and fuel was widespread in Iraq during the time of the Ba’ath autocracy and it is still common nowadays. It is no secret that KRG officials made profits out of reselling some of the fuel purchased by the Iraqi central government (Muttitt, 2012). However, bribes and military connections running through the commodity chain discouraged me from investigating the blind spots of these criminal entanglements. The lack of transparency of the industry is an additional hurdle: information on operators, contractors, or sub-contractors from official sources is sparse. Approaching the IOCs was even less successful. Informality was the only option, but I was afraid of harming my collaborators and therefore I avoided sticking the nose into murky affairs. On the other hand, I realised that people in urban environments were largely unaware of what happened or was ongoing in remote mountainous areas just hours away from Erbil or Sulaymaniyah, or in the opposite zone more generally. Therefore, my intention of mapping cases of oil-led displacement across the region was unrealistic for a number of reasons (not least, logistics and budget). As a result, I felt like I was vacuum-sealed, unplugged, and clueless. I was conducting fieldwork on almost virgin plots and without guidance. What was truly discernible was the emotional and ideological gap between the political class and the rest, with the former entrenched in the ivory tower and the latter feeling betrayed and scammed by the leadership. Undoubtedly, the oil economy has widened the gap. For many Kurds, it brought down the alibis of ruling parties. Corruption is the most popular word someone would hear when talking about politics, no matter if seated inside a shisha café or on a gold-striped sofa inside the Council of Ministers, to the extent that any politician who is known to have some sort of connection with the oil business is blamed even in the absence of evidence. My interviewees oftentimes connected the protests burning under the ashes of the oligarchy and the uneven distribution of oil profits in quite explicit terms:
158 No friends but the mountains Perhaps people from all over think about oil as a source of progress, but for us it became a source of war and something for which we lost our rights. I was born here and I can tell you that I wish we had no oil under our land. We don’t know how to get benefits from it. We lost Kirkuk some months ago because of oil. If we were like Djibouti, I think that we would be independent now. (Anonymous, interview #44) I grew up as a refugee. Will my son be a refugee too? If so, oil would have been useless. As a nation, we need stability. They told us that oil was meant for building a state and giving everyone a salary. Unfortunately, what they have done with oil in the last fifteen years was against us. We suddenly got into a hole and nobody knows when we will get out. (Anonymous, interview #33) The priority was getting oil money, that’s it. They had no plans for building a nation. What they claim to be nation-building was just a change of clothes. (Anonymous, interview #37) Contrary to the petro-nationalist narrative, these excerpts portray the KRG oil policy as unhelpful for state-building aspirations and even harmful to national solidarity. Despite widespread dissatisfaction, it was somewhat surprising to notice that neither opposition parties nor the civil society at large had countered the establishment with an alternative vision of resource governance. All the attention was given to mismanagement and misappropriation by the elites. Only small pockets of resistance put the dominant imaginary into question. A general lack of ecological awareness is one reason for the absence of a large movement advocating for a more sustainable, more equitable, and more balanced model of economic development. The patrimonial structure of Kurdish society is a second and more stringent explanation though. As one of my informants observed, “society is strangled by political parties.” That is not a hyperbole and says more than repression. Similar to economic enterprises, for the most part, civil society organisations are also aligned with the hegemonic party in each zone, which amounts to saying that every issue passes through the close scrutiny of Barzani and Talabani families. Albeit on a much smaller scale and by less coercive cliques, anti-establishment parties have similar fingerprints. Regardless of colours or wings, this bond of vertical dependence expresses a strategy of control by other means than brute force and ended up choking the channels of social change. In a politicised context under tight surveillance, the overlap between party politics and civil society has prevented popular mobilisation to rise. This, in turn, made data collection even more difficult for my research. Activism came to my aid. During my stay in Sulaymaniyah, I developed relations of trust and collaboration with many environmental activists. These were mainly university students, human rights advocates, NGO practitioners, artists, or intellectuals; either middle-aged Kurds returned from some European
No friends but the mountains 159 country in the 2000s or youths born after 1991 with whom I shared professional interests and/or political views. In most cases, they were pushing ahead solitary struggles, under the constant threat of heavy repercussions. I considered myself an activist, and my contribution to local campaigns went beyond research purposes and has been ongoing even after my fieldwork. As already mentioned, beyond the research fellowship at AUIS, I volunteered for the Save the Tigris and Iraqi Marshes Campaign. Two of their partner organisations had an office (UPP) and headquarter (Waterkeepers Iraq) in Sulaymaniyah, where I lived. Joining them seemed natural to me. After all, I had decided to avoid spending time with international expats working in the region in order not to contaminate my ethnographic immersion and, therefore, that network of activists became my quite unique lens on Kurdish society. That lens was selective, of course. As any act of translation tends to be partial, I am aware that some things went inevitably lost in such a learning process. This was compounded by the lack of well-organised social movements, which would have connected scattered protests across the region into a unitary frame. However, notwithstanding these empirical and cultural limitations, that filter enabled me to grasp some social realities that I would not have noticed or fully understood otherwise. Local activists acted as precious intermediaries to fill a knowledge gap. In some cases, they became good friends as well. I gradually learned and further reconstructed how oil-driven development had challenged customary claims on land, exhausted rural ecologies, and bolstered up top-down mechanisms of social control. Such reflexive and participatory methodology of knowledge coproduction eventually shined a light on collective instances of resistance and on different imaginings of nature. Protests in Shawre Valley and Khor Mor Two case studies are contrasted in the following in order to shed light on imaginaries of nature and resource usage through the stories of marginalised and subaltern voices. From an environmental justice perspective, one could describe them as a success story and a less fortunate one. In both cases, dispossession stemming from the appropriation of hydrocarbons led to expropriation of rights and costs shifting on local communities. Although it would be implausible to cover all struggles over extractive sites, the comparison allows a general reflection on the sub-regional contours of the extractive regime. The analysis reveals under which circumstances collective action and resistance emerged and in which circumstances it did not. Moreover, it gives an insight into the many intersubjective “realities” in which oil-producing communities are embedded. Sirwan was a key informant. We met in a teahouse I used to go to not far from Azadi Park, in Sulaymaniyah. A long-time activist for women’s rights, Sirwan, walked me through the general situation of human rights, gender issues, and ethnic coexistence in the region. We talked about overt and covert forms of oppression. After many years of activism in a closed society, Sirwan dreamed of leaving the country and getting British citizenship. At some point,
160 No friends but the mountains our conversation turned to oil politics. I shared my impression that the trail of oil can be seen everywhere. It is so. I am sure you have some background, but you need to know that when the big companies started arriving after 2003 . . . It was a shock. Especially for those who lived in rural villages and all of the sudden saw the Asayish taking possession of lands where their ancestors had lived from time immemorial. Media do not pay attention to the social impact of the industry, how people were expropriated of the land that had nourished them for centuries, and the environmental damage that ensued. (Sirwan, interview #29) Sirwan gave an overview on reactions against extractive projects. I learned that requests of compensation had been common, and IOCs had allocated funds for infrastructures and social services to somewhat redress land losses. Such indemnities, however, were siphoned out by the KRG and never reached destination in most cases. All the more so after losing disputed areas, Sirwan commented that it was just a matter of time before the KRG would turn attention to hydrocarbon deposits in unexplored areas in the region, such as Atroush or Bazian. “There will be new abuses, but the future has yet to be written,” he added with a hint of optimism. Unexpectedly, he went on talking about a bunch of small villages that years before had sabotaged ExxonMobil explorations to the point of making it impossible for the energy titan to stay. That story seemed to be close to what I was looking for. I asked him to tell me more and facilitate meetings with the villagers. What I heard from Sirwan and the people I met few weeks later is reported in what follows. ExxonMobil started exploration and drilling activities in the Betwata exploration block in May 2013, following the PSA signed in October 2011. Whilst protests against extractive projects had been mild or ineffective elsewhere, the mobilisation against upstream operations in the Shawre Valley (which stretches north of the town of Ranya in the Sulaymaniyah Governorate) was unprecedented in scale, coordination efforts, and outcome. To date, it is the only case inside the region in which the refusal by local communities induced an IOC to withdraw the investment. During the first half of 2013, ExxonMobil’s contractors began undertaking seismic explorations with the use of dynamite explosives and conducted a geological survey. With KRG consent, the oil major expropriated about 18 hectares of orchards and vineyards in between the villages of Hajji Ahmed and Sartka in the Shaqlawa district in order to build a 3,000-metre deep oil well. These preliminary activities prompted concern throughout the valley, where the sustenance of 5,000 people depends on agricultural yields. About 30 villages (Gullan, Daraban, Allawa, and Sorabani to mention a few) staged demonstrations to oppose land expropriations. Activists played a fundamental role in raising public awareness and reached out to oil engineers to assess the effects of oil drilling. An association (Assembly for the Protection of the Environment and Public Rights) was formed to organise grievances and support local councils.
No friends but the mountains 161 In the meantime, ExxonMobil set up a camp to explore potential drilling sites nearby and restricted access to farmland, as a consequence of which traditional livelihoods were disrupted. Locals documented a loss of annual harvest and soil depletion. Degradation of groundwater quality and disappearance of natural springs were the main sources of apprehension for farmers. Some campaign slogans from the protests included “We won’t exchange water for oil,” “Our beautiful and abundant land is our wealth, not oil,” and “Do not destroy our environment for the leaders’ pockets.” The fact that the company had hired only KDP or PUK affiliates also stoked tensions. Meetings with ExxonMobil’s representatives, who promised benefits to mukhtars,6 were not sufficient to allay concerns. Many villagers refused money from the company, while others did not receive adequate compensation. However, compensation for losses was secondary to the demand to withdraw from explorations and any other future development in the valley. As noted in a document prepared by the NGO Christian Peacemaker Teams – Iraqi Kurdistan (CPT IK), which helped residents to voice their claims, requests included “the full consultation with, and free and informed consent of, area residents as a precondition to KRG permits for hydrocarbon exploration or development” (CPT IK, 2013). Some activists were threatened and arrested. Even the Head of the Natural Resources Committee of the Kurdistan Parliament, Sherko Jawdat, was denied access to the ExxonMobil’s site in March 2015. Despite the deployment of security forces, villagers defied the KRG at their own peril by organising protests to dissuade ExxonMobil from carrying out further explorations. Shawre people are renowned for their tenacious temperament, which has its roots in a history of resistance. The revolt against Saddam Hussein in March 1991 lit up in Ranya and spread from there across the entire region. The town came to be known as the gateway of insurgency (darwaza-i raparin). According to Sarwar, a villager from Gullan, the KRG refrained from taking strong measures precisely due to that legacy: “They knew we were ready to put our lives in danger to protect our valley.” Hence, security convoys did not intimidate dwellers. As protests against the company unfolded, the KRG soon became the main target. The ruling elites were blamed for being accomplices in the destruction of a delicate environment for easy profits. On 15 August 2013, 80–120 protesters gathered in Daraban and blocked the main road with wooden logs to interrupt the passage of ExxonMobil SUVs and trucks. Kurdish media broadcast the collective action, which was reported widely by local media (Iraqi Oil Report, 2013). Although acts of civil disobedience were nonviolent with no exceptions, protesters came to the point of threatening the use of arms as a last resort, but the conflict did not escalate. Amid heightened protests and non-prospective findings, ExxonMobil stopped the project and eventually abandoned the Betwata block in late 2016. Although unsatisfactory oil discoveries are one of the reasons for the relinquishment of the exploration block, locals consider, with much pride, the withdrawal of ExxonMobil as the direct result of their steadfastness. What is certain is that the resolute and coordinated mobilisation of villages across the
162 No friends but the mountains valley was a significant factor. Moreover, the protest created awareness about the dangers extractive industries may pose to farming practices and connectedness to ecological processes. Whereas there was no prior knowledge on the matter, the involvement of NGOs and experts allowed villagers to raise demands with greater effectiveness. Even more importantly, it led people to interpret events in their area as consistent with an overall pattern unfolding in many other places in the region and Iraq. For many, it became a moment where things clicked – a milestone in the process of consciousness-building towards the emergence of a counter-narrative. My interview with Sarwar was enlightening on that point: “We realised that where there is an oil well, there is pollution. We saw that in Kirkuk. We see it happening now in Basra. Once you are drilling you cannot stop the consequences from happening.” The emotional attachment to the natural landscape was also crucial for the mobilisation to grow and endure, despite power asymmetries. Affected communities internalised the message that “once you lose your land, you have already lost most of your culture,” as put in to words by Ako, another villager. Figuratively speaking, the protests in Shawre Valley represent the symbiotic relationship between Kurdishness and the mountainous environment discussed in the opening of this chapter. This relationship lies at the heart of Kurdish collective memory binding ethnic consciousness to a powerful sense of place. Besides that, from a pragmatic point of view, the development of a grassroots network coordinating sparse and relatively unconnected villages in a vast mountainous area was the key to success. The disavowal of a PSA signed with one of the biggest firms in the oil and gas sector much embarrassed the KRG. Besides the reputational loss, officials feared a domino effect in other blocks where oil exploration and drilling had been approved. That has not occurred, however. The resolve exhibited in the valley remains an isolate case. Where the four enabling factors weaving together Shawre people – a culture of resistance, a sense of community given by belonging to a shared ecosystem, co-production of knowledge with experts, support network of social activism – were not in place, similar concerns about IOCs’ activities did not arouse mobilisations of the same magnitude. Even when resignation to the circumstances was not the first option, collective actions were short-lived and intermittent. A good illustration of this is grievances around Khor Mor. Since 2007, the UAE-based Crescent Petroleum and Dana Gas were given exclusive rights for appraisal and development of the substantial gas reserves in the area upon signing of a service-type contract that extended also to the Chamchamal block further north (Mills, 2016). In 2011, two European minority shareholders – the Austrian OMV and the Hungarian MOL – joined the consortium, known as Pearl Petroleum. Through a 180-kilometre-long pipeline completed in record time in August 2008, the gas processing plant in Khor Mor supplies the two major power stations in Bazian and Erbil, generating about 60% of electricity used in the KRI. After settlement of a lengthy arbitration with the KRG, Pearl Petroleum agreed to boost production on top of a total investment of USD 1.3 billion. Years later Dana Gas and Crescent Petroleum released a 92-page
No friends but the mountains 163 assessment report to highlight the socio-economic benefits of their operations.7 Nevertheless, there is counter-evidence that local communities suffered significant collateral damage. Since 2014, CPT IK was invited on multiple occasions to Kormori Bchwk, a remote village of 22 families a three-hour drive south of Sulaymaniyah in the middle of barren and earthy lands. Villagers showed them that all the springs nearby had dried up for the water-intensive needs of the processing plant (CPT IK, 2016). Kormori Bchwk became dependent on a small tanker provided by the company. The lowering of the underground water table went hand in hand with degradation of water quality. CPT IK delegations were told that Dana Gas had confiscated 400 hectares of land and closed the main road to access the village. Moreover, despite provision of services, the company did not hire workers in the area (except two) and did not offer adequate compensation. Poisoning from gas fumes was also reported. CPT IK documented a peaceful blockade, as a result of which the leader of the village was arrested and released on bail, though faced with a court summons. Protests did not undermine gas extraction in any way and complaints remained unheard. Quite differently from the ExxonMobil case, the operations in the Khor Mor plain were pushed forward by a flagship project for the expansion of the still underdeveloped gas sector and affected a much smaller community. The lack of employment opportunities outweighed environmental concerns, which were present nonetheless. Any economic activity bears seeds of discord, and one could argue that the energy-driven transformation of the whole region is worth the sacrifice of a depressed and scarcely populated area. However, contamination of water streams and air poisoning were not restricted to the few dwellers and the bare hills of Kormori Bchwk. As confirmed by in situ visits, the toxic footprint is apparent in the entire agricultural area around the Chamchamal block. Moreover, citizens and local administrations were neither consulted, let alone involved, in planning the future of their territory, despite the negative impact on their livelihoods. No wonder, hence, that distributional issues emerged when people realised that households in the gas-rich district were delivered with much less electricity supply than the cities of Erbil or Sulaymaniyah. After vehement protests against power cuts in January 2017, rockets were fired at the power plant in Chamchamal (Latif, 2017). The attack caused quite a stir and met its target given that supply was immediately turned on and without interruptions. That was not a single incident. A year before a section of the Khor Mor-Erbil gas pipeline had blown up near the village of Qadr Karam knocking out power for hours (Iraqi Oil Report, 2016). The violent turn demonstrations took illustrates dissatisfaction with the inequitable allocation of benefits, as well as the latent potential for civil unrest against the KDP–PUK oligarchy. Frontiers of accumulation and logics of expulsion As already discussed in Chapter 1, the still influential paradigm of rentierism and the oil curse model are bounded to a narrow understanding of the modus operandi of extractive regimes in relation to contexts other than the state and properties other than the monetary rent. The conclusion that follows
164 No friends but the mountains mainstream theoretical assumptions is that oil revenues are the reason why producing countries in undemocratic contexts plunge into chaos. Even when a correlation between political instability and a rentier economy can be found, such an explanation fails to see what lies in the shadows, especially that the financial and military ramifications of transnational commercial ventures are quite often the actual drivers of institutional weakness and armed conflict in oil-producing areas. Furthermore, the violent transformation of territories into extractive frontiers disappears from the scene. Starting with the first point, the general dynamics of petro-capitalism need to be taken into consideration. If on the one hand the alliance between foreign capital and the state begets a particular fiscal sociology that makes central institutions dependent on whopping unearned income (the rentier aspect to which the analyses on petro-states devotes much attention), on the other hand, it must be emphasised that “the presence, and activities, of the oil companies constitute a challenge to customary forms of community authority, inter-ethnic relations, and local state institutions” (Watts, 2004: 54). In his ethnographic reconstruction of the oil economy in the Niger Delta, Watts discovers that the oil complex – understood as the dense institutional setting through which oil concessions reconstitute local communities8 – interferes with the manufacturing of “governable spaces,” which is to say configurations of identities, forms of rule, and territory. He illustrates in great detail the ways in which the emergence of an extractive community has left a heavy footprint on the various spaces of chieftainship, indigeneity, and nationalism. This turbulent reorganisation of allegiances and hierarchies within a territory is conflictive and contradictory. For one thing, albeit disguised as the engine of progress, petro-capitalism has resulted in the expropriation of wealth and rights across the delta, where insurgents and protesters against multinational oil operators are just the tip of the iceberg of resistance against the dramatic reverberations of extractivism, from near ecological collapse to ethnic marginalisation. Again with reference to Nigeria, Obi corroborates Watt’s conceptualisation by stressing that the rapacious alliance of ruling elites and foreign investors has thrived upon a multitude of excluded groups. In the context of a “privatised state” aiming to secure a stream of profits by means of coercion, the removal of natural resources from sites of production and their transfer to sites of consumption abroad has implied indeed land enclosure, appropriation of rights over nature, and destruction of previous socio-cultural orders (Obi, 2010). With due proportions, the same patterns can be found in most oil-producing areas in the global South as extractive frontiers establish mutual relations between capitalist cores and reservoirs of raw materials and cheap labour. How such a pattern materialises across time and space is an empirical question. In this sense, an impoverished yet oil-blessed region is anything but a paradox of plenty. Just like the Niger Delta, it can be regarded instead as one of the many offshoots of capitalist expansion at the confluence of the unbalanced commodity exchange binding dominant nodes of consumption to subordinate supply zones at the fringes of the global economy.
No friends but the mountains 165 These pages are influenced by David Harvey’s writings. According to his adjustment to the Marxist theory of primitive or original accumulation of capital, accumulation by dispossession exemplifies the exit strategy to chronic pressures of over-accumulation, which Marx identified as the internal contradiction crippling capitalistic systems on a cyclical basis. Based on Rosa Luxembourg’s insight that the occupation of non-capitalist formations is required to confront periodic surpluses of capital, Harvey adds that capitalism craves for lower input costs and new markets as a way out of the crisis tendency. When a pre-existing “outside” is no longer available, capitalistic forces would manufacture it by releasing or devaluing assets at a very low cost. According to Harvey (2003), this is precisely what happened with the real estate bubble in the US, which set the 2008 global financial crisis into motion. Dispossession is therefore organic to the reproduction of capitalism. In the current phase, new forms of exploitation have come to light, while conventional ones have been stretched to extreme levels. Harvey takes as examples the rampant privatisation of public utilities, the retreat of labour protection schemes, the depletion and degradation of environmental commons. The reinvention of mechanisms for primitive accumulation is equally central in Saskia Sassen’s reflection on the sheer and relentless growth of inequality worldwide. Sassen (2014) suggests that transaction chains of contemporary advanced capitalism end in the brutal, large-scale, and acute expulsion of growing masses of people from the core social and economic orders. The dismantling of welfare and health programs, increasing foreign acquisitions of swathes of land, and the transformation of natural environments into “dead land and dead water” by virtue of unrestrained resource extraction all share a common pattern of expulsion – from the social contract underpinning liberal democracies, from livelihoods and life projects, and even from the biosphere. These “expanded modes of profit extraction” are far from being exceptional or transitional. Rather, they indicate that a “systemic deepening of capitalist relations” reflects the loss of value of the bourgeoisie for the reproduction of the economic system and is executed through complex technologies or opaque financial derivatives such as subprime mortgages and credit default swaps – to mention two speculative tools that caused the aforementioned 2008 financial crisis. The resulting extensive destitution runs counter to the belief (which was widespread in early 1990s) that global imbalances and absolute poverty were about to gradually diminish, if not disappear. On the contrary, the “radical reshuffling of capitalism” after the end of the Cold War led to unbridled de-regulation policies on the one side and the repositioning of resource-rich territories as sites of extraction on the other side. Applied to the material realities engendered by petro-capitalism, the couple of concepts reviewed earlier (accumulation by dispossession and expulsion from socio-economic cores) falsify international energy relations by showing the structural inequalities beneath the circuits of capital. Under this premise, social and environmental harm at the point of extraction comes into focus as a transfer of production costs from centre to periphery, from producers to
166 No friends but the mountains oil-producing communities. Already in 1953, Kapp signalled that capitalistic systems rely on the possibility of shifting production costs to third parties, or society at large. This book focuses on the channels through which such exogenous dynamics were inserted into a contentious environment, and with what consequences. My interpretation is that the KRG-corporate nexus is more than a rentseeking machinery dispensing profits and enabling violence. I argue, instead, that the extractive regime acted as both an engine of social change and a device for maintaining power. Harvey commented that the US-led military interventions in Iraq in 1991 and 2003 were imperialist wars par excellence dictated by the goal of controlling the global oil spigot. Whatever the opinion one may have, for the purpose of this analysis, suffice it to point out that KRG elites were quick to jump on the bandwagon of the re-privatisation of the Iraqi petroleum industry by offering remunerative PSAs to foreign wildcatters. The injection of fresh crude into the global arteries bolstered up the request for a major role in the federal re-composition of the country, but only the Kurdish upper crust has benefited from inclusion into the sphere of interests of energy traders. For everyone else extractivism is a synonym of social dismemberment and a new geography of exclusion. The conceptual toolbox from the Marxist tradition is helpful to ground the study of extractive localities into the diagnosis of systemic contradictions of capitalism, but it is insufficient to grasp the full variety of lived experiences in affected communities. In other words, it risks fetishising the oil commodity chain at the macro-level as a global material network of production and dispossession processes without looking into the functioning in context. A political ecology approach has much to offer in this sense. Aside from capitalist expansion to generate and reinvest profits, such a lens draws attention to the fact that extractive frontiers burst into local environmental histories with a complex bearing on livelihoods, cultural norms, and social relations. Extractivism restructures socio-natures as a whole. Territorial transformations are one pertinent example: although sites of extraction cover a much narrower area than the one licensed once operations are underway, the existence of a concession entails a shift in land ownership and use, and with it also new perceptions of risks, uncertainties, and opportunities (Bebbington, 2011). The commodification of the underground has a ripple effect on the economic prospects and the ecology of an extractive territory. It is not hard to imagine that disruption of agro-pastoral livelihoods or quick transition from a rural economy to make room for the petroleum industry is destabilising by and large: in most cases, displacement, eviction from survival systems, decay of traditional norms, and deterioration of the ecosystem are just around the corner. Foreign land grabs “transform sovereign territories into a far more elementary condition – land for usufruct” (Sassen, 2014: 82). In this sense, it should also be noted that the extraction of value goes hand in hand with a loss of rights. And what is worse, that is not a one-off transaction but rather a long-term rearrangement forging a stable, export-oriented regime. Even if the historical trend suggests adverse
No friends but the mountains 167 outcomes, the by-products of extractivism are not straightforward; otherwise, we would embrace some sort of commodity determinism. Tensions inside extractive communities are evidence of different “realities” resulting from open and latent conflicts. When conducting fieldwork, these inconsistencies caught my attention. Divide and rule The Kurdish experience re-illustrates some classic features of extractivism. Understood as a mode of accumulation of primary commodities, it is neocolonial in essence. Petroleum and mining industries are not designed to create value in the territories where they operate: the lion’s share of raw materials appropriated by multinational enterprises is not processed for domestic consumption but exported hundreds of miles away. This circumstance leads to the apparently anomalous situation for which oil-producing countries usually have very limited refining capacities and are forced to import petroleum products. The KRI does not set a departure from the general trend. What is left on the ground are the social and environmental costs transferred to local communities not benefiting from resource exploitation. These costs are sold as a necessary sacrifice for the sake of progress and modernisation, but at a closer look, the production of value from the commodification of nature entails the consumption of life and of the environment in extractive localities (Bebbington, 2011: 5). From this viewpoint, the whole set of activities referred to as extractivism resembles a “machinery of plunder.” Furthermore, extractive enclaves tend to be cordoned off from the rest of the economy given that they are unable to absorb unskilled labour or generate employment (Kohl & Farthing, 2012: 225). Insularity is compounded by the overall distortion of the economic structure and allocation of production factors (Acosta, 2013): the gargantuan influx of cash via royalty payments accrues to the top, while standards of living fall to the bottom. In the absence of fair redistribution, the scale of extractive activities is such that the concentration of wealth in a few pockets translates to the impoverishment of large fractions of the population. Typically, highly productive systems and subsistence-based systems are on different tracks, engendering a mirrored contrast between a greater sense of affluence spurring a consumerist boom and widespread backwardness aggravated by disruption of livelihood strategies. It is worth emphasising that these processes are inflicted by the welding of private or privatised interests with little or no civil oversight, hence, the spiralling of social tensions. In the Kurdish case, distributional disputes and lack of deliberation show that the pact between the KRG and IOCs was insensitive to local rights or claims. The latter were disregarded and emptied into a development model whose agents are foreign corporate actors that are not socially accountable to the citizenry, and in which distribution mechanisms rely on patrimonial transfers through the coffers of ruling parties. There is a sad irony that IOCs were held responsible for addressing and relieving social pressures,
168 No friends but the mountains whereas the KRG acted merely as a security provider. Despite the nationalist frame, a national policy is barely recognisable. Even more so, a striking paradox is there: the oil nationalist discourse mobilised by the establishment critically depends, in practice, on transnational capital and foreign acquisitions of public assets. Since PSAs are awarded by bilateral negotiations behind the scenes and not by public auctions, as noted in the previous chapter, institutional control is out of question. However, local claims for the reassertion of land ownership have opened loci of contestation. In the Shawre Valley, participation in the process of knowledge production made villagers conscious of their agency. Though that is not the same as deliberation, confrontation with the corporate-government nexus allowed a counter-discourse to gradually emerge. The human–nature mythology and the longing for rural self-sufficiency were opposed against the extractive imperative backed by nationalist propaganda. Preservation of natural beauty and traditional customs overrode the tempting prospect of oil windfalls. The presence of those themes in the Kurdish collective memory made the appeal effective and sustained collective action. Walking backwards into the future, Shawre people appealed that they belonged to the valley where their ancestors had settled in the mists of time, thus claiming to protect the real backbone of Kurdishness. Nevertheless, Kurds’ attitudes towards extractive activities are mixed. In fact, occupational and economic concerns were indeed predominant in Khor Mor and Chamchamal. Moreover, the tangible effects of the oil and gas industry are unseen in urban settings. The urban–rural divide tells more than the passing of time. “Kurdish parties completed what Saddam Hussein had started,” Sirwan told me. He meant that the action of major parties is consistent, paradoxically, with the Ba’athist resettlement policy in that it has continued to divide the social texture and create forms of economic dependency: Working for the KRG is the only source of income for some 1.5 million people, out of a total population of 5–6 million. That’s a form of social control. Households are not autonomous. My family, on the foothills of the Halgurd, is perhaps an exception. They produce what they eat, except for rice and tea. If you control the economy, you make people dependent. Capitalism, of which the petroleum industry is one aspect, destroyed the economic independence of Kurdish society. (Sirwan, interview #29) His biographical account summarises many points already discussed throughout the book, most notably KDP–PUK patrimonial features and the consumerist boom that has gripped the region on the heels of the oil bonanza. It also suggests, however, some other elements that further clarify the link through which the commodification chain allows room for strategies of social control. To generalise from this insight, urbanisation and rural decline may be interpreted as illustrative of a “peripherisation” process (Fischer-Tahir, 2010) that
No friends but the mountains 169 follows from the KRG development policies and contributes to disconnection and othering of rural areas. Living on the margins Fischer-Tahir shows that technocratic, academic, and political representations of the district of Qaradagh, southwest of Sulaymaniyah, is an example of a policy discourse making rural areas dependent on cities in terms of “income, food supply, and political decision-making” (2010: 2). Such discourse, which favours the urban cores in the three Kurdish governorates, is coupled by a pair of tendencies that have hit the region since the mid-1990s: the decline of agriculture as a result of lack of public planning and, relatedly, the exodus of workforce from the countryside into cities to earn state salaries, either as civil servants or members of the security forces. Once in the middle of pasture lands, villages in Qaradagh are no longer self-sufficient in terms of food and goods production, and also marginalised in terms of political representation with respect to the dominance of urban-based party bureaus. Fischer-Tahir’s focus on centre–periphery relations is innovative since research along these lines has mostly focused on treating the Kurdish north as a peripheral region vis-à-vis the Iraqi state without entering sub-state dynamics. The peripherisation thesis, instead, offers a complementary angle to read economic imbalances inside the KRI. Until the development of the petroleum industry, the rain-fed highlands of Kurdistan were the granary of the country, accounting for about 70% of the total wheat production in early 1950s (Natali, 2010: 3). Despite isolation and underdevelopment, the region not only supplied the domestic market but also exported cereals to neighbours and Europe. In addition, agriculture was the most important tax base, providing one-third of the national income (ivi). However, the petrolisation of Iraq quickly undermined the agricultural sector: already in late 1950s, Iraq was a food importer for over two-thirds of its needs. This had repercussions on the agrarian economy of Kurdistan as well. When the KRG itself undertook the development of the geological potential, the decay of the agrarian society continued unabated. One may wonder why has the KRG set foot on the same dysfunctional path of the Iraqi petro-state? At the time of regime change in Baghdad, oil and gas exploitation was an intention at best. The region still was predominantly rural and almost self-sufficient in terms of local products, though in a general condition of poverty. Within a few years, the KRG embarked, instead, on a radical transformation towards an oil-based rentier economy. One answer could be that path-dependency was due to a general lack of administrative expertise and experience. To put it bluntly, Kurdish leaders were unprepared to run a government: from professional state-destroyers and guerrilla specialists, who had fought for their entire lives up the mountains, all of a sudden they came to be improvised state-builders, confronted with a region in ruins and enticed by multi-millionaire oil deals. The elites found themselves under enormous pressure and looked up to the example of the parent state in order to expedite
170 No friends but the mountains the state-building process. After all, the new class of senior KRG bureaucrats had been trained in Baghdad in no small part. Despite its defects, in a hundreddollar oil world, Iraq was still the model to follow. In addition, the friendly support of energy-hungry Western powers was not secondary: a neo-liberal extractive economy promised to be the most valuable asset for securing international recognition and achieving greater autonomy. This is part of the explanation, but there appear to be stronger reasons in my view. Under the Ba’ath Party, the country as a whole was a centralised and socialist state providing health care, education, and employment in the public sector, with the bulk of state revenues being generated through oil production. That aura of prosperity concealed a number of negative consequences such as the outsized growth of military expenditure and the institutionalisation of patronage networks deep inside the Iraqi state, but welfare and social mobility counterbalanced the most brutal aspects of autocratic rule (Marr, 2012). Quite differently, Kurdistan lagged behind the rest of the country as historically penalised in terms of infrastructures, social services, and professional opportunities. The regime used segregation and backwardness to weaken Kurds, thus impeding local political claims to get strength. Given this legacy of resentment, the KRG was expected by local population to subsidise the same level of wellbeing and fund payrolls independently of Baghdad once the golden valve of oil exports was opened. In fact, a rentier mentality had been in existence well before the first barrel of crude was actually sold. Since the Oil-for-Food Programme in the early 1990s, the KRG has relied upon money injections from the outside – be it international aid, federal allocations from central government, or petrodollars from IOCs and traders. The primary source of income has always been external. Taken to an extreme, this means that the KRG is bankrupt by design given that, with numbers at hand, it has never been able to afford payrolls for its own. Rentierism is well rooted in the political culture of the region in that it has shaped behaviour patterns between rulers and their constituencies. Undoubtedly, the emergence of the oil and gas sector, which contributes little to other sectors and absorbs about 1% of the labour force (World Bank, 2016), and the characterisation of economic independence as a springboard for the state-building project have made the rentier model stronger than ever before. What happened next is known. Expectations of living on oil were not realistic, but generous foreign capital loans pumped up government spending at unsustainable pace, with the salaries of civil servants draining over 60% of the budget. The vicious circle of centralisation, neo-tribal patrimonialism, and rent-seeking behaviour “made economic reform unsuccessful and accelerated economic crisis” (Noori, 2018: 2). As seen, price fluctuations, unsolved federal disputes on revenue sharing, and armed conflict with ISIS added to the crisis. Despite massive public investments in education, the expansion of the construction sector, and buoyant economic growth between 2007 and 2013, the boom-bust business cycle resulted in a non-productive economy, stuck in a debt trap and exposed to market volatility. Many Kurds have experienced a
No friends but the mountains 171 worsening of living conditions. As mentioned, food insecurity is a theme. Heshmati notes that the “region has never been more dependent on import of human resources and imported goods previously produced locally” (2008: 12). Although this is typical for rentier states, economic and fiscal dependency on oil turns out to be heavier in the KRG than in Saudi Arabia or other oil-producing countries in the Middle East (World Bank, 2016). And what is worse, the oil boom left better-educated new generations with slim employment opportunities. The KRG has proved unable so far to address these structural issues by reforming the economy through a more diversified and sustainable income base. However, this is not solely the unintended outcome of a widespread rentier mentality, inherited from the past and endorsed with indolence by those in power. As demonstrated by the fact that a handful of people within ruling parties reserved the oil dossier to themselves, the leadership has been in the driving seat throughout the journey. In other words, it can be argued that the extractive regime was designed to suit the KDP and PUK power systems. From this perspective, even prior to becoming the backbone of state institutions, the development of the petroleum industry was the ultimate strategy of social control to keep the reins of the region. A standard definition of the concept from any textbook would place emphasis on the socialisation of norms that discipline behaviour by drawing the line between what is (culturally) considered to be acceptable and what is not, or between the normal and the pathological as Foucault would say. In these pages, instead, social control is used with a slightly different connotation as it focuses on the regulation of political orders through top-down practices of dominance.9 For all the forms of power, social control is exerted through normation and normalisation. As seen, the enforcement of a legal framework for the concession of exploration rights and the subsequent creation of an extractive milieu rearrange hierarchies and functions within a given territory. Overall, the restructuring of the KRG as a de facto petro-state put a glove on society through three mechanisms: i) repression – bankrolling of party militias to reduce mobilisation and opposition against the establishment; ii) cronyism – distribution of monetary rewards to party affiliates as the main form of income; and iii) dispossession – displacement of traditional rural livelihoods and discouragement of productive activities. Taken together, these mechanisms offer a larger picture than that of rentierism. The outcome of such a strategy is unequivocal, in my view: the foundation of a consumer society on the payroll of the oligarchy. No longer productive inhabitants of a self-sufficient region that used to be the breadbasket for the whole Iraq, Kurds got flattened into a horizontal society based on a single commodity economy, within which survival strategies depend on monetary allocations falling from the top, while any social grouping other than the party is hindered. As noted by Noori, “political parties lobbied for controlling people through the labour market” (2018: 18). Quite explicitly he adds that “transferring employees from other sectors to the public sector was inspired by the desire for absolute power” (ivi).
172 No friends but the mountains Extractivism is then part and parcel of the peripherisation process mentioned before. The petrolisation of the region reflects the parallel decay of the traditional agrarian society. Presented as the inevitable relapse of modernisation, in fact, exploitation of hydrocarbons has ensured the means for greater social control. It is no doubt that the enclave nature of the petroleum industry was an asset: ruling parties had the chance of outsourcing upstream activities to foreign investors and simultaneously occupying midstream and downstream services from refining to transportation with their affiliated companies. Therefore, besides petrodollars channelled through party coffers, party leaders got a grip on the entire commodity chain. Needless to say that at the official level, the KRG has kept glorifying the image of a petro-state with nationalistic fervour. As economic growth came to a halt, that discourse began to lose credibility. When the short-circuit of increasing public spending and dwindling fiscal resources became unsustainable, KDP and PUK found themselves unable to comply with the exchange of bread for consent upon which the pact between authority and the citizenry had been made. As the distributive system ran out of cash due to price swings and federal budget cuts, cracks in the power bases of Barzani and Talabani clans became noticeable as well. After the drop in oil prices, many Kurds realised that the path of a single-commodity exporter is not as rosy as depicted. Popular dissatisfaction and disenchantment have dwelt on the oil curse ever since. Despite living at the margins of the oil value chain, most Kurds have fallen in a state of apathy. To date, resistance has been limited to few and unconnected instances. “A producer is granted rights, a consumer is fed by government subsidies – that is why people do not revolt,” one of my interviewees explained. According to this interpretation, the poorest and marginalised strata of society were made powerless by a predatory political class. When I crossed paths with Hassan, an old farmer living at the outskirts of Kirkuk, on a scorcher day, he wearily pointed the finger at the dark clouds cresting over gas flares of oil facilities in the distance: “they left us with nothing but smoke.” A striking metaphor of what the oil dream has brought to Kurds. Notes 1 “My name is a dream, I am from the land of magic, my father is the mountain, and my mother the mist, I was born in a year whose month was murdered, a month whose week was murdered, a day whose hours were murdered.” (Sherko Bekas, The Cross, the Snake, the Diary of a Poet) 2 In Turkey, Kemalists banned the words “Kurds” and “Kurdistan” and after Ataturk’s death in 1938, they began to designate Kurds as “mountain Turks” to deny them as a distinct ethnic group (McDowall, 2003: 210; Gunter, 2018: 215). Iranian policies followed suit (Strohmeier, 2003: 139). 3 Most probably an Arabic proverb – ‫ﻻ ﺃﺻﺪﻗﺎء ﺳﻮﻯ ﺍﻟﺠﺒﺎﻝ‬, it has been used profusely to name books (i.e. Bulloch & Morris, 1992), articles, and documentaries on Kurds – and this chapter as well. 4 I came to know later that in certain sites (i.e. Qara Dagh), the extraction of one barrel of oil requires the consumption of three-four barrels of water.
No friends but the mountains 173 5 With regard to the KRI see UNDP (2010, 2015). 6 In many Arab countries, the mukthar is the head of a village or a district. 7 Dana Gas and Crescent Petroleum (2015). The report can be accessed at the following link: www.kurdistangasproject.com/. 8 In the Nigerian case, the oil complex is the sum of: “(1) a statutory monopoly over mineral exploitation . . .; (2) a nationalized oil company operating through joint ventures with oil majors who are granted territorial concessions (blocs); (3) the security apparatuses of the state (working synergistically with those of the companies themselves) protecting costly investments and ensuring the continual flow of oil; and (4) an institutional mechanism . . . by which federal oil revenues are distributed to the states and producing communities, and not least the oil-producing communities themselves” (Watts, 2004: 60). 9 Many political ecologists, Watts included, have adopted the concept of governmentality. According to Foucault, the art of government is the right disposition of things. More than sovereignty, which defines and is exercised upon territory, governmentality means shaping and managing a population. However, in my view, the extensive application of the concept can be problematic. Foucault’s excellent critique of liberal democracies and their microphysics of power are rooted in Western tradition and a landscape of nationstates. It is specific in time and space. Even though it is impossible to decolonise one’s way of thinking and representing social reality, caution must be taken. Once in Kurdistan I realized that the lines of separation between private and public spaces, tribal allegiances and citizenship, land and territory may be seen and practiced in quite different terms compared to the cultural background I was accustomed to. For this reason, I preferred to refrain from using governmentality here as analytical shortcut and adopting, instead, the more general concept of social control. References Acosta, A. (2013). “Extractivism and Neoextractivism: Two Sides of the Same Curse”. In Mokrani, D., & Lang, M. (Eds.). Beyond Development: Alternative Visions from Latin America. Transnational Institute – Rosa Luxemburg Foundation. Bebbington, A. (2011). Social Conflict, Economic Development and Extractive Industry: Evidence from South America. Routledge. Bridge, G. (2009). “Material Worlds: Natural Resources, Resource Geography and the Material Economy”. Geography Compass, 3(3), 1217–1244. Bulloch, J., & Morris, H. (1992). No Friends But the Mountains: The Tragic History of the Kurds. Oxford University Press. CPT Iraqi Kurdistan. (2013). “Kurdistan: Villagers Seek Support as Gov’t Eyes Oil”. 23(4). https://cpt.org/files/SOTT-Oct-Dec-2013.pdf CPT Iraqi Kurdistan. (2016). “Kormori Bchwk – the Forgotten Village”. Dana Gas and Crescent Petroleum. (2015). Gas Project in Kurdistan Region of Iraq Socio Economic Benefits. www.kurdistangasproject.com/ Fischer-Tahir, A. (2010). “Representations of Peripheral Space in Iraqi Kurdistan”. Etudes Rurales, 186, 117–132. Gunter, M. M. (2018). Historical Dictionary of the Kurds. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. Harvey, D. (2003). The New Imperialism. Oxford University Press. Heshmati, A. (2008). The Economy of Southern Kurdistan. Nova Science Publishers, Inc. Iraqi Oil Report. (2013). “Locals Protest Oil Exploration in Exxon Block”. November 8. Iraqi Oil Report. (2016). “Explosion Shuts down Critical Kurdistan Gas Pipeline”. January 29. Izady, M. R. (2015). Kurds: A Concise Handbook. Routledge. Kapp, K. W. (1953). The Social Costs of Private Enterprise. Schocken Books.
174 No friends but the mountains King, M. D. (2015). “The Weaponization of Water in Syria and Iraq”. The Washington Quarterly, 38(4), 153–169. Kohl, B., & Farthing, L. (2012). “Material Constraints to Popular Imaginaries: The Extractive Economy and Resource Nationalism in Bolivia”. Political Geography, 31(4), 225–235. Latif, A. (2017). “Power Station Attack a Sign Iraqi Kurdish Protestors Are Ready to Use Violence?”. Niqash, January 19. Marr, P. (2012). The Modern History of Iraq. Routledge. McDowall, D. (2003). Modern History of the Kurds. IB Tauris. Mills, R. M. (2016). Under the Mountains: Kurdish Oil and Regional Politics. Oxford Institute for Energy Studies. Muttitt, G. (2012). Fuel on the Fire: Oil and Politics in Occupied Iraq. The New Press. Natali, D. (2010). Kurdish Quasi-State: Development and Dependency in Post-Gulf War Iraq. Syracuse University Press. Noori, N. (2018). “The Failure of Economic Reform in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq (1921–2015): The Vicious Circle of Uncivic Traditions, Resource Curse, and Centralization”. British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies, 45(2), 156–175. Obi, C. (2010). “Oil as the ‘Curse’ of Conflict in Africa: Peering through the Smoke and Mirrors”. Review of African Political Economy, 37(126), 483–495. O’Shea, M. T. (2004). Trapped between the Map and Reality: Geography and Perceptions of Kurdistan. Routledge. Peet, R., & Watts, M. (2004). Liberation Ecologies: Environment, Development and Social Movements. Routledge. Sassen, S. (2014). Expulsions. Harvard University Press. Strohmeier, M. (2003). Crucial Images in the Presentation of a Kurdish National Identity: Heroes and Patriots, Traitors and Foes. Brill. UNDP. (2010). Drought Impact Assessment, Recovery and Mitigation Framework and Regional Project Design in Kurdistan Region. UNDP. (2015). Post-Conflict Impact Assessment on Environment in Kurdistan Region of Iraq. Van Bruinessen, M. (1992). Agha, Shaikh, and State: The Social and Political Structures of Kurdistan. Zed Books. Watts, M. (2004). “Resource Curse? Governmentality, Oil and Power in the Niger Delta, Nigeria”. Geopolitics, 9(1), 50–80. World Bank. (2016). “The Kurdistan Region of Iraq: Reforming the Economy for Shared Prosperity and Protecting the Vulnerable”. Zwijnenburg, W., & Postma, F. (2017). “Living under a Black Sky: Conflict Pollution and Environmental Health Concerns in Iraq”. PAX. www.paxforpeace.nl/publications/ all-publications/living-under-a-black-sky
Conclusions The making of oil environments Poetry and oral literature have a prominent position in Kurdish culture. I often introduced previous chapters with a few lines of famous poems to convey the emotional and symbolic baggage that permeates the liberation struggle more directly than my fleeting interpretation of it. A quite popular poem circulating also in some KRG documents (its author and origin are unknown to me, though) describes the troubled history of Kurds as “one of a thousand sighs, a thousand tears, a thousand revolts and a thousand hopes.”1 Etched and seared into collective memory, it might be said that the sufferings of the past still reverberate through the present and foreshadow an everlasting battle to attain self-determination in a divided homeland. Kurdish identity is firmly anchored to this narrative: whatever the personal beliefs or political visions, such inheritance mediates a powerful sense of belonging that is common to any Kurd, dare I say. This book endeavoured to journey into the mythology of Kurdistan as practiced in the Iraqi side, in particular, through an unusual route. Most IR scholars would not look at resource politics as constitutive of political communities, if not in the terms of strategic commodities to be secured or as the financial basis for power consolidation. In line with an interdisciplinary and interpretive approach, I instead lay the proposition that oil environments ought to be framed as socially constituted fields of power within which the struggles over the commodification of nature intersect with the constant remaking of collective identities. Starting the journey from here implied exploring the role resource governance has in the spatialisation of rule and identity. The opening up of a frontier of accumulation across the beloved mountains of Kurdistan and the exploitation via transnational capital relations of the abundant fossil fuels buried underground have had a bearing on feelings of national belonging, inter-ethnic competition, forms of authority, and mechanisms of enclosure and dispossession. Although not the foundation of the state-building process, initially driven by international aid during the 1990s when Iraqi Kurds made the first tentative steps towards self-rule, the creation of an extractive economy nonetheless became essential to the consolidation of autonomy within the federal framework. Neo-tribal politics and patrimonial ties were transformed as well. While the accumulation of revenues has mainly DOI: 10.4324/9781003161103-7
176 Conclusions rewarded cronies and clients of ruling parties, internal feuding and impoverishment of large sections of the population have broken up the national body along old and new lines. In parallel, energy issues put Erbil-Baghdad already long-standing tensions on a collision course all the more, thus contributing to the near collapse of Iraqi federalism. After the central government reasserted control over disputed areas (and disputed oilfields), half of the KRG oil output vanished overnight and the ambition to realise full autonomy upon crude exports began to crumble. The political setback was painfully compounded by the ongoing financial crisis, as a consequence of which the resource nationalist narrative is growing weaker, while opposite beliefs framing oil as constraint to economic and political independence have come to light. What does the Kurdish case teach us? A general point can be made. Oil environments are not merely descriptive or regulative of politics, they themselves are productive of political communities. The argument begs for explanation. According to ecological economics, in contemporary fossil-fuelled industrial societies, the accumulation of capital is inseparable from the entropic growth of energy consumption. The assumption does not imply that energy shapes social life; rather, it tells us that social life happens through an energy dimension at the metabolic interface between nature and society. The lengthy discussion on natural resources laid down in Chapter 1 conjures up the image of the “second-nature” Neil Smith reflects on. In the Marxist view, the commodification of nature into resources through labour and technology extracts exchange value out of the environment. As such, the production (or construction, from the epistemological viewpoint of social constructionism) of nature is as much material as ideological. Throughout the book, I tried to go one step further to demonstrate that extractive regimes aimed at capital accumulation are also implicated, to paraphrase Jasanoff (2004), in ordering social worlds. The petroleum industry is not a tool of power as is generally intended in a rather minimal sense, though it can certainly be a source of authority. In a more relevant way, oil environments articulate a space of relations that interact with the political community along multiple axes: through the re-negotiation of political hierarchies, juridical norms, and ideological values; the modes of production and the related economic structure; social stratification and socioeconomic inequalities; down to the ecological relations that place a population within the ecosystem. As Rasmussen and Lund (2018) insightfully pointed out, frontier dynamics destroy and reorder space anew. These changes do not happen in isolation and, moreover, may involve the deployment of physical and/or symbolic violence (Peluso & Watts, 2001). Hence, oil environments turn out to be conflict-torn spaces. In brief, the processes stemming from the appropriation of nature tend to be all encompassing in that they dismantle and rearrange political, economic, social, and ecological orders. Conceptually, order is wider than regime or system, yet more specific than society or community: it gives an idea of regularity in the disposition of things and patterns that organise social life. Put differently, an order is an arrangement of principles, norms, and rules that is crystallised in institutions and everyday
Conclusions 177 practices. The adjectives used here (political, economic, social, and ecological) define which sphere of relations any particular order refers to. Although it builds on the empirical analysis, the proposition that oil environments are productive of orders may sound obscure and be of little benefit without reference to the overall purpose of this work: namely, understanding how the governance of natural resources and the constant remaking of collective identities are tethered to each other. In the Kurdish enclave, the establishment of the extractive regime reoriented the whole set of material incentives, values, and imaginaries within which the bonds of loyalty (to the Kurdish nation, the party, the tribe, the city or village, and the Iraqi federal constitution) are being made. As a result of the importance extractivism gained as the accepted basis for the reorganisation of the political economy underpinning Kurdish society, the criteria of belonging and alterity were forged again in the furnace of the petroleum industry, adding new meanings and implications to an already dense alloy. Political disputes were remodelled by and through resource politics. A prime example is the contradictory influence the oil economy has had on the political regime: whilst on the one hand it certainly strengthened the hegemony of the ruling class, on the other hand, it also undermined the legitimacy of major parties. In a manner of speaking, the reliance on the extractive imperative hardened the KDP–PUK duopoly to such an extent of cracking the social base underneath. The outcome on identity formation remains open-ended: ideologically and politically, extractivism is resisted by those social groupings that bore the brunt of dispossession and displacement. This is a further demonstration of how oil environments may be terrains for contestation around the core values of a given community. By grouping together material and discursive entanglements between ecologies and power, this book highlights the co-production of the many dimensions mentioned earlier. What are the pathways through which these processes take place? To answer this question and substantiate the argument further, the empirical findings illustrated in previous chapters are commented with more theoretical breadth in what follows. Seven propositions Extractive regimes contribute to the territorialisation of authority The foundation of an energy landscape in the Kurdish enclave was pivotal in the re-territorialisation of the KRG jurisdiction in northern Iraq, most notably through oil concessions and an export pipeline to trade crude independently via Turkey. Assertion and expansion of control over hydrocarbons proved to be fundamental to fix authority in space, both by legal means (e.g. PSCs, institutional bodies, and a separate legislation to regulate the oil and gas sector) and by military practices (e.g. checkpoints and deployments in disputed areas), which sedimented into de facto boundaries challenging the Green Line. This territorial function had real consequences even before that crude was effectively pumped up to surface. Rasmussen and Lund (2018) already noted that
178 Conclusions commodity frontiers erase previous borders and institutions. The case at hand is all the more interesting when one considers that the territorialising actors are sub-state entities, namely, the two main Kurdish political parties and the KRG as a sum of both. KDP and PUK are distinguished from the regional administration as a whole to highlight that resource control does not set the frontline against the central government only but also extends into the internal boundaries between KDP- and PUK-held spheres of influence. However, the emergence of the extractive regime came with a paradox insofar as it provided incentives for the de-territorialisation of economic activities, or rather the recomposition of the bulk of the economy at the scale of foreign energy operators, which are notably entrenched into enclaves detached from the local economy. From here, private gains depart from the purported public goal of oil-based national development. Given that collective identity is socialised through spatial categories, as Walker (1993) and Campbell (1992) elucidate, territorialisation practices are worthy of note, especially in view of unsolved territorial disputes arising from competition among ethnic and party groupings. So far, however, this perspective has been marginal in the literature on extractivism. The opposite logics of capitalism and territorialism coexist The petroleum industry is possibly the best exemplification of the interplay between the opposite logics of capitalism and territorialism (Arrighi, 1994). Although antithetical in terms of pursuit (capital accumulation vs. consolidation of sovereignty), spatiality (continuous flows of capital circulation vs. discrete territories), and social constituency (private investors vs. groups defined along citizenship, privilege, class, or kinship lines), these modes of power are not incompatible but rather intertwined (Harvey, 2003). The “slick alliance” (Watts, 2003) of corporate agents and territorial rulers reveals continuity of interests between energy operators, financial traders, and foreign states on the one hand, and the ensemble of ruling parties, local militias, and patronage networks on the other hand. The two logics are not in disagreement, I argue, precisely because they operate on different scales, albeit interrelated. On the side of the KRG, resource nationalism supports the claim for the regional management of the oil and gas industry. The portfolio of investors is pitted against vetoes in Baghdad. On the side of foreign actors, instead, the neo-colonial inclusion of the autonomous region into global energy relations pleads in favour of the privatisation of an unexploited resource frontier. That would seem a win–win solution. Some incongruities are in plain sight, nonetheless: even if the extractive regime is the most solid keystone for the KDP–PUK duopoly, the sheer dependency on crude exports and capital inflows run against the touted isomorphism between national and resource imaginaries. Inasmuch as self-determination is built upon ancestral belonging to the mountainous homeland, the nationalist discourse that postulates the exploitation of natural endowments as an intrinsic national
Conclusions 179 right goes towards, in fact, the sale of national assets, the uprooting of citizens from land, and dislocation from livelihoods. Despite the potency of the symbolic apparatus mobilised by the KRG, this tension has eroded social cohesion, let alone the KDP–PUK legitimacy. In this sense, it brings to mind the contradictory dialectic that Watts ascribes to petro-capitalism.2 The performativity of scalar processes (Alatout, 2008; Harris & Alatout, 2010) appears to be a promising avenue to further analyse the divergent tendencies and spaces articulated by capital and territorial logics. Oil environments cannot be reduced to state-centric frameworks Oil is a highly concentrated and usually state-owned resource, “inseparable from the largest forms of transnational capital” (Watts, 2001: 191). The juxtaposition of territorial attributes and financial rewards at different geographical scales suggests some of the tensions intrinsic to the industry: while embedded in a web of capitals and infrastructures to market and move petroleum products globally, upstream activities for the extraction of hydrocarbons refer to a “punctuated and discontinuous” landscape of subterranean sites and surface points (wells, rigs, pumping stations, terminals, refineries, petrochemical plants, etc.). Often organised in militarised enclaves, this spatial configuration does not conform to the contiguous territorial logic of national development or expansion (Bridge, 2010: 319). The commodification of crude requires advanced technologies, large investments, and commercial concessions involving state– private joint ventures to translate a diffuse and viscous raw material buried deep underground into what is idealised as black gold – a “bulk commodity” (Wallerstein, 1989) that is among the hard currencies of power politics. Moreover, the appropriation of petroleum would be barren if not integrated into a global network of tankers, trucks, pipelines, and trunk routes connecting points of production to storage deposits and consumers downstream – let alone financial markets and brokers managing the black box of oil transactions. Overall, these material processes articulate a tri-dimensional (vertical and horizontal) space that does not fit the flat map of nation-state boundaries. The oil commodity chain, hence, is good evidence for Agnew’s territorial trap argument (1994): even though they intersect each other across a thin membrane, from a spatial perspective territory and capital are defined by different structures of relations for which domestic and foreign dimensions are, in fact, tangled. Moreover, the state neither overlaps nor is the “container” of society. Commodification is not a state prerogative. It is for this reason that Michael Watts (2004) speaks appropriately of an oil complex,3 which he defines as a massive assemblage populated by various actors, agents, and processes all thriving upon the breeding ground of petro-capitalism. The configuration delineated earlier shows the limits of state-centred reductions of oil environments. This stands as a methodological corollary of the two arguments mentioned earlier. From the oil rig to the pump (that is to say from the site of extraction to the point of consumption), the uneven, discontinuous,
180 Conclusions and untidy geography of oil production does not match the narrow conceptual boundaries of the petro-state nor fit into the framing of inter-state geopolitical scrambles for energy supplies. Following the trail of oil along production networks and transit routes, from hand to hand, shows that state actors are quite often less significant than non-state ones (such as energy operators, brokers, contractors, smugglers, political parties, and armed groups). Furthermore, value creation is not limited to the price tag traded on the energy markets insofar as resource materialities are equally imbued with moral and aesthetic attributes, which infuse imaginaries on resource use and recommend a broader outlook than that commonly used in IR. Resource imaginaries provide a discursive space for the re-negotiation of collective identities The matrix of conflicts inside and beyond the KRI bears witness to the imprint of the extractive regime on the mechanisms of identity formation, as an emergent discursive space within which collective groupings re-align perceptions, goals, and visions upon a changed material context. KRG elites incorporated the extractive imperative into the weft of the nationalist narrative to find a political outlet for the historical plea for self-determination, as well as to maintain a grip on power. The dominant discourse strives for naturalising an organic unity between the exploitation of hydrocarbons and the national self-image. As Gellner (1983) suggested, nationalist frames seek to achieve political legitimacy. However, the fragile construct of the oil nation thins out when viewing the nation-building projects undertaken by KDP and PUK leaderships. In this respect, the extractive regime acts like a double-edged sword: it was a persuasive impulse for the strategic rapprochement between KDP and PUK after the civil war and the subsequent creation of the KRG to maximise profits but also became the source of inter-party competition and intra-party fragmentation, also resulting in divergent alliances with external powers. After all, national identity shares the stage with complementary or even contrasting identities. Assuming that nationalism occupies a preordained space would be a normative stretch (Hobsbawm, 1990): the Kurdish case clearly shows that other criteria of social identification based on tribal allegiances, social stratification, or the rural-urban divide are by no means residual. From this perspective, social divisions already cracking the political community were amplified by the inception of the oil economy. In some cases, alternative resource imaginaries coming from the grassroots of society supported local claims against the establishment, with environmental activists and rural communities emphasising the life function of the ecosystem (in place of the productive function of extraction). As said, the natural environment is perceived as integral to Kurdish ethnic consciousness. Therefore, oil environments enter a broad universe of meaning and relate with social practices of signification drawing in-group and out-group identities. Resting upon human–nature relations, resource imaginaries are inevitably conflictive and expressive of selective representations of political subjectivity.
Conclusions 181 Extractivism is deployed to exert social control locally within a global chain of dispossession Petro-capitalism is only one dimension of global capitalist relations. For instance, Manuel Castells (2011) discussed rise and consequences of the information technology revolution, which is another side of the coin. Nevertheless, fossil fuels determine the pace and the extent of the entropic metabolism of capitalism, being the basic input for contemporary modes of production, mobility infrastructures, and consumerism. On this account, the illustration of the case study sheds light on the Janus-faced nature of petro-capitalism, which mirrors the dialectic between local enclaves and the global economy. The material infrastructure of the oil value chain keeps together a dispersed geography of power, from local to global. Key nodes within such networks may provide some actors (e.g. oil firms, economic elites, or even insurgent armies) with sufficient leverage to exert significant control over the entire chain (Le Billon, 2001: 575–576). Violent struggles typically revolve around these junctures between producing enclaves and world markets (Watts, 2004: 53). James Ferguson (2006) gave a striking description of these connections4 spanning the globe without covering it – by which he meant that extractive peripheries are “perversely” globalised in “highly selective and spatially encapsulated forms.” It is in this sense that the petroleum industry resembles a global chain of dispossession: enclosure and appropriation of raw materials goes hand in hand with destitution and eviction in extractive localities, hence, the discrepancy between resource domains and rights domains (Feitelson & Fischhendler, 2009; Boelens, Getches, & Guevara-Gil, 2010). The petrolisation of society inside Kurdistan validates the pattern. Oil indeed widened the gap between predatory elites on the one side and masses of expelled on the other side. The copious revenue stream accruing from transnational investments flowed into ruling parties’ coffers and financed disproportionate social payments rather than development programmes, consistently with the survival strategies of neo-tribal political organisations that keep the region under their hegemony. Political ecology is an interdisciplinary glue for inquiries on society–nature relations It is worth recalling that a political ecology agenda offers a way out of the environmental determinism that has plagued the literature on resource conflicts in IR. Political ecologists reject apolitical discourses on environmental triggers or stressors on the basis of the mutual constitution of natural and social orders. Against the background of the oil curse thesis that still features high despite lack of robust evidence and similar models reproducing natural realism, the merits of historicising and contextualising the politics of nature have been stressed more than once. Political ecology re-politicises the environment and, in so doing, discloses the agency of those involved in the purposive transformation of it. It is also worth noting that attentiveness to the context does not
182 Conclusions overemphasise locality at the expense of broader trends. As seen in Chapter 3, the KRG extractive enclave is situated within the patterns of the global oil economy, of which it represents a specific frontier. In other words, the case study is relevant to understanding extractivism in general, though findings cannot be generalised automatically sight unseen. As ethnographies unfolds over a double hermeneutic – i) the actors’ interpretations of their lived experiences and ii) the researcher’s interpretation “of situational actors’ interpretations as we participate with them, talk with them, interact with and observe them, and read (literally or figuratively) their documents and other research-relevant artefacts” (Yanow, 2009: 278) – it is in the reader’s capacity to extend the results of this study to other contexts. The Middle East as a regional space mediating situated understandings of environmental governance Originally, I was interested in making a comparison between resource ecologies in Iraqi (Bashur) and Syrian (Rojava) Kurdistan. That proved to be unfeasible in view of on-going instability in northern Syria, though, and the comparison became a single-case study. However, the original idea was justified by what seemed to me to be the polarisation of glaringly opposite resource imaginaries across two axes of the Greater Kurdistan. Both in Bashur and in Rojava, discourses on resource use are merged with the nationalist narrative, but in fundamentally different ways: whilst the KRG resembles a free market-oriented and rentier economy, which extracts wealth and legitimacy from crude exports, the Democratic Federation of Northern Syria leans on a communal and ruralbased economy, which programmatically refrains from the commodification of nature. Social ecology is indeed one of the main principles behind the revolution defended in Rojava. Such contrast points out the complex re-imaginings of the Kurdish question through different ideologies of nature, which in turn are tied to fairly distant types of political communities: a de facto petro-state in Bashur, democratic confederalism in Rojava. Geographical contiguity and political connections between the two sides make the comparison even more interesting. In more general terms, the intersection of environmental governance and political subjectivity would reinforce the argument that political communities may assert collective identity also through contingent visions of resource ownership and use. This might suggest rethinking the Middle East as a whole as a regional space crossed by various images of nature and accompanying models of development and governance. Inter alia, this would be helpful for decolonising the exceptionalist theses resonating in Western-centric accounts on the region allowing one to refocus on local epistemologies. Continuity and change in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq All in all, the seven considerations summarised here spell out the constitutive role of oil environments in the (re)-making of political communities. This is
Conclusions 183 not to say that oil moulds or seduces politics; rather, it recognises the centrality of oil as a material and discursive setting through which politics is played out. It is said that in 1956 King Idris of Libya when speaking to a US diplomat, who had just notified him of new oil discoveries within the kingdom, replied: “I wish your people had discovered water. Water makes men work. Oil makes men dream.” After the end of the Ba’athist autocracy, Kurds dreamed of independence and peace. However, the Dubai model has not brought them prosperity nor have warfare and infighting ceased. The petroleum industry greased the wheels of the strategic agreement signed in 2006 by the two single-party administrations in Erbil and Sulaymaniyah. Since then, only a few elites within the oligarchy have been able to live off oil by scamming dividends and sharing benefits under the ceiling of the KRG, which appears to be a system for the allocation of public resources to party clients. In the absence of civilian control on the military and parliamentary oversight on the executive, with contracting and revenue management highly centralised in the MNR and the Regional Council for the Oil and Gas Affairs, extractivism has exacerbated the authoritarian and violent lineages of a neo-tribal political system, which is blatantly tied to the fortunes of the Barzani and Talabani families. It has also reinforced the division of the region along partisan lines and encouraged the interference of foreign powers that breathe down the neck of Kurdish leadership. The KDP has cemented primacy thanks to the occupation of the MNR and the inauguration of the Khurmala–Fish Kabur conduit running through the yellow zone, which made Turkey the immediate interlocutor of KRG exports at the expense of PUK’s close relationship with Iran, but the Talabanis have managed to tap into the stream of revenue anyway. Beyond divergent alignments with antagonistic patrons, the energy battle between the two major parties found expression in the disputed areas even more. The escalation on Kirkuk is quite explicative. Despite territorial and economic losses after the referendum, the hold of dominant families on society is still significant. Masoud Barzani recently passed the torch to his son, Masrour, but he never actually stepped down from power. Although senior party leaders are regularly engulfed in corruption scandals, the judiciary appears too weak to be effective, while representative institutions are paralysed by the KDP–PUK 50–50 policy, which seriously undercuts any transfer of power from former Peshmerga leaders who still embody the nationalist cause and carry on the idea of personal rule. In a context of general impunity, the party-state system generates massive incentives for patronage politics. The corporatism of traditional elites regulates the economy, which remains non-productive beyond the veil of a free market – oriented legislation. Under these premises, much like Iraq in its entirety (Leezenberg, 2006), the economic dependency on oil exports and the corresponding lack of diversified sources of public funding cannot be attributed to external factors only, but it is rather part of a deliberate strategy of the oligarchy. Within a federal framework that is still undergoing an overlong adjustment period, riddled with aftershocks and setbacks, oil therefore comes with many
184 Conclusions faces for Iraqi Kurds. This book was an attempt to depict some of them by illustrating the complexities of the emotional and political geographies of a historically oppressed people in a country in turmoil. However, oppression comes with many forms as well. Nowadays, Kurds are confronted with a sultanistic political regime that keeps Kurdish society under martial law through the privatisation of security apparatuses and by co-optation of social segments into patrimonial dependencies. As said, the party-state model undermines the autonomy of institutions and, instead, remunerates loyalty to traditional power holders. Indeed, party membership “[plays] a significant role in determining employment and promotions in government, civil service, universities, and other public and many private institutions” (Watts, 2014: 145–146). This is in stark contrast to the rhetoric of the KRG as a thriving democracy or “the shining star of the Middle East and the vanguard of the fight against terrorism,” as Bafel Talabani reminded the international community in a televised speech on 12 October 2017 in an effort to placate the winds of war blowing on Kirkuk and also gather a disunited PUK together behind “the Mam Jalal’s way.” The domination of the twin dynasties is not going to end anytime soon. However, leadership in the yellow and green zones are right in front of a generational turnover. Broken dreams, ruinous policies, and growing arrears on the government’s payroll have made ever-increasing demands for democratic reforms more pressing. These are long overdue, and hopes for change are there. Despite financial duress and the toughness of ruling elites, Kurdish society has proven to be capable of raising its head and staging nonviolent protests on several occasions. Disaffection against cronyism and corruption runs through KDP and PUK lower ranks as well. Economic diversification beyond the dysfunctional rentier model may hopefully open a breach into the crony capitalism upon which the oligarchs desperately rely. It behoves us all to remember the significant progress that has been made with the emergence of a more varied political landscape, which created space for oppositions and debate. There is growing awareness on fundamental rights and freedoms to be respected. Enjoying those rights fully is what Kurds today strive for and deserve. Notes 1 See, for instance, KRG (2008: 38). 2 “Petro-capitalism, contains a double movement, a contradictory unity of capitalism and modernity. On the one hand oil is a centralizing force, one that rendered the state more visible (and globalized), and permitted, that is to say financially underwrote, a process of secular nationalism and state building. On the other, centralized oil revenues flowing into weak institutions and a charged, volatile federal system produced an undisciplined, corrupt and flabby oil-led development that was to fragment, pulverize, disintegrate and discredit the state and its forms of governance. It produced conditions, which challenged and undermined the very tenets of the modern nation-state.” (Watts, 2004: 61) 3 “this is obviously the IOCs, the NOCs and the service companies and the massive oil infrastructure but also the petro-states, the massive engineering companies and financial groups, the shadow economies (theft, money laundering, drugs, organized crime), the rafts of NGO’s (human rights organizations, monitoring agencies, corporate social
Conclusions 185 responsibility groups, voluntary regulatory agencies), the research institutes and lobbying groups, the landscape of oil consumption (from SUV’s [to] pharmaceuticals), and not least the oil communities, the military and paramilitary groups, and the social movements which surround the operations of, and shape the functioning of, the oil industry narrowly construed” (Watts, 2009: 8–9). 4 “But it is worth noting how such enclaves participate not only in the destruction of national economic spaces but also in the construction of ‘global’ ones. For just as enclaves of, say, mining production are often fenced off (literally and metaphorically) from their surrounding societies, they are at the same time linked up, with a ‘flexibility’ that is exemplary of the most up-to-date, ‘post-Fordist’ neoliberalism, both with giant transnational corporations and with net-works of small contractors and subcontractors that span thousands of miles and link nodes across multiple continents” (Ferguson, 2006: 13–14). References Agnew, J. (1994). “The Territorial Trap: The Geographical Assumptions of International Relations Theory”. Review of International Political Economy, 1(1), 53–80. Alatout, S. (2008). “‘States’ of Scarcity: Water, Space, and Identity Politics in Israel, 1948– 59”. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 26(6), 959–982. Arrighi, G. (1994). The Long Twentieth Century: Money, Power, and the Origins of our Times. Verso. Boelens, R., Getches, D., & Guevara-Gil, A. (2010). Out of the Mainstream: Water Rights, Politics and Identity. Routledge. Bridge, G. (2010). “Past Peak Oil: Political Economy of Energy Crises”. Global Political Ecology, 8, 307. Campbell, D. (1992). Writing Security: United States Foreign Policy and the Politics of Identity. University of Minnesota Press. Castells, M. (2011). The Rise of the Network Society. Blackwell Publishing. Feitelson, E., & Fischhendler, I. (2009). “Spaces of Water Governance: The Case of Israel and Its Neighbors”. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 99(4), 728–745. Ferguson, J. (2006). Global Shadows: Africa in the Neoliberal World Order. Duke University Press. Gellner, E. (1983). Nations and Nationalism. Cornell University Press. Harris, L. M., & Alatout, S. (2010). “Negotiating Hydro-Scales, Forging States: Comparison of the Upper Tigris/Euphrates and Jordan River Basins”. Political Geography, 29(3), 148–156. Harvey, D. (2003). Spaces of Capital: Towards a Critical Geography. Routledge. Hobsbawm, E. (1990). Nations and Nationalism since 1780: Programme, Myth, Reality. Cambridge University Press. Jasanoff, S. (Ed.). (2004). States of Knowledge: The Co-Production of Science and the Social Order. Routledge. KRG. (2008). The Kurdistan Region: Invest in the Future. Newsdesk Media Inc. Le Billon, P. (2001). “The Political Ecology of War: Natural Resources and Armed Conflicts”. Political Geography, 20(5), 561–584. Leezenberg, M. (2006). “Urbanization, Privatization, and Patronage: The Political Economy of Iraqi Kurdistan”. In ʿAbd-al-Jabbār, F., et al. (Eds.). The Kurds: Nationalism and Politics. Saqi. Peluso, N. L., & Watts, M. (2001). Violent Environments. Cornell University Press. Rasmussen, M. B., & Lund, C. (2018). “Reconfiguring Frontier Spaces: The Territorialization of Resource Control”. World Development, 101, 388–399. Walker, R. B. (1993). Inside/Outside: International Relations as Political Theory. Cambridge University Press.
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Appendix Figure 1 A back of a napkin sketch of pipeline networks, output levels, and distribution grids in the Kirkuk province by an interviewee.
Index Ahmed: Hero 128, 141; Ibrahim 55, 122, 128 al-Abadi, Haider 59, 140 al-Anfal campaign 57, 89–90 al-Bazzaz’s declaration 70 Algiers Agreement 56–57 al-Luaibi, Jabar 110 al-Maliki, Nouri 95 al-Shahristani, Husain 92 Ankara 69, 95, 111–112, 144 Arabisation 56, 70, 77, 86–87, 140 Arab nationalism 69–70 Ba’ath: Party 56–57, 69, 74, 77, 139, 144, 170; regime 2, 17, 57–58, 70, 74–75, 127, 157, 168, 183 Bakhtiyar, Mala 128, 141 Barzani: Aram 129; Mansour 128; Masoud 1, 41, 75, 89, 96, 103, 111–112, 122–124, 128–129, 131–132, 140–143, 183; Masrour 128–129, 183; Mustafa 55–57, 89; Nechirvan 75, 98, 106, 111, 130, 133, 140, 142; Sirwan 129 Barzanji, Sheikh Mahmud 54–55 Basra 2, 53, 73–74, 77, 147, 162 Churchill, Winston 53, 72 commodification 99, 100, 166–167 democratic confederalism 5, 182 diaspora 34, 39, 87, 89 disputed territories 1–2, 7, 41, 59, 77–78, 86, 88, 93, 96–97, 106, 130, 133, 139–140, 142–143, 145, 160, 176–177, 183 Erbil 3, 57–58, 77–78, 87, 92–93, 95, 97, 106–107, 110–112, 121, 123–125, 129, 133–134, 141–142, 155, 157, 162–163, 176, 183 Erdoğan, Recep Tayyip 111–112 extractivism 5, 7, 36, 101, 130, 155, 164, 166–167, 172, 177–178, 181–183 ExxonMobil 78, 93, 109, 112, 160–161, 163 Faisal, Emir 54, 69, 72 Gorran Party 123–125, 127, 132, 141 Greater Kurdistan (Kurdistan Mezin) 6, 34, 61–63, 68, 105, 154, 182 Green Line 58, 93, 140, 177 Gulf War 2, 6, 17, 57, 122 Halabja: demonstrations 124; massacre 57 Hashd al-Shaabi 138, 142 Hawrami, Ashti 92–93, 107–109, 111, 131, 136–137 Hussein, Saddam 2, 6, 21, 56–58, 70, 75–76, 86, 89, 91, 106–108, 111, 123, 131, 139, 161, 168 Iran 17, 20, 37, 53, 55–56, 59, 61–64, 69, 75, 87, 91, 94–95, 107, 112, 131, 138, 141, 157, 183 Iraqi constitution 58–59, 76–77, 93, 96–97, 124, 143, 146, 177 ISIS (Islamic State of Iraq and Syria) 1, 3, 5, 27, 41, 59, 62, 78, 88, 95–97, 110, 124, 132–133, 138–140, 156, 170 Israel 109 KAR Group 129, 133, 141 Karim, Najmiddin 142 KDP 7, 41, 55–59, 67, 77, 88, 98, 101, 106, 109, 111, 121–134, 136, 138–147,
Index 156, 161, 163, 168, 171–172, 177–180, 183–184 Khanaqin 56, 75, 88 Khurmala: -Fish Khabur pipeline 7, 95, 110, 112, 183; oilfield 77, 95, 133 Kirkuk 1–2, 5, 7, 40–41, 52, 56, 59, 69, 72–75, 77–78, 86–87, 90–91, 93, 95, 97, 109–110, 112, 129–130, 133, 138–142, 147, 155, 158, 162, 172, 183–184 Kobanî 62 Kurdish civil war 57–58, 121–123, 180 Kurdish nationalism (kurdayetî) 54–55, 63–65, 67–69, 71, 90, 121, 143 Kurdishness 65, 67–68, 162, 168 Kurdish Spring 126 Lakhani, Murtaza 108 Lausanne, Treaty of 54, 59, 62 League of Nations 54, 73 Mahabad, Republic of 55, 61 March Manifesto 56 martyrdom 1, 89–90, 102, 121, 140 Massum, Fuad 59 Mesopotamia 53–54, 69, 72 Mosul 1, 41, 53–54, 73, 75, 87–88, 93–96, 140 mountains, connectedness to 7, 63, 101, 152–154, 162 Mustafa, Nawshirwan 57, 123, 125, 141 nationalisation of the petroleum industry 2, 22, 35, 56, 73–75, 92, 97 nationalism 33–35, 64–65; see also Kurdish nationalism (kurdayetî) Nokan Group 128–129, 133–134, 138, 141 Öcalan, Abdullah 5 Oil and Gas Law (Law n. 22/2007) 78, 92–93, 102, 106, 131, 134–135 oil curse theory 4, 10, 20–22, 27, 30, 163, 172, 181 Oil-for-Food Programme 58, 108, 170 OPEC 35, 56, 73–75, 104 Ottoman Empire 53, 61–62, 66–67, 69–70, 72–73 Pahlavi, Mohammed Reza 56 patrimonalism 7, 101, 111, 124, 127–128, 145–147, 158, 167–168, 170, 175, 184 189 patronage 2, 7, 20, 71, 127–128, 133, 136, 145–146, 170, 178, 183 petro-capitalism 14, 22, 164–165, 179, 181 petro-state 20, 36, 71, 101, 104, 164, 169, 171–172, 180, 182 populism 100, 102–105 PKK 5, 55, 90, 111, 153 PUK 7, 41, 57–59, 67, 77, 88, 109, 112, 121–134, 136, 138–147, 156, 161, 163, 168, 171–172, 177–180, 183–184 PYD 5 Qasim, Abd al-Karim 55–56, 70, 74–75 Ranya 124, 160–161 Rasol, Kosrat 141–142 Red Line Agreement 73 referendum 1, 5, 39, 41, 59, 69, 86, 100, 107, 109–111, 124, 140–143, 183 Regional Council for the Oil and Gas Affairs 131, 135, 182 rentierism 20–21, 74, 101, 163–164, 169–171, 182, 184 resource: frontier 28, 93, 97–100, 176, 178, 182; imaginary 36, 144, 154; nationalism 22, 31, 34–37, 97, 106, 178 Rojava (Syrian Kurdistan) 5, 62, 182 Rosneft 3, 108, 110, 133 Russia 110–111, 138 Sadiq, Yousif Mohammed 124, 128 Salih, Barham 59, 125, 128, 131, 141 San Remo conference 72 Save the Tigris and Iraqi Marshes Campaign 159 Sèvres, Treaty of 53–54 Solaimani, Qasem 142 Soviet Union 17, 55–56, 74 Sulaymaniyah 1, 41, 54, 57, 87–89, 121, 123–126, 129, 131, 133–134, 137, 141, 155–160, 163, 169, 183 Sykes-Picot Agreement 53, 64, 72 Syrian civil war 5, 94, 110–111 Talabani: Bafel 128, 140–142, 184; Jalal 55, 59, 75, 77, 89, 103, 122–123, 128, 131–132, 139, 141–142, 147, 184; Lahur 125, 128, 137, 141–142; Qubad 128, 134, 137, 141 Taq Taq 77–78, 95, 110, 131 Tawke 95, 131
190 Index Teheran 69, 112, 144 territorialisation 5, 37, 93, 177–178 trading houses 93, 95, 107–109, 111, 133, 136, 147 Turkey 5, 37, 54–55, 59, 63–64, 66, 69, 73, 94–95, 98, 111–112, 131, 138, 177, 183 United Nations 57–58, 108, 122 United States 2, 16–18, 21–22, 57, 71–73, 78, 94, 96, 105, 123, 129, 131, 135, 139, 142, 165–166 vilayet 53–54, 69 Washington Agreement 123, 134