A delegation from Iraq’s Shi’ite Coordination Framework arrived in the autonomous Kurdistan Region’s capital of Erbil on Monday to meet with the Kurdish leadership, media outlets reported Monday.
The meeting was taking place because Iraq’s political status quo has been thrown into turmoil, and it is having trouble appointing a new president and prime minister. The president usually has been a Kurd.
In the past, the position of president was often held by a Kurd from the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) party. The Kurdish leadership in Erbil is dominated by the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KPD), from which the PUK split in 1975.
On some issues, however, the Kurdish parties coordinate closely. Regarding Baghdad, this is sometimes one of the issues they work together on.
The reason a Kurd holds the presidency is a result of the post-2003 US invasion constitution and consensus in Iraq.
Iraq was led by Saddam Hussein, a Sunni Arab dictator for many decades. After his fall, the concept was that Shi’ites would usually be prime minister, while a Kurd would be president, and a Sunni would be speaker of parliament.
In some ways, this is how Lebanon’s politics is also organized along sectarian lines. Although the KDP is the larger Kurdish party, there is a kind of trade-off in which the KDP runs the Kurdistan Region Government (KRG) and someone backed by the PUK gets to be the largely ceremonial Iraqi president.
Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani arrived in Erbil with the Coordination Framework, Iraq’s The New Region news site reported. The meeting is intended to iron out the problems Iraq has had in appointing the president and prime minister.
The Kurds look to be power brokers in Iraq today. This is partly a result of the KRG being a stable region. It also links Iraq to Turkey and Syria.
In addition, the KRG has close ties with the US. US President Donald Trump has opposed Nouri al-Maliki becoming Iraq’s next prime minister.
Maliki was prime minister in 2014 when part of Iraq was taken over by ISIS. He wants to return to the office. He is a Shi’ite and is close to Iran.
The Kurdish leadership, often represented by the KDP’s Barzani family and the PUK’s Talabani family, has had complex ties with the Shi’ite parties.
IN 2017, Masoud Barzani, the KDP leader, led the Kurdistan Region to an independence referendum. This angered Baghdad and Iran.
Qasem Soleimani, commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ Quds Force, was sent to talk with the PUK and work with Baghdad to thwart the Kurds’ power. After the referendum, Baghdad sent tanks into the city of Kirkuk, forcing the Kurdish Peshmerga fighters to flee.
The KDP at the time believed the PUK had made a secret deal with Soleimani and Baghdad. The PUK has often been portrayed as being closer to Iran.
Years later, however, things have changed. The KDP and PUK sometimes work together and sometimes work against each other. For instance, Baghdad had tried to prevent the KRG from exporting oil to Turkey. Now there is a deal.
US envoy meets Barzani amid Iraq and Syria talks
At the same time, in the wake of Trump posting about Maliki, the US charge d’affaires in Iraq has been meeting with Iraqi politicians.
“President Masoud Barzani on Sunday received in Erbil the Charge d’Affaires of the US Embassy in Iraq, Joshua Harris, where the two officials highlighted Erbil’s role in supporting a milestone integration agreement between Damascus and the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF),” Kurdistan Region-based news channel Rudaw Media Network reported.
In a statement on Facebook, Barzani’s headquarters quoted Harris as conveying “the thanks and appreciation of the President and Government of the United States to President Barzani for the support and assistance he provided toward reaching the recent agreement between the Syrian [interim] government and the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF).”
“Abbas Radi, the Coordination Framework’s secretary-general, said in a statement on Sunday that a ‘high-level delegation’ from the bloc ‘will travel on Monday to the Kurdistan Region to meet Kurdish leaders’ in Erbil, a power base of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP), and in Sulaimani, the stronghold of its rival, the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK),” another Rudaw Media Network report said.
“Radi detailed that the delegation will comprise senior Coordination Framework leaders, including Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia’ al-Sudani, Badr Organization head Hadi al-Ameri, and former Iraqi deputy speaker and al-Asas Coalition leader Mohsen al-Madalawi,” the report said.
The Kurdish leadership is clearly working as a power broker, and it has to balance many things.
It must balance the close ties it has with the US with the discussions with the Shi’ite parties about who might be prime minister. There may be a trade-off regarding the presidency.
With so many balls in the air, the Kurdish parties once again have a chance to showcase their importance for Iraq.