Aslan wrote:For Turkey it’s a big problem though. Turkey embraced the rebellion early on, envisioning a Sunni Arab nationalist Syria that would weaken Kurdish autonomy bids, but instead finding Islamist incursions uniting Kurdish blocs and pushing them toward de facto independence.
In Iraq, long-standing concerns about Kurdish autonomy may be falling by the wayside, however, as the central government comes to appreciate them as an effective foil for al-Qaeda. Either way, the Kurdish surge looks to leave a lasting imprint of northeastern Syria, and further complicates the overall war.
talsor wrote:PYD/PKK would have never made such gains without direct support from Iran/Syria and Iraq . They are providing PYD with heavy weapons and Iraqi artillery is actively involved in the fight helping PYD . If the syrian regime survive which is the goal , these same countries (Iran, Iraq , Syria) would crush PYD within a week and keep in mind that they made and would never make any real promises to PYD in terms of autonomy . They are also instructing PYD to be hostile toward KRG for obvious reasons .
The syrian opposition(FSA )on the other hand are very clear in their message to Kurds in syria . They (opposition ) clearly say that there will be no western Kurdistan , there will be no autonomy , there will be no kurdish rights , so nothing could be gained by joining them .
Syria , Iraq and Iran are pissed at turkey and they will do anything and everything for PYD for now , but when the dust is settled they will shake hands and turn their guns towards Kurds . No matter how bad their relations get historically , they always unite when it comes to fighting kurds .
Unity between PYD and KRG is the only way out and that sadly would never happen .In the short terms Kurds are in a good position , but in the long term I think we are screwed .
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