The Kurds want their independence from Turkey, Iran, Syria, and Iraq.
The Kurds desire their own state due to historical repression and marginalization within the countries they reside in. They seek autonomy to preserve their culture, language, and identity. Additionally, having their own state would provide them with political and economic independence.
Yes, Kurds in Turkey have long sought greater autonomy and recognition of their cultural rights, including independence. This has led to periods of conflict and tensions between Kurdish groups and the Turkish government, particularly in the southeast region of Turkey.
Kurds are an ethnic group mainly from the region known as Kurdistan, which spans parts of Turkey, Iraq, Iran, and Syria. They have their own distinct culture, language, and history. Kurds have faced struggles for recognition and independence in the countries where they reside.
The Kurds have never had their own government in Iraq separate from the Iraqi government since the independence of the Hashemite Kingdom of Iraq in 1923 (and subsequent Iraqi States). However, Kurds had autonomy under the Ottoman Empire in what would become northern Iraq (or Iraqi Kurdistan). The Kurds have never had complete independence from the Iranians, Turks, Iraqis, or Syrians.
The Kurds only really consider the United States to be an ally in their attempt at statehood in a relatively weak fashion. This is because the US has been the only country that has intervened in Kurdish affairs and did not repeatedly try to discriminate against them or commit genocide against them (a relatively low-bar). Additionally, the Kurds were the real winners of the Iraq War, which the US started, because it resulted in Kurdish autonomy from Iraq. However, Kurds are wary of the strong Turkish-US alliance, which impedes the independence or autonomy of Turkish Kurdistan.
They want their own country.
The Kurds desire their own state due to historical repression and marginalization within the countries they reside in. They seek autonomy to preserve their culture, language, and identity. Additionally, having their own state would provide them with political and economic independence.
The Kurds
Yes, Kurds in Turkey have long sought greater autonomy and recognition of their cultural rights, including independence. This has led to periods of conflict and tensions between Kurdish groups and the Turkish government, particularly in the southeast region of Turkey.
Very probably not. Abandoning large parts of their countries to a newly established State totally runs against the thinking of the rulers of the countries where Kurds now live. An acknowledged form of autonomy within those countries is the best the Kurds can hope for. And Turkey would probably not even want to consider that.
The Kurds want a stake in self-governance or autonomy, but the governments of Turkey, Iraq, and Iran prefer a unitary state. As a result, the two create a vicious cycle of Kurds seeking independence, those movements being violently crushed by the authorities, which inspires more Kurds to seek independence, etc.Specifically in Turkey, the creation of the Turkish State was founded on the conception that all of the Muslim inhabitants of Turkey were ethnic Turks and anyone who asserted otherwise would have their languages, festivals, and identities taken from them. The Kurds were the largest Muslim ethnic minority in Turkey. There were Turkish laws banning education, public communications, and giving children names in the Kurdish language, some of which are still enforced. Rather than giving the Kurds autonomy to self-govern and speak their own languages, the Turks continue to repress Kurdish customs and the Kurdish self-identity. Turkish Kurds have tried to change the laws arrayed against them by electing politicians with a more pro-Kurdish outlook, but many of them have been assassinated by Turks who prefer that the discriminatory laws remain in place. As a result, a number of Kurds have resorted to more violent methods of opposing the Turkish government and seek full-blown independence given the Turkish reticence towards extending proper rights to the Kurds.
Kurds are an ethnic group mainly from the region known as Kurdistan, which spans parts of Turkey, Iraq, Iran, and Syria. They have their own distinct culture, language, and history. Kurds have faced struggles for recognition and independence in the countries where they reside.
Kurdistan is a term applied to regions of southeast Turkey, northeast Syria, northern Iraq, and northwest Iran in reference to the Kurdish ethnic majority who live on that land. The Kurds, by and large, want independence from their host nations and to create an independent republic on these majority Kurdish lands.
Yes. The Kurds are an overwhelmingly insular community.
The Kurds have never had their own government in Iraq separate from the Iraqi government since the independence of the Hashemite Kingdom of Iraq in 1923 (and subsequent Iraqi States). However, Kurds had autonomy under the Ottoman Empire in what would become northern Iraq (or Iraqi Kurdistan). The Kurds have never had complete independence from the Iranians, Turks, Iraqis, or Syrians.
Yes, but there are minorities of Shiite Muslim Kurds, Yazidi Kurds, and Baha'i Kurds.
The Kurds only really consider the United States to be an ally in their attempt at statehood in a relatively weak fashion. This is because the US has been the only country that has intervened in Kurdish affairs and did not repeatedly try to discriminate against them or commit genocide against them (a relatively low-bar). Additionally, the Kurds were the real winners of the Iraq War, which the US started, because it resulted in Kurdish autonomy from Iraq. However, Kurds are wary of the strong Turkish-US alliance, which impedes the independence or autonomy of Turkish Kurdistan.