My hosts and I at Zakho's hippest internet cafe. |
A
trip to the world’s most in-the-way getaway...
If I stood up in a café in Mosul,
Iraq, and shouted “I am American!” about how much time might I have? “Five
seconds,” says 25 year-old Ali, politely suppressing a smile. It is a crisp morning
on the frosty Kurdish steppe and we are on a bus heading north into Turkey from
Iraq. Ali has a cool seen-it-all demeanor,
but he can’t keep his eyes off of the passing crystal pastures and occasional
rustic military base. He apologetically asks to trade for my window seat. Today,
you see, is the first day of his life outside of Iraq.
That
Ali’s first trip out of Iraq
coincided with my first trip to Iraq makes
us appreciate our few similarities. We are the same age, for example. We both like
Eminem. We dislike al Qaeda. Yet you begin to appreciate our vaster differences
when you consider what each of us was doing exactly nine years prior: Ali was pledging
allegiance to a poster of His Excellency No. 1 Chairman Saddam Hussein,
wondering whether his feigned ebullience would satisfy a Baathist teacher fishing
for excuses to snitch to the Mukhbarat on any undermining of national sentiment.
I, conversely, was with friends in St. Paul, Minnesota counter-protesting one
of the world’s many concurrent “Peace Rallies” with basketball game chants
of “free-I-ra-aq (ba-ba—ba-ba-ba) to peacenik
jeers of “fuck you.” Ian McEwan would later memorialize the London peace rally
of that same 15th of February, 2003, in his 24-hour novel
“Saturday,” so “bothered” he had been “that so many people seemed so thrilled
to be there.” Indeed, while I was hearing for the first time such
self-gratifying simplifications as “no blood for oil” and “Bush is a
war-monger,” I was guilty myself of adventurizing a cause with satisfying naivette:
this was a time, for example, when Abu Ghraib, IED, and Mission Accomplished had
not yet assumed their macabre connotations.
Nine
years later I’m concluding a vacation to one of the places in Iraq that really did greet the US Army with flowers as liberators;
and Ali is nervously anticipating the logistics of his plan to earn remittances
renovating apartments in Istanbul. Was the war in Iraq worth it? “50-50,” he
says matter-of-factly. Not as high as you’d hope to hear from a liberated Shia.
But not bad, considering the reasons for the war require a nine-year memory of
things better forgotten, and the reasons against it require waiting a day or
two until the next crowd of diners blows up.
What
exactly did we liberate in Iraq? What did the thousands of Americans who died
in Iraq accomplish? To imagine how Saddam would have handled the Arab Spring is
to begin to get an idea. And to spend a few days in northern Iraq with Kurds is
to get one with even less strain on the imagination. Yet ironically, while most
people think the war that secured Chinese oil interests in Iraq was about
securing American oil interests in Iraq, few think the war that secured
semi-autonomy for the world’s largest stateless minority was about securing
semi-autonomy for that minority, the Kurds.
Whether
the unsung cause of a free, secular, pluralistic, democratic Iraqi Kurdistan
merited a single American life is another question. But there’s a moral
evasiveness in opting for arms’ length realism, particularly when we backdate
Colin Powell’s “you break it you own it” to the decades in which Kurdistan’s
fate was up to Kissinger, the CIA, and “our kind of guy,” Saddam. It’s no
wonder Kurds shifted their hopes for a state to Turkish soil in the 1980s. But
there the cynicism of pre “Bush Doctrine” US policy was to prove borderless.
Fortunately,
where solidarity is concerned Kurdistan’s slightly absurd self-description as a
tourist hot-spot offers a convenient opportunity. Yet expressing your
international fraternalism in Kurdistan with your tourism dollars is easier
said than done: Americans will have trouble getting Kurds to accept full
payment for anything, so appreciative they are of the US intervention against
Saddam. But whatever the price of your Kurdish kidney beans or boiled peanuts, the
geopolitics and culture clashes unique to a Kurdish vacation ensure something
for everyone in the family: a close-up on US power as a force for good (and,
alas, evil), on nationalism v. internationalism, on capitalism v. tradition, on
insurgency v. counterinsurgency. Solidarity is worth this vacation deal – a
getaway that will get you away from very little.
“To be born again, first you have
to die,” sang Salman Rushdie’s Gibreel Fareeshta. And likewise to get to Iraqi
Kurdistan by land, first you have to go through one of a selection of unsavory
regions, such as Syria, Iran, or Sunni Triangle Iraq. I opted for Turkey, thus
de facto enrolling myself as a civilian consideration of an increasingly deadly
phase of the Turkish Army’s counterinsurgency against Kurdish Nationalist
rebels in the southeast, though enjoying the peculiar arrangement of being
endeared by both sides – feds and rebels – as a silly American. Indeed, even
the Turkish Airlines agent at the Istanbul airport was amused when I asked for
a ticket to Dyarbakir, the southeastern city with the largest Kurdish
population whose occasional firefights are a national preoccupation (though a
drizzle compared to the chaotic 1980s when the Kurdish resistance held sway).
But
first, I had half-a-day to evaluate Istanbul: the city of West and East, of Christian
emperors and Muslim sultanates, of imperial decline and, if you believe today’s
Turks, a glorious near return to founding father Mustafa Kamal Ataturk’s dream
of regional hegemony. Alas, this last
premonition must be unavoidable for anyone hailing from a city where even the
back-alleys are wrinkled with Neo-baroque mystique, as if the pale-faced, dark-eyed
youths getting on and off the snow-covered 1920s trams winding between the
bubbly majesty of the Hagia Sophia and the Blue Mosque were all extras in some
Turkish soap opera.
It
didn’t take long before one such extra overheard me asking for directions and eagerly
requested an elderly English-speaking Turk to translate a question to me. “He wants
to know what you, an American, think of Turkey,” the old man said, intonating that
he himself was above such self-doubts (the type who, when asking where you’re
from, finds it an affront to his accent-recognition if you answer “America”
without specifying the city). Sensing balloons of nationalistic pride in the
balance, I cited the splendor of the Ottoman Empire and the “modernizing”
influence of Turkey in the Middle East. “Yes, thank you,” he beamed.
But
having parted with Istanbul and found my seat on the flight to Diyarbakir next
to a beautiful Turkish girl about my age, I began to appreciate the
qualifications of Turkey’s modernization. On one hand, I was certainly not in
Kandahar anymore, conversing a bit flirtatiously with an uncovered, eyed-shadowed
Muslim girl who could remember the last time she had drunk Raki much more
readily than the last time she had been in a mosque. On the other, she
thoroughly debunked any allusions I had about her country’s political
liberalism. Erdogan? “Arrests anyone that goes against him. Journalists,
generals, politicians – even the lawyers that defend them.” And what of the PKK
(the Kurdistan Workers’ Party)? “They are our Taliban.”
Diyarbakir
brought yet more juxtaposition. The airport’s dank bathroom was perfumed with
pot, which was promptly offered to me by a diplomatic young man on my bus to
nearby Mardin. But this care-freeness contrasted with the familiar Turkish Army
troop carrier tanks sprinkled along Diyarbakir’s outskirts. I had seen them
before in Kabul, where I had wondered what Afghans – to whom all NATO forces
are “Americans” – must have thought of an outsider tank stamped with the red
crescent of Turkey’s Islamic flag. A most effective counter IED, perhaps.
Why
all the tanks? We should know – we supplied them. US sales of jets planes, tanks, and guns to Turkey took off at the onset of the PKK counterinsurgency in 1984,
eager as we were to satisfy a crucial Cold War ally. Of course, it doesn’t
require a Soviet bogeyman to justify a fight against Marxist PKK death squads.
But no matter how despicable one finds, for example, the now-imprisoned PKK
ringleader Abdullah Ocalac, “the Pol Pot of Kurdish politics” as Kurdophile
Christopher Hitchens put it, Turkey’s ethnic cleansing and destruction of thousands
of Kurdish villages during the Clinton years with US weapons was a crime in
which America was complicit (in the end, Clinton’s realpolitique was not quite
enough to convince the Turks to allow a northern front in 2003, to the glee of
the Sunni insurgency). One wonders what our threshold for geo-political
flexibility must be when it comes to Turkey, from our bizarre anti-opium policy
in Afghanistan to our acceptance of Turkey’s unapologetic massacre of 35
Kurdish civilians last January with American equipment, just a month after
Congress approved the sale of new attack helicopters to Ankarra.
And
yet: it is, in fact, this same Turkish military to which Turks turn when
secular republicanism is most threatened. Confused? So are the Turks, judging
by the coups-upon-coups (1960, 1971, 1980, and 1997). Fortunately the 1971 coup
brought clarity to such procedures, being the world’s first streamlined coup,
“The Coup by Memo.” The coups typically came with mass detentions and
Lincolnesque justifications: break the constitution to save the constitution. As
the Kamalist rebel in Orhan Pamuk’s 2002 novel Snow puts it when accused of torturing Islamist madrassa students,
“No one who’s even slightly Westernised can breathe freely in this country
unless they have a secular army protecting them…When we go the way of Iran, do
you really think anyone is going to remember how a porridge-hearted liberal
like you shed a few tears for the boys from the religious high school?”
Arriving
in Mardin and abruptly hastened onto a moonlit street-corner by the gruff bus
driver, I ruck-marched my way uphill from the New City toward the hostels of
the Old City. Perched above plains speckled with the green glow of minaret
lights, the cavernous residential adobes of Old Mardin seem about two blocks
wide and a mile high. Fortunately a gang of 14 year-olds observed me huffing
and eagerly offered their complimentary broken-English hostel-finding services.
I demurred when they pointed to one of the famous castle hotels. “Anything
cheaper?” They didn’t understand. “Rahees,” I said in Arabic. “Ah, oojuz!” they
said. Between my crap Arabic and Dari (which shares the Turkish word for
“thanks,” for example), their crap English, and their second-language Turkish
(they spoke Kurdish first, having been born after the Kurdish language ban
ended in 1991), we probably shared a complete vocabulary, if only we knew how
to splice it. “You know Turkish?” one asked. I recited “tashakoor” (thanks), “tuz”
(salt…slang for “bite me” in Arabic due to Arab traders dismissing Ottoman tax
collectors by claiming their entire covered cargo was “tuz,” the one tax-free
commodity) and “ka” (snow). I knew ka from Pamuk’s book. “You like Orhan
Pamuk?” I asked. “No, he is traitor. Not even live in Turkey.”
As if
on a time sensitive VIP movement, they rushed me through the Old City’s windy
stone-step allies, chirping “oojuz, oojuz!”
We passed a statue of Ataturk, and they began manically saluting. “He is
great man!” Indeed, the great chauvinist caricaturized as “Resident World
Controller” Mustapha Mond in Huxley’s Brave
New World maintains his omnipresence via statues, posters, and street names
all over Turkey for having salvaged the lost empire. With their minds now on
politics, one asked me “You like Bush?” I said yes, as I always do abroad
(whether to an al-Qaeda loving Syrian in Beirut or bearded youths in Ramallah),
but expecting a positive reaction for once, as these were Kurds. “We like Obama!
He is a black man!” I didn’t quite follow the logic. At last they delivered me to
my ideal $10 hostel, and I bid them thanks and joined in a salute to Ataturk.
As my
hamstrings cramped up ten minutes into a jog “up” Mardin the next morning, I
stopped to stretch out when I realized I was not alone. Ten little wide-eyed
faces were peering down on me from a ridge, imploring me to come play
basketball. As I emerged onto the overcrowded courtyard, you would have thought I
was Ataturk himself. Fifty little kids went ecstatic yelling all at once “hello
Mister how are you where you from what you do you are married?” I began
planning a hasty exit strategy, but now there were calls to dunk on the 7-foot
hoop. I clumsily complied, and it is barely exaggerating to say that girls fainted. Boys were tearing through notebooks to secure
paper for my signature. Paper ran out so limbs were supplied. A girl shoved a
piece of cardboard at my pencil. Signing rapidly, I asked the boys which
basketball stars they liked. “Michael Jordan!” “Allen Iverson!” I pointed at a
shy, sickly boy and said “Kevin Garnett?” and he staggered backwards in dazed
ecstasy. “Ok I gotta go!” I said. Where,
where? “To Iraq!” Wooow. But when will you return? “Someday hopefully…goodbye!”
And thus I fled for safe-haven in Iraq.
Getting into Iraqi Kurdistan is quite
easy for Americans who don’t fit the suicide-bomber profile. From a bus station
on the Turkish side of the border I waited with a few good-humored, giddy Iraqi
Kurds who broke into a shoulder-locked Kurdish jig at one point. At last, with
the sun now set, we left the station, left Turkey, and entered Iraqi
Kurdistan’s immigration control building – one of those cold, hollow, stone
buildings in which, if you’re not on top of a propane heater, you might as well
be outside. We were the only ones
waiting, and a guard brought us cigarettes and sugary tea from a table flanked
by massive posters of national president Jalal Talabani and regional president
Masoud Barzani – the Ataturk of Iraqi Kurdistan. I was summoned to an empty
inner-office. A confessional window behind my seat opened and a cigarette-smoking
man with resigned eyes studied my face. Like some grizzled investigator who had
extracted all the necessary confessions from his long-hunted fugitive and now
just wanted a man-to-man, he asked, “So. Why do you want to go to Iraq?” For
tourism, I said. Without looking up from my passport he asked, “Why did you go
to Dubai?” For a layover on business travel, I said. He put out his cigarette
and handed me my passport, Coalition of the Willing members not needing to obtain a
visa (a gracious gesture suspiciously absent in Afghanistan). “Enjoy
Kurdistan,” he said.
The
fact that Iraqi Kurdistan is drastically safer than the rest of the country is
hard to intuit when you’re actually there, driving on a dark road 60 miles from
Mosul, with death-squad execution headlines swirling through your mind. But the
earnest service taxi driver did his best to put my mind at ease, vowing that
there are no Arabs in Zakho, the ancient town near the border where I’d be
staying. He was set on me enjoying my stay, and when my first hotel selection
proved overbooked, he waited and brought me to another, refusing the full fare.
My
hotel was located at a motley round-about. Across was a 6-story abandoned
building. To the right, a juice bar storefront in the shape of a giant apple.
To the left, what remained of a Christian liquor store burned down after a
mullah’s jihad sermon just months earlier. And in the middle, a soldier at his
post. It was late, so I woke up the staffer in the smoky wood-paneled lobby.
Joseph, an Armenian who spoke neither English nor Arabic and who looked not
unlike the portraits lining the room of a melodramatic Chuck Norris-like
Barzani gazing into the Kurdish meadows, took me to my room. I was satisfied
and bid him good night. But something was troubling Joseph. He shut my
room’s door behind us, breathed a bit heavily, and then…signed me the cross.
“Christian?” he asked. I would have loved to delve into the nuances of my
Spinozist pantheism, but for the sake of the poor persecuted wretch I said yes.
Yet this caused him a bulge-eyed expression of disbelief: he held up his
crucifix necklace, as if to emphasize a bare minimum flare requirement. “Oh, sorry,”
I said, awkwardly returning his sign of the cross. Joseph tisk-tisked his
crucifix at me once more and waved good night.
The omnipresent Kurdish flag. |
I
spent the day wandering the markets and talking with Kurds in cafes. 35 year-old Karzan had me for a CIA spook,
but was eager to talk and answer any question about Kurdistan. For being members
of the largest stateless minority, and victims of multiple ethnic cleansings,
it’s amazing how little Kurds such as Karzan expected me to know or care about
their plight – a far cry from the Palestinian pre-school I had once visited,
its walls covered with finger-paints of sad-faced clouds crying tears of bombs
onto dismembered x-eyed Palestinian children. Without a hint of self-pity or
jingoism Karzan delved into Kurdish history and politics, concluding that for
all the bad the future was bright.
It
emerged that though Karzan was no friend of the PKK, he was certain that if he
tried crossing into Turkey he’d be detained. If the fate of Turkey’s largest
Kurdish-language newspaper Azadiya Welat is
any indication – six editors have fled or been jailed since its 2006 start –
Turkey has mastered the art of totalitarian due process described so poignantly
in Arthur Koestler’s Soviet show trial novel Darkness at Noon, where no crime is self-evident: “Perhaps he had
laid a wreath on the wrong grave…” No comrade could be sure of his innocence
when the commissars were free “to dot the i’s.” Indeed, even within the borders
of the great modernizing NATO ally and EU-candidate Turkey, to be accused of
writing one of the banned Kurdish letters x, w, or q is enough. Forget Saddam: to have given Kurds an
alternative from this is not nothing.
That
night I went to an internet café – a social mainstay for Zakho youths. I chatted
with six of them over tea and obligatory cigarettes, channeling everything
through Warhin, the sole English speaker among them. They wanted to see my
facebook profile, so I pulled up my feed, which included someone’s Valentine’s
Day post. Warhin rendered the council’s Islamic verdict: “This is a foolish
holiday.” Yes, I said. As I flipped through my photos I got a generally warm
reaction of “wow, this is America?” They were not quite as impressed by the
several photos including alcoholic beverages (though eager to “friend” me nonetheless).
This reminded me to ask them what they thought of the “youths” who had
destroyed Zakho’s liquor stores month earlier, as I had earlier talked to a
young Christian running his parents’ pizza store who had confided that he was
still afraid. The boys pulled up a youtube video of the chaos: lots of “allahu
akbar” and smoke and camera shaking. “Idiots,” said Warhin. They were all
embarrassed, but as usual in the Middle East, they also suspected a conspiracy.
Exiting Iraq, as they say, is
difficult. All seemed to be going well when I arrived at the cross-border taxi
station. But the taxi needed three, and I was alone. I tried joining a threesome in another taxi,
but obscure common law precedents and corollaries were recited. The whole lot
reaked of monopolistic collusion and trickery. After an hour our foursome was
complete: a Baghdad woman, her grandmother, and a Turk. Having tightly squeezed
in our cargo, we were notified of a taxi reassignment. The only consolation was
that our new taxi driver was a young slick-haired, squirrely, earnest boy named
Abo. Between sprinting our passports in and out of the office and tripping on
curbs he enjoyed moments of calm in the driver’s seat marked by turning up the
Kurdish music radio and ensuring that the photos of himself and a generic
Hallmark baby above the rearview mirror stayed well-taped. After several
comedic moments when everyone was ready except the person sent to look for the
person who hadn’t been ready, we set off for Turkey.
But
to our disgust, the entire bridge to Turkey was full of cars. We would wait for nearly
two hours to go half a mile. Abo passed the time throwing his candy wrappers
into the polluted river, probably to wind up in some Syrian revolutionary’s
mouth as he smuggled in weapons from Turkey downstream. Indeed, with the
revolution in full-force, the long border wait was likely a result of special
attention to the Syrian refugee problem. The Turks had offered to stave off the
problem a month earlier by establishing a humanitarian corridor inside Syria,
but the US said no. One can believe that the Syrian uprising had nothing to do
with the 2005 Lebanese intifada. And one can believe that the 2005 intifada had
nothing to do with our intervention in Iraq. But can anyone look at this region
and argue that disallowing intervention is any less imperial than ordering it?
At last I was back in Turkey, and soon enough on that bus with Ali. I thought of Gen. Petraeus’ cryptic riddle during the 2007 surge years of the war in Iraq: “tell me how this ends.” 50-50 didn’t seem a good enough ending. But then again, it never does end. Perhaps good endings lie in the appreciation of the chance for new beginnings, the hope that the status quo is never the end. If that’s true, then Ali and Karzan are off to a good start. As for Americans, both kinds of February 15th revolutionaries might admit that an explanation of starts and endings in Kurdistan is easier chanted than understood. And as guardians of the oldest revolution of one of the youngest nations, they might consider visiting one of the oldest nations with a revolution only just begun.