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Kurdish
Opposition in Iraq
The Kurdish Democratic Party (KDP) and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan
(PUK) are the two major Kurdish opposition parties operating within
northern Iraq. The two groups are composed of about 40,000 troops, making
them the largest armed group opposed to Saddam Hussein.
A longtime
target of oppression by Saddam's government, both parties support regime
change in Iraq. Their current area of operation, relatively protected
by no-fly zones in Northern Iraq, has left them in a better position
in a possible fight against Baghdad. Both parties want to know who would
take Saddam's place before they will agree to help.
The KDP,
the larger of the two groups, was established in 1946 under the leadership
of Mustafa Barzani, a prominent Kurdish leader.
The PUK
was created in 1975 after a failed Kurdish rebellion in Iraq. Jalal
Talabani, a KDP leader, broke away to form a party that would "provide
a new direction for Kurdish resistance and society."
Since the
split, both groups have competed with one another; regional rivals such
as Turkey, Iraq, and Iran have exacerbated this rivalry by forming coalitions
with the different factions to keep them at odds with one another.
Both groups
were brought together under the Iraqi National Congress (link to Iraq
National Congress profile), an alliance formed with the help of the
United States as an opposition party to Saddam Hussein following the
Gulf War.
In 1994,
internal rifts between factions split the KDP from the Iraqi National
Congress, leading to violent clashes between the groups. The U.S. has
made repeated efforts to mend the rifts between the parties, and although
they now coexist peacefully, many differences remain.
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By Emily Birr, Online NewsHour
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