Federal and problematic relationship between the center and the region in Iraq

Authors

  • أ.م.د.ابتسام محمد عبد

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.30907/jj.v0i51.104

Abstract

The US invasion of Iraq in 2003 unleashed the repressed national aspirations of the Kurdish people. After the colonial powers, especially Britain, failed to establish a homeland of scattered Kurds in Iraq, Turkey, Syria and Iran, Iraq's Kurds managed to establish a semi-independent state in the north of the country Which lasted decades against the central authority in Baghdad in protest against what they call the forced integration of Kurds in the Iraqi state, and to obtain more rights and privileges as partners in this country. The federal region in the Kurdistan region of Iraq has become a reality, and it is eager not to strengthen its authority in return for the authority of the central government, but to annex other areas inhabited by a Kurdish majority, especially the oil-rich province of Kirkuk, to its control, considering that its wealth will form the most powerful financial base on which to rely. The Kurdish state that it hopes will be established in the future.

Published

2019-02-20

How to Cite

Federal and problematic relationship between the center and the region in Iraq. (2019). Political Sciences Journal, 51, 149-180. https://doi.org/10.30907/jj.v0i51.104

Publication Dates