HOW THE ABANDONED KURDS LOST OUT

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP81M00980R002000090053-3
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 16, 2016
Document Release Date: 
October 4, 2004
Sequence Number: 
53
Case Number: 
Content Type: 
NSPR
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PDF icon CIA-RDP81M00980R002000090053-3.pdf97.95 KB
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Approved For Release EAAiMN&XU8 AToReO2OO Jack Anderson How the Abandoned Kurds' L opt but In an ordinary brick house' in the the Kurds. They fought the Iraqis to a Washington suburbs, the proud and standstill. dauntless leader of a fierce mountain But in March, 1975,' the shah people spends his days visiting with abruptly announced he had patched friends and laboring to learn the Eng- up his differences with Iraq. Over- lish language. Every few weeks, he vi- night, American support for the Kurds sits the Mayo Clinic for treatment for dried up, and, without weapons, the the cancer that is ravaging his lungs. mountain men were overpowered, He is Gen. Mustafa Barzani, the griz- Thousands were killed or wounded; zled, 75-year-old commander-in-exile of thousands more fled .into Iran as refu- the Kurds, who used to roam the rug- gees. ged mountains where Iran, Iraq, Tur- Gen. Barzani flew to the United key, Syria and the.Soviet Union come States to plead with Nixon and Kissin- together. Now, most of his people have ger for humanitarian help for his be- been deported in small groups. to the leaguered people. The American lead- deserts of Iraq and dispersed through- ers, who had abandoned him on the out remote regions of Iran. battlefield, refused to acknowledge The unfortunate tribesmen became any obligation. They ignored his ap- pawns on Henry Kissinger's chess- peals. board in 1972. They were manipulated Our sources say they refused assis- and then abandoned. Today, the pow- tance in deference again to the shah, ers-that-be in Washington act as if they who distrusts the Kurds and prefers to would like the Kurds to fade away. keep them subjugated. He has tried to The Kurds lost out because of conceal, meanwhile, the ruthless man- Washington's strange love affair with ner in which he exploited them. the shah of Iran. In the early 1970s, he Eventually, a token 700 Kurdish ref- was embroiled in border and naviga- ugees were admitted to-the United tion disputes with Iraq, and he felt States. Kurdish leaders were in- threatened by Iraq's close relation- structed to keep quiet about even this ships with the Soviet Union. He minor gesture. Like the shah, the thought it strategically wise, there- United States doesn't want to advertise fore, to stir up the ancient, simmering its crass intrigues in the Iraqi high- struggle between the Kurds and the lands. Iraqis. The Kurds who arrived in the In May, 1972, the shah pressed Kis- United States were granted no special singer and his boss, Richard Nixon, to privileges. They were sponsored by in- arm the Kurds against the Iraqis. De- ternational refugee organizations, spite CIA resistance, the White House which gave them personal loans to pay pair agreed to the shah's scheme. Fol- their air fares and expenses. Some lowing orders, the CIA smuggled $16 were thrown into resettlement camps million worth of untraceable Chinese in San Diego. Later, they were actually and Soviet weapons through Iran to asked to pay for their "care and main- tenance" at the camps. Although the Kurdish refugees, for the -most part, are educated tmd skilled, many had difficulty with the Englisb language and had to take low paying jobs. Dozens of them remaill unemployed. Nevertheless, they ear* receiving dun letters from their spon- soring organizations. One letter from the Tolstoy Founda- tion, for example, warns a refugee that non-payment of his loan "may cause you difficulties In your permanent residence in this country." The refugees from other U.S. for- eign policy flops, on the other hand, are treated royally. Over $1.3 billion has been lavished on Cuban refugees since 1961. And some $455 million, ac- cording to congressional sources, has been spent to help Indochinese refu- gees resettle in this country. For the Kurds, the State Department reached into its Petty cash and scraped up a paltry $150,000, which was used to help finance the United Nations Kur- dish refugee program. Congressional leaders, meanwhile, have Ignored the Kurds' plea for funds to help them resettle. As part of his daily routine, Gen. Barzani musters his energy to dictate,a few letters asking for help. Twice he has written to President Carter. Once, he received a short response from the National Security Council advising him to talk to the State Department. On another occasion, he received a twoesentence note from a presidential aide who assured the general that his "interest" in the Kurdish problem ?"is Approved For Release 2004/10/12 : CIA-RDP81 M00980R002000090053-3