搜索关注在线英语听力室公众号:tingroom,领取免费英语资料大礼包。
(单词翻译)
Instability in Iraq Fuels Kurdish Independence Move
LONDON —
The president of Iraq’s Kurdistan Regional Government has told VOA the situation in the country has increased the urgency of creating an independent Kurdish state.
Peshmerga fighters from the Kurdish autonomous1 region have responded to territorial2 gains by Sunni militants4 with moves of their own, taking the disputed city of Kirkuk, and surrounding areas.
Now, Iraqi Kurdistan regional President Massoud Barzani told VOA this was the time to create a Kurdish state.
“This is a natural right that must be achieved. Independence must be achieved. I believe now the conditions are also favorable for independence,” he said.
The United States continues to oppose Kurdish independence. "No change of policy here. We've said that a unified5 Iraq is the strongest Iraq," said State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf.
But Kurdish leaders have a strategy designed to make independence palatable7 to the United States.
Speaking via Skype, Bill Park of London’s King’s College said, "They want to present themselves as not so much declaring independence from a functioning, ongoing8 Iraqi state, but being forced into independence as a consequence of the chaos9 around them."
That was clear in Barzani’s interview with VOA's Persian Service.
“The situation is chaotic10 and scary. Now along a 1,050-kilometer border we face terrorists and radical11 groups and people who are unknown to us. This is a new situation. I doubt if Iraq will go back to what it was,” he said.
And Barzani said the past strong opposition12 to Kurdish independence was no more.
“We have discussed this with the United States, with all sides, and with the Europeans. In the past, reaction was severe, but we don’t see that anymore,” he said.
Bill Park said still, Barzani had to be careful not to alienate13 his old friends in Washington, new friends in Turkey and Iran, and even some of his own people.
“It is a kind of high risk strategy, but it’s a lot less risky14 now than it’s ever been in the past,” he said.
Indeed, many experts believe that, whatever happens in Kurdistan, Iraq will never be as it was before the Sunni militants took over large areas in the west and center of the country.
American political consultant15 Sam Patten has advised Iraqi Kurds and moderate Sunnis and spoke6 to Alhurra television.
“The relationship that existed until now between Baghdad and the regions will never be the same," he said. "The regions that are no longer under Baghdad’s control are going to have to enjoy some degree of autonomy that they haven’t seen before,” said Patten.
The militant3 Sunni fighters now call themselves the Islamic State. Whether they can make that stick remains16 to be seen, but they may have created the opportunity for Kurds to fulfill17 their long held dream of statehood, and placed the future of the Iraqi state in question.
本文本内容来源于互联网抓取和网友提交,仅供参考,部分栏目没有内容,如果您有更合适的内容,欢迎 点击提交 分享给大家。