@Duchess
Please note I'm not even going near the whole american insurrection thingie. That is worse than a RAR with triple !!!
I'm as usual nitpicking faults here, in this case regarding the iraqi kurds.
The Duchess of Zeon wrote:..., Bean,...
Bean? Is that some sort of insult? *goes googling* Nope couldn't find anything unless its some weird reference to its latin name... Is it some kind of beancounter reference? Hmm never seen that before, could someone explain?
The Duchess of Zeon wrote:No, I'm referring to the fact, Bean, that during the entire period you mention, Iraq was never able to establish lawful authority over the rural areas of the upper Zagros range.
*sigh* how could you miss this: "(ie not remote mountain villages with no economical importance)" I only wrote it about four times.
Its also a complete red herring in context since it has nothing to do with guns, but instead has everything to do with the fighting spirit and identity of the kurds + geographical advantages. It has nothing to do with gun control since except during insurgency crack downs the kurds were allowed/able to buy rifles etc legally on the open market. The second reason its a red herring is that outside of the regions that the governement deemed 'not worth it' they were defeated. The third reason why its a red herring is that the kurdish identity is divided over three countries and some disporia, meaning that they are almost always getting supplies and weapons from their brethren across the border. Something which has proven much more useful than any old stock of antiquated guns.
Its like saying that the taliban/al quaida is a successful insurgency versus the Afghani gov because they hide in the Afghani mountains and can get supplies through the pakistan border.
Then a small reminder what you actually said:
"an area larger than a half-dozen Luxembourgs for twenty years without help "
so with that in mind lets go through your new statement
" during the entire period you mention, Iraq was never able to establish lawful authority over the rural areas of the upper Zagros range. "
lets start from the back and correct the mistakes here. I'm pretty sure you know about these and just chose to gloss over them to make your argument coherent.
1) the Zagros range is mostly in Iran
2) the upper Zagros range is definately in Iran
3) the mountaineous parts you are trying to refer to is probably less than 30%-40% of iraqi kurdistan and it probably countains less than 5-10% of its population, for instance operation Comfort came into effect because it was impossible for all of those millions of kurds to flee up into the mountains.
4) during the time period I mention Iraq did establish lawful authority in a haphazard way every now and then when the regional governor got orders about it, the kurds then ran away and came back if and when the regional governor didn't care anymore, in no instance where an economic interest existed did the kurds remain in power or in "lawful authority", for instance during late saddam regime there were border crossings between Iraq+Iran with gov troops from both sides to prevent kurds to use them and that was in the heart of kurdish "controlled" Zagros
5) "without help" is completely untrue, the iraqi kurds received lots of help, first and foremost from other kurds across borders, but also from kurdish diaspora around the world, then also from foreign powers interested in a weaker iraqi gov
6) Luxembourg is really small but still... twenty would be, hmm some ~50 000km2? Now the iraqi kurds didn't hold on to that much since the current Iraqi Kurdistan contains about ~40 000km2 and the whole of iraqi kurdistan was never under complete control while Saddam was in power. Look at these two images:
Check out where Kirkurk and Mosul are on those maps.
The Duchess of Zeon wrote:All you can bleat about is Kirkuk and the other i]cities[/i] of Kurdistan repeatedly falling to the Baathist forces.
Nope, I was saying that before the UN resolution the kurds were losing the insurrection - badly. They couldn't fight the gunships and tanks of the loyalists.
It was why there was such a huge outcry from the global community.
If it hadn't been for the UN resolution and Comfort I+II there would have been another curbstomp.
The Duchess of Zeon wrote:And the Kurds were never fully disarmed after the initial rebellion that started with just old British and Ottoman rifles, and always had this area to fall back into.
You do realise that this actually goes against your argument right? But even given that, its not even relevant since they also had stuff like close supply of kalashnikovs etc especially during the iran/iraq buildup and conflict.
So nope, they had better stuff than that ever since WWII onwards.
Heck they even had some artillery pieces which they got from the turkish kurds.