Washington Kurdish Institute
After the fall of al Ba’ath party led by the former dictator Saddam Hussien in 2003, the Kurds of Iraq were the vital players in the establishment of the new Iraq. In 2005, alongside all the Shiite and some Sunni Arab parties, the Kurds voted in favor of the new Iraqi constitution. The new Iraqi constitution was the hope for the Kurds to live peacefully in a country that has committed genocides and ethnic cleansing against them. However, 15 years later, the articles of the constitution that would solve a century of the Kurdish struggle in Iraq, were never implemented by different Iraqi cabinets. The former Iraqi governments failed to deliver what the constitution calls for including solving the issue of the Arabization on the Kurdish lands, allocating federal budget to the Kurdistan region, the oil share revenues, and treating the Peshmerga forces as the rest of the forces in Iraq.
On May 7, 2020, a new Iraqi cabinet was formed headed by Prime Minister Mustafa al Kadhemi who was supported and voted for by the Kurdish factions in the Iraqi Parliament. Kadhemi vowed to solve the outstanding issues between the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) and the central government.
The Kurdistan Region is also facing threats by the regional powers including from Turkey and Iran. Turkey has started a new invasion into the region using the fight against the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) as an excuse to establish a similar zone they did in Syria. From the east, Iran has mobilized troops inside the region to “fight” the Iranian Kurdish opposition groups.
The panel discussed how the KRG can overcome the economic and security challenges and how the new Prime Minister Kademi pursue the Kurds and establish trust between both sides. Furthermore, the speakers will also lay out recommendations for the Iraqi government and the KRG to work together and achieve common goals amid threats facing both sides.
Speakers:
Najmaldin Karim– President of the WKI & Former Governor of Kirkuk Province- Iraq. Click HERE for remarks by Dr. Kairm
Michael Gunter– Professor of political science at Tennessee Technological University. Click HERE for remarks by Prof. Gunter
Brendan O’Leary– Lauder Professor of Political Science, University of Pennsylvania. Click HERE for remarks by Prof. O’leary
Peter Galbraith– Former US Ambassador to Croatia & Assistant Secretary General of the United Nations in Afghanistan. Click HERE for remarks by Amb. Galbraith

Dr. Michael M. Gunter is a professor of political science at Tennessee Technological University in Cookeville, Tennessee. He also is the Secretary-General of the EU Turkey Civic Commission (EUTCC) headquartered in Brussels. In the past he taught courses for many years during the summer at the International University in Vienna, as well as courses on Kurdish and Middle Eastern politics, among others, for the U.S. Government Areas Studies Program and U.S. Department of State Foreign Service Institute in Washington, D.C. Dr. Gunter is the author of 10 critically praised scholarly books on the Kurdish question, and editor or co-editor of five more books on the Kurds, among others. He has also published numerous scholarly articles on the Kurds and many other issues in such leading scholarly periodicals as the Middle East Journal, Middle East Policy, Middle East Quarterly, Critique: Critical Middle Eastern Studies, Orient, Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs, Maghreb Review, American Journal of International Law, International Organization, World Affairs, Journal of International Affairs (Columbia University), Read more.



