And us. We armed them, backed them, allied with them; encouraged and supported them to fight for our aims as well so we could minimise our own military "footprint" and personnel deaths.
Does honour mean anything or does it not? I mean, this thread is almost entirely people talking about ethics. It's a bit late to suddenly act like realpolitik is all that counts.
Regardless of honor or realpolitik, I think this topic was grossly oversimplified. Here is how things went in Iraq, and you may find some interest in this.
This is a story about Kurds in Iraq. There was an autonomous region in Iraq, in the north of the country, where many Kurds lived. The region had two major political factions - in essence, two local families. The Barazani and Talabani families.
en.wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
The Barazani family was more prone to outright conflict, militant and independent. Their powerbase is in Erbil. It became the capital of the autonomous region.
The Talabani family was more prone to negotiations and dealings with the Iraqi central government and Iran. Their powerbase is in Sulemayba.
Iraq’s first Kurdish president, Jalal Talabani, laid to rest in hometown near Sulaymaniyah - Anadolu Ajansı
www.aa.com.tr
The leader of the Barazani family was the president of the autonomous region in recent years, while the leader of the Talabani family was the ceremonial president of Iraq, placed there by the Americans. The Barazani leader in Erbil declared a referendum for Kurdish independence -
en.wikipedia.org
Which was a blow to the Talabani family, whose power was also in the autonomous region, but they were cooperating with the Iraqi government. They reluctantly agreed to the referendum, which passed with overwhelming support. They even freed Kirkuk, which was occupied by ISIS - and wasn't officially a part of the autonomous region. Kirkuk is home to oil fields and distillation facilities, which are a great source of income.
However the Talabani family wouldn't forget this treachery. The rival family, Barazani, positioned itself as the leader of an independent Kurdistan, and robbed them of any political power in their home. Jalal Talabani died in a German hospital in October 3rd, which was when the Barazani family decided to strike. It engineered a coup, by which they cooperated with Sulemayni (Iran's top general, responsible for many dark dealings in the Shiite crescent).
When the Iraqi shiite forces moved to occupy Kirkuk on the 16th, the Talabani family ordered its soldiers to abandon the city and retreat. Left dazed and confused, the Barazani forces had to retreat as well, when half of their own previously united forces retreated. Iraq took Kirkuk without a single shot fired.
Turkmen living in Kirkuk and surroundings resented how the Kurds took the city for themselves despite that it wasn't majority Kurdish. They ran the rest of the Kurdish militia out of the city, and had some revenge killings as well.
The fall of Kirkuk reflects the struggle to control Iraq after the defeat of IS, says Michael Knights.
www.bbc.com
BAGHDAD (AP) — Iraq's ethnically-mixed and contested city of Kirkuk was on a nighttime curfew on Tuesday after clashes erupted there the previous night between Kurds and Turkmen amid preparations for the controversial Kurdish independence referendum next week, a local Turkmen official said. The...
apnews.com
Here is the son of Jalal saying that the referendum was a "colossal mistake".
Trump didn't intervene in this squabble between the Kurdish families. Why would anyone? Kurdistan was divided in Iraq. If you supported either side, you alienated the other. If he had supported the independent side, he would have weakened Iraq and drew ire from both Iran and Turkey (a NATO ally). The other option was an open support for Iran. Both were bad choices. The best choice was to not intervene at all. Why would you support this group if it can't even remain united with itself.
TL;DR The Kurds aren't one people, one polity. There is internal politics at play, and only a fool would lodge themselves into it. They proved that they are not independent, not unified, and not trustworthy. Good choice.