Kurdish autonomy ‘linchpin’ of American approach to Iraq: Secretary Rubio

ERBIL, Kurdistan Region - The autonomy that the Kurds enjoy in Iraq is the “linchpin” of America’s approach to the country, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said on Wednesday, adding that Washington values the economic success of the Kurdistan Region. 

“The linchpin of our approach to Iraq is that autonomy that the Kurdish population has in that part of the country, and part of that is allowing them the economic lifeline that allows them to prosper and succeed,” Rubio said while testifying before the House Foreign Affairs Committee. 

His remarks followed the signing of two major energy agreements between Washington and Erbil valued at a combined $110 billion over their lifespans during Kurdistan Region Prime Minister Masrour Barzani’s visit to the US. 

The two deals, signed between the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) and US-based energy companies HKN Energy and WesternZagros, granted the American firms the rights to develop two oil and gas fields in the Kurdistan Region. 

“The Iraqi officials have expressed interest in a closer, better relationship with the United States and we have explained to them that the core to that is the respect for the companies that are operating in that country, from our country, operating within Iraq, also respect, as I said, for the autonomy of the Kurds,” Rubio stressed. 

Rubio was responding to a question from Congressman Joe Wilson, a staunch supporter of the Kurdistan Region, who reiterated to Prime Minister Barzani on Tuesday his “firm support for a strong and prosperous Kurdistan Region” and lauded the recent energy deals. 

He also condemned “growing” Iranian influence in the Iraqi government and said it “poses a great danger to the United States



The US has been one of the primary backers of the Kurdistan Region since the latter secured autonomy in the 1990s and brokered a crucial ceasefire between the Region’s largest parties - the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) - in 1998 in Washington, that ended the Kurdish civil war. 

Washington has also played an instrumental role in developing the Kurdish Peshmerga forces with financial and military support, and has led a global coalition against the Islamic State (ISIS) since the jihadists took over swathes of northern and western Iraq in 2014. It is also the primary supporter of the ongoing reforms to the Peshmerga forces. 

The US is also set to open the largest consulate general in the world in the Kurdistan Region’s capital of Erbil soon.