No, Sunnis and Shiites live together in most of the country. They will not give up their land and move to a different part of the country because their land now belongs to the other group.
2007-04-30 04:51:10
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answer #1
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answered by gerafalop 7
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If the U. S. pulls out of Iraq in the previous installation a good looking good authorities there, I anticipate accurate right here: both Iran or Turkey will invade for his or her very own political causes first, accompanied right now through the different, then Syria after which Saudi Arabia will annex the impartial Zone. Iran will occupy interior the south seizing the provinces of Al-Basrah, Al-Muthanna, An-Najaf, Al-Qadisiyah, Dhi Qar, Maysan, Karbala, Babal, Wasit, Diyala and the city of Baghdad. Turkey will occupy from the north seizing the provinces of Dahuk, Irbil, Ninawa, At-Tamim, Sulaymaniyah, Salahad-Din and that element of Al-Anbar north of the Euphrates River to the outskirts of Baghdad. The Syrians will grab something else of Al-Anbar. all facets will scrupulously stay away from combating one yet another with Iran and Syria being the most careful to stay away from the Turks. interior the destiny, if the Turks take a more advantageous 'enlightened' view of issues, they are going to enable the Kurds to have an self reliant 'state' interior of a 'more advantageous Turkey' enjoyable their want for self decision. As for something else Iran, Saudi Arabia and Syria will in simple terms take in the territory and human beings into their respective states and which will be that. truly, regardless of if the U. S. would not pull out this may ensue: US Forces might want to/might want to easily hollow up in our garrisons and make threatening noises till the dirt settles..... The Turks are our allies, the Syrians do not want to wrestle us and the saber damn on the opposite, neither does Iran.
2016-11-23 17:09:39
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answer #2
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answered by okamura 4
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Partition is a logical way to resolve the ethinic conflict in Iraq, though, it'd involve a great deal of 'injustice' itself, as peoples are officially forced out of thier homes or off thier land and into whichever reservation thier religion or ethnicity consigns them too. Of course, that's being done via murder and intimidation, now, just with less clearly-defined boundries.
It might be easier on the Kurds, since the north is not as heavily integrated, outside Kirkuk, as are other parts of the country. However, anything resembling an independent Kurdistan is going to cause trouble for Turkey and Iran, who have thier own Kurdish minorities with dreams of sepratism.
2007-04-30 05:12:04
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answer #3
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answered by B.Kevorkian 7
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I doubt this will work as there has been jealousies and inner sect violence within their structure for centuries. Tough it may be a viable solution on paper I don't think this strategy will be effective.
2007-04-30 04:54:05
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answer #4
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answered by Don W 6
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I really don't know,but the Serbs aren't happy about giving up Kosovo either. They claim it's theirs historically.
2007-04-30 04:54:00
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answer #5
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answered by chickyboom 3
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