2012-09-27 18:34:19
Φωτογραφία για Πάρτε το Κουρδιστάν με τη βούλα των The New York Times
The New World

By FRANK JACOBS and PARAG KHANNA

IT has been just over 20 years since the collapse of the Soviet Union and the last great additions to the world’s list of independent nations. As Russia’s satellite republics staggered onto the global stage, one could be forgiven for thinking that this was it: the end of history, the final major release of static energy in a system now moving very close to equilibrium. A few have joined the club since — Eritrea, East Timor, the former Yugoslavian states, among others — but by the beginning of the 21st century, the world map seemed pretty much complete.

Now, though, we appear on the brink of yet another nation-state baby boom. This time, the new countries will not be the product of a single political change or conflict, as was the post-Soviet proliferation, nor will they be confined to a specific region. If anything, they are linked by a single, undeniable fact: history chews up borders with the same purposeless determination that geology does, as seaside villas slide off eroding coastal cliffs. Here is a map of what could possibly be the world’s newest international borders.


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ROTATE

ROTATE

AFRICA

ALGERIA

MOROCCO

WESTERN

SAHARA

Azawad

MALI

ZAMBIA

BELGIUM

IRAQ

IRAN

KURDISTAN

SYRIA

TURKEY

AZERBAIJAN

BAHRAIN

SAUDI

ARABIA

YEMEN

SOMALIA

REPUBLIC OF

CONGO

DEMOCRATIC

REPUBLIC OF

CONGO

An Independent Kurdistan

To Iran’s west, Iraq remains on the brink as American forces withdraw and the political center in Baghdad remains fragile. As Syria descends into civil war, the entire post- World War I map of the Middle East may need to be redrawn. Rarely in the Kurds’ 3,000-year history has the possibility of an independent Kurdish homeland been closer than today. The Kurdistan Regional Government of northern Iraq is by far the country’s most stable sector, flying its own flag and cutting energy and infrastructure deals on its own with Exxon and Turkish firms.
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