Trump and Xi Jingping summit: How are the United States and China redefining their relationship?
By Dr. Pshtiwan Faraj, SULAIMANI, Kurdish Policy Analysis, April 24, 2026
The next battlefield in America's confrontation with Iran may not lie inside Iran itself. It may be Iraq.
As military tensions escalate between Washington, Israel, and Tehran, Iraq is once again being pulled toward the center of a conflict it can neither control nor escape. The country's Shiite militias, Kurdish territories, and fragile political institutions now sit directly in the path of regional escalation.
Baghdad has spent years attempting to balance its strategic partnership with the United States against its deep political and economic ties to Iran. That balancing act is rapidly becoming impossible.
Washington has sharply increased pressure on Iraq to curb Iranian-backed militias, while Tehran continues to use Iraqi territory as both a logistical corridor and a strategic buffer. The result is a sovereignty crisis unfolding in real time.
The Kurdistan Region has once again become the most exposed part of Iraq.
Iranian missile and drone strikes have repeatedly targeted Iranian Kurdish opposition groups sheltering in Iraqi Kurdistan. Despite its close partnership with the West, Erbil remains dangerously underprotected, lacking independent air defense capabilities. Kurdish leaders have privately expressed frustration over Western reluctance to provide stronger security guarantees.
For the Kurds, geography remains both destiny and curse.
The greatest immediate threat may come from Iraq's Iranian-backed armed groups.
Unlike Hezbollah or the Houthis, Iraqi militias operate inside a state that is nominally allied with Washington. Any major attack on American personnel could force direct US retaliation on Iraqi soil, potentially igniting a wider confrontation between Baghdad, Tehran, and Washington.
That would place Iraq in the impossible position of hosting both the trigger and the response.
Iraq is the hinge of the Middle East.
It connects Iran to Syria and Lebanon, hosts thousands of American personnel, and borders the Gulf's most vital energy routes. A breakdown in Iraq would reverberate across global oil markets, regional security architectures, and the future of American influence in the Middle East.
For the Kurdistan Region, the stakes are existential.
A wider US-Iran confrontation inside Iraq would place Kurdish cities, infrastructure, and political institutions under extraordinary pressure. Yet it could also elevate Erbil's strategic importance as Washington searches for reliable partners in an increasingly unstable landscape.
That opportunity would come at a significant cost.
History has a habit of returning to Iraq.
What begins as a war with Iran could easily become a struggle over Iraq itself. And if that happens, Kurdistan will once again find itself on the front line of a conflict shaped far beyond its borders.
In the Middle East, battlefields are rarely chosen by those who must endure them.
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