Iraq’s New Government Is a Temporary Truce, Not a Strategic Settlement

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  Baghdad’s latest cabinet formation reveals a state still trapped between militia power, oil dependency, Kurdish fragmentation, and the geopolitical collision between Washington and Tehran. By Dr. Pshtiwan Faraj | Sulaimani, Iraq | 13 May 2026 — Kurdish Policy Analysis After six months of political paralysis, Iraq finally has a government. Yet the formation of Prime Minister Ali al-Zaidi’s cabinet may say less about political stabilization than about the inability of Iraq’s competing factions to sustain prolonged deadlock. The parliamentary approval of Zaidi’s government this week ended one of the country’s longest post-election crises in recent years. But the structure of the new cabinet — incomplete, contested, and heavily shaped by factional bargaining — reveals an Iraqi state still fundamentally unable to resolve its core strategic contradictions. The most important fact about Iraq’s new government is not that it was formed. It is that it emerged without resolving the dis...

The Kurdistan Region Is Becoming a Quiet Frontline in Iran’s Regional Conflict

 Rising tensions reveal Kurdistan’s growing role in broader geopolitical struggles. Security developments suggest the Kurdistan Region is becoming increasingly exposed to regional conflict dynamics.


Kurdish Policy Analysis While often seen as a relatively stable region, Iraqi Kurdistan is increasingly becoming a strategic frontline in regional conflicts involving Iran and its adversaries.

Kurdish discussions highlight a growing pattern of security incidents, including drone activity, militia presence, and cross-border tensions. These developments suggest that the region is being drawn into a wider geopolitical confrontation.

Iran’s concerns about opposition groups operating near its borders have led to repeated pressure on Kurdish authorities. Meanwhile, international actors maintain a presence in the region, further complicating the security landscape.

The result is a fragile balance: Kurdistan must navigate between powerful regional forces while maintaining internal stability.

Recent security reports covered by Shafaq News and Kurdish-language discussions on Nuser.net indicate a rise in drone activity and cross-border tensions near the Iran–Iraq frontier.

Iran has repeatedly expressed concerns about opposition groups operating in areas close to its borders, prompting warnings and occasional military responses. Kurdish authorities, meanwhile, face increasing pressure to balance internal stability with external demands.

While the Kurdistan Region has long been considered relatively stable compared to the rest of Iraq, these developments suggest a gradual shift. The region is becoming more directly exposed to the broader confrontation between Iran and its regional rivals.

Kurdistan is evolving from a buffer zone into an active geopolitical space, where regional conflicts are beginning to intersect. Kurdistan’s strategic location is turning it into a geopolitical buffer zone—one that may become increasingly unstable if tensions escalate.


#Iran #Kurdistan #Security

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