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...

Gas Flows Again: Dana Gas Restarts Khor Mor gas field After War Disruption

Production resumes in Iraq’s Kurdistan Region after weeks of shutdown linked to U.S.–Iran escalation, easing pressure on electricity supply.

Kurdish Policy Analysis / SULAIMANI, Iraq 

SULAIMANI, Iraq — Dana Gas said on Monday it had resumed operations at the Khor Mor gas field in Iraq’s Kurdistan Region, following more than a month of disruption triggered by regional conflict involving the United States and Iran.

The Emirati energy firm announced “the resumption of production” at the facility after a period of intermittent shutdowns, according to a statement published via the Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange.

Operations at Khor Mor — a critical energy hub supplying the majority of the Kurdistan Region’s power stations — had been halted on February 28 as tensions escalated into open confrontation, prompting authorities to suspend natural gas flows.

The Kurdistan Regional Government’s ministries of electricity and natural resources said at the time that the shutdown was necessary due to “extraordinary circumstances” and ongoing security risks, emphasizing the need to protect personnel working at the site.

The Khor Mor complex has long been considered a strategic asset for the region’s energy stability, but it has also been a frequent target of attacks in recent years, with Iraqi officials attributing strikes to Iran-aligned armed groups.

The resumption of production is expected to help stabilize electricity generation across the Kurdistan Region, where power supply has been strained by both conflict-related disruptions and infrastructure vulnerabilities.

#Kurdistan #Iraq #EnergyCrisis #Gas #DanaGas #MiddleEast #Geopolitics #Iran #US #Breaking


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