Trump and Xi Jingping summit: How are the United States and China redefining their relationship?

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As tensions over trade, Taiwan, technology, and global influence intensify, the meeting between Donald Trump and Xi Jinping may determine the future balance of power between Washington and Beijing. By Dr. Pshtiwan Faraj | Sulaimani, Iraq | 13 May 2026 — Kurdish Policy Analysis "We don't have permanent allies and we don't have permanent enemies, only our interests are permanent, and we have to follow them." – Henry John Temple. The root of the current Strait of Hormuz tensions is not only about shipping routes or oil prices, but also about the final collapse of the historical US concept towards Beijing. However, the 2025 National Security Strategy, released by the White House in November, says this was a historic mistake because China used the assets it accumulated to strengthen itself and compete with the West, not to become their partner. For many years, the United States alone maintained maritime security; The fifth US ship in Manama, Bahrain, worked only to keep o...

Kurdish Blocs Unite for Presidential Session, KDP Stands Apart

 Kurdish Majority Moves to Elect Iraq’s President as KDP Boycotts Key Parliamentary Session. PUK-led blocs confirm attendance for April 11 vote, while KDP’s withdrawal reshapes Kurdish unity but fails to block quorum


(Kurdish Policy Analysis )

Kurdish PUK media has reported that the majority of Kurdish blocs have confirmed their participation in the parliamentary session scheduled for Saturday, 11 April 2026, to elect the President of the Republic, with the exception of one bloc.


According to a well-informed political source cited by the Al-Masra website, the Kurdish blocs—namely the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan with 17 seats, the Al-Mawqif Movement with 5 seats, the New Generation Movement with 3 seats, the Kurdistan Islamic Union with 4 seats, and the Kurdistan Justice Group with 1 seat—have agreed to attend the presidential election session. However, members of the Kurdistan Democratic Party have declined to participate, breaking with the broader Kurdish consensus.

The source noted that the KDP holds 26 seats in parliament, while the remaining Kurdish blocs collectively hold 30 seats, constituting a Kurdish majority within the legislature. It was further indicated that most parliamentary blocs have confirmed their attendance at Saturday’s session, and that the KDP’s boycott will not affect the quorum required for the session in which the presidential election is to be decided.

The source added that the majority of blocs in the Iraqi parliament—particularly the Kurdish blocs—recognise the scale of the challenges facing the country, underscoring the need to expedite the resolution of outstanding constitutional matters, foremost among them the positions of President and Prime Minister.

#Iraq #Kurdistan #PUK #KDP #IraqiPolitics #Parliament #PresidentialElection #Baghdad #KurdishPolitics #MiddleEast

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