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...

How Kurdish Groups Became Central to US Strategic Thinking on Iran

Washington increasingly views Kurdish actors as part of its broader pressure framework against Tehran

Kurds as a US Strategic Tool Against Iran: Inside Washington’s Shifting Narrative. New analysis highlights how Kurdish groups in Iran are increasingly framed as a potential lever in US–Israel pressure strategy against Tehran

By Dr. Pshtiwan Faraj, SULAIMANI,  Kurdish Policy Analysis, April 22-– Kurdish political and armed groups in Iran are increasingly being discussed in Western strategic circles as a potential internal pressure point in any long-term confrontation with Tehran, according to recent policy and analytical assessments.

A new analysis published by Amwaj Media and echoed in wider regional reporting suggests that Kurdish actors in Iran—particularly in the country’s northwest region known as Rojhelat—are being repositioned within an evolving US narrative that views internal ethnic and regional divisions as potential leverage against the Iranian state.

The shift reflects what analysts describe as a broader recalibration in US and Israeli thinking, moving from external military pressure toward the exploration of internal fragmentation strategies inside Iran.

Iranian Kurdish Opposition Groups


Kurds in the evolving US narrative

According to the analysis, Kurdish groups have gradually moved from the margins of US policy considerations to a more central, though informal, role in discussions about Iran’s internal stability.

This framing does not necessarily indicate an official policy shift, but rather a growing perception among some strategists that Iran’s multiethnic composition—including Kurdish, Baluch, Arab, and Azerbaijani populations—could present exploitable fault lines under sustained pressure.

A recent wave of commentary and reporting has suggested that Kurdish armed groups based in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq are being viewed as one of the most organized opposition components capable of operating near Iran’s western border.

Historical background and long-standing engagement

The relationship between Kurdish movements and US strategic thinking is not new. Historical records show that Kurdish political actors have periodically intersected with US regional policy since at least the Cold War era, often in the context of broader efforts to limit Iranian influence in Iraq and the region.

In Iraq and Syria, Kurdish forces have previously played key roles as local partners in US military campaigns, reinforcing perceptions in Washington of Kurds as pragmatic on-the-ground actors in fragmented conflict zones.

However, analysts caution that these partnerships have often been temporary and shaped by shifting geopolitical priorities rather than long-term commitments.

Strategic opportunity or political risk

Recent reporting suggests that some discussions within US-linked policy and intelligence circles have examined the possibility of leveraging Kurdish groups in any broader strategy aimed at increasing internal pressure on Tehran.

At the same time, experts warn that such a strategy carries significant risks, including regional spillover effects involving Iraq, Turkey, and Syria, where Kurdish populations and armed movements are already politically sensitive actors.

Critics argue that any attempt to instrumentalize Kurdish forces against Iran could trigger unintended consequences, including escalation along the Iran–Iraq border and renewed instability in Iraqi Kurdistan.

Kurdish caution and historical memory

Kurdish political discourse itself remains divided, but a recurring theme among Kurdish analysts and leaders is caution regarding external involvement in Iranian Kurdish affairs.

Historical experiences—particularly perceived abandonment in past regional conflicts—continue to shape Kurdish skepticism toward great-power strategies that rely on non-state actors without formal guarantees or long-term political frameworks.

As one Kurdish analyst noted in broader commentary on the issue, Kurdish movements have repeatedly been treated as tactical instruments in shifting geopolitical calculations rather than durable political partners.

Uncertain trajectory

Despite growing attention, there is no indication of a unified US policy on Kurdish involvement in Iran, and official positions remain cautious or undeclared.

For now, Kurdish groups in Iran remain positioned between historical political marginalization and renewed strategic visibility, as regional tensions continue to reshape how external actors assess the internal structure of the Iranian state.

Whether this translates into real strategic influence—or remains rhetorical framing within broader geopolitical debate—remains uncertain.

These dynamics are further explored in our analysis of Iranian Kurdistan’s evolving strategic role: https://kurdishpolicyanalysis.blogspot.com/2026/04/iran-kurdish-wildcard-rojhelat-strategic-role-conflict.html

Recent developments on the ground, including drone strikes near Erbil, highlight the risks:

https://kurdishpolicyanalysis.blogspot.com/2026/04/iran-drone-strike-erbil-kurdish-base-attack.html

Related analysis:
IRGC cross-border operations against Kurdish groups:
https://kurdishpolicyanalysis.blogspot.com/2026/04/irgc-drone-missile-strikes-kurdish-opposition-erbil.html

#Iran #Kurds #Kurdistan #USPolicy #Geopolitics #MiddleEast #Rojhelat #BreakingAnalysis

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