500 Drones Launched From Iraq Toward Saudi Arabia — Region on Edge

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Iraq Becomes Drone War Battlefield as Iran-Backed Militias Strike Gulf States. Five Hundred drone attacks from Iraqi territory hit Saudi Arabia and beyond, raising fears of a hidden regional war spiraling out of control By Dr. Pshtiwan Faraj, SULAIMANI,   Kurdish Policy Analysis , April 21--  Iraqi militia groups close to Iran have fired dozens of drones at Saudi Arabia and the Gulf countries during the war; This has created a “silent” war in the midst of the Great War. According to a report in the Wall Street Journal on Tuesday, April 21, 2026, half of the 1,000 drone strikes against Saudi Arabia were from within Iraqi territory. The report cited a Saudi security assessment that said the attacks targeted sensitive positions, including the Yanbu refinery on the Red Sea and oil fields in eastern Saudi Arabia. The report said the drones hit not only Saudi Arabia, but also Kuwait's only civilian airport. Even after US President Donald Trump announced a ceasefire earlier this...

Aras Sheikh Jangi’s Baghdad Reentry Signals a New Kurdish–Shia Political Axis


Kurdish Policy Analysis / SULAYMANIYAH, Iraq— Meeting with Nouri al-Maliki highlights shifting alliances, internal Kurdish fractures, and emerging power recalibrations in Iraq

Aras Sheikh Jangi’s meeting with Nouri al-Maliki signals shifting Kurdish–Shia alliances, exposing fractures within the PUK and evolving power dynamics in Iraq.

A quiet meeting in Baghdad may signal a louder political shift underway in Iraq.

Aras Sheikh Jangi — the elder brother of Lahur Sheikh Jangi — has resurfaced politically after meeting with former Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. While no official statement followed, the timing and context suggest more than a routine political courtesy.

This development comes amid deepening fragmentation across both Kurdish and Shia political arenas, where alliances are increasingly fluid and shaped by tactical necessity rather than long-term cohesion.

From Power Center to Political Exile

Aras was once embedded within the upper ranks of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, serving on its Leadership Council. His removal — alongside his brother — by Bafel Talabani marked one of the most consequential internal purges in recent Kurdish political history.

Since then, both brothers have been effectively locked out of Sulaymaniyah, the PUK’s stronghold. Aras now resides in Baghdad, positioning himself physically — and perhaps politically — closer to Iraq’s federal power centers.

His meeting with Maliki therefore signals not just re-engagement, but potential realignment.

Maliki, the KDP, and Parliamentary Fracture

The significance of the meeting is amplified by Maliki’s current alignment with the Kurdistan Democratic Party. Both actors notably boycotted the parliamentary session that resulted in the election of Iraq’s president — a move that exposed ongoing fractures in Baghdad’s governing coalition.

In this context, Aras’s appearance alongside Maliki raises a strategic question: is a new political channel being constructed between marginalized Kurdish figures and segments of the Shia establishment that feel sidelined by current arrangements?

Eroding Old Networks

Aras was previously known for maintaining close relationships with influential Iran-aligned actors, including Qais al-Khazali and Ammar al-Hakim. These networks once formed part of a broader web of Kurdish–Shia coordination that shaped post-ISIS political order in Iraq.

However, the landscape has shifted.

Today, many of these same actors — alongside Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani — are perceived to be closer to the current PUK leadership. This realignment likely diminishes Aras’s former leverage within those circles.

The result is a political figure seeking new entry points into influence — and potentially new alliances to compensate for lost ones.

A Fragmented System Breeding New Axes

Iraq’s political system is entering a phase where exclusion often produces reinvention. Actors pushed out of dominant coalitions are increasingly attempting to construct alternative networks rather than reconcile with existing power centers.

Aras Sheikh Jangi may now represent such a case.

His engagement with Maliki suggests the early contours of a potential axis that bridges:

  • Disaffected Kurdish elites excluded from the PUK
  • Shia political factions operating outside the current governing consensus
  • Baghdad based power brokers seeking leverage against both Erbil and internal rivals

While still speculative, such alignments are not unprecedented in Iraq’s post-2003 political evolution.

Strategic Implications

If sustained, this emerging alignment could have several implications:

  • Intra-Kurdish tension escalation: Any perceived coordination with Baghdad figures could deepen divisions between the PUK leadership and its former members.
  • Baghdad leverage over Kurdish fragmentation: Federal actors may increasingly exploit Kurdish internal splits to shape negotiations on oil, budget, and security.
  • Fluid Shia alliances: Maliki’s continued maneuvering signals that the Shia political house remains far from unified.

Notable political signal emerging from Baghdad:

Aras Sheikh Jangi, brother of Lahur Sheikh Jangi, has held a meeting with Nouri al-Maliki — a development that may reflect shifting alignments inside Iraq’s fractured Kurdish–Shia political landscape.

Aras, once a member of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan leadership council, was expelled by Bafel Talabani and remains barred — alongside Lahur — from entering PUK-controlled areas in Sulaymaniyah.

The meeting is notable given Maliki’s current alignment with the Kurdistan Democratic Party, with both sides having boycotted the parliamentary session that resulted in the election of Iraq’s president — underscoring deepening political fragmentation in Baghdad.

Aras previously maintained strong ties with Iran-aligned Shia actors, including figures such as Qais al-Khazali, Ammar al-Hakim, and Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani. However, as these actors have moved closer to the PUK leadership in recent years, those relationships appear to have weakened.

Now based in Baghdad and effectively exiled from Sulaymaniyah, Aras’s re-emergence alongside Maliki may signal an attempt to reposition within Iraq’s evolving power structure — or the early stages of a new political axis bridging disenfranchised Kurdish factions and segments of the Shia establishment.

At minimum, the meeting underscores a key reality: Iraq’s political order is not stabilizing — it is reconfiguring.

#Iraq #IraqPolitics #Kurdistan #KurdishPolitics #PUK #KDP #Baghdad #Sulaymaniyah #MiddleEast #Geopolitics #PowerStruggle #PoliticalRealignment #ShiaPolitics #IranInfluence #Maliki #KurdishLeaders #RegionalPolitics #EnergyPolitics #PostISIS #IraqAnalysis

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