“A Quicksand Feeling”: Iraq Caught in Escalating Fallout from Israel–US War on Iran

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  Iraq is being pulled into regional shockwaves from the Israel–US–Iran confrontation, reviving fears of militia activation, political fragmentation, and strategic instability across Baghdad and the Kurdish region. Dr. Pshtiwan Faraj , Sulaimani, Iraq, April 2026  — Iraq is once again being pulled into the center of a widening regional confrontation, as the escalating Israel–US war dynamics with Iran reverberate across its fragile political and security landscape. In a recent analysis titled “A Quicksand Feeling: How Iraq has been Roiled by the Israel–US War on Iran,” political analyst Juan Cole describes Iraq as entering a condition of strategic entrapment , where external conflict generates internal instability faster than the state can contain it. Iraq as the “Pressure Zone” of Regional Conflict According to Cole’s framing, Iraq is not a direct battlefield—but a secondary impact zone where: Iranian influence is deeply embedded through aligned militias US for...

Kurdish Shepherds Stoic on the Frontline of Another War

 


In the Zagros Mountains, Survival Has Become a Way of Life

Dr. Pshtiwan Faraj, Sulaimani, Iraq, April 2026  — High in the rugged valleys of the Zagros Mountains, Kurdish shepherds continue grazing their flocks beneath skies increasingly filled not with birds, but with drones.

For generations, these mountains have been both sanctuary and battlefield. Today, as regional tensions once again spill across borders, Kurdish herders find themselves trapped between geopolitics and geography. Iranian missile and drone strikes near the frontier have turned traditional grazing routes into potential kill zones, forcing many families to abandon lands they have used for decades.

Yet life goes on.

For Kurdish shepherds, war is not an interruption. It is a recurring season.

A People Conditioned by Conflict

Many of the shepherds now navigating the mountains were born into war. They survived the Iran-Iraq War, the Gulf War, Saddam Hussein's campaigns, the U.S. invasion, and the rise of the Islamic State.

Each conflict changed the map.

None changed the mountains.

That continuity explains the stoicism visible across Kurdistan's borderlands. Fear becomes difficult to sustain when conflict is the only constant one has ever known.

As one shepherd put it, Kurds have repeatedly found themselves caught in wars they did not start and could not avoid.

Geography Is Kurdistan's Blessing—and Curse

The mountains have always protected the Kurds.

They have also made Kurdistan a frontline in every regional confrontation.

The same terrain that shelters Kurdish identity also places Kurdish civilians directly between rival states, insurgent groups, and competing military doctrines. The borderlands between Iraq and Iran are no exception.

When Tehran targets Kurdish opposition groups, it is Kurdish villagers, shepherds, and farmers who absorb the first shockwave.

That is the cruel arithmetic of frontier politics.

The Economic Cost of Endless War

For pastoral communities, even distant airstrikes carry immediate consequences.

Livestock panic. Milk production drops. Grazing patterns collapse. Families are forced closer to villages, reducing access to valuable pastureland. Every drone overhead becomes an economic threat.

In fragile rural economies, security and livelihood are inseparable.

A single strike can destroy more than property; it can erase an entire season's income.

Kurdistan's Forgotten Frontline

International attention usually focuses on capitals, oil fields, and military bases.

But Kurdistan's true frontline often lies in remote valleys where shepherds, not soldiers, bear the daily burden of instability.

These communities receive little protection, limited compensation, and almost no global attention. Yet they remain essential to Kurdistan's rural economy, food security, and cultural identity.

They are the first to face danger and the last to appear in headlines.

The Strategic Reality

Kurdish borderlands are increasingly vulnerable as confrontation between Iran, Israel, and the United States intensifies.

Kurdistan does not choose these conflicts.

But it inevitably inherits them.

Its geography ensures that every escalation elsewhere eventually echoes through its mountains.

That has been true for a century.

It remains true today.

The Hard Lesson

For Kurdish shepherds, resilience is not romantic.

It is mandatory.

The outside world often celebrates Kurdish endurance, but endurance is what people practice when alternatives have been denied. Survival is admirable, but it is not a strategy.

A nation cannot build prosperity if its border communities are permanently preparing for the next missile strike.

The Future

Unless regional tensions ease, Kurdistan's frontier populations will face growing insecurity.

More displacement is likely. Traditional pastoral life may continue to shrink. Younger generations may abandon the mountains altogether, accelerating rural decline.

And with every family that leaves, Kurdistan loses not just population, but memory.

The mountains will remain.

The question is whether those who have guarded them for centuries will still be there.

#Kurdistan #Iraq #MiddleEast #WarImpact #ShepherdLife #ZagrosMountains #HumanStories #ConflictZone #Geopolitics #RuralIraq


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