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...

A Nation Divided: How Kurdish Disunity Keeps Killing Its Own Future

    A Nation Without Unity: The Kurdish Struggle Between Identity and Fragmentation. Strong identity, zero coordination—why Kurdish fragmentation remains the biggest obstacle to statehood


Kurdish Policy Analysis--Almost every Kurd agrees on one idea: Kurdistan is one country, and Kurds are one nation.

Yet in practice, nothing reflects that unity.

In my previous article I focused on the missed opportunities and argued that the Kurdish Question is not only about oppression—but Strategy. From Sèvres to Lausanne, the Kurdish struggle wasn’t only defeated from outside—it was weakened from within

This contradiction sits at the heart of the Kurdish question. National identity is strong—perhaps stronger than ever—but political unity is almost nonexistent. And that gap has defined Kurdish failure more than any external enemy.

Kurdistan is divided across four states: Iran, Iraq, Turkey, and Syria. This fragmentation is often described as the central injustice. And it is. But focusing only on external division hides a deeper problem:

Internal fragmentation.

There is no unified Kurdish strategy. No shared political vision. No common diplomatic front. No coordinated military doctrine. Not even a consistent narrative.

Instead, every faction claims leadership. Every party competes for dominance. Every disagreement becomes a rupture.

The result is paralysis.

Historically, the consequences have been devastating.

During the great geopolitical shifts of the 20th century—from the collapse of empires to the rise of modern nation-states—the Kurds failed to act as a single political force. Tribal divisions, local loyalties, and the absence of decisive leadership prevented coordinated action at the most critical moments.

Even when opportunities emerged, they were undermined from within.

In the mid-20th century, as regional power structures weakened and space opened for new actors, Kurdish movements expanded—but so did internal rivalries. The number of parties and leaders grew, but unity did not.

More actors did not produce more power. It produced more division.

At key turning points—whether in the 1970s, after 1991, or following 2003—Kurdish gains were repeatedly followed by internal conflict. Instead of consolidating power, Kurdish factions turned on each other.

The Kurdish struggle became two wars at once:

One against external powers.

One against itself.

This internal conflict has arguably done more long-term damage than any external suppression. Energy that could have been directed outward was consumed internally. Strategic opportunities were lost not because they didn’t exist—but because there was no unified force capable of seizing them.

And yet, there was one moment that broke this pattern.

Between 2011 and 2019, during the fight against ISIS, Kurdish forces across different regions found themselves aligned on the same battlefield. For a brief period, coordination replaced fragmentation. It was a rare glimpse of what Kurdish unity could look like in practice.

But it was temporary.

Once the immediate threat faded, the old divisions resurfaced.

This raises a critical question:

Can a nation achieve statehood without first achieving internal cohesion?

History suggests the answer is no.

The Kurdish issue is not only about geography or oppression. It is about organization, discipline, and political maturity. Modern power is not built on emotion or symbolism—it is built on institutions, strategy, economic capacity, and long-term coordination.

Yet Kurdish politics remains trapped in cycles of rivalry, distrust, and short-term thinking.

Worse still, divisive actors often escape accountability. Instead of confronting those who deepen fragmentation, Kurdish society frequently splits around them—some defending, others opposing—further entrenching division.

This is not sustainable.

No nation in modern history has achieved lasting success while being this internally divided. And few have lost as many opportunities while maintaining such a strong sense of identity.

That is the paradox:

A nation united in identity—but divided in action.

Until that gap is closed, every external injustice will continue to be amplified by internal weakness.

The path forward is not easy—but it is clear.

Without unity of strategy, there will be no unity of outcome.

And without that, history will continue to repeat itself.

#Kurdistan #Geopolitics #MiddleEast #KurdishPolitics #Unity #Strategy #Statehood #Analysis #ISIS #Politics


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