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

Image
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...

President Trump says he will end all tariffs and sanctions on Iran

 After years of “maximum pressure,” a sudden pivot raises urgent questions: Is Washington preparing to lift sanctions on Iran—or weaponizing the idea to force a deal within 14 days?


By Kurdish Policy Analysis 

April 8, 2026

A dramatic claim circulating online—that Donald Trump is preparing to end all tariffs and sanctions on Iran—is raising urgent questions across diplomatic and economic circles, as Washington and Tehran enter a fragile two-week ceasefire.

While no formal executive order has yet confirmed a full lifting of sanctions, recent statements from Trump suggest that sanctions relief is now on the negotiating table, marking a striking shift from years of “maximum pressure” policy.

 From “Maximum Pressure” to Possible Reset

For years, U.S. policy toward Iran relied on sweeping economic sanctions targeting its oil exports, banking system, and industrial sectors. Those measures were designed to cripple Tehran’s economy and force concessions on its nuclear and regional activities.

Yet in a sudden reversal, Trump said the U.S. would “work closely” with Iran and discuss sanctions relief following the ceasefire agreement.

This comes just days after the same administration threatened massive tariffs and military escalation, underscoring the volatility of the current moment.

 The Timing: A 14-Day Window

The reported shift is unfolding under a two-week ceasefire deadline, brokered to halt escalating conflict and reopen the Strait of Hormuz—a chokepoint for nearly 20% of global oil flows.

Vice President JD Vance has already warned the truce is “fragile,” suggesting that negotiations are far from settled.

Analysts say the idea of lifting sanctions may be less a policy decision—and more a negotiating tool.

“Sanctions are Washington’s strongest leverage. Floating their removal now could be a way to force rapid concessions before day 15,” said a regional analyst familiar with the talks.

 Contradictions Raise Doubts

Despite the viral claim, Trump has simultaneously pursued new economic pressure measures, including threats  of tariffs on countries supporting Iran militarily.

This contradiction—offering relief while escalating pressure—suggests a dual-track strategy:

  • Public diplomacy: Signal openness to peace and economic normalization
  • Coercive leverage: Maintain pressure to extract concessions

 Regional Stakes: Iraq and Kurdistan

For Iraq and the Kurdistan Region, the implications are immediate and high-risk.

If sanctions are lifted:

  • Iranian economic recovery could expand its regional influence
  • Proxy groups may regain funding and operational capacity
  • Trade routes through Iraq could surge—but with political consequences

If talks collapse:

  • The region could face a rapid return to escalation
  • Energy markets—and Kurdish oil exports—could be hit by renewed instability

 Reality Check: Can Sanctions Be Lifted Quickly?

Even if Trump intends to remove sanctions, legal and political barriers remain:

  • Many sanctions are tied to U.S. Congress, not just executive authority
  • International sanctions frameworks involve multiple governments and institutions
  • Any full rollback would likely take months—not days

The Bottom Line

The claim that Trump will “end all tariffs and sanctions on Iran” remains unconfirmed—and likely overstated.

What is real:

  • Sanctions relief is now part of negotiations
  • The U.S. is signaling a willingness to pivot
  • The next 14 days could determine the future of the region

What is uncertain:

  • Whether this is a genuine policy shift
  • Or a high-stakes bluff before a potential return to conflict

#Trump #Iran #Sanctions #MiddleEast #Ceasefire #Geopolitics #Kurdistan #USForeignPolicy #BreakingNews #OilMarkets

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Iranian Media Unveils ‘Lord of the Straits’ Animation Amid Hormuz Tensions

Did Japan just send Godzilla to the Strait of Hormuz? As global tensions rise, a viral meme captures the chaos of 2026’s geopolitical crisis.

U.S.–Iran 45 Day Ceasefire Bid Emerges as War Nears Breaking Point