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...

Turkey’s Kurdish Peace “Goodwill Phase” Ends: Pro-Kurdish Parties Demand Real Action Now

 After decades of conflict, Kurdish political actors and leftist groups say Ankara must move beyond promises and implement concrete legal and democratic reforms.


April 6 (Kurdish Policy Analysis) — Turkey’s main pro-Kurdish party and a coalition of leftist political groups declared on Monday that the “goodwill phase” of the country’s long-stalled Kurdish peace process is over, demanding immediate action from President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s government.

In a joint statement signed by 11 organizations, including the Peoples’ Equality and Democracy Party (DEM Party), the Workers’ Party of Turkey (TİP) and the Labor Party (EMEP), the groups criticized Ankara for treating the peace initiative primarily as a security issue rather than implementing concrete political and legal reforms.

The statement outlined four urgent demands: an end to the removal of elected mayors in predominantly Kurdish regions, immediate enforcement of rulings by the Turkish Constitutional Court and the European Court of Human Rights, a halt to judicial actions targeting opposition figures, and accelerated parliamentary action on transition and democratic integration laws.

The push reflects mounting impatience among Kurdish actors as Turkey’s peace track, long overshadowed by violence and mistrust, enters a critical legislative phase. A parliamentary commission earlier this year approved a roadmap linking legal reforms to the Kurdistan Workers’ Party’s (PKK) disarmament and reintegration, aiming to conclude a conflict that has killed more than 40,000 people over four decades.

Recent calls for action intensified after jailed PKK leader Abdullah Öcalan emphasized the need for legal guarantees and reforms during this year’s Nevruz celebrations, marking a year since his call to end armed campaigns.

Meanwhile, security operations and arrests during Nevruz events have raised concerns among Kurdish parties about the government’s commitment to meaningful democratization, highlighting the delicate balance between peace initiatives and ongoing political repression.

As Turkey faces renewed domestic and international pressure to secure a lasting settlement, observers note that the government’s next steps could determine whether the decades-old conflict moves toward resolution—or remains stalled in rhetoric.

#Turkey #KurdishPeace #Democracy #Erdoğan #PKK #HumanRights #MiddleEast


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