National Political Council Affirms Readiness to Attend Confidence Vote Session for New Government
Speaking during an official European tour covering France, Belgium, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom, the head of the KRG Department of Foreign Relations, Safeen Dizayee, urged Western allies to take a more active role in protecting the region from ongoing security violations.
“Our friends must prevent these violations,” Dizayee said, calling for either direct protection measures or the provision of advanced defense systems comparable to those supplied to Baghdad.
Since the outbreak of the US-Israel-Iran confrontation earlier this year, the Kurdistan Region has reportedly faced hundreds of drone and missile attacks. Despite broader ceasefire arrangements between major regional powers, strikes on Kurdish territory have continued with little interruption.
According to KRG estimates, more than 800 attacks have been recorded since the beginning of the conflict, often justified by unnamed actors under what Erbil describes as “unfounded pretexts.”
Even after the April ceasefire between Washington and Tehran, monitoring groups reported nearly 50 additional strikes, many of them targeting areas linked to Iranian Kurdish opposition groups.
The Community Peacemaker Teams (CPT) attributed the majority of post-ceasefire incidents to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and affiliated groups, suggesting a sustained pattern of cross-border pressure despite formal de-escalation.
Dizayee reiterated that the Kurdistan Region is not participating in regional conflicts and will not allow its territory to be used as a platform for escalation.
“We made clear that the Kurdistan Region has not been and will not be party to the war, and will not allow its territory to become a threat to regional security,” he said.
He also drew historical parallels, referencing the 1991 establishment of a no-fly zone over northern Iraq, which enabled the emergence of the Kurdistan Region’s current autonomous status under international protection.
“Just as a no-fly zone was established in 1991, we now need to be protected from these acts of aggression,” he added, arguing that modern defensive capabilities are beyond the region’s current reach.
France in particular has maintained long-standing ties with the Kurdistan Region and was among the key supporters of the 1991 protection framework. That history is now being invoked by Erbil as it seeks renewed Western engagement.
The KRG is effectively signaling that the region is entering a new phase of vulnerability—one where autonomy exists, but deterrence does not.
At the center of its message is a strategic request: either enhanced direct protection or military parity in defensive systems with Baghdad, to prevent the Kurdistan Region from becoming a repeated target in wider Iran-linked regional tensions.
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