The Iraqi federal government has issued a stern warning to the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) regarding the potential involvement of Kurdish factions in the ongoing US-Israeli military campaign against Iran. According to multiple officials from Iraq, Kurdistan, and Turkey who spoke with Middle East Eye, Baghdad delivered the ultimatum earlier this week, threatening to deploy federal forces to secure border areas if the KRG fails to prevent Kurdish groups from joining the conflict.
This development emerges amid growing regional apprehensions that Iranian Kurdish opposition parties based in Iraqi Kurdistan might be pressured by Washington to initiate cross-border operations. These groups, possessing thousands of well-organized fighters, represent the most structured segment of Iran’s fragmented opposition. Their involvement, however, would almost certainly provoke severe retaliation from Tehran, potentially dragging Iraq deeper into the escalating regional warfare.
Iran has previously threatened to strike Kurdish bases in Iraq if utilized for attacks, while Turkey consistently views armed Kurdish movements as a fundamental national security threat. Kurdish officials, including Qubad Talabani, KRG Deputy Prime Minister, have publicly distanced themselves from the conflict, emphasizing that participation could unleash unpredictable chaos across the region. Talabani explicitly stated, “This is not our war, and we’ve made that very clear.”
The situation is further complicated by ambiguous signals from the US administration. President Donald Trump initially appeared to encourage Kurdish engagement, suggesting they would need to “choose a side,” but later contradicted this by stating, “I don’t want the Kurds to go in. The war is complicated enough as it is.”
Despite this, two prominent exiled groups—the Free Life Party of Kurdistan (PJAK) and the Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan—have not ruled out joining the war. PJAK recently called for Kurds in western Iran to form local committees, with senior commander Mazloum Haftan articulating goals for a “democratic and decentralised Iran” rather than alignment with either Washington or Tehran.
The conflict originated on February 28th with US-Israeli air and missile strikes targeting Iran’s military infrastructure and nuclear program, described by Washington as efforts to cripple Tehran’s capabilities. Iran denounced the attacks as unprovoked aggression aimed at regime change. The warfare has since expanded, with Iranian retaliatory strikes on Israeli territory, US bases in the Gulf, and regional energy facilities, significantly escalating tensions across Middle Eastern shipping lanes and strategic locations.









