Kurdish Fighters Mass Near Iran Border as New Front Against Tehran Emerges
Reporting from SOFX indicates that Iranian Kurdish opposition groups have started to position fighters near or inside Iran as part of a potential cross-border offensive against Iran. Officials from the Coalition of Political Forces of Iranian Kurdistan (CPFIK) say thousands of fighters from groups such as PJAK and PAK have moved into staging areas near the Iranian border, while The Guardian reports that Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) has responded with border reinforcements and airstrikes against Kurdish positions in Iraq.
The UK’s Daily Mail also reports that these developments may be tied to a broader U.S. and Israeli effort to open a new front against Iran by leveraging Kurdish opposition groups operating along the Iran-Iraq frontier. Airstrikes on Iranian military and security installations in western Iran appear to be aimed at weakening border defenses and creating access points for Kurdish fighters to cross into the country.
Analysts warn that empowering separatist movements could provoke regional backlash from neighboring states with their own Kurdish populations and potentially rally Iranian public support around the regime. For a comprehensive primer on the Kurds’ background, check out this BBC primer and its rabbit hole of linked articles.
The post Kurdish Fighters Mass Near Iran Border as New Front Against Tehran Emerges appeared first on Small Wars Journal by Arizona State University.