Iran's Pezeshkian Vows to 'Resolve Problems' with Iraqi Kurdistan

This handout picture made available by the Iranian presidency shows the President of Iraq's autonomous Kurdistan Region Nechervan Barzani (R) receiving Iran's President Masoud Pezeshkian in Arbil on September 12, 2024. (Iranian Presidency / AFP)
This handout picture made available by the Iranian presidency shows the President of Iraq's autonomous Kurdistan Region Nechervan Barzani (R) receiving Iran's President Masoud Pezeshkian in Arbil on September 12, 2024. (Iranian Presidency / AFP)
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Iran's Pezeshkian Vows to 'Resolve Problems' with Iraqi Kurdistan

This handout picture made available by the Iranian presidency shows the President of Iraq's autonomous Kurdistan Region Nechervan Barzani (R) receiving Iran's President Masoud Pezeshkian in Arbil on September 12, 2024. (Iranian Presidency / AFP)
This handout picture made available by the Iranian presidency shows the President of Iraq's autonomous Kurdistan Region Nechervan Barzani (R) receiving Iran's President Masoud Pezeshkian in Arbil on September 12, 2024. (Iranian Presidency / AFP)

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian vowed on Thursday to “resolve problems” with the Iraqi Kurdistan Region.

Pezeshkian visited Kurdistan on the second day of his official trip to Iraq that he kicked off on Wednesday. He met with several Kurdish officials in the capital Erbil and Sulaymaniyah city.

Kurdistan President Nechervan Barzani described Pezeshkian’s visit as historic, saying Kurdish regions will not be used to threaten Iran’s security.

Pezeshkian is the first Iranian president to visit Kurdistan in an official capacity.

“We enjoy historic and cultural ties with Iran,” Barzani told a press conference.

Discussions focused on bilateral relations, especially in the security field.

Leader of the Kurdistan Democratic Party Masoud Barzani meets with Iran's President Masoud Pezeshkian, in Erbil, Iraq, September 12, 2024. Iran's Presidency/WANA (West Asia News Agency)/Handout via Reuters

“Iran has always stood by our side during difficult times,” Barzani remarked while acknowledging that there are problems with Iran and “we are determined to resolve them.”

Speaking in Kurdish, Pezeshkian said his visit aimed to consolidate ties with Iraq and the Kurdistan region and resolve pending problems.

Pezeshkian and his accompanying delegation held a meeting with Kurdish Prime Minister Masrour Barzani. They tackled border, trade and security issues, said a brief government statement.

Problems between Iran and Kurdistan lie in what Tehran says is Erbil’s harboring of armed members of Kurdish Iranian opposition groups.

Baghdad recently announced the closure of dozens of headquarters of these groups.

In March 2023, Iraq and Iran signed a security agreement months after Iran carried out strikes against Kurdish opposition groups in northern Iraq.

Since then, both sides agreed to disarm these groups and repel them from their joint borders.

Tehran accuses the groups of obtaining their weapons from Iraq and of stoking anti-regime protests that erupted in wake of the death of young Kurdish woman Mahsa Amini in September 2022.

A handout picture made available by the Iranian Presidency shows, leader of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan Bafel Talabani (L) greets Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian (R) upon his arrival at the airport in Sulaymaniyah, Iraq, 12 September 2024. (EPA/Iranian Presidency)

Pezeshkian also met with Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) leader Masoud Barzani, inviting him to visit Iran.

The officials exchanged views on general affairs in Iraq and Kurdistan and they agreed to coordinate and bolster political, economic and cultural relations, said a statement from the party.

Pezeshkian held talks with head of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) Bafel Talabani in Sulaymaniyah.

The PUK, a rival of the KDP, enjoys close ties with the ruling pro-Iran Coordination Framework in Iraq.

Local media said Pezeshkian and PUK leaders discussed bolstering security in border areas to facilitate trade and increase investments.

Pezeshkian is expected to visit the southern Iraqi city of Basra on Friday in a first for an Iranian president in nearly a century.



US Aircraft Carrier in the Middle East is Heading Home

File photo of the US aircraft carrier "Eisenhower" in the Red Sea (AFP)
File photo of the US aircraft carrier "Eisenhower" in the Red Sea (AFP)
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US Aircraft Carrier in the Middle East is Heading Home

File photo of the US aircraft carrier "Eisenhower" in the Red Sea (AFP)
File photo of the US aircraft carrier "Eisenhower" in the Red Sea (AFP)

The Pentagon's rare move to keep two Navy aircraft carriers in the Middle East over the past several weeks has now finished, as the USS Theodore Roosevelt is heading home, according to US officials.

US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin had ordered the Roosevelt to extend its deployment for a short time and remain in the region as the USS Abraham Lincoln was pushed to get to the area more quickly. The Biden administration beefed up the US military presence there to help defend Israel from possible attacks by Iran and its proxies and to safeguard US troops, according to The AP.

US commanders in the Middle East have long argued that the presence of a US aircraft carrier and the warships accompanying it has been an effective deterrent in the region, particularly for Iran. Since the Israel-Hamas war in the Gaza Strip began last fall, there has been a persistent carrier presence in and around the region — and for short periods they have overlapped to have two of the carriers there at the same time.

Prior to last fall, however, it had been years since the US had committed that much warship power to the region.

The decision to bring the Roosevelt home comes as the war in Gaza has dragged on for 11 months, with tens of thousands of people dead, and international efforts to mediate a ceasefire between Israel and the Hamas militant group have repeatedly stalled as they accuse each other of making additional and unacceptable demands.

For a number of months earlier this year the USS Dwight D. Eisenhower remained in the Red Sea, able both to respond to help Israel and to defend commercial and military ships from attacks by the Iranian-backed Houthis in Yemen. The carrier, based in Norfolk, Virginia, returned home after an over eight-month deployment in combat that the Navy said was the most intense since World War II.

US officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss troop movements, said the San Diego-based Roosevelt and the USS Daniel Inouye, a destroyer, are expected to be in the Indo-Pacific Command's region on Thursday. The other destroyer in the strike group, the USS Russell, had already left the Middle East and has been operating in the South China Sea.

The Lincoln, which is now in the Gulf of Oman with several other warships, arrived in the Middle East about three weeks ago, allowing it to overlap with the Roosevelt until now.

There also are a number of US ships in the eastern Mediterranean Sea, and two destroyers and the guided missile submarine USS Georgia are in the Red Sea.