
Washington wants Kurdish militias to put boots on ground as the regime girds itself in response

A commander and leader of the Kurdistan Free Life Party, one of the best-armed and most ideologically allied partners to America Credit: Shwan MOHAMMED/AFP via Getty Images
Memphis Barker Senior Foreign Correspondent
And Matt Broomfield
Mar 4, 2026
Air strikes alone will not topple the Iranian regime. It is a message the Trump administration has heard ad nauseam.
Five days into the war, the Pentagon appears to have its answer: there will be “boots on the ground” in Iran – only they will belong to proxy forces rather than US soldiers.
From the west, the CIA is working with Kurdish forces to prepare a ground offensive across the border with Iraq, according to CNN.
“Our armed forces inside and outside Iran are ready for anything, but will need external support,” Razgar Alani, a UK representative of the Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan (PDK-I), told The Telegraph.
Late on Wednesday, the Iraqi Kurds launched a ground offensive across the border into Iran, Fox News reported.
From the east, Pakistan-based Baluch Islamist groups have, in an effort to draw wider support, rebranded as the “Popular Fighters Front”, saying their goal is to liberate Iran.
And from the north, the plan to exploit the grievances of Iran’s ethnic patchwork will hope to draw in Azeris, who have led fierce protests against the regime.
Together, these groups make up between a quarter and a third of Iran’s 90 million-strong population
The US and Israel are inviting them to rise up through air strikes targeting western border posts, the powerful Iranian police state and any leaders who might be able to co-ordinate an effective resistance.
Missiles have hit the headquarters of Iran’s state broadcaster while hackers disseminate text messages calling for revolution.
An armed uprising would aim to empower the vast number of Iranian citizens whose efforts to overthrow the clerical establishment have only been thwarted, to date, by mass murder carried out by the Basij paramilitary group and Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC).
It remains unclear how far the US has prepared for such a strategy. Donald Trump elected to pursue regime change having failed to secure his preferred option: a negotiated deal to end Tehran’s nuclear programme.
And analysts warn of risks that the endeavour backfires – and Iran is plunged into chaos and civil war that upends the Middle East for years to come.

Members of the Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan at a checkpoint leading to their base in the Koya district of Irbil, Iraq Credit: Rashid Yahya/AP
The regime, for its part, has already started to gird itself in response. With the appointment of Ahmad Vahidi as commander of the Revolutionary Guards, it has signalled that the priority will be cracking down on internal dissent.
In 1988, Mr Vahidi became the first leader of the Quds Force, the IRGC’s foreign operations branch. Command for the next decade gave him networks across Iran’s diverse population that other conventional commanders lack.
In 2022, as interior minister, Mr Vahidi led the brutal campaign to crush anti-hijab protests, backing the security forces who shot protesters. That drew fresh US sanctions, highlighting his commission of serious human rights offences against the Iranian population.
Within the past 48 hours, IRGC ground forces have reportedly begun to carry out drone strikes on Kurdish militant positions in northern Iraq. Troops have been deployed west as Israeli strikes pummel the border defences.
On Monday, the IRGC sent text messages to residents of Sanandaj, a Kurdish-majority city in the west of the country, asking locals to report signs of military activity or movement of weapons, according to the Hengaw Organisation for Human Rights, a Norway-based NGO focused on Iran’s Kurdish population.
The Kurds present America’s readiest, best-armed and most ideologically allied partners, although caution abounds because of the history of Western betrayals.
The US military allied with Kurdish forces during the Iraq war and turned to them again to lead the ground campaign against the Islamic State, where – as may be the case in Iran – they worked in close co-ordination with the American air force.
“Given that organised opposition is very weak in other parts of Iran and the regime knows little restraint in brutally repressing protests, the current war offers the Kurds a unique opportunity,” said Dr Kamran Matin, an Iranian Kurdish academic based at the University of Sussex. “But their entry into the fray carries huge risks.”

Donald Trump has this week spoken with both the senior leadership of the new Iranian Kurdish Coalition and leading political figures in the semi-autonomous Kurdish Region of Iraq, which gained its autonomy under US sponsorship in 1992 and would be the key route for any US supply of weapons and resources to Iranian Kurdish forces.
Kurds have suffered long-term repression by the Islamic regime, waging an off-and-on guerrilla war against Tehran since 1979. For decades, Washington has encouraged Kurdish efforts to secure autonomy, only to backtrack and leave its allies exposed at crucial moments.
The four Iranian Kurdish opposition groups contacted by The Telegraph remain wary of bloody reprisals by an Iranian rump state, or the imposition of a new, US-backed order no more favourable to democracy and minority interests than the deposed regime.
“We are not a part of the US and Israel’s war with Iran, but it’s possible the changes they are pursuing will be beneficial for the Kurds,” said Zagros Anderyari, a spokesman for the largest and best-armed Kurdish opposition group, the Kurdistan Free Life Party (PJAK). “If so, we may be able to work with them.”
Kurdish opposition sources contacted by The Telegraph suggested they were poised to begin ground operations within days or weeks.
Strikes on the border have already had an impact, Mr Anderyari said.
“Most of Iran’s military, political and intelligence centres in the Kurdish regions have been bombed,” he told The Telegraph. “This doesn’t mean their forces withdrew altogether, but they have left their bases and set up new, ad-hoc positions.”
But even with the support of dominant US air power, Kurdish militants would need US ground support to have a chance of uprooting the deeply entrenched IRGC, Mr Anderayri added.
“If the US and Israel want regime change, there will need to be boots on the ground, even if only in small numbers.”
In addition, Kurdish operations would be restricted to the majority-Kurdish western provinces, a spokesman told The Telegraph. The US would need other partners to threaten the regime from multiple directions.
While representatives express openness to links with Baluch, Azeri and Arab groups, those connections remain speculative – and in some cases fraught with complication.
Iran’s most numerous minority, the Turkic-speaking Azeris, are likely to pursue Turkish support if the Islamic regime starts to crumble.
But Ankara opposes any fresh regional experiments in Kurdish-led autonomy, especially if spearheaded by PJAK, which has close ties to Turkey’s key domestic enemy in the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).
Meanwhile, Baluch separatist groups in eastern Iran and across the border in Pakistan have waged a long, violent insurgency.
If the US seeks to empower these fighters, they will face fierce resistance from Pakistan, which only two months ago convinced Washington to designate the Balochistan Liberation Army a terrorist group.
Islamabad’s powerful Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency has long penetrated and suffocated Baloch groups in the dusty, poverty-stricken province bordering Iran.
It also has plenty of experience in directing proxy operations that run against Washington’s interests, most notably in the case of the Afghan Taliban.
Funnelling arms and money into the region could end up supercharging the growth of the Islamic State in Khorasan (IS-K), the terrorist group’s local branch.
What is certain is that American military bombardments will continue to distract, destroy and degrade the capabilities of the Islamic Republic.
While encouraging a multi-directional insurgency within Iran, US strikes are attempting to ensure the passage of oil through the Strait of Hormuz with the destruction of Tehran’s navy.
At least 10 ships have been destroyed to date, with the department of war releasing footage on Tuesday of a submarine’s torpedo strike on the IRIS Dena frigate, one of the country’s most advanced vessels.
Without a functioning navy, Iran will struggle to assert control over the strait, limiting its ability to pressure Washington into a shortened campaign and quick ceasefire.
Let loose, instead, the CIA would then have another chance to dust off an old playbook with a less-than-sterling track record: backing ethnic groups to topple America’s enemies, and deliver a more pliant partner in the Middle East.

The Kurds and the Yazidis are excellent people. They need to be given their historic homeland back : an independent Kurdistan covering parts of Iraq, Iran, Syria and Turkey.
Yazidis are simply Kurds who refused to convert to Islam. That’s why there aren’t many of them left. The latest genocide was inflicted on them by isis. The Peshmerga defeated them, only to be abandoned and fucked over by their American allies.
We want no repeat of that.
We need a much smaller Iran, Iraq, Syria and Turkey, with a powerful Kurdistan bringing stability to the ME.
Comment from :
Niaill Wright
The Iranian Kurds have been resisting Iranian brutality since the Iranian regime took power and they have been exposed to the same level of persecution as the same Iraqi Kurds under Sudam Husein. This is not an ethnic group one wants hostlities with, they have a history of vanquishing much larger better equipped adversaries.
Brian Holloway
So once again, as in Ukraine, the US will get others to fight their wars because the US public won’t stomach any American military dead. The US public is massively against this war ,only 25% are for it. There is no plan and now the war is spreading with the Kurds being dragged in. This war has the potential to last for years with all the death and misery it will bring but as long as it’s away from US shores and no Americans die then that’s ok? No it isn’t.
Chump said he would end ALL foreign wars if he was elected and in his 18 months in charge he has bombed EIGHT different countries! He is a liar and has become a dictator and the Americans are losing friends all over the world after being complicit in the genocide of at least 100,000 Palestinians including at least 50,000 innocent women and children.
Chump will go down as the worst President ever and history will be brutal to him.
Alex Porter
Reply to Brian Holloway
But the American “public” were also against the involvement of their troops in WW1 & WW2. So? It’s is actually the government of the day that decides not the public.
Gwyn Davies
And what desperate insurgent group would ever trust that the CIA would be a steady and reliable partner? They wouldn’t have to ask the Tibetans, the Contras or the Ukrainians given that the Kurds themselves already know all about American betrayal.
Mark Jones
For 47 years an increasingly despotic regime has screamed death to America, death to Israel with religious fervour. Getting ever closer to developing nuclear weapons.
Now the breakdown of that regime beckons as the various tribes that make up Iran decide perhaps their own autonomy and living in peace is finally possible.
So is civil war and the breakdown up of Iran a disaster?
Certainly not for the USA, Israel and all the Middle East states now having Iranian missiles fired at their citizens. Iran in its religious entirety is a rogue state. It should be broken up.
David Downie
Why would the Kurds trust the US again after being betrayed by them before? They took the fight to daesh when no one else would and were betrayed in Syria. As for backing islamists in Pakistan, what could possibly go wrong with that?
Tony Williams
Reply to David Downie
They don’t need to trust much beyond the US continuing to weaken Iran. Kurds have a lot to gain here. Such opportunities don’t come around that often.
ThePeddler OfOldDreams
Surely the kurds have learnt their lesson about the dangers of trusting Donald Trump. They did all the work, made all the sacrifices in the fight against IS. Then once the job was done, Trump abandoned firstly when Turkey invaded and then recently when the Syrian militias launched their offensive. They should be wary of sacrificing their lives for Trump again.
Anthony Lawrence
The Kurds were an independent country for centuries before the allied powers arbitrarily chopped it up between Iran Iraq turkey armenia and Syria at the end of WW1 they’ve been persecuted ever since , they will want payback now.
Another View
A couple of weeks after the Kurds start messing with the much larger IRGC they’ll find Trump has agreed a deal that leaves the regime in place (albeit somewhat battered). They’ll be left high and dry just as the protestors were that Trump said he’d help.
Orbis Tertius
So now Trump will be happy about the Kurds.
Yet in 2019 Trump defended his decision to withdraw US troops from Syria and enable a Turkish offensive against US-backed Kurdish fighters in the region by noting the Kurds didn’t fight alongside the US in the second world war.
“Late on Wednesday, the Iraqi Kurds launched a ground offensive across the border into Iran, Fox News reported.”
Someone is telling lies.
They haven’t started yet as far as can be ascertained. But it seems likely that they will go ahead soon.
Probably depends on what promises Krasnov made to them.
They will be outmanned and outgunned (sounds familiar) but unlike Ukraine they will get air support from Krasnov.
“Someone is telling lies.”
That’s why they’re referred to as “Faux News”.
Posted by the BBC, 2 hours ago:
Iranian Kurdish opposition groups in exile in northern Iraq have told the BBC they have plans to cross the border – and have had them for decades – but they flatly deny claims that their fighters have already done so.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cm215nnjyr0o
“Air strikes alone will not topple the Iranian regime. It is a message the Trump administration has heard ad nauseam.”
Taco missed the best timing when the masses were out in the streets. He waited until many thousands were slaughtered.
The U.S. was never the most dependable partner for certain people, and under Taco, it is a irresponsible and treacherous one. Just ask Ukraine.