The Peshmerga are the official military forces of the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG), tasked with defending the borders, sovereignty, and internal stability of the autonomous Kurdistan Region in northern Iraq.[1]
The term "Peshmerga," derived from Kurdish words meaning "those who face death," underscores their origins as resilient guerrilla fighters who have confronted existential threats from successive Iraqi regimes since the mid-20th century.[2][3]
Formally under the Ministry of Peshmerga Affairs, these forces embody a national institution symbolizing heroism and sacrifice, though in practice they have long been fragmented by affiliations to major Kurdish parties such as the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK).[1][4]Since the 2014 ISIS offensive, the Peshmerga have been instrumental in reclaiming vast territories in northern Iraq from the terrorist group, suffering approximately 12,000 fatalities in the process and earning recognition as a vital partner in the international coalition's campaign.[5][6]
This role highlighted their effectiveness in defensive operations but also exposed vulnerabilities, including initial setbacks against ISIS advances and the challenges of partisan command structures that complicated coordinated responses.[7][8]
Ongoing U.S.-funded reforms aim to unify brigades, digitize payments, and depoliticize the force, with nearly 95% of unified units receiving allowances digitally by mid-2025, fostering a more professional and national-oriented military.[9][10]Despite these advances, persistent internal divisions and incomplete integration efforts remain defining characteristics, potentially undermining long-term cohesion amid regional tensions with Baghdad and neighboring states.[11][4]
Etymology
Linguistic and Cultural Origins
The term Peshmerga originates from the Kurdish language, specifically composed of the elements pêş (meaning "front" or "before") and merg or merga (meaning "death"), yielding a literal translation of "those who face death" or "one who stands before death".[3][11][12]Kurdish belongs to the Northwestern Iranian branch of the Indo-Iranian language family, with the term appearing in both Kurmanji and Sorani dialects spoken by Kurds in regions spanning modern-day Iraq, Turkey, Iran, and Syria.[13]The earliest documented English usage of Peshmerga dates to 1963, though the word predates this in Kurdish oral and martial traditions, reflecting a cultural archetype of warriors embodying self-sacrifice against existential threats.[13] Its formal adoption as a designation for organized Kurdish fighters emerged in the mid-20th century, amid revolts against centralizing states, with some accounts attributing initial usage to Qazi Muhammad during the short-lived Republic of Mahabad in 1946, where it connoted guerrilla forces confronting superior odds.[14][15] The term's etymological roots evoke ancient Indo-Iranian motifs of heroic defiance, akin to Persian concepts of martyrdom in battle (shahid), but adapted to Kurdish tribal and communal resilience against imperial domination.[11]Culturally, Peshmerga encapsulates the Kurdish ethos of berxwedan (resistance), where individual valor serves collective survival in a historically fragmented homeland lacking sovereign recognition.[16] This linguistic construct underscores a pragmatic fatalism: fighters not as seekers of death, but as interposers against it for kin and autonomy, distinguishing it from suicidal ideologies by emphasizing strategic confrontation.[3] In Kurdish folklore and epics, such as those drawing from medieval resistances against Arab, Seljuk, and Ottoman incursions, precursors to the term highlight nomadic horsemen (siyç) who prioritized clan defense over personal preservation, embedding Peshmerga in a continuum of asymmetric warfare tactics honed over centuries.[2] The word's honorific evolution from descriptive nomenclature to synonymous with Kurdish national defense illustrates its role in forging identity amid diaspora and persecution, often invoked in poetry and anthems to rally against assimilationist policies.[14]
Historical Development
Early Formations and Revolts (1920s-1960s)
The earliest organized Kurdish armed resistance in Iraq emerged in the aftermath of World War I, as tribal militias challenged British mandate authorities seeking to incorporate Kurdish regions into the new Iraqi state. In May 1919, Shaykh Mahmud Barzanji, a Naqshbandi Sufi leader, initiated a revolt from Sulaymaniyah, proclaiming himself ruler of Kurdistan and mobilizing around 500 fighters, including a young Mustafa Barzani; British forces, employing aircraft for suppression, defeated the uprising by June 1919, leading to Barzanji's temporary exile.[17][18] Barzanji returned in 1922, sparking further revolts that controlled parts of southern Kurdistan until British aerial bombardments and ground operations quelled the resistance, prompting a short-lived recognition of limited Kurdish autonomy in 1923 before full integration into Iraq.[17]A subsequent wave of unrest occurred in 1931–1932, led by Sheikh Ahmed Barzani, Mustafa's brother, who unified several tribes in protest against Iraq's impending independence and League of Nations membership without provisions for Kurdish self-rule. The rebels achieved initial successes, including a battle where Barzani forces inflicted 13 deaths and 34 wounds on Iraqi troops, but Iraqi army advances supported by British air bombings inflicted heavy casualties on the Kurds, numbering in the hundreds, and forced the revolt's collapse by mid-1932.[19][20]The term "Peshmerga," denoting "those who face death," gained formal usage among Kurdish fighters during the mid-1940s, though organized formations trace to 1943 when Mustafa Barzani, returning from exile, assembled an initial force of 750 tribal warriors in the Barzan region to raid Iraqi police stations and frontier posts amid economic grievances and demands for autonomy.[21][17] Under Barzani's command, the group expanded to nearly 2,000 by late 1943, structured into combat units with appointed leaders like Muhammad Amin Mirkhan and enforced discipline codes; victories in battles such as Gora Tu and Mazna (1943–1944) secured the release of Sheikh Ahmed Barzani in 1944 and bolstered calls for regional self-governance, but intensified Iraqi offensives compelled a retreat into Iran by October 1945.[21]Following these events, Barzani established the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) in 1946 to coordinate political and military efforts for Kurdish rights within Iraq.[21] After years in Soviet exile until 1958, Barzani's forces initially cooperated with Iraq's new republican government under Abdul Karim Qasim, aiding in suppressing anti-regime uprisings like those in Mosul (1959) and Sidakan (1959). Tensions escalated over unfulfilled autonomy promises, culminating in the KDP's declaration of revolt on September 10, 1961, which ignited the September Revolution—a sustained guerrilla campaign where Peshmerga seized strategic mountain passes and disrupted Iraqi supply lines.[21][17] By 1962, Peshmerga strength had grown to 15,000–20,000 organized into units like dasta (squads) and pal (companies), unifying tribes against Iraqi air strikes on areas like Barzan, though the conflict persisted without decisive resolution into the late 1960s.[17]
Mahabad Republic and Immediate Aftermath (1946-1970s)
The Republic of Mahabad, proclaimed on January 22, 1946, in northwestern Iran under Soviet influence, marked an early institutionalization of Peshmerga forces as the official military of a Kurdish proto-state. Mustafa Barzani, leader of Kurdish fighters from Iraq's Barzani tribe, arrived in Mahabad with several thousand armed men in late 1945 and was appointed Minister of Defense, commanding the Peshmerga units that defended the republic against potential threats. These forces, numbering around 3,000-5,000 irregular fighters at peak, relied on tribal levies and Soviet-supplied arms to maintain order and deter Iranian incursions, though they engaged in limited skirmishes rather than full-scale war until the republic's end.[22][23][21]The republic collapsed on December 15, 1946, after Soviet withdrawal allowed Iranian troops to advance; Barzani's Peshmerga resisted fiercely in battles around Mahabad, inflicting casualties but ultimately withdrawing to avoid encirclement. Barzani led approximately 500-1,000 Peshmerga fighters on a grueling 53-day exodus starting May 18, 1947, crossing into Soviet Azerbaijan to evade Iranian pursuit, preserving a core of experienced guerrilla cadres. This retreat, involving heavy losses from combat and hardship, shifted Peshmerga operations from state defense to survival and exile-based reorganization, with Barzani establishing training camps in the USSR where fighters honed tactics for future insurgencies.[23][21][17]Barzani's Peshmerga remnants remained in Soviet exile until 1958, when he returned to Iraq following the overthrow of the monarchy, initially cooperating with the new republican government under Abd al-Karim Qasim. Tensions escalated over Kurdish demands for autonomy, culminating in the September Revolution on September 11, 1961, when Barzani proclaimed an uprising from bases in Iraqi Kurdistan, mobilizing Peshmerga forces estimated at 15,000-20,000 by mid-decade. These guerrillas, operating in mountainous terrain, employed hit-and-run tactics to seize control of rural areas, capturing towns like Zakho and Rawanduz by 1962 and forcing Iraqi army withdrawals through ambushes that inflicted disproportionate casualties despite inferior conventional weaponry.[24][25][21]The First Iraqi-Kurdish War (1961-1970) saw Peshmerga evolve into a more structured insurgency, bolstered by external aid including arms from Iran and Israel, enabling sustained control over 80% of Kurdistan's territory by 1965. Iraqi counteroffensives, involving chemical weapons and scorched-earth policies, displaced tens of thousands but failed to dislodge core Peshmerga strongholds, as fighters adapted with fortified positions and supply lines. The conflict ended with the March 11, 1970, autonomy agreement, negotiated between Barzani and Saddam Hussein, which recognized Kurdish rights to self-rule in specified areas and integrated select Peshmerga units into Iraq's national guard, though implementation faltered amid mutual distrust. This pact temporarily legitimized Peshmerga as a political-military entity, numbering around 50,000 by 1970, but sowed seeds for renewed fighting after Baghdad's 1974 abrogation.[26][27][28]
Ba'athist Oppression and Anfal Genocide (1970s-1991)
Following the 1970 Iraqi-Kurdish Autonomy Agreement, which promised Kurds regional self-governance, official recognition of the Kurdish language, and representation in national institutions, implementation disputes arose as Baghdad unilaterally drafted an autonomy statute in March 1974 that excluded key oil-rich areas like Kirkuk from Kurdish control.[29][30] This triggered the Second Iraqi-Kurdish War (1974-1975), during which Peshmerga forces under the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) mounted guerrilla offensives against Iraqi army positions in northern Iraq, capturing territory and disrupting government supply lines with support from Iran and covert U.S. aid.[31] The conflict ended in March 1975 after the Algiers Accord between Iraq and Iran, which halted Tehran's backing of the Kurds, leading to a Peshmerga collapse; thousands of fighters surrendered or fled, and over 200,000 Kurds were forcibly relocated to southern Iraq as part of early Arabization policies.[31][30]The Iran-Iraq War (1980-1988) revived Peshmerga activity, as Kurdish fighters, numbering around 50,000-100,000 across KDP and PUK factions, exploited Iraq's preoccupation to launch cross-border raids into Iraqi Kurdistan, coordinating with Iranian forces to seize towns and sabotage oil infrastructure.[32] Iraqi retaliation escalated with scorched-earth tactics, including the destruction of over 4,000 Kurdish villages by 1983 and widespread use of chemical weapons against Peshmerga positions starting in 1983, such as mustard gas attacks on Barzani tribesmen.[33] These measures aimed to dismantle Kurdish resistance bases, displacing populations and integrating areas via settlement of Arab families, but Peshmerga persisted in hit-and-run operations, controlling significant rural swathes by 1987.[33]The Anfal campaign (February-September 1988), orchestrated by Ali Hassan al-Majid under Saddam Hussein's regime, represented the apex of Ba'athist anti-Kurdish operations, targeting Peshmerga-held areas in the Garmian and Badinan regions through phased military sweeps involving artillery barrages, chemical bombardments, and mass executions.[33] In the first phase, Iraqi forces sealed off valleys, herded civilians into complexes for "registration," and executed non-combatants, killing an estimated 50,000-100,000 Kurds overall, with Peshmerga units suffering heavy losses while attempting to shield evacuations.[33][34] The Halabja attack on March 16, 1988, following a joint Peshmerga-Iranian capture of the city, deployed a cocktail of mustard gas, sarin, and tabun, killing 3,200-5,000 civilians and wounding 7,000-10,000, decimating local resistance capabilities.[35] Subsequent phases razed 2,000 villages and deported survivors, effectively depopulating Peshmerga strongholds; al-Majid's directives explicitly authorized village destruction and chemical use against "saboteurs."[33]By 1989-1991, surviving Peshmerga regrouped in remote mountains, sustaining low-level insurgency amid ongoing chemical strikes and executions, which claimed up to 182,000 Kurdish lives in total during Anfal.[34] Iraqi courts later convicted Saddam Hussein and al-Majid of genocide for these acts in 2006-2007 trials, based on evidence of systematic intent to eradicate Kurdish rural society and resistance networks.[36] Peshmerga resilience, though battered, laid groundwork for the 1991 post-Gulf War uprising, where fighters briefly overran Iraqi garrisons before regime counteroffensives.[33]
Gulf Wars, Safe Haven, and Autonomy (1991-2003)
Following the conclusion of the Gulf War on February 28, 1991, Kurdish forces, including Peshmerga units affiliated with the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), participated in a widespread uprising against the Iraqi regime starting in mid-March. Encouraged by U.S. President George H.W. Bush's calls for Saddam Hussein's removal but lacking direct coalition support, the Peshmerga briefly captured major cities such as Kirkuk on March 19 and Sulaymaniyah. Iraqi Republican Guard counteroffensives, however, rapidly reversed these gains, ousting Peshmerga from Kirkuk by March 29 and forcing a retreat from Erbil and Dohuk by early April, resulting in the deaths of tens of thousands and the flight of over 1.5 million Kurds toward the Turkish and Iranian borders.[37][32]In response to the humanitarian crisis, the UN Security Council adopted Resolution 688 on April 5, 1991, condemning Iraq's repression of civilians, including Kurds, and demanding access for international relief efforts to affected populations. This paved the way for Operation Provide Comfort, a U.S.-led multinational effort launched on April 7, involving coalition forces from 13 countries, which established secure relief corridors and a safe haven in northern Iraq north of the 36th parallel. Ground troops, peaking at over 20,000, secured areas around Zakho and later withdrew to Turkey by July 15, while air enforcement of a no-fly zone prevented Iraqi incursions, enabling displaced Kurds to return and Peshmerga forces to reconsolidate control over approximately 80% of Iraqi Kurdistan by late 1991. Operation Northern Watch succeeded Provide Comfort in January 1997, maintaining aerial patrols until 2003.[38][39]The safe haven facilitated de facto Kurdish autonomy, shielding the region from Baghdad's direct control and allowing the Peshmerga to function as the primary security force against sporadic Iraqi incursions. In May 1992, parliamentary elections established the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG), with Peshmerga units under KDP leader Masoud Barzani and PUK leader Jalal Talabani securing territorial divisions. Autonomy endured amid economic challenges, including reliance on smuggling and limited oil revenues, but was undermined by intra-Kurdish conflict.[37][31]Tensions between KDP and PUK Peshmerga escalated into civil war from 1994 to 1998, triggered by disputes over revenue from the Turkish border crossing at Ibrahim Khalil and political dominance, leading to battles that killed over 2,000 and divided Iraqi Kurdistan into KDP-controlled west and PUK-controlled east. Peshmerga forces, estimated at 70,000-120,000 total, clashed repeatedly, with external involvement including Iranian support for PUK and alleged Iraqi aid to KDP. U.S.-mediated Washington Agreement on September 17, 1998, restored a fragile power-sharing arrangement, though partisan Peshmerga structures persisted until after 2003.[37][31][40]
Post-2003 Reintegration and Rise of ISIS (2003-2014)
Following the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, Peshmerga forces collaborated with coalition troops, securing northern cities such as Kirkuk on April 10, 2003, after Iraqi Republican Guard units fled, with U.S. Special Forces providing air support and coordination.[41] This cooperation extended to operations in disputed territories, where Peshmerga units filled security vacuums left by the collapse of Saddam Hussein's regime, including advances into areas like Kirkuk and Diyala province.[2] Although initial U.S. plans envisioned partial reintegration of Peshmerga into the new Iraqi Army, the forces largely retained autonomy under the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG), functioning as the region's official military per the 2005 Iraqi Constitution, which recognized Kurdishfederalism and regional security responsibilities.[37]Peshmerga numbers, estimated at 100,000–120,000 in 2003, expanded amid unification efforts between the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) factions, driven by post-invasion imperatives to consolidate under a single command.[42] The 2006 KDP-PUK Unification Agreement renewed commitments to merge party-affiliated units, leading to the formalization of the Ministry of Peshmerga Affairs in 2007 and the creation of Regional Guards Brigades in 2009–2010 as non-partisan formations.[37][11] By 2014, total strength approached 150,000–200,000, with approximately 40,000 under the ministry's 14 brigades and the remainder tied to KDP (80 Units) or PUK (70 Units) structures, reflecting incomplete integration amid partisan divisions.[43][44]Tensions with Baghdad escalated over disputed territories, exemplified by the 2008 Khanaqin crisis in Diyala province, where the Iraqi Army's 1st Division deployed to replace Peshmerga garrisons, prompting a standoff resolved only through U.S. mediation without gunfire but highlighting unresolved Article 140 implementation on Kirkuk and other areas.[45][46] Peshmerga maintained forward positions in these zones, cooperating sporadically with Iraqi forces against Sunni insurgents like Al-Qaeda in Iraq (AQI) in border regions such as Diyala, where joint operations quelled militant activity in the mid-2000s.[47] However, limited combat experience since 1991 and reliance on static defense left Peshmerga underprepared for AQI's evolution into the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) by 2013–2014.As ISIS consolidated in western Iraq and exploited Sunni grievances, Peshmerga secured the KRG's de facto borders but faced initial probes in early 2014, with Iraqi Army collapses in June—such as Mosul's fall on June 10—prompting Peshmerga advances into Kirkuk to prevent chaos, inadvertently extending frontlines.[48] These moves strained resources, as Peshmerga prioritized territorial defense over offensive capabilities, setting the stage for ISIS offensives in July–August 2014 targeting Sinjar and Makhmour.[49] Despite U.S. arms flows via the KRG, equipment shortages and partisan command fractures hampered readiness against ISIS's conventional tactics.[50]
War Against ISIS and Territorial Gains (2014-2017)
In June 2014, following the rapid collapse of Iraqi Security Forces in Mosul on June 10, Peshmerga units advanced into the disputed Kirkuk province, assuming control of the city and its oil fields as Iraqi troops fled the ISIS offensive.[51] This move secured approximately 350,000 barrels per day of oil production under Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) administration and expanded Peshmerga presence into multi-ethnic areas long contested between Baghdad and Erbil.[52] By mid-August 2014, however, ISIS forces overran Peshmerga positions in Zumar, Sinjar, and Makhmour, displacing thousands of Yazidis and prompting a tactical retreat due to insufficient heavy weaponry and ammunition shortages.[53]The United States initiated airstrikes against ISIS on August 8, 2014, targeting positions near Erbil and providing immediate relief to Peshmerga lines, followed by the deployment of advisors and delivery of arms including AT-4 anti-tank weapons and small arms ammunition.[54] In October 2014, coalition-backed Peshmerga offensives recaptured Rabia and parts of the Sinjar corridor, severing a key ISIS supply route from Syria to Mosul.[54] These operations, supported by over 2,000 coalition airstrikes in Kurdish-controlled sectors by mid-2015, enabled Peshmerga forces—numbering around 150,000-200,000 personnel—to stabilize fronts in Nineveh and Diyala provinces.[55]A pivotal victory occurred on November 13, 2015, when approximately 7,500 Peshmerga troops, coordinated with U.S. special forces and airstrikes, liberated Sinjar town from ISIS after two days of intense fighting, rescuing remaining Yazidi holdouts and destroying ISIS fortifications.[55][56] This battle, involving KDP-aligned Peshmerga units, resulted in hundreds of ISIS casualties and secured the district, though post-liberation control disputes with PKK-linked YPG forces highlighted intra-Kurdish rivalries.[57] By 2016, Peshmerga secured eastern flanks during the coalition's Mosul offensive, capturing Bashiqa and holding Gwer, thereby gaining de facto administration over additional disputed territories encompassing roughly 40% expansion beyond pre-2014 KRG borders.[58]These gains, while militarily driven by Peshmerga resilience and coalition enablement, incorporated oil-rich and strategically vital areas like the Kirkuk fields and Sinjar Mountains, bolstering KRG economic leverage but fueling tensions with Baghdad over constitutional claims.[52] Peshmerga casualties exceeded 10,000 by 2017, reflecting heavy frontline engagement, though internal divisions between KDP and PUK brigades occasionally hampered unified command.[59] The period marked Peshmerga's transformation into a coalition-aligned force, receiving over $250 million in U.S. aid for training and equipment modernization by 2017.[60]
Independence Referendum, Territorial Losses, and Recovery (2017-2022)
On September 25, 2017, the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) held an independence referendum in the Kurdistan Region and the disputed territories, including Kirkuk, which Peshmerga forces had secured in 2014 amid the Iraqi army's retreat from ISIS advances. Approximately 92.73% of voters supported independence, with turnout around 72% of eligible voters in the region. Peshmerga units, expanded during the anti-ISIS campaign, maintained control over these areas, providing the territorial leverage that enabled the vote's inclusion of disputed zones beyond the KRG's constitutional borders.[61][62]The Iraqi central government, under Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi, rejected the referendum's legitimacy and demanded Peshmerga withdrawal from disputed areas to pre-2014 lines by October 15, 2017, imposing economic sanctions including flight bans and budget cuts. On October 16, Iraqi federal forces, supported by Popular Mobilization Units (PMU), launched offensives, rapidly advancing into Kirkuk after Peshmerga factions—particularly those affiliated with the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK)—withdrew without significant resistance, citing orders from PUK leadership influenced by Iranian pressures and internal KDP-PUK divisions. Clashes were limited, with estimates of dozens of Peshmerga casualties, but the lack of unified command and preparation for conventional warfare against a reorganized Iraqi army led to the swift loss of key sites like Kirkuk's oil fields and military bases.[63][64][65]By late October 2017, Peshmerga relinquished approximately 40% of the territories gained since 2014, including parts of Kirkuk, Nineveh, and Diyala provinces, severing access to Kirkuk's oil revenues that had bolstered KRG finances. The retreat exposed vulnerabilities in Peshmerga cohesion, as party-loyal units prioritized political alignments over joint defense, exacerbating economic fallout from lost exports and Baghdad's blockade. Iranian-backed militias played a role in facilitating Iraqi advances, particularly in PUK-controlled areas, highlighting external influences on Kurdish fractures.[66][67]In response, the Ministry of Peshmerga Affairs (MoPA) accelerated unification reforms from 2018, aiming to consolidate around 200,000 fighters into a professional force under centralized command, reducing partisan brigades through a 31-point plan that included salary standardization, brigade restructuring, and demobilization of excess personnel. U.S. support via a 2017 Memorandum of Understanding (renewed in subsequent years) provided training, equipment stipends (phased out by 2026), and assistance for counter-ISIS operations, enabling Peshmerga to conduct stabilization missions in border areas while partisan units handled most remnant threats. By 2022, reforms achieved partial brigade integration and downsizing, though KDP-PUK rivalries slowed full unification, with MoPA forces focusing on defensive postures amid ongoing Baghdad-Erbil tensions over oil and budgets.[16][68][6]Peshmerga recovery emphasized institutionalization, with international partners like the U.S. and coalition allies prioritizing anti-ISIS residual threats in disputed zones, where Peshmerga patrolled alongside Iraqi forces under fragile truces. Economic constraints from territorial losses prompted efficiency drives, including equipment modernization from U.S. and European donors, but persistent party control over units limited operational autonomy. Despite setbacks, Peshmerga maintained deterrence against ISIS resurgence, contributing to Iraq's overall stabilization by 2022, though vulnerabilities to internal divisions remained evident in stalled territorial negotiations.[69][70]
Ongoing Reforms and Stabilization (2023-2025)
In 2023, the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) advanced Peshmerga unification by consolidating 28 brigades under the Ministry of Peshmerga Affairs (MoPA), with oversight from Coalition Forces, aiming for completion within two years.[71] This process involved biometric registration to reduce duplicate payrolls and patronage networks tied to the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), though political divisions persisted as barriers.[16] By mid-2023, reforms emphasized professionalization, including unified command structures and logistics simplification, to enhance operational efficiency amid Iraq's fragile security environment.[68]Efforts intensified in 2024-2025, with KDP and PUK agreeing in January 2025 to merge Units 70 and 80 under the Davar Command by March, marking a step toward a national army framework.[72] By September 2025, seven divisions had been formed from brigade consolidations, with four more planned, nearing the final unification stage under a US-backed initiative that shifted focus to division-level command for better control.[73]Prime MinisterMasrour Barzani chaired a September 15, 2025, meeting to accelerate MoPA reforms, approving restructuring aligned with broader government priorities, including establishment of two command regions by year's end to support a unified force.[10][74]International partners bolstered these reforms through training and funding; the US reaffirmed commitment on September 18, 2025, via a 2022 security assistance agreement, with the 2025 Pentagon budget allocating $57.8 million for Peshmerga equipment and training, rising slightly for 2026.[70][75] Joint drills for merging units commenced in July 2025, while Coalition Forces provided advisory support, though US officials expressed frustration in August 2025 over delays attributed to partisan resistance.[76][77] Full unification is targeted for 2026, contingent on sustained political will, to stabilize the region against threats like Turkish incursions and Iranian-backed militias.[78]Stabilization efforts included salary regularization and infrastructure builds, with MoPA achieving key reforms in unifying KDP- and PUK-affiliated forces despite Baghdad's inconsistent funding.[78] Coordination with Iraqi security forces improved via joint operations, but Peshmerga retained autonomy under the Iraqi Constitution, focusing internally on counter-terrorism readiness post-ISIS.[79] These measures aim to forge a cohesive force capable of defending Kurdistan amid ongoing geopolitical pressures.
Organizational Structure
Political Party Affiliations and Divisions
The Peshmerga forces maintain strong affiliations with the two primary political parties in Iraq's Kurdistan Region: the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and the [Patriotic Union of Kurdistan](/page/Patriotic Union of Kurdistan) (PUK). The KDP controls the 80 Units (also referred to as Unit 80), comprising approximately 50,000 fighters loyal primarily to party leadership rather than the regional government.[68][11] Similarly, the PUK oversees the 70 Units (Unit 70), with a comparable force of around 50,000 personnel whose allegiance prioritizes partisan structures over centralized command.[68][80] These party-affiliated contingents constitute the majority of Peshmerga strength, exceeding the Ministry of Peshmerga Affairs' (MOPA) unified brigades by a factor of roughly three to one.[81][37]This partisan alignment fosters operational divisions, manifesting in geographically delineated security zones: the KDP-dominated "Yellow Zone" in the west and north, and the PUK-led "Green Zone" in the south and east.[16] Such fragmentation undermines unified command, as forces respond to party directives during conflicts, evident in historical intra-Kurdish clashes like those in the 1990s and coordination issues against ISIS from 2014 onward.[11][37] Party loyalties, rooted in decades of guerrilla warfare and patronage networks, perpetuate nepotism and resistance to subordination under MOPA, with older generations exhibiting particularly entrenched partisan ties.[68][11]Reform initiatives since 2017 have sought to dismantle these divisions by integrating Units 70 and 80 into MOPA's structure, including partial transfers of PUK forces into the ministry's Second and Fourth Divisions by early 2025.[82] Plans announced in January 2025 envision restructuring into two regional commands—Region One and Region Two—each with five divisions, aiming for completion before 2026, though KDP-PUK rivalries have delayed full unification, leaving significant partisan contingents intact as of September 2025.[83][77] These efforts, driven by figures like KDP leader Masoud Barzani, emphasize transcending party influences for a national force, yet persistent political incentives and corruption allegations continue to hinder progress.[80][4]
Unification Efforts and Agreements
Efforts to unify the Peshmerga, traditionally divided along lines of allegiance to the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), date back to the establishment of the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) in 1992, with formal unification under the Ministry of Peshmerga Affairs (MoPA) proposed as a core objective.[73] These divisions stemmed from the 1990s Kurdish civil war, which fragmented command structures into partisan militias, complicating centralized control despite shared Kurdish national goals.[44]The 1998 Washington Agreement, brokered by the United States, ended active hostilities between the KDP and PUK, laying groundwork for cooperation but leaving Peshmerga forces under separate party commands.[44] This was followed by the 2006 Unification Agreement, signed by KDP leader Masoud Barzani and PUK leader Jalal Talabani, which committed both parties to integrating their forces into a unified structure, including the creation of the MoPA as a proto-defense ministry to oversee non-partisan brigades.[37] However, implementation stalled due to entrenched partisan loyalties, with KDP and PUK maintaining parallel commands for Units 70 (PUK-aligned) and 80 (KDP-aligned), respectively.[11]Post-2017 reforms accelerated after territorial losses to Iraqi forces, emphasizing depoliticization and integration under MoPA. In 2023, the KRG entered a 35-point agreement with international partners, including the U.S.-led coalition, to professionalize the force through brigade restructuring, equipment inventories, and unification of partisan units into Regional Guard Brigades.[16] A September 2022 U.S.-KRG security agreement further outlined military assistance for unification, focusing on institutional gaps and interoperability between KDP and PUK forces.[70]By 2025, unification progressed to near-final stages, with seven divisions formed and four more planned, alongside the integration of Units 70 and 80 expected by March, aiming for completion by September 2026.[73] U.S. delegations reaffirmed support in September 2025 meetings, highlighting ongoing funding, training, and coordination to overcome political hurdles.[84] Despite advances, challenges persist from partisan resistance and budgetary disputes with Baghdad, which have delayed salary payments and full MoPA authority.[68]
Ministry Oversight and Command Hierarchy
The Peshmerga forces fall under the formal oversight of the Kurdistan Regional Government's (KRG) Ministry of Peshmerga Affairs (MoPA), which was established to administer personnel, logistics, procurement, and modernization efforts for the approximately 125,000-strong force.[1] The ministry operates from Erbil and is led by a minister and deputy minister, supported by a secretary general and specialized directorates for contracts, armament, volunteers, and finance, handling administrative and budgetary functions.[85] However, operational command remains partially decentralized due to historical divisions between the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), with many units retaining party loyalties despite legal mandates for unity under the KRG presidency.[42]According to the KRG's 1992 constitution, the President of Kurdistan serves as the supreme Commander-in-Chief of the Peshmerga, with authority over strategic decisions and deployments, though day-to-day oversight is delegated to MoPA.[2] Reforms initiated post-2017 independence referendum have aimed to centralize this hierarchy, including the creation of unified brigades like the Regional Guard Brigades, which report directly to MoPA rather than party militias.[16] As of December 2024, MoPA announced plans for two operational command centers—divided into geographic "Davar" areas—overseeing 11 military divisions to streamline the chain of command and reduce partisan fragmentation.[86]By September 2025, unification efforts had progressed to form seven divisions under this structure, with four more in development, supported by U.S. assistance emphasizing a single professional command to enhance efficiency and interoperability.[73] Despite these advances, challenges persist, including political resistance from KDP and PUK factions that maintain parallel command chains for non-integrated units, leading to duplicated efforts and uneven resource allocation.[16] The Peshmerga Executive Steering Committee, co-chaired with the U.S. Department of Defense, continues to monitor milestones for full institutionalization, including standardized reporting lines from brigade to ministry level.[87]
Integration with Iraqi Security Forces
The Peshmerga, as the military forces of the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG), hold a distinct status under Article 121(5) of the Iraqi Constitution, which assigns regional governments responsibility for internal security forces while recognizing Peshmerga as a legitimate component of Iraq's overall defense framework.[88][89] This provision formalized their role post-2003, distinguishing them from federal Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) under the Ministry of Defense in Baghdad, with Peshmerga command remaining under KRG's Ministry of Peshmerga Affairs rather than integrated into the national chain of command.[37][90] Full subordination to federal authority has not occurred, as KRG maintains operational autonomy to safeguard regional interests, amid ongoing disputes over funding, salaries, and control of territories like Kirkuk.[91]Following the 2003 U.S.-led invasion, select Peshmerga units were temporarily tasked with federal roles, including border security, oil pipeline protection, and joint training with coalition forces, totaling around 7,000 personnel trained by U.S. forces in some estimates. However, these arrangements did not lead to permanent incorporation, as Peshmerga retained loyalty to KRG political parties (KDP and PUK) and regional oversight, contrasting with the ISF's centralized structure dominated by Shi'a Arab elements after Sunni boycotts post-2003.[92] Cooperation intensified during the 2014-2017 campaign against ISIS, where Peshmerga forces—numbering approximately 200,000 at peak mobilization—fought alongside ISF units, such as in the Battle of Mosul, supported by U.S.-led coalition airstrikes and logistics.[16] A 2016 U.S.-KRG memorandum of understanding facilitated this partnership, providing equipment and training without altering Peshmerga's regional status.[93]Post-2017 Kurdistan independence referendum, relations strained as Iraqi forces retook disputed areas, prompting limited agreements on joint security, such as the 2021 pact for two mixed Peshmerga-ISF brigades in contested zones and the Sinjar Agreement to counter PKK influence.[94] Yet, integration efforts faltered due to mutual distrust: Baghdad delayed Peshmerga salary payments (pegged at Iraqi army levels but often underfunded) and reduced Kurdish representation in the federal military to under 1% by 2025, violating constitutional quotas for ethnic balance.[90][95] KRG reforms since 2023 emphasize internal unification—merging party-affiliated brigades into nine professional divisions—over federal absorption, with U.S. support continuing but potentially shifting toward ISF priorities as of August 2025.[68][96] This parallel structure sustains Peshmerga effectiveness in regional defense but perpetuates Iraq's fragmented security apparatus, hindering unified national command.[97]
Combat Formations and Special Units
The Peshmerga forces are primarily structured around Regional Guard Brigades, with ongoing reforms consolidating these into divisional commands for improved operational cohesion. As of October 2023, twenty-eight such brigades had been unified under the Ministry of Peshmerga Affairs (MoPA), including Brigades 15, 17, 18, 19, 21, 22, 23, 24, 26, and 30, while Brigades 25 and 27 were nearing completion.[16] Two division headquarters were established by this period to oversee brigade-level operations, with proposals for two additional headquarters pending approval.[16] By September 2025, seven divisions were operational as part of a U.S.-backed unification plan, with four more in development to form a total of eleven infantry divisions across two military zones.[73][76]Earlier integration efforts between 2010 and 2013 merged approximately 42,000 personnel from partisan Unit 70 (affiliated with the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan) and Unit 80 (affiliated with the Kurdistan Democratic Party) into fourteen unified brigades, though partisan influences have persisted in command structures.[70] These brigades typically consist of infantry-focused units equipped for defensive and counterinsurgency roles, with brigade sizes varying from 3,000 to 5,000 personnel depending on recruitment and reform progress.[16]Special units within the Peshmerga include elite and rapid-reaction formations designed for high-intensity operations. The Zeravani brigades, functioning as a gendarmerie and special intervention force under the Kurdistan Regional Government's Ministry of Interior, provide internal security and quick-response capabilities, with historical formations totaling around 30,000 troops organized into divisions.[98] The Gulan Special Forces, an elite unit linked to KDP leadership and commanded by figures such as Mansour Barzani, specialize in counterterrorism and direct-action missions, including operations against ISIS remnants.[99] Additional specialized elements, such as the Counter-Terrorism Group (CTG) Kurdistan, operate as one of Iraq's most capable special forces contingents, focusing on intelligence-driven raids and high-value target neutralization.[11] These units, while integrated into broader reforms, often retain semi-autonomous operational chains tied to political affiliations, complicating full unification.[16]
Military Capabilities
Equipment Inventory and Modernization
The Peshmerga's equipment inventory features a mix of legacy Soviet-era systems, battlefield captures from ISIS, and targeted international donations, reflecting limited centralized procurement prior to recent reforms. Small arms predominantly consist of AK-47 assault rifles and variants, supplemented by PK-series machine guns, DShK heavy machine guns, and RPG-7 rocket launchers for infantry support.[100] Anti-tank capabilities include Milan and TOW guided missiles, effective against armored advances during the ISIS conflict.[42][101]Heavier assets remain constrained, with armored forces relying on antiquated T-55, T-62, and T-72 tanks, many salvaged from pre-2003 Iraqi arsenals or post-liberation captures, lacking modern upgrades like reactive armor or advanced fire control.[102]Artillery inventories include towed howitzers, bolstered by U.S. deliveries of new systems in August 2024 to enhance indirect fire support.[103] Armored personnel carriers and MRAP vehicles form the mobility backbone, though quantities are insufficient for sustained mechanized operations, with partisan divisions between KDP and PUK units leading to duplicated or incompatible stockpiles.[16]Modernization initiatives, accelerated since 2018 as part of unification under the Ministry of Peshmerga Affairs, prioritize standardization, logistics interoperability, and acquisition of defensive technologies. The United States has provided heavy weapons shipments in 2024 and committed nearly $250 million in security assistance for equipment and infrastructure, including artillery and potential air defense systems authorized by a 2023 congressional bill.[104]Germany contributed advanced weapons, armored vehicles, and communications gear in January 2025, alongside training to integrate these assets.[105] U.S. funding for Peshmerga training and procurement rose to $61 million in fiscal year 2025, focusing on countering residual ISIS threats and Iranian-backed militias.[106] These efforts aim to phase out obsolete gear, but progress is hampered by budget disputes with Baghdad and internal factionalism, resulting in uneven distribution across brigades.[107]
Training Programs and International Assistance
The Peshmerga maintain internal training facilities, such as the Menila Training Center in northern Iraq, where units conduct exercises simulating front-line attacks and defensive maneuvers.[108] These programs emphasize basic infantry skills, route clearance, and counter-improvised explosive device (IED) tactics, often building on coalition-provided methodologies.[109]International assistance to Peshmerga training expanded significantly following the 2014 rise of ISIS, coordinated through the Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS under Operation Inherent Resolve, which advises and equips Kurdish forces to enable independent operations against remnants of the group.[110] The United States initiated formal training in early 2015, deploying advisors to sites including Irbil, where approximately 100 Peshmerga began brigade-level instruction on January 23, 2015; this effort targeted three Peshmerga brigades as part of a broader plan announced by President Obama in November2014 to train nine Iraqi and three Kurdish brigades.[111][112] By 2016, U.S. and coalition assessments evaluated these programs' effectiveness in enhancing Kurdish Security Forces' operational capacity against ISIS.[113] Training continued into 2018 with $365 million allocated for Peshmerga sustainment, including skill development in combat and logistics.[114] U.S. efforts persisted as of August 2021, with military experts committed to ongoing Peshmerga instruction.[115]Germany contributed substantially from 2014 onward, deploying around 100 Bundeswehr troops in December 2014 to northern Iraq for Peshmerga instruction in weapons handling, urban combat, and patrolling; initial sessions also occurred in Bavaria starting September 28, 2014.[116][117] Up to 150 German soldiers extended this mandate through 2017, focusing on experienced fighters rather than novices, though training paused in October 2017 amid Kirkuk tensions.[118][119]The United Kingdom led coalition efforts in specialized areas, funding counter-IED and bomb disposaltraining announced on October 13, 2014, and providing instruction in infantry tactics, medical response, and explosive detection for Kurdish forces from 2017 to 2019.[120][121]France, alongside other coalition members like Italy, supplied military advisors for weaponry and intelligencetraining, integrated into broader post-2014 support packages.[122] Coalition-wide programs, active as of September 2024, continue to emphasize detect-and-defeat IED skills and operational readiness.[123]
Operational Strengths and Limitations
The Peshmerga have demonstrated notable operational strengths rooted in their fighters' high motivation, familiarity with rugged northern Iraqi terrain, and experience in irregular warfare, enabling effective defensive operations and localized counteroffensives. During the 2014–2017 campaign against the Islamic State, Peshmerga forces, bolstered by coalition airstrikes and intelligence, successfully liberated key areas such as Sinjar in November 2015, where over 7,500 Kurdish and Yezidi fighters expelled ISIS militants and severed a critical supply route along Highway 47 between Mosul and Raqqa.[55] Their morale, encapsulated in the term meaning "those who face death," has sustained prolonged engagements, particularly in protecting core Kurdish territories like Erbil.[124]However, these strengths are constrained by deep political fragmentation, with forces divided along party lines such as the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), resulting in disjointed command structures and rivalries that delayed unified responses, as seen in intra-Kurdish tensions during the Sinjar operation.[55] This disunity hampers large-scale maneuver warfare and resource allocation, perpetuating a reliance on ad hoc coalitions rather than integrated operations.Equipment deficiencies further limit conventional capabilities; historically equipped as light infantry with outdated Soviet-era armaments, the Peshmerga proved vulnerable to ISIS's captured heavy weaponry during the August 2014 offensive, where militants overran positions along a 650-mile front due to the Kurds' lack of tanks, artillery, and recent combat experience.[7] As of 2024, persistent shortages include no combat aircraft, minimal utility helicopters, absence of drones for intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR), and inadequate air defenses against rocket, artillery, and drone attacks from Iran-backed militias, exemplified by strikes on the Khor Mor gas field.[102] Baghdad's restrictions have blocked transfers of advanced systems like Javelin missiles and surveillance drones, despite U.S. deliveries of items such as 36 M119 howitzers in August 2024, underscoring ongoing dependence on external aid for modernization.[102][124]
Societal and Demographic Aspects
Role of Women in Combat and Support
Women have participated in the Peshmerga since the 1990s, with formal integration into combattraining beginning in 1996 amid opposition to Saddam Hussein's regime, leading to the establishment of dedicated all-female units.[125] These units, numbering around 500 fighters by 2015, underwent specialized military training and were assigned to guard sensitive sites post-2003, though they retained combat capabilities.[126] Unlike many regional militaries, Peshmerga policy permits women to serve alongside men in frontline roles, a practice that gained prominence during the fight against ISIS starting in 2014.[127]During the ISIS conflict, female Peshmerga units, such as the Sun Brigade formed around 2016, engaged in direct combat operations, with nearly 200 women aged 18-38 receiving Peshmerga training by early 2017; this included 127 Yazidi recruits focused on liberating their communities.[128] These fighters contributed to defensive efforts in northern Iraq, screening displaced women at checkpoints—a tactical advantage given ISIS beliefs about purification through combat with females—and providing immediate medical aid via individual first aid kits (IFAKs).[129] However, post-ISIS territorial defeats by 2017, many female units shifted toward support functions like border security, protection of women's shelters, and logistics, amid reports of reduced frontline deployments.[128]In support capacities, women have handled communications, medical services, and welfare for internally displaced persons, leveraging their roles to address gender-specific needs in conflict zones.[128]Coalition training programs, including advanced instructor courses completed by female Peshmerga in Erbil and Sulaymaniyah in November (year unspecified in reports but post-ISIS era), enhanced their operational effectiveness in both combat and advisory roles.[130]As of March 2025, female participation remains low at approximately 1% of Peshmerga forces, prompting the Ministry of Peshmerga Affairs to launch initiatives aiming for 6% integration, including plans for a dedicated female regiment while allowing role flexibility.[131] This push reflects ongoing efforts to balance traditional combat integration with expanded support functions, though challenges like recruitment halts in 2015 temporarily limited growth.[126]
Recruitment, Demographics, and Veteran Affairs
Recruitment into the Peshmerga occurs primarily through voluntary contractual enlistment overseen by the Ministry of Peshmerga Affairs, with no formal conscription in place.[132] Candidates typically must be aged 18 to 30 and hold at least a high school diploma, undergoing selective evaluations that prioritize fitness, loyalty, and skills amid unification reforms.[133] During intensified drives, such as in June 2015 against ISIS, thousands of volunteers applied for new brigades, but officials rejected most to maintain standards, reflecting a preference for quality over quantity in party-influenced but increasingly centralized processes.[133] While enlistment remains uncoerced, social pressures from families or communities in Kurdish areas can encourage participation, particularly in regions with strong martial traditions.[132]The Peshmerga's demographics are dominated by Iraqi Kurds, comprising the vast majority of personnel and reflecting the ethnic composition of the Kurdistan Region, where Kurds form about 15-20% of Iraq's total population but maintain concentrated regional control.[134] Forces are historically segmented by political affiliation, with Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP)-aligned units drawing more Kurmanji speakers from Erbil and Dohuk, and Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK)-aligned units favoring Sorani speakers from Sulaymaniyah, though unification efforts under the Ministry aim to dilute these divides.[16] Ethnic minorities, including Yazidis, AssyrianChristians, and Turkmen, constitute a minority share, often integrated into specialized or regional roles following ISIS-era displacements.[98] Overall strength hovers around 150,000 to 200,000 active fighters, supplemented by reserves, with the absence of conscription limiting broader societal representation and favoring volunteers from tribal or politically connected networks.[135][136] Age profiles skew toward combat-ready adults, with service eligibility spanning 21 to 41 years, blending veterans from prior conflicts like the Iran-Iraq War and Anfal genocide with younger ISIS-era recruits.[11]Veteran affairs are administered by the Ministry of Peshmerga Affairs, encompassing pensions, medical care, and retirement benefits for former fighters, including those disabled in battles against ISIS from 2014 onward.[1] However, systemic delays plague disbursements, with retirees protesting an 18-month pension freeze as of April 2025, attributed to chronic funding shortfalls from Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) budget constraints and federal disputes over salary equalization.[137] The Peshmerga Pension Authority has advocated aligning benefits with Iraq's unified retirement law while preserving regional adjustments, amid KRG directives in September 2025 to accelerate processing for unification-linked retirees.[138][139] Structural issues, including party-based payrolls and oil revenue withholding by Baghdad, exacerbate inconsistencies, though international coalition stipends indirectly bolster active forces and reform efforts that could extend to veteran equity.[140][95]
Controversies and Criticisms
Internal Challenges: Corruption, Nepotism, and Delays
The Peshmerga have faced persistent internal challenges stemming from corruption, which has manifested in practices such as the inflation of troop numbers through "ghost soldiers"—non-existent personnel listed on payrolls to siphon funds—and embezzlement of military resources. These issues have been exacerbated by the dual command structure inherited from the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), allowing party-affiliated units to operate parallel to the unified Ministry of Peshmerga Affairs (MoPA), established in 2014 to centralize control but undermined by partisan interference. For instance, audits have revealed discrepancies where reported Peshmerga strength exceeded actual deployable forces by up to 50% in some brigades, diverting salaries intended for active fighters.[122]Nepotism has further entrenched inefficiencies, with senior command positions often allocated based on familial or political loyalty rather than merit, particularly within the Barzani and Talabani clans dominating KDP and PUK forces, respectively. This has led to unqualified appointments and resistance to merit-based reforms, as evidenced by stalled unification efforts where party elites prioritize patronage networks over operational cohesion. Reports indicate that such favoritism contributes to low morale and duplicated efforts, with promotions frequently bypassing competent officers in favor of relatives of political leaders, hindering the integration of forces post-2017 referendum setbacks.[122][141][77]Delays in salary payments and procurement have compounded these problems, often linked to corruption scandals and fiscal mismanagement within the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG), directly impacting Peshmerga readiness. Public sector salary arrears, including for Peshmerga, reached months-long backlogs by 2014-2017 amid oil revenue disputes with Baghdad and internal graft, eroding troop motivation and contributing to desertions during critical operations against ISIS. As recently as 2025, U.S. officials expressed frustration over protracted reform delays, attributing them to entrenched nepotism and corruption that perpetuate underfunding and uneven equipping, with some units waiting over six months for pay amid ongoing party control over budgets. These challenges have persisted despite international aid, as partisan divisions impede the MoPA's enforcement of unified standards, resulting in fragmented logistics and delayed modernization initiatives.[77][84]
Relations with Baghdad: Budget Disputes and Legal Status
The Peshmerga's legal status derives from Article 121(5) of Iraq's 2005 Constitution, which vests regional governments with authority to administer security forces for maintaining order within their territory, explicitly recognizing the Peshmerga as the Kurdistan Regional Government's (KRG) official regional military.[89][12] This provision formalizes their role as a legitimate state entity under Iraqi law, distinct from irregular militias, with command structures remaining under KRG control rather than federal oversight.[37][90]Baghdad, however, has persistently challenged this autonomy, asserting that the Peshmerga should integrate into the national armed forces to ensure unified command and prevent regional separatism, a position reinforced by demands for Peshmerga subordination during federal military reforms.[16][11]Budgetary relations between Erbil and Baghdad form a core friction point, with the federal government constitutionally required to allocate a proportionate share of national revenues to the KRG, including funds for Peshmerga salaries estimated at around $900 million annually as part of the region's 17% entitlement under pre-2014 formulas.[142] Payments have been repeatedly delayed or conditioned on concessions over oil exports, territorial control, and fiscal transparency, escalating since 2014 amid disputes over Kurdish independent oil sales and peaking after the 2017 independence referendum when Baghdad halted transfers entirely, forcing the KRG to borrow heavily to cover shortfalls.[143][144] By mid-2025, these withholdings persisted, prompting KRG Interior Minister Reber Ahmed to publicly condemn Baghdad on July 15 for breaching obligations to remit Peshmerga wages, which had left thousands of fighters unpaid for months and strained operational readiness.[145]In June 2025, major Kurdish parties, including the Kurdistan Democratic Party and Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, threatened withdrawal from Iraq's federal political process unless salary arrears—accumulating to billions of dollars since 2022—were cleared, highlighting how Baghdad's leverage over finances has been used to extract compliance on issues like oil revenue normalization and disputed territories such as Kirkuk.[144][146] Efforts at resolution, such as a February 2023 tripartite memorandum between Erbil, Baghdad, and international auditors, temporarily resumed partial payments but faltered by 2024 over verification disputes, with federal allocations covering only about 60% of committed amounts.[142] On September 16, 2025, the KRG reiterated calls for parity in Peshmerga remuneration with Iraqi Army salaries, currently averaging $800–$1,200 monthly versus federal troops' higher scales, underscoring systemic underfunding that compromises recruitment and modernization despite Peshmerga contributions to national security against ISIS.[95] These fiscal weaponizations reflect Baghdad's strategy to centralize control, eroding Kurdish fiscal independence while Peshmerga forces remain dependent on erratic federal disbursements amid KRG's constrained domestic revenues.[143][16]
Interactions with Non-Kurdish Populations: Control and Displacement
During the advance against ISIS in 2014, Peshmerga forces seized control of disputed territories including Kirkuk, parts of Ninewa, and Diyala governorates, areas previously administered by the Iraqi central government but claimed by the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG).[52] This expansion facilitated efforts to reverse Saddam Hussein's Arabization campaigns, which had forcibly displaced Kurds and resettled Arabs in Kurdish-majority regions since the 1970s.[147] However, these operations involved the systematic eviction of Arab residents and demolition of their homes, often extending to structures not demonstrably built illegally, displacing tens of thousands and preventing returns.[147]Amnesty International documented deliberate destruction by Peshmerga between September 2014 and March 2015 in at least 13 Arab villages across Ninewa (e.g., Sibaya, where over 700 of 897 structures were razed), Kirkuk, and Diyala, using bulldozers, explosives, and arson.[147]Satellite imagery confirmed near-total demolition in sites like Tabaj Hamid and Jumeili (95% of buildings), attributing the actions to a campaign of forced displacement rather than isolated military necessities, though framed by KRG as targeting ISIS-linked sites.[147] The KRG rejected these findings, asserting that Peshmerga operations cleared ISIS fortifications and spared civilians, without evidence of systematic abuse.[148]Human Rights Watch reported similar demolitions in Kirkuk governorate villages post-ISIS recapture, including al-Murra (entirely leveled in July 2015), Qarah Tappah (over 100 homes in late October 2016), Qutan (90 of 100 homes on October 21, 2016), and Qoshkaya (30+ homes in May 2015 and additional in October 2016), displacing 3,000–4,000 residents in Qarah Tappah alone.[149] Peshmerga cited removal of ISIS-planted explosives or punishment for resident collaboration with militants, but experts questioned the scale, noting many homes showed no explosive residue and demolitions preceded detailed searches.[149]Turkmen communities in Kirkuk faced targeted expulsions, such as in Yengice village in May 2017, where Peshmerga and allied forces evicted hundreds of displaced Turkmen families sheltering there since ISIS's 2014 takeover, citing security risks without alternative housing provided.[150] Broader Turkmen complaints during Peshmerga control (2014–2017) included arbitrary arrests and harassment, contributing to political tensions in multi-ethnic areas.[52] These practices fueled accusations of ethnic favoritism, though Peshmerga maintained actions prioritized demining and counter-ISIS measures over demographic engineering.[148] Iraqi federal forces' 2017 retaking of these territories reversed some Kurdish gains but displaced Kurds in turn, highlighting reciprocal control disputes.[52]
Human Rights Allegations and Infighting
Human Rights Watch documented the deliberate destruction by Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) security forces, including Peshmerga units, of hundreds of Arab homes and entire villages in disputed territories of Kirkuk and Nineveh governorates between September 2014 and May 2016, following the defeat of ISIS forces.[151] Specific cases included the razing of 523 homes in Barzan village and 120 in Hamad Agha, often using fire, explosives, or heavy machinery weeks or months after combat ended, with evidence from satellite imagery, over 120 eyewitness interviews, and site visits to 13 locations.[151] These actions displaced thousands of Arab residents and prevented their return in some areas as late as 2020, amid claims of reversing Saddam Hussein's Arabization policies but lacking military necessity in many instances.[152][149]Amnesty International similarly reported mass destruction in Arab villages across Ninewa, Kirkuk, and Diyala governorates recaptured from ISIS between September 2014 and March 2015, with satellite imagery showing bulldozer tracks and the demolition of up to 700 of 897 structures in Sibaya subdistrict alone.[147] The organization alleged these acts constituted collective punishment potentially amounting to war crimes, targeting communities suspected of ISIS collaboration, though the KRG maintained the demolitions were for security reasons, such as clearing improvised explosive devices or punishing sympathizers.[147] The KRG established an investigative committee in April 2016 and issued a presidential decree in March 2016 ordering protection of civilian property, but U.S. State Department reports indicate limited accountability for such abuses.[151][153]Peshmerga forces have faced additional allegations of civilian endangerment during operations, including indiscriminate firing in disputed areas near Kirkuk on October 16, 2017, which killed at least seven civilians amid clashes with Iraqi forces.[154] The KRG has consistently refuted claims of systematic violations, attributing damage to coalition airstrikes or ISIS remnants and emphasizing the forces' role in liberating areas from genocide and atrocities.[155]Infighting among Peshmerga ranks stems primarily from partisan divisions between the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP)-affiliated 80th Unit and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK)-affiliated 70th Unit, which operate as party militias rather than unified under the Ministry of Peshmerga Affairs (MoPA).[16] This fragmentation, rooted in the 1994-1998 KDP-PUK civil war that killed thousands and partitioned Iraqi Kurdistan into rival zones, has persisted despite reform initiatives launched in 2017 with U.S., UK, German, and Dutch support to integrate forces and achieve biometric enrollment.[11][16]Reform efforts, including a 2022 U.S.-KRG memorandum requiring partisan unit reorganization and electronic payroll by October 2024, have unified 28 brigades but stalled on integrating the 70th and 80th units due to intra-party resistance and disputes with Baghdad, exacerbating vulnerabilities exposed in the 2017 loss of Kirkuk.[16] These divisions undermine operational cohesion, with Peshmerga loyalty often prioritizing party leaders over regional command, as seen in boycotts and conflicts hindering MoPA oversight.[156] Such infighting has delayed modernization and weakened defenses against threats like Iranian-backed militias, though partial progress in brigade unification continues amid ongoing KDP-PUK tensions.[157]