Iraqi Interior Minister Abdul Amir Shamari and a high-level military delegation met with the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) Interior Minister Rebar Ahmed and the Commander of the Kurdistan region border guard to reorganize guards on Iraqi borders with Iran and Turkey. The Iraqi borders with Iran and Turkey have been subject to numerous incursions.

Following the high-level military meeting, the Commander of the Kurdistan Region Border Guards told reporters in a televised press conference that following six months of talks, Baghdad and Erbil reached a deal to form two regimes for the first and second Iraqi Border Guard Brigades. 

“The to be regimes would be deployed in void areas on the Iraqi borders with Iran and Turkey,” the Commander noted. 

The two regimes would be recruited from local Kurds, and each regiment would enlist up to 700 personnel, KurdSat’s Aso Ahmed said. 

The Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) and the Iraqi government have agreed to increase security on the Iran-KRG border and establish two regimes to guard the borders.

The two sides agreed to establish two regimes of border guards and provide all military equipment to reorganize and control the Iraqi borders with Turkey and Iran.

Two of the three Iraqi Border Guard brigades are positioned on borders of the Kurdistan region with Iran, Turkey, and Syria; they are made of local Kurds and commanded by a Kurdish commander, KurdSat’s Aso Ahmed said. The other brigade is deployed to secure the rest of the Iraqi-Iranian border to the south and Iraq-Saudi border.

PUK MP in the Iraqi house of representatives and a member of the parament’s defense and security committee told KurdSat English that the deployment would not reduce the attacks by Iran and Turkey as they are done with drones and aircraft but to deprive Ankara and Tehran of any excuses that our border is porous to smuggles and armed personnel.

Iran and Turkey have increased their attacks on the Kurdistan region since the last year using drones and advanced missiles; the attacks usually claim civilian life and have displaced hundreds of people. Iran and Turkey cite the presence of Kurdish opposition groups based in the Kurdistan region as an excuse for their attacks.