New Photo - Hospital officials say an Israeli strike killed 4 in Gaza, including a child and his pregnant mother

Hospital officials say an Israeli strike killed 4 in Gaza, including a child and his pregnant mother BY SAMY MAGDY Sun, March 15, 2026 at 8:02 AM UTC 0 A boy pushes a bicycle carrying jerrycans of water through a sandstorm in Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip, Saturday, March 14, 2026. (AP Photo/Abdel Kareem Hana) () CAIRO (AP) — At least four Palestinians, including a boy and his pregnant mother, were killed Sunday by an Israeli airstrike in the wartorn Gaza Strip, hospital authorities said.

Hospital officials say an Israeli strike killed 4 in Gaza, including a child and his pregnant mother

BY SAMY MAGDY Sun, March 15, 2026 at 8:02 AM UTC

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A boy pushes a bicycle carrying jerrycans of water through a sandstorm in Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip, Saturday, March 14, 2026. (AP Photo/Abdel Kareem Hana) ()

CAIRO (AP) — At least four Palestinians, including a boy and his pregnant mother, were killed Sunday by an Israeli airstrike in the war-torn Gaza Strip, hospital authorities said.

The strike hit a house in Nuseirat, an urban refugee camp in central Gaza, killing a couple and their young son, according to the nearby Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital. The fourth fatality was taken to the Awda hospital in Nuseirat.

There was no immediate comment from the Israeli military.

The deaths were the latest fatalities among Palestinians in the coastal enclave since an October ceasefire deal attempted to halt a more than 2-year war between Israel and Hamas in Gaza.

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While the heaviest fighting has subsided, the ceasefire has still seen almost daily Israeli fire. Israeli forces have carried out repeated airstrikes and frequently fire on Palestinians near military-held zones, killing more than 650 Palestinians, according to Gaza health officials.

Israel says it has responded to violations of the ceasefire or targeted wanted militants. But about half of those killed have been women and children, according to the Gaza Health Ministry.

They were among more than 72,200 Palestinians killed in the war which was triggered when Hamas-led militants attacked southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023. The militant attack killed over 1,200 people and took over 250 others hostage.

The health ministry, which is part of the Hamas-led government, maintains detailed casualty records that are seen as generally reliable by U.N. agencies and independent experts. But it does not give a breakdown of civilians and militants.

Militants have carried out shooting attacks on troops, and Israel says its strikes are in response to that and other violations. Four Israeli soldiers have been killed since the ceasefire.

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Hospital officials say an Israeli strike killed 4 in Gaza, including a child and his pregnant mother

Hospital officials say an Israeli strike killed 4 in Gaza, including a child and his pregnant mother BY SAMY MAGDY Su...
New Photo - Pentagon identifies six airmen killed in plane crash in Iraq

Pentagon identifies six airmen killed in plane crash in Iraq Aleena Fayaz, Hanna Park, Emma Tucker, CNNSun, March 15, 2026 at 6:30 AM UTC 0 Left to right: Maj. John A. Klinner, 33, of Auburn, Alabama, Tech. Sgt. Tyler H. Simmons, 28, of Columbus, Ohio, Tech. Sgt. Ashley B. Pruitt, 34, of Bardstown, Kentucky, Capt. Seth R. Koval, 38, of Mooresville, Indiana, Capt. Curtis J. Angst, 30, of Wilmington, Ohio, and Capt. Ariana G.

Pentagon identifies six airmen killed in plane crash in Iraq

Aleena Fayaz, Hanna Park, Emma Tucker, CNNSun, March 15, 2026 at 6:30 AM UTC

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Left to right: Maj. John A. Klinner, 33, of Auburn, Alabama, Tech. Sgt. Tyler H. Simmons, 28, of Columbus, Ohio, Tech. Sgt. Ashley B. Pruitt, 34, of Bardstown, Kentucky, Capt. Seth R. Koval, 38, of Mooresville, Indiana, Capt. Curtis J. Angst, 30, of Wilmington, Ohio, and Capt. Ariana G. Savino, 31, of Covington, Washington - MacDill Air Force Base/Ohio National Guard

A squadron operations chief who had recently earned her wings as a pilot, a major overseeing flight training for dozens of airmen, and a young boom operator remembered for his "million-dollar smile" were among six US Air Force airmen killed when an aircraft crashed in western Iraq on Thursday, the Pentagon said.

The Pentagon identified the airmen on Saturday, as the crash remains under investigation.

The airmen are 33-year-old Maj. John A. Klinner of Auburn, Alabama; 31-year-old Capt. Ariana G. Savino of Covington, Washington; 34-year-old Tech. Sgt. Ashley B. Pruitt of Bardstown, Kentucky; 38-year-old Capt. Seth R. Koval of Mooresville, Indiana; 30-year-old Capt. Curtis J. Angst of Wilmington, Ohio; and 28-year-old Tech. Sgt. Tyler H. Simmons of Columbus, Ohio.

The crew members' deaths bring the number of US troops killed in connection to the war with Iran to 13.

Klinner, Savino and Pruitt were assigned to the 6th Air Refueling Wing at MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa, Florida. All three served with the 99th Air Refueling Squadron, a geographically separated unit based at Sumpter Smith Joint National Guard Base in Birmingham, Alabama.

"They were not only outstanding Airmen. They were our neighbors – our fellow Alabamians. May their service and that of their families never be forgotten," Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey said on X.

Koval, Angst and Simmons were assigned to the 121st Air Refueling Wing at Rickenbacker Air National Guard Base in Columbus, Ohio.

Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine said he is mourning all of the airmen alongside the rest of the state, including those who were elite members of the Ohio Air National Guard.

They were trained to "transfer fuel from one plane to another in midair, and their work was critical in long-distance missions in defense of our nation. Every mission they undertook involved risks that they were willing to take and the courage to put the lives of others above their own. They served with honor," DeWine wrote on X.

The crew members were aboard a US Air Force KC-135 Stratotanker refueling aircraft when it crashed in western Iraq on Thursday, the US military said, adding that the incident was "not due to hostile fire or friendly fire."

A previous statement said two aircraft were involved in an incident over western Iraq while operating during Operation Epic Fury, the name the Pentagon has given for the war with Iran. The statement said the second aircraft landed safely.

The KC-135 allows aircraft to refuel in the sky to remain in a battle zone for longer. The jets can also be configured to carry cargo and medical patients. The Air Force did not say what mission the jets involved in Thursday's incident were performing.

Maj. John "Alex" Klinner

Klinner was "more than a serviceman," leaving behind his wife, Libby Klinner, and their young children – a 2-year-old and 7-month-old twins, according to a GoFundMe page organized to raise funds to support his family following his death.

"He was a devoted husband, a loving father, and the kind of person who would quietly step in to help anyone who needed it. He embodied what it means to be a servant leader," the fundraiser says.

Klinner served as a major in the Air Force for eight years and was recently deployed on March 12 to support Operation Epic Fury, according to the GoFundMe page.

"If his death means anything – if any of their deaths mean anything – then please, do not look away," his aunt Jean Marie Dillon shared in a Facebook post. "His name was Major Alex Klinner, and he mattered."

Klinner was the 99th Air Refueling Squadron's chief of standardization and evaluation, overseeing training and flight proficiency for more than 30 aircrew members as an evaluator pilot, according to the Air Force. He deployed multiple times during his career, including in support of operations in Europe and the Middle East.

An Auburn University graduate, Klinner commissioned through the Air Force ROTC program in 2017.

The university said in a statement it was mourning his death.

"His commitment to serving our nation reflects the courage, character and sense of duty demonstrated by those who choose a life of service," the university said, while extending its "deepest condolences" to his family.

Capt. Ariana G. Savino

Savino was a "great human, a future senior leader, a mentor to Latina youth and current Air Force superstar" who died "doing what she loved," said her friend Ernesto Nisperos in a Facebook post.

Savino was his mentee and a "source of positive energy," he said. "She was one of those people who lit up every room she walked into. That smile of hers wasn't just infectious, it was disarming. She brought energy, grit, and a ruthless commitment to making everyone around her better," Nisperos added.

Savino served as chief of current operations for the 99th Air Refueling Squadron, overseeing the unit's daily flight schedule and coordinating its training and missions, according to the Air Force.

She commissioned in 2017 through the Air Force ROTC program at Central Washington University and initially served as a combat systems officer before completing pilot training in 2025 and earning her wings as a KC‑135 pilot. She deployed to the Middle East during her career.

Sen. Patty Murray of Washington said she was "heartbroken" by Savino's death and "deeply grateful for her courage and sacrifice in service to our country."

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Women like Savino represent "the absolute best of our state and country," adding the nation must honor them "not only with words but by supporting the families they leave behind."

Tech. Sgt. Tyler H. Simmons

Simmons of Columbus, Ohio, had a "million-dollar smile," that his family knew would take him to places, including his dream job, his cousin Tracy Peaks told CNN affiliate WBNS.

Simmons played football and graduated from the Eastmoor Academy High School in 2015 and then worked in security prior to becoming a military boom operator, the WBNS report said.

His parents remembered the exact time uniformed officers came to their door to inform them their son died, his mother Cheryl Simmons told WBNS through tears.

Tyler was their only child, and his mother had once hoped he would choose a different path than the military, according to WBNS.

But his passion for aviation and serving his country was clear, his mother said.

Columbus Mayor Andrew Ginther extended his "deepest condolences" to Simmons' family after his "life was taken far too soon in a recent accident in Iraq."

"We honor his memory as a true hero who served our country with courage and dedication," Ginther said.

Tech. Sgt. Ashley B. Pruitt

Pruitt served as an instructor boom operator and assistant flight chief of operations with the 99th Air Refueling Squadron, where she oversaw training and readiness and instructed fellow boom operators in the precise mechanics of midair refueling, according to the Air Force.

She entered the Air Force in 2017 and rose steadily through the enlisted ranks, earning leadership responsibilities within the squadron and deployed multiple times in support of operations in the Middle East. She was promoted to technical sergeant last May.

Pruitt, Klinner and Savino were members of the MacDill Air Force Base in Florida, which said it's "devastated" by their loss. They were members of the 99th Air Refueling Squadron, the department's statement said.

"To lose a member of the Air Force family is excruciatingly painful, especially to those who know them as son, daughter, brother, sister, spouse, mom or dad," said US Air Force Col. Ed Szczepanik, 6th Air Refueling Wing Commander.

"Our communities feel this loss deeply and Team MacDill will ensure their sacrifices and service to our nation are never forgotten."

Capt. Seth R. Koval

Koval served in the Air Force for 19 years, first enlisting as a machinist with the guard, according to the Ohio National Guard. He was responsible for training pilots in "worldwide air refueling, aeromedical, cargo and passenger operations," the statement said.

Koval's family said their "world was shattered" by the sudden loss of the husband and father who had dreamed since childhood of becoming a pilot. Koval, they said, wore the uniform with purpose.

"My husband was many things - loving, generous, kind-hearted, smart, devoted, a fixer of all things, a real outdoorsman, and selfless," his wife, Heather Nicole, wrote on Facebook. "He always put others before himself – until the very end. I will see him in the smile of our son and carry him with me in every moment."

He graduated from Purdue University in Indiana in 2011, earning a bachelor's degree in aviation operations before transferring to the Ohio Air National Guard in 2017, the guard said.

His awards and decorations included the Meritorious Service Medal, Air medal and Air and Space Achievement Medal, the guard said.

Capt. Curtis J. Angst

Angst earned his bachelor's degree in aerospace engineering at the University of Cincinnati, the Ohio National Guard said. He enlisted in the Ohio National Guard in May 2015 as a vehicle maintenance technician, according to the statement.

He earned his undergraduate pilot training in 2022 before achieving his pilot initial qualification in 2024, the guard said.

He was responsible for "worldwide air refueling, aeromedical, cargo and passenger operations," the guard said. Angst was deployed in 2015 and 2026 to support Spartan Shield and Epic Fury, the guard said.

Angst's awards and decorations included the Air and Space Commendation Medal, National Defense Service Medal and the Meritorious Unit Award, according to the guard.

This story has been with additional information.

CNN's Haley Britzky, Brad Lendon and Amanda Watts contributed to this report.

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Pentagon identifies six airmen killed in plane crash in Iraq

Pentagon identifies six airmen killed in plane crash in Iraq Aleena Fayaz, Hanna Park, Emma Tucker, CNNSun, March 15, 2...
New Photo - What we know about the Old Dominion University gunman, a veteran and convicted ISIS supporter

What we know about the Old Dominion University gunman, a veteran and convicted ISIS supporter Alaa Elassar, CNNSun, March 15, 2026 at 7:00 AM UTC 0 An officer carrying a large firearm heads onto Old Dominion University's campus in Norfolk, Virginia, after reports of an active shooter on Thursday. Kendall Warner/The VirginianPilot/Tribune News Service/Getty Images In a grim pattern that has become all too familiar, another campus has been shattered by gunfire, this time at Old Dominion University in Virginia, where an attacker cloaked violence in the language of religion.

What we know about the Old Dominion University gunman, a veteran and convicted ISIS supporter

Alaa Elassar, CNNSun, March 15, 2026 at 7:00 AM UTC

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An officer carrying a large firearm heads onto Old Dominion University's campus in Norfolk, Virginia, after reports of an active shooter on Thursday. - Kendall Warner/The Virginian-Pilot/Tribune News Service/Getty Images

In a grim pattern that has become all too familiar, another campus has been shattered by gunfire, this time at Old Dominion University in Virginia, where an attacker cloaked violence in the language of religion.

Federal authorities are investigating Thursday's shooting at Old Dominion University as an act of terrorism after identifying the gunman as Mohamed Bailor Jalloh, 36, a former member of the Virginia National Guard who previously served prison time for attempting to aid the terrorist group ISIS.

Devoted ROTC instructor Lt. Col. Brandon Shah, a father and husband, was killed in the attack. Two others were hospitalized with injuries, university police Chief Garrett Shelton said, noting all three victims were affiliated with the university.

Federal investigators say they are still piecing together the events leading up to the attack and what led Jalloh to carry out the shooting.

The case has drawn renewed scrutiny to Jalloh's past, including a terrorism conviction nearly a decade ago that followed an investigation officials said kept them "up at night," as well as the circumstances surrounding his early release from prison.

During the earlier investigation before his stint in prison, investigators were made aware that Jalloh had expressed admiration for the 2009 Fort Hood shooting rampage, when Army psychiatrist Nidal Hasan killed 13 people and wounded dozens at a Texas military base.

Here's what we know about Jalloh.

A former National Guard member with a terrorism conviction

Jalloh, a naturalized US citizen born in Sierra Leone , served as a combat engineer in the Virginia National Guard between 2009 and 2015, according to a US Army official.

During a 2016 investigation, authorities learned he had begun consuming online lectures from a deceased Al-Qaeda leader and ultimately decided not to reenlist after leaving the Guard.

That same year, federal prosecutors said Jalloh attempted to assist ISIS. He sought to obtain weapons he believed would be used in an attack carried out in the group's name and also tried to send money to the terrorist organization, according to the Department of Justice.

Unbeknownst to him, the person he was communicating with was an FBI source who was monitoring his behavior.

In 2016, Jalloh initially attempted to purchase an AR-15-style rifle from a gun shop in Virginia but was denied because he did not have the required documentation, according to the affidavit.

Authorities say he came back later the same day and purchased a different rifle, but the weapon had been disabled before he left the store. He was taken into custody the next day.

In conversations with the source, court documents say Jalloh had discussed potential timelines for an attack on US soil and "expressed that it was better to plan an operation for Ramadan," according to a FBI affidavit filed in his criminal case.

Ramadan is one of the holiest periods in Islam, a month dedicated to fasting, prayer, reflection and spiritual renewal. The faith's teachings emphasize compassion, patience and restraint, including refraining from anger and cruelty, values meant to be practiced even more deeply during Ramadan.

Central to Islamic doctrine is the prohibition against taking innocent life, a principle that stands in direct contrast to acts of violence sometimes erroneously carried out in its name.

An earlier plot and its echoes in the ODU attack

Jalloh pleaded guilty to attempting to provide material support to a designated foreign terrorist organization and was sentenced to 11 years in prison and five years of supervised release in 2017.

Jalloh was serving his sentence at a low-security federal facility in Allenwood, Pennsylvania, before being moved in August 2024 to a residential reentry center, commonly known as a halfway house, in the Baltimore area, according to the Federal Bureau of Prisons.

He was released from federal custody in December 2024 — about two-and-a-half years before the end of his sentence.

His release came through a federal provision that allows some inmates to receive early release after completing a substance abuse treatment program, according to the Federal Bureau of Prisons.

Mohamed Bailor Jalloh, 36-year-old Old Dominion University shooting gunman, is pictured. - Facebook

Jalloh said in 2016 he had been thinking about carrying out an attack similar to the 2009 Fort Hood massacre, authorities said.

Officials believe that fixation may have carried over into Thursday's shooting, which targeted an ROTC gathering that included both active-duty military personnel and students training for service, according to FBI Special Agent in Charge Dominique Evans.

Jalloh's earlier case drew particular concern among investigators and experts.

In the book "Homegrown: ISIS in America," terrorism researcher Alexander Meleagrou-Hitchens devoted an entire section to Jalloh's 2016 case. When news of the attack broke, Meleagrou-Hitchens said he was stunned.

"As far as I knew, he was still in jail," he told CNN, adding the news raised serious questions about how authorities manage individuals convicted of supporting terrorist organizations once they are released.

Meleagrou-Hitchens said several factors made Jalloh particularly concerning to investigators at the time. Among them were his military training, his travel to Sierra Leone after leaving the Guard where he attempted to make contact with ISIS-linked militants in Nigeria, and his communication with an ISIS "virtual plotter."

These online operatives, based in territory once controlled by ISIS, sought out supporters in Western countries and helped guide potential attacks from afar.

Jalloh's ambitions at the time, Meleagrou-Hitchens told CNN, appeared to mirror the scale of the Fort Hood massacre.

Special agents in charge of Jalloh's case in 2016 said of the multitude of cases they investigated over years, this was the one that "kept them up at night," Meleagrou-Hitchens wrote in his book.

Inmates with terrorism-related convictions are no longer eligible for early release under a new 2025 provision, according to the Federal Bureau of Prisons. Bureau director William Marshall implemented the change on September 25, 2025, under a Trump-era executive order, ensuring inmates with terrorism related charges will no longer qualify for early release under the prior federal provision.

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Life after prison

After his release from prison in December 2024, Jalloh is believed to have lived with family in Sterling, Virginia. He was taking online classes at Old Dominion University after his release from prison, court records show.

Court documents say he remained under court-mandated probation at the time of the shooting, though a probation officer visited the home he shared with his sister only twice a year. The most recent visit occurred in November 2025.

It is unclear if Jalloh exhibited any warning signs that might have emerged during the roughly year he spent outside prison before the attack.

Reporting from the neighborhood where he may have lived painted a picture of a relatively quiet household.

Multiple generations live in the upscale three-level red-brick townhouse, according to neighbors. They said the family is known to host at least one large gathering a year, often with loud music.

A sign posted on Jalloh's family's front door read, "We do not wish to speak to the press!"

After CNN knocked on the door, a middle-aged man answered and reiterated the family did not want to speak to reporters.

"We really don't want to speak to the media. Please understand we're going through a very tough time," he said.

He did not confirm whether Jalloh lived there.

Neighbors told reporters the family largely kept to themselves.

Kenneth Brown, who lives in the neighborhood, told CNN he would occasionally see Jalloh walking around the area.

"He would look down and not acknowledge you," Brown said.

How the attack at Old Dominion unfolded

Authorities say the violence unfolded late Thursday morning inside Constant Hall, the main building for Old Dominion University's College of Business.

Old Dominion, a public university with about 24,000 students, is located in Norfolk, Virginia, roughly 200 miles southeast of Washington, DC.

Investigators say Jalloh entered a class or meeting attended by ROTC students and active-duty service members at the university.

He asked people in the room twice to confirm it was an ROTC event, according to court documents.

Moments later, authorities say he shouted "Allahu Akbar," an Arabic phrase meaning "God is greatest," and opened fire.

The phrase "Allahu Akbar" is a central expression in Islam and is recited many times during Muslims' five daily prayers. It is commonly used by Muslims around the world in everyday life to praise God in moments of gratitude, joy and celebration, such as hearing good news or marking milestones and also in times of hardship as a reminder that faith is greater than any challenge.

Religious scholars and community leaders have long noted that extremist groups have at times misappropriated the phrase during acts of violence, a use that stands in stark contrast to its deeply spiritual meaning within the faith.

When Jalloh began shooting, the group of students in the room quickly reacted, rushing the attacker and managing to subdue him, Evans said.

"Brave ROTC members in that room subdued him, and if not for them, I'm not sure what else he may have done," Evans said.

One of the students stabbed Jalloh, according to multiple law enforcement sources briefed on the case. The attacker's ultimate cause of death is unclear.

Police arrive at Old Dominion University's campus in Norfolk, Virginia, after reports of an active shooter on Thursday. - John Clark/AP

Police said the first calls reporting the shooting came in at 10:43 a.m. Officers arrived four minutes later, and by 10:50 a.m., authorities determined the attacker was dead.

Old Dominion student Zachary Mulder said he had just left a class in Constant Hall and was reading in another building when people suddenly rushed in yelling there was a shooter.

"My heart dropped," Mulder told CNN affiliate WTKR. "I didn't really know what was going on. I just knew I had to leave immediately."

Investigators later said the firearm used in Thursday's attack had been purchased illegally. Prosecutors say the person who sold the weapon told authorities that Jalloh claimed he needed it for protection while working as a delivery driver.

Kenya Mcchell Chapman was arrested Friday in connection to his sale of a pistol to Jalloh.

A cellphone recovered near Jalloh's body allowed law enforcement to retrace his recent movements, according to court filings. Investigators say he repeatedly traveled between several locations in Virginia in the days leading up to the attack, including his home, the university campus, another residence and an Islamic center.

CNN's Emma Tucker, Elizabeth Wolfe, Hannah Rabinowitz, Holmes Lybrand and Rebekah Riess contributed to this report.

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What we know about the Old Dominion University gunman, a veteran and convicted ISIS supporter

What we know about the Old Dominion University gunman, a veteran and convicted ISIS supporter Alaa Elassar, CNNSun, M...
New Photo - 'No friends but the mountains.' Kurds want Trump's help for Iran ground war

&x27;No friends but the mountains.&x27; Kurds want Trump&x27;s help for Iran ground war Younes Mohammad and Kim Hjelmgaard, USA TODAYSun, March 15, 2026 at 7:00 AM UTC 0 ON A KURDISH BASE NEAR THE BORDER WITH IRAN – Soon, there could be military boots on the ground crossing into the Islamic Republic of Iran from this terrain of fertile valleys, deep gorges and ancient Mesopotamian trade routes perched below the mountainous border dividing Iraq and Iran. They may not be American ones. The White House says ground operations are "not part of the plan right now" as the U.S.

'No friends but the mountains.' Kurds want Trump's help for Iran ground war

Younes Mohammad and Kim Hjelmgaard, USA TODAYSun, March 15, 2026 at 7:00 AM UTC

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ON A KURDISH BASE NEAR THE BORDER WITH IRAN – Soon, there could be military boots on the ground crossing into the Islamic Republic of Iran from this terrain of fertile valleys, deep gorges and ancient Mesopotamian trade routes perched below the mountainous border dividing Iraq and Iran.

They may not be American ones.

The White House says ground operations are "not part of the plan right now" as the U.S.-Israel war against Iran enters its third week. President Donald Trump has reportedly alleged Iran is "about to surrender," though there is no indication of that from Tehran. According to Israeli and U.S. officials, the war is designed to hunt down key figures in Iran's clerical regime while crippling Tehran's long-range ballistic missile arsenal and nuclear program.

Still, as the war barrels forward on an uncertain trajectory, exiled Iranian Kurdish opposition officials and fighters − "Peshmerga," a name that translates in English to "those who face death" − tell USA TODAY they have an invasion plan ready to activate. All they're waiting for, they say, is U.S. military air cover to launch the operation.

1 / 0Kurdish fighters prepare for action in Iran, await U.S. helpKurdish Peshmerga fighters from the Kurdistan Freedom Party are seen north of Erbil, the capital of the Kurdistan Region of Iraq, on March 11, 2026.

"When we cross the border, the United States should secure the skies for us and protect us from above," said Rebaz Sharifi, a commander with the Kurdistan Freedom Party (PAK), one of several Iranian Kurdish separatist groups based in northern Iraq, in an interview on March 11. "We do not need, nor do we expect, people to take to the streets," he said, referring to comments made by Trump on Feb. 28 when he urged Iranians as the bombing operation began to "take over your government. It will be yours to take." Israel's leader has made similar comments.

Exclusive: Israel decided to kill Iran's leader after Oct. 7 attack

USA TODAY interviewed Sharifi at a PAK base north of Erbil, the capital of the Kurdistan Region of Iraq. The base resembled more a barracks than an operational military facility. It is built along one bank of the Great Zab river that meanders through northeastern Iraq. Some identifying details about the facility are being withheld at the request of Kurdish military commanders.

Kurdish Peshmerga fighters from the Kurdistan Freedom Party are seen north of Erbil, the capital of the Kurdistan Region of Iraq, on March 11, 2026.Iran's drones: cheap, fast, deadly

Since the outbreak of the war, Iran and Iran-aligned militias in Iraq have repeatedly fired drones and missiles at bases like this one, as well as at the U.S. Consulate in Erbil and the the headquarters of the U.S.-led Global Coalition to Defeat the Islamic State militant group at Erbil International Airport. Many get intercepted by air defense systems.

But not all.

Kurdistan Freedom Party (PAK) military commander Rebaz Sharifi is seen at a PAK base in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq, on March 11, 2026

Shortly before a USA TODAY reporter arrived at the PAK base an Iranian drone had fallen while encircling agricultural fields. It had not exploded. Nearby, fighters showed off the impact of drones that had. They explained how the attacks had taken place with two types of Iranian-made "Shahed" drones. They are cheap to produce, fast, known as "kamikaze" drones because they are not designed to come back − and hard to stop.

During a USA TODAY visit on March 12 to a separate Kurdish military base associated with the Komala Party of Iranian Kurdistan (KPIK), a reporter was abruptly ordered by the group's commander to take cover because of the possibility of a drone attack. The KPIK base is nestled in a rocky mountainous landscape close to Iran's border. Its fighters wore camouflage gear that blended with a sand-colored backdrop; the base was only reachable by walking up a steep slope.

Iran war: Video shows apparent US-made missile strike near Iran girls' school

At one point during the climb, about 20 Peshmerga fighters stood on either side of a narrow path while chanting slogans such as "Woman, Life, Freedom" and "Long live the resistance of Kurdistan."

The fighters − female and male − ranged in age from late teenagers to women and men in their fifties and sixties.

"Soon we'll be able to get back to Iran," said one fighter, who didn't want to provide his name.

Kurds: repression, shifting alliances, betrayals

The Kurds are the Middle East's fourth-largest ethnic group, with an estimated population of 36 to 45 million worldwide, according Kurdish Institute of Paris, an independent cultural and research center. But they have no single country they call their own and are predominantly scattered across western Iran, Iraq, Syria, Armenia and Turkey.

For more than a century Kurds have endured repression, shifting alliances and repeated betrayals, including by Israel and the United States. They are routinely hunted by Iran and Turkey, which consider some Kurdish militias to be terrorist organizations. Some Kurdish groups have fought a decades-long insurgency against the Turkish state.

In the 1970s, the U.S. and Iran − at the time allies − armed Iraqi Kurdish rebels to weaken the Iraqi government in Baghdad. But when the shah of Iran secured a territorial concession from Iraq in 1975, he abruptly cut off support to the Kurds with U.S. approval. Four years later, Iran's monarch was himself was overthrown in the country's 1979 Islamic Revolution. The pattern repeated itself in 1991 when the U.S. called on Kurdish Iraqis to rise up against Saddam Hussein. Uprisings followed. Washington declined to intervene as the regime violently suppressed them.

1 / 0See how the Iran war's fallout is hitting the Middle East

See how Middle Eastern countries are caught in the crossfire of the war launched by the United States and Israel against Iran.Bahrain Smoke rises in the sky after blasts were heard in Manama, Bahrain, Feb. 28, 2026.

"We have no friends but the mountains," is a well-worn Kurdish proverb.

For now, it's not clear in particular if they have a friend in the U.S. president.

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Trump has given contradictory statements about backing Kurdish opposition groups as a proxy ground force in the war against Iran, including the possibility of supplying them with weapons and/or providing them with the air support they seek to launch an invasion. Kurds are one of Iran's largest ethnic minorities. There are an estimated 7 to 15 million Kurds inside Iran (around 8-17% of Iran's total population), according to London think tank Chatham House.

The shadow of a Kurdish fighter, a member of The Organization of Iranian Kurdistan Struggle (Sazmani Khabat), falls on the shrapnel scarred wall of a damaged building, following an Iranian drone attack to their base near Erbil, in Iraq's northern autonomous Kurdish region on March 9, 2026.

"I think it's wonderful they want to do that − I'd be all for it," Trump said on March 5, responding to a reporter's question about Iranian Kurdish forces potentially launching an offensive into Iran from bases in Iraqi Kurdistan. Two days later, he reversed course, saying "The war is complicated enough without getting the Kurds involved."

Experts: Fomenting ethnic strife in Iran 'a recipe for death and destruction'

Arming the Kurds: what it means

The Peshmerga do not have a single universally agreed-upon number of fighters because the forces are divided between different political groups and command structures. British government estimates put the total personnel number at around 150,000 although it's not clear how many of those are active soldiers.

Seth Frantzman is a veteran Israel-based journalist and analyst of the Middle East who is an adjunct fellow at the Washington-based Foundation for Defense of Democracies think tank. He has covered Kurdish issues for more than a decade. He said Kurdish Iranian opposition groups' fighters have primarily small arms, consisting of AK-47 rifles.

A view of the outskirts of an Iranian Kurdish military facility north of Erbil that was struck by an Iranian drone, on March 11, 2026.

He said it's unclear what kind of arms and logistics could be stood up quickly even if the U.S. military decided to back them because it takes time to train and put arms in their hands and U.S. soldiers may need to be involved in an "advise and assist" capacity. When the U.S. supported and armed the Syrian Defense Forces, a Kurdish-led group in Syria, to defeat the Islamic State militant group, he said, it took several years before that defeat materialized.

On March 13, a U.S. official told USA TODAY that the U.S. is strengthening its presence in the Middle East by sending 2,500 additional Marines amid an increase in Iranian attacks in the Strait of Hormuz. In a recent interview with NBC News, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said Iran is prepared for U.S. ground troops. "We are waiting for them," Araghchi said, adding that "we are confident that we can confront them, and that would be a big disaster for them."

He did not mention Iranian Kurdish fighters.

Trump's confusing Kurdish messaging

Despite the mixed messages Kurdish fighters have received from the Trump administration, a new coalition of exiled Iranian Kurdish groups including PAK have joined forces to take advantage of the shifting dynamics around Iran and the regime's perceived frailty in the lead up to and following the military action on Iran from Israel and the U.S.

Khalid Azizi, a spokesperson for the Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan (PDKI), which is part of this coalition, traveled to Washington last week to try to secure meetings with key Trump administration officials, shore up backing for Kurds and, ideally, procure U.S. military drones to defend themselves against Iran.

"We have received messages from Trump that he supports the Kurdish case, the Kurdish people, that he's in favor of establishing democracy in Iran, that he wants regime change, or some sort of change inside Iran to make it possible for people there to have it better. Things like that," said Azizi, who himself was injured in 2018 when an Iranian missile struck the PDKI's headquarters in Koya, southeast of Erbil.

Kurdish fighters examine the aftermath of a location where they destroyed an Iranian drone that failed to detonate, on March 11, 2026.

Azizi said the coalition has "some level of contacts" with U.S. officials "underground," a term he didn't elaborate on. He said he did not have information about reports that said the CIA is working to arm Kurdish forces with the aim of fomenting a popular uprising in Iran. He noted that Kurdish groups have been in contact with U.S. officials for many years, but the ongoing war in Iran has injected uncertainty into the relationship.

The CIA did not return a request for comment.

"President Trump has a lot of reservation," Azizi said. "We haven't received any clear message." It wasn't clear if Azizi was able to meet with Trump administration officials while in Washington.

Sharifi, the PAK military commander, said Peshmerga fighters like him have "distanced ourselves" from many aspects of regular life "for the sake of achieving the rights of our people and the freedom of our nation."

Members of Komala of the Toilers of Kurdistan, a Kurdish Iranian dissident group, are seen near their military bases hidden among the mountains on March 12, 2026 in Khalifa, Erbil Province, Iraq.

He said the Kurds do not need a popular uprising in Iran. What they need, he said, is for the U.S. and Israel to "open a corridor for us so that we can enter Iranian territory. When that happens, they will see what we are capable of."

He said Kurds have put their trust in Trump, who they see as a "strong and capable man who knows well how to manage war in the Middle East." He said no previous U.S. president could have done what he has done so far.

Younes Mohammad reported from the Kurdistan Region of Iraq.

Kim Hjelmgaard is an investigative journalist covering global stories for USA TODAY, from living rooms to conflict zones. He is based in London.

Contributing: Cybele Mayes-Osterman from Washington.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Kurdish fighters want Trump's help for ground war with Iran

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Published: March 15, 2026 at 03:54AM on Source: PRIME TIME

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'No friends but the mountains.' Kurds want Trump's help for Iran ground war

&x27;No friends but the mountains.&x27; Kurds want Trump &x27;s help for Iran ground war Younes Mohammad and...

 

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