Iran Drops 400+ Flying Knives on Kurdistan, Still Can’t Break US Playground Guards
KEY POINTS
- •Iran attacked the northern Iraq Kurdistan region more than 400 times with drones and ballistic missiles since late February.
- •Kurdish security forces presented remnants like the swift jet-powered Hadid-110 drone and the hefty Zolfaghar missile after recent strikes near Erbil.
- •Despite 13,000 US strikes and a two-week ceasefire on April 7, Iran retains much of its arsenal including thousands of kamikaze drones.
Last week in Erbil, Kurdish bomb detectives turned scrap metal into a terrifying art gallery showcasing Iran’s drone madness. Over 400 attacks, including the Zolfaghar missile packing a 1,100-pound punch near a mosque mere hours ago, and jet-powered Hadid-110 drones zooming twice as fast as their lumbering Shahed cousins, made VIP damage reports mandatory. Iran’s drone buffet—with help from Russia, China, and secret tech Santa North Korea—rained missiles, drones, and kamikaze toys onto Kurdish skies through six weeks of action. The US burned through 13,000 Iranian targets without defusing half their missile launchers or thousands of kamikaze drones—finally calling a ceasefire April 7. Meanwhile, a cozy $800 million US consulate got a few dents while the French learned drone wars are sadly no picnic. Kurdish heroes risk double-tap death just to collect the leftover flying scrap, proving dedication beats even Iranian techno-terrorism.
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(1 of 3)Source: Businessinsider | Published: 4/15/2026 | Author: Ibrahim Naber