'We have been preparing': Why the boots on the ground in Iran could be Kurdish
'We have been preparing': Why the boots on the ground in Iran could be Kurdish 9 hours ago Orla GuerinSenior international correspondent, northern Iraq For a sixth day, the US and Israel are battering targets in Iran, waging war from the air. Could there soon be boots on the ground? Maybe. But not American ones.
But she insisted that "not a single Peshmerga has moved".
The Kurdish word peshmerga means "those who face death".
"No-one moves alone," she told us.
"We will know if our brothers are going to move. " She does not expect fighters to advance this week. First, the US needs to pave the way.
"We can't move if the air above us is not cleaned," she said.
"And we need the regime's weapons depots to be destroyed. Otherwise, it would be suicidal. The regime is very brutal, and the most advanced weapon we have is a Kalashnikov. "
She wants the US to impose a no-fly zone to protect Kurdish fighters.
"We have asked for this many times," she said. "I was the one who sent the emails saying 'we need it urgently'. "
We saw the aftermath of strikes on two different groups, including a ballistic missile attack which tore through a PAK base, killing one fighter. Some groups have emptied their bases and moved their forces to try to shield them from attack.
They have a long history of being persecuted and betrayed.
As the Kurdish saying goes, "we have no friends but the mountains".
Can the US be trusted to keep any promises it may make? Many Kurds in Syria - staunch US allies in the battle against IS - were angered recently when Trump sided with the transitional government in Damascus against them.
But some senior Iranian Kurdish leaders take a pragmatic view.
"But they are targeting bases of the Islamic Revolution Guard Corps [IRGC], and this will be good for us and help us to go in. "
At 67, he has been waiting most of his lifetime for the fall of the Islamic regime.
He said 60% of his family had been arrested and badly treated because of his political activities.
Mauludi already has a mental picture of his first moments back on home soil.
"When I get to the first village," he told us, "I will say with a loud voice: 'I have been fighting for you, you are my people, and now I will fight even more. '"
The Kurds account for about 10% of Iran's population of 90 million.
Their leaders here are calling on the international community to back Trump, and to back them.
"And we won't let this opportunity [for change] be wasted. "
He is disappointed with the UK's stance.
"I'm astonished that Britain is the only country in the continent [of Europe] that has not registered the IRGC as a terrorist organisation," Mohtadi said. He also criticised Britain's "hesitation" over allowing the US to use its bases to strike Iran.
It is hard to gauge how many troops the Kurds could muster.
"It may be several thousand, including some already inside," according to one local journalist, who is Kurdish himself.
"They want to be part of the change in Iran, to ensure they are part of the future.
Despite the lessons of history, they continue to hope. "
Some Iranian Kurds say it is time to act - with or without American promises.
"Going back to my land will be very emotional," she said.
"My uncles and grandparents died here [in northern Iraq]. I don't know how to feel, happy or sad, because those who really deserve to see this day are gone. " Additional reporting by Wietske Burema, Matthew Goddard and Bizhar Shareef
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