Iran and the United States
- Have been enemies since 1979 and remain highly antagonistic on most issues
- Back opposite sides in the Syrian conflict
... but ...
- Have a major common interest in the survival of the Maliki government in Iraq and the defeat of the Sunni extremist militias
United States and the Gulf Monarchies, including Saudi Arabia
- Are longstanding allies, sharing an interest in containing Iran
- Back the opposition to the Assad government in Syria
... but ...
- The monarchies are hostile to the American-backed, Shiite-dominated Maliki government in Iraq
- Gulf money has financed jihadist fighters in Syria and Iraq that the United States wants no part of
Turkey and the Iraqi Kurds
- Have developed extensive commercial relations
- Have agreed to cooperate in Syria
... but ...
- The Turks are wary of Kurdish gains in Iraq, for fear that it will prompt a flare-up of Kurdish separatism in Turkey
- The Kurds are deeply suspicious of Turkish intervention in Iraq
The Kurds and the Maliki Government
- Are at odds over boundaries, oil revenue and the Kurds’ goal of independence
- Have sectarian differences (most Kurds are Sunnis)
… but …
- Share an interest in preventing a Sunni militant takeover of either Iraq or Syria
- Have cooperated tactically against Sunni militant fighters
The Gulf Monarchies and the Sunni Insurgents
- Have a common enemy in the Assad government in Syria
- Share antipathy for Shiite rule and Iranian influence in Iraq and the region
... but ...
- The monarchies consider ISIS and its goal of a hard-line caliphate too extreme and a threat
- The insurgents consider the monarchies corrupt and irreligious
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