More than 100 missile and drone attacks were carried out against Iranian Kurdish party-linked sites and related civilian facilities in Iraq’s Kurdistan Region during March 2026. According to the Iranian Kurdish monitoring group Hengaw, the cumulative count stood at least 112 attacks by 19 March. By my reconstruction from date-specific reporting, Kurdish party media, Kurdish local coverage, and cumulative rights-monitoring, the campaign touched at least 22 distinct named or separable sites or site-clusters across Sulaimani, Zargwez/Zargwezala, Dukan/Surdash, Koya, Degala, Bahrka, Soran, Khabat, and the northwest Erbil-Bani Harir belt. The KDPI/PDKI bore the heaviest burden, followed by Komala, then PAK, then Khabat.

What follows is the fullest deduplicated list I can defend in public sources. I have kept low-confidence items in the text where Kurdish cumulative reporting or indexed social traces point to real strikes but the exact site or date is less clean than for places like Azadi, Zawi Spi, Degala, Zargwezala, or Bashik Heights.

KDPI:

On 1 March, a drone fell in the Koya area while attempting to hit an office of an Iranian Kurdish opposition party. No damage was reported. This is the earliest clearly reported KDPI/Koya entry in the March wave.

On 3 March, Azadi Camp in Koya was hit by three drones. One person was wounded. Rudaw also cited eyewitness and source claims that a missile may have been involved and that the camp hospital was hit, injuring a staff member.

On 4 March, the hospital in Amiriyeh Camp in Koya was struck after being evacuated beforehand. No casualties were reported.

On 5 March, Azadi Camp was struck again in what Kurdistan24 described as the fourth attack on the site since the start of the wave. No casualties were reported. On the same day, a former KDPI headquarters near Koya was also hit; ANHA said the building was empty and there were no human casualties.

On 6 March, Azadi Camp was hit again. Anadolu, citing security and local media reporting, said the attack involved four rockets and two suicide drones. There is also lower-confidence Kurdish and social reporting that another PDKI family-camp site may have been hit in the wider Koya-Degala belt the same day, but the exact sub-site is not cleanly fixed in public reporting.

On 12 March, Zawi Spi camp near Koya was hit for the first time. A drone struck a civilian house in the camp. Rudaw said there were no casualties, though Kurdish reporting also pointed to at least one female civilian injury in the broader same-site coverage.

On 13 March, three separate KDPI-linked locations in the Koya belt were hit: Azadi Camp by about five missiles, Akoyan Valley positions by two drones with no casualties, and the Saraw area of Koya later the same day.

On 14 March, a drone struck Azadi Camp again, and another struck a KDPI office near Koysinjaq University, causing material damage.

On 15 March, the border area of Koya district was targeted by three missiles. Public reporting did not clearly identify which exact KDPI sub-site or family-camp was hit, so this is best treated as a Koya border/family-camp cluster entry rather than a single named camp.

On 17 March, indexed Kurdish and monitoring social posts say a KDPI camp in Koya was hit again by drone that afternoon. I include this as low-confidence but plausible, because the strike appears in Kurdish indexed social traces, but the exact sub-site is not fixed in a stronger stand-alone news report.

On 18 March, Shafaq confirmed a drone strike on a KDPI camp housing families near Koya at about 1:30 p.m. local time. It added that the strike followed similar attacks on Tuesday and overnight. Indexed Kurdish reporting from the same day described five or six attacks on the family-camp belt around Koya, but those should remain clustered rather than broken into falsely precise sub-sites.

On 23 March, Kurdish party media said Jezhnikan base in Bahrka was struck by three missiles at noon, after also being hit the previous night. Separate Kurdish and rights-monitoring reporting also pointed to a strike on the PDKI civilian camp of Gerdechal/Kurde Shal near Erbil/Bahrka the same day, including a hit on a medical facility. These appear to be two distinct Bahrka-area PDKI sites, not one site under two names.

On 23 March, Shafaq separately reported that four rockets hit an Iranian opposition site on Mount Bani Harir in the Soran administration, in the Khalifan-Shaqlawa belt.

Komala

On 1 March, a drone hit the Komala headquarters in Sulaimani province. The building was empty and no casualties or damage were reported.

On 4 March, Surdash Camp in Dukan district came under rocket attack. No casualties were reported.

On 5 March, the wider Surdash/Zargwez belt was targeted again during the day’s Sulaimani wave. An Iranian drones struck Kurdish opposition party sites in southern Kurdistan and specifically noted earlier attacks on Surdash and Zirgwez. I treat this as a repeat strike wave against the Komala belt, but not every sub-site is cleanly separable.

On 7 March, Zargwezala camp was hit by several missiles. Komala’s own statement said Ismail Rahimi was killed and another fighter wounded.

On 10 or 11 March, one of Komala’s camps, again identified in party reporting as Zargwezla/Zargwezala, was hit by several explosive drones. Omid Vaisi was killed and another fighter wounded. Some reporting dates the strike to late 10 March, while Komala’s statement dates it to the early hours of 11 March.

On 15 March, three missiles struck a Komala camp in the Zargwez area. No immediate casualties were reported.

On 19 March, the Zargwezle belt was hit in what looks like one major same-day event with evolving early reporting. Shafaq first reported a drone attack on a Komala site in Sulaimani, then later reported four rockets hitting Zargwezle camp, with numerous injuries and significant damage. I treat that as one major 19 March Zargwezle strike wave, not two fully separate incidents.

On 21 March, three drones struck the Komala headquarters in Sulaimani province. Preliminary reporting said there were no casualties, but the site sustained significant damage.

On 23 March, a rocket strike hit Surdash Camp again. Shafaq said there were no casualties and only limited material damage. This is an important late-month addition and should be counted separately from the 4 March Surdash strike.

PAK

On 2 March, PAK said one of its bases near Gomaspan was targeted, and that another base near Prde/Pirde (Altun Kupri) also came under drone attack. These are the clearest early-March PAK entries.

On 4 March, a strike on a PAK base near Degala killed Jalal Rashidi and wounded others. The same day, a separate explosion hit Saqaya Cave near Degala, a site used by PAK members. The cave strike is real enough to keep in the chronology, though the public record is thinner on casualties.

On 6 March, there are repeated references in Kurdish monitoring and later reconstructions to a further PAK base strike that wounded four fighters, but the exact base name is not cleanly fixed in strong public reporting. I therefore keep this as low-confidence/unresolved-site rather than attach it falsely to Gomaspan or Degala without evidence.

Hengaw’s 19 March roundup separately lists Pakshar Camp in Degala. That looks real enough to keep in a side layer, but it is still less securely date-anchored than the 2 March Gomaspan/Prde attacks or the 4 March Degala base strike.

Khabat

On 5 March, a drone struck Khabat headquarters in Rizgari. Preliminary reporting pointed to one injury.

On 13 March, a drone hit Khabat’s Bashik Heights base in Nineveh province, killing two members and wounding four.