And there's another Kurdish. I mean, it's like becoming like a sort of acronym alphabet soup. I mean, this is always like actually in debate in Turkey that they always say like, oh, you should not call this Kurdish group the Kurds because they don't represent all the Kurds.
But then if you're going to call all their acronyms, people are going to go crazy and they will not understand anything. Because if you if you think that this area was already complicated and Iran will be even more complicated there because they have so many different Kurdish parties. I mean, for example, they have an alliance with six Kurdish parties.
And then some of these Kurdish parties, it's sort of like a Monty Python moment that you have a party with the same name, but there are three different parties with the same name. So it's going to get very confusing if you if you're going to just call them by this party names or that party name instead of the Iranian Kurds. So I think the media will again, like, just like what in Syria, they're gonna just say like the Iranian Kurds.
Amr, are you still there? Yeah, I don't know who was talking, but go ahead. Yeah, no, I was gonna say that, I mean, like, based on like all this kind of conflicting reporting, and then basically Kurdish officials saying nothing's happening, like, what's your sense on like, what do you think might actually be going on? Well, I mean, I mean, it's like possible that some small groups are moving. And I think maybe also, there's probably some things that US officials maybe are leaking some reports, but it doesn't mean maybe that it starts yet.
It could also mean that a bigger offensive is starting in the next days. And if you look to the telegram channels, which are not always very reliable, in my opinion, you also see like a very big increase in strikes in Kurdish areas. So like the targets and everything, the governor offices, the police, the border of points, etc.