Iran launched new strikes targeting groups of Iranian Kurdish opposition based in neighboring Iraqi Kurdistan, less than a week after similar strikes, as announced by these groups and local officials, according to the French News Agency.

The anti-terrorism services in Iraqi Kurdistan said, "The Revolutionary Guards again targeted Iranian Kurdish parties," without giving any results.

For their part, the Iranian Kurdistan Democratic Party and the Iranian Kurdish nationalist "Komala" organization confirmed that the strikes targeted their facilities in this region in northern Iraq.

And the official Iraqi News Agency reported, "The headquarters of 3 Iranian opposition parties inside the Kurdistan region were bombed by Iranian missiles and drones."

On November 14, a missile strike and strikes by Iran with drones against Iranian Kurdish opposition groups left one dead and 8 wounded in Iraqi Kurdistan, and similar strikes took place on September 28.

The Iranian Kurdistan Democratic Party confirmed on Twitter, Monday, that it had been targeted in two locations near Erbil, the capital of the Kurdistan region, by "missile strikes and suicide drones."

The oldest Kurdish party in Iran, which was founded in 1945, said that these indiscriminate attacks come at a time when the Iranian regime is unable to stop the demonstrations taking place in Kurdistan, according to him.

The Iranian government accuses these opposition groups of fomenting the unrest in Iran since September 16, following the death of Mahsa Amini.

In a statement, the US Military Command for the Middle East (CENTCOM) condemned the "Iranian cross-border strikes" that were carried out with "missiles and drones" near Erbil.

And it considered that "such indiscriminate and illegal attacks endanger civilians, violate Iraqi sovereignty, and undermine the security and stability of Iraq and the Middle East."