Nechirvan Barzani’s Vatican diplomacy: building Erbil’s voice in the West – Shafaq News

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2026-05-19T22:39:12+00:00

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Shafaq News

A decade of papal audiences, carefully chosen gifts
depicting coexistence on Kurdish soil, and a sustained presence in one of the
world’s most symbolically loaded capitals has produced one measurable outcome
for Nechirvan Barzani and the Kurdistan Region of Iraq he leads: recognition in
Rome, and a sustained effort to keep it that way.

During his meeting with Pope Leo XIV on May 18, Barzani
extended a formal invitation for the Pope to visit Iraq and the Kurdistan
Region, reaffirmed that Christians and other religious communities are an
essential part of the Region’s history and future, and presented gifts,
including a painting depicting a cross in Bedyal* village and a painting
symbolizing coexistence. The meeting followed the pattern of its predecessors
with enough precision to suggest the messaging has been standardized. What
changes between visits is the regional pressure under which the imagery is
produced, and the urgency with which Erbil needs Western attention to remain
stable.

Pattern Built on Crisis

The relationship between Erbil and the Vatican was not
established through formal diplomacy, but built incrementally, using each
regional crisis as an occasion to deepen the connection and each period of
relative calm to institutionalize it.

Barzani, then serving as Prime Minister, met Pope Francis at
the Vatican on March 2, 2015, at the height of the ISIS crisis, to discuss
steps the KRG was taking to ensure a peaceful environment for displaced
communities. Hundreds of thousands of Christians and Yazidis from the Nineveh
Plains were sheltering in Kurdish territory, and the Peshmerga was the only
force standing between ISIS and Erbil. He returned on January 12, 2018, as
ISIS’s territorial defeat was consolidating, shifting the conversation from
emergency to institution-building. In December 2018, Cardinal Pietro Parolin
visited Erbil and praised the Region’s role in providing for refugees. Prime
Minister Masrour Barzani met the Vatican’s Council of Justice in February 2020.

The relationship’s most significant moment came in March
2021, when Pope Francis made the first-ever papal visit to Iraq, met with
Nechirvan and Masrour Barzani in Erbil, then proceeded to Mosul and Qaraqosh,
and celebrated Mass for 10,000 people at the Franso Hariri stadium.

The visit gave the Kurdistan Region something no bilateral
meeting could replicate: the image of the head of the Catholic Church on
Kurdish soil. When Francis died in April 2025, Nechirvan Barzani attended the
funeral at St. Peter’s Square, maintaining continuity across the transition and
ensuring Erbil was present at the moment a new pontificate began.

The Visit That Set the Mold

The most direct predecessor to the current trip was
Barzani’s April 2023 Vatican visit. He met Cardinal Parolin, where discussions
centered on Christian minorities in Iraq, then met Pope Francis at the
Apostolic Palace, where the two discussed a possible future papal visit to the
Kurdistan Region. Barzani presented a painting illustrating coexistence between
the Region’s diverse communities, the same visual argument, to the same
institution, carried forward three years later to a different pope.

The 2023 visit took place while the Kurdistan Region was
navigating a severe budget crisis with Baghdad and a protracted government
formation process. Neither was resolved by the trip, as the budget dispute
continued, and the government formation stalled. The visit renewed Vatican
attention to Iraqi Kurdistan’s stability —a real outcome, though a symbolic
one, at a moment when Erbil needed something more tangible.

Same Painting, Harder Room

The current visit carries the same institutional content as
its predecessors but arrives under considerably more pressure. The US-Iran war,
the Strait of Hormuz crisis, Iraq’s new government formation under Prime Minister
Ali al-Zaidi, and ongoing regional volatility give the stability and
coexistence messaging an urgency it did not carry in 2023.

Erbil, through President Barzani, is presenting to the
Vatican in May 2026 the same argument it has been making since 2015: a stable,
coexistence-oriented enclave in a region becoming less stable and less
tolerant. Whether an argument that has remained consistent across a decade is
evidence of strategic clarity or of limited options is a dilemma the visits
themselves do not resolve.

The disputes with Baghdad persist, and the budget crisis
recurs. Barzani is not unaware of what Rome can and cannot deliver: no papal
audience resolves a budget dispute, and no painting of coexistence rewrites a
constitutional arrangement. But for a region whose leverage in Baghdad is
constrained and whose options in the West are limited, maintaining a steady
presence in the Vatican’s consciousness may be the most available form of
capital. He has spent a decade making sure Erbil never loses it.

* A small village in the Mergasor District in the Erbil
Province. It is one of the oldest Christian settlements in the Barzan area.


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