Order Code RL31339
CRS Report for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
Iraq: U.S. Regime Change Efforts and
Post-Saddam Governance
Updated December 22, 2004
Kenneth Katzman
Specialist in Middle Eastern Affairs
Foreign Affairs, Defense, and Trade Division
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

Iraq: U.S. Regime Change Efforts and
Post-Saddam Governance
Summary
Operation Iraqi Freedom accomplished a long-standing U.S. objective, the
overthrow of Saddam Hussein, but replacing his regime with a stable, moderate,
democratic political structure has run into significant difficulty. That outcome
would contribute to preventing Iraq from becoming a sanctuary for terrorists, a key
recommendation of the 9/11 Commission report (Chapter 12, Section 2). During the
1990s, U.S. efforts to covertly change the regime failed because of limited U.S.
commitment, disorganization of the Iraqi opposition, and the vigilance of Iraq’s
several overlapping security services. Previous U.S. Administrations had ruled out
a U.S. military invasion to change the regime, believing such action would be risky
and that Iraq did not necessarily pose a level of threat that would justify doing so.
President George W. Bush characterized Iraq as a grave potential threat to the United
States because of its refusal to abandon its weapons of mass destruction (WMD)
programs and its potential to transfer WMD to terrorist groups. After a November
2002-March 2003 round of U.N. WMD inspections in which Iraq’s cooperation was
mixed, on March 19, 2003, the United States launched Operation Iraqi Freedom to
disarm Iraq and change its regime. The regime fell on April 9, 2003.
In the months prior to the war, the Administration stressed that regime change
through U.S.-led military action would yield benefits beyond disarmament and
reduction of support for terrorism, benefits such as liberation of the Iraqi people
from an oppressive regime and promotion of democracy throughout the Middle
East. However, escalating resistance to the U.S.-led occupation (April 2003-June
2004) complicated U.S. efforts to quickly build democracy and to establish
legitimate and effective Iraqi political and security bodies. Partly in an effort to
satisfy Iraqi demands for an end to coalition occupation, the United States decided
to accelerate the hand over of sovereignty. An interim government was named on
June 1, 2004, and the handover took place on June 28, 2004. Current plans are to for
elections for a transition government on January 30, 2005, with votes on a
permanent constitution by October 31, 2005, and for a permanent government by
December 15, 2005. Virtually all of these deadlines are to some degree in question
because of the persistent insurgency.
Although acknowledging that the insurgency is adversely affecting U.S. policy,
the Bush Administration asserts that U.S. policy in Iraq will ultimately succeed as
U.S., NATO, and other trainers build Iraq’s various security bodies. Some believe
the United States should add significant numbers of troops to the current level of
about 150,000, plus about 26,000 foreign military personnel. Others believe the
United States needs to take new steps to recruit major international force
contributors, and yet some others believe that the United States should end its
presence in Iraq.
This report will be updated as warranted by major developments. See also CRS
Report RS21968, Iraq: Post-Saddam National Elections, and CRS Report RL31833,
Iraq: Recent Developments in Reconstruction Assistance.

Contents
Major Anti-Saddam Groups and Past Regime Change Efforts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Iraqi National Congress (INC)/Ahmad Chalabi . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
INC Funding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Iraq National Accord (INA)/Iyad al-Allawi . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Major Kurdish Organizations/KDP and PUK . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Ansar al-Islam/Abu Musab al-Zarqawi . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Monarchist Organizations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Shiite Islamist Leaders and Organizations: Ayatollah Sistani,
SCIRI, Da’wa Party, Moqtada al-Sadr, and Others . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Schisms Among Major Factions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Rebounding From Setbacks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Iraq Liberation Act (ILA) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Operation “Desert Fox”/First ILA Designations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Bush Administration Policy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Pre-September 11: Reinforcing Containment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Post-September 11: Implementing Regime Change . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
Broadening the Iraqi Opposition as War Approaches . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Decision to Launch Military Action . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Post-Saddam Governance and Transition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
Occupation Period and the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) . . 19
The Iraqi Governing Council (IGC) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
The Handover of Sovereignty . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Transitional Administrative Law (TAL)/Transition Roadmap . . . . . . 22
Interim Government and Sovereignty Handover . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Resolution 1546 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
Post-Handover Authority Building/Interim Parliament . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Preparations for January 2005 Elections . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
Security Challenges to the Transition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
The Insurgency . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
Options for Stabilizing Iraq . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
“Iraqification”/Building Iraqi Forces . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
“Internationalization” of the Effort . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
Altering U.S. Force Levels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
Rejuvenating Iraq’s Economy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
The Oil Industry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
CPA Budget/DFI/U.S. Funding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
Supplemental U.S. Funding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
FY2005 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
Lifting U.S. Sanctions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
Termination of the Oil-for-Food Program . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
Debt Relief/WTO Membership . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
Congressional Reactions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
Appendix. U.S. Assistance to the Opposition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41

List of Tables
Appropriated Economic Support Funds (E.S.F.) to the Opposition . . . . . . . . . . 41
List of Figures
Figure 1. Map of Iraq . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42

Iraq: U.S. Regime Change Efforts and
Post-Saddam Governance
The United States did not remove Iraq’s Saddam Hussein from power in the
course of the 1991 Persian Gulf war, and his regime unexpectedly survived post-war
uprisings by Iraq’s Shiites and Kurds. For twelve years after that, the United States
sought to remove Saddam from power by supporting dissidents inside Iraq, although
changing Iraq’s regime did not become U.S. declared policy until 1998. In
November 1998, amid a crisis with Iraq over U.N. weapons of mass destruction
(WMD) inspections, the Clinton Administration stated that the United States would
promote a change of regime. A regime change policy was endorsed by the Iraq
Liberation Act (P.L. 105-338, October 31, 1998). Bush Administration officials
placed regime change at the center of U.S. policy toward Iraq shortly after the
September 11, 2001 attacks. Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF) was launched on March
19, 2003, and had deposed Saddam Hussein by April 9, 2003.
The Bush Administration’s stated goal is to transform Iraq into a democracy
that could be a model for the rest of the region and would prevent Iraq from
becoming a safehaven for Islamic terrorists. Iraq has not had experience with a
democratic form of government, although parliamentary elections were held during
the period of British rule under a League of Nations mandate (1920-1932). Iraq,
which became independent in 1932, was governed by kings from the Hashemite
dynasty during 1921-1958, with substantial British direction and influence.1
Members of the Hashemite dynasty continue to rule in neighboring Jordan. Iraq’s
first Hashemite king was Faysal bin Hussein, son of Sharif Hussein of Mecca, who
led the Arab revolt against the Ottoman Empire. Faysal ruled Iraq as King Faysal I
and was succeeded by his son, Ghazi (1933-1939). Ghazi was succeeded by his son,
Faysal II, who ruled until the military coup of Abd al-Karim al-Qasim on July 14,
1958. Qasim was ousted in February 1963 by a Baath Party - military alliance. Also
in 1963, the Baath Party took power in Syria. It still rules there today, although there
was strong rivalry between the Syrian and Iraqi Baath regimes during Saddam’s rule.
One of the Baath Party’s allies in the February 1963 coup in Iraq was Abd al-
Salam al-Arif. In November 1963, Arif purged the Baath, including Baathist Prime
Minister Ahmad Hasan al-Bakr, and instituted direct military rule. Arif was killed
in a helicopter crash in 1966 and was replaced by his elder brother, Abd al-Rahim al-
Arif, who ruled until the Baath Party coup of July 1968. Following the Baath seizure,
Ahmad Hasan al-Bakr, a military figure, returned to government as President of Iraq
and Saddam Hussein, a civilian, became the second most powerful leader as Vice
Chairman of the Revolutionary Command Council. In that position, Saddam
1 See Eisenstadt, Michael and Eric Mathewson, eds. U.S. Policy in Post-Saddam Iraq:
Lessons From the British Experience. The Washington Institute for Near East Policy, 2003.

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developed and oversaw a system of overlapping security services to monitor loyalty
among the population and within Iraq’s institutions, including the military. On July
17, 1979, the aging al-Bakr resigned at Saddam’s urging, and Saddam became
President of Iraq.
Major Anti-Saddam Groups and
Past Regime Change Efforts
Prior to the launching on January 16, 1991 of Operation Desert Storm, which
reversed Iraq’s August 1990 invasion of Kuwait, President George H.W. Bush called
on the Iraqi people to overthrow Saddam. The Administration decided not to
militarily occupy Iraq or overthrow Saddam Hussein in the course of the 1991 war
because the United Nations had approved only the liberation of Kuwait, and there
was concern that the U.S.-led coalition would fracture if the United States advanced
to Baghdad. According to former President George H.W. Bush’s writings,2 the
Administration also feared that the U.S. military could become bogged down in a
violent, high-casualty occupation. Within days of the end of the Gulf war (February
28, 1991), opposition Shiite Muslims in southern Iraq and Kurdish factions in
northern Iraq, emboldened by the regime’s defeat and the hope of U.S. support,
launched significant rebellions. The revolt in southern Iraq reached the suburbs of
Baghdad, but the Republican Guard forces, composed mainly of regime loyalists,
had survived the war largely intact, having been withdrawn from battle prior to the
U.S. ground offensive, and it defeated the Shiite rebels by mid-March 1991. Many
Shiites blamed the United States for standing aside as the regime retaliated against
those who participated in the rebellion. Kurds, benefitting from a U.S.-led “no fly
zone” established in April 1991, drove Iraqi troops out of much of northern Iraq and
subsequently remained relatively autonomous.
According to press reports, about two months after the failure of the Shiite
uprising, President George H.W. Bush forwarded to Congress an intelligence finding
stating that the United States would undertake efforts to promote a military coup
against Saddam Hussein; a reported $15 million to $20 million was allocated for that
purpose. The Administration apparently believed — and this view apparently was
shared by many experts and U.S. officials — that a coup by elements within the
current regime could produce a favorable new government without fragmenting Iraq.
Many observers, however, including neighboring governments, feared that Shiite and
Kurdish groups, if they ousted Saddam, would divide Iraq into warring ethnic and
tribal groups, opening Iraq to influence from neighboring Iran, Turkey, and Syria.
Reports in July 1992 of a serious but unsuccessful coup attempt suggested that
the U.S. strategy might ultimately succeed. However, there was disappointment
within the George H.W. Bush Administration that the coup had failed and a decision
was made to shift the U.S. approach from promotion of a coup to supporting the
diverse opposition groups that had led the post-war rebellions. At the same time, the
2 Bush, George H.W. and Brent Scowcroft. A World Transformed. Alfred A. Knopf, Inc.
1998.

CRS-3
Kurdish, Shiite, and other opposition elements were coalescing into a broad and
diverse movement that appeared to be gaining support internationally. This
opposition coalition was seen as providing a vehicle for the United States to build a
viable overthrow strategy. Congress more than doubled the budget for covert
support to the opposition groups to about $40 million for FY1993.3
The following sections discuss organizations and personalities that were part of
the U.S. effort to change Iraq’s regime during the 1990s, as well as some that were
not directly associated with those efforts but are now emerging as major players.
Iraqi National Congress (INC)/Ahmad Chalabi. After 1991, the growing
exile opposition coalition took shape in an organization called the Iraqi National
Congress (INC). The INC was formally constituted when the two main Kurdish
militias, the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan
(PUK), participated in a June 1992 meeting in Vienna of dozens of opposition
groups. In October 1992, major Shiite Islamist groups came into the coalition when
the INC met in Kurdish-controlled northern Iraq.
The INC appeared viable because it brought under one banner varying Iraqi
ethnic groups and diverse political ideologies, including nationalists, ex-military
officers, and defectors from the Baath Party. The Kurds provided the INC with a
source of armed force and a presence on Iraqi territory. Its constituent groups
publicly united around a platform that appeared to match U.S. values and interests,
including human rights, democracy, pluralism, “federalism,” the preservation of
Iraq’s territorial integrity, and compliance with U.N. Security Council resolutions
on Iraq.4 However, many observers doubted its commitment to democracy, because
most of its groups have an authoritarian internal structure, and because of tensions
among its varied ethnic groups and ideologies. The INC’s first Executive Committee
consisted of KDP leader Masud Barzani, ex-Baath Party and military official Hassan
Naqib, and moderate Shiite cleric Mohammad Bahr al-Ulum.
Ahmad Chalabi. When the INC was formed, its Executive Committee
selected Chalabi, a secular Shiite Muslim from a prominent banking family, to run
the INC on a daily basis. Chalabi, who is about 60 years old, was educated in the
United States (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) as a mathematician. His father
was president of the Senate in the monarchy that was overthrown in the 1958 military
coup, and the family fled to Jordan. He taught math at the American University of
Beirut in 1977 and, in 1978, he founded the Petra Bank in Jordan. He later ran afoul
of Jordanian authorities on charges of embezzlement and he left Jordan, possibly
with some help from members of Jordan’s royal family, in 1989. In April 1992, he
was convicted in absentia of embezzling $70 million from the bank and sentenced
to 22 years in prison. The Jordanian government subsequently repaid depositors a
total of $400 million. Chalabi maintains that the Jordanian government was
pressured by Iraq to turn against him, and he asserts that he has since rebuilt ties to
3 Sciolino, Elaine. “Greater U.S. Effort Backed To Oust Iraqi.” New York Times, June 2,
1992.
4 The Iraqi National Congress and the International Community. Document provided by
INC representatives, Feb. 1993.

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the Jordanian government. In April 2003, senior Jordanian officials, including King
Abdullah, publicly called Chalabi “divisive;” stopping short of saying he would be
unacceptable as leader of Iraq.
The INC and its leader, Ahmad Chalabi, have been controversial in the United
States since the INC was formed. The State Department and Central Intelligence
Agency (CIA) have, by many accounts, believed the INC had little popularity inside
Iraq. In the George W. Bush Administration, numerous press reports indicated that
the Defense Department and office of Vice President Cheney believed the INC might
be able to lead a post-Saddam regime. Chalabi’s critics acknowledge that, despite
allegations about his methods, he was single-minded in his determination to
overthrow Saddam Hussein.
After the start of the 2003 war, Chalabi and about 700 INC fighters (“Free Iraqi
Forces”) were airlifted by the U.S. military from their base in the north to the
Nasiriya area, purportedly to help stabilize civil affairs in southern Iraq, later
deploying to Baghdad and other parts of Iraq. After establishing his headquarters in
Baghdad, Chalabi tried to build support by searching for fugitive members of the
former regime and arranging for U.S. military forces in Iraq to provide security or
other benefits to his potential supporters. (The Free Iraqi Forces accompanying
Chalabi were disbanded following the U.S. decision in mid-May 2003 to disarm
independent militias.) Chalabi was subsequently selected to serve on the Iraq
Governing Council (IGC) and was one of the nine that rotates its presidency; he was
president of the IGC during the month of September 2003. He headed the IGC
committee on “de-Baathification,” although his vigilance in purging former Baathists
was slowed by U.S. officials in early 2004. His appointments came despite the lack
of an evident large following among Iraqis, and, during 2004, Chalabi has attempted
to build a popular following by criticizing U.S. policies and allying with some Shiite
Islamist factions. These positions ran Chalabi afoul of some of his supporters in the
Bush Administration.
The deterioration in Chalabi’s relationship with the United States was
demonstrated when Iraqi police, backed by U.S. troops, raided INC headquarters in
Baghdad on May 20, 2004. Among the allegations in question were that Chalabi had
passed information to Iran that the United States had broken Iranian intelligence
codes;5 that INC members had been involved in kidnaping or currency fraud; or that
the INC had failed to cooperate with an Iraqi investigation of the U.N. “oil-for-food
program.” Some accuse Chalabi of helping steer reconstruction work to relatives and
business associates.6 In the raid, the investigators seized computers and files that the
INC had captured from various Iraqi ministries upon the fall of Saddam’s regime.
Demonstrating the degree to which Chalabi has become estranged from the United
States and the interim Iraqi government, on August 8, 2004, an Iraqi judge issued a
warrant for Chalabi’s arrest on counterfeiting charges, and for his nephew Salem
Chalabi’s arrest for the murder of an Iraqi finance ministry official. Salem had
5 Risen, James and David Johnston. “Chalabi Reportedly Told Iran That U.S. Had Code.”
New York Times, June 2, 2004.
6 Richter, Paul and Edmund Sanders. Contracts Go to Allies of Iraq’s Chalabi. Los Angeles
Times
, Nov. 7, 2003.

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headed the tribunal trying Saddam Hussein and his associates, but his role on that
issue ended after the warrant was issued. Both were out of the country but returned
to fight the charges. Upon his return to Iraq in mid-August, Chalabi met with Iraqi
investigators and the case was subsequently dropped.
INC Funding. According to the U.S. General Accounting Office, in a report
dated April 2004,7 the INC’s Iraqi National Congress Support Foundation (INCSF)
received $32.65 million in U.S. funding (Economic Support Funds, ESF) in five
agreements with the State Department during 2000-2003. Most of the funds —
separate from drawdowns of U.S. military equipment and training under the separate
“Iraq Liberation Act,” see below — were for the INC to run its offices in
Washington, London, Tehran, Damascus, Prague, and Cairo, and to operate its Al
Mutamar (the “Conference”) newspaper and Liberty TV. In addition, in August
2002, the State Department and Defense Department agreed that the Defense
Department would take over funding ($335,000 per month) for the INC’s
“Information Collection Program” to collect intelligence on Iraq; the State
Department wanted to end its funding of that program because of questions about the
INC’s credibility and the propriety of its use of U.S. funds. The INC continued to
receive these funds even after Saddam Hussein was overthrown,8 and Chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Richard Meyers said on May 20, 2004, that the INC
had provided some information that had saved the lives of U.S. soldiers. However,
with controversy over the quality of the INC’s pre-war intelligence on Iraqi WMD
escalating, the Defense Department officials announced a halt to the funding on May
18, 2004, effective at the June 2004 sovereignty handover.
Some U.S. funds for the INC were specifically earmarked. The FY2001 foreign
aid appropriation (H.R. 4811, P.L. 106-429, November 6, 2000) earmarked $25
million in ESF for “programs benefitting the Iraqi people,” of which at least $12
million was for the INC to distribute humanitarian aid in Iraq; $6 million was for INC
broadcasting; and $2 million was for war crimes issues. (The appropriation stated
that the remaining $5 million could be used to provide additional ESF to the seven
groups then eligible to receive assistance under the Iraq Liberation Act, see below.)
In September 2000, the Clinton Administration agreed to provide the INC with $4
million (from FY1999 ESF appropriated for the Iraqi opposition) to develop a plan
to distribute humanitarian aid in Iraq and to gather information on Iraqi war crimes.
However, three days before leaving office, the Clinton Administration issued a
required report to Congress stating that any INC effort to distribute humanitarian aid
in areas of Iraq under Baghdad’s control would be fraught with security risks to the
INC, to Iraqi recipients of such aid, and to any relief distributors with which the INC
would contract.9 In February 2001, the Bush Administration adopted a similar
policy: supporting INC information gathering but opposing its distribution of
humanitarian aid inside Iraq.
7 General Accounting Office Report GAO-04-559. State Department: Issues Affecting
Funding of Iraqi National Congress Support Foundation. Apr. 2004.
8 Lake, Eli. Jockeying Begins for Control of Iraqi Intelligence Agency. New York Sun, Mar.
1, 2004.
9 U.S. Department of State. Washington File. “Clinton Sends Report on Iraq to Congress.”
Jan. 17, 2001.

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In August 2001, the INC began satellite television broadcasts into Iraq, from
London, called Liberty TV. The station was funded by the FY2001 ESF appropriated
by Congress, with start-up costs of $1 million and an estimated additional $2.7
million per year in operating costs.10 However, Liberty TV’s service was sporadic
due to funding disruptions resulting from the INC’s refusal to accept some State
Department decisions on how the INC was to use U.S. funds.11 (A table on U.S.
appropriations for the Iraqi opposition, including the INC, is an appendix).
Iraq National Accord (INA)/Iyad al-Allawi. The Iraq National Accord
(INA) was founded just after Iraq’s 1990 invasion of Kuwait. Supported initially by
Saudi Arabia, the INA consisted of defectors from Iraq’s Baath Party, military, and
security services who were perceived as having ties to disgruntled officials in those
organizations. During the mid-1990s, the INA reportedly had an operational backing
from the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).12
The INA has been headed since 1990 by Dr. Iyad al-Allawi — now Prime
Minister of Iraq — who that year broke with another INA leader, Salah Umar al-
Tikriti. Allawi is a former Baathist who, according to some reports, helped Saddam
Hussein silence Iraqi dissidents in Europe in the mid-1970s.13 Allawi is about 58
years old (born 1946 in Baghdad). After falling out with Saddam in the mid-1970s,
he became a neurologist and was president of the Iraqi Student Union in Europe. He
survived an assassination attempt in London in 1978, allegedly by Iraq’s agents. He
is a secular Shiite Muslim, but most of the members of the INA are Sunni Muslims.
Although Allawi no longer considers himself a Baath Party member, he is not known
to have openly denounced the original tenets of Baathism, a pan-Arab multi-ethnic
movement founded in the 1940s by Lebanese Christian philosopher Michel Aflaq.
Like the INC, the INA does not appear to have a mass following in Iraq. Like
Chalabi, Allawi was named to the IGC and to its rotating presidency; Allawi was
president during October 2003. On June 1, 2004, after being nominated by the IGC,
he became prime minister of the interim government; he assumed formal power
upon the June 28, 2004 sovereignty handover.
Major Kurdish Organizations/KDP and PUK. The Kurds, probably the
most pro-U.S. of all the major groups in Iraq, do not express ambitions to govern
Arab Iraq, but they have a historic fear of persecution by the Arab majority and want
to preserve the autonomy they have experienced since the 1991 Gulf war. (The
Kurds are mostly Sunni Muslims, but they are not ethnic Arabs.) In committing to
the concept of “federalism,” the 1992 INC platform assured the Kurds autonomy
in a post-Saddam Iraq. Turkey, which has a sizable Kurdish population in the areas
bordering northern Iraq, particularly fears that the Kurds want outright independence
10 Sipress, Alan. “U.S. Funds Satellite TV to Iraq.” Washington Post, Aug. 16, 2001.
11 GAO study, Apr. 2004, cited above.
12 Brinkley, Joel. “Ex-CIA Aides Say Iraq Leader Helped Agency in 90’s Attacks.” New
York Times
, June 9, 2004.
13 Hersh, Seymour. “Annals of National Security: Plan B.” The New Yorker, June 28, 2004.

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and that this might touch off an effort to unify with Kurds in neighboring countries
(including Turkey) into a broader “Kurdistan.”
Iraq’s Kurds have fought intermittently for autonomy since their region was
incorporated into the newly formed Iraqi state after World War I. In 1961, the KDP,
then led by founder Mullah Mustafa Barzani, current KDP leader Masud Barzani’s
father, began an insurgency that has continued until the fall of Saddam Hussein. At
times, the insurgency was suspended during autonomy negotiations with Baghdad.
Masud Barzani’s brother, Idris, commanded Kurdish forces against Baghdad during
the Iran-Iraq war but was killed in that war. The PUK, headed by Jalal Talabani, split
off from the KDP in 1965; the PUK’s members are generally more well-educated,
urbane, and left-leaning than those of the KDP. Together, the PUK and KDP have
about 75,000 “peshmergas” (fighters); some are trained in conventional tactics.
In the aftermath of the 1991 Gulf war, the KDP and the PUK agreed in May
1992 to share power after parliamentary and executive elections. In May 1994,
tensions between them flared into clashes, and the KDP turned to Baghdad for
backing. In August 1996, Iraqi forces, at the KDP’s invitation, militarily helped the
KDP capture PUK-held Irbil, seat of the Kurdish regional government. With U.S.
mediation, the Kurdish parties agreed on October 23, 1996, to a cease-fire and the
establishment of a 400-man peace monitoring force composed mainly of Turkomens
(75% of the force). The United States funded the force with FY1997 funds of $3
million for peacekeeping (Section 451 of the Foreign Assistance Act), plus about
$4 million in DOD drawdowns (vehicles and communications gear), under Section
552 of the FAA. Also set up was a peace supervisory group consisting of the United
States, Britain, Turkey, the PUK, the KDP, and Iraqi Turkomens.
A tenuous cease-fire held after November 1997, helped by the September 1998
“Washington Agreement” to work toward resolving the main outstanding issues
(sharing of revenues and control over the Kurdish regional government).
Reconciliation efforts showed substantial progress in 2002 as the Kurds perceived
that the United States might act to overthrow the regime of Saddam Hussein. On
October 4, 2002, the two Kurdish factions jointly reconvened the Kurdish regional
parliament for the first time since the 1994 clashes. In June 2002, the United States
gave the Kurds $3.1 million in new assistance to further the reconciliation process.
In post-Saddam Iraq, both Barzani and Talabani were placed on the IGC, and
both were part of the Council’s rotating presidency. Talabani was IGC president
during November 2003, and Barzani led the body in April 2004. Neither leader is in
the interim government, but their top aides and former representatives in
Washington, Hoshyar Zibari (KDP) and Barham Salih (PUK), are high-ranking
officials. The Kurdish parties have negotiated with U.S. authorities to maintain
substantial autonomy in northern Iraq in a sovereign, post-occupation Iraq — a
demand largely enshrined in the Transitional Administrative Law (interim
constitution, see below.) The Kurds’ uncertainty about the eventual shape of the
post-Saddam political structure has caused the KDP and PUK to combine their
political resources and to re-establish joint governance of the Kurdish regions.
Ansar al-Islam/Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. One organization begun by Kurds,
Ansar al-Islam, has become decidedly anti-U.S. Ansar al-Islam, which is named by

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the State Department as a Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO), originated in the
mid-1990s as a Kurdish Islamic faction called the Islamic Movement of Iraqi
Kurdistan (IMIK). Based in Halabja, the IMIK publicized the effects of Baghdad’s
March 1988 chemical attack on that city.
A radical faction of the IMIK split off in 1998, calling itself the Jund al-Islam
(Army of Islam). It later changed its name to Ansar al-Islam (Partisans of Islam),
first led by Mullah Krekar. Krekar reportedly had once studied under Shaikh
Abdullah al-Azzam, an Islamic theologian of Palestinian origin who was the spiritual
mentor of Osama bin Laden. Ansar reportedly agreed to host in its northern Iraq
enclave Al Qaeda fighters, mostly of Arab origin, who had fled the U.S.-led war in
Afghanistan in 2001. This Arab contingent was led by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, a 37-
year-old Jordanian Arab who reputedly fought in Afghanistan during the 1980s
alongside other Arab volunteers for the “jihad” against the Soviet Union. Possibly
because Ansar was largely taken over by Zarqawi and his Arab associates, Mullah
Krekar left Iraq for Norway, where he was detained in August 2002, arrested again
in early January 2004, and released again in February 2004.
Prior to OIF, during which its base was captured, about 600 Arab fighters lived
in the Ansar al-Islam enclave, near Khurmal.14 Ansar fighters clashed with the PUK
around Halabja in December 2002, and Ansar gunmen were allegedly responsible for
an assassination attempt against PUK prime minister Barham Salih in April 2002.
Zarqawi has become a major insurgent leader in Iraq, using a new organizational
name — Association of Unity and Jihad — which was named as an FTO on October
15, 2004. In early 2004, U.S. forces captured a letter purportedly written by Zarqawi
asking bin Laden’s support for Zarqawi’s insurgent activities in Iraq,15 and an
Islamist website broadcast a message in October 2004 — reportedly deemed
authentic by U.S. agencies — that Zarqawi has formally allied with Al Qaeda. Since
then, he reportedly has changed his organization’s name to “Al Qaeda in Iraq.” He
was believed to be in Fallujah prior to the U.S. offensive against that insurgent-held
city on November 8, 2004, but he is believed to have fled that city in advance of the
U.S. operation. An offshoot of Zarqawi’s group is called “Ansar al-Sunna,” or
Partisans of the Traditions [of the Prophet]. Ansar al-Sunna claimed responsibility
for the December 21, 2004, attack on Camp Marez in Mosul that killed 22, including
some U.S. soldiers.
Monarchist Organizations. One anti-Saddam group supports the return of
Iraq’s monarchy. The Movement for Constitutional Monarchy (MCM), is led by
Sharif Ali bin al-Hussein, a relative of the Hashemite monarchs (he is a cousin of
King Faysal II, the last Iraqi monarch) that ruled Iraq from the end of World War I
until 1958. Sharif Ali, who is about 49 and was a banker in London, claims to be the
leading heir to the former Hashemite monarchy, although there are other claimants.
The MCM was considered a small movement that could not contribute much to the
pre-war overthrow effort, but it was part of the INC and the United States had
14 Chivers, C.J. “Repulsing Attack By Islamic Militants, Iraqi Kurds Tell of Atrocities.”
New York Times, Dec. 6, 2002.
15 For text, see [http://www.state.gov/p/nea/rls/31694.htm]

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contacts with it. Sharif Ali returned to Iraq on June 10, 2003, but neither he nor any
of his followers was appointed to the IGC or the interim government.
Shiite Islamist Leaders and Organizations: Ayatollah Sistani, SCIRI,
Da’wa Party, Moqtada al-Sadr, and Others. Shiite Islamist organizations
constitute major factions in post-Saddam Iraq. Several of them had some ties to the
United States during the regime change efforts of the 1990s, but several other Shiite
factions had no contact at all with the United States until after the fall of the regime.
Muslims constitute about 60% of the population but have been under-represented in
every Iraqi government since modern Iraq’s formation in 1920. In an event that many
Iraqi Shiites still refer to as an example of their potential to frustrate great power
influence, Shiite Muslims led a revolt against British occupation forces in 1921.
Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani. Grand Ayatollah Sistani was largely
silenced by Saddam Hussein’s regime and was not part of U.S.-backed efforts in the
1990s to change Iraq’s regime, but he is emerging as a major political force in post-
Saddam Iraq. Sistani is about 75 years old and suffers from heart-related problems
that required him to travel to the United Kingdom for treatment in August 2004.
Sistani is the most senior of the Shiite clerics that lead the Najaf-based “Hawza al-
Ilmiyah,” a grouping of seminaries; his status as supreme “marja-e-taqlid,” or source
of emulation, is recognized by many Shiites worldwide. Other senior Hawza clerics
include Ayatollah Mohammad Sa’id al-Hakim, uncle of the slain leader of the
Supreme Council of the Islamic Revolution (SCIRI) in Iraq, Mohammad Baqr al-
Hakim; Ayatollah Mohammad Isaac Fayadh, who is of Afghan origin; and Ayatollah
Bashir al-Najafi. The large, mainstream Shiite Islamist groups SCIRI and the Da’wa
Party have aligned themselves with Sistani in post-Saddam Iraq, which adds
substantial organizational clout to his own network of supporters and agents (wakils)
throughout Iraq.
Sistani was born in Iran and studied in Qom, Iran, before relocating to Najaf at
the age of 21. He became head of the Hawza when his mentor, Ayatollah Abol
Qasem Musavi-Khoi, died in 1992. Sistani generally opposes a direct role for clerics
in government, but he believes in clerical guidance and supervision of political
leaders, partly explaining his deep involvement in shaping political outcome in post-
Saddam Iraq. He wants Iraq to maintain its Islamic culture and not to become secular
and Westernized, favoring modest dress for women and curbs on alcohol
consumption and Western-style music and entertainment. On the other hand, his
career does not suggest that he favors a repressive regime and he does not have a
record of supporting extremist Shiite organizations such as Lebanese Hizbollah.
Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI). SCIRI
is perhaps the best organized of the Shiite Islamist parties. It was set up in 1982,
composed mainly of ex-Da’wa Party members, to increase Iranian control over Shiite
opposition movements in Iraq and the Persian Gulf states. It was a member of the
INC in the early 1990s, but distanced itself from that organization in the mid-1990s.
Unlike most INC-affiliated parties, SCIRI had refused throughout the 1990s to work
openly with the United States or accept U.S. funds, although it had contacts with the
United States during this period. SCIRI says it does not seek to establish an Iranian-
style Islamic republic, but U.S. officials have expressed some mistrust of SCIRI’s

CRS-10
ties to Iran, which is said to include substantial amounts of financial and in-kind
assistance. SCIRI also runs its own television station.
SCIRI’s former leader, Ayatollah Mohammad Baqr al-Hakim, was the choice
of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini of Iran to head an Islamic republic of Iraq.
Khomeini enjoyed the protection of Mohammad Baqr’s father, Grand Ayatollah
Muhsin al-Hakim, when Khomeini was in exile in Najaf during 1964-1978.
(Ayatollah Muhsin al-Hakim was head of the Hawza al-Ilmiyah at that time.) SCIRI
and Mohammad Baqr had been based in Iraq after 1980, during a major crackdown
by Saddam Hussein, who feared that Iraqi Shiites were inspired by the Iranian Islamic
revolution to overthrow his Baathist government. Mohammad Baqr was killed in a
car bomb in Najaf on August 29, 2003, about a month after he returned to Iraq from
exile in Iran. Mohammad Baqr’s younger brother, Abd al-Aziz al-Hakim, who is a
lower ranking Shiite cleric, subsequently took over SCIRI, and served on the IGC.
He was president of the IGC during December 2003. His key aide is Adel Abd al-
Mahdi, who is Finance Minister in the interim government.
U.S. officials also express concern about SCIRI’s continued fielding of the
Badr Brigades (now renamed the “Badr Organization”), which number about
10,000-15,000 and are said to play a substantial role in the policing of Basra and
other southern cities. Iran’s Revolutionary Guard, which is politically aligned with
Iran’s hardliners, trained and equipped the Badr forces during the Iran-Iraq war and
helped the Badr forces to conduct forays from Iran into southern Iraq to attack Baath
Party officials there during that conflict. However, many Iraqi Shiites view SCIRI
as an Iranian creation, and SCIRI/Badr operations in southern Iraq during the 1980s
and 1990s did not spark broad popular unrest against the Iraqi regime.
Da’wa Party. The Da’wa Party, Iraq’s oldest Shiite Islamist grouping is
aligned with Sistani and SCIRI. The Da’wa (Islamic Call) Party was founded in 1957
by a revered Iraqi Shiite cleric, Ayatollah Mohammed Baqr Al Sadr, then an
associate of Ayatollah Khomeini (and uncle of Moqtada al-Sadr). It was the most
active Shiite opposition movement in the few years following Iran’s Islamic
revolution in February 1979; Da’wa activists conducted guerrilla attacks against the
Baathist regime and attempted assassinations of senior Iraqi leaders, including Tariq
Aziz. Ayatollah Baqr Al Sadr was hung by the Iraqi regime in 1980 for the unrest,
and many other Da’wa activists were killed or imprisoned. After the Iraqi
crackdown, many surviving Da’wa leaders moved into Iran; some subsequently
joined SCIRI, but others rejected Iranian control of Iraq’s Shiite groups and
continued to affiliate only with Da’wa. Da’wa has fewer Shiite clerics in its ranks
than does SCIRI. (There are breakaway factions of Da’wa, the most prominent of
which calls itself Islamic Da’wa of Iraq, but these factions are believed to be far
smaller than Da’wa.)
In post-Saddam Iraq, Da’wa’s leader, Ibrahim Jafari, and its leader in Basra,
Abd al Zahra Mohammad (also known as Izzaddin Salim) served on the IGC. Salim
was killed on May 17, 2004 in a suicide bombing while serving as president of the
IGC. Also on the IGC was a former Da’wa member turned human rights activist,
Muwaffaq Al-Ruba’i. Jafari was one of the nine rotating IGC presidents; he was
first to hold that post (August 2003), and he is now a deputy president in the interim
government.

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The Kuwaiti branch of the Da’wa Party allegedly was responsible for a May
1985 attempted assassination of the Amir of Kuwait and the December 1983 attacks
on the U.S. and French embassies in Kuwait. The Hizballah organization in Lebanon
was founded by Lebanese clerics loyal to Ayatollah Baqr Al Sadr and Iran’s
Ayatollah Khomeini, and there continue to be personal and ideological linkages
between Lebanese Hizballah and the Da’wa Party. The Hizballah activists who held
U.S. hostages in that country during the 1980s often attempted to link release of the
Americans to the release of 17 Da’wa Party prisoners held by Kuwait for those
attacks in the 1980s. Some Da’wa members in Iraq look to Lebanon’s senior Shiite
cleric Mohammed Hossein Fadlallah, who was a student and protege of Ayatollah
Mohammed Baqr Al Sadr, for spiritual guidance; Fadlallah also reportedly perceives
himself a rival of Sistani as a pre-eminent Shiite authority figure. These linkages
could explain reports that activists from Lebanese Hizballah have entered Iraq since
the fall of Saddam Hussein.16
Moqtada al-Sadr/Mahdi Army.17 Members of the clan of the late Ayatollah
Mohammed Baqr al-Sadr, the founder of the Da’wa Party, have become highly active
in post-Saddam Iraq. The clan stayed in Iraq during Saddam Hussein’s rule, and it
was repressed politically during that time. The United States had no contact with this
clan during its 1990s efforts to change Iraq’s regime. Although the Sadr clan has
traditionally been identified with the Da’wa Party, most members of the clan
currently do not identify with that party. Some relatives of the clan are in Lebanon,
and the founder of what became the Shiite Amal (Hope) party in Lebanon was a Sadr
clan member, Imam Musa Sadr, who died in murky circumstances in Libya in 1978.
Another revered member of the clan, Ayatollah Mohammed Sadiq al-Sadr, and
two of his sons, were killed by Saddam’s security forces in 1999 after Ayatollah
Sadiq al-Sadr began publicly opposing Saddam’s government. His lone surviving
son, Moqtada, who is about 30 years old (born in 1974), has gained a prominent role
in post-Saddam Shiite politics by adopting hard-line positions against the occupation.
U.S.-funded polling shows that Sadr has a significant following among poorer
Shiites, particularly in a Baghdad district now called “Sadr City,” which has a
population of about 2 million.
Sadr is viewed by most Iraqi Shiites, including Sistani, as a young radical who
lacks religious and political weight. To compensate for his lack of religious
credentials, he has sought spiritual authority for his actions from his teacher,
Ayatollah Kazem Haeri, who lives in Qom, Iran. Sadr believes Sistani is too willing
to compromise with U.S. and Iraqi authorities. There is also a personal dimension
to the rift; Sadr’s father, Mohammad Saddiq, had been a rival of Sistani for pre-
eminent Shiite religious authority in Iraq. The widespread view of Sadr as an
impulsive radical began on April 10, 2003, when his supporters allegedly stabbed to
death Abd al-Majid Khoi, the son of the late Grand Ayatollah Khoi, shortly after
Khoi’s U.S.-backed return to Najaf from exile in London. Khoi had headed the Khoi
16 Risen, James. “Hezbollah, in Iraq, Refrains from Attacks on Americans.” New York
Times
, Nov. 24, 2003.
17 See also White, Jeffrey. “To the Brink: Muqtada Al Sadr Challenges the United States.”
Washington Institute for Near East Policy, Policywatch 794. Oct. 17, 2003.

CRS-12
Foundation, based in London. Sadr subsequently used his Friday prayer sermons in
Kufa (near Najaf) and other forums to Iraqi officials as puppets of the U.S.
occupation and to call for an Islamic state. He did not seek representation on the IGC
or in the interim government, but instead he began (July 2003) recruiting for an
Islamic army (the “Mahdi Army”), initially unarmed, to combat the U.S. occupation.
Sadr supporters published anti-U.S. newspapers and held demonstrations. His first
uprising began on April 4, 2004, after his paper, “Al Hawza al-Natiqa” (the Vocal
Hawza”) was closed by U.S. authorities on allegations of incitement. His second
uprising began August 5, 2004, and many believe Sadr does not trust the political
process, including planned elections. He has not formally registered his faction to
compete in the elections, although some of his supporters apparently are on a large
slate backed by Ayatollah Sistani.

Other Shiite Organizations and Militias. A smaller Shiite Islamist
organization, the Islamic Amal (Action) Organization, is headed by Ayatollah
Mohammed Taqi Modarassi, a Shiite cleric who returned to Iraq from exile in Iran
after Saddam fell. Islamic Amal’s power base is in Karbala, and it conducted attacks
against Saddam Hussein’s regime in the 1980s. At that time, it was under the SCIRI
umbrella. Islamic Amal appears to have broken with SCIRI and reportedly is now
aligned with Chalabi in a new “Shiite Political Council.” However, Islamic Amal
does not appear to have a following nearly as large as do SCIRI or Da’wa.
Modarassi’s brother, Abd al-Hadi, headed the Islamic Front for the Liberation of
Bahrain, which stirred Shiite unrest against Bahrain’s regime in the 1980s and 1990s.
A variety of press reports say that some other Shiite militias are operating in
southern Iraq. One such militia is derived from the fighters who challenged Saddam
Hussein’s forces in the marsh areas of southern Iraq, around the town of Amara,
north of Basra. It goes by the name Hizbollah (Party of God) Iraq, and it is headed
by marsh guerrilla leader Abdul Karim Muhammadawi, who was on the IGC.
Hizbollah Iraq is said to play a major role in policing Amara.
Schisms Among Major Factions
The factions discussed above have a long history of friction. In the mid-1990s,
differences among them nearly led to the collapse of the U.S. regime change effort.
As noted above, in May 1994, the KDP and the PUK began clashing with each other
over territory, customs revenues levied at border with Turkey, and control over the
Kurdish enclave’s government based in Irbil. The infighting contributed to the defeat
of an INC offensive against Iraqi troops in March 1995; the KDP pulled out of the
offensive at the last minute. Although it was repelled, the offensive initially overran
some of poorly motivated front-line Iraqi units. Some INC leaders said the battle
indicated that the INC could have succeeded militarily had it received more U.S.
assistance.
The infighting in the opposition in the mid-1990s caused the United States to
briefly revisit the “coup strategy” by renewing ties to Allawi’s INA.18 A new
18 An account of this shift in U.S. strategy is essayed in Hoagland, Jim. “How CIA’s Secret
(continued...)

CRS-13
opportunity to pursue that strategy came in August 1995, when Saddam’s son-in-law
Hussein Kamil al-Majid — organizer of Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction efforts
— defected to Jordan, suggesting that Saddam’s grip on power might be weakening.
After that defection, Jordan’s King Hussein agreed to allow the INA to operate from
Jordan. However, the INA was ultimately penetrated by Iraq’s intelligence services
and, in June 1996, Baghdad dealt it a serious setback by arresting or executing over
100 INA sympathizers in the military.
Baghdad went on the offensive against both the INA, as well as the INC, in mid-
1996, culminating with the August 1996 incursion into northern Iraq, at the invitation
of the KDP. Iraq helped the KDP capture Irbil from the PUK, and Saddam’s forces
took advantage of their presence in northern Iraq to strike against the INC base in
Salahuddin, a city in northern Iraq, as well as against remaining INA operatives
throughout the north. During the incursion in the north, Iraq reportedly executed two
hundred oppositionists and arrested 2,000 others. The United States evacuated from
northern Iraq and eventually resettled in the United States 650 mostly INC activists.
Rebounding From Setbacks. For the two years following the opposition’s
1996 setbacks, the Clinton Administration had little contact with the opposition. In
those two years, the INC, INA, and others attempted to rebuild their organizations
and their ties to each other, although with mixed success. On February 26, 1998,
then Secretary of State Madeleine Albright testified to a Senate Appropriations
subcommittee that it would be “wrong to create false or unsustainable expectations”
of the effect of U.S. support for the opposition.
During 1997-1998, Iraq’s obstructions of U.N. weapons of mass destruction
(WMD) inspections led to growing congressional calls to overthrow Saddam,
although virtually no one in Congress or outside was advocating a U.S.-led military
invasion to accomplish that. A congressional push for a regime change policy began
with an FY1998 supplemental appropriation (P.L. 105-174, signed May 1, 1998) that,
among other provisions, earmarked $5 million in Economic Support Funds (ESF) for
the opposition and $5 million for a Radio Free Iraq, under the direction of Radio Free
Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL). The radio service began broadcasting in October
1998, from Prague. Of the ESF, $3 million was devoted to an overt program to
promote cohesion among the opposition factions, and to highlighting Iraqi violations
of U.N. resolutions. The remaining $2 million was used to translate and publicize
documents of alleged Iraqi war crimes; the documents were retrieved from the
Kurdish north, placed on 176 CD-ROM diskettes, and translated and analyzed by
experts under U.S. government contract. In subsequent years, Congress appropriated
funding for the Iraqi opposition and for war crimes issues (see appendix). Some of
the war crimes funds went to the opposition-led INDICT (International Campaign to
Indict Iraqi War Criminals) organization for publicizing Iraqi war crimes issues.
Iraq Liberation Act (ILA). A clear indication of congressional support for a
more active U.S. overthrow effort was encapsulated in another bill introduced in
1998: the Iraq Liberation Act (H.R. 4655, P.L. 105-338, signed October 31, 1998).
18 (...continued)
War On Saddam Collapsed.” Washington Post, June 26, 1997.

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The ILA was widely interpreted as an expression of congressional support for the
concept, advocated by Chalabi and some U.S. experts, of promoting an insurgency
by using U.S. air-power to expand opposition-controlled territory. President Clinton
signed the legislation, despite doubts about the opposition’s capabilities. The ILA
! made the previously unstated policy of promoting regime change in
Iraq official policy by stating that it should be the policy of the
United States to “support efforts” to remove the regime headed by
Saddam Hussein. In mid-November 1998, President Clinton
publicly articulated that regime change was a component of U.S.
policy toward Iraq.
! gave the President authority to provide up to $97 million in defense
articles and services, as well as $2 million in broadcasting funds, to
opposition organizations to be designated by the Administration.
! did not specifically provide for its termination after Saddam Hussein
is removed from power, and Section 7 of the ILA provides for
continuing post-Saddam “transition assistance” to Iraqi parties and
movements with “democratic goals.”
Operation “Desert Fox”/First ILA Designations. Immediately after the
signing of the ILA came a series of new crises over Iraq’s obstructions of U.N.
weapons inspections in Iraq. On December 15, 1998, U.N. inspectors were
withdrawn, and a three-day U.S. and British bombing campaign against suspected
Iraqi WMD facilities followed (Operation Desert Fox, December 16-19, 1998). In
January 1999, diplomat Frank Ricciardone was named as State Department
“Coordinator for the Transition in Iraq,” a liaison to the opposition. On February 5,
1999, President Clinton issued a determination (P.D. 99-13) making the following
groups eligible to receive U.S. military assistance under the ILA: the INC; the INA;
SCIRI; the KDP; the PUK; the Islamic Movement of Iraqi Kurdistan (IMIK); and the
Movement for Constitutional Monarchy (MCM). (Because of its role in the eventual
formation of Ansar al-Islam, the IMIK did not receive U.S. funds after 2001,
although it was not formally taken off the ILA eligibility list.)
In concert with a May 1999 INC visit to Washington, the Clinton
Administration announced a draw down of $5 million worth of training and “non-
lethal” defense articles under the ILA. During 1999-2000, about 150 oppositionists
underwent civil administration training at Hurlburt air base in Florida, including
Defense Department-run civil affairs training to administer a post-Saddam
government. The Clinton Administration asserted that the opposition was not
sufficiently organized to receive weaponry or combat training, a restriction that
reflected doubts about the viability of the opposition and concerns that the United
States might become militarily embroiled in civil conflict in Iraq. The Hurlburt
trainees were not brought into OIF or into the Free Iraqi Forces that deployed to Iraq
at the end of the major combat phase of the war.

CRS-15
Bush Administration Policy
Bush Administration policy toward Iraq started out similar to that of its
predecessor’s, but policy changed dramatically after the September 11, 2001 terrorist
attacks. Some recent accounts assert that the Administration was planning, well prior
to September 11, 2001, to confront Iraq militarily; others say that the shift toward a
more assertive policy was prompted largely by the September 11 attacks. The policy
shift first became clear in President Bush’s State of the Union message on January
29, 2002; in that speech, he characterized Iraq as part of an “axis of evil,” along with
Iran and North Korea.
Pre-September 11: Reinforcing Containment. Throughout most of its
first year, the Bush Administration continued the basic elements of its predecessor’s
policy on Iraq. With no immediate consensus on whether or how to pursue
Saddam’s overthrow, Secretary of State Powell focused on strengthening
containment of Iraq, which the Bush Administration said had eroded substantially in
the few preceding years. Secretary Powell visited the Middle East in February 2001
to enlist regional support for a “smart sanctions” plan, a modification of the U.N.
sanctions regime and “oil-for-food” program to improve international enforcement
of the U.N. ban on exports of weapons-related technology to Iraq. The plan offered
to relax U.N. restrictions on exports to Iraq of purely civilian equipment.19
The Administration believed that the “smart sanctions” proposal, by easing the
suffering of the Iraqi people, would cause the international community to prevent
further erosion of the sanctions regime. Secretary Powell, who had openly expressed
skepticism about the opposition’s prospects, barely raised the regime change issue
during his trip or in his March 7, 2001, testimony before the House International
Relations Committee, at which he was questioned about Iraq.20 After about a year
of Security Council negotiations, the major feature of the smart sanctions plan —
new procedures that virtually eliminated U.N. review of civilian exports to Iraq —
was adopted on May 14, 2002 (U.N. Resolution 1409).
Even though several senior officials had been strong advocates of a regime
change policy, many of the long-standing questions about the difficulty of that
strategy were debated early in the Bush Administration.21 During his confirmation
hearings as Deputy Secretary of Defense, a leading advocate of overthrowing Iraq’s
regime, Paul Wolfowitz, said that he did not yet see a “plausible plan” for changing
the regime. Like its predecessor, the Bush Administration decided not to provide the
opposition with lethal aid, combat training, or air or other military support.
19 For more information on this program, see CRS Report RL30472, Iraq: Oil For Food
Program, Sanctions, and U.S. Policy
.
20 Perlez, Jane. “Powell Goes on the Road and Scores Some Points.” New York Times, Mar.
2, 2001.
21 One account of Bush Administration internal debates on the strategy is found in Hersh,
Seymour. “The Debate Within.” The New Yorker, Mar. 11, 2002.

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Post-September 11: Implementing Regime Change. After September
11, the Bush Administration stressed regime change and asserted that containment
was failing. After the U.S.-led war on the Taliban and Al Qaeda in Afghanistan
began in early October 2001, speculation began building that the Administration
might try to change Iraq’s regime through direct use of military force as part of a
“phase two” of the war on terrorism. Some U.S. officials, particularly deputy
Defense Secretary Wolfowitz, asserted that the United States needed to respond to
the September 11, 2001 attacks by ending regimes that support terrorist groups,
including Iraq. Vice President Cheney visited the Middle East in March 2002
reportedly to consult regional countries about the possibility of confronting Iraq
militarily, although the countries visited reportedly urged greater U.S. attention to the
Arab-Israeli dispute and opposed confrontation with Iraq. Recent accounts, including
the book “Plan of Attack,” by Bob Woodward (published in April 2004), say that
Secretary of State Powell and others were concerned about the potential
consequences of an invasion of Iraq, particularly the difficulties of building a
democratic political structure after major hostilities ended.
The two primary themes in the Bush Administration’s public case for the need
to confront Iraq were (1) its purported refusal to end its WMD programs, and (2) its
ties to terrorist groups, to which Iraq might transfer WMD for conduct of a
catastrophic attack on the United States. President Bush did not assert that Iraq was
an imminent or immediate threat to U.S. security, but he called Iraq a “grave and
gathering” threat that should be blunted before the threat became imminent. The
Administration added that regime change would yield the further benefit of
liberating the Iraqi people and promoting stability and democracy in the Middle East.
! WMD Threat Perception. Senior U.S. officials asserted the
following about Iraq’s WMD: (1) that Iraq had worked to rebuild its
WMD programs in the nearly four years since U.N. weapons
inspectors left Iraq and had failed to comply with 17 U.N.
resolutions, including Resolution 1441 (November 8, 2002) that
demanded complete elimination of all of Iraq’s WMD programs; (2)
that Iraq had used chemical weapons against its own people (the
Kurds) and against Iraq’s neighbors (Iran), implying that Iraq would
not necessarily be deterred from using WMD against the United
States or its allies. Critics noted that, under the U.S. threat of
massive retaliation, Iraq did not use WMD against U.S. troops in the
1991 Gulf war. On the other hand, Iraq defied U.S. warnings of
retaliation and did burn Kuwait’s oil fields in that war; and (3) that
Iraq could transfer its WMD to terrorists, particularly Al Qaeda, that
could use these weapons to cause hundreds of thousands of deaths
in the United States or elsewhere.
! Links to Al Qaeda. Iraq was a designated state sponsor of terrorism
during 1979-82, and was again designated after the 1990 invasion of
Kuwait. Although they did not assert that Saddam Hussein’s regime
had a direct connection to the September 11 attacks or the
subsequent anthrax mailings, senior U.S. officials said there was
evidence of Iraqi linkages to Al Qaeda. The final report by the
bipartisan commission on the September 11 attacks found no

CRS-17
evidence of an operational linkage between them. Iraq was removed
from the terrorism list by President Bush on September 24, 2004
(Presidential Determination 2004-52). See CRS Report RL32217,
Iraq and Al Qaeda: Allies or Not?
Broadening the Iraqi Opposition as War Approaches. As it began in
mid-2002 to prepare for possible military action against Iraq, the Bush
Administration tried to build up the Iraqi opposition. On June 16, 2002, the
Washington Post reported that, in early 2002, President Bush authorized stepped up
covert activities by the CIA and special operations forces to destabilize Saddam
Hussein. In August 2002, the State and Defense Departments jointly invited six
major opposition groups (INC, the INA, the KDP, the PUK, SCIRI, and the MCM)
to Washington for meetings. At the same time, the Administration expanded its ties
to several groups composed primarily of ex-military officers, as well as to some
ethnic-based groups. These groups included the Iraqi National Movement; the Iraqi
National Front; the Iraqi Free Officers and Civilians Movement; the Higher Council
for National Salvation, headed by a former head of Iraqi military intelligence;22 the
Iraqi Turkmen Front, a small, ethnic-based group, considered aligned with Turkey;23
the Islamic Accord of Iraq, a Damascus-based Shiite Islamic Party; and the Assyrian
Democratic Movement, which is headed by Yonadam Yousif Kanna. Iraq’s
Assyrians are based primarily in northern Iraq, but there is a substantial diaspora
community living in the United States; the group began integrating into the broader
opposition front in September 2002. (In post-Saddam Iraq, Kanna served on the
IGC.) On December 9, 2002, the Administration made six of these factions (not the
Higher Council for National Salvation) eligible to receive ILA draw-downs, and he
authorized the remaining $92 million worth of goods and services available under the
ILA for those groups, as well as for the INA, the INC, the KDP, the PUK, SCIRI,
and the MCM.
The Bush Administration supported efforts by these groups to coordinate with
each other and with other groups. One such meeting, in July 2002 in London and
jointly run with the INC, attracted over 70 ex-military officers. As U.S. military
action against Iraq approached, the Administration also began a program to train
about 5,000 oppositionists in tasks that could assist U.S. forces, possibly including
combat units.24 An initial group of 3,000 was selected, but only about 70 of them
completed training at an air base (Taszar) in Hungary.25 These recruits served with
U.S. forces in OIF as translators and mediators between U.S. forces and local leaders.
22 Ex-chief of staff of Iraq’s military Nizar al-Khazraji, who was based in Denmark since
fleeing Iraq in 1996, may also be a member of this group. He is under investigation there
for alleged involvement in Iraq’s use of chemical weapons against the Kurds in 1988. His
current whereabouts are unknown.
23 Turkomens, who are generally Sunni Muslims, number about 350,000 and live mainly in
northern Iraq.
24 Deyoung, Karen, and Daniel Williams. “Training of Iraqi Exiles Authorized.”
Washington Post, Oct. 19, 2002.
25 Williams, Daniel. “U.S. Army to Train 1,000 Iraqi Exiles.” Washington Post, Dec. 18,
2002.

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As 2002 drew to a close, the opposition began planning its role in post-Saddam
Iraq. During December 14-17, 2002, with U.S. officials attending, major Iraqi
opposition groups met in London and sought to declare a provisional government.
The Administration opposed that step on the grounds that doing so would give the
impression that the United States wanted the exile groups to dominate post-war Iraq
politically. Major opposition groups met again (in northern Iraq) in February 2003,
forming a transition preparation committee. Attending was Adnan Pachachi, who
served as foreign minister and ambassador to the United Nations during the 1950s
and 1960s, under the military governments of Qasim and “the Arif brothers” (see
above). Pachachi, who is about 80, lived in the UAE during Saddam Hussein’s rule
and heads a small party called the “Iraqi Independent Democrats.” He was one of the
rotating presidents of the IGC (January 2004).
Decision to Launch Military Action. As U.N. inspectors worked in Iraq
under the new mandates provided in Resolution 1441, the Administration demanded
complete disarmament by Iraq to avert military action. In an effort to garner
international support for a U.S.-led war, the Administration downplayed the goal of
regime change in President Bush’s September 12, 2002 speech before the United
Nations General Assembly, stressing instead the need to enforce U.N. resolutions on
Iraq. In March 2003, U.N. diplomacy over whether the U.N. Security Council should
authorize war broke down. The impasse followed several briefings for the U.N.
Security Council by the director of the U.N. inspection body UNMOVIC (U.N.
Monitoring, Verification, and Inspection Commission) Hans Blix and the director
of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Mohammad al-Baradei, most
recently on March 7, 2003. The briefings, based on WMD inspections that resumed
November 27, 2002, under Resolution 1441, criticized Iraq for failing to pro-actively
cooperate to clear up outstanding questions about its WMD program, but the latter
two briefings (February 24 and March 7, 2003) noted progress in clearing up some
uncertainties and added that Iraq might not have retained any WMD. The inspectors
reported few Iraqi obstructions in about 700 inspections of about 400 different sites.
Iraq declared short range ballistic missiles that were determined by Blix to be of
prohibited ranges, and Blix ordered Iraq to destroy them; Iraq began the destruction
prior to the war. The briefings appeared to match what was found in the course of
the post-war U.S.-led WMD searches by the Iraq Survey Group (ISG), as outlined in
the “Duelfer report” released on September 22, 2004. The Administration began
emphasizing the regime change rather than disarmament goal after it became clear
that diplomacy at the United Nations would not produce U.N. backing for war.
Security Council opponents of war, including France, Russia, China, and
Germany, said the pre-war WMD inspections showed that Iraq could be disarmed
peacefully or contained indefinitely. On the Security Council, the United States,
along with Britain, Spain, and Bulgaria, maintained that Iraq had not fundamentally
decided to disarm. At a March 16, 2003, summit meeting with the leaders of Britain,
Spain, and Bulgaria at the Azores, President Bush asserted that diplomatic options
to disarm Iraq peacefully had failed. The following evening, President Bush gave
Saddam Hussein and his sons, Uday and Qusay, an ultimatum to leave Iraq within 48
hours to avoid war. They refused the ultimatum, and OIF began on March 19, 2003.
In the war, Iraq’s conventional military forces were overwhelmed by U.S. and
British forces, although some Iraqi units and irregulars (“Saddam’s Fedayeen”) put

CRS-19
up stiff resistance and used unconventional tactics. No major Iraqi military
commanders or Baathist political figures came forward to try to establish a post-
Saddam government; and regime leaders fled Baghdad. No WMD was used,
although Iraq did fire some ballistic missiles into Kuwait; it is not clear whether
those missiles were of prohibited ranges (greater than 150 km). The regime vacated
Baghdad on April 9, 2003, although Saddam appeared publicly with supporters that
day in a district of Baghdad where he was popular. Organs of the U.S. government
are attempting to uncover evidence of former regime human rights abuses and other
violations, in addition to evidence of WMD. See CRS Report RL32379, Iraq:
Former Regime Weapons Programs, Human Rights Violations, and U.S. Policy
.
Post-Saddam Governance and Transition26
There has been substantial debate about the course of U.S. policy toward Iraq
as post-Saddam insurgency and anti-U.S. violence have persisted. The outcome of
the debate will likely depend on the duration and intensity of continued resistance;
the numbers of U.S. casualties; the pace of reconstruction; and the stability and
orientation of Iraq’s government. During 2004, including the presidential election
campaign, President Bush has said that there is positive movement on major issues
and that the United States should “stay the course” by implementing the political
transition roadmap discussed below, although he said on December 20, 2004, that the
insurgents were adversely affecting U.S. policy. Some critics maintain that new
current policy is not bringing stability or democracy to Iraq and that new steps should
be considered. Some options are discussed in this section.
Occupation Period and the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA).
After the fall of the regime, the United States set up an occupation structure, a
decision reportedly based on Administration concerns that immediate sovereignty
would likely result in infighting among and domination by major factions. The
Bush Administration initially tasked Lt. Gen. Jay Garner (ret.) to direct
reconstruction, with a staff of U.S. government personnel to serve as advisers and
administrators in Iraq’s ministries. He headed the Office of Reconstruction and
Humanitarian Assistance (ORHA), within the Department of Defense, created by a
January 20, 2003 executive order. Garner and about 200 of his staff deployed to Iraq
in April 2003.
Garner’s focus was to try to quickly establish a representative successor Iraqi
regime. Garner organized a meeting in Nasiriyah (April 15, 2003) of about 100
Iraqis of varying ideologies; many of the attendees were representatives of Iraqi tribal
groupings and emerging political movements. A follow-up meeting of about 250
delegates was held in Baghdad on April 26, 2003, ending in agreement to hold a
26 Some of the information in this section was obtained during author’s participation in a
congressional delegation to Iraq during Feb. 26-Mar. 2, 2004. The visit to Baghdad, Basra,
and Tallil included meetings with CPA head L. Paul Bremer, the commander of U.S. forces
in Iraq Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, and various local and national Iraqi political figures and
other CPA, U.S., and coalition military officials.

CRS-20
broader meeting, within a month, to name an interim Iraqi administration. In parallel,
major exile parties began a series of meetings, with U.S. envoys present.
Press reports said that senior U.S. officials were dissatisfied with Garner’s
perceived lax approach to post-Saddam security and that they feared that Garner’s
political transition process would lead to domination by the major exile parties. In
early May 2003, senior U.S. officials ended this process of selecting a transition
regime and, on May 6, 2003, the Administration named former ambassador L. Paul
Bremer to replace Garner as head of the Iraq effort. He arrived in Iraq on May 12,
2003, to head the “Coalition Provisional Authority” (CPA), which subsumed ORHA.
U.S. officials referred to the CPA as an occupying authority recognized by U.N.
Security Council Resolution 1483 (May 22, 2003). The major exile parties criticized
the U.S. decision to cut Garner’s political process short. Partly in response to the
criticism, Bremer said on June 23, 2003 that he would appoint a 25- to 30-member
Iraqi body that would have “real authority” (though not formal sovereignty). Bremer
said the “Governing Council” would nominate ministry heads, recommend policies,
and draft a new constitution.27
Another alteration of the U.S. post-war structure was made public in early
October 2003; an “Iraq Stabilization Group” under the direction of National Security
Adviser (Secretary of State-nominee) Condoleezza Rice was formed to coordinate
interagency support to the CPA. Rice deputy, Robert Blackwill, had been the NSC’s
primary official for the Iraq transition, but he resigned from the Administration in
November 2004. The Administration’s post-war policy did not make extensive use
of a State Department initiative, called the “Future of Iraq Project,” that drew up
plans for administration by Iraqis after the fall of Saddam. Some Iraqis who
participated in that project are now in official positions in Iraq’s government. The
State Department project, which cost $5 million, consisted of about 15 working
groups on each major issue.
The Iraqi Governing Council (IGC). On July 13, 2003, the “Iraq Governing
Council (IGC)” was named by the CPA. It was dominated by major exile parties but
contained other prominent Iraqis as well; many IGC figures remain prominent. It had
three women and included Shiites, Sunni Arabs, Kurds, and others. (It dissolved on
June 1, 2004, in concert with the naming of the interim government.)
There were 13 Shiites on the IGC, of which six were Islamists. One seat was
held by SCIRI (Abd al-Aziz Al Hakim); one by marsh guerrilla leader Abdul Karim
al-Muhammadawi); two were Da’wa Party leaders (Ibrahim al-Jafari and Abdul
Zahra Mohammad, also known as Izzaddin Salim) and one was a former Da’wa
member (Muwaffaq al-Ruba’i). The sixth was independent, moderate cleric,
Mohammad Bahr al-Ulum, who headed the Ahl al-Bayt charity center in London
since the 1980s. The remaining seven Shiites, including Chalabi and Allawi, were
secular; including the head of the Iraqi Communist Party (Hamid al-Musa), which
is making a comeback in Iraq. It had been allied with Saddam Hussein’s Baath Party
in the 1950s and 1960s but was purged and repressed by the Baathists after the party
took power for the second time in 1968. Two were women.
27 Transcript: “Bremer Reviews Progress, Plans for Iraq Reconstruction.” Washington File,
June 23, 2003.

CRS-21
The IGC had five Sunni Muslim Arabs. They were National Democratic Party
leader Nasir al-Chadirchy; Adnan Pachachi; Samir Shakir al-Sumaidy, a civil
engineer (now Iraq’s ambassador to the United Nations); Ghazi al-Yawar, a senior
member of the Shammar tribe and president of Saudi-based Hicap Technology (now
President); and Muhsin Abdul Hamid, head of the Iraqi Islamic Party. The body also
had five Kurds (all Sunni Muslims): the two Kurdish leaders Talabani and Barzani
and three independents, one of which was an Islamist. The other IGC minorities
were Yonadam Kanna (discussed above) and Ms. Songul Chapuk, a Turkoman
women’s activist.
In July 2003, the Council decided that nine members would rotate as presidents,
each for one month: Jafari, Chalabi, Allawi, Talabani, Hakim, Pachachi, Barzani,
Bahr al-Ulum, and Abdul Hamid. The IGC also decided that none would serve twice
as president; the IGC selected Shiite member Izzaddin Salim to head the IGC during
May 2004. He was killed by a car bomb outside CPA headquarters on May 17, 2004;
his colleagues selected Ghazi al-Yawar to fill the remaining few weeks.
The IGC was less active than expected; some believe it was too heavily
dominated by exiles and lacked legitimacy. In September 2003, the IGC selected a
25-member “cabinet,” with roughly the same factional and ethnic balance of the IGC
itself. Among major actions, the IGC began a process of “de-Baathification,” later
slowed, and authorized the establishment of a war crimes tribunal for Saddam and
his associates.
The Handover of Sovereignty
The Bush Administration initially made the end of the U.S. occupation
contingent on the completion of a new constitution and the holding of national
elections for a new government, tasks which were expected to be completed by late
2005. However, the IGC made little progress in drafting a constitution due to
factional divisions. Ayatollah Sistani insisted that drafters be elected. In the fall of
2003, the major factions began agitating for an early restoration of Iraqi sovereignty.
CPA head Bremer consulted with President Bush, resulting in a decision to accelerate
the transfer of sovereignty. On November 15, 2003, the CPA and the IGC
announced agreement a plan to draft, by February 28, 2004, a provisional
constitution, or Transitional Administrative Law (TAL), and for sovereignty to
return to Iraq by June 30, 2004. Under the agreement, 15-person committees were
to be selected in each of Iraq’s 18 provinces; they would select participants for
broader “caucuses.” By May 31, 2004, the caucuses were to select members of a
250-member national assembly, which would choose an executive branch, including
a provisional leader, and then assume sovereignty. National elections for a
permanent government would be held by December 31, 2005.
This plan attracted mixed reviews. Ayatollah Sistani strongly opposed the
“caucuses” as not democratic. In part to address his concerns, the CPA abandoned
that idea and asked the United Nations to assess the feasibility of holding elections
prior to a restoration of sovereignty. A U.N. team led by senior U.N. adviser Lakhdar
Brahimi conducted its assessment during February 7-16, 2004, and, based on the
team’s report, U.N. Secretary General Annan said in February 2004 that elections for

CRS-22
a new government could not be completed by June 30, 2004, but might be feasible
by the end of 2004 or by early 2005.
Transitional Administrative Law (TAL)/Transition Roadmap. Much
of the Brahimi findings were incorporated into the Transitional Administrative Law
(TAL), which lays out a transition roadmap. Although it was delayed by factional
infighting, the IGC formally signed the TAL on March 8, 2004.28 Before and
immediately after the signing, Sistani expressed opposition to the TAL’s limitations
on the authority of a transition (post-January 2005) president and its provision
allowing the Kurds a veto over a permanent constitution; he called on the United
Nations not to formally endorse the TAL. The key points of the TAL are as follows:
! A “transition government” is to be formed, chosen by a 275-seat
National Assembly elected in voting no later than January 31, 2005.
The Assembly is to choose a “presidency council” consisting of a
president and two deputy presidents. It is expected that the president
would be a Shiite, and the two deputies a Sunni Arab and a Kurd.
The presidency council is to operate by consensus, and it is to name
a prime minister by unanimous vote.
! The election law for the transition government “shall aim to achieve
the goal of having women constitute no less than 25% of the
members of the National Assembly.”
! The Kurds maintain their autonomous “Kurdistan Regional
Government,” but they were not given control of the city of Kirkuk
and they received some powers to contradict or alter the application
of Iraqi law in the Kurdish provinces. The Kurdish militias
(“peshmerga”) were allowed to continue to operate.
! The transition government (post-January 31, 2005) is to draft (by
August 15, 2005) a constitution to be put to a national vote by
October 15, 2005. A provision allows two-thirds of the voters any
three Iraqi provinces to veto the permanent constitution, giving the
Kurds (who control the three northern provinces of Dohuk, Irbil, and
Sulaymaniyah) a veto. If the constitution is not approved, another
draft is to be completed and voted on by October 15, 2006.
! If the permanent constitution is approved, elections to a permanent
government are to occur by December 15, 2005, and it is to take
office by December 31, 2005. If the constitution is not approved,
then elections for a new national assembly are to be held by
December 15, 2005.
! The TAL states that Islam is the official religion of Iraq and is to be
considered “a source,” but not the only source or the primary source,
28 The text of the TAL can be obtained from the CPA website: [http://cpa-iraq.org/
government/TAL.html].

CRS-23
of legislation. It adds that no law can be passed that contradicts the
agreed tenets of Islam, but neither can any law contradict certain
rights including peaceful assembly; free expression; equality of men
and women before the law; and the right to strike and demonstrate.
Interim Government and Sovereignty Handover. The TAL did not
address how an interim (post-handover) government would be chosen. Options
considered for selecting the interim government included holding a traditional
assembly along the lines of Afghanistan’s loya jirga; holding a smaller “roundtable”
of Iraqi notables; or expanding the IGC into an interim government. To increase the
legitimacy of the decision-making process, the United States gave U.N. envoy
Brahimi substantial responsibility for selecting the interim government that took
power on June 28, 2004.29 He initially envisioned a government of technocrats,
devoid of figures who might use their official positions to promote themselves in
national elections. However, maneuvering by IGC and cabinet members led to
inclusion of many of them — or their political allies — in the interim government
selected on June 1, 2004. A few of the cabinet positions are held by relatively non-
political personalities. The interim government began work immediately, but the
formal handover of sovereignty took place in a brief ceremony at about 10:30 A.M.
Baghdad time on June 28, 2004. The handover occurred two days before the
advertised June 30 date, partly to confound insurgents.

The powers of the interim government are addressed in an addendum to the
TAL, signed by the IGC on June 1, 2004. The interim government has a
“presidency” composed of a largely ceremonial president (former IGC member and
Shammar tribal elder Ghazi al-Yawar) and two deputy presidents (the Da’wa Party’s
Ibrahim al-Jafari and the KDP’s Dr. Rowsch Shaways). As noted above, Iyad al-
Allawi is Prime Minister, who has executive power, and there is a deputy prime
minister, 26 ministers, two ministers of state with portfolio, and three ministers of
state without portfolio. Six ministers are women, and the ethnicities of the interim
government are roughly the same as they were in the IGC. The major positions
include the following:
! Deputy Prime Minister (for national security). PUK official Barham
Salih, formerly PUK representative in Washington and prime
minister of the PUK-controlled region of northern Iraq.
! Minister of Defense. Hazem al-Shaalan, an elder of the Ghazal tribe
who was in exile during 1985-2003.
! Interior Minister. Falah al-Naqib, son of ex-Baathist general Hassan
al-Naqib. (Hassan al-Naqib was a member of the first executive
committee of the INC in the early 1990s.)
! Minister of Finance. Senior SCIRI official Adel Abdul Mahdi.
29 Chandrasekaran, Rajiv. “Envoy Urges U.N.-Chosen Iraqi Government.” Washington Post.
Apr. 15, 2004.

CRS-24
! Minister of Oil. Former oil ministry official Thamir Ghadban, who
played a major role in rehabilitating Iraq’s oil industry since the fall
of Saddam’s regime.
! Some IGC cabinet “ministers” were retained. KDP official Hoshyar
Zebari, was “foreign minister” in the IGC cabinet and was retained
in this position. Dr. Mehdi al-Hafidh, an independent Shiite,
remained as Minister of Planning; PUK official Dr. Abdul Latif
Rashid stayed as Minister of Water Resources; and Ms. Nasreen
Berwari (now married to President Ghazi al-Yawar) stayed as
Minister of Public Works. Shiite Muslim IGC member Wael Abd
al-Latif, became Minister of State for Provinces. The Iraqi
Ambassador to the United States is Rend Rahim, formerly an
opposition activist based in the United States. However, there have
been reports she might be replaced by Kanaan Makiya, a long-time
dissident and human rights activist.
Resolution 1546. Many of the powers and responsibilities of the interim
government are spelled out in U.N. Security Council Resolution 1546, adopted
unanimously on June 8, 2004. It endorsed the handover of sovereignty and provided
for the following:
! U.S. officials no longer have final authority on non-security related
issues. The interim government’s primary function is to run the
ministries and prepare for the January 2005 assembly elections.
Many international law experts say that the interim government
could exceed this intended mandate, possibly including amending
the TAL or revoking CPA decrees, but it has not taken such steps to
date. The Kurds had feared that the interim government would
repeal TAL provisions that the Kurds view as protecting them from
the Arab majority;30 their fears were heightened by the omission
from Resolution 1546 of any mention of the TAL.
! The relationship between U.S. and Iraqi forces — coordination and
partnership — is spelled out in an exchange of letters between
Secretary of State Powell and Prime Minister Allawi, annexed to
Resolution 1546. Iraqi participation in specific operations is at the
discretion of the Iraqi government, but the Iraqi government does not
have a veto over specific coalition operations, and the coalition
retains the ability to take prisoners. The Resolution reinforces the
TAL in specifying that, at least until the end of 2005 (the end of the
transition period), Iraqi forces will be “a principal partner in the
multi-national force operating in Iraq under unified [American]
command pursuant to the provisions of U.N. Security Council
Resolution 1511 (October 16, 2003) and any subsequent
resolutions.”
30 Filkins, Dexter. Kurds Threaten to Walk Away From Iraqi State. New York Times, June
9, 2004.

CRS-25
! The coalition’s mandate is to be reviewed “at the request of the
Government of Iraq or twelve months from the date of this
resolution,” that the mandate would expire when a permanent
government is sworn in at the end of 2005, and that the mandate
would be terminated “if the Iraqi government so requests.” The
Resolution, as does the TAL, defers to the post-January 31, 2005,
government an agreement on the status of coalition forces in Iraq.
! The interim government was given control over Iraq’s oil revenues
and the Development Fund for Iraq (DFI), subject to monitoring for
at least one year by the U.N.-mandated International Advisory and
Monitoring Board. The interim government also was given
responsibility for close-out of the “oil-for-food program.”31
! The Resolution gave the United Nations a major role in assisting and
advising the Iraqi government in preparing for national elections and
in many aspects of governance. It also authorized a force within the
coalition to protect U.N. personnel and facilities.
Post-Handover Authority Building/Interim Parliament. The process of
building an Iraqi government continued after the handover.32 Resolution 1546 and
the addendum to the TAL provided for the holding of a conference of over 1,000
Iraqis (chosen from all around Iraq by a 60-member commission of Iraqis) to choose
a 100-seat advisory council (“Interim National Council”) — essentially an interim
parliament. This body does not have legislative authority, but according to the
addendum to the TAL, it is able to veto decisions by the executive branch with a 2/3
majority. The conference, due to be held by July 31, 2004, but postponed due to
security concerns and political infighting, was held under tight security during
August 13-18, 2004. The conference was dominated by a crisis of violence in Najaf,
but it completed the selection of an 81-member slate of candidates, dominated by the
major Shiite, Kurdish, and other exile parties.33 The other 19 seats are held by the
IGC members who did not obtain positions in the interim government, as provided
for in the TAL. Some smaller parties said the meeting was chaotic and did not
provide them with a “level-playing field;” they apparently accepted the result
nonetheless. The council was sworn in on September 1, 2004. It has held some
televised “hearings” questioning ministers on government performance.
The following other actions were undertaken in connection with the handover.
31 For information on that program, see CRS Report RL30472, Iraq: Oil-for-Food Program,
International Sanctions, and Illicit Trade.

32 Information in this section was obtained from various press reports, CRS conversations
with executive branch officials in May 2004, CRS conversations with journalists and other
observers, and CRS participation in a congressional visit to Iraq during Feb. 28-29, 2004.
33 Tavernise, Sabrina. “In Climax To a Tumultuous 4-Day Debate, Iraq Chooses An
Assembly.” New York Times, August 19, 2004.

CRS-26
! CPA head Bremer departed Iraq for the United States on June 28,
2004, and the CPA and formal state of occupation ceased.
Ambassador John Negroponte, the U.S. Ambassador to Iraq,
confirmed by the Senate on May 6, 2004, arrived in Iraq and
subsequently presented credentials, establishing formal U.S.-Iraq
diplomatic relations for the first time since January 1991. A large
U.S. embassy opened on June 30, 2004; it is being staffed with
about 1,000 U.S. personnel, including about 160 U.S. officials and
representatives that serve as advisers to the interim government.
(See, CRS Report RS21867, U.S. Embassy in Iraq.)
! Some CPA functions, such as the advising of local Iraqi
governments, local Iraqi governing councils, and U.S. military units,
have been retained at the U.S. embassy in the form of an “Iraq
Reconstruction and Management Office (IRMO).” About 150 U.S.
personnel are serving in at least four major centers around Iraq to
advise local Iraqi governments: Hilla, Basra, Kirkuk, and Mosul.
As of November 2004, the IRMO is headed by Ambassador
William Taylor, formerly U.S. aid coordinator for Afghanistan.
! In connection with the handover, U.S. military headquarters in
Baghdad (Combined Joint Task Force-7, CJTF-7) has become a
multi-national headquarters (Multinational Force-Iraq, MNF-I).
Four-star U.S. Gen. George Casey, confirmed by the Senate on June
24, 2004, is commander.34 Before dissolving on June 28, the CPA
extended existing orders giving U.S. military people, and some
contractors, immunity from prosecution by Iraqi courts.35
! The Program Management Office (PMO), which reported to the
Department of Defense and administers some U.S. funds for Iraq,
has been replaced by a “Project and Contracting Office (PCO),”
headed by Charles Hess.
Preparations for January 2005 Elections. U.S. and Iraqi attention has
turned to the January 2005 Assembly elections, now scheduled for the 30th, and
simultaneous elections for provincial governments and the Kurdish regional
assembly. As of early December 2004, open splits have emerged between Iraq’s
Shiites and Sunni Arabs over whether or not to postpone the elections due to security
concerns caused primarily by the Sunni-led insurgency. The interim government has,
for now, refused a call by 17 Sunni-led parties to postpone the elections. The
registration process closed on December 16, 2004, with 109 political entities filing
to compete, most notably nine large coalition slates such as the Sistani-backed Shiite
Islamist-dominated “United Iraqi Alliance.” Campaigning has begun. The planned
34 Hendren, John and Richard Serrano. “Pentagon Intends to Replace Ground Commander
in Iraq.” Los Angeles Times, May 25, 2004.
35 Wright, Robin. U.S. Immunity in Iraq Will Go Beyond June 30. Washington Post, June
24, 2004.

CRS-27
elections, including funding, security, and competing factions, are covered in CRS
Report RS21968, Iraq: Post-Saddam National Elections.
U.S. election-related assistance will attempt to complement U.S. efforts already
underway to promote local governance and politics. Although governance at the
national level has been contentious, there appears to have been political progress at
the local level. U.S. officials say Iraqis are freer than at any time in the past 30 years,
with a free press and the ability to organize politically; dozens of political parties
have formed since the fall of Saddam’s regime. Over 500 courts are operating, as are
about 700 local governing councils. Elections for local leaders, to replace those
appointed by U.S.-led forces immediately after the fall of the regime, have been held
throughout Iraq. Some Iraqi women are becoming more politically active, and
among other grassroots activities, more than 700 tribal leaders formed a “farmers’
union” in January 2004. A U.S. funded “Community Action Program (CAP)” is
providing local leaders with grant money for specific community projects.36 USAID
is conducting more than 1,400 democracy dialogue activities to help Iraqis prepare
for the transition to participatory government.
Security Challenges to the Transition
The insurgency against U.S. and Iraqi forces has defied most U.S. expectations
in intensity and duration. As of December 22, 2004, about 1,325 U.S. forces and
about 160 coalition partner soldiers have died in OIF. Of U.S. deaths, about 1,150
have occurred since President Bush declared an end to “major combat operations”
in Iraq on May 1, 2003. About 150,000 U.S. troops are in Iraq, with about another
50,000 troops in Kuwait supporting OIF. U.S. force levels have risen from 140,000,
to help secure the January 2005 elections, including the addition of 1,500 soldiers
from the 82nd Airborne Division. U.S. forces will not directly guard the
approximately 9,000 polling places on election day but will be positioned to quickly
assist Iraqi forces should major election violence flare.
The Insurgency. Upon assuming his position, CENTCOM commander John
Abizaid said (July 17, 2003) that the United States faced a “classic guerrilla war.”
Subsequent to the capture of Saddam Hussein in mid-December 2003, some U.S.
commanders had said the United States had “turned the corner” against the ex-
Baathist component of the resistance, with the help of documents captured from
Saddam U.S. forces; less so against “foreign fighters” who have come into Iraq.
Backing away from these comments, senior U.S. officials now say that the
insurgency is broader and more tenacious than predicted, and Secretary of State
Powell and Secretary of State Rumsfeld both said in September 2004 that the
insurgency is “worsening.” On December 20, 2004, President Bush said at a press
conference that the insurgency was “having an effect” on U.S. policy in Iraq. Some
estimates say insurgents may number 20,000 or more, with a higher degree of
coordination than previously believed, and are well funded from wealthy donors in
36 Iraqi Groups Build Democracy at Grassroots Level. Department of State Washington File,
Jan. 16, 2004.

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neighboring countries such as Saudi Arabia.37 Other accounts say that insurgent
leaders are using Syria as a base to funnel money and weapons to their fighters in
Iraq.38 Other reports say the insurgents are increasingly pressuring U.S. supply lines,
necessitating air drops of supplies in some cases. Other reports say attacks have
choked off gasoline supplies to Baghdad, creating long lines for gasoline. Some
believe the elections could quiet the insurgency by bestowing legitimacy on an Iraqi
government.
Although most assessments say the insurgency has grown more sophisticated
over the past year, analysis of the sources and motivations of the insurgency differ.
The bulk of the insurgents appear to be motivated by opposition to perceived U.S.
rule, although the insurgency appears increasingly dominated by younger Iraqis, in
partnership with foreign Islamic fighters, who might want to establish an Islamic
state. Sunni insurgents are likely also working to ensure that Iraq’s Shiite majority
does not take over the instruments of government through elections or peaceful
means; the Sunnis have historically ruled Iraq. The resistance has sought to
demonstrate that U.S. stabilization efforts are not working by causing international
workers and peacekeeping forces to leave Iraq, undermining the planned elections,
slowing reconstruction, turning the Iraqi populace against the coalition, and
attempting to provoke civil conflict among Iraq’s ethnic groups. Insurgent targets
have included not only U.S. forces but also, increasingly, Iraqi security forces and
Iraqi civilians working for U.S. authorities, foreign contractors, oil export facilities,
water and other infrastructure facilities.
A controversial dimension of the insurgency is the use by some factions of
methods that are or resemble classic forms of “terrorism”: suicide and other attacks
against non-combatant targets. This dimension to the insurgency, which has been
attributed by most experts to the foreign factions of the insurgency led by Abu Musab
al-Zarqawi, began in August 2003 with vehicle bombings in Baghdad of the embassy
of Jordan (August 7) and U.N. headquarters at the Canal Hotel (August 19). Among
the dead in the latter bombing was the U.N. representative in Iraq, Sergio Vieira de
Mello, and it prompted an evacuation of U.N. personnel from Iraq. An August 29,
2003, car bombing in Najaf killed SCIRI leader Mohammad Baqr Al Hakim and 100
others. Suicide bombings and like attacks occur frequently, targeting coalition bases
throughout Iraq, political party headquarters, religious gatherings, Iraqi police and
military training and recruitment facilities, U.N. and foreign embassy compounds,
and hotels. Some observers do not characterize all of these attacks as “terrorism”
because the targets of some of them are military-related.
As of April 2004, insurgent groups have introduced an additional terrorist
dimension to their activities: the kidnaping and killing of individuals, including
journalists and civilian contract workers, mainly, although not exclusively, from
countries cooperating with the United States. Some have been released but many
37 Krane, Jim. “U.S. Officials: Iraq Insurgency Bigger.” Associated Press report published
in the Philadelphia Inquirer. July 9, 2004; Schmitt, Eric and Thom Shanker. “Estimates By
U.S. See More Rebels With More Funds.” New York Times, October 22, 2004.
38 Blanford, Nicholas. “Sealing Syria’s Desolate Border.” Christian Science Monitor,
December 21, 2004.

CRS-29
have been beheaded, including three Americans. On October 20, 2004, an insurgent
faction kidnaped the British-born director of the CARE organization, Margaret
Hassan, prompting a pullout by that organization; she was subsequently killed. Other
relief organizations, including Doctors Without Borders, have also subsequently
pulled out of Iraq. See above, and see also CRS Report RL32217, Iraq and Al
Qaeda: Allies or Not?

Counter-Insurgent Operations/Fallujah. U.S. counter-insurgent
operations have increased since the April 2004 insurgent killing and mutilation of
the bodies of four U.S. security contractors in Fallujah on March 31, 2004, prompting
a U.S. move to seal off and retake the city. Fearing collateral damage that could
harm the overall U.S. position in Iraq, in late April 2004 local U.S. commanders
agreed to an compromise that former Iraqi officers would patrol the city, but this
solution quickly unraveled and the city became a haven for insurgents. Insurgent
factions in other Sunni-inhabited towns, including Baqubah, Mosul, Ramadi,
Samarra, Latifiyah, Mahmudiyah, and Tal Affar, also fell largely under insurgent
influence, apparently with some degree of popular support. Fallujah was run by a
“mujahedin shura,” or council of insurgents. U.S. forces, joined by Iraqi forces,
began operations in September 2004 to restore Iraqi government control to these
cities in preparation for the January 2005 Iraqi elections, beginning with Samarra.
In October 2004, U.S. forces began preparations to remove insurgents from
Fallujah and restore government control there in order to eliminate an insurgent “safe
haven.” The U.S. operation, “Phantom Fury,” began on November 8, 2004,
involving 6,500 U.S. Marines and 2,000 Iraqi troops. U.S. forces captured the city
within about ten days, killing an estimated 1,200 insurgents and finding numerous
large weapons caches and a possible chemical weapons lab, but most of the guerrillas
are believed to have left before the U.S. offensive began. Some fighting in parts of
the city continues, as insurgents try to reinfiltrate it, but the U.S. military has begun
returning civilians to the city and reconstruction of the city is beginning. Since the
offensive on Fallujah, there has been an upsurge of violence in several Sunni-
inhabited cities by insurgents that had fled Fallujah, particularly in Mosul, but
including Samarra, Baquba, Ramadi, and parts of Baghdad.
Some consider forces loyal to Moqtada al-Sadr as insurgents, although uprisings
by Sadr’s faction have been occasional and temporary, with no evidence of
cooperation with the Sunni insurgents. U.S. counter-insurgency operations, coupled
with a measure of diplomacy, have been relatively effective in calming the Sadr
component of the insurgency. In April 2004, Sadr’s Mahdi Army armed itself and
seized governing installations in at least seven Shiite-populated cities as well as
Baghdad’s Sadr City. In May 2004, U.S. and British military pressure contributed
to an agreement under which Mahdi and U.S. forces would cease fighting, and Sadr
himself remained free. Violence abated in June 2004 but flared again in Najaf in
early August 2004 after clashes around Sadr’s home and office. The violence in
Najaf was resolved in a compromise brokered by Ayatollah Sistani. Some promised
reconstruction has begun in outlying areas of Najaf, but the old city around the Imam
Ali Mosque remains desolate and virtually destroyed. Najaf has since been relatively
quiet, although there was a major bombing there on December 20, 2004, but Sadr
supporters continue to exercise major influence in several southern cities, including
Nassiriyah, Diwaniyah, Amara, and Basra, as well as Sadr City. Tensions in Sadr

CRS-30
City have eased substantially under an agreement of mid-October 2004 in which
Mahdi fighters traded in heavy and medium weapons for cash and pledges of several
hundred million dollars in reconstruction funds, as well as release of arrested Mahdi
fighters. About 700 rocket-propelled grenades were turned in, although some
believe the Mahdi fighters traded in only older model weapons. Many question
Sadr’s statements that he is now willing to join the legitimate political process in
Iraq; his faction did not register to formally compete in the January 30, 2005
elections, but some of his supporters are said to be on the “United Iraqi Alliance” list
announced by Ayatollah Sistani.
Prime Minister Allawi has announced measures and received new authorities
(emergency law powers, including curfews and added arrest powers) to combat the
insurgency, and he has tried to diplomatically engage insurgent factions, including
that of Sadr, to join the political process. A law offering amnesty to insurgents,
except for those involved in killing coalition or Iraqi security forces, was issued in
early August 2004. The death penalty, suspended after the fall of Saddam, was
reinstated in early August 2004. Iraqi officials have also placed blame for the
insurgency on assistance to it from neighboring Syria and Iran — an assertion backed
by President Bush — and Allawi has held discussions with representatives of both
countries to try to persuade them to prevent the movement of fighters, arms, and
funds to the resistance in Iraq.
Allawi responded to a call by countries that attended a November 22-23, 2004
conference in Egypt to open talks with Sunnis representing the insurgency. On
December 1, 2004, he met in Jordan with Iraqi Sunni tribal leaders, although not
necessarily figures believed linked to the insurgency.
Abu Ghraib Prison Abuses. U.S. efforts to calm ongoing violence were
complicated somewhat by revelations in early May 2004 that U.S. military personnel
had abused prisoners at the Abu Ghraib prison near Baghdad. Photos of abuses in
progress were printed in newspapers worldwide, including in Iraq, and shown on
television. At least seven U.S. soldiers have thus far been charged with abuses at the
prison. Several congressional hearings have been held on the issue. (For information
on the Abu Ghraib issue, see CRS “Current Legislative Issues” web page entitled
“Prisoners in Iraq; U.S. Treatment” [http://www.congress.gov/erp/legissues/html/
isjus10.html].
Options for Stabilizing Iraq
As instability in major parts of Iraq has continued, a number of options have
been implemented or are being discussed. The Bush Administration maintains that
holding to the existing political and security transition plans, while working with
foreign allies and accelerating the training and equipping of Iraqi security forces, will
lead to stability and democracy. On the other hand, a National Intelligence Estimate
completed in July 2004 reportedly concluded that Iraq’s future is relatively bleak,
with possibilities ranging from civil war to, at best, tenuous stability.39 Some critics
39 Jehl, Douglas. “U.S. Intelligence Shows Pessimism on Iraq’s Future.” New York Times,
(continued...)

CRS-31
say that major new options need to be considered. Some argue for a large increase
in U.S. forces in Iraq, others argue for significant concessions to persuade U.S. allies
to play a greater role in Iraq, and a few call for the United States to pullout of Iraq
immediately.
“Iraqification”/Building Iraqi Forces. A major goal of current policy is
the building of national Iraqi security institutions that the Bush Administration says
should eventually be able to secure Iraq by themselves. To date, the performance of
Iraq’s forces have come into serious question as they have often failed or refused, on
their own, to forcefully combat the insurgency, although some units have engaged
insurgent forces when fighting alongside U.S. units. Other questions have been
raised about their level of training, and some reports say they are penetrated by
insurgents. U.S. officials say these forces are clearly not ready to secure Iraq,40 and
on December 20, 2004, President Bush described their performance as “mixed.”
Maj. Gen. David Petraeus, who had served until late 2003 as commander of the
101st Airborne Division, is overseeing the training of Iraqi security forces. U.S.
Embassy Baghdad status reports say that a total of about 115,000 in the various
forces are considered “trained or on hand.” That number has remained relatively
constant since November 2004. In a September 2004 State Department notification
of a planned reallocation of FY2004 supplemental funds, an increase of $1.8 billion
is slated for accelerated building of the security forces — this is more than half of the
total reallocation request of $3.46 billion. The following, based on Administration
status reports from late November 2004, are the status of the major Iraqi security
institutions:
! Iraqi Army. The CPA formally disbanded the former Iraqi army
following Bremer’s arrival in Baghdad; the outcome of that move is
still being debated. The United States plans to recruit, train, and
equip a 27,000-person Iraqi Army, about 8% the size of the pre-war
Iraqi force, by April 2005. About 3,400 are trained or on hand thus
far. Recruits are paid $60 per month and receive nine weeks of
training. Within the Iraqi Army is a Special Operations Force,
trained largely by Jordan. About 675 are trained or on hand at this
time, and the goal is 2,000. About $2 billion to train and equip the
Iraqi military was provided by the FY2004 supplemental
appropriation (P.L. 108-106). The September 2004 reallocation
plans to add $112 million for the military.
! Air Force. It currently has about 165 personnel of its goal of 500.
It has few aircraft, although the UAE has said it would supply the
force with some unspecified combat aircraft. The September 2004
aid reallocation includes $28 million for Iraqi Air Force airfields.
39 (...continued)
September 16, 2004. The text of the reported estimate is classified.
40 Oppel, Richard and James Glanz. “U.S. Officials Say Iraq’s Forces Founder Under Rebel
Assaults.” New York Times, November 30, 2004.

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! Coastal Defense Force. This service has about 410 personnel
trained or on hand, of a goal of about 600. It is equipped with
donated small boats to patrol Iraq’s waterways to prevent smuggling
and infiltration.
! Iraqi National Guard. This force, formerly called the Civil Defense
Corps, or ICDC, is a paramilitary force that assists in combating
insurgents. Thus far, about 40,000 are on hand or trained, of a
planned force of about 62,000. The number is expected to be
reached by April 2005. Recruits are paid $50 per month and cannot
have served in Iraq’s former army at a level of colonel or higher.
They receive a few weeks of training but most of their training is
“on-the-job,” patrolling alongside U.S. forces. About $140 million
for training and equipping the National Guard (ICDC) was
appropriated in the FY2004 supplemental (P.L. 108-106). The
September 2004 reallocation plans $442 million in additional funds
to for the 20 additional Guard battalions (about 20,000 personnel)
desired.
! Iraqi Police Service (IPS). Overall, about 51,000 Iraqi policemen
are trained or on hand, with the goal of having 135,000 by June
2005. Their eight-week training courses are conducted in Jordan,
Iraq (including in Irbil in the Kurdish region), and the United Arab
Emirates (UAE); Jordan will train about 35,000 of the total. German
officers conduct the training in UAE. Police are paid $60 per month,
and must pass a background check ensuring they do not have a
record of human rights violations or criminal activity. They are
recruited locally, making them susceptible to intimidation by
insurgents in restive areas. About 75% of the 4,000-person police
force in Mosul fled an insurgent offensive there in November 2004,
although police units have fended off at least six insurgent attacks on
their stations in December 2004. $950 million was provided in the
FY2004 supplemental (P.L. 108-106) to train and equip the police.
The September 2004 reallocation request plans $788 million in
additional funds for training 45,000 police.
! Civil Intervention Force. This unit of the police has 1,100 on hand
of a planned 3,700. Of the September 2004 reallocation, $221
million is planned to go to the Civil Intervention Force and related
services.
! An Emergency Response Unit, also part of the police, has 170
personnel of a planned 270.
! Other forces include a new Intervention Force, which has 1,800
personnel on hand out of a planned 6,600; a Highway Patrol, with
370 personnel of a planned 1,500; and a Bureau of Dignitary
Protection
with 490 personnel on hand of a planned 500. No longer
considered a formal force is the former “Facilities Protection
Service,” a term used for the approximately 75,000 security guards

CRS-33
that protect installations such as oil pumping stations, electricity
substations, and government buildings.
! Border Enforcement. To date, about 15,000 Iraqis are trained or on
hand in this force, of a goal of 30,000. Members of these forces
receive a few weeks of training. Of the September 2004 planned
reallocations, $190 million is slated for this department.
On November 21, 2003, the Bush Administration issued a determination
repealing a U.S. ban on arms exports to Iraq so that the United States can supply
weapons to the new Iraqi security institutions. Authority to repeal this ban was
requested and granted in an FY2003 emergency supplemental appropriations (P.L.
108-11) for the costs of the war and was made subject to a determination that sales
to Iraq are “in the national interest.” On July 21, 2004, the Administration
determined that Iraq would be treated as a friendly nation in evaluating U.S. arms
sales to Iraqi security forces and that such sales would be made in accordance with
the Foreign Assistance Act and the Arms Export Control Act. However, questions
have been raised about the slow pace of equipping the new Iraqi security institutions.
Lt. Gen. Petraeus said in September 2004 that about 39,000 weapons for the new
forces had been received since July 2004.
Prime Minister Allawi has also placed a high priority on rebuilding a domestic
intelligence network. On July 14, 2004, he announced the formation of a new
domestic intelligence agency (General Security Directorate) to infiltrate the insurgent
groups.
“Internationalization” of the Effort.41 Some in and outside the Bush
Administration believe that the United States should exert greater efforts to enlist
greater international participation in peacekeeping, including giving up some of its
political influence in Iraq, if required. Those who advocate this option believe it
essential if the United States is to succeed in stabilizing Iraq and in reducing the
financial and military burden of the war — asserting that 90% of coalition casualties
in Iraq have been Americans. As the insurgency escalated during 2003, the
Administration took steps in this direction, including inviting the United Nations to
play a greater role in organizing a post-Saddam transition.
The Bush Administration asserts that it has consistently sought U.N. backing for
its post-war efforts, primarily to obtain international contributions to Iraq
peacekeeping. Resolution 1483 (adopted unanimously May 6, 2003) provided for a
U.N. special representative to coordinate the activities of U.N. personnel in Iraq and
it “call[ed] on” governments to contribute forces for stabilization. On August 14,
2003, the U.N. Security Council adopted a compromise resolution, Resolution 1500,
that “welcomed,” but did not “endorse,” the formation of the IGC. The resolution
established a “U.N. Assistance Mission for Iraq.” In a further attempt to satisfy the
requirements of several major nations, such as France, for a greater U.N. role in
41 For additional information on international contributions to Iraq peacekeeping and
reconstruction, see CRS Report RL32105, Post-War Iraq: A Table and Chronology of
Foreign Contributions
.

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post-Saddam Iraq, the United States obtained agreement on Resolution 1511
(adopted unanimously on October 16, 2003, and referenced above). It authorized a
“multinational force under unified command.” Resolution 1546 restated many of
these provisions. However, some major potential force contributors as France,
Germany, Russia, India, and Pakistan have viewed these resolutions as insufficient
to prompt their involvement on the grounds that they did not end what these countries
perceive as U.S. monopoly of decision-making on Iraq policy.
The Bush Administration asserts that the United States has a large coalition,
pointing to the fact that 28 other countries are providing forces. The total of non-
U.S. forces in Iraq is about 26,000. The United Kingdom and Poland are leading
multinational divisions of about 10,000 forces each in southern Iraq and central Iraq,
respectively. The UK-led force is based in Basra; the Poland-led force is based in
Hilla. Japan has deployed about 600 troops to Samawah, in southern Iraq, and South
Korea has deployed 3,000 troops to the Irbil area, where the Kurds predominate. (A
list of countries performing peacekeeping can be found in the Department of State’s
“Iraq Weekly Status Report,” and in CRS Report RL32105, Post-War Iraq: A Table
and Chronology of Foreign Contributions
.)
In late July 2004, Secretary of State Powell said the United States would
consider a Saudi proposal for a contingent of troops from Muslim countries to
perform peacekeeping in Iraq, reportedly under separate command. However, the
idea appears to have floundered due to opposition from potential contributing
countries such as Pakistan and reported Iraqi sensitivities to the potential for Muslim
foreign troops to meddle in Iraqi politics.
Critics say that coalition countries are donating only about 15% of the total
U.S.-led coalition contingent in Iraq, and they question the sustainment of even the
existing coalition. Some point to Spain’s May 2004 withdrawal of its 1,300 troops
from Iraq as an indication that the Bush Administration effort to maintain an Iraq
coalition is faltering. Spain made that decision following the March 11 Madrid
bombings and subsequent defeat of the former Spanish government that had
supported the war effort. Honduras, the Dominican Republic, and Nicaragua
followed suit, withdrawing approximately 900 personnel, and the Philippines
withdrew in mid-July 2004 after one of its citizens was taken hostage and threatened
with beheading. Hungary completed a pullout of its 300 forces in December 2004,
and Thailand, New Zealand, and Norway are in the process of withdrawing as well.
Poland is stretched by the $100 million per year cost of the Iraq deployment; on
October 5, 2004, Poland’s President said that he hoped Polish troops could be
withdrawn by next year. Italian officials said in October 2004 that Italy might
withdraw after the planned January 2005 Iraqi elections. In mid-November 2004, the
Netherlands’ cabinet reaffirmed an earlier decision to withdraw its 1,350 troops from
Iraq in March 2005. On the other hand, Singapore deployed 180 troops in November
2004 after a hiatus of several months, and Japan has approved extending its
deployment beyond its planned departure at the end of 2004.
NATO. One major issue in the debate over securing Iraq is the possibility of
greater NATO involvement. Since mid-2003, NATO has been providing logistical
support to the international forces in Iraq led by Poland, but increased NATO
involvement was discussed at every major NATO meeting since late 2003. The

CRS-35
issue was discussed again at the June 28-29, 2004, NATO summit in Istanbul, in
light of Prime Minister Allawi’s formal request for NATO assistance. At the
summit, NATO agreed to provide training for Iraqi security forces, and up to 300
NATO trainers will deploy for that purpose; 65 of them are now in Iraq. Several
major NATO states, such as France, continue to oppose an actual NATO combat
commitment to Iraq at this time and France and five other NATO countries are
refusing to send trainers to the NATO-approved training mission for Iraq.
On July 10, 2003, the Senate adopted an amendment, by a vote of 97-0, to a
State Department authorization bill (S. 925) calling on the Administration to formally
ask NATO to lead a peacekeeping force for Iraq. A related bill (H.R. 2112) was
introduced in the House on May 15, 2003. (For more information on this possibility,
see CRS Report RL32068, An Enhanced European Role in Iraq?)
Altering U.S. Force Levels. Others believe that major potential force
contributors, such as India or Turkey, are unlikely to send forces to Iraq, and that the
United States should greatly increase its own troops in Iraq in an all-out effort to
defeat the insurgents. The Bush Administration has said that U.S. field commanders
will be provided with more troops, if needed, and senior commanders are increasing
force levels to about 150,000 (from the previous level of 140,000 to help secure the
January 2005 elections. On the other hand, some believe that increasing U.S. force
levels would further the impression in Iraq that the interim government is beholden
to the United States for its survival, and that the United States is continuing to deepen
its commitment to Iraq without a clear exit strategy or victory plan.
A minority of commentators argue that the United States should withdraw
immediately. Those who take this position tend to argue that the decision to invade
Iraq and change its regime was a mistake in light of the failure thus far to locate
WMD. Others believe that the January 30, 2005, elections will not stabilize Iraq and
that a continued U.S. presence in Iraq will result in additional U.S. casualties without
securing U.S. national interests. Critics of this view say the Iraqi interim government
would collapse quickly if the United States pulled out suddenly, harming U.S.
credibility internationally and enabling Iraq to become a haven for terrorists. Some
believe that the United States should consider negotiating with representatives of the
insurgents, possibly under the auspices of the United Nations, to include them and
their grievances into a new or reworked Iraqi power structure.
Rejuvenating Iraq’s Economy
The Administration asserts that, despite the ongoing insurgency, economic
reconstruction is progressing. Administration officials say that life has returned to
normal in most of Iraq, that Iraq’s economy is recovering, and that many Iraqis are
demonstrating their confidence by buying automobiles and appliances. Electricity
has been restored to above pre-war levels (80,000 Megawatt Hours), although
resistance attacks continue to reduce power to 9-15 hours per day in most of Iraq.
Sanitation, health care, and education are a few of the indicators that are improving
statistically, although some recent studies say that Iraq’s health care system and some

CRS-36
health indicators are in a state of crisis.42 About 3 million Iraqi children have been
vaccinated since Saddam fell. A new currency has been introduced and has remained
stable since introduction in early 2004. On the other hand, insurgent attacks have
slowed oil exports, and some surveys and a number of studies say reconstruction has
not proceeded to the point at which most Iraqis are pleased with the progress thus
far.43 In September 2004, the State Department finished a review of how to spend
U.S. funds to accelerate reconstruction, and it has shifted focus to smaller scale
projects that can quickly employ Iraqis and yield concrete benefits.
The Oil Industry. As the driver of Iraq’s economy, the rebuilding of the oil
industry has received substantial U.S. attention. Before the war, it was widely
assumed that Iraq’s vast oil reserves, believed second only to those of Saudi Arabia,
would fund much, if not all, reconstruction costs. Then presidential spokesman Ari
Fleischer said on February 18, 2003, referring to Iraq’s oil reserves, that Iraq has “a
variety of means...to shoulder much of the burden for [its] own reconstruction.” The
oil industry infrastructure suffered little damage during the U.S.-led invasion (only
about 9 oil wells were set on fire), but it has become a target of insurgents.
In May 2003, the CPA set up an advisory board, headed by former Shell
executive Phillip Carroll, to oversee the rebuilding of Iraq’s oil sector. The first
exports began in late June 2003, and increased gradually to about 1.8 million barrels
per day (mbd) by April 2004. (Pre-war levels were 2.2 mbd.) As of early December
2004, exports are averaging about that same level (1.8 million mbd) and production
is averaging about 2.2 mbd, below the pre-war peak of 2.5 mbd. Exports have been
halted almost entirely on some days because of insurgent attacks on oil pipelines and
related facilities. Thus far in 2004, Iraq has earned about $16.3 billion from oil
exports. The FY2004 supplemental appropriations, P.L. 108-106, provided $1.2
billion to repair Iraq’s oil infrastructure, plus $700 million to import refined energy
products that Iraq’s infrastructure cannot produce. In January 2004, the
Administration redirected some funds for energy importation to local governance.
A related issue is long-term development of Iraq’s oil industry and which
foreign energy firms, if any, might receive preference for contracts to explore Iraq’s
vast reserves. Russia, China, and others are said to fear that the United States will
seek to develop Iraq’s oil industry with minimal participation of firms from other
countries. Iraq’s interim government has contracted for a study of the extent of Iraq’s
oil reserves, and it has contracted with Royal Dutch/Shell to formulate a blueprint to
develop the gas sector.
42 Vick, Karl. “Children Pay Cost of Iraq’s Chaos.” Washington Post, November 21, 2004.
43 For further information, see CRS Report RL31833, Iraq: Recent Developments in
Reconstruction Assistance.
See also, “Progress or Peril: Measuring Iraq’s Reconstruction.
Center for Strategic and International Studies. September 2004. Available online from the
CSIS website at [http://www.csis.org/isp/pcr/0409_progressperil.pdf].

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CPA Budget/DFI/U.S. Funding.44 At inception, the Development Fund for
Iraq (DFI), set up by Resolution 1483 (May 6, 2003) as the repository for Iraq’s
revenue, contained about $7 billion when it was established in June 2003. Controlled
by the CPA during the occupation period and now run by the Iraqi government (as
specified in Resolution 1546), the DFI has received funds from captured Iraqi assets,
Iraqi assets held abroad, the monies transferred from the close-out of the “oil-for-
food program,” revenues from oil and other exports, and revenues from other sources
such as taxes, user fees, and returns from profits on state-owned enterprises. In late
October 2003, a multilateral board to monitor the Development Fund for Iraq (DFI),
mandated by Resolution 1483, was established (the International Advisory and
Monitoring Board, IAMB). It has hired KPMG as external auditor. The IAMB met
in late June 2004 and identified some possible problems in how the DFI was
administered, and it produced the first formal audit on July 15, 2004. A KPMG
report produced in October 2004 identified several examples of CPA
mismanagement of the DFI and possible corruption in some cases.45 The DFI was
held in the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, not Iraq’s Central Bank, during the
occupation period.
In order to accelerate reconstruction, Iraq was deemed to require international
donations, such as those pledged at the October 23-24, 2003 donors’ conference in
Madrid, additional U.S. appropriations, and funds remaining after the U.N.-run “oil
for food program” terminated on November 21, 2003 (see below). A World Bank
estimate, released in early October 2003, said Iraq reconstruction would require about
$56 billion during 2004-2007, including the $20 billion in U.S. funding requested by
the Administration in September 2003. At the Madrid donors conference, donors
pledged about $4 billion in grants and $9 billion in credits, in addition to the $20
billion to be provided by the United States. A third donors’ meeting was held in
Tokyo during October 13-14, 2004, with commitments by donors to accelerated
payments on existing pledges. Iran joined as a donor country, pledging $10 million.
(For information on international pledges, see CRS Report RL32105, Post-War Iraq:
A Table and Chronology of Foreign Contributions
.)
Supplemental U.S. Funding. In part to meet the requirements for funding,
an FY2003 supplemental, P.L. 108-11, appropriated about $2.5 billion for Iraq
reconstruction. When oil revenues continued to lag, U.S. officials decided to ask
Congress for another supplemental appropriation. On September 8, 2003, President
Bush requested supplemental funding for FY2004 for the “war on terrorism,” in the
amount of $87 billion, of which over $70 billion would be for military operations in
and reconstruction of Iraq. Of that amount, about $50 billion would be for military
costs and about $20 billion for reconstruction of Iraq.
44 For information on the status of legislative consideration of the request for supplemental
funding, see CRS Report RL32090, FY2004 Supplemental Appropriations for Iraq,
Afghanistan, and the Global War on Terrorism: Military Operations & Reconstruction
Assistance
.
45 Walker, Tony. “KPMG’s Iraq Audit Turns Up the Heat.” Australian Financial Review.
October 16, 2004.

CRS-38
The FY2004 supplemental appropriation (conference report H.Rept. 108-337,
P.L. 108-106) provided the following funds for Iraq reconstruction (total $18.7
billion):
! $3.243 billion for security and law enforcement, including the New
Iraqi Army, border enforcement, and other security functions;
! $1.32 billion for justice and civil society and democracy
development, including programs for women and youth and the
formation of an independent human rights commission,
! $5.56 billion for electricity infrastructure rehabilitation,
! $1.89 billion for rehabilitating the energy infrastructure,
! $4.332 billion to repair water and sewage systems;
! $500 million for repair of transportation and telecommunications
infrastructure,
! $370 million to upgrade housing, roads, and bridges,
! $800 million to construct and equip hospitals and clinics, and
! $453 million for education, jobs training, and private sector
initiatives.
The continuing violence has slowed spending on reconstruction. As of early
December 2004, of the $21 billion appropriated in the FY2003 and FY2004
supplementals, about $12 billion has been obligated. Of that, about $3.8 billion has
been disbursed. In September 2004, the Administration asked Congress for approval
to reallocate $3.46 billion of the appropriated funds, to be reassigned from funds
previously allocated for purchases of refined energy products, for water and sewerage
and electrical reconstruction. Because some of the funds added to some categories
of activities would exceed ceilings set in P.L. 108-106, the Administration asked for
legislation to approve the reprogramming; the approval was granted in a continuing
resolution on FY2005 appropriations.
FY2005. No new funds for Iraq reconstruction were requested in the
Administration’s budget for FY2005, released on February 2, 2004. As noted above,
reconstruction spending is slower than expected, and already appropriated funds will
likely be sufficient for the near term. A FY2005 supplemental appropriation of $25
billion will be used mostly for military costs in Iraq and Afghanistan, and additional
military funds for the Iraq war effort will be requested in early 2005, according to
numerous press reports. The amount has not yet been determined, but some press
reports put the figure at about $70 billion.
Lifting U.S. Sanctions. The Bush Administration has lifted most U.S.
sanctions on Iraq, beginning with several Presidential Determinations easing
sanctions under authorities provided by P.L. 108-7 (consolidated appropriations for
FY2003) and P.L. 108-11 (FY2003 supplemental appropriations). On July 30, 2004,
President Bush issued an executive order formally ending the package of sanctions
imposed on Iraq following the 1990 invasion of Kuwait. Those measures were
contained in Executive Order 12722 (August 2, 1990) and 12724 (August 9, 1990),
issued after Iraq’s August 2, 1990, invasion of Kuwait. They imposed a ban on U.S.
trade with and investment in Iraq and froze Iraq’s assets in the United States. The
Iraq Sanctions Act of 1990 (Section 586 of P.L. 101-513, signed November 5, 1990)
reinforced those executive orders.

CRS-39
Subsequently, remaining sanctions were removed. On September 8, 2004, the
President designated Iraq a beneficiary of the Generalized System of Preferences
(GSP), enabling Iraqi products to have duty free tariff treatment for entry into the
United States. On September 24, 2004, Iraq was removed from the U.S. list of state
sponsors of terrorism under Section 6(j) of the Export Administration Act (P.L. 96-
72). Therefore, Iraq is no longer barred under that section from receiving U.S.
foreign assistance, U.S. votes in favor of international loans, and sales of munitions
list items (arms and related equipment and services). As a result of the removal of
Iraq from the list, exports of dual use items (items that can have military applications)
are no longer subject to strict licensing procedures. However, a May 7, 2003
executive order left in place the provisions of the Iran-Iraq Arms Non-Proliferation
Act (P.L. 102-484); that act imposes sanctions on persons or governments that export
technology that would contribute to any Iraqi advanced conventional arms capability
or weapons of mass destruction programs. The July 30, 2004, order does not
unfreeze any assets in the United States determined to belong to the former regime.
Termination of the Oil-for-Food Program. In accordance with the
provisions of U.N. Security Council Resolution 1483 (May 22, 2003), the U.N.-run
oil-for-food program ended November 21, 2003. The close-out of residual contacts
under the program is now run by the interim Iraqi government. See CRS Report
RL30472, Iraq: Oil-for-Food Program, Sanctions, and Illicit Trade.
Debt Relief/WTO Membership. The Administration is attempting to relieve
Iraq’s debt burden built up during the regime of Saddam Hussein. The debt is
estimated to total about $116 billion, not including reparations dating to the first
Persian Gulf war. On November 21, 2004, the so-called “Paris Club” of 19
industrialized nations agreed to cancel about 80% of the $39 billion Iraq owes them.
On December 17, 2004, the United States signed an agreement with Iraq writing off
100% of Iraq’s $4.1 billion debt to the United States; that debt consisted of principle
and interest from about $2 billion in defaults on Iraqi agricultural credits from the
1980s. For more information, see CRS Report RS21765, Iraq: Paris Club Debt
Relief
.
On December 13, 2004, the World Trade Organization (WTO) agreed to begin
accession talks with Iraq. In September 2004, the International Monetary Fund (IMF)
approved a loan to Iraq of $436 million for reconstruction, and indicated it plans
about $4 billion in further lending to Iraq. The loan came one week after Iraq cleared
up $81 million in arrears to the Fund dating from Saddam Hussein’s regime.
Congressional Reactions
Congress, like the Administration, had divergent views on the mechanisms for
promoting regime change, although there was widespread agreement in Congress that
regime change should be a major U.S. policy goal for Iraq. On December 20, 2001,
the House passed H.J.Res. 75, by a vote of 392-12, calling Iraq’s refusal to readmit
U.N. weapons inspectors a “mounting threat” to the United States. The resolution
did not call for new U.S. steps to overthrow Saddam Hussein but a few Members
called for the overthrow of Saddam Hussein in their floor statements in support of
the resolution. In early 2002, prior to the intensified speculation about possible war
with Iraq, some Members expressed support for increased aid to the opposition. As

CRS-40
discussion of potential military action increased in the fall of 2002, Members debated
the costs and risks of an invasion of Iraq. Congress adopted H.J.Res. 114,
authorizing the President to use military force against Iraq if he determines that doing
so is in the national interest and would enforce U.N. Security Council resolutions on
Iraq. The measure passed the House on October 11, 2002 by a vote of 296-133, and
the Senate the following day by a vote of 77-23. The legislation was signed into law
on October 16, 2002 (P.L. 107-243).
The 108th Congress held numerous hearings on post-Saddam Iraq and, as noted
above, has appropriated reconstruction and military funding for the Iraq effort.
Although Congress has applauded the performance of the U.S. military and the
overthrow of the regime, several Members have criticized the Administration for
inadequate planning for the post-war period. Criticism has escalated as attacks on
U.S. occupation forces have mounted, and some Members have offered suggestions
to stabilize Iraq, including adding U.S. forces. Several committees are conducting
inquiries into why substantial amounts of WMD have not been found in Iraq to date,
and hearings have been held alleged abuses of the U.N.-run oil-for-food program and
the abuses at Abu Ghuraib prison. Some Members who have visited Iraq — and over
one third of Members have visited Iraq since the fall of Saddam — say reconstruction
is proceeding and that Iraq is more stable than is widely portrayed in the press.46
46 Chaddock, Gail Russell. “Trips to Iraq Reshape War Views On Hill.” Christian Science
Monitor
, January 6, 2004.

CRS-41
Appendix. U.S. Assistance to the Opposition
Appropriated Economic Support Funds (E.S.F.)
to the Opposition
(Figures in millions of dollars)
Unspecified
War
INC
Broadcasting
Opposition
Total
Crimes
Activities
FY1998
2.0
5.0
3.0
10.0
(P.L. 105-174)
(RFE/RL)
FY1999
3.0
3.0
2.0
8.0
(P.L. 105-277)
FY2000
2.0
8.0
10.0
(P.L. 106-113)
FY2001
12.0
2.0
6.0
5.0
25.0
(P.L. 106-429)
(aid
(INC radio)
distribution
inside Iraq)
FY2002
25.0
25.0
(P.L. 107-115)
Total,
15.0
9.0
11.0
43.0
78.0
FY1998-FY2002
FY2003
3.1
6.9
10.0
(no earmark)
(announced
(remaining
April 2003)
to be
allocated)
FY2004
0


0
(request)
Notes: The figures above do not include defense articles and services provided under the Iraq
Liberation Act. The figures provided above also do not include any covert aid provided, the amounts
of which are not known from open sources. In addition, during each of FY2001 and FY2002, the
Administration has donated $4 million to a “U.N. War Crimes Commission” fund, to be used if a war
crimes tribunal is formed. Those funds were drawn from U.S. contributions to U.N. programs.



















CRS-42
Figure 1. Map of Iraq
Caspian
Sea
T u r k e y
Zakhu
Dahuk
Tall 'Afar
Al Mawsil (Mosul)
Irbil
As Sulaymaniyah
Chamchamal
Kirkuk
Khurma
S y r i a
Halabjah
Tuz Khurmatu
Tikrit
Anah
Qarah Tappah
I r a n
Balad
Al Khalis
Ba'Qubah
Mandali
Hit
Al Jadidah
Ar Ramadi
Al Fallujah
Al A`Zamiyah
Al Habbaniyah
Baghdad
Ar Rutbah
Al Mahmudiyah
I r a q
Sal Man Pak
Jordan
Karbala'
An Nu'Maniyah
Al Kut
Al Hillah
Kut Al Hayy
Al Kufah Ad Diwaniyah
Al Amarah
An Najaf
Qawam Al Hamzah
Ar Rifa
Al Majarr Al Kabir
As Samawah
An Nasiriyah
Suq Ash Shuyukh
Al Basrah
Az Zubayr
Persian
Kuwait
Gulf
S a u d i A r a b i a
Al-Kuwait
0
100 Miles
0
100 KM
Source: Map Resources. Adapted by CRS. (K.Yancey 7/21/04)