Iraq: Politics and Governance
Kenneth Katzman
Specialist in Middle Eastern Affairs
Carla E. Humud
Analyst in Middle Eastern and African Affairs
November 13, 2015
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
RS21968


Iraq: Politics and Governance

Summary
Iraq’s sectarian and ethnic divisions—muted toward the end of the 2003-2011 U.S. military
intervention in Iraq—have reemerged to fuel a major challenge to Iraq’s stability and to U.S.
policy in Iraq and the broader Middle East region. The resentment of Iraq’s Sunni Arabs toward
the Shiite-dominated central government facilitated the capture in 2014 of nearly one-third of
Iraqi territory by the Sunni Islamist extremist group called the Islamic State (also known as the
Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, or ISIL). Iraq’s Kurds have been separately embroiled in
political and territorial disputes with Baghdad, although those differences have been subordinated
to the common struggle against the Islamic State.
U.S. officials assert that defeating the Islamic State will require the Iraqi government to gain the
loyalty of more of Iraq’s Sunnis and to resolve differences with the Kurdistan Regional
Government (KRG). Prospects for greater inter-communal unity appeared to increase in 2014
with the replacement of former Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki with another Prime Minister,
Haydar al-Abbadi. Although both men are from the Shiite Islamist Da’wa Party, Abbadi appears
more willing than was Maliki to compromise with Sunni interests and with those of the KRG. In
November 2014, Baghdad and the KRG reached a temporary agreement on the KRG’s
exportation of oil separately from Baghdad, but that agreement largely collapsed in mid-2015.
Achieving the hoped-for political consensus in Iraq has been hindered in part because of divisions
within the major communities. Iraq’s Sunnis remain divided between those who accept Islamic
State rule over many Sunni areas and those who want to help the government defeat it. The
government’s need to rely on Shiite militias has given militia commanders significant new
political influence, to the point where militia commanders and their political leaders threaten
Abbadi’s hold on the prime ministership. Some Shiite militia leaders seek to combat the Islamic
State without the participation of Sunni fighters, who many experts assert are key to ultimately
defeating Islamic State forces. Divisions within the KRG have been widened by a dispute over
the position of KRG President Masud Barzani, whose term has expired but who his supporters
insist should stay on in the interests of stability.
The strains of fighting the Islamic State have caused a deterioration of services and produced
unrest in Baghdad itself. Protests in the summer of 2014 prompted Abbadi to push for significant
restructuring of the Iraqi government, and efforts against corruption and excessive government
spending. These efforts were supported by Iraq’s highest Shiite leadership based in Najaf, but
have been resisted by Iraqi politicians whose positions are threatened by reform and by many
citizens who do not want their salaries cut.
As part of an overarching effort to defeat the Islamic State, the United States is helping the Iraqi
government try to recapture territories in Iraq that have fallen under Islamic State control. The
United States is conducting airstrikes against the group and has deployed over 3,500 U.S. military
personnel to advise and training the Iraqi Security Forces (ISF), the peshmerga militia of the and
Sunni tribal fighters. For detail on the U.S.-led efforts to defeat the Islamic State forces in Iraq,
see CRS Report R43612, The "Islamic State" Crisis and U.S. Policy, by Christopher M. Blanchard
et al.
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Contents
Introduction ..................................................................................................................................... 1
Brief Historical Overview ............................................................................................................... 1
The U.S. Intervention and Post-Saddam Transition ........................................................................ 2
Construction of the Post-Saddam Political System ................................................................... 2
Permanent Constitution ....................................................................................................... 4
December 15, 2005, Elections Put Maliki at the Helm ....................................................... 5
2006-2011: Sectarian Conflict and U.S. “Surge” ............................................................................ 5
Governance Strengthens and Sectarian Conflict Abates ........................................................... 6
Second Provincial Elections in 2009 .................................................................................. 6
The March 7, 2010 National Elections ............................................................................... 7
U.S. Involvement Winds Down: 2009-2011 ............................................................................. 8
The Post-2011 Diplomatic and Economic Relationship ..................................................... 9
Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) and Post-Withdrawal U.S. Support.............................................. 10
Office of Security Cooperation-Iraq (OSC-I) ................................................................... 10
Major Arms Sales 2011-2013 ............................................................................................ 11
Other Post-2011 Security Assistance and Training Programs ........................................... 12
Unresolved Schisms after the U.S. Withdrawal ............................................................................ 13
Armed Sunni Groups ............................................................................................................... 13
Al Qaeda in Iraq/Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL)/Islamic State ..................... 13
Naqshabandi Order (JRTN) and Ex-Saddam Military Commanders ................................ 13
Sunni Tribal Leaders/Sons of Iraq Fighters ...................................................................... 14
Shiite Militias and their Relations with Political Leaders ....................................................... 14
Sadrist Militias .................................................................................................................. 15
Iran-Trained Militias: Kata’ib Hezbollah and Asa’ib Ahl Al Haq .................................... 15
The Badr Organization ...................................................................................................... 16
Shiite Militiamen Formed after the U.S. Withdrawal ....................................................... 16
The Kurds and the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) .................................................. 16
KRG Structure/Intra-Kurdish Divisions ........................................................................... 17
KRG-Baghdad Disputes.................................................................................................... 18
KRG Oil Exports .............................................................................................................. 18
Tier Three Designations of the KDP and PUK ................................................................. 19
Unrest and Insurgency since 2011 ................................................................................................. 19
Sunni Unrest Escalates in 2013 ............................................................................................... 20
ISIL Begins to Capture Cities in Anbar in Late 2013 ....................................................... 21
Effect of the Islamic State Challenge on Stability ......................................................................... 21
Government Formation Process amid Security Collapse ........................................................ 22
Abbadi’s Governing Style and Policies ................................................................................... 25
Popular Unrest Compels Reform Measures ...................................................................... 26
U.S. Policy Response to the Islamic State .............................................................................. 27
Results of Operation Inherent Resolve in Iraq and Way Forward .................................... 28
Human Rights Issues ..................................................................................................................... 29
Trafficking in Persons ....................................................................................................... 29
Media and Free Expression ............................................................................................... 29
Corruption ......................................................................................................................... 30
Religious Freedom/Situation of Religious Minorities ...................................................... 30
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Women’s Rights ................................................................................................................ 31
Economic Development and the Energy Sector ...................................................................... 31
Regional Relationships .................................................................................................................. 32
Iran .......................................................................................................................................... 33
Syria ........................................................................................................................................ 34
Turkey ..................................................................................................................................... 34
Gulf States ............................................................................................................................... 35

Tables
Table 1. Major Political Factions in Post-Saddam Iraq ................................................................... 3
Table 2. Major Coalitions in April 30, 2014, COR Elections ........................................................ 25
Table 3. U.S. Assistance to Iraq Since FY2003 ............................................................................. 36

Contacts
Author Contact Information .......................................................................................................... 37

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Introduction
This report provides background and analysis on the politics of Iraq, including its communities,
its governing personalities and factions, security forces and militias, and the government’s human
rights record. The report does not provide a detailed analysis of the U.S.-led campaign to defeat
Islamic State forces in Iraq. For analysis on that issue, see CRS Report R43612, The "Islamic State"
Crisis and U.S. Policy
, by Christopher M. Blanchard et al.
Brief Historical Overview
The territory that is now Iraq fell under the rule of the Ottoman Empire in the 16th Century,
divided into three provinces: Mosul Province, Baghdad Province, and Basra Province. Ottoman
rule lasted until World War I, in which that empire was defeated and its dominions in the Middle
East were taken over by the European powers that had defeated the Ottomans in the war. Britain
took over Iraq (then still called “Mesopotamia”) under a League of Nations mandate, but ruled by
Faysal I, a leader of the Hashemite family (which still rules modern-day Jordan). Iraq gained
independence in 1932, with Faysal as King. Arab nationalist military leaders led by Abd al-Qarim
Qasim overthrew the monarchy (King Faysal II) in July 1958, proclaiming a republic. Qasim
invited Kurdish leader Mullah Mustafa Barzani to return to Iraq but, beginning in 1961, he led
Kurdish forces in a significant war for autonomy from Baghdad, with the ultimate objective of
forming a separate Kurdish state. The Ba’th (“Renaissance”) Party organized against Qasim and
took power briefly in a 1963 coup, but the first Ba’thist government was ousted in late 1963 by
nationalist military leaders, who ruled until a successful second Ba’th takeover in 1968. In July
1979, Saddam Hussein ousted then-President Ahmad Hasan Al Bakr and assumed his position.
Saddam Hussein came to power in Iraq about six months after Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini’s
Islamic revolution ousted the U.S.-backed Shah in neighboring Iran. Saddam apparently
perceived Iran’s revolution as an existential threat for its potential to inspire a Shiite-led
revolution in Iraq, which is about 60% Shiite Arab, 20% Sunni Arab, and 18% Kurdish. In
September 1980, Saddam launched war against Iran, but the war bogged down into a rough
stalemate until the summer of 1988, when Iran accepted a ceasefire encapsulated in U.N. Security
Council Resolution 598, adopted a year prior. Perhaps seeking a broader hegemony in the Gulf, in
August 1990, Saddam ordered an invasion and occupation of Kuwait, which along with the other
Persian Gulf monarchies had underwritten Iraq’s war effort against Iran. A U.S.-led coalition
expelled Iraqi forces by the end of March 1991, and Iraq accepted an intrusive U.N.-led
inspection regime to dismantle its weapons of mass destruction (WMD) programs, including a
nuclear program that apparently was close to producing enough fissile material for a nuclear
weapon. By the end of the 1990s, the inspection regime broke down over Iraqi objections to its
intrusiveness and stated frustrations about a worldwide economic embargo imposed on Iraq after
the Kuwait invasion. However, Iraq’s WMD program, it was later determined in a late 2002
investigation by the International Atomic Energy Agency and the U.N. inspections mission in Iraq
UNMOVIC (U.N. Monitoring, Verification, and Inspection Commission authorized by U.N.
Security Council Resolution 1284 of December 1999, superseding Resolution 687 of April 1991),
had not been revived to any meaningful extent.1

1 The Iraq WMD inspections mandate of UNMOVIC and IAEA were terminated by Resolution 1762 of June 29, 2007.
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The U.S. Intervention and Post-Saddam Transition
A U.S.-led military coalition that included about 250,000 U.S. troops crossed the border from
Kuwait into Iraq on March 19, 2003, to oust the regime of Saddam Hussein and eliminate
suspected WMD programs that were retained. After several weeks of combat, the regime of
Saddam Hussein fell on April 9, 2003. During the 2003-2011 presence of U.S. forces, Iraq
completed a transition from the dictatorship of Saddam Hussein to a plural political system in
which varying sects and ideological and political factions compete in elections. A series of
elections began in 2005, after a one-year occupation period and a subsequent seven-month
interim period of Iraqi self-governance that gave each community a share of power and prestige
to promote cooperation and unity. Still, disputes over the relative claim of each community on
power and economic resources permeated almost every issue in Iraq and were never fully
resolved. These unresolved differences—muted during the last years of the U.S. military
presence—reemerged in mid-2012 and have since returned Iraq to major conflict.
After the fall of Saddam Hussein, all U.S. economic sanctions against Iraq were lifted, removing
impediments to U.S. business dealings with Iraq. During 2003-2004, Iraq was removed from the
“terrorism list,” and the Iraq Sanctions Act (Sections 586-586J of P.L. 101-513), which codified a
U.S. trade embargo imposed after Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait, was terminated. In subsequent years,
a series of U.N. Security Council resolutions removed most remaining “Chapter VII” U.N.
sanctions against Iraq that stemmed from the 1990 invasion of Kuwait—opening Iraq to receiving
arms from any country. Iraq still is required to comply with international proliferation regimes
that bar it from reconstituting Saddam-era weapons of mass destruction programs, and still pays
into a U.N.-run fund to compensate victims of the 1990 Kuwait invasion. The Iraq WMD
inspections mandate of UNMOVIC and IAEA were terminated by Resolution 1762 of June 29,
2007. On October 24, 2012, Iraq signed the “Additional Protocol” of the Nuclear Non-
Proliferation Treaty.
Construction of the Post-Saddam Political System
After the fall of Saddam’s regime, the United States set up an occupation structure based on
concerns that immediate sovereignty would favor established Islamist and pro-Iranian factions
over nascent pro-Western secular parties. In May 2003, President Bush named Ambassador
L. Paul Bremer to head a Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA), which was recognized by the
United Nations as an occupation authority. In July 2003, Bremer ended Iraqi transition
negotiations and appointed a non-sovereign Iraqi advisory body, the 25-member Iraq Governing
Council (IGC). U.S. and Iraqi negotiators, advised by a wide range of international officials and
experts, drafted a Transitional Administrative Law (TAL, interim constitution), which became
effective on March 4, 2004.2
On June 28, 2004, Bremer appointed an Iraqi interim government, ending the occupation period.
The TAL also laid out a 2005 elections roadmap, based on agreement among all Iraqi factions that
elections should determine future political outcomes. The interim government was headed by a
prime minister (Iyad al-Allawi) and a president (Sunni tribalist Ghazi al-Yawar). It was heavily
populated by parties and factions that had long campaigned to oust Saddam.
In accordance with the dates specified in the TAL, the first elections process, on January 30,
2005, produced a 275-seat transitional parliament and government that subsequently supervised

2 Text, in English, is at http://www.constitution.org/cons/iraq/TAL.html.
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writing a new constitution, held a public referendum on a new constitution, and then held
elections for a full-term government. Elections for four-year-term provincial councils in all 18
provinces (“provincial elections”) and a Kurdistan regional assembly (111 seats) were held
concurrently. The election was conducted according to the “proportional representation/closed
list” election system, in which voters chose among “political entities” (a party, a coalition of
parties, or people). The ballot included 111 entities, nine of which were multi-party coalitions.
Sunni Arabs (20% of the overall population) boycotted and won only 17 seats in the transitional
parliament. The government included PUK leader Jalal Talabani as president and Da’wa Party
leader Ibrahim al-Jafari as prime minister. Sunni Arabs held the posts of parliament speaker,
deputy president, one of the deputy prime ministers, and six ministers, including defense.
Table 1. Major Political Factions in Post-Saddam Iraq
Faction
Leadership/Description
Da’wa Party/State of Law
The largest faction of the Da’wa Party has been led since 2006 by Nuri al-Maliki, who
Coalition
displaced former Da’wa leader (and former Prime Minister) Ibrahim al-Jaafari. Da’wa
was active against Saddam but also had operatives in some Persian Gulf states, including
Kuwait, where they committed attacks against the ruling family during the 1980s. Da’wa
is the core of the “State of Law” political coalition. Iraq’s current Prime Minister,
Haydar al-Abbadi, is a Da’wa member.
Islamic Supreme Council
Current leader is Ammar al-Hakim, who succeeded his father Abd al-Aziz al-Hakim
of Iraq (ISCI)
upon his death in 2009. The Hakims descend from the revered late Grand Ayatol ah
Muhsin Al Hakim, who hosted Iran’s Ayatol ah Ruhol ah Khomeini when he was in exile
in Iraq during 1964-1978. Abd al-Aziz’s elder brother, Mohammad Baqr al-Hakim,
headed the movement when it was an underground armed opposition group against
Saddam, but he was kil ed outside a Najaf mosque shortly after returning to Iraq
fol owing Saddam’s overthrow. Its ally is the Badr Organization, which fields a Shi te
militia force commanded by parliamentarian Hadi al Ameri.
Sadrists and Offshoot
Thirty-seven year old Shi te cleric Moqtada Al Sadr is the son of revered Ayatol ah
Militias
Mohammad Sadiq Al Sadr, who was kil ed by Saddam’s security forces in 1999, and a
relative of Mohammad Baqr Al Sadr, a Shi te theoretician and col eague of Ayatol ah
Khomeini. Moqtada formed a Shi te militia called the Mahdi Army during the U.S.
military presence, which was formally disbanded in 2009 but has regrouped under an
alternate name to combat the Islamic State organization. The Sadrists have competed in
all Iraqi elections since 2006. In 2014, the group competed under the “Al Ahrar”
(Liberal) banner. Runs its own Shi te militia, of which several major Iran-allied Shi te
militias are offshoots, including Asa’ib Ahl Al Haq and Kata’ib Hezbol ah.
Kurdish Factions:
Masoud Barzani heads the KDP and remains the elected President of the Kurdistan
Kurdistan Democratic
Regional Government (KRG), although his term expired in August 2015. The PUK is led
Party (KDP), Patriotic
by the ailing Jalal Talabani, who was President of Iraq until the 2014 government
Union of Kurdistan (PUK), selection process. Iraq’s current president, Fouad Masoum, is a senior PUK leader as
and Gorran
well. Gorran (“Change”) is an offshoot of the PUK.
Iraqi National
Led by Iyad al-Allawi, a longtime anti-Saddam activist who was transitional Prime
Alliance/”Iraqiyya”
Minister during June 2004-February 2005. Allawi is a Shi te Muslim but most of his bloc’s
supporters are Sunnis, of which many are ex-Baath Party members. Iraqiyya bloc
fractured after the 2010 national election into blocs loyal to Allawi and to various Sunni
leaders including ex-COR peaker Osama al-Nujaifi and deputy Prime Minister Saleh al-
Mutlaq. Allawi and Nujaifi are both vice presidents in the government formed in
September 2014, and Mutlaq has retained his deputy prime ministerial post.
Iraqi Islamic Party
Sunni Islamist faction that was underground during Saddam’s rule, joined post-Saddam
politics, and was headed by then Vice President Tariq al-Hashimi. The group was part of
the Iraqiyya alliance in the 2010 election. Hashimi fled a Maliki-ordered arrest warrant
in late 2011 and has remained mostly in Turkey since.
Sources: Various press reports and author conversations with Iraq experts.
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Permanent Constitution3
A 55-member drafting committee—in which Sunnis were underrepresented—produced a draft
constitution, which was adopted in a public referendum of October 15, 2005. It major provisions
are as follows:
 It does not stipulate any ethnic or sectarian-based distribution of positions. An
informal agreement developed in the process of forming successive governments
in which a Shiite Muslim is Prime Minister, a Kurd is President, and a Sunni is
Speaker of the Council of Representatives (COR, parliament).
 In Article 113, it acknowledges that the three Kurdish-controlled provinces of
Dohuk, Irbil, and Sulaymaniyah constitute a legal “region” administered by the
Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG). Such regions are able to organize
internal security forces, legitimizing the Kurds’ fielding of their peshmerga
militia (Article 117). This continued a TAL provision. There would be a
December 31, 2007, deadline to hold a referendum on whether Kirkuk (Tamim
Province) would join the Kurdish region (Article 140).
 Any two or more provinces may join together to form a new “region,” according
to an October 2006 law on formation of regions. Holding a referendum on region
formation requires obtaining signatures of 10% of the provinces’ voters, or the
support of one-third of the members of their provincial councils.
 Islam was designated as “a main source” of legislation.
 It stipulates that a “Federation Council” (Article 62) would be formed by future
law as a second parliamentary chamber with size and powers to be determined.
The body has not been formed to date.
 It sets a 25% electoral goal for women (Article 47).
 Families are to choose which courts to use for family issues (Article 41), and
only primary education is mandatory (Article 34). Islamic law experts and civil
law judges would serve on the federal supreme court (Article 89).
 The central government is to distribute oil and gas revenues from “current fields”
in proportion to population, and “regions” will have a role in allocating revenues
from new energy discoveries (Article 109).
These provisions left many disputes unresolved, particularly the balance between central
government and regional and local authority. The TAL made approval of the constitution subject
to a veto if a two-thirds majority of voters in any three provinces voted it down. Sunnis registered
in large numbers (70%-85%) to try to defeat the constitution, despite a U.S.-mediated agreement
of October 11, 2005, to have a future vote on amendments to the constitution. The Sunni
provinces of Anbar and Salahuddin had a 97% and 82% “no” vote, respectively, but the
constitution was adopted because Nineveh Province voted 55% “no”—short of the two-thirds
“no” majority needed to vote the constitution down.

3 Text of the Iraqi constitution is at http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/10/12/
AR2005101201450.html.
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December 15, 2005, Elections Put Maliki at the Helm
The December 15, 2005, elections were for a full-term (four-year) national government (also in
line with the schedule laid out in the TAL). Each province contributed a set number of seats to a
“Council of Representatives” (COR), a formula adopted to attract Sunni participation. There were
361 political “entities,” including 19 multi-party coalitions, competing in a “closed list” voting
system (in which votes are cast only for parties and coalitions, not individual candidates). The
Shiites and Kurds again emerged dominant. The COR was inaugurated on March 16, 2006, and
Jafari was replaced with a then-obscure Da’wa figure, Nuri Kamal al-Maliki, as Prime Minister.
Talabani was selected to continue as president, with deputies Adel Abd al-Mahdi (incumbent) of
ISCI and Tariq al-Hashimi, leader of the Sunni Iraqi Islamic Party (IIP). Of the 37 Cabinet posts,
there were 19 Shiites; 9 Sunnis; 8 Kurds; and 1 Christian. Four were women.
2006-2011: Sectarian Conflict and U.S. “Surge”
The 2005 elections did not resolve the Sunnis’ grievances over their diminished positions in the
power structure, and subsequent events reinforced their political weakness and sense of
resentment. The bombing of a major Shiite shrine (Al Askari Mosque) in the Sunni-dominated
city of Samarra (Salahuddin Province) in February 2006 set off major Sunni-Shiite violence that
became so serious that many experts, by the end of 2006, were considering the U.S. mission as
failing. The “Iraq Study Group” concluded that U.S. policy required major change.4
In August 2006, the United States and Iraq agreed on “benchmarks” that, if implemented, might
achieve political reconciliation. Under Section 1314 of a FY2007 supplemental appropriation
(P.L. 110-28), “progress” on 18 political and security benchmarks—as assessed in Administration
reports due by July 15, 2007, and September 15, 2007—was required for the United States to
provide $1.5 billion in Economic Support Funds (ESF) to Iraq.5 In early 2007, the United States
began a “surge” of about 30,000 additional U.S. forces—bringing U.S. troop levels from their
2004-2006 levels of 138,000 to a high of about 170,000—intended to blunt insurgent momentum
and take advantage of growing Sunni Arab rejection of Islamist extremist groups. As 2008
progressed, citing the achievement of many of the agreed benchmarks and a dramatic drop in
sectarian violence, the Bush Administration asserted that political reconciliation was advancing
but that the extent and durability of the reconciliation would depend on further compromises
among ethnic groups.

4 “The Iraq Study Group Report.” Vintage Books, 2006. The Iraq Study Group was funded by the conference report on
P.L. 109-234, FY2006 supplemental, which provided $1 million to the U.S. Institute of Peace for operations of an Iraq
Study Group. The legislation did not specify the Group’s exact mandate or its composition.
5 President Bush exercised the waiver provision of that law in order to provide that aid. The law also mandated an
assessment by the Government Accountability Office, by September 1, 2007, of Iraqi performance on the benchmarks,
as well as an outside assessment of the Iraqi Security Forces (ISF).
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United Nations Assistance Mission—Iraq (UNAMI)
The United Nations contributes to political reconciliation through its U.N. Assistance Mission—Iraq (UNAMI). The
head of UNAMI is also the Special Representative of the Secretary General for Iraq. The mandate of UNAMI was
established in 2003 and has been renewed each July since in a U.N. Security Council resolution. UNAMI’s primary
activities have been to help build civil society, assist vulnerable populations, consult on possible solutions to the Arab-
Kurd dispute over Kirkuk Province, and resolve the status of the Iranian opposition group People’s Mojahedin
Organization of Iran that remains in Iraq (see below). The first head of the office was kil ed in a car bombing on his
headquarters in August 2003. In February 2015, Jan Kubis, the former head of UNAMA in Afghanistan, replaced
Bulgarian diplomat Nickolay Mladenov as head of UNAMI.
Governance Strengthens and Sectarian Conflict Abates
The passage of Iraqi laws in 2008 that were considered crucial to reconciliation, continued
reductions in violence accomplished by the U.S. surge, and the Sunni militant turn away from
violence, facilitated political stabilization. A March 2008 offensive ordered by Maliki against the
Sadr faction and other militants in Basra and environs (Operation Charge of the Knights) pacified
the city and caused many Sunnis and Kurds to see Maliki as willing to take on armed groups even
if they were Shiite. This contributed to a decision in July 2008 by several Sunni ministers to end
their one-year boycott of the Cabinet.
U.S. officials also pressed Maliki to devolve power from Baghdad, in large part to give Iraq’s
Sunnis more ownership of their own affairs and regions. Such devolution could take the form of
establishment of new “regions,” modeled along the lines of the KRG, or allowing provinces or
groups of provinces more autonomy and powers. Opponents of that proposal asserted that
devolving power from the central government would lead to the breakup of Iraq.
In part to address U.S. advice, in 2008, a “provincial powers law” (Law Number 21, replacing the
1969 Provinces Law Number 159) was adopted that assigned substantial powers for provincial
governing councils, such as enacting provincial legislation, regulations, and procedures, and
choosing the province’s governor and two deputy governors. That added to the duties of the
provincial administrations, which serve four-year terms, to draft provincial budgets and
implement federal policies. Some central government funds are given as grants directly to
provincial administrations for their use. Provinces have a greater claim on Iraqi financial
resources than do districts, and many communities support converting their areas into provinces.
Law 21 has been amended on several occasions to try to accommodate restive areas of Iraq. A
June 2013 amendment gave provincial governments substantially more power, a move intended
to satisfy Sunnis. In December 2013, the central government announced it would convert the
district of Halabja into a separate province—Halabja is symbolic to the Kurds because of
Saddam’s use of chemical weapons there in 1988. In January 2014, the government announced
other districts that would undergo similar conversions: Fallujah (in Anbar Province), a hotbed of
Sunni restiveness; Tuz Khurmato (in Salahuddin Province) and Tal Affar (in Nineveh Province),
both of which have Turkmen majorities; and the Nineveh Plains (also in Nineveh), which has a
mostly Assyrian Christian population. These conversions appeared intended to keep minorities
and Sunnis on the side of the government, but were not implemented.
Second Provincial Elections in 2009
The second set of provincial elections were delayed until January 21, 2009, because of
differences between the KRG and the central government over the province of Kirkuk. The
dispute caused provincial elections in the three KRG provinces to be postponed to an unspecified
future time. About 14,500 candidates (including 4,000 women) vied for the 440 provincial
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council seats in the 14 Arab-dominated provinces of Iraq. About 17 million Iraqis (any Iraqi 18
years of age or older) were eligible for the vote, which was run by the Iraqi Higher Election
Commission (IHEC). Pre-election violence was minimal but turnout was lower than expected at
about 51%.
The certified vote totals (March 29, 2009) gave Maliki’s State of Law Coalition a very strong 126
out of the 440 seats available (28%). Its main Shiite rival, ISCI, went from 200 council seats to
only 50, a result observers attributed to its perceived close ties to Iran. Iyad al-Allawi’s faction
won 26 seats, a gain of 8 seats, and a Sunni faction loyal to Tariq al-Hashimi won 32 seats, a loss
of 15. Sunni tribal leaders who boycotted the 2005 elections participated in the 2009 elections.
Their slate came in first in Anbar Province. Although the State of Law coalition fared well, the
party still needed to strike bargains with rival factions to form provincial administrations.
The March 7, 2010 National Elections
With the strong showing of his slate in the provincial elections, Maliki was poised to retain his
position after the March 7, 2010 COR elections. Yet, as 2009 progressed, Maliki’s image as
protector of order was tarnished by several high-profile attacks, including major bombings in
Baghdad on August 20, 2009, in which the buildings housing the Ministry of Finance and of
Foreign Affairs were heavily damaged. A strong rival Shiite slate took shape—the “Iraqi National
Alliance (INA)”—consisting of ISCI, the Sadrists, and other Shiite figures. Sunni Arabs rallied
around the outwardly cross-sectarian but mostly Sunni-supported “Iraq National Movement”
(Iraqiyya) of former Prime Minister Iyad al-Allawi.
The election law passed by the COR in November 2009 expanded the size of the COR to 325
total seats, of which 310 were allocated by province and constituency sizes ranged from
Baghdad’s 68 seats to Muthanna’s seven. The remaining 15 seats were minority reserved seats
and “compensatory seats”—seats allocated from “leftover” votes for parties and slates that did
not meet a minimum threshold to win a seat.
The U.S. and Iraqi goal of bringing Sunni Arabs further into the political structure was
jeopardized when the Justice and Accountability Commission (JAC, the successor to the De-
Baathification Commission that worked since the fall of Saddam to purge former Baathists from
government) invalidated the candidacies of 499 individuals (out of 6,500 candidates running) on
various slates. Appeals reinstated many of them. Maliki later named the Minister for Human
Rights to also serve as JAC chairman. The JAC continues to vet candidates.
The final candidate list contained about 6,170 total candidates spanning 85 coalitions. Turnout
was about 62%, and certified results were announced on June 1, 2010, showing Iraqiyya winning
two seats more than did State of Law. The Iraqi constitution (Article 73) mandates that the COR
“bloc with the largest number” of members should be afforded the first opportunity to form a
government. However, on March 28, 2010, Iraq’s Supreme Court ruled that a coalition that forms
after the election could be deemed to meet that requirement. On October 1, 2010, a six-month
deadlock among major blocs over major positions broke when Maliki received the backing of the
Sadr faction. The Obama Administration initially appeared to favor Allawi’s efforts to form a
governing coalition but later acquiesced to a second Maliki term.
On November 10, 2010, an “Irbil Agreement” was reached in which (1) Maliki and Talabani
would serve another term; (2) Iraqiyya would be extensively represented in government; (3)
Allawi would form an oversight body called the “National Council for Strategic Policies”;6 and

6 Fadel, Leila and Karen DeYoung. “Iraqi Leaders Crack Political Deadlock.” Washington Post, November 11, 2010.
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(4) de-Baathification laws would be eased. At the November 11, 2010, COR session to implement
the agreement, Iraqiyya figure Usama al-Nujaifi (brother of Nineveh Governor Atheel Nujaifi)
was elected COR speaker. Several days later, Talabani was reelected president and subsequently
tapped Maliki as prime minister-designate. Maliki met the December 25, 2010 to achieve COR
confirmation of a Cabinet, which divided the positions among the major factions, but Maliki
formally held the positions of Defense Minister, Interior Minister, and Minister of State for
National Security. Other officials headed these ministries on an “acting” basis, without the full
authority they would normally have as COR-approved ministers.
U.S. Involvement Winds Down: 2009-2011
As the second full-term government took shape in Iraq, the United States began implementing its
long-planned military withdrawal from Iraq. A November 2008 U.S.-Iraq “Security Agreement”
(SA), which took effect on January 1, 2009, stipulated that the withdrawal was to be completed
by the end of 2011. On February 27, 2009, President Obama announced that U.S. troop levels in
Iraq would decline to 50,000 by September 2010 (from 138,000 in early 2009) and the U.S.
mission would shift from combat to training the ISF. By the formal end of the U.S. combat
mission on August 31, 2010, the size of the U.S. force was 47,000 and it declined steadily
thereafter until the last U.S. troop contingent crossed into Kuwait on December 18, 2011.
With the final withdrawal deadline approaching, fears of expanded Iranian influence, deficiencies
in the Iraqi Security Forces (ISF), and simmering sectarian rifts caused U.S. officials to seek to
revise the SA to keep some U.S. troops in Iraq after 2011. U.S. officials emphasized that the ISF
remained unable to defend Iraq’s airspace and borders, and Iraqi commanders indicated that the
ISF would be unable to execute full external defense until 2020-2024.7 Renegotiating the SA to
allow for a continued U.S. troop presence required discussions with the Iraqi government and a
ratification vote of the Iraqi COR; Iraq’s constitution requires a COR vote on formal bilateral
agreements with foreign countries.
Several high-level U.S. visits and statements urged the Iraqis to consider extending the U.S. troop
presence. Maliki told then Speaker of the House John Boehner during his April 16, 2011, visit to
Baghdad that Iraq would welcome U.S. training and arms after that time.8 Subsequently, Maliki
stated that a continued U.S. troops presence would require a “consensus” among political blocs
(which he later defined as at least 70% concurrence)—an apparent effort to isolate the Sadr
faction, the most vocal opponent of a continuing U.S. presence. On August 3, 2011, most major
factions gave Maliki their backing to negotiate an SA extension, but Sadr threatened to activate
his Mahdi Army militia to oppose any extension of the U.S. presence. U.S.-Iraq negotiations on a
post-2011 U.S. presence reportedly ranged from 3, 000 to 15,000 remaining U.S. troops.9
With Sadrist opposition unyielding, on October 5, 2011, Iraq stated that it would not extend the
legal protections contained in the existing SA. That stipulation failed to meet the Defense
Department requirements that U.S. soldiers not be subject to prosecution under Iraq’s constitution
and its laws. On October 21, 2011, President Obama announced that the United States and Iraq
had agreed that, in accordance with the SA, all U.S. troops would be out of Iraq by the end of
2011. Whether the Obama Administration made substantial efforts to overcome the Iraqi
resistance remains an issue of debate. In his 2011 Iraq withdrawal announcement, President

7 “Iraq General Says Forces Not Ready ‘Until 2020.’” Agence France Presse, October 30, 2011.
8 Prashant Rao. “Maliki Tells US’ Boehner Iraqi Troops Are Ready.” Agence France Presse, April 16, 2011.
9 Author conversations with Iraq experts in Washington, DC, 2011; Eric Schmitt and Steven Lee Myers. “Plan Would
Keep Military in Iraq Beyond Deadline.” September 7, 2011.
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Obama stated that, through U.S. assistance programs, the United States would be able to continue
to develop all facets of the bilateral relationship with Iraq and help strengthen its institutions.10 He
and other U.S. officials asserted that the United States would continue to help Iraq secure itself,
using programs commonly provided for other countries. Administration officials stressed that the
U.S. political and residual security presence would be sufficient to ensure that Iraq remained
stable, allied to the United States, moving toward full democracy, and economically growing.
U.S. officials asserted that, even though it would not retain forces in Iraq, the United States could
help defend Iraq through the significant force it maintained in the Persian Gulf. Information on
the U.S. military presence in the Gulf is analyzed in detail in: CRS Report RL32048, Iran, Gulf
Security, and U.S. Policy
, by Kenneth Katzman.
The Post-2011 Diplomatic and Economic Relationship
With U.S. troops departing in 2011, the cornerstone of the bilateral relationship was to be the
Strategic Framework Agreement (SFA), which entered into effect at the same time as the SA. The
SFA outlined long-term U.S.-Iraqi relations with the intent of orienting Iraq’s politics and its
economy toward the West and the developed nations, and reducing its reliance on Iran or other
regional states. It set up a Higher Coordination Committee (HCC) as an institutional framework
for high-level U.S.-Iraq meetings, and subordinate Joint Coordinating Committees. The SFA
provides for the following (among other provisions):
 U.S.-Iraq cooperation “based on mutual respect,” and that the United States will
not use Iraqi facilities to launch any attacks against third countries and will not
seek permanent bases.
 U.S. support for Iraqi democracy and support for Iraq in regional and
international organizations.
 U.S.-Iraqi dialogue to increase Iraq’s economic development, including through
the Dialogue on Economic Cooperation and a Trade and Investment Framework
Agreement (TIFA). The two countries Iraq finalized a TIFA on March 6, 2013.
 U.S. promotion of Iraq’s development of its electricity, oil, and gas sector and
Iraqi participation in agricultural programs run by the U.S. Department of
Agriculture and USAID.
 Cultural cooperation through several exchange programs, such as the Youth
Exchange and Study Program and the International Visitor Leadership Program.
At least 1,000 Iraqi students are studying in the United States.
State Department-run aid programs, implemented mainly through Economic Support Funds
(ESF), are intended to fulfill the objectives of the SFA, according to State Department budget
documents. Most U.S. economic aid to Iraq now goes to programs to promote democracy,
adherence to international standards of human rights, rule of law, and conflict resolution.
Programs funded by the State Department Bureau of International Narcotics and Law
Enforcement (INL) focus on rule of law, moving away from previous use of INL funds for police
training. Funding continues for counterterrorism operations (NADR funds), and for anti-
corruption initiatives. U.S. officials stress that, for programs run by USAID in Iraq, Iraq matches
one-for-one the U.S. funding contribution.

10 Remarks by the President on Ending the War in Iraq. http://www.whitehouse.gov, October 21, 2011.
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The State Department became the lead U.S. agency in Iraq as of October 1, 2011, and closed its
“Office of the Iraq Transition Coordinator” in March 2012. In July 2011, as part of the transition
to State leadership in Iraq, the United States formally opened consulates in Basra, Irbil, and
Kirkuk. An embassy branch office was considered for Mosul but cost and security issues kept the
U.S. facility there limited to a diplomatic office (until the Islamic State capture of that city in
2014, which caused any U.S. personnel there to leave the city). The Kirkuk consulate closed at
the end of July 2012 in part to save costs. The State Department has planned to replace the U.S.
consulate in Irbil with a New Consulate Compound in Irbil, and the FY2014 Consolidated
Appropriation, P.L. 113-76, provided $250 million for that purpose. The U.S. Embassy in
Baghdad, built at a cost of about $750 million, controlled over 16,000 personnel at the time of the
2011 U.S. withdrawal—about half of which were contractors—a number that fell to about 5,500
at the end of 2013.11 Of the contractors, most were on missions to protect the U.S. Embassy and
consulates, and other U.S. personnel and facilities throughout Iraq. The U.S. Ambassador in Iraq
is Stuart Jones, who was sworn in on September 17, 2014.
Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) and Post-Withdrawal U.S. Support
At the time of the U.S. withdrawal, the Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) was assessed as a relatively
well-trained and disciplined force of about 800,000, of which about 350,000 were Iraqi Army and
the remainder were mostly Iraqi Police Service personnel. Of the military forces, a mostly-Shiite
Counter-Terrorism Service (CTS), of which about 4,100 are Iraqi Special Operations Forces
(ISOF), were considered highly capable but reported directly to Maliki’s “Office of the
Commander-in-Chief. The ISF ground forces were also relatively well armed, utilizing heavy
armor supplied by the United States. However, the Air Force was limited, using mostly propeller-
driven aircraft.
Following the withdrawal, competent commanders were in some cases replaced by Maliki
loyalists and many commanders viewed their positions as financial and political rewards. Iraqi
investigations in 2014 found that much of the ISF personnel were “ghost” or “no-show” forces.
During his April 2014 visit to the United States, Prime Minister Haydar al-Abbadi did not dispute
assertions that the Iraqi military is about 80% Shiite Muslim—possibly explaining why some
Iraqi Sunnis say they considered the ISF an “occupation force” or an “Iranian force.” The
collapse of the ISF in northern Iraq in the face of the Islamic State offensive in 2014 might have
left the Iraqi Army regular force with as few as 50,000 personnel.
Office of Security Cooperation-Iraq (OSC-I)
The Office of Security Cooperation—Iraq (OSC-I), operating under the authority of the U.S.
Ambassador to Iraq, was to be the primary Iraq-based U.S. entity tasked with interacting with the
post-2011 Iraqi military. Its primary mission is to administer the foreign military sales (FMS)
programs (U.S. arms sales to Iraq), funded with foreign military financing (FMF) funds,
discussed in the aid table below, and Iraqi national funds. Prior to the 2014 ISIL-led challenge, it
worked out of the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad and five other locations around Iraq (Kirkuk
Regional Airport Base, Tikrit, Besmaya, Umm Qasr, and Taji). It left the facility in Tikrit before
the Islamic State captured that city in June 2014, and has not returned to it despite Tikrit’s
recapture in April 2015.

11 Ernesto Londono. “U.S. Clout Wanes in Iraq.” Washington Post, March 24, 2013.
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Total OCS-I personnel number over 3,500, most of which are security contractors. Of the staff,
about 175 are U.S. military personnel and an additional 45 are Defense Department civilians.
Some of these personnel have been seconded to anti-Islamic State missions, but some remain as
OSC-I personnel performing the functions they have since 2012. About 46 members of the staff
administer the FMS program and other security assistance programs such as the International
Military Education and Training (IMET) program.
Major Arms Sales 2011-2013
A pillar of the post-2011 U.S. security effort was to continue to supply Iraq with substantial
quantities of arms. In August 2012, the United States completed delivery to Iraq of 140 M1A1
Abrams tanks. Iraq paid for $800 million of the $860 million cost of the tanks with national
funds. In December 2012, the U.S. Navy delivered two support ships to Iraq to assist Iraq’s fast-
attack and patrol boats in securing its offshore oil platforms and other coastal locations. The
United States also sold Iraq equipment that its security forces can use to restrict the ability of
insurgent and terrorist groups to move contraband across Iraq’s borders and checkpoints
(RAPISCAN system vehicles), at a cost of about $600 million. Some refurbished air defense guns
were provided gratis as excess defense articles (EDA).
F-16s
The largest FMS case is the sale of 36 U.S.-made F-16 combat aircraft to Iraq, notified to
Congress in two equal tranches, the latest of which was made on December 12, 2011 (Transmittal
No. 11-46). The total value of the sale of 36 F-16s is up to $6.5 billion when all parts, training,
and weaponry are included. Deliveries of the aircraft began in July 2014 at a U.S. air base in
Arizona because of the Islamic State presence near their permanent home at Balad Air Base, north
of Baghdad. The aircraft and their trained pilots deployed to Iraq later in mid-2015 and have been
engaged in air strikes against Islamic State positions.
Apache Attack Helicopters, Air Defense Equipment, and Stingers
In 2013 Iraq requested to purchase from the United States the Integrated Air Defense System and
Apache attack helicopters.12 The sale of the Air Defense system was notified to Congress on
August 5, 2013, with a value of $2.4 billion, including 681 Stinger shoulder held units, three
Hawk anti-aircraft batteries, and other equipment. DSCA simultaneously notified about $2.3
billion worth of additional sales to Iraq including of Stryker nuclear, chemical, and biological
equipment reconnaissance vehicles, 12 Bell helicopters, and other systems and support. The
provision of Apaches was to involve leasing of six of the helicopters, with an estimated cost of
about $1.37 billion, and the sale of 24 more, with an estimated value of $4.8 billion. As noted
below, the provision of the Apaches was held up by some in Congress until the December 2013
Islamic State gains in Anbar Province. Iraq subsequently allowed the deal to lapse because of a
lack of trained manpower.13
Other Suppliers. The United States is not the only arms supplier to Iraq. In October 2012, Iraq
and Russia signed deals for Russian arms worth about $4.2 billion. In November 2013, Russia
delivered four Mi-35 attack helicopters to Iraq, and Russia quickly delivered several combat
aircraft in late June 2014 that Iraq sought to fill a gap in its air attack capabilities. In October

12 John Hudson. “Iraqi Ambassador: Give Us Bigger Guns, And Then We’ll Help on Syria.” July 17, 2013.
13 http://www.janes.com/article/43680/iraq-passes-on-apache-buy
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2012, Iraq agreed to buy 28 Czech-made military aircraft, a deal valued at about $1 billion.14 In
December 12, 2013, South Korea signed a deal to export 24 FA-50 light fighter jets to Iraq at an
estimated cost of $1.1 billion; the aircraft will be delivered between 2015 and 2016.15
Other Post-2011 Security Assistance and Training Programs
OSC-I’s mandate included training and assistance programs for the Iraq military. Because the
United States and Iraq did not conclude a long term Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA) that
granted legal immunities to U.S. military personnel, the 160 OSC-I personnel involved in these
programs, which focused mostly on counterterrorism and naval and air defense, were mostly
contractors. Some were embedded with Iraqi forces not only tactically, but at the institutional
level by advising Iraqi security ministries and its command structure.
As Sunni unrest increased in 2012, Iraq sought additional security cooperation with the United
States, expressing interest in expanded U.S. training of the ISF and joint exercises. Subsequently,
a unit of Army Special Operations forces reportedly deployed to Iraq to advise on
counterterrorism and help with intelligence against AQ-I/ISIL.16 (These forces operated under a
limited SOFA or related understanding drafted for this purpose.) In December 5-6, 2012, Iraq and
the United States signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) providing for high level U.S.-
Iraq military exchanges; professional military education cooperation; counter-terrorism
cooperation; the development of defense intelligence capabilities, and joint exercises.
The concept of enhanced U.S.-Iraq cooperation gained further consideration in 2013. During his
November 1, 2013, meeting with President Obama, Maliki reportedly discussed enhanced
security cooperation, including expanded access to U.S. intelligence.17 The joint statement issued
at the conclusion of Maliki’s meeting with President Obama did not specify any U.S.
commitments to this level of cooperation, but did express a “shared assessment of al Qaida
affiliated groups threatening Iraq.” Aside from increasing U.S. training for the ISF, the United
States arranged Iraq’s participation in the regional Eager Lion military exercise series in Jordan
and participation in the U.S.-led international mine countermeasures exercise off Bahrain in 2013.
In July and November 2013, the United States convened a strategic dialogue that included Iraq,
Jordan, the United Arab Emirates, and Egypt.
Police Development Program
A separate program, the Police Development Program, was intended to maintain the proficiency
of Iraq’s police forces. It was the largest program that in 2012 transitioned from DOD to State
Department lead, using International Narcotics and Law Enforcement (INCLE) funds. However,
Iraq’s drive to emerge from U.S. tutelage produced apparent Iraqi disinterest in the PDP. By late
2012, it consisted of only 36 advisers, about 10% of what was envisioned, and it was phased out
entirely during 2013. Two facilities built with over $200 million in U.S. funds (Baghdad Police
College Annex and part of the U.S. consulate in Basra) were turned over to the Iraqi government
at the end of 2012.

14 Adam Schreck. “Iraq Presses US For Faster Arms Deliveries.” Yahoo.com, October 18, 2012.
15 Defense News. December 12, 2013.
16 Tim Arango. “Syrian Civil War Poses New Peril For Fragile Iraq.” New York Times, September 25, 2012.
17 Michael Gordon and Eric Schmitt. “As Security Deteriorates at Home, Iraqi Leader Arrives in U.S. Seeking Aid.”
New York Times, November 1, 2013.
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Unresolved Schisms after the U.S. Withdrawal
Even though overall violence in Iraq was relatively low at the time of the 2011 U.S. withdrawal,
numerous armed groups remained, and the sectarian and political grievances that had caused the
post-Saddam insurgency and sectarian conflict remained unresolved. The sections below discuss
the various threats to the political and security situation, some of which undoubtedly contributed
to the successes of the Islamic State in Iraq in 2014 and the difficulty Iraqi forces have had in
defeating the Islamic State, despite substantial U.S. help.
Armed Sunni Groups
At the time of the 2011U.S. withdrawal, some Sunni antigovernment armed groups were still
operating, although at low levels of activity. Such groups included Baath Party and Saddam
Hussein supporters as well as hardline Islamists, some of whom were linked to Al Qaeda. After
the U.S. military departure in 2011, these groups increased their armed opposition to the Maliki
government, drawing on increasing Sunni resentment of Shiite political domination.
Al Qaeda in Iraq/Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL)/Islamic State
Iraq’s one-time Al Qaeda affiliate constitutes the most violent component of the Sunni rebellion
that has become a major threat to Iraqi stability. Its antecedent called itself Al Qaeda in Iraq (AQ-
I), which was led by Jordanian militant Abu Musab al-Zarqawi until his death by U.S. airstrike in
2006.18 In October 2012, Jordanian authorities disrupted an alleged plot by AQ-I to bomb
multiple targets in Amman, Jordan, possibly including the U.S. Embassy there.
In 2013, the group adopted the name Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) or, alternately,
Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS). In June 2014, the group changed its name to the Islamic
State (IS), and declared its leader, Abu Bakr Al Baghdadi, as the “Commander of the Faithful”—a
term essentially declaring him leader of all Muslims. It also declared a caliphate in the territory it
controls in Iraq and Syria. The group’s attacks on the government began to escalate significantly
after an assault on Sunni protesters in the town of Hawija on April 23, 2013. The group increased
its violent activity to about 40 mass casualty attacks per month, far more than the 10 per month of
2010.19 In 2013, the group began asserting control of territory and operating training camps close
to the Syria border.20 The head of the National Counterterrorism Center, Matt Olsen, told
Congress on November 14, 2013, that ISIL was the strongest it had been since its peak in 2006.21
Naqshabandi Order (JRTN) and Ex-Saddam Military Commanders
Some insurgent groups are composed of members of the Saddam-era regime or Iraqi military.
These groups include the 1920 Revolution Brigades, the Islamic Army of Iraq, and, most
prominently, the Naqshabandi Order—known by its Arabic acronym “JRTN.”22 The JRTN, based

18 An antecedent of AQ-I was named by the United States as a Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO) in March 2004
and the designation applies to AQ-I and now the Islamic State.
19 Michael Knights. “Rebuilding Iraq’s Counterterrorism Capabilities.” Washington Institute for Near East Policy, July
31, 2013.
20 Ben Van Heuvelen. “Al Qaeda-Linked Group Gaining Ground in Iraq.” Washington Post, December 8, 2013.
21 Eileen Sullivan. “Official: Al-Qaida in Iraq Strongest Since 2006.” Associated Press, November 14, 2013.
22 The acronym stands for Jaysh al-Rijal al-Tariq al-Naqshabandi, which translated means Army of the Men of the
Naqshabandi Order.
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primarily in Nineveh Province, has been designated by the United States as a Foreign Terrorist
Organization (FTO).
In mid-2012, JRTN attacks on U.S. facilities in northern Iraq apparently contributed to the State
Department decision to close the Kirkuk consulate. In February 2013 Sunnis linked to the JRTN
circulated praise for the protests from the highest-ranking Saddam regime figure still at large,
Izzat Ibrahim al Duri. He reportedly issued anti-Iraq government statements during the course of
the 2014 Islamic State offensive. Iraqi officials say they killed Duri during a battle in northern
Iraq in early May 2015, but that claim awaits confirmation.
The JRTN and related ex-Ba’thist groups disagree with the Islamic State’s ideology but
apparently support it as a Sunni organization opposed to the Iraqi government. Some of these ex-
military officers reportedly are helping the Islamic State by providing tactical and strategic
military planning. Some JRTN ex-Saddam military officers operate under a separate structure
called the “General Military Council for Iraqi Revolutionaries,” which includes Sunni tribal
fighters and other ex-insurgent figures.
Sunni Tribal Leaders/Sons of Iraq Fighters
Approximately 100,000 Iraqi Sunnis fighters known as “Sons of Iraq” (also called Awakening, or
“Sahwa” fighter) were part of the insurgency against the U.S. military during 2003-2006 but then
cooperated with U.S. and Iraqi forces against AQ-I during 2006-2011. The Iraqi government
promised all of the Sons of Iraq integration into the Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) or government
jobs but, by the time of the U.S. withdrawal in 2011, only about two-thirds of the Sons had
received these benefits. The remainder continued to man checkpoints in Sunni areas and were
paid about $500 per month by the government but were not formally added to security ministry
rolls. As a result, some of these fighters became disillusioned with the Maliki government and
some (numbers unknown) reportedly joined the Islamic State offensives in 2014.
Many of the Sons of Iraq belong to the tribes of Anbar Province that seek more Sunni influence in
the central government and oppose the Islamic State. The leaders of these tribes include Ahmad
Abu Risha, Ali Hatem Suleiman al-Dulaymi, and Majid al-Ali al-Sulayman al-Dulaymi. Abu
Risha is the brother of the slain tribal leader Abdul Sattar Abu Risha, who, with Ali Hatem, were
key figures in starting the Awakening movement. These leaders generally oppose the involvement
of Shiite militiamen in Iraqi efforts to recapture Sunni-inhabited territory from the Islamic State,
and instead are trying to recruit Sunni tribal fighters to spearhead government offensives against
Islamic State positions. Some Anbar tribal leaders and other Sunni figures visited Washington
D.C. in the spring of 2015, in part to request direct transfer of U.S. weaponry to Sunnis who
oppose the Islamic State.
Some of the Sons of Iraq and their tribal recruiters have supported the Muslim Scholars
Association (MSA), a Sunni Islamist organizations that is far less violent than AQ-I or the Islamic
State. The MSA is led by Harith al-Dari, who in 2006 fled U.S. counter-insurgency operations to
live in Jordan and is sanctioned by the United States. Harith al-Dari’s son, Muthana, is active
against the government.
Shiite Militias and their Relations with Political Leaders
The 2006-2008 period of sectarian conflict was fueled in part by Shiite militias, such as those
formed by Moqtada Al Sadr. Sadr is considered an Iraqi “nationalist,” who did not go into exile
during Saddam’s rule, and his following is particularly strong among lower class Shiites. Sadr has
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sometimes tried to reach out to Sunni leaders in an effort to demonstrate opposition to
sectarianism and bolster his nationalist credentials.
Iran reportedly armed some of these militias with upgraded rocket-propelled munitions, such as
Improvised Rocket Assisted Munitions (IRAMs). Shiite militias are estimated to have killed
about 500 U.S. military personnel during 2003-11.23 Until the U.S. withdrawal in December 2011,
rocket attacks continued against the U.S. consulate in Basra. Current estimates of the total Shiite
militiamen in Iraq number about 100,000, including those mobilized since the major Islamic State
offensive of mid-2014 (Popular Mobilization Forces or Units, PMF or PMU, also known by the
Arabic name of Hashid al-Shaabi). Some Shiite militia forces went to Syria after 2012 to protect
Shiite shrines and fight in support of the government of Bashar Al Assad.24 Many of these
militiamen returned to Iraq after the Islamic State capture of Mosul in 2014, in part to fend off
any potential threat to Baghdad.
The militias, and particularly some of their commanders, reportedly are an increasingly influential
force in Iraqi politics as the war against the Islamic State progresses. Their political fortunes have
risen as the performance of the ISF against the Islamic State has faltered. Former Prime Minister
Maliki, and various militia commanders such as Asa’ib Ahl Al Haq’s Qais Khazali and the Badr
Organization’s Hadi al-Amiri, are seen as potentially contending for ultimate political power in
Iraq.
Sadrist Militias
Sadr’s professed nationalism in part explains his opposition to the United States during 2003-11.
Sadr formed his “Mahdi Army” militia in 2004 to combat the U.S. military presence in Iraq, and
U.S. troops fought several major battles with the Mahdi Army, an offshoot called the “Special
Groups,” and several other Shiite militias from 2004 to 2008. Sadr’s campaign meshed with
Iran’s policy to ensure that the United States completely withdrew from Iraq. Much of the Mahdi
Army had already been slowly integrating into the political process as a charity and employment
network called Mumahidoon (“those who pave the way”). In response to the Islamic State capture
of Mosul in 2014, former Mahdi Army militiamen reorganized as the “Salaam (Peace) Brigade.”
Iran-Trained Militias: Kata’ib Hezbollah and Asa’ib Ahl Al Haq
The Sadrist pressure on the U.S. forces during 2003-11 was amplified by the activities of several
other Shiite militias, some of which left Sadr’s control and fell increasingly under the sway of
Iran its Islamic Revolutionary Guard—Qods Force (IRGC-QF) and its commander, Maj. Gen.
Qasem Soleimani. The militias the IRGC-QF most intensively advised and armed include Asa’ib
Ahl al-Haq (AAH, League of the Family of the Righteous), Kata’ib Hezbollah (Hezbollah
Battalions), and the Promised Day Brigade, the latter organization of which might still be
affiliated to some degree with Sadr.25 In June 2009, Kata’ib Hezbollah was designated by the
United States as a Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO). On November 8, 2012, the Treasury
Department designated several Kata’ib Hezbollah operatives as terrorism supporting entities
under Executive Order 13224.

23 http://www.militarytimes.com/story/military/capitol-hill/2015/07/14/iran-linked-to-deaths-of-500-us-troops-in-iraq-
afghanistan/30131097/
24 Abigail Hauslohner. “Iraqi Shiites Take Up the Cudgels for Syrian Government.” Washington Post, May 27, 2013.
25 Department of State. Bureau of Counterterrorism. Country Reports on Terrorism 2014. Released June 19, 2015.
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AAH’s leader, Qais al-Khazali, took refuge in Iran in 2010 after three years in U.S. custody for
his alleged role in a 2005 raid that killed five American soldiers. In 2011, AAH’s leaders,
including Khazali, returned from Iran and opened political offices to recruit loyalists and set up
social service programs. The group did not compete in April 2013 provincial elections, but allied
with Maliki in the 2014 elections (Al Sadiqun, “the Friends,” slate 218).26
The Badr Organization
One major Shiite militia is neither a Sadrist offshoot nor an antagonist of U.S. forces during
2003-11. The Badr Organization was the armed wing of the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq, a
mainstream Shiite party, headed now by Ammar al-Hakim. The Badr Organization largely
disarmed after Saddam’s fall and integrated immediately into the political process. Its leader is
Hadi al-Amiri, an elected member of the National Assembly who is viewed as a hardliner
advocating extensive use of the Shiite militias to recapture Sunni-inhabited areas. It might have as
many as 30,000 militia fighters.
Shiite Militiamen Formed after the U.S. Withdrawal
Some new militias have formed since the U.S. withdrawal. Some formed mainly to assist Assad
in Syria, while others have gained strength since the 2014 Islamic State offensive. Those that
formed to assist Assad include the Harakat Hezbollah al-Nujaba or “Nujaba Movement, which
organized in 2013. It is led by Shaykh Akram al-Ka’bi, its secretary general, and remains engaged
in Syria as well as in Iraq. It receives some backing from the Islamic Revolutionary Guard – Qods
Force (IRGC-QF). Another Shiite militia that formed in 2013 is the “Mukhtar Army,” reportedly
formed to help the government suppress Sunni protests. It was led by Wathiq al-Battat, who
reportedly was killed in late 2014.27 The Mukhtar Army claimed responsibility for a late October
2015 attack on Iranian dissidents inhabiting the “Camp Liberty” facility, discussed further below.
The Islamic State offensive prompted many young Shiite men to answer a call from Grand
Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani to rally with the government to combat the Islamic State. These men
formed “Popular Mobilization Forces” (PMF), also known as “Popular Mobilization Units”
(PMU), to fight alongside the ISF against the Islamic State. The Popular Mobilization Forces are
generally commanded by ISF forces and are not directly backed by the IRGC-QF, although some
of the PMF might also supply manpower to the Iran-backed militias discussed above. Politically,
ex-Prime Minister Maliki has associated himself with the PMF and has apparently sought to use
their battlefield successes as leverage in his continuing political competition with Prime Minister
Abbadi. Exact numbers of PMF fighters are not known, but are widely estimated to be in the tens
of thousands. As of May 2015, the United States has provided air strike support to combat by
Shiite militias that are under ISF command. Some Sunni fighters are included in the PMF, for the
primary purpose of freeing Sunni inhabited areas from Islamic State rule.
The Kurds and the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG)28
Since the end of the U.S.-led war to end Iraq’s occupation of Kuwait in early 1991, the United
States has helped ensure Iraqi Kurdish autonomy, while opposing any Iraqi Kurdish move toward

26 Liz Sly. “Iran-Tied Group Is On Rise in Iraq.” Washington Post, February 19, 2013.
27 http://www.longwarjournal.org/archives/2014/12/leader_of_iran-suppo.php
28 For more information on Kurd-Baghdad disputes, see CRS Report RS22079, The Kurds in Post-Saddam Iraq, by
Kenneth Katzman.
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independence. Iraq’s Kurds have tried to preserve a “special relationship” with the United States
and use it to their advantage. The collapse of the ISF in northern Iraq in mid-2014 enabled the
Kurds to seize long-coveted Kirkuk and many of its oilfields. However, that collapse also
contributed to the advance of the Islamic State force close to the KRG capital Irbil before U.S.
airstrikes beginning on August 8, 2014, drove Islamic State fighters away from KRG-controlled
territory. The KRG region now shares a tense and long border with Islamic State forces and is
largely cut off from central government-controlled Iraq. The seizure of Kirkuk gives the Kurds
even more control over economic resources, so much so that in June 2014, Kurdish leaders
indicated the region might hold a referendum on independence within a few months. However,
the subsequent Islamic State threat to KRG-controlled territory muted further public discussion of
Iraqi Kurdish independence.
As permitted in the Iraqi constitution, the KRG fields its own force of peshmerga and Zeravani
ground forces, which together number about 150,000 active duty fighters. The KRG has about
350 tanks and 40 helicopter gunships, but has not been eligible to separately purchase additional
U.S. weaponry. The Kurdish militias are under the KRG’s Ministry of Peshmerga Affairs and are
paid out of the KRG budget. Prior to the June 2014 Islamic State offensive, the KRG had made
some headway in its plans to transform the peshmerga into a smaller but more professional and
well trained force, and the peshmerga is benefitting from the U.S. training discussed below.
KRG Structure/Intra-Kurdish Divisions
The Iraqi Kurds’ two main factions—the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), and the Kurdistan
Democratic Party (KDP)—are the dominant factions in the KRG. Barzani, the son of the revered
Kurdish resistance fighter Mullah Mustafa Barzani, is not only President of the KRG but also
head of the KDP. The PUK is led by Jalal Talabani, who served two terms as Iraq’s President and
is still ailing following a 2012 stroke. Masoud Barzani is President of the KRG, directly elected in
July 2009. The KRG has an elected Kurdistan National Assembly (KNA, sometimes called the
Kurdistan Parliament of Iraq, or KPI), and an appointed Prime Minister. Since January 2012, the
KRG Prime Minister has been Nechirvan Barzani (Masoud’s nephew), who replaced PUK senior
figure Barham Salih. Masoud Barzani’s son, Suroor, heads KRG security institutions. In July
2014, another senior PUK figure, Fouad Masoum, succeeded Talabani as Iraq’s President—
continuing the informal understanding that a PUK figure be Iraq’s President.
On July 1, 2013, the KNA voted to extend Barzani’s term two years, until August 20, 2015. No
consensus emerged among the KRG factions over how to choose a replacement, and he remains
as President while the parties try to negotiate a way forward. The KDP argues that there are no
obvious successors and that, in the interests of stability, his term should be extended again. The
PUK and Gorran, which together control more seats in the KNA than does the KDP, want the
KNA to choose a successor. As a sign of growing tensions over the issue, in September 2015 the
KDP expelled Gorran members from several KRG ministerial positions.29 Some observers assert
that unity might be restored if Barzani agrees to substantial political reforms within the KRG as a
condition of receiving PUK and Gorran support to continue as president.
Disputes between the KDP and PUK are not new and have sometimes clashed over territorial
control and resources; a serious armed conflict between them flared in 1996. Since the fall of
Saddam, the two parties have generally abided by a power-sharing arrangement. However, their
dynamic has been altered since 2005 as Gorran (Change) has become a significant factor in

29 Denise Natali. “Countering ISIS with the Kurds: A View from the Ground Up” National Defense University Institute
of Strategic Studies, November 2, 2015.
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Kurdish politics. Gorran, a PUK breakaway, is headed by Neshirvan Mustafa, a longtime critic of
the PUK. In 2014, Aram al-Sheikh Mohammad, a Gorran leader, became second deputy COR
speaker, becoming the first Gorran leader to obtain a senior leadership post in the central
government.
The latest KNA elections were held on September 21, 2013. About 1,130 candidates registered to
run for the 111 available seats, 11 of which are reserved for minority communities such as
Yazidis, Shabaks, Assyrians, and others. Gorran continued to increase its political strength,
winning 24 seats, second to the KDP’s 38 (which was up from 30 in 2010) and ahead of the PUK
that won only 18 seats (down from 29 in the 2010 election). In part because of Gorran’s increased
representation, the Kurds did not agree on a new government for the KRG region until June 2014.
Nechirvan Barzani remained KRG prime minister. Jalal Talabani’s son, Qubad, who headed the
KRG representative office in Washington, D.C., until 2012, became deputy prime minister.
Provincial elections in the KRG-controlled provinces were held concurrent with the Iraq-wide
parliamentary elections on April 30, 2014.
KRG-Baghdad Disputes
Even the common threat from the Islamic State has not prompted a permanent resolution of the
various disputes between the Kurds and the central government. The most emotional of these is
the Kurdish insistence that Tamim/Kirkuk Province (which includes oil-rich Kirkuk city) is
“Kurdish land” and must be formally affiliated to the KRG. Most of the oil in northern Iraq is in
Kirkuk, and legal KRG control over the province would give the KRG substantial economic
leverage. However, the Kirkuk dispute has been put aside, at least temporarily, by the Kurds’
seizure of Kirkuk in the face of the ISF collapse in the Islamic State offensive of June 2014.
Many experts assess that the Kurds will be hesitant to yield back their positions to the central
government if the government succeeds in defeating the Islamic State challenge.
Under the Iraqi constitution, there was to be a census and referendum on the affiliation of the
province by December 31, 2007 (Article 140), but the Kurds agreed to repeated delays in order to
avoid antagonizing Iraq’s Arabs. Nor has the national census that is pivotal to any such
referendum been conducted; it was scheduled for October 24, 2010, but then repeatedly
postponed by the broader political crises. On the other hand, a Property Claims Commission that
is adjudicating claims from the Saddam regime’s forced resettlement of Arabs into the KRG
region is still functioning.
KRG Oil Exports
The KRG and Baghdad have been at odds over the Kurds’ insistence on being able to export oil
that is discovered and extracted in the KRG region. Baghdad terms the KRG’s separate oil
exports and energy development deals with international firms “illegal,” insisting that all KRG oil
exports go through the national oil export pipeline grid and that revenues earned under that
arrangement go to the central government. Under an agreement forged shortly after the fall of
Saddam, a fixed 17% share of those revenues goes to the KRG. The Obama Administration has
generally sided with Baghdad’s position that all Iraqi energy projects and exports be implemented
through a unified central government.
In recent years, KRG oil exports through this system have been repeatedly suspended over KRG-
central government disputes on related issues, such as Baghdad’s arrears due to the international
firms operating Kurdish-controlled oil fields. In January 2014, the Iraqi government suspended
almost all of its payments to the KRG of about $1 billion per month on the grounds that the KRG
was not contributing oil revenue to the national treasury. In what it described as an effort to
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compensate for that loss of revenue, the KRG began exporting oil through a newly constructed
pipeline to Turkey that bypasses the Iraqi national grid. The pipeline is capable of carrying
300,000 barrels per day of oil.30
The need to cooperate against the Islamic State organization paved the way for an interim
resolution of the dispute. On December 2, 2014, the KRG and Baghdad signed a deal under
which the KRG would provide to SOMO 550,000 barrels per day of oil (300,000 from the Kirkuk
fields now controlled by the KRG and 250,000 barrels from fields in the KRG itself) in exchange
for a restoration of the 17% share of national revenues (which will amount to about $600 million
per month at current oil prices.)31 In addition, Baghdad would provide the KRG with
approximately $100 million per month to pay for peshmerga salaries and weapons purchases and
facilitate the transfer of some U.S. weapons to the peshmerga.32 The agreement was incorporated
into the 2015 Iraqi budget, adopted by the COR on January 29, 2015. However, in mid-2015, the
Kurds complained that Baghdad was making only partial payments, and the pact broke down. The
KRG reportedly has been exporting its oil on its own, including some from Kirkuk fields, and
without involvement of government institutions, and it has been directly paying the international
firms involved in the exportation.
KRG fields, excluding those in Kirkuk, have the potential to export 500,000 barrels per day and
are expected to eventually be able to increase exports to 1 million barrels per day.33 It appears that
the KRG would be able to separately export any amounts over the 250,000 barrels per day that
the December deal requires the KRG to transfer to Baghdad’s control. Left unresolved was the
disagreement over separate foreign firm investment deals with the KRG. Baghdad has sought to
deny energy deals with the central government to any company that signs a separate development
deal with the KRG. This dispute has affected such firms as Exxon-Mobil and Total SA of France.
Tier Three Designations of the KDP and PUK
In 2001, U.S. immigration officials placed the KDP and PUK in a Tier Three category that makes
it difficult for members of the parties to obtain visas to enter the United States. The categorization
was based on a determination that the two parties are “groups of concern”—meaning some of
their members committed acts of political violence (to try to overthrow Saddam). A provision of
the FY2015 National Defense Authorization Act (P.L. 113-291) gave the Administration
authority, without judicial review, to revoke the Tier 3 designation. The designated was
subsequently removed.
Unrest and Insurgency since 2011
The fragile power-sharing arrangement among all Iraqi factions agreed in 2010 largely unraveled
in 2011-12, casting doubt on President Obama’s assertion, stated at the time of the final U.S.
withdrawal, that Iraq is now “sovereign, stable, and self-reliant.” On December 19, 2011, the day
after the final U.S. withdrawal (December 18, 2011)—and one week after Maliki met with

30 Much of the dispute centers on differing interpretations of a 1976 Iraq-Turkey treaty, which was extended in 2010,
and which defines “Iraq” (for purposes of oil issues) as the “Ministry of Oil of the Republic of Iraq.” See “Analysis:
Iraq-Turkey Treaty Restricts Kurdistan Exports.” Iraq Oil Report, April 18, 2014.
31 Ibid.
32 Tim Arango, “Iraq Government Reaches Accord with the Kurds.” New York Times, December 3, 2014.
33 Jane Arraf, “Iraq’s Unity Tested by Rising Tensions Over Oil-Rich Kurdish Region.” Christian Science Monitor,
May 4, 2012.
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President Obama in Washington, DC, on December 12, 2011—the government announced an
arrest warrant against Vice President Tariq al-Hashimi, a major Sunni figure, for allegedly
ordering his security staff to commit acts of assassination. He fled to the KRG region and then to
Turkey, where he remains. Maliki’s opponents also cited his retaining the three main security
portfolios for himself as an indication that he sought to concentrate power.34
In an effort to try to restore Sunni trust in the Maliki government, U.S. officials intervened with
various political factions and obtained Maliki’s agreement to release some Baathists prisoners and
to give provinces more autonomy (discussed above). The concessions prompted Sunni COR
members and ministers to resume their duties.35 In March 2012, all factions tentatively agreed to
hold a “national conference” to try to reach a durable political solution, but that agreement was
not finalized and no such conference was held. Maliki critics subsequently collected signatures
from 176 COR deputies to request a no-confidence vote against Maliki. Under Article 61 of the
constitution, signatures of 20% of the 325 COR deputies (65 signatures) are needed to trigger a
vote, but then President Talabani stated on June 10, 2012, that there were an insufficient number
of valid signatures to proceed.36
The disputes flared again after Talabani suffered a stroke on December 18, 2012, and left Iraq for
treatment in Germany. Two days later, Maliki moved against another Sunni leader, Finance
Minister Rafi al-Issawi, by arresting 10 of his bodyguards. Al Issawi took refuge in Anbar
Province with Sunni tribal leaders, sparking anti-Maliki demonstrations in the Sunni cities in
several provinces and in Sunni districts of Baghdad. Demonstrators demanded the release of
prisoners; repeal of antiterrorism laws under which many Sunnis are incarcerated; reform or end
to the de-Baathification laws; and improved government services in Sunni areas.37
Sunni Unrest Escalates in 2013
During January-March 2013, the use of small amounts of force against Sunni demonstrators
caused the unrest to worsen. On January 25, 2013, the ISF killed nine protesters, causing Sunni
demonstrators to set up protest camps in some cities. Extremist Sunni elements, including ISIL
(now called the Islamic State), stepped up attacks on the ISF. On April 23, 2013, three days after
the first group of provinces voted in provincial elections, the ISF stormed a Sunni protest camp in
the town of Hawijah and killed about 40 civilians. In the following days, many Sunni
demonstrators and tribal leaders took up arms, and some gunmen took over government buildings
in the town of Suleiman Pak. Maliki attempted with some temporary success to calm the unrest
through conciliation, including amending (in June 2013) the 2008 provincial powers law (No. 21,
see above) to give the provinces substantially more authority and transferring province-based
operations of central government to the provincial governments.38 In July 2013, the Cabinet
approved reforms easing de-Baathification laws to allow former Baathists to serve in government.
April 2013 Provincial Elections Occur Amid the Tensions. The April 20, 2013 provincial elections
were affected by the growing unrest. The government postponed the elections in two Sunni
provinces, Anbar and Nineveh, until June 20, 2013, but the election in the remaining provinces

34 Sadun Dulaymi, a Sunni Arab, is acting Defense Minister; Falih al-Fayad, a Shiite, is acting Minister of State for
National Security; and Adnan al-Asadi, another Shiite, is acting Interior Minister.
35 Tim Arango. “Iraq’s Prime Minister Gains More Power After Political Crisis.” New York Times, February 28, 2012.
36 “Embattled Iraqi PM Holding On To Power for Now.” Associated Press, June 12, 2012.
37 Author conversations with Human Rights Watch researchers, March 2013.
38 Reidar Vissar. “Provincial Powers Revisions, Elections Results for Anbar and Nineveh: Is Iraq Headed for Complete
Disintegration?” June 27, 2013.
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went forward as planned. The COR’s law to govern the election for the 447 provincial council
seats (including those in Anbar and Nineveh that voted on June 20, 2013), passed in December
2012, provided for an open list vote. A total of 50 coalitions registered, including 261 political
entities as part of those coalitions or running separately, and comprising about 8,150 individual
candidates. With the April 20, 2013, vote being held mostly in Shiite areas, the election was
largely a test of Maliki’s popularity. Maliki’s State of Law coalition remained relatively intact,
including Fadilah (virtue) and the ISCI-offshoot the Badr Organization. It won 112 of the 447
seats up for election, a decrease from 2009. ISCI registered its own Citizen Coalition, which won
75 seats. Sadr registered a separate Coalition of Liberals and it won 59 seats.
Among the mostly Sunni groupings, Allawi’s Iraqiyya and 18 smaller entities ran as the Iraqi
National United Coalition. A separate United Coalition consisted of supporters of the Nujaifi
brothers (then COR speaker Osama and Nineveh governor Atheel), Vice President Tariq al-
Hashimi, and Rafi al-Issawi. A third Sunni coalition was loyal to Saleh al-Mutlaq. The two main
Kurdish parties ran under the Co-Existence and Fraternity Alliance. The June 20, 2013, election
in Anbar and Nineveh was primarily a contest among these blocs. In Anbar, the Nujaifis won a
slight plurality, but in Nineveh, where the Nujaifis previously held an outright majority of
provincial council seats (19 or 37), Kurds won 11 out of the province’s 39 seats and the Nujaifis
came in second with eight seats. However, Atheel Nujaifi was selected to another term as
Nineveh governor. The results suggested that Sunnis want to avoid a return to sectarian conflict.39
ISIL Begins to Capture Cities in Anbar in Late 2013
Unrest in Sunni areas escalated sharply at the end of 2013, after yet another arrest order by Maliki
against a prominent Sunni leader—parliamentarian Ahmad al-Alwani. The order, which followed
an ISIL attack that killed 17 ISF officers, prompted a gun battle with security forces that killed
Alwani’s brother and several of his bodyguards. Maliki subsequently ordered security forces to
close down a protest tent camp in Ramadi (capital of Anbar Province), prompting ISIL to attack
and take over Ramadi, Fallujah, and some smaller Anbar cities. ISIL fighters were joined by some
Sunni protesters, defectors from the ISF, and some Sons of Iraq and other tribal fighters.
Partly at the urging of U.S. officials, Maliki opted primarily to arm and fund loyal Sunni tribal
leaders and Sons of Iraq fighters to help them expel the ISIL fighters. By early January 2014,
these loyalists had helped the government regain most of Ramadi, but Fallujah remained in
insurgent hands. In April 2014, ISIL-led insurgents also established a presence in Abu Ghraib,
only about 10 miles from Baghdad, prompting the government to close the prison. Some ISF
officers told journalists that the ISF effort to recapture Fallujah and other opposition-controlled
areas suffered from disorganization and ineffectiveness.40
Effect of the Islamic State Challenge on Stability
At the time of the April 30, 2014, national (COR) elections, the ISIL-led insurrection appeared
contained in Anbar Province. But, that assessment was upended on June 10, 2014, when Islamic
State fighters—apparently assisted by large numbers of its fighters moving into Iraq from the
Syria theater—captured the large city of Mosul amid mass surrenders and desertions by the ISF.
The group later that month formally changed its name to “The Islamic State.” Apparently

39 Kirk Sowell. “Sunni Voters and Iraq’s Provincial Elections.” July 12, 2013.
40 Loveday Morris. “Iraqi Army Struggles in Battles Against Islamist Fighters in Anbar Province.” Washington Post,
February 27, 2014.
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supported by many Iraqi Sunni residents, Islamic State-led fighters subsequently advanced down
the Tigris River valley as far as Tikrit as well as east into Diyala Province. IS-led forces also
expanded previous gains in Anbar Province and moved to within striking distance of Baghdad.
The offensive also threatened KRG-controlled territory when Islamic State forces advanced to
within 30 miles of the KRG capital of Irbil, causing substantial panic among Iraq’s Kurds. The
relatively lightly armed Kurdish forces withdrew under pressure from numerous towns inhabited
mostly by Christians and other Iraqi minorities, particularly the Yazidis—a Kurdish-speaking
people who practice a mix of ancient religions, including Zorastrianism, which held sway in Iran
before the advent of Islam.41
In response, the PMF and established Shiite militias mobilized and enabled the ISF to regroup to
some extent. These developments, coupled with the fact that Islamic State fighters faced
resistance from any location not dominated by Sunni inhabitants, appeared to lessen the threat to
Baghdad itself. The defense of Baghdad and of Irbil was aided by U.S. advisers (discussed
below), U.S.-led airstrikes, and by Iran’s sending of military equipment as well as IRGC-QF
advisers into Iraq.
Government Formation Process amid Security Collapse
U.S. officials considered the outcome of the April 30, 2014, national elections as crucial to
reversing Islamic State gains by giving Sunni voters an opportunity to signal a rejection of Sunni
extremist violence. An election law to regulate the vote, passed on November 4, 2013, expanded
the COR to 328 seats (from 325). A total of 39 coalitions, comprising 275 political entities
(parties), registered. The campaign period nationwide began on April 1. Turnout on election day
was about 62%, about the same level as in the 2010 COR elections, and violence was
unexpectedly minimal. Elections for 89 total seats on the provincial councils in the three KRG
provinces were held simultaneously.
Maliki appeared positioned to secure a third term because his State of Law bloc had remained
relatively intact, whereas rival blocs had fractured. On June 17, 2014, the Independent Higher
Election Commission (IHEC) announced certified election results showing Maliki’s State of Law
winning 92 seats—three more than it won in 2010 and far more than those won by ISCI (29) or
the Sadrists (32). Major Sunni slates won a combined 53 seats—far fewer than the 91 seats they
won in 2010 as part of the Iraqiyya bloc.42 The Kurdish slates collectively won about 62 seats.
Maliki’s individual candidate vote reportedly was exceptionally strong, most notably in Baghdad
Province, which sends 69 deputies to the COR—results that had appeared to put Maliki in a
commanding position to retain his post.
Maliki’s route to a third term was upended by the IS offensive, which U.S. officials publicly
blamed on Maliki’s efforts to marginalize Sunni leaders and citizens (see above). Grand Ayatollah
Ali al-Sistani appeared to undermine Maliki by calling for an inclusive government that “avoids
mistakes of the past.” The factions ultimately agreed to start filling some key positions before
reaching consensus on a Prime Minister. The process unfolded as follows:
 On July 15, the COR named Salim al-Jabburi, a moderate Sunni Islamist (IIP), as
speaker. The two deputy speakers selected were Aram al-Sheikh Mohammad of
Gorran (Kurdish faction discussed above) and Haydar al-Abbadi of Maliki’s

41 Ishaan Tharoor. “Who Are the Yazidis?” Washington Post, August 7, 2014.
42 “Iraq: PM’s Group Is Biggest Election Winner.” Associated Press, May 19, 2014.
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Da’wa Party. Jabburi, who is about 45 years old, was a former law professor at
the University of Mesopotamia. He visited the United States in June 2015.
 On July 24, the COR selected a senior PUK leader, Fouad Masoum, as Iraq’s
President. No deputy presidential slots were selected. Masoum is about 76 years
old and helped draft Iraq’s constitution. He is a close ally of Jalal Talabani.
 On August 11, Masoum tapped deputy COR speaker Haydar Al Abbadi as leader
of the “largest bloc” in the COR as Prime Minister-designate, giving him a 30-
day period (until September 10) to achieve COR confirmation of a government.
Abbadi’s designation came after several senior figures in the State of Law bloc
abandoned Maliki—apparently bowing to pressure from the United States, Iran,
Iraq’s Sunnis and Kurds, and others. Maliki initially called the designation
“illegal” on the grounds that Masoum was required to tap him first as Prime
Minister-designate as leader of the largest bloc elected, but U.S. officials and
Iranian officials welcomed the Abbadi designation and Maliki’s support
collapsed.
The Cabinet. The Abbadi cabinet, which was confirmed on September 8, appeared to satisfy U.S.
and Iraqi demands for inclusiveness. Factional disputes caused Abbadi to avoid naming choices
for the key security posts of Defense and Interior ministers, and agreement on the two posts was
not achieved until October 23, when the COR confirmed Mohammad Salem al-Ghabban as
Interior Minister and Khalid al-Ubaydi as Defense Minister. The selection of Ghabban drew
criticism from many Sunni figures because he is a leader of the Badr Organization (see above).
Ubaydi, a Sunni, was an aircraft engineer during the rule of Saddam Hussein, and became a
university professor after Saddam’s downfall.
A major feature of the Abbadi government is that incorporated many senior faction leaders,
although some posts lack significant authority. At the same time, it gave enhanced security details
and prestige and influence to some figures that might represent challenges to Abbadi’s authority,
particularly Maliki.
 Maliki, Iyad al-Allawi, and Osama al-Nujaifi, all major faction leaders, became
Vice Presidents—a position that lacks authority but ensures that their views are
heard in government deliberations. Maliki reportedly has used his vice
presidential post to exert authority independently, in part by holding meetings of
the State of Law bloc and advertising himself as commander of the PMF.
 Ex-Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari, a KDP leader whom Maliki ousted in mid-
2014 over the KRG-Baghdad rift, became deputy prime minister and Finance
Minister. The two other deputy prime ministers are Saleh al-Mutlaq (Sunni Arab,
discussed above) and Baha al-Araji, who heads the Sadrist bloc in the COR.
 Ibrahim al-Jafari, who served as transitional Prime Minister in 2005 and part of
2006, is Foreign Minister. A senior leader of ISCI, Adel Abdul Mahdi, is Minister
of Oil. Hussein Shahristani, a senior member of Maliki’s State of Law bloc, is
Minister of Higher Education.

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Prime Minister
Haydar al-Abbadi

Abbadi is about 62 years old and holds a doctorate in engineering from the University of Manchester. He is
from a traditional elite family. He is fluent in English language and often speaks in English in press
conferences in Western countries.
He is a longtime Da’wa Party member but his exile during the Saddam Hussein regime was spent mostly in
London, and not in Iran or Syria. During his time as a Da’wa underground activist, he assisted the party by
writing tracts and promoting its message, and he apparently was not involved in planning or executing any
of the attacks carried out by the Da’wa Party in Iraq or Kuwait during the 1980s.[1] His familiarity with
Western culture and his lack of ties to senior Iranian leaders apparently contributed to Iran’s initial
reluctance to support him for the prime ministership. However, Abbadi reportedly attracted strong
support from Ayatol ah Ali al-Sistani and within Da’wa ranks, and Iran acquiesced to his selection.
Photograph from Wikipedia















[1] Adam Taylor. “Meet Haider al-Abbadi, the Man Named Iraq’s New Prime Minister.” Washingtonpost.com, August
11, 2014.
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Table 2. Major Coalitions in April 30, 2014, COR Elections
Coalition
Leaders and Components
Seats Won
State of Law (277)
Maliki and Da’wa Party; deputy P.M.
92-95
Shahristani; Badr Organization
Muwatin (Citizens Coalition) (273)
ISCI list. Includes former Interior
29
Minister Bayan Jabr Solagh; Ahmad
Chalabi; many Basra politicians
Al Ahrar (Liberals) (214)
Sadrists. Allied with ISCI in 2010 but
32
separate in 2014.
Wataniya (Nationalists) (239)
Iyad al-Allawi (ran in Baghdad),
21
Includes Allawi fol owers from
former Iraqiyya bloc
Mutahiddun (United Ones) (259)
COR Speaker Nujaifi (ran in
23
Nineveh). No candidates in Shi te-
dominated provinces. Was part of
Allawi Iraqiyya bloc in 2010.
Arabiyya (Arabs) (255)
Deputy P.M. Saleh al-Mutlaq (ran in
9
Baghdad) Also limited to mostly
Sunni provinces. Was part of Iraqiyya
bloc in 2010.
Kurdish parties
KDP, PUK, and Gorran ran
62 (combined)
separately in most constituencies.
Fadilah (219)
Shi te faction, was allied with ISCI in
Not available
2010 election but ran separately in
2014.
Da’wa (Jaafari) (205)
Da’wa faction of former P.M. Ibrahim
Not available
al-Jafari (who ran in Karbala). Was
allied with ISCI in 2010.
Source: Reidar Vissar, “Iraq and Gulf Analysis.”
Abbadi’s Governing Style and Policies
U.S. officials say that Abbadi is attempting to heal the underlying rifts in Iraqi society but that his
efforts are often thwarted by hardliners on all sides, by the state of conflict in Iraq, and by vested
interests within the political system. President Obama praised Abbadi in the course of their
bilateral meeting at the White House on April 14, 2015, saying
And in a significant change from some past practices, I think both Sunni leaders and
Kurdish leaders feel that they are heard in the halls of power, that they are participating in
governance in Baghdad ... Prime Minister Abbadi has kept true to his commitments to
reach out to them and to respond to their concerns and to make sure that power is not
solely concentrated within Baghdad.... 43
Since taking office, Abbadi has sought to reverse some of the objectionable policies of Maliki, for
example by abolishing the “Office of the Commander-in-Chief.” Abbadi has also sought to
publicly disclose significant instances of corruption; he announced in November 2014 that 50,000
ISF personnel on the payrolls were not actually performing military service. In February 2015,

43 White House. “President Obama Holds a Media Availability with Iraqi Prime Minister Haider Al-Abbadi. April 14,
2015.
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the Cabinet approved an amendment to the “de-Baathification” laws (see above) to further re-
integrate former members of Saddam’s Baath Party into the political process and presumably
reduce Sunni resentment of the government.
Abbadi has promoted formation of a “National Guard” force based on locally recruited fighters,
reporting to provincial governments, to protect their home provinces from the Islamic State. The
program appears mostly intended to entice Iraq’s Sunnis to resist Islamic State influence—an
apparent attempt to revive the concept of the earlier U.S.-led “Awakening”/Sons of Iraq program.
The program is planned to also apply to Shiite militias who want to secure Shiite areas.44 The
initiative received Cabinet approval in February 2015 but has remained stalled in the COR, where
the dominant Shiite factions apparently do not want to arm Sunni fighters extensively.
Continued Sunni mistrust of Baghdad appears to have hindered any broad Sunni shift to
cooperate with the government against the Islamic State. Abbadi’s visits to Iran (October 2014
and June 2015) continue to fuel Sunni suspicions that Abbadi is susceptible to arguments from
some Iranian leaders not to compromise with Sunni factions. The Iraqi decision in late March
2015 to move forward with an attempt to take back the city of Tikrit with Shiite militia and
Iranian advisory help—rather than the assistance of the U.S.-led coalition—caused many experts
to assess that Abbadi remains dependent politically and militarily on the Shiite militias. Abbadi
addressed this perception in an April 3, 2015, interview in the German newspaper Spiegel by
indicating that “[the militias] are very powerful because they are ideologically motivated.
Honestly, it would be a challenge to deal with this.45
Abbadi’s Shiite opponents benefitted from the inability of the U.S.-led coalition to prevent the
Islamic State’s takeover of Ramadi in May 2015. The Shiite militias - particularly those backed
by the IRGC-QF and its commander Qasem Soleimani - have become politically influential and
assertive to the point where some experts assess the militias as seeking to undermine Abbadi’s
authority. Former Prime Minister Maliki continues to seek to exert his influence by holding
meetings of the State of Law parliamentary bloc and by cultivating an image of personal affinity
for and control over the PMF. Compounding Abbadi’s political problems has been a move by
activists in Basra Province, through which the majority of Iraq’s oil is exported, to revive a 2008
effort to convert the province into an autonomous region similar to the KRG. Those supporting
forming a region assert that the province does not receive a fair share of national revenues.
Popular Unrest Compels Reform Measures
In the summer of 2015, the strains of confronting the Islamic State challenge manifested as
popular unrest in some government controlled areas. Even though observers report that the
Islamic State threat to Baghdad had receded substantially and some of the security measures in
the city had been eased, large demonstrations took place in Baghdad and elsewhere asserted that
the government had failed to reliably deliver key services, particularly electricity that was crucial
to coping with a particularly hot summer. In response, Abbadi proposed a reform package to
address public grievances but also potentially sideline key rivals such as Maliki. The most
controversial part of the reforms was the abolition of the three vice presidential posts, which
would remove Maliki (and the other Vice Presidents) from formal positions and reduce their
security protections and legal immunities. The reform package had the support of Grand

44 Loveday Morris. “Iraq’s Plans for Force to Fight Islamic State Meet Distrust.” Washington Post, September 14,
2014.
45 Susanne Koelbl, “Interview with Iraqi Prime Minister Al-Abbadi: ‘The Liberation of Tikrit Is Very Encouraging,’”
Spiegel (Hamburg), April 3, 2015.
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Ayatollah Sistani and apparently the public as well, and the COR generally endorsed the reforms
in August 2015. U.S. officials assert that Abbadi’s reform package reflects Abbadi’s stated goals
of creating a more effective, accountable Iraqi government.46
However, support for the reforms have been eroded by vested interests and others affected.
Ayatollah Sistani came out in opposition to Abbadi’s October 2015 pay cut of 20% for
government employees. The three vice presidents have refused to vacate their positions, asserting
Abbadi had acted outside the constitution. On November 2, 2015, essentially shut down the
reform program by voting to require that any anti-corruption or governmental reorganization
measures, such as the proposal to eliminate redundant ministerial post (or reduce the number of
deputy prime ministers) require COR approval. At the same time, experts have taken note of the
increasing intrusiveness of the normally reserved Ayatollah Sistani into the political process, in
some cases comparing him to the clerical supervisory role pioneered by the late Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini, leader of Iran’s Islamic revolution.47
U.S. Policy Response to the Islamic State48
The gains by the Islamic State in Iraq in mid-2014 posed a threat to the territorial and political
integrity of Iraq, and caused the Obama Administration to resume an active military role in Iraq.
President Obama stated on September 10, 2014 that U.S. policy is “to degrade and ultimately
defeat the Islamic State.” That statement represented an escalation of the U.S. response well
beyond the responses undertaken as the ISIL challenge increased in late 2013. From late 2013
until the ISIL capture of Mosul in June 2014, the United States took several actions:
Delivered and sold additional weaponry. The Defense Department supplied Iraq
with several hundred HELLFIRE air-to-surface missiles for use against ISIL
training camps.49 The Administration also obtained the concurrence of Congress
to release for sale and lease of 30 Apache attack helicopters (discussed above).50
Additional Training. The Department of Defense increased bilateral and regional
training opportunities for Iraqi counterterrorism (CTS) units to help burnish ISF
counter-insurgency skills. By June 2014, U.S. Special Operations Forces had
conducted two sessions of training for Iraqi CT forces in Jordan.51
After the Islamic State’s capture of Mosul in June 2014, the U.S. response broadened
significantly into a multifaceted strategy to try to degrade and ultimately defeat the Islamic State.
The military component of the strategy, conducted in partnership with several dozen other
countries playing various roles, is termed “Operation Inherent Resolve.”
Advice and Training. The United States has deployed about 3,500 U.S. military
personnel to train and advise the ISF, peshmerga forces, and Sunni tribal fighters.

46 “Iraqi leader wins backing for reforms but walks a dangerous line,” Washington Post, August 11, 2015.
47 Matt Bradley and Safa Majeed. “Iraq Parliament Curbs Premier’s Powers.” Wall Street Journal, November 2, 2015.
48 For a comprehensive analysis of U.S. policy against the Islamic State in both Iraq and Syria, see CRS Report
R43612, The "Islamic State" Crisis and U.S. Policy, by Christopher M. Blanchard et al.
49 http://www.defensenews.com/article/20140106/DEFREG02/301060019/US-Speeds-Up-Drone-Missile-Deliveries-
Aid-Iraq.
50 Josh Rogin. “Congress to Iraq’s Maliki: No Arms for a Civil War.” Daily Beast, January 8, 2014.
51 Missy Ryan. “U.S. Renews Training of Elite Forces in Jordan.” Reuters, May 7, 2014.
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Air Strikes. Since August 8, 2014, U.S. military action in Iraq has included
airstrikes on Islamic State positions and infrastructure.
Weapons Resupply. Since mid-2014, the United States has delivered to Iraq
significant quantities of additional weapons, HELLFIRE missiles and the F-16s
previously purchased. In addition to support for the ISF, the Administration has
supplied weaponry and ammunition to the peshmerga of the KRG, via the Iraqi
government. The Administration has been unable to date to provide U.S.
weapons directly to the KRG or Sunni tribal fighters. Under the Arms Export
Control Act, all U.S. foreign military sales (FMS) go to central governments, not
sub-national forces.
Military Aid. The Administration is providing substantial amounts of military
aid to help the Iraqi government counter the Islamic State threat. For FY2015,
over $1.6 billion in “Overseas Contingency Operation” funding for an “Iraq Train
and Equip Fund” has been provided. For FY2016, the Administration requested
$715 million for those purposes, supplemented by a request for $250 million in
Foreign Military Financing (FMF) for Iraq.
Results of Operation Inherent Resolve in Iraq and Way Forward
Assessments differ over whether, and if so, how steadily, Operation Inherent Resolve is
progressing toward the stated goals. Some observers have suggested ways to make the Operation
more effective, including:
Deploy Ground Combat Units. Some recommend that the need to defeat the Islamic State is
sufficiently critical to merit reintroduction of ground combat troops to Iraq. President Obama has
repeatedly ruled out the deployment of ground combat units, maintaining that U.S. troops will not
fix the underlying political problems that facilitated or caused the IS-led insurrection.
Move U.S. Advisers Closer to the Frontline. Some observers suggest that the mission would
benefit from deploying the U.S. advisers at or near the front lines in order to better guide Iraqi
forces. A related recommendation some military experts make is to position U.S. military
personnel as “forward air controllers” to be able to better target Islamic State forces.
Arm and Train Sunni Tribal Fighters. Some have suggested that the key to defeating the Islamic
State is to focus on recruiting, training, and deploying anti-Islamic State Sunni tribal fighters. The
Administration has adopted this option.
Support Shiite Militia Forces. Another option proposed by some and adopted, to some extent, by
the Administration, has been to provide air strike support to Shiite militia forces. The
Administration is providing air strike support to PMF who are commanded by the ISF, but not to
Shiite militias commanded or trained by Iran. Opponents of this option argued that doing so
would politically alienate Iraq’s Sunnis even further, hindering the overall effort of driving a
wedge between Iraq’s Sunni population and Islamic State forces.
Containment of the Islamic State. Some experts assert that the existing or likely level of U.S.
resources devoted to the anti-Islamic State mission in Iraq is unlikely to defeat the Islamic State,
given the dynamics in Iraq that are driving its successes. Some who agree with that assessment
argue that the U.S. goal should be adjusted to containing the Islamic State—preventing it from
expanding is areas of operation in Iraq. A component of a containment strategy would be to try to
prevent Islamic State fighters from transiting from the Iraq (or Syria) battlefields to Europe, the
United States, or elsewhere for the purpose of conducting terrorist attacks. The containment
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policy, according to advocates of this approach, might provide time for Iraqi politicians to take
the steps required to defeat the organization long term.52
Strategy Change: Support “Federalism” or “Soft-Partition” of Iraq. An option related to
“containment” would be to support a de facto partition, or “soft-partition” of Iraq by supporting
the concept of “federalism.” This option would envision accepting Iraq’s decentralization along
ethnic and sectarian lines, potentially including the formation of a legal Sunni autonomous
“region” similar to the KRG. A drawback to this option is that it might entail a de facto
acceptance of domination by the Islamic State in at least some Sunni-inhabited areas. Many
experts and U.S. officials might oppose this option as an abandonment of the goal of defeating the
Islamic State, and that the option is based on an uncertain hope that moderate Sunni forces living
under Islamic State control might be able to moderate the group’s ideology and goals over time.
Human Rights Issues
The State Department human rights report for 2014 largely repeated previous years’ criticisms of
Iraq’s human rights record, while also analyzing gross violations of human rights committed in
Iraq by the Islamic State. The report cites a wide range of human rights problems committed by
Iraqi government security and law enforcement personnel—as well as by KRG security
institutions—including unlawful killings; torture and other cruel punishments; poor conditions in
prison facilities; denial of fair public trials; arbitrary arrest; arbitrary interference with privacy
and home; limits on freedoms of speech, assembly, and association due to sectarianism and
extremist threats; lack of protection of stateless persons; wide scale governmental corruption;
human trafficking; and limited exercise of labor rights.53 Many of these same abuses and
deficiencies are alleged in reports by outside groups such as Human Rights Watch.
Additional human rights issues have arisen from the reemergence of the Shiite militias. Some of
these militias reportedly have executed Sunnis for alleged collaboration with the Islamic State.
The militias have also, in some cases, allegedly prevented Sunnis from returning to their homes in
towns recaptured from the Islamic State.
Trafficking in Persons
The State Department’s Trafficking in Persons report for 2015 again places Iraq in Tier 2, as did
the reports for 2013 and 2014.54 The Tier 2 placement is an upgrade from the Tier 2 Watch List
rating for Iraq for the four years prior to 2013, and was based on a U.S. assessment, repeated in
the report for 2015, that Iraq is making “significant efforts” to comply with the minimum
standards for the elimination of trafficking. The report for 2015 blames much of the human
trafficking that is taking place in Iraq on the Islamic State, which conducts such activities—
particularly the trafficking of women and girls for forced marriages, sexual slavery, and rape – in
areas of Iraq that are outside the control of the Iraqi government.
Media and Free Expression
While State Department and other reports attribute most of Iraq’s human rights difficulties to the
security situation and factional infighting, some curbs on free expression are independent of such

52 http://nationalinterest.org/feature/the-best-strategy-handle-isis-good-old-containment-11341
53 http://www.state.gov/documents/organization/236812.pdf
54 http://www.state.gov/documents/organization/243559.pdf
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factors. Human rights activists criticized a law, passed by the COR in August 2011, called the
Journalist Rights Law, that purported to protect journalists but left many of the provisions of
Saddam-era libel and defamation laws in place. State Department human rights reports have
noted continuing instances of harassment and intimidation of journalists who write about
corruption and the lack of government services, including raids on media offices. Much of the
private media that operate is controlled by individual factions or powerful personalities. There are
no overt government restrictions on access to the Internet.
In early 2013, the COR adopted an Information Crimes Law to regulate the use of information
networks, computers, and other electronic devices and systems. Human Rights Watch and other
groups criticized that law as “violat[ing] international standards protecting due process, freedom
of speech, and freedom of association,”55 and the COR revoked it February 2013.
Corruption
The State Department human rights report for 2014 repeated previous years’ reports that political
interference and other factors such as tribal and family relationships regularly thwart the efforts of
anti-corruption institutions, such as the Commission on Integrity (COI). The report says that
corruption among officials across the government is widespread. In addition to the COI,
(formerly called the Public Integrity Committee), which investigates allegations of governmental
corruption and refers cases to the courts for prosecution, there is a Supreme Board of Audits,
which monitors the use of government funds. The Central Bank’s Money Laundering Reporting
Office leads the government’s efforts to combat money laundering and terrorism financing. A
Joint Anti-Corruption Council, which reports to the Cabinet, is tasked with implementing the
government’s 2010-2014 Anti-Corruption Strategy. No new anti-corruption strategy was issued in
2014. The KRG has its own separate anti-corruption institutions, including an Office of
Governance and Integrity in the KRG Cabinet.
Religious Freedom/Situation of Religious Minorities
The Iraqi constitution provides for religious freedom, but heightened sectarian tensions produced
by the overall conflict with the Islamic State caused limitations in religious freedom and
substantial discrimination, according to the most recent State Department report on International
Religious Freedom.56 In addition, reflecting the conservative Islamic attitudes of many Iraqis,
Shiite and Sunni clerics seek to enforce aspects of Islamic law and customs, sometimes coming
into conflict with Iraq’s generally secular traditions as well as constitutional protections. In
February 2014, the Cabinet adopted a Shiite “personal status law” that would permit underage
marriages—reportedly an attempt by then Prime Minister Maliki to shore up electoral support
among Shiite Islamists.
A major concern is the safety and security of Iraq’s Christian and other religious minority
populations which are concentrated in northern Iraq as well as in Baghdad. These groups include
the Yazidis, which number about 500,000-700,000; the Shabaks, which number about 200,000-
500,000 and most of whom are Shiites; the Sabeans, who number about 4,000; the Baha’i’s that
number about 2,000; and the Kakai’s of Kirkuk, which number about 24,000. Conditions for these
communities have deteriorated sharply since the Islamic State-led offensives that began in June
2014. Of the 325 seats in the Council of Representatives, the law reserves eight seats for members

55 Human Rights Watch. “Iraq’s Information Crimes Law: Badly Written Provisions and Draconian Punishments
Violate due Process and Free Speech.” July 12, 2012.
56 http://www.state.gov/j/drl/rls/irf/religiousfreedom/index.htm#wrapper
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of minority groups: five for Christian candidates from Baghdad, Ninewa, Kirkuk, Erbil, and
Dahuk; one Yezidi; one Sabean-Mandaean; and one Shabak. See also CRS Insight IN10111,
Conflict in Syria and Iraq: Implications for Religious Minorities, by Christopher M. Blanchard.
Christians. Even before the 2014 Islamic State-led offensives, recent estimates indicate that the
Christian population of Iraq had been reduced to 400,000-850,000, from an estimated 1 million-
1.5 million during Saddam’s time. About 10,000 Christians in northern Iraq, fearing bombings
and intimidation, fled the areas near Kirkuk during October-December 2009. After the Islamic
State capture of Mosul in June 2014, the city’s remaining Christians were expelled and some of
their churches and other symbolic locations destroyed. There is one Christian in the central
government cabinet.
Prior to the Islamic State capture of much of Nineveh Province, Iraqi Assyrian Christian groups
advocated a Nineveh Plains Province Solution, in which the Nineveh Plains would be turned into
a self-administering region, possibly its own province. Supporters of the idea claimed such a zone
would pose no threat to the integrity of Iraq, but others say the plan’s inclusion of a separate
Christian security force could set the scene for violence and confrontation. The Iraqi government
adopted a form of the plan in its January 2014 announcement that the Cabinet had decided to
convert the Nineveh Plains into a new province. The Islamic State’s takeover of much of the
north has probably mooted this concept. One prominent Iraqi human rights NGO, the Hammurabi
Organization, is largely run by Iraqi Assyrians.
U.S. Policy and Funding and Issues. Even at the height of the U.S. military presence in Iraq, U.S.
forces did not specifically protect Christian sites at all times, partly because Christian leaders do
not want to appear closely allied with the United States. The Deputy Assistant Secretary of State
for Iraq in the Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs served as the State Department’s special
coordinator for Iraq’s religious and ethnic minority groups.
Appropriations for FY2008 and FY2009 each earmarked $10 million in ESF to assist the Nineveh
Plain Christians. The Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2010 (P.L. 111-117) made a similar
provision for FY2010, although focused on Middle East minorities generally and without a
specific dollar figure mandated for Iraqi Christians. The State Department International Religious
Freedom report for 2012 said that the United States funded more than $73 million for projects to
support minority communities in Iraq from 2003 up to that time. Subsequent reports did not
update that figure.
Women’s Rights
Iraq has a tradition of secularism and liberalism, and women’s rights issues have not been as large
a concern for international observers and rights groups as they have in Afghanistan or the Persian
Gulf states, for example. Women serve at many levels of government, as discussed above, and are
well integrated into the work force in all types of jobs and professions. By tradition, many Iraqi
women wear traditional coverings but many adopt Western dress. In October 2011, the COR
passed legislation to lift Iraq’s reservation to Article 9 of the Convention on the Elimination of All
Forms of Discrimination Against Women.
Economic Development and the Energy Sector
Iraq’s energy sector has enabled the economy to continue to develop despite the setbacks on
governance and human rights. The growth of oil exports has fueled rapid expansion of the
economy. Iraqi officials estimated that growth averaged 5% growth per year during 2004-2014.
GDP now exceeds $150 billion per year. However, violence slowed Iraq’s economy dramatically
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in 2014 to zero growth or perhaps even slight contraction. Iraq implemented a $150 billion budget
for 2014, but, addressing falling oil prices, on January 29, 2015, the COR adopted a much smaller
$105 billion budget for 2015.
During Prime Minister Abbadi’s visit to Washington, DC in mid-April, Iraqi officials estimated
that they face a $22 billion budget deficit for 2015 and the visit includes talks with the IMF and
major multi-national banks to discuss possible bond issues and loans. In his meeting with Abbadi
on April 14, 2015, President Obama did not announce any additional major economic aid to Iraq
but he did announce a grant of $200 million in humanitarian aid to help the Iraqi government
cope with the financial burden of assisting persons displaced by the Islamic State’s offensives.
Iraq also opened discussions about $500 million in short-term funding from the Export-Import
Bank to purchase Boeing commercial aircraft for a reviving Iraqi Airways.
Iraq’s economy remains dependent on the energy sector, which provides 90% of Iraq’s budget.
Iraq possesses a proven 143 billion barrels of oil. After long remaining below the levels achieved
prior to the ouster of Saddam Hussein, Iraq’s oil exports recovered to Saddam-era levels of about
2.1 million barrels per day by March 2012. Production reached the milestone 3 million barrels per
day mark in February 2012, and expanded further to about 3.6 million barrels per day as of mid-
2014. The Islamic State offensive interrupted export of Iraqi oil through the northern route (25%
of total exports), contributing to the KRG-Baghdad oil sales deal for 2015, discussed above.
Exports from the south of the country (75% of Iraq’s totals) have been unaffected.
Iraqi leaders say they plan to increase production to over 10 million barrels per day by 2017. The
International Energy Agency estimates more modest but still significant gains: it sees Iraq
reaching 6 mbd of production by 2020 if it attracts $25 billion in investment per year, and
potentially 8 mbd by 2035. Helping Iraqi production grow is the involvement of foreign firms,
including BP, Exxon-Mobil, Occidental, and Chinese firms. China now buys about half of Iraq’s
oil exports.
Adopting national oil laws has been considered key to developing and establishing rule of law
and transparency in a key sector. Substantial progress appeared near in August 2011 when both
the COR and the Cabinet drafted the oil laws long in the works to rationalize the energy sector
and clarify the rules for foreign investors. However, there were differences in their individual
versions: the version drafted by the Oil and Natural Resources Committee was presented to the l
COR in August 2011. The Cabinet adopted its separate version on August 28, 2011, but the KRG
opposed it as favoring too much “centralization” (i.e., Baghdad control) in the energy sector. A
2012 KRG-Baghdad agreement on KRG oil exports included a provision to set up a six-member
committee to review the different versions of the oil laws under consideration and decide which
version to submit to the COR for formal consideration. There has been little subsequent
movement on this issue. The KRG-Baghdad interim deal on oil sales—coupled with an improved
working relationship between the KRG and the Abbadi government as compared to the Maliki
government—increased the potential for agreement on the issue, but the breakdown of the oil
deal in 2015 has stalled progress again.
Regional Relationships
Iraq’s neighbors have significant interest in Iraq’s stability and in defeating the Islamic State, but
Sunni-run governments in the region have been hesitant to work closely with the Shiite-
dominated government in Baghdad. Iraq’s instability has interrupted its efforts to reintegrate into
the Arab fold after more than 20 years of ostracism following Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait in August
1990. That reintegration took a large step forward with the holding of an Arab League summit in
Baghdad during March 27-29, 2012, even though only nine heads of state out of the 22 Arab
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League members attended. Only one of them was a Persian Gulf state leader (Amir Sabah al-
Ahmad Al Sabah of Kuwait). On May 23-24, 2012, Iraq hosted nuclear talks between Iran and six
negotiating powers. Iraq has also begun to assist other Arab states, for example by assisting post-
Qadhafi authorities in Libya destroy chemical weapons stockpiles from the Qadhafi regime.
Iran
Iran is the chief regional supporter and ally of the Baghdad government and its influence in Iraq
has increased steadily since the fall of Saddam Hussein. Iran’s leverage over Baghdad has
increased further since mid-2014 as a result of Tehran’s military assistance to the Iraqi
government against the Islamic State. Iran has reportedly sent as many as 1,000 advisers from the
IRGC-QF to help the ISF; in part the role of the IRGC-QF has been to reactivate, arm, and train
the established Iraqi Shiite militia forces discussed above.
Iran also has provided to Baghdad substantial quantities of military equipment including a
reported five to seven Su-25 combat aircraft; flown drone surveillance flights over Iraq; and
conducted at least one airstrike (December 2014) directly against Islamic State forces near Iran’s
border. The aircraft Iran has provided to Iraq might have been from among 100+ combat aircraft
that Iraq flew to Iran at the beginning of the 1991 war against the United States and which Iran
integrated into its own air force.57 (Iran had not previously returned the jets, asserting that they
represented “reparations” for Saddam’s invasion of Iran in 1980.) KRG leaders have also praised
Tehran for delivering military equipment to the peshmerga almost immediately after the Islamic
State’s major offensive in northern Iraq began in mid-2014.
Iran’s military assistance to Iraq furthers the overall U.S. objective in Iraq of countering the
Islamic State, but senior U.S. officials say there is no formal U.S. coordination with Iran in Iraq.
By many accounts, Iran cooperated with U.S. efforts to achieve a replacement for Maliki as Prime
Minister. And, as of mid-2015, U.S. officials have said that the United States is supporting anti-
Islamic State operations by the Shiite PMF if they are commanded by the ISF, but not those
commanded by or trained by Iran. This shift represented an apparent U.S. calculation that Iraqi
forces would not be successful against the Islamic State without at least some help from Shiite
militia forces.
Iran has also apparently viewed Iraq as an avenue for reducing the effects of international
sanctions. In July 2012, the Treasury Department imposed sanctions on the Elaf Islamic Bank of
Iraq for allegedly conducting financial transactions with the Iranian banking system in violation
of the Comprehensive Iran Sanctions, Accountability, and Divestment Act of 2010 (CISADA,
P.L. 111-195). Those sanctions were lifted in May 2013 when Elaf reduced its involvement in
Iran’s financial sector.
The Iraqi government treatment of the population of Camp Liberty, in which over 2,700 Iranian
oppositionists (People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran, PMOI) remain, is another indicator of
the government’s close ties to Iran. The residents of the camps accuse the Iraqi government and
some Shiite militias of periodic attacks on the camp. As noted above, the Mukhtar Army claimed
responsibility for the late October 2015 attack on Camp Liberty, which killed 23 PMOI residents.
This issue is discussed in substantial detail in CRS Report RL32048, Iran, Gulf Security, and U.S.
Policy
, by Kenneth Katzman.
Iran has periodically acted against other Iranian opposition groups based in Iraq, including the
Free Life Party (PJAK) that consists of Iranian Kurds and is allied with the Kurdistan Workers’

57 Gareth Jennings. “Iraq Receives Additional Su-25 Jets, Purportedly from Iran.” Jane’s Defence Weekly, July 2, 2014.
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Party that opposes the government of Turkey. Iran has shelled purported camps of the group on
several occasions. Iran is also reportedly attempting to pressure the bases and offices in Iraq of
such Iranian Kurdish parties as the Kurdistan Democratic Party of Iran (KDP-I) and Komaleh.
The close Iran-Iraq relationship today contrast sharply with the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq war, in
which an estimated 300,000 Iraqi military personnel (Shiite and Sunni) died. Still, Iraq’s Shiite
clerics resist Iranian interference and take pride in Najaf as a more prominent center of Shiite
theology than the Iranian holy city of Qom.
Syria
One of the major disagreements between the United States and the government of Iraq has been
on Syria. U.S. policy is to achieve the ouster of President Bashar Al Assad, whereas Iraq’s
government apparently sees Assad as an ally that is, like Iraq, governed by Shiite leaders.
(Assad’s Alawite community practices a religion that is an offshoot of Shiism.) Iraq has generally
refrained from criticizing Assad’s military tactics, and it abstained on an Arab League vote in
November 2011 to suspend Syria’s membership. However, perhaps to ensure Arab participation at
the March 2012 Arab League summit in Baghdad, Iraq voted for a January 22, 2012, Arab League
plan for a transition of power in Syria. As an indication of Iraq’s policy of simultaneously
engaging with the United States on the Syria issue, Iraqi officials have attended meetings of
countries that are seeking a political transition in Syria.
An issue that divided Iraq and the United States in 2012-2014 was Iraq’s reported permission for
Iranian arms supplies to overfly Iraq en route to Syria.58 Iraq searched a few of these flights,
particularly after specific high-level U.S. requests to do so, but routinely allowed the aircraft to
proceed after finding no arms aboard, sometimes because the Iranian aircraft had already dropped
off their cargo in Syria. Following a March 24, 2013 visit of Secretary of State Kerry to Baghdad,
the United States agreed to provide Iraq with information on the likely contents of the Iranian
flights, and the overflights decreased in frequency.
In August 2015, Iraq joined with Iran, Syria, and Russia to form an intelligence fusion cell to
cooperate against the Islamic State. The Administration interpreted that arrangement as intended
to assist Assad primarily and to provide Russia with inroads into anti-Islamic State activities in
Iraq. Administration officials, including Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Joseph Dunford in
a visit to Iraq in October 2015 warned Iraq that allowing Russia a military role in Iraq would
jeopardize U.S. support.
As noted above, some Iraqi Shiite militiamen have gone to Syria to fight on behalf of the Assad
regime, although many returned to Iraq in 2014 to counter the Islamic State’s offensive. The KRG
has trained some Syrian Kurdish militia forces to secure an autonomous Kurdish area if Assad
loses control and sent about 200 peshmerga to assist Syrian Kurdish forces (YPG, a successor to
the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, PKK) in the successful defense of the town of Kobane in 2014-15.
Turkey
Turkey’s policy toward Iraq has historically focused almost exclusively on the Iraqi Kurdish
insistence on autonomy and possible push for independence. Turkey has always expressed
concern that Iraqi Kurdish independence could embolden Kurdish oppositionists in Turkey. The
anti-Turkey Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) has long maintained camps inside Iraq, along the

58 Kristina Wong, “Iraq Resists U.S. Prod, Lets Iran Fly Arms to Syria.” Washington Times, March 16, 2012.
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border with Turkey. During the 1990s and 2000s, and again in recent months, Turkey has
conducted periodic cross-border military operations against the group’s camps in Iraq. However,
the PKK issue has not prevented Turkey from building a pragmatic and positive relationship with
the KRG and becoming the largest outside investor in northern Iraq. Turkey did not openly
oppose the KRG’s seizure of Kirkuk in June 2014, even though the capture would help a KRG
independence drive.
Turkey’s positive relations with the KRG have complicated relations between Turkey and the
Iraqi government. On August 2, 2012, then Turkish Foreign Minister (now Prime Minister)
Ahmet Davotoglu visited the disputed city of Kirkuk, prompting Iraq’s Foreign Ministry to
criticize the visit as an inappropriate interference in Iraqi affairs. In an effort to improve relations
with Baghdad, Davotoglu in mid-November 2013 visited Najaf and Karbala—Iraqi cities holy to
Shiites—apparently to signal Turkish evenhandedness with regard to sectarian disputes in Iraq.
Still, Turkey’s permission as of mid-2015 for the KRG to sell oil from the KRG region without
coordinating the sales with Baghdad remains an irritant in Iraq-Turkey relations.
Gulf States
Most of the Sunni-led Persian Gulf states (Gulf Cooperation Council, GCC: Saudi Arabia,
Kuwait, UAE, Qatar, Bahrain, and Oman) have not fully accepted Iraq’s domination by Shiite
factions. Iraq- GCC relations worsened during 2012-2014 as the Maliki government marginalized
Iraq’s Sunni leaders. The GCC states have joined the U.S.-led coalition against the Islamic State,
but have to date limited their airstrikes to Syria, not Iraq, apparently not wanting to directly
support the Shiite-dominated government in Baghdad.
Saudi Arabia had been widely criticized by Iraqi leaders for delaying opening an embassy in
Baghdad, a move Saudi Arabia pledged in 2008. This issue faded somewhat after February 2012,
when Saudi Arabia announced that it had named its ambassador to Jordan, Fahd al-Zaid, to serve
as a nonresident ambassador to Iraq concurrently—although still not opening an embassy in
Baghdad. On September 15, 2014, Saudi Arabia announced that it would open an embassy in
Baghdad and, during the visit of Prime Minister Abbadi to Washington, DC in mid-April 2015,
Saudi Arabia named a resident Ambassador to Iraq. The appointment coincided with comments
by Abbadi during his U.S. visit that were critical of Saudi intervention against advancing Zaidi
Shiite Houthi rebels in Yemen. Using language similar to that used by Iran about the Saudi
intervention, Abbadi said “There is no logic to the [Saudi] operation [in Yemen] at all in the first
place.”59 The other Gulf countries have opened embassies and all except the UAE have appointed
full ambassadors to Iraq.
Iraq’s relationship with Kuwait is always fraught with sensitivity because of the legacy of the
1990 Iraqi invasion. However, the two countries have built a close relationship as Kuwait has
been the most accepting of Iraq’s government among the GCC states. Amir Sabah of Kuwait was
the only Gulf head of state to attend the March 27-29, 2012, Arab League summit in Baghdad; the
other Gulf states sent low-level delegations. These issues are discussed in detail in CRS Report
RS21513, Kuwait: Governance, Security, and U.S. Policy, by Kenneth Katzman.

59 Michael Gordon and Eric Schmitt. “Tensions Flare Between Allies in U.S. Coalition.” New York Times, April 16,
2015.
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Table 3. U.S. Assistance to Iraq Since FY2003
(appropriations/allocations in millions of dollars)
FY
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16

‘03

(req)
IRRF
2,475
18,389

10










ESF


— 1,535.4
1,677
429
541.5
382.5
325.7
250
72.3
72.3
22.5
72.5
Democracy



Fund




250
75





IFTA



(Treasury
Dept.
Asst.)



13.0
2.8






NADR


3.6

18.4
20.4
35.5
30.3
29.8
32
31.1
31.1
23.86

Refugee



Accounts
(MRA and
ERMA)
39.6
.1


78.3
278
260
316
280


IDA
22

7.1
.3
45
85
51
42
17





Other



USAID
Funds
470




23.8





INCLE



91.4
170
85
20
702
114.6
137
13.5
13.5
11
11
FMF









850
471.3
471.3
250
250
IMET

1.2


1.1

2
2
1.7
2
1.1
1.7
1.4
1.0
DOD—


ISFF Funds


5391
3007
5542
3000
1000
1000
1155

1618
715
DOD—



Iraq Army
51.2

210








DOD—




CERP

140
718
708
750
996
339
263
44.0

DOD—Oil




Repair
802









DOD—




Business
Support




50.0
50.0
74.0



Total
3,859 18548
6329
5365
8584
5042
2323
2738
1968
1519
589.4
590
1927
1050
Sources: State Department FY2015 budget documents, and CRS calculations. Figures include regular and
Overseas Contingency Operations (OCO) funding.
Notes: Table prepared by Curt Tarnoff, Specialist in Foreign Affairs, This table does not contain separate agency
operational costs. IMET=International Military Education and Training; IRRF=Iraq Relief and Reconstruction
Fund; INCLE=International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Fund; ISF=Iraq Security Force;
NADR=Nonproliferation, Anti-Terrorism, Demining and Related: ESF=Economic Support Fund;
IDA=International Disaster Assistance; FMF=Foreign Military Financing; ISF= Iraqi Security Forces. FY2015 and
2016 ISF funding are funds to equip and train the ISF, peshmerga, and Sunni tribal fighters.

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Author Contact Information

Kenneth Katzman
Carla E. Humud
Specialist in Middle Eastern Affairs
Analyst in Middle Eastern and African Affairs
kkatzman@crs.loc.gov, 7-7612
chumud@crs.loc.gov, 7-7314

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