Archive for the ‘Iraq’ Category

In Saudi diplomatic shift on Iraq, a hand to Sunnis … and Shiites – Yahoo News

With the so-called Islamic State on the brink of defeat in northern Iraq, the government in Baghdad is set to mark another victory: reconciliation with regional hegemon Saudi Arabia.

The oil-rich kingdom and dominant Sunni power has effectively been absent from Iraq since Riyadh cut ties with Baghdad after Saddam Husseins invasion of Kuwait in 1990.

Following the 2003 US invasion of Iraq, the Saudis distanced themselves from their neighbor further, writing Iraq off as a lost cause that was hopelessly under the influence of archrival Iran, and working to effectively freeze Baghdad out of Arab regional politics.

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Experts say a rapprochement now with Saudi Arabia could have a profound impact on Iraq by encouraging disenfranchised Sunnis to reconnect with the political process, curbing Irans broad influence over Iraqi affairs, and revitalizing hopes for a political settlement to end the sectarian violence that has wracked the country for more than a decade.

DIPLOMATIC TURNAROUND

The Saudi move isolating Iraq was a self-fulfilling prophecy, experts say. Without Saudi Arabia and its Sunni Gulf allies to keep Iraq in the Arab fold, the country and its leaders were forced to increase their reliance on Shiite Iran for security, stability, and economic sustainability.

Now, with the new leadership in Riyadh confronting both a decline in oil revenue and its own limitations in militarily checking Iranian influence in its disastrous war in neighboring Yemen, Saudi Arabia is adopting a new strategy to boost its influence in Iraq (and not just incidentally tweak Iran): diplomacy.

In a flurry of high-profile visits to Riyadh in late July, Saudi Arabia hosted a series of senior Iraqi officials, including the countrys interior and oil ministers. But the most groundbreaking, and surprising, visit was that of Moqtada al-Sadr, the firebrand Shiite cleric and fervent nationalist who holds deep sway among Iraqs Shiites.

The visits were followed by a host of goodwill gestures from Saudi Arabia this month, starting with the reopening of the Arar border crossing for the first time in 27 years. Saudi Prince Faisal bin Khalid bin Sultan, governor of the northern border region, was present to personally welcome and greet the first batch of Iraqi pilgrims to enter the crossing.

Critically, Saudi Arabia announced that it plans to open consulates in Najaf and Basra, major Shiite cities in Iraq with religious and economic importance, and build air and land links with the cities. According to Iraqi officials, the Saudi cabinet also announced the formation of a joint trade council and a committee to oversee a series of projects such as hospitals in Baghdad and Basra and the opening of free trade zones.

It is a deployment of soft power with a personal touch that Riyadh hopes will convince Baghdad, and Iraqis, that their years of isolation in the Arab world are over and that after a long absence, they can rely once again on Saudi Arabia.

POLITICAL SETTLEMENT

The immediate impact of Saudi Arabias reengagement with Iraq is the bolstering of the countrys beleaguered Sunni minority.

Since the 2003 invasion, many of Iraqs Sunni leaders have refused to come to the negotiating table to hash out a new political agreement with the countrys Shiites and Kurds.

Sunnis have long believed that Iraqs Shiites, thanks to their backing by Iran, hold the upper hand and can dictate their demands on a leaderless and exposed Sunni community. Trust between Sunnis and the Shiite-majority government deteriorated further after the perceived targeting of Sunni communities and leaders by former Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.

With Saudi Arabia growing its political and economic influence in the country, experts say Iraqs Sunnis may now feel more confident in granting concessions to Shiites and Kurds, and in their ability to gain concessions of their own.

Such a development would be critical in efforts to reach a fairer power-sharing agreement that would bring Sunnis into the Iraqi state and quell political and sectarian violence.

In the near-term, this could pave way for a new power-sharing agreement between Sunnis and Shiites where Sunnis feel like they are given political power and economic influence in proportion to their demographics, says Kenneth Pollack, an Iraq expert and resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute.

This would allow Iraqis to address decentralization, executive power, and the role of security services and other enormous issues in Iraq stemming from gaps and vagueness in parts of the constitution that has led to different interpretations.

Sunni tribal leaders, in interviews with the Monitor, stress that although they welcome Saudi Arabias increased role in Iraq as a long overdue return to the Arab fold, they need to see the Iraqi government make a goodwill gesture to allow for negotiations, namely disarming and demobilizing Shiite militias.

An increased role by Saudi Arabia is positive, says Abdalrazzaq Suleiman, a leader of an Anbar tribe.

But before we can talk about the future of Iraq, we have to see that this government is willing and able to stop these militias from acting outside the law.

Another Anbar tribal leader says, however, that Riyadh may lead the realignment many Sunnis have been waiting for.

The government in Baghdad has tied us to Iran and pitted us against the rest of the world.We want Saudi Arabia to help us rejoin the Arab world, where we belong, says the leader, who requested not to be named.

COALITION-BUILDING

The Saudi outreach comes as a shrewd recognition by Riyadh that not only Sunnis, but Iraqs moderate and nationalist Shiites, such as Mr. Sadr and Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi, are growing weary of Irans dominance in Iraqi internal affairs, analysts say.

By building economic, transport, and diplomatic ties with key Shiite cities and leaders, Riyadh is emboldening moderate Shiite leaders such as Mr. Abadi and Ayad Allawi, a vice president and former prime minister, who would like to engage and partner with Sunnis. That is an engagement that Iran and its hardline allies within Iraq have discouraged and at times torpedoed over the last decade.

With an alternative power such as Riyadh, emboldened Shiite political forces may consider moves unpopular in Tehran such as the demobilization of the Popular Mobilization Units and other Shiite militias influenced by Iran that have sparked a backlash from the Sunni community.

Abadi is not 100 percent supportive of Saudi Arabias policy in the region. But this is an opportunity to chart a new course that is not dependent on Iran and that puts Iraqs national interests first, says Raed Mansour, a fellow at Chatham House.

The timing for such a push is not a coincidence. The 2018 parliamentary elections in Iraq are several months away.

By encouraging Sunni participation in the polls and offering an olive branch to the Shiite community, Riyadh and its allies could help further foster the cross-sectarian, Shiite-Sunni coalition building that is vital to Iraqs political and physical stability.

It would not be unrealistic to see a reemergence of a coalition that includes moderate Sunnis and Shia that can bring stability to Iraq. This is certainly on the minds of Saudi policy-makers, says Firas Maksad, director at The Arabia Foundation inWashington.

Saudi Arabias rapprochement with Iraq can also have an immediate impact on the reconstruction of towns and cities hit by the war against ISIS.

News reports, and Saudi insiders, say Riyadh and Baghdad are negotiating a role for Saudi Arabia in rebuilding Iraqs war-torn cities, namely the predominately Sunni cities of Mosul, Tikrit, Falluja, and Ramadi.

The Iraqi government estimates it will cost $100 billion to rebuild the mainly Sunni areas hit by ISIS and coalition airstrikes, while the UN has called for $985 million in humanitarian relief alone.

The post-ISIS reconstruction has provided an opportunity for Saudi Arabia to influence Iraq as well as an opportunity for Iraq, which is desperately looking for investors, says Mr. Mansour.

But initial signs say Riyadh is not ready to write a blank check to Baghdad just yet.

PUSH-BACK FROM IRAN

Saudi Arabia has been burned by the limited influence it gained from funneling billions of dollars to Egypt, while a drop in oil prices has forced the kingdom to cut back on public spending and embark on its own ambitious economic transformation plan.

Rather than throwing money at Iraq, Saudi Arabia is likely to select a few, small-scale projects to build the confidence of both the Iraqi government and public, such as the rehabilitation of a strategic oil export pipeline running from Iraq through Saudi Arabia to the Red Sea, and the rehabilitation of the road connecting Baghdad with Amman.

The question remains whether Saudi Arabia has the patience to play the long game. In Iraq there will undoubtedly be setbacks and elements loyal to Iran who will push back, and perhaps even attempt to sabotage their reconciliation with Baghdad, observers say.

The question is: when they meet Iranian resistance, how will they respond? says Mr. Pollack.

Will they give up and throw their hands up, or will they double down and try harder?

Iran has trained, equipped, and directs several Shiite militias, has the presence of its elite Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, and can use its offer of military and security support expertise and power Saudi Arabia lacks to sway Iraqs politicians, clerics, and decision-makers.

Iran is going to be a very significant and perhaps the dominant player in Iraq for quite some time, says Mr. Maksad.

But the reengagement of Iraq by Gulf states opens opportunities to check some of Irans unwanted influence and that is important in and of itself.

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In Saudi diplomatic shift on Iraq, a hand to Sunnis ... and Shiites - Yahoo News

Girl who fled Iraq ‘never imagined’ getting nine GCSEs – BBC News

Girl who fled Iraq 'never imagined' getting nine GCSEs
BBC News
Zainab Fhadal arrived in Stoke-on-Trent three years ago only speaking a little English, but she has now gained nine GCSEs. The 16-year-old fled the Iraqi capital Baghdad in June 2014 after her family's home was destroyed. She said she'd spent her ...

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Girl who fled Iraq 'never imagined' getting nine GCSEs - BBC News

Richard Linklater’s New Iraq War Movie Will Make You Laugh and Cry – Esquire.com

Following up on the breezy summer baseball movie Everybody Wants Some!!, director Richard Linklater is returning with a much heavier topic. A sequel to Hal Ashby's 1973 comedy-drama The Last Detail, Linklater's Last Flag Flying reunites veterans Sal Nealon (Bryan Cranston) and Reverend Richard Mueller (Laurence Fishburne) with Larry "Doc" Shepherd (Steve Carell) on a mission to bring home Shepherd's son, who was killed in the Iraq War.

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In very Little Miss Sunshine-style, they end up transporting the casket on their own on a trip up the East Coast to his home in New Hampshire. The trailer for Last Flag Flying mirrors the tone and some of the settings of the original, with the trio traveling on trains and through New York City to wrestle with the tragic results of war.

The film is due out on November 3 through Amazon Studios.

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Richard Linklater's New Iraq War Movie Will Make You Laugh and Cry - Esquire.com

Iraq sets conditions to exempt Jordanian products from fee hikes – Jordan Times

Iraq sets conditions to exempt Jordanian products from fee hikes
Jordan Times
Jordan has requested Iraq to exempt Jordan from the 30 per cent customs duties imposed on imports from all countries during the meeting of Jordanian-Iraqi joint committee, as the two neighbours are bracing for a new era after the expected reopening of ...

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Iraq sets conditions to exempt Jordanian products from fee hikes - Jordan Times

How Saudi Arabia is stepping up in Iraq – American Enterprise Institute

Some of the best news to come from the Middle East in a long time is the recent and long-overdue improvement in relations between Iraq and Saudi Arabia. It started in February, when Saudi foreign minister Adel al-Jubeir visited Baghdadthe first such visit since 1990and continued with a number of subsequent contacts, including a meeting between Iraqi Interior Minister Qasim al-Araji and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MBS) on July 19. Most striking of all was when Iraqs Shiite firebrand cleric, Muqtada al-Sadr, traveled to Riyadh for high level talks on improving bilateral ties with the Saudis on July 31.

Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman meets with Iraqi Shiite leader Muqtada al-Sadr in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia July 30, 2017. Reuters

As an Iraqi leader, Sadr has typically taken a hard nationalistand sometimes even Shiite chauvinistline. And although his relationship with Tehran is complicated owing to his independent power base and occasional appeal to a sense of Iraqi patriotism, he has been a critical Iranian ally for most of the post-Saddam Hussein era. His militia, Saraya al-Salam, continues to receive extensive support from Irans Revolutionary Guard. For all those reasons, his meeting with the Saudis, Irans traditional Arab Sunni nemesis, was a surprise, to say the least.

Although still at an early stage, these meetings have raised the possibility of Saudi willingness to support war-ravaged Iraq, ease commerce and communications between the two countries, and re-open the massive pipelines that run through the Kingdom from Iraq to the Red Seabuilt during the Iran-Iraq War but closed after Saddams 1990 invasion of Kuwait. They also raise the prospect of meaningful Sunni political participation in post-ISIS Iraq.

From the perspective of the United States (and Iraq), this can only be good news. Washington has been trying in vain since 2003 to convince the Saudis and other Gulf states that they have a vital role to play in Iraqs stability and geopolitical realignment, and that dissing the Iraqis would simply drive the countrys Shiites into the arms of the Iranians and its Sunnis into the arms of terrorist groups like al Qaeda and the Islamic State (or ISIS).

For the past 14 years, the Kingdom has kept its distance, believing that Iraq was already lost to the Iraniansand that if it werent, it was the United States job to fix the problems it created with its invasion. But MBS has been willing to reassess old policies and compete in areas where the Kingdom has previously ceded the field. Some have criticized the new approach as being occasionally too muscular, particularly in the case of Yemen. Yet this opening to Shiite leaders in Iraq suggests that the Saudis are also capable of playing a subtler political game and reaching across the sectarian divide when required.

Iraq could be a major beneficiary of such a shift, and that would be enormously helpful to U.S. efforts to stabilize the country in the wake of ISIS imminent defeat. The Saudis can play an important role in preventing their northern neighbor from sliding back into civil war for a third time. Their influence with Iraqs Sunni leaders and the tribes from the otherwise restive Anbar Province could help facilitate a political settlement that results in a more representative government in Baghdad.

Saudi Arabias opening to the Iraqis is also significant, not only for bilateral relations, but for reintegrating Iraq into its broader Arab environment. Following Sadrs landmark meeting with the Saudi crown prince, he was invited to the United Arab Emirates, where State Minister for Foreign Affairs Anwar Gargash announced a new era of engagement between Iraq and Arab Gulf countries. Reading the diplomatic tea leaves, four Arab foreign ministers have visited Baghdad this month.

The psychological and political dimensions of this are of equal importance. Although many Iraqi Shiites have some degree of trust that Iran will support them when no one else will, most dont like the overbearing nature of Iranian influence and would like to see it diminished. In the past, however, whenever a moderate Shiite leader tried to forge a path apart from Iran, he found it impossible to replace Tehrans largesse and protection. Neither the United States nor the deeply suspicious Sunni Arab states would help, forcing the moderate leader to turn back to Iran.

Saudi Arabias more forward leaning posture could give Iraqi Sunnis confidence to bargain with the Shiites in Baghdad. Knowing that they have a powerful neighbors support, they could be more willing to compromise. It should also make them more confident that Shiite hardliners wont be able to ignore their legitimate demands in areas such as political representation and economic benefits. It could also help them meet the needs of their community after the ravages inflicted by ISIS.

Ultimately, Iraqis dont want to become Saudi dependents eitherand they are terrified that Iraq could become the designated battlefield for the next Saudi-Iranian proxy warbut the country would love to be able to rely on another powerful regional state to restore balance to its foreign policy. Improved relations with Saudi Arabia before Iraqs 2018 parliamentary elections could make it easier for Iraqis to support more moderate candidates who could help bridge the sectarian divide, rather than the radicals who have torn the country apart.

The hard part for the United States will be to resist the temptation to assume that a bigger Saudi role in Iraq will allow for a smaller U.S. role. But as important as a better relationship with Saudi Arabia would be for Iraq, Riyadh still cannot replace Washington. Indeed, Saudi support should be seen as enabling the United States to do the things that only it can do: helping the Iraqis reach a new national reconciliation and power-sharing agreement among Sunnis and Shiites, assisting in finding a permanent solution for the status of Iraqi Kurdistan, and diluting Irans excessive influence in a strategically important Arab state.

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How Saudi Arabia is stepping up in Iraq - American Enterprise Institute