Holocaust In The Middle East: From Morocco To Iraq – HistoryExtra – BBC History Magazine
From the plane, Rauff went to Erwin Rommels battle headquarters, where he presented his orders to the field marshals chief of staff, Lieutenant Colonel Siegfried Westphal. As commander of a new mobile killing unit, an Einsatzkommando, Rauff was assigned to carry out executive measures, meaning mass murder of Jews, as soon as Rommel completed his expected conquest of Egypt. Rauff had come from Berlin, where the Nazi leadership was awash with optimism about Rommel pressing forward through Egypt into the Near East, as German foreign minister Joachim von Ribbentrop had just told the Japanese ambassador.
After Egypt, Rauffs next target would be the 500,000 or more Jews of Palestine. And if, as Adolf Hitler expected, Rommels tanks drove forward to the oil fields of Iraq, the Jews of that country and of Syria and Lebanon would face mortal danger.
But Rommels chief of staff explained to Rauff that logistical problems, especially lack of fuel, were delaying the Axis forces advance, so the two agreed that Rauff and his team would move from Germany to Athens, Greece. From there, they could deploy to Egypt once Rommel swept forward into Alexandria a mere 60 miles east of El Alamein and Cairo.
It never happened. The desert battlefield would be the site of Rommels most famous defeat, and one of the great turning points of the Second World War.
Yet Rauffs mission to Egypt is fraught with significance. Contrary to popular memory, the Holocaust was not only a European event. Across north Africa and the Middle East, from Morocco to Iraq, the Germans and the regimes collaborating with them systematically persecuted Jews. Hitler had declared his intent to eradicate the Jews of the Middle East, and the SS actively prepared to do so. Allied victories heroic, and at times close to miraculous prevented the Nazis from carrying out the worst of their plans, but any full account of the Holocaust requires a map that extends well beyond Europe.
Listen to this article:
The early months of the Second World War were disturbing but distant thunder for Jews in the Arab world. Three events in June 1940 changed that. First, the Italian Fascist dictator Benito Mussolini announced to an obediently cheering crowd of thousands in Rome that Italy was joining Germany and going to war against the plutocratic and reactionary democracies of the west: Britain and France. His immediate goal was seizing a scrap of France as it collapsed before the German onslaught. The larger implication was that war was inevitable in north Africa, since Mussolini dreamed of creating a new Roman empire, using the Italian colony of Libya as a base for expansion.
A week later, First World War hero Philippe Ptain formed a new government in France and sought peace with Germany. The armistice left Ptains government, based in Vichy, in control only of southeastern France, but it ruled most of Frances overseas empire, including the north African colonies of Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia.
The third incident came at the end of June. An Italian anti-aircraft unit at Tobruk in eastern Libya shot down an Italian plane, mistaking it for a British aircraft. On board was Italo Balbo, the governor-general of Libya.
SS officer Walther Rauff, photographed in 1945. After his mission of mass extermination was halted at El Alamein, Rauff was posted to Tunisia. (Photo by ullstein bild via Getty Images)
Balbos death made life go from bad to worse for Libyas 30,000 Jews. Though a prominent Fascist, Balbo had opposed the Nazi-style anti-Semitism that Mussolini had adopted. The Italian campaign against the Jews had begun in 1938 with the Manifesto of Race that defined Italians as Aryans, and Jews as biologically inferior. A series of race laws barred Jews from government jobs, from teaching or studying in Italian schools, from practising professions including medicine and law, and more.
Balbo avoided enforcing the laws strictly in Libya, especially those that locked Jews out of the colonys economy. The Jews are already a dead people; there is no need to oppress them cruelly, Balbo explained to Mussolini in a letter. Il Duce answered: Though the Jews may seem to be dead, they never really are, echoing the Nazi view of Jews as a powerful, clandestine threat. Once Balbo was dead, the official persecution of the Jews in Libya could be escalated.
The Vichy regime in France, meanwhile, showed how fully it had become a German satellite by enacting its own Jewish Statute in October 1940. The move was driven in part by the home-grown anti-Semitism of the French right, but, as Vichy foreign minister Paul Baudouin would write, German pressure played a major role. Modelled on Nazi laws, the French statute defined Jewishness in racial terms, with a Jew being anyone with three Jewish grandparents or with two and a Jewish spouse. Among the measures, Jews were banned from all teaching, judicial and police positions, and most of the civil service. Only 2 per cent of lawyers, doctors and midwives could be Jewish all professions in which Jews were prominent.
The provisions echoed those adopted in other Nazi satellites in Europe, including Hungary, Slovakia and Romania. In the French case, though, their reach extended to Africa. The Vichy statute was applied directly in French Algeria, while the sultan of Morocco and bey of Tunisia, nominal rulers of French protectorates, issued decrees bringing in similar rules.
After enacting the Jewish Statute, Ptain abrogated the 1870 decree that granted French citizenship to Algerian Jews. Vichy authorities gave Jews a month to sell their businesses. The sultan of Morocco decreed that Jews living in European areas of cities had one month to move back to the old, crowded Jewish quarters. There, with more people packed in, disease spread quickly. Step by step, the Jews of French north Africa saw their lives and livelihoods constricted, in a process parallel to what German Jews had endured early in Nazi rule.
Another country at the far end of the Arab world briefly tilted into the Axis orbit when, in April 1941, four Iraqi colonels overthrew the British-aligned government. The coup was planned in the Baghdad home of Hajj Amin al-Husseini, Grand Mufti of Jerusalem and exiled leader of the Arab revolt in Palestine in the late 1930s. Abd al-Ilh, the regent who ruled in place of Iraqs six-year-old king, Faisal II, fled to Transjordan, while the king was smuggled out of Baghdad by his mother.
Iraqs government radio station broadcast a stream of inflammatory agitation against the Jews and powerful appeals to Nazism, according to a later commission of inquiry. Baghdad was then about one-sixth Jewish. On the streets, members of pro-Nazi paramilitary groups, such as the Youth Phalanxes, seized random Jews and dragged them to police stations, or occasionally murdered them. Meanwhile, Britains codebreakers at Bletchley Park deciphered Axis messages that the German and Italian air forces were sending unmarked warplanes to aid the Iraqi junta and that ships arriving at Rhodes bore ammunition to be airlifted to Iraq.
Commander of the Afrika Korps, Erwin Rommel (right), gives orders during the north African campaign. Often described as the war without hate, the conflict actually witnessed numerous persecutions against Jewish populations. (Photo by Jean DESMARTEAU/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images)
The British quickly organised an invasion and the Iraqi army had crumbled by June. Husseini and the other plotters fled. When Abd al-Ilh returned to Baghdad, British troops stayed outside the city in the hope that his return would not look like their doing. A crowd of Jews came to greet the regent, but as they returned home Iraqi soldiers attacked them, with teens from the Youth Phalanxes joining in. Only on the next day did the newly returned regent finally order the police to disperse the mobs. A large number of Jewish shops and homes were looted, and several hundred Jews were brutally murdered, the British ambassador reported. The dead of the Baghdad pogrom, the Farhud, may be the least known and least acknowledged victims of Nazism.
Husseini eventually reached Berlin and, in November 1941, met with Hitler. He asked the fhrer to declare publicly his backing for the independence and unity of Palestine, Syria and Iraq. While Hitler avoided such a pledge, he promised that once German armies in the Soviet Union pushed south into the Middle East, Germanys objective would then be solely the destruction of the Jewish element in the Arab world.
Axis armies would actually threaten the Middle East from a different direction. In September 1940, Italy launched an invasion of Egypt from Libya. By winter, the British under General Archibald Wavell counterattacked and pushed the Italians out of Cyrenaica, the eastern province of Libya. Afraid the Allies would keep going and threaten Europe from the south, Hitler sent an army to Libya under his favourite general, Rommel.
In the expanse of the desert, the fighting see-sawed wildly. Rommel reconquered most of Cyrenaica, then in late 1941 the British Eighth Army overran the province again, only to be pushed back once more. By early 1942, Benghazi, the largest town in Cyrenaica, had changed hands four times.
Mussolini found a scapegoat for Italian military failures: Libyas Jews. On 7 February 1942, he issued a decree to expel them to a concentration camp in the desert. Colonial authorities started with the Jews of small towns in Cyrenaica, and lists of those to be expelled began appearing in synagogues each fortnight. Survivors would remember that 40 people were packed onto each open truck and that they travelled for five days in the sun to the camp at Giado, south-west of Tripoli. There, men were subjected to forced labour. Inmates received between 100 and 150 grams of bread a day, and when they complained about the lack of food, camp authorities told them: The purpose of bringing you here is not to feed you, but to starve you to death. Of the 2,600 Jews imprisoned at Giado, more than one in five died within a few months of hunger or typhus.
One factor slowed the sfollamento, the clearing, of Jews, according to the German consul in Tripoli: a shortage of trucks. They were needed to supply Rommels new offensive, which began in late May 1942. Thanks to his secret weapon, a superb intelligence source in Cairo, he had taken Tobruk in eastern Libya by 21 June. A message from the Cairo source said that the Eighth Army was decisively beaten and if Rommel intends to take the Nile Delta this is a suitable moment.
Rommel plunged into Egypt. In Berlin and Rome, expectations soared and the SS sped up its preparations to send an Einsatzkommando to the Middle East. Yet during that crucial last week of June 1942, an intelligence breakthrough at Bletchley Park identified and silenced the Axis source. The timing was providential. Rommel was caught by surprise when British commander General Claude Auchinleck made a last-minute decision to move his defensive line to El Alamein. Auchinlecks change, the topography of the area and dogged fighting by British, Australian, New Zealand, Indian and South African troops stopped the Axis advance. Rommel and Rauff would never reach Cairo or Tel Aviv.
Following the battle of El Alamein, in November 1942, the Eighth Army, now commanded by General Bernard Montgomery, shattered Rommels army and forced it to retreat eastward. Days later, the Allies launched Operation Torch, the Anglo-American invasion of Morocco and Algeria. In response, German forces seized Tunisia as a last redoubt in Africa and the SS sent Rauffs team.
As German historians Klaus-Michael Mallmann and Martin Cppers have detailed, Rauff carried out a reign of terror against Tunisian Jews that included conscripting 5,000 for forced labour. But with shipping to Europe under constant attack, Rauff could not carry out the larger SS plan to send Tunisias Jews to death camps in Europe.
The Nazis intentions to carry the war against the Jews beyond Europe never wavered. Ultimately, though, defeat at El Alamein turned the tables and kept the SS from carrying out its plans.
Yet leaving north Africa and the Middle East out of Holocaust history has erased the suffering of many of the Nazis victims and obscured the full significance of the victory at El Alamein.
Early in 2021, I received an email from the scientist Michael Bevan, son of Lance Corporal John Bevan of the Second New Zealand Division, who fought and was taken prisoner at El Alamein. My father always thought they were fighting to preserve the British empire, he wrote, which for a colonial was not a high priority. Only in the winter of 1945 in Germany, when as a prisoner of war his father saw female slave labourers building an airfield, did he fully grasp the evils he had fought to contain.
Therefore, the soldiers son went on, understanding how the Eighth Army established the El Alamein line, and thus prevented genocide in the Middle East, has brought new and deserved honour to the brave men of my fathers generation, who fought and suffered in Egypt.
For their sake, too, the story must be told.
As a French protectorate, Morocco was subject to Vichy control after the fall of France. While Jews were not sent to death camps in Europe, Sultan Mohammed V issued a decree enacting Vichys Jewish Statute. Under wartime rationing, Jews received less to eat than Europeans or Muslims, and a 1941 edict gave Jews living in European neighbourhoods one month to move back into the mellahs, or Jewish quarters, where overcrowding accelerated the spread of disease.
The Vichy regimes Jewish Statute was applied directly in Algeria, where at least 110,000 Jews lived. They were stripped of French citizenship, removed from occupations, given one month to sell their businesses, and those of military age sent to internment camps. Even after the Anglo-American liberation of Algeria in November 1942, Vichy officials remained in office and anti-Jewish measures were only overturned late the following year.
Subject to Vichy rule from 1940, Tunisia was then occupied by Germany in November 1942. The SS sent in the Einsatzkommando under the command of Walther Rauff, who had been originally assigned to the mass murder of Egypt and Palestines Jews. Rauff took Jewish leaders hostage in order to round up 5,000 Jews for forced labour, and imposed fines on the pretext that international Jewry was responsible for Allied bombings. As many as 400 Jews died due to the German occupation, but the Allied liberation of Tunisia in May 1943 thwarted Nazi plans to ship Tunisias 66,000 Jews to death camps in Europe.
Italian dictator Benito Mussolini enacted anti-Jewish laws that were enforced with increasing strictness in the Italian colony of Libya. In 1942, on Mussolinis orders, 2,600 Jews from eastern Libya were trucked to a desert concentration camp, where more than 500 died of disease and starvation. The British conquest of Libya after El Alamein prevented the imprisonment of the remainder of Libyas estimated 30,000 Jews and resulted in the liberation of the concentration camp at Giado.
The SS created a mobile killing unit to carry out genocide in Egypt and Palestine as the Axis army, under the command of General Erwin Rommel, reached El Alamein in July 1942. Britains Special Operations Executive trained Palestinian Jews for guerrilla warfare after the expected Nazi conquest. But the dogged British defence at El Alamein stopped Rommel and prevented the murder of an estimated 75,000 Jews in Egypt and half a million or more in Palestine.
French mandatory officials declared fealty to Vichy and enacted anti-Jewish statutes. Jews were dismissed from government posts, the press and the railways, but enforcement was otherwise sporadic against the 30,000 or more Jews across the two countries. An Anglo-Free French invasion in June 1941 ended Vichy rule, and Free French general Charles de Gaulle abrogated the anti-Jewish laws.
Four colonels, known as the Golden Square, carried out a pro-Axis coup in April 1941, threatening some 110,000 Jews in the country. Government radio broadcast a stream of Nazi propaganda. In Baghdad, pro-Nazi paramilitary group Youth Phalanxes arrested or sometimes murdered Jews on the streets. The regimes collapse in the face of a British invasion ignited a pogrom in which soldiers and Youth Phalanxes murdered 180 or more Jews. The events shattered Jewish confidence in life in Iraq, setting the stage for a later exodus.
Gershom Gorenberg is an Israeli historian and journalist. His latest book, War of Shadows: Codebreakers, Spies, and the Secret Struggle to Drive the Nazis from the Middle East, was published in January by PublicAffairs
This content first appeared in the September 2021 issue of BBC History Magazine
Read this article:
Holocaust In The Middle East: From Morocco To Iraq - HistoryExtra - BBC History Magazine
- Iraq tells Turkey it needs more time to restart Kurdish oil exports - rudaw.net - May 10th, 2025 [May 10th, 2025]
- Turkey and Iraq reaffirm commitment to work against Kurdish militants and other security threats - AP News - May 10th, 2025 [May 10th, 2025]
- Trumps deportation lies are nothing new: Remember Bush, WMD and Iraq? - Salon.com - May 10th, 2025 [May 10th, 2025]
- Iraq's prime minister visits Turkey as neighbors work to strengthen cooperation - ABC News - May 10th, 2025 [May 10th, 2025]
- Pedestrian bridge in Whitehouse dedicated to Sgt. Andy Eckert, 20 years after he was killed in Iraq - WTVG - May 10th, 2025 [May 10th, 2025]
- US-led 1991 Iraq slaughter: Opening guns of World War III - The Militant - May 10th, 2025 [May 10th, 2025]
- Q&A: Hassan Mohammed Hassan, director general of the Iraqi Drilling Company - Iraq Oil Report - May 10th, 2025 [May 10th, 2025]
- Russia's Ambassador To Iraq Meets Leader Of Iran-Backed Militia In Iraq, Signaling Deepening Ties - MEMRI | Middle East Media Research Institute - May 10th, 2025 [May 10th, 2025]
- Norris Burkes: Returning from Iraq, a hard landing and 'flying on a wing and a prayer' - Yahoo News - May 10th, 2025 [May 10th, 2025]
- Iran expands air navigation co-op with Iraq, UAE at regional aviation summit - Tehran Times - May 10th, 2025 [May 10th, 2025]
- Turkey and Iraq reaffirm commitment to work against Kurdish militants and other security threats - The Sun Chronicle - May 10th, 2025 [May 10th, 2025]
- Turkey and Iraq reaffirm commitment to work against Kurdish militants and other security threats - Ottumwa Courier - May 10th, 2025 [May 10th, 2025]
- Development Road Project to drive prosperity for Iraq and region, Erdoan says - Hrriyet Daily News - May 10th, 2025 [May 10th, 2025]
- A GOP rep was awarded a Bronze Star for his bravery in Iraq. Those he reportedly saved cant remember him being there - Yahoo - May 10th, 2025 [May 10th, 2025]
- Turkey and Iraq reaffirm commitment to work against Kurdish militants and other security threats - WHEC.com - May 10th, 2025 [May 10th, 2025]
- Turkey and Iraq call for progress on lucrative 'development road' linking to Gulf - thenationalnews.com - May 10th, 2025 [May 10th, 2025]
- Iraq's prime minister visits Turkey as neighbors work to strengthen cooperation - The Independent - May 10th, 2025 [May 10th, 2025]
- Iraq's Oil Exports to India Topped $29 Billion in 2024 - Crude Oil Prices Today | OilPrice.com - May 8th, 2025 [May 8th, 2025]
- Former minister named Trkiyes special representative to Iraq | Daily Sabah - Daily Sabah - May 8th, 2025 [May 8th, 2025]
- Press advocacy group urges restoration of suspended Iraq political talk show - Jurist.org - May 8th, 2025 [May 8th, 2025]
- The Strategic Implications of Irans Shrinking Economic Leverage in Iraq - Middle East Forum - May 8th, 2025 [May 8th, 2025]
- Iraq warns of water crisis before PM Al-Sudani's visit to Turkey - The New Arab - May 8th, 2025 [May 8th, 2025]
- From Croatia to Iraq: The French Fighter Jet Rafale Is in Hot Demand - The National Interest - May 8th, 2025 [May 8th, 2025]
- Azerbaijan and Iraq discuss boosting interparliamentary ties - Latest news from Azerbaijan - May 8th, 2025 [May 8th, 2025]
- Severe sandstorms engulf Saudi Arabia and Iraq - The Watchers - Watching the world evolve and transform - May 8th, 2025 [May 8th, 2025]
- Analysis: Iraq is not-so-seriously attempting to exert control over militias and weapons - Long War Journal - May 3rd, 2025 [May 3rd, 2025]
- Iraq Veteran Says Trump Tariffs Sinking Her Baby Products Business - Newsweek - May 3rd, 2025 [May 3rd, 2025]
- Suspected ISIS member arrested in connection with New Orleans attack, Iraq says - USA Today - May 3rd, 2025 [May 3rd, 2025]
- ISIS-linked suspect arrested in Iraq tied to New Years Bourbon Street terror attack - fox8live.com - May 3rd, 2025 [May 3rd, 2025]
- Silenced voices: The treacherous reality for journalists in Iraq - Shafaq News - - May 3rd, 2025 [May 3rd, 2025]
- Iraq and World Health Organization Celebrate World Health Day 2025 with the Launch of the National Strategy for the Health of Women, Children, and... - May 3rd, 2025 [May 3rd, 2025]
- Foreigners block extradition of terrorists from Iraq to Iran - Mehr News Agency - May 3rd, 2025 [May 3rd, 2025]
- Iraq arrests ISIS suspect linked to deadly truck attack in New Orleans - Al Arabiya English - May 3rd, 2025 [May 3rd, 2025]
- Wichita Army veteran did two tours in Iraq and trained snipers in Kansas - KSN-TV - May 3rd, 2025 [May 3rd, 2025]
- United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, and Iraq: Are These the Top Cultural Tourism Hotspots to Visit Now Before Tariff Impacts Deepen with the... - May 3rd, 2025 [May 3rd, 2025]
- Sandstorms and thunder sweep through northern Iraq and Syria - thenationalnews.com - May 3rd, 2025 [May 3rd, 2025]
- Sandstorms and thunder sweep through northern Iraq and Syria - MSN - May 3rd, 2025 [May 3rd, 2025]
- Iraq arrests ISIS suspect for inciting New Orleans attack - The Arab Weekly - May 3rd, 2025 [May 3rd, 2025]
- The 10 Best Movies About the Iraq War, Ranked - Collider - May 3rd, 2025 [May 3rd, 2025]
- PKK claims Iraq attacks on Kurdish security forces - Space War News - May 3rd, 2025 [May 3rd, 2025]
- Iran, Iraq move forward with plans to boost trade to $25bn annually - thecradle.co - May 3rd, 2025 [May 3rd, 2025]
- Ainuska Kalil kyzy wins $2,500 in international running tournament in Iraq - AKIpress News Agency - May 3rd, 2025 [May 3rd, 2025]
- Suspected ISIS member arrested in Iraq in connection with Bourbon Street Attack - WWLTV.com - May 3rd, 2025 [May 3rd, 2025]
- Lightning and sandstorms over Iraq and Syria - in pictures - thenationalnews.com - May 3rd, 2025 [May 3rd, 2025]
- ISIS member accused of inciting New Orleans terror attack arrested in Iraq - WSB-TV - May 3rd, 2025 [May 3rd, 2025]
- Iraqi Military Forces Capacity in the Wake of a Likely U.S. Withdrawal from Iraq - New Lines Institute - April 25th, 2025 [April 25th, 2025]
- Returning from the Middle East, Michael Baumgartner reflects on Iraq's progress since he left in 2008 - The Spokesman-Review - April 25th, 2025 [April 25th, 2025]
- So was Poland a sucker when it supported the US in Iraq? - The Hill - April 25th, 2025 [April 25th, 2025]
- Iraq says Pope Francis' calls for coexistence 'will leave an indelible impact' - NPR - April 25th, 2025 [April 25th, 2025]
- Turkiye expands military occupation of northern Iraq: Report - thecradle.co - April 25th, 2025 [April 25th, 2025]
- JJs Star Spangled Salute: A Kansas Veteran On The Frontlines In Iraq - 101.3 KFDI - April 25th, 2025 [April 25th, 2025]
- Whats missing from Alex Garlands Iraq movie Warfare? Context, motivation and, for the most part, Iraqis - The Guardian - April 25th, 2025 [April 25th, 2025]
- In pictures: Easter celebrated around the world from Greece to Iraq - BBC - April 25th, 2025 [April 25th, 2025]
- Hemorrhagic Fever Death Toll Rises to Four in Iraq, Health Ministry Confirms - kurdistan24.net - April 25th, 2025 [April 25th, 2025]
- Iraq veteran and film-maker Ray Mendoza: Writing Warfare with Alex Garland was like going to a therapist - The Guardian - April 25th, 2025 [April 25th, 2025]
- French FM visits Iraq as part of regional tour to prepare for Palestine conference - The Arab Weekly - April 25th, 2025 [April 25th, 2025]
- Warfare review nerve-shredding real-time Iraq war film drags you into visceral frontline combat - The Guardian - April 25th, 2025 [April 25th, 2025]
- 'Warfare': The true story behind Ray Mendoza's Iraq War movie - USA Today - April 12th, 2025 [April 12th, 2025]
- Warfare brings realistic carnage of Iraq War to theaters - Military Times - April 12th, 2025 [April 12th, 2025]
- Why a Navy SEAL Vet Relived His Iraq War 'Nightmare' to Make the Harrowing Movie Warfare (Exclusive) - People.com - April 12th, 2025 [April 12th, 2025]
- Is Warfare Fact or Fiction? Inside the Real-Life Iraq War Mission That Inspired the Shocking Movie - People.com - April 12th, 2025 [April 12th, 2025]
- 'Warfare': The True Story Behind Iraq War Mission Gone Wrong - Men's Health - April 12th, 2025 [April 12th, 2025]
- Global agriculture index: Iraq ranks 109th - Shafaq News - - April 12th, 2025 [April 12th, 2025]
- Warfare aims to be the most authentic Iraq War film yet - CNN - April 12th, 2025 [April 12th, 2025]
- UNFPA and German Delegation Visit Womens Protection Center in Anbar, Reaffirming Continued Commitment to Womens Empowerment in Iraq [EN/AR] -... - April 12th, 2025 [April 12th, 2025]
- Iraq finally confirms parliamentary elections for this November - The New Arab - April 12th, 2025 [April 12th, 2025]
- From Artsakh to Iraq: economic blockades as gendered violence - The Armenian Weekly - April 12th, 2025 [April 12th, 2025]
- 'Warfare' is based on the true story of a Navy SEAL team that fought in Iraq. The directors made it for a soldier who doesn't remember how he lost a... - April 12th, 2025 [April 12th, 2025]
- ICRC in Iraq: Key Figures 2024 [EN/AR/KU] - ReliefWeb - April 12th, 2025 [April 12th, 2025]
- Iran defies Trump by arming proxy forces in Iraq with missiles - The Times - April 12th, 2025 [April 12th, 2025]
- Alex Garland's Iraq-war film Warfare is visceral, exciting and unethical - CBC - April 12th, 2025 [April 12th, 2025]
- How Warfares All-Star Cast Made the Most Intense Iraq War Film Ever - GQ - April 12th, 2025 [April 12th, 2025]
- GE Vernova partners with Iraq on 24,000 MW natural gas power project - energynews.pro - April 12th, 2025 [April 12th, 2025]
- Al-Sudani in Erbil: Iraq Has Withstood Crises, Now Focused on Stability and Economic Growth - kurdistan24.net - April 12th, 2025 [April 12th, 2025]
- Warfare pays tribute to those who served in Iraq War with raw and powerful filmmaking - AZFamily - April 12th, 2025 [April 12th, 2025]
- Exclusive: Iran-backed militias in Iraq ready to disarm to avert Trump wrath - Reuters - April 8th, 2025 [April 8th, 2025]
- Executions at 10-year high after huge increases in Iran, Iraq and Saudi Arabia - The Guardian - April 8th, 2025 [April 8th, 2025]
- Why Trump threats have cowed Tehrans axis of resistance in Iraq - The Times - April 8th, 2025 [April 8th, 2025]
- Iran seeks indirect talks with US, warns Iraq, Kuwait over supporting strikes - Hindustan Times - April 8th, 2025 [April 8th, 2025]
- Iran-backed militias in Iraq are ready to disarm following Trumps threats - New York Post - April 8th, 2025 [April 8th, 2025]