The U.S. Invaded Iraq 20 Years Ago. The Grift Just Keeps Going …
The quote that would secure Jim Mattis reputation as the most celebrated Marine general of his generation came during meetings he hadnt wanted to attend. It was April 2004, a half-mile east of the Iraqi city of Fallujah, which had exploded in an insurrection that threatened to doom the American occupation after barely a year. Mattis hadnt wanted to take Fallujah, recognizing that flattening the City of Mosques would throw gasoline on a smoldering nationwide insurrection. But he followed White House-pushed orders to invade, and after roughly a week of intense urban fighting leaving 39 U.S. troops dead, an estimated 616 Iraqi civilians killed, and Fallujah untaken he followed orders to stop.
The first order was stupid, he thought, but combining it with the second was risible. It sent the message that America was not only idiotic during a crucial moment of challenge but also weak. Still, no matter how disastrous the order, no Marine general would ever resign his command as his Marines went through such a crucible, so Mattis reached for a different kind of weapon: his mouth.
In his 2019 memoir, Call Sign Chaos, Mattis recounts sitting down to discuss the future of Fallujah with local notables enlisted to guarantee its security. One of the sheikhs, evidently frustrated, demanded to know when the Americans would leave. Mattis replied that he had bought property on the Euphrates River, where he would marry one of your daughters and retire there. Then he warned the Iraqis: I come in peace. I didnt bring artillery. But Im pleading with you, with tears in my eyes: If you fuck with me, Ill kill you all.
It was quintessential Mattis: a threat of ultra-violence wrapped in a wit quick enough to make him as quotatious as Shaquille ONeal. As reports of the comment spread, Mattis became something of a folk hero in American military circles and back home. One of his nicknames, much promoted by journalists, was Warrior Monk, emphasizing not only his martial expertise but also his devotion to his craft. Years later, the kill you all line would take pride of place in an adoring Twitter hashtag, #Mattisisms, celebrating not so much his deeds as his attitude.Editors picks
The adulation obscured the fact that Mattis swagger didnt really work. The sheikhs did not act on my warning, Mattis writes in Call Sign Chaos. They were allowing their sons to be recruited by the insurgents while they were talking to me unwittingly abrogating their own authority. Maybe. Or perhaps they didnt like a foreign invader pledging to fuck their daughters and kill everyone they know.
The Iraq War was supposed to showcase American potency after 9/11. But the fuck-around stage gave way within months to a finding-out stage that lasted for years. A war partially predicated on dealing a lethal blow to terrorism instead prompted the creation of the Al Qaeda affiliate that would become the so-called Islamic State. Americas 100-plus years of experience with imperial policing were no match for widespread Iraqi rejectionism. At home, the humiliations of the War on Terror were political fuel for those who said America needed to be made great again. As we approach the 20th anniversary of one of the most unjust and calamitous wars the U.S. ever waged, #Mattisisms read like a way for Americans to save face amid self-inflicted disasters that revealed their weakness.
Mattis, who through a spokesperson declined an interview request, doesnt even crack the top 30 list of people culpable for the Iraq War. As a division commander, he was several rungs down from the decision-makers of George W. Bushs administration. Mattis tour ended months before the Marines began another operation to take Fallujah a grueling, bloody, urban battle that has passed into Corps legend. Yet his example is illustrative of an age of American hubris. Even when Mattis saw through the pretexts of the war he suggests in his memoir that Saddam Hussein was boxed in before the offensive even began he, like most officers, chose to serve rather than walk away, and expressed greater displeasure at the prospect of withdrawal from the war than the initial invasion. Ten years later, he was no more an obstacle when he joined the board of another doomed-to-fail enterprise based on deception.Related
Theranos was a Silicon Valley unicorn valued at $9 billion, a startup that claimed to have a proprietary machine that could perform a dizzying array of health analyses from a single drop of blood. The business press ate it up with the exception of Wall Street Journal writer John Carreyrou, whose reporting revealed that the companys technology just didnt work. Founder Elizabeth Holmes had browbeat her lab technicians to deliver impossible results just as Dick Cheney pressured the CIA to connect Saddam Hussein to Osama bin Laden. (Theranos lead scientist Ian Gibbons committed suicide in 2013, a tragedy his wife laid at Holmes feet.) The prospect that Holmes concept could work became a certainty that it would, a rationalization that transformed lies into pre-truths; vindication awaited, as long as everyone stayed the course. It was the same sort of refrain offered by overseers of the Iraq War and repeated by their media tribunes: The war was constantly on the verge of turning a corner.
The consensus now is that the Iraq War was a mistake, a deviation born of post-9/11 madness. In reality, its an endeavor that captures the spirit of an age of grift. It was a big con that heralded a thousand more.
Mattis should have served as a guardrail for this kind of malfeasance. A corporate board is, in theory, responsible for oversight. That was certainly the sort of reputational validation Holmes sought in assembling her board with statesmen of Mattis caliber, including George Shultz and Henry Kissinger. But as the general had done in Iraq, he went along with an ill-conceived scheme. One of Mattis problems with invading Fallujah in 2004 was poor intelligence: They were tasked to take the city without knowing where the enemy was hiding, he wrote. Yet at Holmes trial in 2021, Mattis testified that for all his time serving on the board of Theranos, Holmes was his sole source of information about the company.
Today, Holmes is serving an 11-year prison sentence for fraud, a very rare example of a corrupt CEO doing time. Mattis went on to serve under Trump, loyally standing by through the Muslim ban, Charlottesville, and family separations. Meanwhile, the type of public deception the Iraq War helped rationalize, license, and unleash has only compounded and escalated in corporate America, from schemes run by Goldman Sachs to the insurance giant AIG and the crypto superfund FTX.
Perhaps it has worked out that way because so few people deceiving the public have paid any appreciable legal, political, or reputational price. Paul Yingling, an Army armor officer who served in Iraqs Nineveh province, wrote in 2007 that a private who loses a rifle suffers far greater consequences than a general who loses a war. From the vantage of 2023, it feels quaint that anyone ever thought it would be otherwise.
Bush and Cheney have been functionally rehabilitated by the Trump presidency rather than viewed as its preconditions. One of the most important Democratic validators of the war is our current president. Cultural cues like these function as permission, something Holmes prosecutors evidently understood: They said they werent just seeking to convict Holmes, they wanted to deter future startup fraud schemes. The distance of 20 years makes it easier to see that the disaster of Iraq, combined with the impunity its architects enjoyed, proved that lying and scheming and enabling at ever-greater scale would result in no real reprisal for the powerful.
The prevailing consensus now is that the Iraq War was a mistake, a deviation born of post-9/11 madness. In reality, its an endeavor that captures the spirit of an age of grift. It was a big con built on cherished myths of American power, greatness, and justice that heralded a thousand more.
THE BIGGEST LIES of the war, both self-deceptions and outright deceits, are indelible: Saddam Hussein had illicit stockpiles of the most dangerous weapons on the planet, meaningful ties to Al Qaeda, and a willingness to hand his secret weapons to the terrorist group responsible for the mass murder of 9/11. Bush stopped short of implicating Saddam in 9/11, but not by much, claiming a year after the attacks, You cant distinguish between Al Qaeda and Saddam when you talk about the War on Terror. Hundreds of thousands of Iraqis and 4,500 U.S. troops died for lies that the majority of American journalists, with the rare and important exceptions of Warren Strobel and Jonathan S. Landay, promoted rather than debunked.
But the occupation, once underway, floated on a raft constructed from other, less conspicuous lies. The Pentagon initially denied the existence of an Iraqi insurgency and called its adversaries Saddam dead-enders or, more astonishingly, Anti-Iraqi Forces. Bushs portrayal of our foes as people representing violence and innocent death papered over those same disgraces brought about by the Americans, from torture and sexual assault at the Abu Ghraib prison to the massacres of civilians at places like Haditha, Samarra, and Nisour Square. At least one unscrupulous service member even understood a #Mattisism as permission for atrocity. In 2004, a Marine lieutenant named Ilario Pantano wrote one of Mattis favorite refrains, No Better Friend, No Worse Enemy attributed to Sulla, one of the men responsible for destroying the Roman Republic on cardboard that he left on the windshield of a car containing the bodies of Hamaady Kareem and Tahah Ahmead Hanjil, two unarmed Iraqi men he executed.
Through it all, the U.S. resisted acknowledging that its presence was the central cause of the violence it encountered. Americans had no shortage of obstacles to identify, from the scars Iraqi society bore from Saddams fear-based rule to the psychotic religious fanatics who rushed into the post-Saddam vacuum, but it was harder to admit that we were the problem and not the solution. In 2005, Ahmed S. Hashim of the International Institute for Strategic Studies spoke with a fighter battling the Americans at Tal Afar. Prior to the U.S. invasion, the man had been a teacher. He explained to Hashim, simply, What would you do if I had invaded your country?
The Iraqi novelist Mortada Gzar told me that Iraqis are more likely to describe the U.S. presence as an occupation today than they were during the formal occupation of 2003-11. It will not sound neutral if I dont use the term occupier in my social media, unlike 10 years ago, explains Gzar. I didnt initially understand that, having reported from Iraq back then, when it was indisputably a country under foreign occupation. But Amal al-Jubouri, an Iraqi poet, reminded me that I didnt see Iraq through Iraqi eyes.
Many Iraqi writers who were inside Iraq did not dare to name the American invasion as an occupation, al-Jubouri says. The word was dangerous. That may lead those who dared to utter it to a tragic fate through the unknown informers of the new Iraqi political process and the occupiers who reacted immediately by arresting and torturing Iraqis if they received any such reports. The Western press, she continues, called it the insurgency instead of resistance. I certainly did.
ABOUT EIGHT YEARS after Mattis left Iraq, an Army officer responsible for ensuring Theranos compliance with medical regulations, Lt. Col. David Shoemaker, came on the receiving end of a #Mattisism. Mattis wasnt yet on Theranos board. He was by then a military celebrity commander of all U.S. forces in the Middle East and Southwest Asia and having met Holmes after giving a speech in San Francisco, he sought to test Theranos blood analysis on troops in Afghanistan. Shoemaker, who played a key role in the process by which that would happen, grew concerned that Holmes was looking to route around certification from the Food and Drug Administration. He told Holmes he couldnt approve a test without it.
When Shoemaker went to the FDA himself, prompting an FDA inspector to show up at Theranos office, Holmes erupted to Mattis, according to Carreyrous book Bad Blood. Who is LTC Shoemaker and what is going on here? Mattis emailed staff. The general referred to Shoemakers due diligence as this new obstacle and took personal umbrage at it. Shoemakers colleagues presented him with a certificate of survival for having the courage to stand up to Mattis in person and emerging from the encounter alive, Carreyrou writes. Though he didnt even work with Holmes at the time, Mattis directed more skepticism at Shoemaker than he ever would at her.
Mattis joined Theranos board after retiring from the military, which was an unremarkable transition. Several generals who had made their names in Iraq and the associated post-9/11 wars matriculated to corporate America. Surge architect David Petraeus became a partner at private-equity giant KKR. NSA director Keith Alexander took a board seat at Amazon. Stanley McChrystal of the Joint Special Operations Command started a business consultancy. After generations of a revolving door between the defense industry and the military, generals going corporate was normal. Businessmen believed that they were generals of capitalism. Generals, enjoying a worshipful post-9/11 climate, could be forgiven for believing that it was time to collect a reward after all they had given America.
And corporate America was more than ready to give them their payday and reap the reputational rewards. Holmes attracted the enthusiasm of bipartisan titans of American statecraft for her big con. Theranos has assembled what may be, in terms of public service, the most illustrious board in U.S. corporate history, Fortune enthused in 2014. In addition to Mattis, who invested $85,000 of his own money, Shultz, and Kissinger, Theranos boasted Defense Secretary William Perry, GOP Senate leader Bill Frist, and Adm. Gary Roughead, who had been the Navys senior officer. Their high standings in elite circles contributed to the misperception of Theranos probity.
Donald Trump, a rare soul who truly merits the term con artist, sought to exploit that same perception. Enlisting Mattis as his defense secretary, Trump boasted that he was teaming up with a guy known as Mad Dog. It was a nickname Mattis had let his chosen media interlocutors know he used ironically, but Trump wasnt known for reading between lines. Unlike his rapport with Holmes, Mattis had a fraught relationship with Trump. He cast his own arrival at the Pentagon as a force of continuity, and the foreign-policy establishment, fearful of Trumps chaotic potential, cheered. Mattis escalated the Afghanistan war once again, intensifying the bombing of Somalia and, to his credit, arguing Trump out of torturing detainees. But along with his White House ally H.R. McMaster, Mattis also pivoted U.S. foreign policy in a crucial way, issuing a defense strategy for the reemergence of long-term, strategic competition. To bipartisan acclaim, it recontextualized American foreign policy as an imperial struggle against Russia, which Trump resisted, and China, which Trump embraced.
Beyond that, the line between resistance and complicity for Mattis was blurry. When Trump signed an infamous order preventing people from several Muslim-majority nations from traveling to the U.S., he did so at the Pentagon, with Mattis applauding over his shoulder. Mattis acquiesced to Trumps ban on military service from transgender troops and deployed roughly 5,800 service members to the southern border in support of an election-timed hysteria over migration. He finally quit in 2018, because he believed Trump to be insufficiently committed to the American empire not, say, a year earlier, when Trump hailed a white-supremacist riot in Charlottesville.
Mattis resignation gambit worked, in a way. He stepped down to stop Trump from withdrawing U.S. troops from Iraq and Syria, and Trump backed off. The result has been that U.S. troops remain there without any defined mission. Sometimes a vague backstop to an ISIS resurgence, sometimes an insurance policy to another Iraqi military collapse, something like 2,500 U.S. troops in Iraq and 900 in Syria face attacks from an evolving list of enemies, most recently militias backed by Iran. Its a version of the residual force Mattis and many others sought from the beginning. And it leaves Iraqis with the contradictory legacy of Americans who neither leave nor deliver on their grandiose promises of a brighter future. The U.S. presence is beyond the reach of Iraqs political institutions, as was proven when the U.S. refused to abide by a 2020 parliamentary vote to expel the troops.
This is all out of mind for American elites, who have long since moved on. Iraqis, who have paid the cost of Americans delusions, dont have that luxury. The war has created a country of multiplied mafias, al-Jubouri says. The middle class totally disappeared, and there are now two categories of people. Those who participated in the American political process and their adherents became the new Iraqi elites the ordinary people from all backgrounds, the majority, are living under the poverty line.
Meanwhile, a familiar form of capitalism has reshaped liberated Iraq. The streets and gardens of Baghdad were the lungs for its inhabitants to breathe the blessed smell of their flowers and blossoms of their trees. Gardens were the identity of their capital, remembers al-Jubouri. The gardens after the invasion turned into investment projects for the new investors. The large houses of the Baghdadis have been sold with overexaggerated prices due to money laundering, to the extent that no Baghdadi citizen can afford to buy even a studio there.
She continues: Its the greed of the new Iraqi capitalism, which turned everything into an open auction, excluding only the oxygen; and if they can get it controlled, then even our breath will be for sale.
OBVIOUSLY, FRAUD IN AMERICA didnt begin with the invasion of Iraq. The country that gave the world P.T. Barnum, Ivan Boesky, junk-bond king Michael Milken, and Trump (who pardoned Milken) is no innocent babe constantly committing well-meaning blunders. Iraq belongs in a lineage of wars, American and otherwise, waged on false pretexts, from President Polks 1846 lie that American blood has been shed on American soil to invade Mexico thats how we got California, Nevada, Utah, New Mexico, and parts of five other Western states to the inciting Gulf of Tonkin non-event in Vietnam.
So, to be clear, Iraq didnt cause Holmes to lie about Theranos ability to perform a battery of tests from a single drop of blood. But it supercharged an impulse that was already there. Capitalism, particularly its current incarnation, isnt much interested in the difference between truth and deception. Both Apple and Microsoft stole the windows-based graphical interface from Xerox, as University of Chicago economic historian Jonathan Levy recounts in his recent book, Ages of American Capitalism. When Steve Jobs confronted Bill Gates about Microsoft naming its operating system Windows, Gates shot back, We both had this rich neighbor named Xerox, and I broke into his house to steal the TV set only to find that you had already stolen it. That was who Holmes modeled herself after, down to the black turtlenecks Jobs favored. She was hardly unique in not caring about the distasteful aspects of one of modern Americas greatest corporate success stories.
Theranos appealed to Mattis because, he said, in triage, this could be very, very helpful. A far easier way to save troops lives would be not to wage imperial wars like the one America launched two decades ago.
As the Iraq War persisted, the fraud cycle back home accelerated. Bushs invasion roughly coincided with the era of accounting frauds at corporate giants like Tyco and WorldCom, which now seem like footnotes. Eclipsing them all was a massive scheme in which banks turned their questionable loans during a housing bubble into financial instruments that concealed the fundamental toxicity of these assets. It devastated peoples homes, savings, and nearly the entire global economy in 2008. The subsequent Wall Street bailout reinforced the lesson of elite impunity that Iraq taught.
Carreyrous exposure of Theranos seemed to reveal a generational corporate deceit. Lately, it seems more like a new normal. Three years after Theranos collapse, Tesla CEO Elon Musk baselessly tweeted he had funding secured to take the electric-vehicle company private, swelling and then crashing Teslas stock price and seemingly violating the Securities and Exchange Act. His lies caused regular people to lose millions and millions of dollars, argued an attorney for Tesla shareholders in January during a class-action trial. Even as his trial was set to begin, Musk sold $3.6 billion worth of Tesla stock, The Wall Street Journal reported, weeks before the company announced that it delivered significantly fewer vehicles in 2022 than it had forecast. In an unsurprising turn, Musk was acquitted of wrongdoing on Feb. 3.
Last November, as Elizabeth Holmes waited for Judge Edward Davila to sentence her, another dizzying fraud began to unravel, this one involving the cryptocurrency exchange platform FTX. Pitched as a trustworthy exchange of a new and often unstable asset, FTX siphoned money to a crypto-trading firm co-owned by Sam Bankman-Fried, prompting an $8 billion solvency crisis. Like Holmes and Musk, FTX founder Bankman-Fried had enjoyed years of fawning media coverage that amounted to a cult of personality. He had thrown huge amounts of money into Democratic politics and media organizations like Vox, ProPublica, and Semafor, in the apparent hope of convincing an audience presumed to be skeptical of a digital currency favored by the right that crypto and specifically FTX was a safe bet. Even a federal indictment has not stopped Bankman-Fried from publicly insisting upon his blamelessness. After all, people like him usually get away with it.
None of these economic and geopolitical disasters have persuaded America to dim its global ambitions. The Biden administration, unencumbered by Trumps fondness for Putin, has embraced Great Power Competition, outlined in the Mattis Pentagons defense strategy. With Biden decoupling the U.S. economy from Chinas and rallying Europe against Russias aggression in Ukraine, Great Power Competition is coalescing into a commitment to wage two Cold Wars simultaneously, a global struggle for control of the 21st century.
Theranos appealed to Mattis because, he explained in court, in triage, where you have casualties going in, this could be very, very helpful for medical personnel if it could do what she said it could do. A far easier way to save troops lives would be not to wage imperial wars like the ones America launched two decades ago, and that continue to this day.
Most of the Iraqis see the occupation has yet to end properly, says Gzar, who tried to illustrate this twilight state between occupation and sovereignty in his 2020 novel, Fadhel and Abass. One of the characters describes the case to the leaving U.S. troops, he summarizes in an email interview. He told them, what you are doing is just like a doctor who opened up an ill body. He removed the cancerous tumor, and instead of closing the open body, the doctor just left, celebrating that his job is nicely done! But they left the hollow body to die.
See more here:
The U.S. Invaded Iraq 20 Years Ago. The Grift Just Keeps Going ...
- First Phase Of Game-Changing Iraq Project To Start Early Next Year - Crude Oil Prices Today | OilPrice.com - October 7th, 2025 [October 7th, 2025]
- Integrate, Normalize, or Fight: Choices Facing the Shia Armed Factions in Iraq - The Century Foundation - October 7th, 2025 [October 7th, 2025]
- Fifteen Lamassu Statues and Stunning Reliefs Unearthed in Ancient Nineveh, Iraq - GreekReporter.com - October 7th, 2025 [October 7th, 2025]
- The new blackmail in Iraq: AI and the exploitation of women - Shafaq News - - October 7th, 2025 [October 7th, 2025]
- Where Mesopotamia once flowed: The dying rivers of southern Iraq - Shafaq News - - October 7th, 2025 [October 7th, 2025]
- Iraq recovers over 40,000 looted Artifacts in Four Years - ArtDependence - October 7th, 2025 [October 7th, 2025]
- Syria wins gold and bronze at Arab Cycling Championship in Iraq - - October 7th, 2025 [October 7th, 2025]
- Discoveries continue in Nineveh (Iraq): new reliefs and fifteen lamassu in the palace of Assyrian kings - Finestre sull'Arte - October 7th, 2025 [October 7th, 2025]
- YARBROUGH: Looking back on a visit to Iraq 20 years ago with a group of Georgia heroes - Gwinnett Daily Post - October 7th, 2025 [October 7th, 2025]
- Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al Sudani: Iraqis Are Aligned with the Palestinians, We Believe in the Demise of Israel, But We Will Not Give... - October 7th, 2025 [October 7th, 2025]
- Finally, blessedly, free: Elizabeth Tsurkov in 1st statement after release from Iraq - The Times of Israel - October 4th, 2025 [October 4th, 2025]
- Power Beneath the Sands: The Investment Approaches of the US and China in Iraq - Fair Observer - October 4th, 2025 [October 4th, 2025]
- Remembering Jalal Talabani (Mam Jalal), the First Kurdish president of Iraq - The Times of Israel - October 4th, 2025 [October 4th, 2025]
- Security cooperation between Iraq and Iran poses a risk to the US and Israel - Atalayar - October 4th, 2025 [October 4th, 2025]
- DICK YARBROUGH: Looking back on a visit to Iraq 20 years ago with a group of Georgia heroes - Marietta Daily Journal - October 4th, 2025 [October 4th, 2025]
- Why Iraq Could Make or Break the Next Oil Price Move - Crude Oil Prices Today | OilPrice.com - October 4th, 2025 [October 4th, 2025]
- Excelerate Energy to develop integrated floating LNG import terminal in Iraq - Shipping Telegraph - October 4th, 2025 [October 4th, 2025]
- High-pressure system brings 40C temperatures back to much of Iraq - 964media - October 4th, 2025 [October 4th, 2025]
- US downsizing Iraq presence to focus on 'potential resurgence' of ISIS in Syria - Yahoo News Canada - October 4th, 2025 [October 4th, 2025]
- US downsizing Iraq presence to focus on 'potential resurgence' of ISIS in Syria - USA Today - October 2nd, 2025 [October 2nd, 2025]
- US reducing total number of troops in Iraq amid shift in bases - Task & Purpose - October 2nd, 2025 [October 2nd, 2025]
- Iraq: Six years since Tishreen protests, activists persecuted and freedom of expression in peril - Amnesty International - October 2nd, 2025 [October 2nd, 2025]
- The Met returns 4,500-Year-Old Statue of Ibex to Iraq - ArtDependence - October 2nd, 2025 [October 2nd, 2025]
- Rights group condemns continued persecution of Tishreen activists by Iraq authorities - Jurist.org - October 2nd, 2025 [October 2nd, 2025]
- US military starts drawing down its mission in Iraq countering the Islamic State group - AP News - October 2nd, 2025 [October 2nd, 2025]
- Will Iraq manage to continue to stay out of the Iran-Israel confrontation? - Amwaj.media - October 2nd, 2025 [October 2nd, 2025]
- US military begins reducing its mission in Iraq, Pentagon says - Stars and Stripes - October 2nd, 2025 [October 2nd, 2025]
- Army vet, badly injured in Iraq, gifted new Naperville home by nonprofit and house builder - Chicago Tribune - October 2nd, 2025 [October 2nd, 2025]
- Iraq warns candidates of fines, jail as campaigning begins - The New Region - October 2nd, 2025 [October 2nd, 2025]
- Excelerate Energy wins award to build floating LNG import terminal in Iraq - MSN - October 2nd, 2025 [October 2nd, 2025]
- Iraq recovers rare 4,500-year-old bronze Ibex statue from United States - Iraqi News - October 2nd, 2025 [October 2nd, 2025]
- US begins Iraq troop drawdown amid debate over withdrawal or repositioning - SyriacPress - October 2nd, 2025 [October 2nd, 2025]
- Iraq moves to open two new border crossings with Saudi Arabia, Iran - 964media - October 2nd, 2025 [October 2nd, 2025]
- Pressured to curb Iranian imports, Iraq aims to double KRG oil flows next year - The Arab Weekly - October 2nd, 2025 [October 2nd, 2025]
- From Iceland to Iran and Iraq: One mans mission to help free Elizabeth Tsurkov - The Times of Israel - September 30th, 2025 [September 30th, 2025]
- Iraq restarts oil exports from Kurdistan region to Trkiye - Offshore Technology - September 30th, 2025 [September 30th, 2025]
- Iraq faces water crisis as government seeks short-term talks with Turkey - The Arab Weekly - September 30th, 2025 [September 30th, 2025]
- New Assyrian winged bull discovered in Nineveh (Iraq): a key piece of the Assyrian Empire - Finestre sull'Arte - September 30th, 2025 [September 30th, 2025]
- RELEASE: Gottheimer Co-Leads Bipartisan House Intelligence Committee Trip to Jordan and Iraq - Congressman Josh Gottheimer (.gov) - September 30th, 2025 [September 30th, 2025]
- Iraq War veteran Thomas Sanford IDd as gunman who attacked Grand Blanc LDS church, killing 4 and setting it ablaze - New York Post - September 30th, 2025 [September 30th, 2025]
- Iraq war veteran who opened fire on hundreds of Mormon worshippers pictured in Donald Trump shirt - The Independent - September 30th, 2025 [September 30th, 2025]
- Minute-by-minute of Mormon church shooting as 'Iraq War veteran' ploughed truck with bombs into doors before killing 4 - The US Sun - September 30th, 2025 [September 30th, 2025]
- Mormon church shooter identified as Iraq War veteran - The New Daily - September 30th, 2025 [September 30th, 2025]
- Iraq War veteran Thomas Sanford IDd as gunman who attacked Grand Blanc LDS church, killing 4 and setting it ablaze - AOL.com - September 30th, 2025 [September 30th, 2025]
- Gunman in Michigan LDS church shooting was a veteran of the Iraq War - KVNU - September 30th, 2025 [September 30th, 2025]
- Iraq Accelerates Economic Growth Through Baghdad Reconstruction Electronic Payment Systems Banking Reform and Progressive Policies Attracting Global... - September 30th, 2025 [September 30th, 2025]
- Iraq resumes Kurdish oil exports to Turkey after 2-1/2-year halt - Reuters - September 28th, 2025 [September 28th, 2025]
- Iraq records an increase in oil exports to the United States - Shafaq News - - September 28th, 2025 [September 28th, 2025]
- Two Women Soldiers Served in the Iraq War, Then One Was Deported - StoryCorps - September 28th, 2025 [September 28th, 2025]
- Norway's DNO will not use newly opened pipeline from Iraq's Kurdistan - Reuters - September 28th, 2025 [September 28th, 2025]
- Eight oil companies reach agreement with Iraq, KRG to resume oil exports - Reuters - September 28th, 2025 [September 28th, 2025]
- Iraq resumes oil exports from the Kurdish region to Turkey after a halt of more than 2 years - Yahoo News Canada - September 28th, 2025 [September 28th, 2025]
- Giving Hope to Youth: Catholic University in Iraq Celebrates 10 Years - Church in Need - September 28th, 2025 [September 28th, 2025]
- Iraq Resumes Kurdistan Oil Exports After Halt of Two Years - Bloomberg.com - September 28th, 2025 [September 28th, 2025]
- French jihadist who claimed Nice attack to be tried in Iraq: source close to probe - AL-Monitor - September 28th, 2025 [September 28th, 2025]
- Head of Iraq's PMU responds to Netanyahus threats: We will confront threats against Iraq's security and sovereignty - Pars Today - September 28th, 2025 [September 28th, 2025]
- Good news from the Middle East: Iraq-Turkey pipeline reopens, with U.S. help - Washington Times - September 28th, 2025 [September 28th, 2025]
- Iraq resumes Kurdish oil exports to Turkey, deal eases tensions between Baghdad and Erbil - The Arab Weekly - September 28th, 2025 [September 28th, 2025]
- Energy demand per capita up 8% in 2024 in Iraq - Shafaq News - - September 28th, 2025 [September 28th, 2025]
- After Operation Inherent Resolve: The Future of U.S.-Iraq Security Relations - The Washington Institute - September 25th, 2025 [September 25th, 2025]
- French jihadist who claimed 2016 Nice attack to be tried in Iraq, source says - France 24 - September 25th, 2025 [September 25th, 2025]
- When I was married at 13 I was told refusal would end in my death. Now girls in Iraq as young as nine face the same fate - The Guardian - September 25th, 2025 [September 25th, 2025]
- Bees, once buzzing in honey-producing Basra, hit by Iraq's water crisis - Reuters - September 25th, 2025 [September 25th, 2025]
- Iraq Expects Kurdistan Oil Exports to Restart This Week - Crude Oil Prices Today | OilPrice.com - September 25th, 2025 [September 25th, 2025]
- Iraq Saves Al-Sharaa, Irans Axis Cracks - The Times of Israel - September 25th, 2025 [September 25th, 2025]
- Iraq to try French ISIS terrorist linked to Nice attack in 2016 - Iraqi News - September 25th, 2025 [September 25th, 2025]
- Iraq security brief: Counter-ISIS push, school attack, and fatal shootings - Shafaq News - - September 25th, 2025 [September 25th, 2025]
- Iraq and Turkey Agree to Restart Kurdistans Oil Exports - Crude Oil Prices Today | OilPrice.com - September 25th, 2025 [September 25th, 2025]
- Trump administration intensifies pressure on Iraq to cut ties with Iran - bne IntelliNews - September 25th, 2025 [September 25th, 2025]
- HKN Energy and Seven Other International Oil Companies Reach Milestone Agreement in Principle to Resume Exports Through the Iraq-Turkiye Pipeline -... - September 25th, 2025 [September 25th, 2025]
- Is Iraq Looking To Open Another Backdoor For Iran To Export Its Oil - Crude Oil Prices Today | OilPrice.com - September 25th, 2025 [September 25th, 2025]
- French Jihadist Behind 2016 Nice Attack to Face Trial in Iraq - The European Conservative - September 25th, 2025 [September 25th, 2025]
- Iraq signs $2.5bn seawater injection pipeline deal with Chinese firm - Quantum Commodity Intelligence - September 25th, 2025 [September 25th, 2025]
- Iraq and China Sign $2.5b Deal to Build Massive Seawater Injection Pipeline Network - Pipeline Technology Journal - September 25th, 2025 [September 25th, 2025]
- Engage with Iraq as it launches 1,000 scholarships - Opportunities and insight | British Council - September 25th, 2025 [September 25th, 2025]
- Iran to Host Major Tourism Roadshow in Iraq, Aiming to Attract Five Million Iraqi Visitors by 2026 - Travel And Tour World - September 23rd, 2025 [September 23rd, 2025]
- The US troop presence in Iraq doesnt make sense anymore - Stars and Stripes - September 23rd, 2025 [September 23rd, 2025]
- Presidents of Armenia and Iraq discuss bilateral agenda in New York - Armenpress - September 23rd, 2025 [September 23rd, 2025]
- DNO: Possible Participation In Resumption Of Exports Through The Iraq-Trkiye Pipeline - TradingView - September 23rd, 2025 [September 23rd, 2025]
- A Severe Drought In Iraq Has Revealed Dozens Of 2,300-Year-Old Tombs - All That's Interesting - September 23rd, 2025 [September 23rd, 2025]