Archive for the ‘Iraq’ Category

Iraq wants China to be ‘major participant’ in project linking West Asia … – The Cradle

Iraqi Transport Minister Razzaq al-Saadawi says he expects China to be a major participant in a $17 billion infrastructure project that seeks to link West Asia and Europe and make Iraq a regional transportation hub.

The Iraqi government welcomes Chinas participation in the Development Road project, whether in implementation or investment, Saadawi said in a statement after meeting Chinese Ambassador Cui Wei on 31 May.

Our government welcomes the participation of Beijing in the Development Road project, and the door is open to all countries to take part, first and foremost China, the Iraqi official stressed, adding that the Chinese ambassador had shown clear interest in knowing many of the details and components.

On Thursday, Wei met Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani, telling him that the Development Road project is very important to Iraq, it will be a path for peace and prosperity in the region and will be complementary to Belt and Road initiative.

The Development Road project, linking the under-construction Al-Faw port on the Gulf coast to Iraqs northern border with Turkiye, is intended to transform Iraqs economy after decades of war and crisis.

It involves the construction of 1,200km of railway lines and a new motorway that will reduce transport costs and transit times between the two continents.

Sudani announced the project on 27 May during a conference with transport ministry representatives from Iran, Jordan, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Turkiye, and the UAE.

We see this project as a pillar of a sustainable non-oil economy, a link that serves Iraqs neighbors and the region, and a contribution to economic integration efforts, the Iraqi premier said.

Following his meeting with the Chinese ambassador this week, Saadawi hinted that a second conference on the project would be held to welcome Chinas involvement but did not give a date.

China is one of the biggest buyers of Iraqs oil and one of its main trading partners. Trade between the two nations reached $53.37 billion last year, an increase of 43 percent from 2021.

Iraq was the largest beneficiary in West Asia of Chinas Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) in 2021, receiving more than $10.5 billion in investment.

Earlier this year, the Iraqi central bank announced it would allow trade from China to be settled directly in yuan instead of the US dollar.

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Iraq wants China to be 'major participant' in project linking West Asia ... - The Cradle

Syrian refugee sisters found a safe haven in northern Iraq – Iraqi News

Erbil When the Syrian Kurdish sisters Perwin and Norshean Salih sing about loss, it comes from the heart.

Aged in their early 20s, they have twice been driven from their family home in the northern Syrian town of Kobane once by the Islamic State group, and again by the threat of Turkish bombs.

Now they have found a safe haven in northern Iraq, where they carve out a living by performing the often melancholy music of their people in a restaurant.

Kurdish folk songs are our favourite type of music, said Perwin Salih, 20, who plays the santoor, tambourine and Armenian flute. They tell the plight of the Kurds, the wars, the tragedy of displacement and the killings.

When the jihadists attacked Kobane in late 2014, and heavy fighting turned the town into a symbol of Kurdish resistance, the sisters fled across the border to Turkey.

After several unhappy months in Istanbul, they moved to the mainly Kurdish city of Diyarbakir in Turkeys southeast where they continued their music studies.

They moved back home in 2019, after Syrian Kurdish-led forces drove IS out of their last territorial stronghold, with US backing.

Turkey has kept targeting parts of northern Syria in what Ankara says is a fight against Kurdish militants.

Once, the sisters say, mortar shells hit their family home, thankfully without exploding.

IS still haunts my dreams

Late last year, when Turkey launched major air and artillery strikes, the Salih sisters fled once more, this time to Iraq, where they and two more siblings now rent a modest two-room house in Erbil.

The two women said they grew up in a household of music lovers, with their mother singing to them before bedtime while their father played the tambourine.

But the trauma they have endured since has left deep scars.

A vision of IS still haunts me, said Perwin. Men in black clothes, holding black flags, on a quest to turn life itself black.

At a recent concert, Perwin played the flute while Norshean, 23, captivated the audience with a Kurdish folk tune about displacement.

I am a stranger, she sang softly. Without you, mother, my wings are broken. I am a stranger, and life abroad is like a prison.

Norshean, a classical music afficionado, also plays the piano, guitar and kamanja, an ancient Persian string instrument, and dreams of making it as a violinist.

But for now she has recurring nightmares of the jihadists.

The IS still haunts my dreams, she told AFP.

We cried while we played

On their latest escape from Kobane, the sisters faced another nightmare.

At the border, Syrian soldiers demanded that they play, warning that they would confiscate the instruments if they didnt like the music.

We cried while we played, and when we were done they smiled and said: now you can pass, recounted Norshean.

The sisters now mainly perform at a restaurant called Beroea, an ancient name for the once-vibrant Syrian city of Aleppo.

Co-owner Riyad Othman said he was not surprised by the dangers the women have had to face.

A Syrian Kurd himself, he said his people spend their entire life fleeing, estranged and suffering.

The wandering sisters dream of one day returning home.

I hope the war will end, so we can be free, so we can return to our homes to play music and teach music to the children, said Norshean.

This will be good to revive peoples souls.

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Syrian refugee sisters found a safe haven in northern Iraq - Iraqi News

US supports six armed terrorist groups on Iraq-Iran border: Politician – Press TV

A senior Iraqi politician says the United States supports six armed terrorist groups and organizations operating near Iraqs border with Iran.

Jabbar Odeh, one of the leaders of Iraq's Coordination Framework Alliance, was cited by al-Maloumah news agency as making the statement in an interview on Saturday night.

The US foreign policy is based on creating sedition and international conflicts and disputes, because Washington is the heir and follower of the British policy, which is the policy of divide and rule, Odeh said.

Pointing to the various kinds of support the United States provides to the groups near the border in the Kurdistan region, the Iraqi politician said Washington is using the terrorist groups as leverage to turn the area into a scene of regional conflict.

We consider the presence and activity of these groups around the Iraqi borders with neighboring countries as illegal since Iraqs Constitution has emphasized the prohibition of any activity against neighboring countries bordering Iraq, Odeh said.

Through the financial support of armed groups, the United States is jeopardizing the security of the Iraqi Kurdistan region and pushing the region towards a dangerous direction.

Odeh said the terrorist groups, which are hiding in the heights of the Kurdistan region of Iraq, are tools at the disposal of the American intelligence services.

While the United States claims it has ended its combat mission in Iraq, some 2,500 troops still remain in the country. Under pressure from Iraqi people, US President Joe Biden and Iraqs then Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi declared in July 2021 that the US mission in Iraq would transition from combat to an advisory role by the end of that year.

Back in February, the head of the Iraqi resistance group Harakat Hezbollah Nujaba, Akram al-Kaabi, stated there is no friendship between Baghdad and Washington, and the American occupation forces cannot stay in the Arab country under any pretext.

There is no friendship with America, he said. The US is an enemy and will remain an enemy. We do not accept the staying of American forces, including advisers, technicians and combat forces. The resistance has no other position and will never change it.

On March 19, 2003, the US and Britain invaded Iraq in blatant violation of international law and under the pretext of finding Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD). No such weapons were ever discovered in Iraq.

More than one million Iraqis were killed as a result of the US-led invasion, and occupation of the country, according to the California-based investigative organization Project Censored.

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US supports six armed terrorist groups on Iraq-Iran border: Politician - Press TV

Discontent in Iraq 20 years after US-led invasion – Global Village space

Following the 9/11 terrorist attacks in the United States which occurred over 20 years ago, democracy within the country eroded. A week after the terrorist atrocities, on 18 September 2001 President George W. Bush signed into law the Authorization for Use of Military Force, which was promptly approved by the US Congress. This legislation granted President Bush the power to use the necessary and appropriate force against Americas perceived enemies.

Bush said his government will not only deal with those who dare attack America, but we will also deal with those who harbor them and feed them and house them. On 7 October 2001 the US, with the participation of Britain, Canada and Australia, started bombing Afghanistan, and US ground forces were landing in Afghanistan on 18 October.

Read more: US lawmakers officially end Iraq wars

There was a period of only 26 days, between the 9/11 attacks and when the US bombing of Afghanistan commenced on 7 October. It takes significantly longer than 26 days to prepare a military offensive against a sizable country like Afghanistan. By 26 September, just 15 days after 9/11, operatives from the CIA werepresenton Afghan soil.

Niaz Naik, an experienced diplomat and Pakistans former Foreign Secretary (198286), revealed he had been told by senior American officials in mid-July 2001 that Washington, by then, haddecidedto take military action against Afghanistan. We can assume the actual planning of a military campaign in Afghanistan would have preceded July 2001 by some weeks or months, very soon after Bush entered office on 20 January 2001.

Bush signed into law the Patriot Act on 26 October 2001, which enlarged the governments powers for the electronic surveillance of citizens by the US National Security Agency (NSA); the Patriot Act further established the new crime of domestic terrorism in broad terms, relating to acts of civil disobedience regardless of the political motivation. This was a violation of the US Constitution and which undermined the countrys domestic legal structure.

Nearly a year later, Bush declared the National Security Strategy of the United States on 17 September 2002, in which he stated the battle against the anti-American insurgency could not be won by defensive methods; and that Washington had the right to launch pre-emptive wars unilaterally.Bush further implemented his foreign policy goals, by launching a military offensive against Iraq beginning on 20 March 2003. Bushs government was supported in the attack by the British, Australians and Poles. Washingtons NATO allies France and Germany refused to partake in it.

However, Angela Merkelthe then Leader of the Opposition in Berlinprovided strong public support for the US-led invasion of Iraq, despite doubts from within her own party, the Christian Democratic Union. Shortly before the attack on Iraq began Merkel said war was unavoidable and Not acting would have caused more damage. Merkel tried to cover this up in 2016 when shesaid, I never support war.I did not support the war in Iraq. I was very upset that it was not possible to come up with a common position between the Europeans and the United States.

Read more: US lawmakers officially end Iraq wars

In June 2003 the US Deputy Secretary of Defense, Paul Wolfowitz, was asked during a trip to Singapore why the Americans had not chosen a military solution regarding North Korea, as with Iraq. Wolfowitzreplied, Lets look at it simply. The most important difference between North Korea and Iraq is that economically we just had no choice in Iraq. The country swims on a sea of oil.

Moreover, North Korea has for many years boasted a large army and a formidable arsenal of weapons, which may well be the main reason the US has not launched a military intervention in North Korea since the Korean War ended in 1953. For whatever problems there are within North Korean society, Pyongyangs policy of building a strong military has been a shrewd undertaking. In the event of war between the US and North Korea, the North Koreans would be left with little alternative but to direct the full weight of their military power against South Korea, as the Americans are aware of. Washington had no such issues with Iraq, the country poorly armed in comparison.

A German geologist who explored Iraq and the surrounding area, before the First World War, estimated the region contained the largest undeveloped resources of oil on earth, and he predicted the power that controls the oil lands of Persia [Iran] and Mesopotamia [Iraq] will control the source of supply of the majority liquid fuel of the future.

After World War I, the British seized the Iraqi capital Baghdad, and Basra in the south of the country. The French took control of northern Iraq, Syria and Lebanon. The Kurdish population were kept in a separate region under British rule, and when they revolted the Colonial Secretary Winston Churchillsaid, I do not understand this squeamishness about the use of gas. I am strongly in favour of using poisoned gas against uncivilized tribes.

The US has for decades been more reliant on oil consumption than any other country, and a key foreign policy goal is to safeguard raw materials to sustain the economy and American lifestyle. To provide an example, the American population is massively dependent on petroleum-run automobiles. There arecurrentlyjust over 290 million vehicles in the US for a population of around 335 million, meaning there is nearly a vehicle for every person in the country, and less than 1% of these are electric models. China is considered the worlds biggest manufacturing power, but there is less than 1 vehicle for every 4 people in China, 319 millionvehiclesfor a population of 1.4 billion.

Bushs vice-president Dick Cheney acknowledged that the Gulf War (199091)was concerned, in part, with maintaining Washingtons access to the Persian Gulfs natural resources. On 28 May 2003 Cheneys colleague, Wolfowitz, said the pretext of weapons of mass destruction (WMDs) was chosen for bureaucratic reasons by Washington to justify the invasion of Iraq, because it was the only topic which everyone could agree on as a reason for intervening militarily in the country.

Iraqs leader Saddam Hussein must have been irritated, when he was accused of possessing deadly weapons of which he had none. His irritation would have grown, as he was incorrectly blamed for having some sort of involvement in the 9/11 attacks, and of having ties to Al Qaeda.

Rubens Barbosa, former Brazilian ambassador to the US (19992004), wrote in his memoirs that the decision to attack Iraq had been taken before the September 11 attacks. The BBC show Newsnight outlined in March 2005 that the Bush administration had developedplansfor invading Iraq months prior to 9/11, and political infighting had been taking place between the White Houses neo-conservatives and American oil firms, about how to exploit Iraqs wealth.

Bush and his British counterpart, Tony Blair, discussed what to do with the Iraqi oil assets before 2003. Blairs government (19972007) was being lobbied by British oil companies, who wanted assurances they would be able to access Iraqs petroleum reserves after Saddam Hussein was overthrown. Fossil fuel corporations from America and Europe, including Chevron and Shell, had already developed projects pertaining to Iraq before the invasion commenced.

Read more: TikTokers jailed as Iraq targets decadent content

Afterward, geologists from Western multinational firms analyzed the unexplored desert regions of western and southern Iraq. The US Department of Energy surmised that the areas in question couldholdbetween 45 billion to 100 billion barrels of oil. Bush, who had an extensive history of working in the US oil industry, was also interested in ensuring access to raw materials. Bush said in his 2006 State of the Union address, America is addicted to oil which is often imported from unstable parts of the world.

He started to replace the dollar with the euro as the currency for oil transactions, and he had been in negotiations for contracts with foreign energy companies such as Total from France. This insubordination on Saddams part was a major factor in his demise.

When he was a more pliable client, Saddam had been granted considerable support from Washington, including military aid, such as during the Iran-Iraq War (198088). John Kelly, the US Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs, visited Baghdad shortly after the conclusion of the Iran-Iraq War and told Saddam, You are a force for moderation in the region, and the United States wants to broaden her relationship with Iraq.

When evidence was provided by human rights activists, that Saddams forces had used nerve gas and mustard gas against Iranian soldiers and Kurdish civilians, the US State Department would not condemn him. In the early years of Saddams reign Washington viewed him as a bulwark against Iran, a country which had gained independence from Western control with the 1979 revolution.

President Bush may have truly believed he was going to introduce a free and open society to Iraq by removing Saddam, however misguided such a view was. Yet many Iraqis believe their lives were better off under Saddam, rather than what followed from 2003. In a survey conducted in February 2023, almost 20 years after the US invasion began, 59% of Iraqi respondents said the situation in their country isworsein 2023 compared to life under Saddam, with 40% saying it is better; 66% of Iraqis said the invasion had negative consequences for them.

Read more: TikTokers jailed as Iraq targets decadent content

Following Saddams taking of power in 1979, regardless of some of his notorious actions, he had managed to maintain the structure of the Iraqi state. He was not ultimately responsible for the crippling financial measures which the Western powers had enacted against Iraq, in the decade before 2003.

It had amounted to 90% of government revenues and 58% of the countrys Gross Domestic Product (GDP). During the opening phase of Saddams rule, he used much of the profits gathered from the states oil production in order to modernise the civilian infrastructure, building first-rate hospitals, schools and universities, journalist John Pilger wrote. Pilger noted too that Saddam undertook these policies more than any other Arab leader at the time.

Though Iraq was not a haven under Saddams regime, he had successfully created a fairly large and well-educated middle class. The adult literacy rate in Iraq, those who could read and write, was among the highest in the world under Saddam at about 95%. The adult literacy rate has sincedroppedto just under 80%. Whereas in 1990 the average daily calorie intake for an Iraqi citizen amounted to over 3,000 calories, near the end of the US occupation of Iraq in 2010 this hadfallento 2,580 calories.

Living conditions in Iraq deteriorated since Saddams toppling by the Americans, and sectarian violence greatly worsened from 2003 between the nations Sunni and Shia communities. These problems were also less severe during Saddams reign when Iraq had been a more stable country.

Shane Quinn has contributed on a regular basis to Global Research for almost two years and has had articles published with American news outlets Peoples World and MintPress News, Morning Star in Britain, and Venezuelas Orinoco Tribune. The views expressed in the article are the authors own and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Global Village Space.

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Discontent in Iraq 20 years after US-led invasion - Global Village space

IMF: Growth rate in Iraq is slowing down – Iraqi News

Baghdad (IraqiNews.com) The International Monetary Fund (IMF) issued a statement about the prospects of the Iraqi economy in terms of the suspension of the Kirkuk-Ceyhan oil pipeline, in addition to the decline in oil production and fluctuations in the currency exchange rate.

The statement explained that a team from the IMF met recently with Iraqi officials in the Jordanian capital, Amman, to discuss recent economic developments and policy plans for the period ahead.

The Iraqi economys growth momentum has slowed in recent months. After returning to its pre-pandemic level last year, oil production is set to contract by five percent in 2023 owing to the OPEC+ production cut and the outage of the Kirkuk-Ceyhan oil pipeline, the statement clarified.

The foreign exchange market volatility in the wake of tighter anti-money laundering and combating the financing of terrorism controls by the Central Bank of Iraq (CBI) on foreign exchange market sales has adversely affected import-dependent non-oil sectors, the statement elaborated.

The real non-oil gross domestic product (GDP) is estimated to have contracted by nine percent in the last quarter of 2022, negating its growth during the previous three quarters, the statement explained.

With the foreign exchange market appearing to be stabilizing, helped by CBIs actions, the growth of real non-oil GDP is expected to resume and reach 3.7 percent in 2023, the statement illustrated.

After inflation spiked to seven percent in January, it began to moderate and is projected to average 5.6 percent in 2023, the statement added.

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IMF: Growth rate in Iraq is slowing down - Iraqi News