Archive for the ‘Iraq’ Category

UNODC participates in the 2nd Baghdad International Conference on Countering Narcotics and presents the report Drug Trafficking Dynamics across Iraq…

Today marked an important moment in Iraqs road towards addressing drug trafficking through international cooperation with the holding of the 2nd Baghdad International Conference on Countering Narcotics, in the presence of UNODC, and the presentation of the report Drug Trafficking Dynamics across Iraq and the Middle East (2019-2023): Trends and Responses. The Conference was opened in the presence of H.E. Mohammed Shia' Al Sudani, Prime Minister of Iraq, H.E Abdul Amir al-Shammari, Minister of Interior, H.E. Mohammad Bin Ali Kuman, Secretary General of the Arab Interior Ministers Council (AIMC), Ms. Cristina Albertin, the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) Regional Representative for the Middle East and North Africa, and Mr. Ali El Bereir, Senior Programme Coordinator and Head of the UNODC Office in Iraq. The event was also attended by representatives of Ministers of Interior from the region and neighboring countries affected by drug trafficking.

The Baghdad International Conference on Countering Narcotics aims to bring together relevant authorities and experts from countries neighboring Iraq as well as regional and key international players to find concrete solutions and recommendations to challenges faced by authorities in countering drug trafficking in the region.

H.E. Mohammed Shia' Al Sudani, Prime Minister of Iraq affirmed in the opening of the Conference that Combating drugs is a responsibility that the state must bear with all its agencies and entities, as well as our societies... Drugs and psychotropic substances are a primary factor in the instability of the region. The threat of drugs not only harms our youth but endangers our entire future. By unifying efforts and enhancing joint coordination, we can achieve the desired goal of drug-free societies.

The Drug Trafficking Dynamics across Iraq and the Middle East (2019-2023): Trends and Responses report was presented today at the Conference to provide an analysis of the main drug trafficking trends in Iraq and the Near and Middle East. In addition to posing a diagnostic of the concerning drug situation, the report provides a roadmap to assist national, regional, and international authorities in accelerating collaboration and better coordination to counter-narcotics.

The report reveals that countries in the region have experienced an escalation in both the scale and sophistication of drug trafficking over the past 10 years. This poses important destabilizing risks and is a regional and global concern. Of particular concern are the rising production, trafficking, and consumption of amphetamine-type stimulants (ATS), especially tablets of "Captagon," and methamphetamine.

Ms. Cristina Albertin, UNODC Regional Representative for the Middle East and North Africa stated that the Government of Iraq and its partners have stressed the need for collective responses to tackle the security, social, and economic ramifications of drug trafficking across the Near and Middle East. As seen in different regional contexts, the persistence and potential reactivation of armed groups across the region poses a significant threat, not least given their potential involvement in drug production and trafficking. Data and analysis like those provided by this report are necessary for evidence and data-driven national, regional, and global responses to this problem.

Over the past two years, the Iraqi Government has taken bold steps in combatting drugs, by reorganizing the relevant departments of the Ministry of Interior, a better-coordinated approach internally and with other Member States, and expansion of the treatment facilities. The Conference and the Report are additional contributions towards this holistic approach and will together provide a base for a series of recommendations to be adopted by participating countries and implemented to address the threats of drug trafficking.

*****

Media queries, please contact:

Nermine Abdelhamid (Ms.) | Communications and Visibility Officer UNODC Regional Office for the Middle East and North Africa (ROMENA) nermine.abdelhamid@un.org

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UNODC participates in the 2nd Baghdad International Conference on Countering Narcotics and presents the report Drug Trafficking Dynamics across Iraq...

After 20 years, is Iraq making progress in bid to join WTO? – Al-Monitor

Iraq announced on Monday that it has resumed negotiations to join the World Trade Organization (WTO) for the first time since 2008, a move that could benefit the Iraqi economy but will take considerable time.

Iraqi negotiating teams began preparatory meetings at the WTO headquarters in Geneva. The Iraqi delegation included officials from ministries in both the federal government and the autonomous Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG). Another meeting will be held at an unspecified date to review Iraqs accession to the WTO, the official Iraqi News Agency reported, citing a Trade Ministry statement.

The WTO is an intergovernmental organization that aims to foster international trade. It provides a platform for governments to negotiate trade rules and disputes with one another. Major decisions are made by the member states. The WTO has 164 members that it says are responsible for 98% of global trade.

Background: Iraq first applied to join the WTO in 2004, the year following the US invasion that toppled longtime ruler Saddam Hussein. A working party was subsequently established, but there has been little progress since then. The last time the party met formally was in 2008. An informal meeting was held in 2017, according to the WTO website.

The process has gained momentum recently. In January, a WTO delegation visited Baghdad to galvanize political support for the resumption of Iraqs WTO accession process. The discussion focused on Iraqi economic reforms and was led by Saqer bin Abdullah Al-Moqbel, Saudi Arabias ambassador to the WTO and head of the working party for Iraqs accession, the organization said in a release at the time.

A key requirement for joining the WTO is consistent trade policies throughout the country, including tariff rates and customs procedures. The differences in tariff structure between the federal government and the KRG were therefore an obstacle to Iraqs efforts to join the WTO. Iraq decided to harmonize the two customs regimes in 2019, and the federal Ministry of Finance finally approved the unified tariff framework in February of this year, the United Nations team for Iraq said in a release last week.

The KRG administers northern Iraqs Kurdistan Region and has a significant degree of autonomy from Baghdad, including its own security forces.

Why it matters: Joining the WTO could benefit Iraq. According to an April 2023 report from the Council on Foreign Relations, the WTO has been largely successful in expanding free trade. The dollar value of international trade has quadrupled since the WTOs inception in 1995, and tariffs average just 3%, the council noted.

There are also downsides to the WTO, according to the Council on Foreign Relations.

Globalization and free trade have their drawbacks. These includethe potential for economic inequality and job loss, the council noted in the report.

The WTO has been especially criticized regarding enforcing rules vis-a-vis China.

The WTO also struggles to perform its third job rule enforcement particularly with China. Since joining the WTO in 2001, China hasflouted global trade rulesby providing extensive support to its domestic industries and stealing technology and other intellectual property. It has faced few, if any, consequences for its actions, said the council.

China has a growing presence in Iraq, and there has been significant Chinese investment in Iraqi oil and infrastructure in recent years.

The WTO says it has helped facilitate the alleviation of poverty in developing economies by fostering trade.

Over the past generation, market-oriented reforms in places including Eastern Europe, India and China, combined with the open global economy anchored in the GATT/WTO system to turbocharge growth and trade and help lift more than a billion people out of extreme poverty, WTO Director General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala told the Center for Strategic and International Studies in September 2023.

The GATT refers to the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, a predecessor of the WTO.

Iraqs trade is dominated by oil. Crude petroleum accounted for 90% of Iraqs $123 billion in exports in 2022. Iraq imported $67.1 billion that year, with the top imports being refined petroleum, broadcasting equipment and cars. These figures gave Iraq a trade surplus of more than $50 billion in 2022, according to the Observatory of Economic Complexity.

Whats next: Iraq could be in for a long wait to join the WTO. Timor-Leste joined the organization in February after seven years of negotiations. Comoros joined at the same time a process that took 17 years, Arabian Gulf Business Insight reported at the time.

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After 20 years, is Iraq making progress in bid to join WTO? - Al-Monitor

J.D. Vance Criticizes Bidens Support for Iraq War in 2003 But Pushes Hawkish Policy on China & Iran – Democracy Now!

This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.

AMY GOODMAN: This is Democracy Now!, democracynow.org, War, Peace and the Presidency: Breaking with Convention. Im Amy Goodman, with Nermeen Shaikh.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: Were continuing our look at Donald Trumps running mate J.D. Vance. As a senator, Vance has advocated for cutting aid to Ukraine, increasing support for Israel and taking a harder line on China. During his address on Wednesday night, he briefly spoke about foreign policy.

SEN. J.D. VANCE: Together, we will make sure our allies share in the burden of securing world peace. No more free rides for nations that betray the generosity of the American taxpayer.

Together, we will send our kids to war only when we must. But as President Trump showed with the elimination of ISIS and so much more, when we punch, were going to punch hard.

Together, we will put the citizens of America first, whatever the color of their skin. We will, in short, make America great again.

AMY GOODMAN: That was Republican vice-presidential nominee J.D. Vance, speaking for the first time as the Republican vice-presidential nominee Wednesday night here in Milwaukee at the Republican National Convention.

Were joined in Washington, D.C., by Matt Duss, the executive vice president of the Center for International Policy, former foreign policy adviser to Senator Bernie Sanders.

Matt, welcome back to Democracy Now!

MATT DUSS: Thank you.

AMY GOODMAN: Near the beginning of J.D. Vances speech last night, he attacked President Biden for his support of the Iraq War right? when President George W. Bush led the United States into the war with Iraq on March 19th, 2003. He didnt talk about President Bush. He didnt say the president was Republican at the time. He did accurately say that, like Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden had supported that. But can you explain that? He himself had joined the Marines after the 9/11 attack and went to Iraq to serve in the Public Affairs Division in 2005.

MATT DUSS: Right. I think thats generally consistent with the story hes telling about his own political conversion, but the story he wants to tell America about Trumpism, about the MAGA movement, is that he was misled. He was told by Washington elites that this was a just war, a necessary war, and was lied to. So he did his duty as an American citizen and went to serve in the Marines in Iraq, but then came to realize that that war was based on a lie.

And, of course, that is a very valid argument. It was based on a series of lies and untruths, and had enormously disastrous effects, of course, for the region, but also for the United States. And thats, again, an area where President Biden is quite vulnerable. He was a strong supporter of the Iraq War and, to this day, has never fully accounted for his support for the war.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: Right, Matt. And if you could talk about some of the other positions that Vance has articulated in the past, not just on Iraq, which he spoke about last night, but also Ukraine, Israel, Iran and, of course, China, which he sees as the greatest threat to the United States?

MATT DUSS: Right. I mean, I think if you look at what hes saying and what he said in the past, you know, its very aligned with Trump. I think Trump does get credit for attacking the kind of foreign policy establishment, the hawkish Bush administration and the mistakes that they made, but also the foreign policy establishment more broadly, Democrats and Republicans, have made.

But if you look at the actual record of Trumps presidency, it was, in fact, quite militarist. It was not isolationist. It was certainly not dovish in any respect. It was just unilateralist, I mean, and that, I think, is consistent with what we saw last night. Its not that the United States will be pulling back from the world necessarily. Its that we will be much more aggressive in advancing our own kind of perceived interests.

And if you look at some of the steps Trump took with North Korea, we came closer than ever before to a war with North Korea in 2017. We were on the brink of war with Iran in the wake of the assassination of Qassem Soleimani in January 2020. There was, of course, the attempt at regime change in Venezuela. So, again, I think its important to understand all of these in the background, even while we recognize the validity of the critique of the foreign policy establishment that weve seen from Trump and now from Vance.

AMY GOODMAN: Lets go to Senator J.D. Vance speaking earlier this year, because he didnt talk that much about foreign policy in this address at the RNC, but speaking earlier this year about U.S. relations with Israel and what he would like to see in the future.

SEN. J.D. VANCE: A big part of the reason why Americans care about Israel is because we are still the largest Christian-majority country in the world, which means that a majority of citizens of this country think that their savior and I count myself a Christian was born, died and resurrected in that narrow little strip of territory off the Mediterranean. The idea that there is ever going to be an American foreign policy that doesnt care a lot about that slice of the world is preposterous because of who Americans are.

We have a real opportunity to ensure that Israel is an ally in the true sense. But its going to pursue their interests, and sometimes those interests wont totally overlap with the United States, and thats totally reasonable. But they are fundamentally self-sufficient. And I think the way that we get there in Israel is actually by combining the Abraham Accords approach with the defeat of Hamas that gets us to a place where Israel and the Sunni nations can play a regional counterweight to Iran again, we dont want a broader regional war. We dont want to get involved in a broader regional war. The best way to do that is to ensure that Israel, with the Sunni nations, can actually police their own region of the world.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: So, Matt, if you could respond to what Vance said earlier this year? Youve just co-authored a piece with Daniel Levy, In the U.K. and France, There Was a Gaza Vote. And in the U.S.? And here we have Vance talking about bolstering U.S. relations with Israel. And he was speaking, of course, in the midst the war. Israels assault on Gaza had been happening for several months when he spoke.

MATT DUSS: Sure. I mean, I think theres two parts of that, of what you just played, those remarks from Vance. First is, what he said at the beginning about the kind of political support from many Americans, particularly Christian Americans and, you know, I myself grew up in the Evangelical Church, so I can relate to what hes talking about. There is a deep understanding, a deep sympathy, culturally, religiously and politically, for the state of Israel, for a whole bunch of reasons. I think that is valid. Its important to understand that.

But I think theres a separate conversation about what is the correct policy, if people care about Israel, what actually leads to security, not just for Israelis but to Palestinians, for Palestinians, and for people across the region. And I think that is where were going to have real disagreement.

You heard Trump you heard Vance, excuse me, praising the Abraham Accords. And unfortunately, the Abraham Accords are simply not a formula for genuine security. Its important to understand what the countries in the region Israel, you know, the United Arab Emirates, some of these other undemocratic and repressive countries see the purpose of the Abraham Accords as. And that is sustaining their own undemocratic rule. So, I think that, ultimately, is not going to be a formula either for security for Israel in the long term, certainly not for the Palestinians. I think the fact that you know, I dont want to blame the Abraham Accords for October 7 attacks, but I will note that the logic behind the Abraham Accords, which is that the Palestinians can just be pushed to the side and kind of just managed in perpetuity, that is the logic in which, the environment in which the October 7 attacks happened. We have to understand that.

Now, unfortunately, this is not an area where the Biden administration is able to offer a counterargument, because President Biden himself has adopted the Abraham Accords and now, you know, kind of pretends that they can be a basis for regional peace and security, which they cannot.

AMY GOODMAN: Matt, we would be remiss, in this last 30 seconds, if we didnt ask you a quick question about Biden now having COVID. Biden is so close to Bernie Sanders, your former boss. We just have 20 seconds. But do you see Biden stepping aside? And the significance of this moment?

MATT DUSS: I mean, its hard to predict, but I will say that the concerns from a lot of Democratic leaderships have not gone away. That is where we are now. And I think the COVID diagnosis only adds to that.

AMY GOODMAN: Well, Matt Duss, we want to thank you so much for being with us, executive vice president of the Center for International Policy, former foreign policy adviser to Senator Bernie Sanders, who just recently met with President Biden. Stay tuned for another hour of our special Breaking with Convention coverage right here at Democracy Now!

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J.D. Vance Criticizes Bidens Support for Iraq War in 2003 But Pushes Hawkish Policy on China & Iran - Democracy Now!

Why the Pentagon Is Warning That ISIS Attacks Could Double This Year – The New York Times

Attacks claimed by the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria this year are on the rise and on track to double last years count, the Pentagon said on Tuesday, indicating a resurgence of the terrorist group a decade after it wrought destruction and death across the region.

The group, also known as ISIS, took responsibility for 153 attacks in Iraq and Syria in the first half of this year, according to a report by the militarys Central Command, despite continued operations targeting the organizations operatives by a U.S.-led coalition and partner forces in both countries. In all of last year, ISIS claimed 121 attacks in Iraq and Syria, a defense official said.

The group, a Sunni Muslim organization that traces its roots to Al Qaeda, exploited the power vacuum that emerged after Syrias civil war broke out to conquer large areas. Notorious for kidnappings, sexual enslavement and public executions, ISIS took its largest prize when it seized Mosul, Iraqs second-largest city, before being beaten back in 2014.

Though the last fragment of ISISs self-declared caliphate in the Middle Eastern region was liberated with U.S. military support five years ago, the group has morphed into a decentralized collection of cells and affiliates around the world. The U.S. military has since maintained a presence in Syria and Iraq.

The U.S.-led coalition has conducted nearly 200 missions against ISIS since January, the military said, coordinating with Kurdish-led forces in Syria and the military in Iraq. In all, the report said, U.S.-led forces have killed 44 ISIS operatives and detained 166 others.

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Why the Pentagon Is Warning That ISIS Attacks Could Double This Year - The New York Times

APTOPIX Iraq Moon – The Daily Reflector

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APTOPIX Iraq Moon - The Daily Reflector