Archive for the ‘Iraq’ Category

Iraq announces additional oil output cut for Q1 2024 – Xinhua

BAGHDAD, Nov. 30 (Xinhua) -- Iraq will voluntarily cut oil production by 220,000 barrels per day (bpd) between January and March 2024, the country's oil ministry said in a statement on Thursday.

The measure was taken in coordination with OPEC+ and its allies to stabilize the global oil market, it added.

The ministry statement came hours after OPEC+ oil producers on Thursday agreed to voluntary output cuts of about 2 million bpd for early next year to bolster the market.

On April 2, the ministry said Iraq would voluntarily cut oil production by 211,000 bpd from May until the end of this year.

Oil prices rose after the outbreak of the Russia-Ukraine conflict in February last year, benefiting oil-exporting countries, including Iraq. However, oil prices declined in the past few months due to fears of lower demand in global markets.

Iraq's economy relies heavily on crude oil exports, which account for more than 90 percent of its revenues.

Go here to read the rest:
Iraq announces additional oil output cut for Q1 2024 - Xinhua

UK businesses to build over 350km of new critical drainage system … – GOV.UK

The UKs export credit agency has secured 226 million in financing for the Iraqi government to develop over 350km of drainage infrastructure as well as 15 stormwater and wastewater lifting stations near Hillah city.

Upon completion, the project is expected to help over 25,000 households access clean water in the wider Al-Hillah district, where wastewater is not currently treated.

Supported by UKEFs financing agreements, UK exporters will provide almost half of the projects content, including specialist equipment and installation.

The UK government has secured financing for the construction of a drainage network over 350km long which will bring clean water to tens of thousands of residents in the Al-Hillah district of Iraq, to the south of Baghdad.

The financing comprises a guarantee for 113 million in financing arranged by Standard Chartered Bank, as sole Structuring Bank, Mandated Lead Arranger and Agent, and a 113 million direct loan from His Majestys Treasury.

UK Export Finance the governments export credit agency has ensured that the government of Iraq can access 226 million in financing to fund the project, which will be transformational for a district currently unable to treat wastewater.

Upon completion, the network is expected to process up to 20 million cubic metres of water each year, bringing clean water to over 25,000 households and improved sanitation to hundreds of thousands.

The transaction is expected to support over 100 million in UK export contracts, which make up almost half of the total project value. Turning to the country which gave the world its first modern sewage system, the project will procure equipment and related installation services from the UK.

With their deep expertise across a range of sectors, UK exporters are leading partners for overseas governments seeking to deliver transformational projects. Works in Al-Hillah will help to bring clean water to tens of thousands of people in Iraq, showing how UK Export Finance can unlock financing and UK innovation for sustainable development around the world.

We are proud to provide UKEF-backed financing for our important client, the Iraqi government, to improve sewage and drainage infrastructure for local communities in the Al-Hillah district, underpinning our here for good commitment to make a positive difference in the places we call home. Our UKEF financing capability and global network helped us deliver a unique and complex financing, collaborating with multiple companies from various countries.

The drainage network and water treatment systems will also reduce the local risk of diseases from poor sanitation and flooding from stormwater and the nearby Euphrates River. The project will in addition upgrade existing treatment systems so that they can create biogas and phosphorous by-products to support local agriculture.

Funds will go to the Government of the Republic of Iraq, allowing the Governorate of Babil to contract GCITJ Babel Limited, a UK joint venture, to deliver the works.

Originally posted here:
UK businesses to build over 350km of new critical drainage system ... - GOV.UK

Irans ‘controlled insurgency’ against the US in Syria and Iraq – JNS.org

(November 27, 2023 / JNS)

In the immediate aftermath of Hamass Oct. 7 attack on Israeland during Israels counter-offensive in Gaza, Iranian proxy militias in Iraq and Syria have escalated attacks on U.S. positions in both countries.Sixty such attacks have taken place against U.S. forces since Oct. 7. Fifty-six American personnel have suffered injuries in these attacks so far, ranging from minor wounds to traumatic brain injuries. One contractor died of a heart attack in the course of one of the bombings. Reports of conversations with U.S. personnel based in facilities in Iraq and Syria indicate a near constant state of alert, with troops spending considerable amounts of time in bunkers and shelters.

The United States has struck back on a number of occasions, asPresident Biden notedin his Washington Post op-ed of Nov. 19 Three times since Oct. 26, the United States has carried out retaliatory airstrikes on Iran-backed militias in Syria and Iraq.The latest such strike came on Sunday Nov. 12.According to the opposition-linked, usually reliable Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which maintains a network of contacts on the ground in Syria, eight members of Iran-backed militias were killed in the latest U.S. strikeand seven injured.According to SOHR, the U.S. counterattack destroyed a weapons depot near Albukamal, on the Syrian side of the Syria-Iraq border, and a rocket launch platform near Mayadin. These areas are located inside an area of de facto Iranian control on both sides of theborder.

The U.S. strikes do not at present appear to have been sufficient to deter Iran; five additional Iranian strikes have taken place since the Sunday U.S. operation. Why is Iran carrying out these attacks at the present time? And is the current situation likely to deteriorate further into open conflict, even as the war between Israel and Hamas in Gaza continues, and the situation on the Israel-Lebanon border continues to escalate?

To understand the dynamics of the current situation in Syria and Iraq, it is important first of all to be aware of the dispositions of Iranian and U.S. forces in these countries, and the state of play between them.

Both the Syrian and Iraqi governments are able to assert only partial sovereignty over the areas they formally govern. In both countries, the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) is managing proxy militias as instruments of Iranian power and influence. The IRGC projects in Syria and Iraq resemble one another but also differ significantly because of the different prevailing political realities in the two countries.

In Syria, Iran and its proxymilitias were crucial to the regimes survival and partial victory in the civil war in the 2012-19 period. Iran has not withdrawn from Syria in the post-conflict period.Rather, Teherans proxies remain, woven into the fabric of the official state security forces (the Syrian regime remains in many ways a shell, weak and dependent on its Iranian and Russian allies.)The Iranian proxies have access to and freedom of movement within a contiguous area of land extending from the Iraq-Iran border to Quneitra Province on the Syrian side of the Golan border with Israel. This contiguityis interrupted, however, by the U.S. base at Tanf, and the fire zone maintained by the United States around it.

Israels campaignbetween the wars has over thelast 10 years hit heavily at Iranian efforts to build military infrastructure on Syrian soil.But despite Israels campaign, Iranian proxies remain active, strong and not beholden to the regime of President Bashar Assad for their activities, as Ehud Yaari hasdescribedrecently in the JST.

The presenceof 900 U.S. service personnel in eastern Syria, as part of ongoing efforts against Islamic State, does significantly disrupt the Iranian project in Syria. These forces underwrite the continued de facto partition of Syria, and the ongoing existence of the Kurdish dominated Autonomous Administration of North East Syria.As such, Iran, along with the Assad regime, Russia and indeed Turkey (despite its support for Islamist insurgents at war with Assad), support the withdrawal of this U.S. force and the destruction of the Kurdish-led authority in northeast Syria, which the Kurds call Rojava.

In Iraq, the situation differs in that institutions of representative government exist and function.As a result, in a manner more reminiscent of Lebanon than of Syria, Iranian client militias operate as both political parties and militias.The current government of Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani rests on the support of the militias in their iteration as political parties.

There are currently 2,500 U.S. service personnel deployed in Iraq. Iran is determined to secure the expulsion of these forces. As a result, a sporadic, low-level insurgency by the Shiite militias against the U.S. presence has been under way over the last three years (following the conclusion of the war against ISIS).

Immediately following the Oct. 7 attacks, observers on the ground noted the movement of Iranian client militias in Syria toward the Golan border. On a number of occasions in subsequent days, firing at Israel from Syria has taken place. The first such attack took place on October 10, when a number of shells were fired from Syria at northern Israel. The shells landed in open ground. Israel responded with artillery fire on targets in Syria.

The most significant attack from Syria to date took place on Nov. 9, when a drone was launched which hit the Tzeelim elementary school in Eilat on Israels southern tip.There were no serious injuries in the blast, but Israel failed to detect the drone on its way to Eilat: It apparently flew over Jordan. Israel responded with a counterstrike on the Imam Hussein Brigades in the Homs area in Syria.This brigade is an Iran-backed group including fighters from a variety of nationalities, which works closely with Hezbollah.

Still, the most notable development in Syria (and Iraq) since the commencement of and as a result of the Gaza war is the sharp increase in attacks by Iran-supported militias on U.S. targets. Attacks are taking place almost every day. The U.S. base at Tanf on the Syria-Jordan border, facilities east of the Euphrates such as the Conoco and al-Omar bases in Deir al-Zur province, positions further north such as the Kharab al-Jir base, and bases at Shadadi and Tel Beydar have all been targeted using mortar shells, drones and improvised explosives.

Similarly in Iraq, U.S. personnel and facilities at the Ain al-Asad base, al-Harir base and Erbil Airport have been the target of attacks by the militias. Claims of responsibility for the attacks have come from a group calling itself the Islamic Resistance in Iraq.This appears to be a generic, catch-all term for the militias in Iraq and Syria.

Evidence suggests that a concerted and centrally planned Iranian campaign is under way.The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights has reported that a joint operations center has been established in the Albukamal area, bringing together various elements of the anti-U.S. effort.SOHR listed the organizations participating in this center as the Iraqi Popular Mobilization Units, the Zeinabiyun and Fatemiyun militias (comprising Afghan and Pakistani Shiites, respectively), and Hezbollahs task force in Syria, commanded by an individual known as Haj Mahdi, based in the northern Syrian city of Qamishli.

A recent article by Syrian journalist Samer al-Ahmad, who focuses in his work on northeast Syria, reported that this operations center is tasked with coordinating attacks against U.S. forces east of the Euphrates and atthe U.S. base in Tanf on the Syria-Jordan border, working with Haj Mahdis Hezbollah-led force in Qamishli and the Saraya al-Khorasani militia in the same city.Qamishli is the main city in the Kurdish-led area of northern Syria, but it also still contains a regime and regime allied element, which has an area of physical control containing a base in the center of the city.The regime and its allies also control the military airport close to Qamishli.

These various assets in Iraq and Syria have begun a campaign of harassment of and low-level insurgency against U.S. forces in both countries.This decision appears to have been taken following Oct. 7, and to form part of the Iran-led regional axiss more general effort at a limited, controlled mobilization against Israel, in line with its stated goal of a unification of the frontswhile stopping short of the kind of activities which would be sure to provoke a large-scale response from Israel or the United States.

At present, this controlled, partial mobilization consists of three components: Yemeni Houthi drone and missile attacks against Israel, Lebanese Hezbollahs ongoing and escalating attacks on the Israel-Lebanon border, and the mobilization of militias in Syria and Iraq against U.S. targets and to a lesser extent against Israeli targets. So far, both the Israeli and U.S. responses to these activities have been restrained, intended to avoid deterioration to war. In the Israeli case, this is because of a desire to avoid conflict on more than one front while the IDF is engaged in Gaza. For the United States, the desire appears to be to avoid being drawn into a conflict in the Middle East. In this regard, the U.S. decision on Nov. 15 to green light a sanctions waiver for Iran that would grant Teheran access to $10 billion held in escrow accounts, even as the attacks in Syria and Iraq continued, reflects this orientation.

The U.S. limited response thus appears to be related to the Biden administrations broader Middle East policy, which includes not abandoning the goal of normalizing relations with Iran through inducements, rather than seeing Iran as an enemy to be confronted. On Nov. 19, the United States did imposesanctionson six persons affiliated with the Iran-backed Iraqi militia Kataeb Hizbullah. Will ongoing attacks on United States positions by Iran-led militias in Syria and Iraq lead to a more robust U.S. response?This will become clear in the days and weeks ahead.

Originally published by The Jerusalem Strategic Tribune.

Subscribe to The JNS Daily Syndicate by email and never miss our top stories

By signing up, you agree to receive emails from JNS and our advertising partners

Read the rest here:
Irans 'controlled insurgency' against the US in Syria and Iraq - JNS.org

CrisisInSight Weekly Picks, 30 November 2023 – Iraq – ReliefWeb

Belarus

By the end of November 2023, the number of refugees from Ukraine in the country had increased to 37,000 from 22,000 in June. Cash assistance was reported as the most urgent need and preferred modality of assistance.

Among the main information gaps are the number of unaccompanied children displaced to Belarus from areas under Russian control in Ukraine...

Read more

Iraq

Drought continues to affect the southern region, impacting peoples livelihoods and displacing over 83,500 as at mid-June 2023. The drought is resulting in increased river salinity and land degradation, reducing agricultural products and affecting the fishing industry.

Affected families likely need food, water, and livelihood assistance...

Read more

Myanmar

As at 22 November, the escalation of armed conflict since late October has internally displaced more than 330,000 people, bringing the total number of IDPs in the country to over two million.

Both the newly displaced and host communities need immediate humanitarian assistance, such as food, potable water, safe shelter, emergency healthcare...

Read more

Read more here:
CrisisInSight Weekly Picks, 30 November 2023 - Iraq - ReliefWeb

UAE-Iraq trade registered over 60 per cent growth last year – Gulf Today

A top official speaks during the previous edition of the Iraq Britain Business Council.

The Iraq Britain Business Council (IBBC) is gearing up for its flagship conference in Dubai on December 7 and 8, 2023 to foster partnerships and driving economic transformation in Iraq.

Dr Thani Bin Ahmed Al Zeyoudi, Minister of State for Foreign Trade, UAE, will grace the occasion to deliver the welcome address on Day 2 of the conference dedicated to Building a Sustainable Future.

The 2022 IBBC conference garnered positive feedback with over 230 delegates, leading to a 15% increase in membership. This year, IBBC aims to match the same number of delegates who will come together to deliberate on topics such as Education & Training in Iraq and Building a Sustainable Future at Crowne Plaza Hotel on the 7th and the Address Hotel, Dubai Marina on the 8th, respectively.

Abdulla Ahmed Al Saleh, UAE Under Secretary Foreign Trade and Industry says, It is a privilege to join our friends from Iraq and the IBBC, to discuss joint efforts to help the country in its process of reconstruction. Iraq has suffered greatly but has tremendous potential and abilities to contribute much to the world. In this context IBBC has brought together companies engaged in business and trade from all over the world for the benefit of the Republic of Iraq and its Members. Committed to a free, flourishing, and diverse Iraq, IBBC acts as a bridge between Iraq and the rest of the world and connects governments and the private sector to ultimately benefit business and industry and the People of Iraq. I would like to commend the IBBC and its leadership for organising this platform to connect better. We fully endorse the councils mission of enabling the transfer of technology, infrastructure, and expertise into the Republic of Iraq to strengthen its growth and development.

According to IBBC management, the substantial growth in trade between Iraq and the UAE, exceeding 60% in the last year, underscores the enduring economic ties between the two nations. The event reaffirms the UAEs status as the primary business hub for Iraq, showcasing the nations growing role in facilitating international collaborations. The UAE is seen as a great convening location for everyone from UK, EU, US to India, Turkey and Iraq, and the Gulf, it has world class facilities. The UAE also has tremendous potential for investment in Iraq and for companies operating there, without the administrative and bureaucratic incumbency that can be found in Iraq.

Advocating for Iraqs private sector, Christophe Michels, MD of IBBC, explains that the UAE as an ideal venue due to its role as a regional hub, connecting international businesses with Iraq. The IBBC Dubai conference is always the key middle east event for us, and is very well attended, especially by Iraqis, as it is convenient and familiar to travel to. Many of our members also have HQs in Dubai, and we expect this conference to enjoy the seniority of attendees that decisions makers appreciate, and our members expect for networking with people that matter, Michels added.

The two-day conference comes at a critical juncture, addressing pivotal issues such as economic sustainability, education, finance, and climate change. IBBC anticipates a transformative impact on education and sustainability in Iraq, emphasising increased skill training and industry collaboration. The conference will also address sustainability through the capture of gas and finance strategies to sustain investments beyond oil price fluctuations. This year Wayne David MP, the UK Shadow Minster for the Middle East, will also attending and speaking about UK Foreign Policy in the Middle East.

Vikas Handa, UAE representative for IBBC in the regions, said, Every year we excel ourselves in the level and quality of attendees, as IBBC and Iraq are both rapidly growing in influence and importance in the region. This conference is now set to be significant for the long-term development and perception of Iraq and we welcome all attendees and those in Dubai for COP28 and the sustainability we all seek.

The conference will delve into crucial topics, including an energy panel featuring key providers like TotalEnergies, BP, Basra Gas Company, Hydro-C, GE, Siemens and discussions on financial reform with industry leaders such as the CEO of Standard Chartered Bank, the President of the Trade Bank of Iraq, and the Iraq Director of the International Finance Corporation. The Education and Training in Iraq panel will see top UK University representatives including Lord Boateng, Chancellor of Greenwich University, senior representation from the Iraqi Ministry of Higher Education, the Prime Ministers office, along with leading skills, and training organizations operating in Iraq.

Excerpt from:
UAE-Iraq trade registered over 60 per cent growth last year - Gulf Today