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Iraq
Iraq Takes Precautions to Face Possible Hormuz Closure
2012-03-19
[An Nahar] Iraq moved on Sunday to diversify its oil export routes to reduce the impact of a potential closure of the Strait of Hormuz by Iran on Storied Baghdad's
...located along the Tigris River, founded in the 8th century, home of the Abbasid Caliphate...
oil-dependent income, as well as the world economy.

The plans, recommended by the cabinet's energy and economics committees, include efforts to ramp up exports along a pipeline to Turkey, increase the amount of oil transported by road, and "urgently" fix disused transport pipelines, according to a statement from government front man Ali al-Dabbagh.

He said Iraq's cabinet on Sunday adopted the recommendations which also included working to reopen the Banias-Tripoli
...a confusing city, one end of thich is located in Lebanon and the other end of which is the capital of Libya. Its chief distinction is being mentioned in the Marine Hymn...
pipeline that runs from Syria to Leb but has been closed since 1990, and, if thawing Iraq-Saudi relations continue to improve, a disused pipeline through Soddy Arabia as well.

The committees "also recommended that in the short term there be more efforts to convince the Iranian and American sides of the necessity of avoiding the closure of the Strait of Hormuz because it will damage the global economy, and Gulf countries especially."

Iran has threatened retaliation for fresh Western sanctions over its nuclear program, including a possible disruption of shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, a Gulf chokepoint for global oil shipments, including 80 percent of Iraq's oil exports.

Dabbagh told Agence La Belle France Presse in an interview last month that Iraq was worried by U.S.-Iran tensions and would be one of the worst countries affected if the strait were closed to shipments of crude oil.

Planning Minister Ali Yusuf al-Shukri also said last month that Iraq was mulling its options in case Iran blocks the vital waterway.

Iraq currently produces more than three million barrels per day (bpd), with exports averaging about 2.1 to 2.2 million bpd. Crude sales account for the lion's share of Storied Baghdad's government income.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iraq's Syria stance Sunni-Shiite related
2011-11-20
[Al Ahram] Iraq now has a Shiite-led government, but was ruled by members of the country's Sunni minority for most of its history. Syria is ruled by minority Alawites, an offshoot of Shiite Islam, while protesters demanding reforms are largely from its Sunni majority.

More than 3,500 people have been killed in the conflict, according to UN figures.

Iraq has trod carefully in its response to the violence, and was the only country to abstain from a November 12 vote to suspend Syria from the Arab League
...an organization of Arabic-speaking states with 22 member countries and four observers. The League tries to achieve Arab consensus on issues, which usually leaves them doing nothing but a bit of grimacing and mustache cursing...
. "Our country is deeply confessionally divided, and the Shiites voted for (Syrian President) Bashir al-Assad," reacting along sectarian lines, said Hamid Fadhel, a professor of politics at Storied Baghdad
...located along the Tigris River, founded in the 8th century, home of the Abbasid Caliphate...
University.

"Sectarian divisions are already a reality here, with the desire of politicians to create Sunni and Shiite regions," Fadhel said of moves by Sunni-majority Salaheddin province, and earlier by Shiite-majority Basra, to form autonomous regions.

"The same thing that is happening here will arrive in Syria. Syria will be like Iraq and Leb," he said.

Various Iraqi Shiite leaders have said they support the freedom of the Syrian people, but at the same time condemned the vaporous Arab League suspension of Syria on Wednesday.

"Suspending Syria's membership in the Arab League came in an unacceptable way," Iraq government front man Ali al-Dabbagh said on Iraqiya television.

"We want complete freedom for (Syrians), but not in this forced way that moves the Syrian issue... to internationalisation," he said. "This issue is very dangerous."
Iraq's anti-US Shiite holy man Moqtada Tater al-Sadr
... the Iranian catspaw holy man who was 22 years old in 2003 and was nearing 40 in 2010. He spends most of his time in Iran, safely out of the line of fire, where he's learning to be an ayatollah...
said in a recent statement on Syria that "we support your demonstrations to show your opinion."

But at the same time he asserted that there is "a big difference" between events in Syria and other Arab states that have seen anti-regime protests this year, as "Bashir al-Assad is against the American and Israeli presence and his attitudes are clear."

Ali al-Saffar, an Iraq analyst at the Economist Intelligence Unit in London, said Iraqi leaders fear instability in Syria spilling over into Iraq, but that Storied Baghdad's position on Syria risks increasing domestic sectarian divisions.

"I think they (Iraqi leaders) to some extent fear Assad being tossed will empower the Sunni majority, and that if there was any instability, that that could spill over... into Iraq," Saffar said.
Syria and Iraq share a 605-kilometre (375-mile) border, and Sunni-majority provinces along the frontier were strongholds of resistance against United States forces and the Shiite-led Iraqi governments that have followed the 2003 US-led invasion that toppled Sunni dictator Saddam Hussein.

Saffar noted that Storied Baghdad's position on Syria is at odds with its strong condemnation of a crackdown by Bahrain's Sunni government on protests led by the kingdom's Shiite-majority in March.
"The Iraqi government took a very strong stance against the violence in Bahrain, or at least it made the right noises back then," Saffar said, which contrasts sharply with its stance on Syria.

"It's going to be very difficult for the Iraqi government to venture, actually, that this is not a sectarian move, and that there are actually internal security implications that they're taking into consideration," he said, referring to Iraq's stance on Syria.

And if the government "is not managing to convince the Iraqi Sunnis that... this isn't a sectarian issue," he said, "then I think it's going to spread the (division) along Iraqi sectarian lines."
Political analyst Ihsan al-Shammari, meanwhile, said he believes Iraq is concerned by the stances of Sunni-ruled Gulf countries.

"Concerned that certain movements that are hostile to the political system in Syria and linked to Gulf states are becoming predominant, Iraq wants to impress upon those countries that it oppose their desire to intensify the crisis in Syria," Shammari said.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iraq: Syria Arab League Suspension Unacceptable
2011-11-14
[An Nahar] Iraq on Sunday slammed the Arab League
...an organization of Arabic-speaking states with 22 member countries and four observers. The League tries to achieve Arab consensus on issues, which usually leaves them doing nothing but a bit of grimacing and mustache cursing...
's decision to suspend Syria as unacceptable while also calling on Damascus
...The City of Jasmin is the oldest continuously-inhabited city in the world. It has not always been inhabited by the same set of fascisti...
to open dialogue with the opposition.

"Suspending Syria's membership in the vaporous Arab League came in an unacceptable way," Iraq government front man Ali al-Dabbagh said on Iraqiya television.

Iraq was the only country to abstain from the Saturday vote to suspend Syria's membership in the Arab League over its crackdown on dissent which has left more than 3,500 people dead, according to U.N. figures.

Eighteen countries voted in favor of Syria's suspension from the pan-Arab body while Yemen, Leb and Syria voted against the decision.

"This decision was not taken against other countries that have bigger crisis than the Syrian crisis," said Dabbagh.

Libya is the only other country that has been suspended from the regional bloc since a wave of pro-reform protests swept across the Arab world this year.

"The stability and security of Syria is important to Iraq, and the Iraqi government has called its Syrian counterpart to dialogue with the opposition, and to carry out the requested reforms.

"We want complete freedom for (Syrians), but not in this forced way that moves the Syrian issue ... to internationalization," he said. "This issue is very dangerous."

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Iraq
Talks on U.S. troops staying in Iraq stuck on issue of immunity
2011-10-05
The question of whether American troops who stay in Iraq to train Iraqi forces would have immunity from local prosecution is shaping up to be the most contentious issue as the two countries try to hammer out an agreement on whether to keep a small training force here next year.

Iraqi leaders, desperate to assert their sovereignty, say immunity isn’t necessary for any American forces who stay in Iraq to train their security forces. But for Americans worried about their soldiers ending up in Iraqi courts, the lack of immunity is a deal-breaker.

“Immunity is the main disputed point. If we do not have agreement on the immunity, there will be no agreement on the number” of trainers, said government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh.

Iraqi political leaders met Tuesday night to discuss whether to have American forces stay in Iraq when the 2008 security agreement expires at the end of this year and all American forces are supposed to leave the country. After the meeting they announced that Iraq does need American training help but that the trainers should not have immunity, setting the stage for protracted negotiations.

American officials seemed to be scrambling Wednesday to understand what exactly the Iraqi politicians, who excel at brinkmanship politics, really meant.
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Iraq
Iraq raises salaries for Basra oil workers
2011-06-25
BAGHDAD — Iraq’s government said Thursday it was raising salaries at its southern oil terminals, following threats of a strike that would paralyse oil exports.

“The cabinet decided to grant a 30 percent increase in salaries of employees at the oil terminals in Basra and in Khor al-Aamaya” near the southernmost Faw peninsula, government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh said. He said the initiative was meant to demonstrate the government’s keenness “to develop this sector and show its willingness to be fair to staff.”

He said authorities wanted to “show their appreciation for the efforts of employees, and demonstrate they are aware of the hardships and difficult working conditions” related to the hot southern heat.

In late April, a large number of workers at the Southern Oil Company (SOC) staged a demonstration in Basra asking for more money.”

In early May they had threatened to strike, and an oil ministry delegation sent to negotiate had promised to meet their demands.

Nearly 80 percent of Iraqi oil is exported through the southern ports. In April, 49.7 million barrels were exported through the southern ports, at a value of $5.6 billion, according to oil ministry figures.
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Iraq
UN: Dozens dead in Iranian exile camp raid
2011-04-15
[Al Jazeera] Thirty-four Iranian exiles were killed when Iraqi soldiers stormed Camp Ashraf last week, a UN front man has revealed. The corpse count is the first independent corpse count of the raid that has drawn sharp rebukes from Storied Baghdad's Western allies.

UN human rights
...which are usually open to widely divergent definitions...
front man Rupert Colville in Geneva said on Thursday that a team of UN observers saw 28 bodies still at the camp during a Wednesday visit to the exiles' compound in eastern Diyala province.

"Most of the bodies appeared to have been shot," he said.

Three of the bodies also appeared to have been crushed to death, likely from being run over by a car, a Western diplomat in Baghdad said.

"It's clearly a very serious incident and we are trying to get more information," Colville said. Colville added that women were among the dead and that they were still searching for six more bodies.

The raid targeted the People's Mujahedeen Organization of Iran, which seeks to overthrow Iran's holy manal leaders.

The group won refuge at Camp Ashraf years ago during the regime of Saddam Hussein, who saw them as a convenient ally against Iran. But since then, the exiles have been an irritant to Iraq's new Shia-led government that is trying to bolster ties with Tehran.

After Saddam fell, US troops took control of Camp Ashraf, disarmed its fighters and confined the residents to the camp. In return, the military signed an agreement with the camp's residents giving them protected status under the Geneva Conventions.

But it's not clear whether the residents still have those legal protections.
Guess...
Both Iran and the US consider the group to be a terrorist threat, although the European Union removed the People's Mujahedeen from its own terror list several years ago.

The raid was sharply criticized by Iraqi allies in Washington, London and Geneva, although it was praised by Iran.

Wednesday's UN visit was critical because the Ashraf residents and the Iraqi government have issued wildly different accounts of the raid and the reasons behind it. The visit to Camp Ashraf came five days after the agency first demanded to be allowed in.

The Iraqi army and police have blocked access to the camp for more than a year, following a similar raid in July 2009. A US Army medical team also entered the camp last weekend to provide humanitarian aid but has refused comment on what it looked like inside.

Journalists have not been allowed in.

Until the UN visit, the only official casualty count in the raid came from the morgue at Baqouba public hospital, where officials said they received 12 bodies from the camp. Ashraf resident Shahriar Kia said the 12 bodies at the morgue are likely among about 50 camp residents who died after they were taken to the hospital hours after the raid.

Kia demanded that the UN publicly release its findings of what they saw, "and do not allow the Iraqi government and the religious fascism ruling in Iran to misuse the public unawareness in order to continue their crimes against Ashraf residents."

Iraqi government front man Ali al-Dabbagh did not immediately respond Thursday to the UN findings. Earlier this week, he said the Iraqi government voted to help move the Ashraf residents outside the country by the end of the year.

Al-Dabbagh did issue a statement on Thursday that welcomed what it described as US support to the government's efforts to find "another option for Ashraf camp residents to live in rather than Iraq."

The Ashraf residents maintained from the start that 34 people were killed and as many as 325 maimed when Iraqi army units broke through the camp gate and starting firing into the crowd of people who had rushed outside to protect their homes.
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Iraq
Iraqi forces clash with Iran exiles in camp
2011-04-09
BAGHDAD - Iraqi security forces clashed with residents of an Iranian dissident camp north of Baghdad overnight, the Iraqi government said on Friday, and an Iranian opposition group said residents were attacked and killed. The government spokesman said five members of the Iraqi security forces were wounded in the incident at Camp Ashraf. Representatives of the camp called the incident a “criminal attack” and said 25 residents were killed and 320 wounded.

An Iraqi medical source at nearby Baquba hospital said they had received the bodies of three Iranians, while 16 Iranians, five Iraqi soldiers and one Iraqi policemen were brought to the hospital with injuries. The source requested anonymity since he was not authorised to speak to the media.

The 25-year-old camp, home to some 3,500 people, is the base of the People’s Mujahideen Organisation of Iran (PMOI), a guerrilla group that opposes Iran’s Shia cleric leaders. Iran, Iraq and the United States consider the PMOI a terrorist organisation.

Iraqi government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh said Ashraf residents threw rocks at security forces in what he called a “riot”. Troops had not opened fire, he said, contrary to reports by camp residents.

“The security forces have pushed back residents of Camp Ashraf inside the camp by force,” Dabbagh said. “The situation is now controlled.”

“I do not have any information about any deaths or injuries among the residents of the camp,” he said.

The National Council of Resistance of Iran, the PMOI’s political wing, said Iraqi security forces had been ordered by Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki to attack the camp, in restive Diyala province about 90 km (55 miles) northeast of Baghdad in a remote location largely inaccessible to journalists.

“Al-Maliki, under orders of (Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali) Khamenei, has commenced an unprecedented murder in Ashraf,” the group said in a statement. “Forces under his command used Colts, automatic weapons and machineguns installed on armoured vehicles to open fire on residents.”

Ashraf has been a sore point for Washington, Baghdad and Tehran for years. The PMOI began as a group of Islamist leftists opposed to Iran’s late Shah but fell out with the Shi’ite clerics who took power after the 1979 revolution.

US Defence Secretary Robert Gates, who is visiting Iraq, said the U.S. military had reports of deaths in clashes at Ashraf but could not confirm them. “We’re very concerned with reports of deaths and injuries resulting from this morning’s clashes... I urge the Iraqi government to show restraint and to live up to its commitments to treat residents of Ashraf according to Iraqi law and their international obligations.”

Asked about any US military role, Gates said nearby forces might render medical help “but that’s about the extent of it”.
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Iraq
Rival parties resume Iraqs govt coalition talks
2010-08-21
[Al Arabiya Latest] Iraq's Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and former premier Iyad Allawi have resumed negotiations aimed at forming a government after falling out briefly over a sectarian row, senior politicians said on Friday.

Iraq has drifted in a dangerous political vacuum since a March election produced no outright winner. Attacks by insurgents have raised fears of a return to broader violence as U.S. troops end combat operations this month.

Osama al-Nujaifi, a senior member of Allawi's Sunni-backed Iraqiya, said Allawi had agreed to resume talks with Maliki's Shiite-led State of Law bloc after breaking off talks because Maliki described Allawi's group as Sunni, rather than cross-sectarian.

"Allawi received a letter the day before yesterday from Maliki regarding the last stand made by Iraqiya. I am not aware of the details of the letter but Allawi considers that the letter is sufficient to reconcile and overcome the situation," Nujaifi told Reuters.

Ali al-Dabbagh, a senior State of Law member, said he visited Allawi on Thursday to restart negotiations and handed him two proposals -- one on forming a coalition government and the second on political and administrative reform.

"We are seeking to bring together Allawi and Maliki in a private meeting to bring things back to its normal course and to have serious negotiations started between the two lists," Dabbagh told Reuters.

"We are making a new approach. It talks about creating an equation for partnership."

Allawi and Maliki have been locked in a tussle over who has the right to form the next government. Talks on working together began after Maliki failed to overcome resistance among many of his Shiite allies to his ambitions for a second term.
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Iraq
Iraqi forces structure incomplete to protect borders – Dabbagh
2010-08-20
BAGHDAD / Aswat al-Iraq: The Iraqi forces’ structure are incomplete to protect the country’s borders and sovereignty, according to the Iraqi government’s official spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh on Thursday.

“Iraq’s army forces cannot be built in one or two years. Until the year 2011, the Iraqi security forces would not be ready to protect the nation’s borders and sovereignty,” he said in an interview aired by the semi-official al-Iraqiya channel.

The U.S. government had announced the end of its combat troops’ missions in Iraq and actually embarked on pulling out forces as of mid-August, and supposed to be completed by August 31. The U.S. military presence in Iraq, however, will be confined to logistical and training support for Iraqi forces as well as backup in the civilian field.

Dabbagh pointed out that the pending issues regarding encroachments on Iraqi territories must be settled by the Iraqi government.

“The political decision-making establishment in Iraq is taking into account the need to strike a balance between having U.S. forces to stay for a long time or facing a tough situation in which we have to defend the nation ourselves,” he said.

The Iraqi army’s chief of staff, General Babakr Zebari, had said in a press conference a few days ago that the Iraqi army would not be capable of fully shouldering the security responsibilities before 2020, proposing that the U.S. army should stay in Iraq until the Iraqi army is completely ready.

Zebari’s statements triggered varied reactions and concerns by some Iraqis who are afraid Iraq would slide into another cycle of violence, particularly with the delayed formation of a new government five months after the country’s second legislative elections since 2003 were held and the mounting differences among the winning blocs.
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Iraq
Cabinet agrees to open 2 U.S. consulates in Basra, Arbil
2010-08-11
BAGHDAD / Aswat al-Iraq: The Council of Ministers agreed on Tuesday on the recommendation of the Foreign Ministry to open two U.S. consulates in Arbil and Basra, according to spokesman of the Iraqi government.

“The council decided to approve the recommendation of the Foreign Ministry to open two U.S. consulates in Arbil and Basra,” Ali al-Dabbagh said in a statement received by Aswat al-Iraq news agency.
Did Foggy Bottom find some 'volunteers' finally to staff them?
“The cabinet approved also the central plan of the electronic governing to contribute in the establishment of the material and human capabilities to benefit from the Information Technology and communications in Iraq,” the statement added.
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Iraq
Iraq pays $30 billion as compensation to Kuwait
2010-07-31
BAGHDAD / Aswat al-Iraq: The U.N. committee paid on Thursday $650 million in Iraqi compensation to Kuwait, raising the total amount paid to Kuwait as compensation to $30 billion, spokesman of the Iraqi government said on Friday.

“These compensations are paid every three months from the Iraqi Development Fund’s budget, according to the U.N. Chapter VII,” Ali al-Dabbagh told Aswat al-Iraq news agency.

The payment brings the total sum of compensation paid to Kuwait to 30 billion dollars. A further 22.3 billion dollars is due to Kuwait.

Following the 1991 invasion of Kuwait, Iraq is required to put five percent of its oil and gas revenues into the UN reparations fund.
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Iraq
Iraq political crisis deepens
2010-07-28
Sorta like the Dhimmicrats in Congress but less conniving, backbiting and despicable ...
28 July 2010 BAGHDAD — Iraq’s parliament indefinitely postponed on Tuesday what would have been only its second session since March elections, extending a deadlock that has prevented formation of a new government. The delay is the latest setback in a nearly five-month process, and comes barely more than a month before US combat troops are set to withdraw from Iraq.

“We are postponing the session until further notice because the political entities failed to reach any agreement,” Fuad Massum, who as the oldest member of parliament holds the post of caretaker speaker, told a news conference.

“We held a meeting this morning with the heads of the parliamentary blocs and we agreed to give more time to political entities to reach agreement regarding the selection of a speaker and his two deputies.”

He added: “The representatives of the political entities insisted on calling the current government a caretaker administration.”

Tuesday’s session was to have been only the second since March 7 parliamentary elections. The first, on June 14, was adjourned after only 20 minutes. The selection of a new speaker and president — ahead of the naming of a new premier — is likely to be part of a grand bargain among Iraq’s competing political blocs, further complicating the formation of a new government.

Iraq’s four main political groups, none of which has the 163 seats required for a parliamentary majority to form a government on their own, have been unable to hammer out a coalition deal since the nationwide vote.

The political vacuum continues to dog Iraq only around a month before US combat troops are due to leave the country at the end of August.

“It is a disappointing decision,” said Salim al-Juburi, an MP with the Sunni Tawafuq party. “Each day that passes means the suffering is increasing, the security situation is aggravating, and we are moving far from the interests of the people.”

However, Kurdish MP Saeed Rasul said the postponement was “positive,” arguing it was “better than entering the parliament hall without having reached an agreement.”

In a statement following confirmation of the postponement, government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh confirmed that the government had not “signed any strategic accords or treaties, nor made any special nominations, and has only distributed funds that have been approved by parliament.”

US and Iraqi officials have warned of the dangers of an upsurge in violence as negotiations on forming a coalition drag on, giving insurgent groups an opportunity to further destabilise the country.

Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staffs, arrived in Baghdad on Tuesday to review plans for the American troop drawdown and efforts to form a governing coalition. “We don’t see anything right now that will affect the transition and the continued troop drawdown,” he told reporters at a press conference in Baghdad’s heavily-fortified Green Zone.

Former premier Iyad Allawi’s Iraqiya bloc finished first in the election with 91 seats, followed closely by Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki’s State of Law alliance with 89.

The Iraqi National Alliance, a group of Shiite religious parties, finished third with 70 seats.
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