Six years after the war against the Islamic State, Iraq still faces significant challenges to its recovery. Over one million people remain internally displaced while three million people need humanitarian assistance as Iraq continues its reconstruction. In addition to reintegrating liberated Sunni communities into the political system, the government has struggled to achieve the demobilization and integration of powerful Shiite militias, which formed during the fight against the Islamic State, into the Iraqi security forces. The government also faces ongoing tensions with Kurdish groups pressing for greater autonomy in the north following a failed independence referendum in October 2017. Since the start of the Israel-Hamas War, Iraq’s stability has deteriorated significantly, with Iran-backed militias targeting U.S. forces in the west and north of the country.
Background
Since the U.S.-led invasion in 2003, Iraq has undergone a long period of instability, with armed groups like the self-proclaimed Islamic State taking advantage of the power vacuum left by the disbandment of the military and the ban on Saddam Hussein’s Baath party. In 2014, the Islamic State advanced into Iraq from Syria and took over parts of Anbar province, eventually expanding into the northern part of the country and capturing Mosul in June 2014. Former President Barack Obama authorized targeted air strikes against Islamic State militants in Iraq and Syria, and the United States formed an international coalition of nearly eighty countries to counter the terrorist group. Regional forces—including as many as thirty thousand Iranian troops—joined the Iraqi army, local tribes, and the Kurdish Peshmerga in operations to retake territory from the Islamic State, recapturing Tikrit in April 2015, Ramadi in December 2015, Fallujah in June 2016, and Mosul in July 2017.
The Trump administration sharply escalated the U.S. presence in Iraq in early 2017 to bring a swift end to the Islamic State, and the Iraqi government declared victory over the group in December 2017. Since then, most foreign troops have withdrawn from Iraq, except for a small U.S. contingent.
In late April 2018, the U.S. military officially disbanded the command overseeing the fight against the Islamic State in Iraq, declaring an end to major combat operations against the group. Roughly 2,500 U.S. troops remain in Iraq at the invitation of the Iraqi government as part of a mission to train, advise, and assist the Iraqi military in fighting domestic terrorism.
Underlying sectarian tensions in Iraq among Sunni and Shiite groups, as well as tensions between Kurdish groups in the north and the government in Baghdad, exacerbated the fight to dislodge the Islamic State. These tensions intensified after the U.S. invasion in 2003 and the fall of Saddam Hussein, now threatening the stability of the new Iraqi government as it looks to rebuild the country and prevent a resurgence of the Islamic State. There also remains a larger concern that the aftermath of the conflict and challenges of reconstruction and reintegration will lead to the break up of Iraq and that sectarian tension will plague the region for years to come, possibly expanding into a proxy conflict among various international groups.
A coalition of parties led by Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr won a surprise victory in Iraq’s May 2018 parliamentary election. Their victory raised questions about continued Iranian influence in Baghdad, as al-Sadr’s Shiite bloc has historically remained at odds with Iranian-backed groups in Iraq. Following the 2021 election, which saw increased representation [PDF] for minority groups, the newly elected parliament could not form a coalition government, precipitating a political crisis.
The assassination attempt on Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi in November 2021 led to armed clashes between the Iraqi government and the Iran-backed militias accused of orchestrating the attack. Amid the political crisis, the entirety of al-Sadr’s political bloc resigned from parliament in a gamble aimed at pressuring the government to elect a president. The move largely backfired as al-Sadr’s bloc was quickly replaced, allowing the Shiite groups backed by Iran to assume a majority in the parliament. Al-Sadr retired from politics in August 2022, leaving control of the Iraqi government to his Iranian-backed rivals.
In October 2022, Abdul Latif Rashid was elected president, promising to return the country to normalcy. The premiership was ultimately handed to Mohammad Shia al-Sudani, a long-time ally of Iran. His pro-Iran government includes ministers with ties to several U.S.-designated terrorist organizations, including Kataib Hezbollah. However, al-Sudani has taken a measured approach by expressing a desire to keep U.S. forces in Iraq while continuing his predecessor’s “balance and openness” policy. The United States remains concerned about Iran’s increasing involvement in Iraq and its government, which has disrupted Iraqi relations with the United States and reintegration with other Arab countries, particularly the wealthy Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states.
Meanwhile, the Islamic State continues to plague Iraq, despite its diminished presence. The Islamic State has reverted to its insurgency roots and refocused to orchestrating a hit-and-run campaign. For example, it planted a bomb near the city of Kirkuk in December 2022 that targeted and killed nine federal police officers. In response, the United States announced that it would keep its troops in Iraq to fight the Islamic State.
Recent Developments
Since late 2022, Iraq has faced economic and infrastructural issues. In November, a gas cylinder explosion killed fifteen people in the northern city of Sulaimaniyah, and in October, a gas tanker explosion in Baghdad killed at least nine people. In January, al-Sudani replaced the Central Bank governor after the value of the Iraqi dinar hit new lows, and the previous governor essentially quit. To solve these critical issues, al-Sudani has implemented several measures, including approving a $152 billion budget meant to add public sector jobs and increase public salaries.
However, Iraq’s political instability persists. In late March 2023, the Iraqi government passed amendments that would increase the size of electoral districts, reducing opportunities for smaller parties and independent candidates to win seats in future elections. These amendments were supported by the Iran-backed Coordination Framework but proved to be controversial, sparking demonstrations and prompting several MPs to leave and postpone the session. Similarly, in late June, over fifty MPs resigned from the local parliament in Iraq’s Kurdish region. They protested a court ruling by the Iraqi Federal Supreme Court that rejected their decision to delay regional elections. The ruling is another sign that Baghdad has largely reigned in the Kurdish region’s autonomy, having asserted its control over oil revenue and key infrastructure.
Days later, thousands of Iraqi followers of a Shiite cleric protested in major Iraqi cities, criticizing the burning of a Quran during a demonstration in Sweden, demanding the Swedish ambassador’s expulsion from Iraq, and storming the Swedish embassy in Baghdad. These recent mobilizations showcase the ongoing capacity of al-Sadr to foster instability despite the suspension of his movement in April.
In August 2023, Iran-aligned groups killed Kurdish protestors in the disputed northern city of Kirkuk over the handover of a building to the Kurdish Democratic Party (KDP). Following days of deadly ethnic clashes, the Supreme Court in Baghdad halted Al-Sudani’s order to return the building to the KDP on September 1. The oil-rich province lies along the fault line between the Kurdish autonomous region and areas controlled by Iraq’s government. It has been the center of some of Iraq’s worst violence since the Islamic State. Meanwhile, Turkey has escalated its military attacks against the Kurdistan Workers Party (PPK) in northern Iraq, including a drone strike that killed seven members on August 24. In late August, Turkey called on Iraq to designate the PKK as a terrorist organization, citing the group’s threat to both Iraqi and Turkish security.
At the end of August 2023, the Iranian government announced that the central Iraqi government had pledged to disarm and relocate militant groups from the Kurdish region of northern Iraq by September 19. Despite the joint success of the Iraqi government and the Kurdish Regional Government in Erbil, tensions between Turkey and the Kurds increased following a PKK suicide bombing outside of a government building in the Turkish capital Ankara in October. Although no casualties besides the two PKK-linked attackers were reported, the attack was the first in the Turkish capital since 2016. In response, Turkish forces conducted air strikes in northern Iraq, destroying sixteen targets of the PKK. The situation continued to escalate with further Turkish strikes in northern Iraq in 2024 following a PKK December 22 attack on a Turkish base that killed twelve soldiers, and a similar attack on January 12 that killed nine more.
Over the course of the Israel-Hamas War, Iran-backed militia groups in Iraq and Syria have targeted U.S. troops in the region over 165 times in opposition to Israel’s campaign in Gaza. The remaining 2,500 U.S. troops in Iraq have been subject to consistent attacks on their bases, such as the Al-Asad Airbase in western Iraq, where an attack on October 17 resulted in the death of an American civilian contractor. In February 2024, the United States conducted a series of retaliatory strikes in response to an attack in Jordan on a U.S. military outpost near the Syrian border that killed three American soldiers. The strikes included more than eighty-five targets throughout Iraq and Syria and were the first in a multi-tiered response by the Biden administration. According to the Iraqi government, sixteen people, including civilians, were among those killed in the first round of U.S. strike s, while twenty-five were injured. On February 5, 2024, Russia called a UN Security Council meeting, where the Russian Ambassador to the United Nations accused the United States of violating international law by striking Iraq and Syria.
Iraq Imposes Then Retracts Terror Designations Against Hezbollah and Houthis
The designations, which ordered the groups’ assets to be frozen, were issued on November 17 and publicized today; Iraq said they were made in error, though anonymous officials said the reversal followed pressure from Iran-aligned factions, as Baghdad balances U.S. demands to curb militias against ties with Tehran (AP; Reuters).
New U.S. Consulate in Erbil
The United States opened its biggest consulate in the world, costing $796 million, as it deepens diplomatic and security cooperation with Iraq’s Kurdish region while reducing troops elsewhere in the country (AP).
Strike on Gas Facility in Kurdistan Region
An overnight attack damaged equipment at the Khor Mor facility in northern Iraq, forcing a shutdown of operations and cutting electricity generation across the region; both Baghdad and regional authorities condemned the attack, with Kurdish officials again pointing to Iran-backed militias as the likely culprit (Reuters).
Iraqi Commission Declares Election Results
Iraq’s election commission formally declared that the coalition of Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani secured the most seats in the country’s 329-member parliament, though lengthy negotiations are expected as parties vie to form a governing majority (Reuters).
Tribal Clashes in Wasit Kill Eight
The clashes, which began over a rift for agricultural land, injured another nine, as Iraq continues struggling with post-war feuds between Bedouin groups (Arab News).
U.S. Arms Sales to Iraq
The U.S. State Department approved a possible $100 million sale of the Country Wide Repeater System, which provides high-speed network access and aims to boost command-and-control capabilities, as the U.S. military continues to shift security operations to the Iraqi government (Anadolu Agency).
Iraqi Elections
Initial tallies from Iraq’s parliamentary elections on Tuesday suggest that the coalition of incumbent Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani has emerged victorious, per the country’s Independent High Electoral Commission, boosting his prospects for a second term; the commission reported turnout at 56.11 percent, as parties now turn to coalition negotiations (Reuters). Voters generally chose lawmakers across sectarian lines, with Sudani competing against Iranian-backed militias and Sunni and Kurdish parties; the results are expected to shape Baghdad’s effort to recalibrate its security partnership with Washington while balancing Iranian influence (Jerusalem Post). International observers, including UN Secretary-General António Guterres, praised the fair and orderly conduct of the elections (Anadolu Agency).
Iraq’s Election Results
Prime Minister Mohammed Shia’ al-Sudani’s political group won eight out of eighteen districts in Tuesday’s parliamentary election, topping opponents but not securing enough seats to govern without a coalition; since al-Sudani took power, he has focused on balancing Iraq’s foreign policy interests between the United States and Iran (WaPo).
Explosion at Popular Mobilization Forces Base
The blast killed three militia fighters and wounded several others at a weapons-storage site in Baghdad; officials suggested that leftover material from the self-proclaimed Islamic State triggered the explosion (New Arab).
Iraq Claims Energy Independence
Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani ordered an end to all petroleum imports after new refinery projects lifted domestic supply above national demand; Sudani claimed that the excess in supply, along with broader domestic energy shifts over the past three years, have made Iraq a self-sufficient producer (Reuters). The move comes even as Iraq still faces chronic power shortages (The National). Meanwhile, state firm Somo canceled crude oil imports from Russian oil firm Lukoil, citing concerns from sanctions imposed by the United States and United Kingdom (Reuters). Finally, the U.S. military mission in Iraq confirmed the Iraqi Security Forces’ ability to independently execute combat strike operations, a crucial development that allows the Iraqi government to assume greater control over domestic security missions (CENTCOM).
Iraq Links Disarming Militias to U.S. Troop Withdrawal
Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani said armed factions, including the Iran-backed Popular Mobilization Forces, can only be brought under state control once the U.S.-led coalition fully leaves Iraq, adding that an agreed phased withdrawal will conclude by late 2026 because the self-proclaimed Islamic State has been defeated (Reuters).
Small U.S. Advisory Force to Remain in Iraq
Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani said 250–350 U.S. advisers will remain at Ain al-Asad Air Base to coordinate operations against the self-proclaimed Islamic State with forces in Syria, citing renewed instability following the fall of Bashar al-Assad (AP). The announcement follows a recent declaration from the Pentagon affirming a drawdown of U.S. forces (AP).
Gunmen Attack Sunni Parliamentary Candidate
Armed assailants targeted the office of candidate Muthanna al-Azzawi in Yusufiyah, injuring two of his bodyguards; the attack follows a car bombing that killed another Sunni candidate days earlier, accelerating fears about political violence ahead of Iraq’s November parliamentary elections (Al Arabiya).
Sunni Candidate Assassinated Ahead of November Elections
Safaa al-Mashhadani, a parliamentary candidate from the Sunni-led Sovereignty Alliance, was targeted in a car bombing, marking the most high-profile political assassination in Iraq in recent years; the explosion, which wounded four others, occurred in the Tarmiyah district, with Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani ordering an investigation into the attack (Jerusalem Post).
Iraq to End Iranian Gas Imports by 2028
The move is part of a broader plan to diversify the Iraqi economy, as Baghdad signs multibillion-dollar deals with TotalEnergies and firms from China and the UAE while also courting U.S. and Gulf investment; Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al-Sudani pledged to reach “zero gas flaring” and curb chronic power shortages (CNBC).
Iraq Carries Out Amnesty Law
Iraq’s Supreme Judicial Council announced that more than 35,000 prisoners have been released under a new amnesty law aimed at easing overcrowding, with nearly 144,000 others eligible for similar benefits; courts also recovered $34.4 million from corruption and theft cases, though the law’s inclusion of some terrorism-related offenses has sparked criticism (AP).
Reduction in U.S. Military Mission in Iraq
The Pentagon confirmed it has begun pulling forces from Iraq under a 2024 agreement with Baghdad, citing success against the self-proclaimed Islamic State (IS); troop levels will drop below two thousand, with most coalition forces consolidating in the Kurdish city of Erbil as the focus of counter-IS operations shifts to Syria (The Hill).
Iraq to Resume Kurdish Oil Exports
Baghdad said it will restart oil shipments from the Kurdish region to Turkey’s Ceyhan port, ending a two-year freeze after a recent revenue-sharing deal with Erbil and international oil companies; the pact, backed by the United States, sets exports at about 240,000 barrels per day and seeks to stabilize ties between Iraq’s central and Kurdish governments (AP).
Iraq and Kurdistan Regional Government Agree to Resume Oil Exports
The two governments reached a preliminary deal with oil firms to restart 230,000 barrels per day of crude exports through Turkey after an eighteen-month suspension, pending approval from the Iraqi cabinet and oil producers active in Kurdish regions (Reuters).
U.S. Blocks Iraq-Turkmenistan Gas Deal Routed Through Iran
Washington refused to approve Baghdad’s plan to import Turkmenistan gas via Iran over sanctions concerns, leaving Iraq scrambling to meet peak summer demand amid blackouts; Baghdad is now exploring Qatari LNG imports and the acceleration of projects with TotalEnergies, BP, and Chevron (Reuters).