ARTICLE AD BOX
š®š¶š„ BAGHDAD CLAPS BACK: āIRAQ DOES NOT ACCEPT GUARDIANSHIPā
ā Bold Response After New U.S. Sanctions ā
In a powerful and direct response to theĀ latest U.S. sanctionsĀ on IraqāsĀ Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF) General Engineer CompanyĀ and other associated entities, theĀ Iraqi government is pushing back ā hard.
š¬ In an official statement, Iraq made its position crystal clear:
āWe reject foreign guardianship or interference in our internal affairs. Iraq is a sovereign state.ā
š§ Key Highlights:
š¹Ā Red Line Drawn: Rule of Law First
Baghdad asserts that theĀ rule of law is non-negotiable, making it a national red line. Sanctions imposed without prior dialogue are being labeledĀ āregrettableā
Ā and aĀ breach of diplomatic trustĀ between partners.
š¹Ā Unilateral Actions Undermine Alliances
Iraqi officials warned thatĀ unconsulted U.S. decisionsĀ set a dangerous precedent for future relations andĀ contradict the spirit of cooperationĀ thatās been built between the two nations post-2003.
š¹Ā National Committee Formed for Internal Review šµļøāāļø
Prime Minister Sudani has ordered theĀ formation of a national investigative committee, involving:
Ministry of Finance
Central Bank of Iraq
Integrity Commission
Financial Supervision Bureau
šļø Theyāre tasked with producing aĀ comprehensive report within 30 daysĀ ā a rare display of bureaucratic urgency.
š¹Ā Protection for Workers & Projects
The government emphasized itĀ will protect workers and key infrastructure. While reforms are coming,Ā citizensā rights and livelihoods will be safeguarded.
š¹Ā Zero Tolerance for Off-the-Books Activity
Baghdad declared thatĀ no financial or economic activityĀ will be allowedĀ outside Iraqās legal frameworks. This signals tighter scrutiny over internal and international financial flows.
š¢ What This Means:
Iraq is asserting sovereigntyĀ in a way not often seen in recent years ā signaling to Washington (and Tehran) that itās unwilling to be anyoneās client state.
Sanctions without communicationĀ are now a diplomatic flashpoint, not just a legal action.
AĀ national audit and internal investigationĀ could lead to structural reform or further friction ā depending on whatās uncovered.
Iraq is walking a fine line: balancingĀ internal political pressures,Ā U.S. financial influence, andĀ PMF-related tensions, all while trying to project independence and reform.
š§ The Bigger Picture:
This moment isnāt just about sanctions ā itās aboutĀ Iraqās struggle to reclaim economic independenceĀ andĀ define its post-war identity. As Washington tightens financial control through SWIFT systems and blacklistings, Iraqās leadership is pushing back publicly ā while quietly navigating its path toward banking reform, gold-backed reserves, and dinar redenomination.
š£ Stay Informed ā Connect With Us for 24/7 Updates:
šĀ FACEBOOK:Ā https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100064023274131
š¢Ā TELEGRAM:Ā https://t.me/DINAREVALUATION
šĀ BLOG:Ā https://dinarevaluation.blogspot.com/
š¦Ā TWITTER/X:Ā https://x.com/DinaresGurus
ā¶ļøĀ YOUTUBE:Ā https://www.youtube.com/@DINARREVALUATION
š§ Final Thought:
Iraq is drawing boundaries andĀ staking its claim to real sovereigntyĀ ā both politically and economically. The outcome of this national investigation could determine whether U.S.āIraq relations deepen⦠or break under pressure.