Sunday, December 14, 2025

THE AMBIGUITY IS OVER… JOE WILSON SHOCKS BAGHDAD: LIBERATE IRAQ OR SAY GOODBYE TO AID AND DOLLARS

 America’s new equation

THE AMBIGUITY IS OVER… JOE WILSON SHOCKS BAGHDAD: LIBERATE IRAQ OR SAY GOODBYE TO AID AND DOLLARS.

American pressure on Iraq is escalating daily, shifting from veiled political messages to direct and explicit rhetoric linking continued support to the form of government in Baghdad and the limits of influence wielded by Iranian-backed armed factions.

The latest indication of this shift came in a tweet by Republican Congressman Joe Wilson , who spoke publicly about the need to “liberate Iraq from Iran’s grip” and tied future US military aid to a set of conditions that touch upon the very core of the relationship between the Iraqi state and these factions.

In parallel, US President Donald Trump’s special envoy to Iraq, Mark Savaya, is acting as the executive face of this vision, amidst a clear discourse based on the principle: no weapons outside the state, no public funds being funneled to factions, and no open checks without political and security conditions.

These developments come at a sensitive moment for Iraq; intensive negotiations to form a new government, widespread controversy over the future of the Popular Mobilization Forces and factions, and economic and financial pressures that make any crisis with Washington more costly than ever.

From Wilson’s tweet to the attempt to restrict aid via the Defense Act

In his latest tweet, Joe Wilson not only expressed concern about Iranian influence in Iraq, but also presented what resembled a political and security “statement of conditions.” He praised President Trump’s leadership and envoy Mark Savaya, noting that Congress was prepared to support the president with new provisions in the National Defense Authorization Act that would – for the first time – link assistance to Iraqi security forces to Baghdad taking “real” steps to stop supporting Iranian-backed factions.

The lines of this route indicate:

– Restricting some security and military aid to Iraq to the government’s conduct toward the factions.
– Making the factions a direct target of US legislation, through additional sanctions packages or designations.
– Incorporating the oil and financial sectors into the conditions, by calling for international audits of oil revenues and transfers, and ensuring that institutions such as the Central Bank and the Ministries of Oil, Transportation, and Industry are not used as indirect funding channels.

In this way, the issue is no longer just a passing political speech, but a legislative approach that seeks to make pressure on the factions a structural part of the Baghdad-Washington relationship.

Complex pressure tactics, not a new “invasion plan”

Inside, these signals are interpreted differently. Political and strategic affairs expert Jassim al-Gharabi told Baghdad Today that American statements like “liberating Iraq from Iran’s grip” are essentially pressure tactics rather than concrete plans ready for implementation.

Al-Gharabi explains that the repetition of this discourse at close intervals carries several dimensions, including:

– Emphasizing that the Iraqi file remains a prominent feature of the US strategy in the Middle East, especially given the interconnectedness of energy, security, and factional issues.
– Attempting to reset the rules of political engagement with Iran through Baghdad; the threat of linking aid and financial support to the role played by factions represents a bargaining chip in any broader settlement with Tehran.
– Testing the internal Iraqi mood; Washington is monitoring the reactions of political forces, the public, and elites to any external discourse that speaks of “changing behavior” or “reform from the outside.”

Al-Gharabi warns that turning these statements into a point of sharp internal polarization could open the door to divisions between those who see American pressure as an opportunity to strengthen the state, and those who see it as a gateway to a new guardianship, stressing that the reasonable equation is for decisions on reform and sovereignty to remain purely Iraqi, not part of a conflict of messages between Washington and Tehran.

The new government is at the heart of the storm.

On a practical level, this language translates directly into the process of forming the new government. The issue is no longer simply about distributing portfolios among the blocs, but also about how influential capitals – foremost among them Washington – interpret the nature of the names that will assume the sovereign, security, and economic ministries.

Strategic affairs expert Hussein Al-Asaad warned in his interview with “Baghdad Today” of the repercussions of assigning official positions to figures linked to armed factions, stressing that “pushing forward names close to the armed wings within the anticipated ministerial formation will directly affect the stability of the internal situation, and will also weaken Iraq’s position in its relations with the international community, especially the United States.”

Al-Asaad points out that the recent American messages are decisive in refusing to grant any official cover to the factions within state institutions, and that ignoring this may be understood in Washington as a direct challenge, and opens the door to economic, financial and security reactions that the Iraqi economy cannot easily bear, given the sensitivity of the dollar files, oil contracts, and security and intelligence cooperation.

He reminds us that the world is watching the symbolism of appointments; a minister with a background close to an armed faction is not only interpreted locally, but is also recorded externally as a consecration of the influence of weapons in the joints of the state, which is reflected in risk classifications, investment flows, and patterns of international cooperation with Baghdad.

Pressure tactics and limits of Iraqi response

What gives these statements added weight is that they do not come in a vacuum; in recent years the United States has activated a wide range of pressure tools on both Iraqi and Iranian parties, from individual sanctions to tightening restrictions on the banking system, to introducing political conditions into defense assistance programs.

In contrast, Iraqi government circles assert that the issue of weapons and factions cannot be resolved by an external decision alone, but is linked to the nature of internal balances and the future of the foreign military presence itself, indicating that any approach to disarmament or reorganization requires an internal national dialogue concurrent with any understandings with Washington or others.

Between Washington, Tehran, and the Iraqi street… who will write the final equation?

Between Wilson’s tweet, the pressure from Trump’s envoy Mark Savaya, and the warnings from experts in Baghdad, a political and security minefield is forming for Iraq:

Full acceptance of the American conditions could create internal conflict with the factions and their parliamentary and popular support, opening the door to a new internal confrontation.

Ignoring these conditions could lead to a suffocating tightening of restrictions on dollar transactions, oil contracts, and security cooperation, and perhaps even a wave of sanctions targeting institutions and individuals within the state itself.

Between these two extremes, the realistic equation seems closer to searching for an Iraqi “middle ground”: a state that gradually regains its decision-making power from the grip of uncontrolled weapons, an external relationship that does not allow Iraq to be turned into an arena for settling scores between Washington and Tehran, and a political system that tries to reform itself from within before reforms are imposed on it from the outside.

What is clear so far is that the phase of ambiguity in American discourse has ended; the language today is more explicit, and closer to a new “conditional contract” with Baghdad: conditional American support, factions under scrutiny, and a future government that will be tested – from its first day – in its ability to manage this delicate balance, without the country slipping again into chaos that no one can afford to pay for.

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