Iraqi PM to visit Saudi Arabia for World Economic Forum meeting
Shafaq News/ Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani is scheduled to visit Saudi Arabia later this month, a government source revealed on Thursday.
The source told Shafaq News Agency that al-Sudani's visit is to participate in the World Economic Forum's special meeting, hosted by Riyadh on April 28 and 29.
This visit comes on the heels of al-Sudani's multi-day trip to the United States last week.
[via WiserNow] ...Two separate sources is saying that everything should be released to us and have a climactic conclusion by end of this week... does this happen...Thursday? Friday? Saturday? We don’t know...They didn't give that specific day... we're getting this from two separate redemption centers...
Tues. 23 April BruceThe Big Call Universe (ibize.com)667-770-1866, pin123456#: “Redemption Center sources say everything will be released by the end of the week. One Redemption Center Head said ‘This is the week.’ Since Sun. 21 April
19 currencies have been going up in value on the Forex. Zim has been on par with the US Dollar and was now over par. While most currencies will top out, the Dong may continue to go up in value.”
“Redemption Center sources say everything will be released by theend of the week. One Redemption Center Head said ‘This is the week.’
SinceSun. 21 April19 currencies have been going up in value on the Forex. Zim has been on par with the US Dollar and was now over par. While most currencies will top out, the Dong may continue to go up in value.”
FRANK26: "FROM YOUR MOUTH TO PARLIAMENT'S EARS!!!"...........F26
Deputy: The budget schedules will arrive next week
4/23/2024
Information / Baghdad...
Member of the Parliamentary Finance Committee, Representative Mudar Al-Karawi, confirmed on Tuesday that the 2024 deadlines will arrive next week.
Al-Karawi said in an interview with Al-Maalouma, “The 2024 budget schedules will reach Parliament next week according to our expectations,” pointing out that “the Finance Committee will discuss all its items during its sessions.”
He added, “There is a vision regarding resolving many files, including Baghdad’s lecturers and administrators and allocations.” “We seek to guarantee the rights of all segments in the budget schedules
, in addition to creating high flexibility in their implementation through coordination with all relevant parties.” It is noteworthy that Parliament is awaiting the 2024 schedules from The government is in order to study it before voting on it so that it can take its course in actual implementation.”
A lot of people were not too happy of the more recent JP Morgan Bank stories...I had my own bank story...They're true...I went into Chase Bank...They didn't know who the Vice President Daniel Zelikow was...People that say when they go into the retail side of things you don't get a reception like some of the other folks do that go into the private banking side...
They're presenting the relationship with JP Morgan Bank and Iraq. For all those that may still question whether or not JP Morgan is dealing with Iraq or not they should be alleviated from now...
They show us progress...We have never been at this stage with Iraq ever and since 2003. I don't know any person out there and I know many that have been in this for over 20 year that have never witnessed what we're witnessing today. You really should be profoundly happy...It's phenomenal.
Iran will check Erdogan's ambitious goals in Iraq, experts say
Shafaq News / Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has agreed with Iraqi officials to expand bilateral relations, an attempt that experts say will be challenged by neighbor Iran, which has established significant political clout in Iraq.
Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani said at a joint news conference with Erdogan on Monday that the 26 memorandums of understanding he signed that day provided a “road map for sustainable cooperation” between Iraq and Turkey.
Erdogan, on his first visit to Iraq in 13 years, hailed the memorandums.
"I believe that my visit and the agreements we signed will be a turning point in the relations between Iraq and Turkey,” he said.
The documents address key issues between the two countries, including security, water management and trade.
The two leaders also witnessed the signing of preliminary agreements among Iraq, Turkey, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates on a 1,200-kilometer highway and railway project known as the Development Road Project, which would connect the Persian Gulf countries to Turkey and Europe through Iraq.
However, some experts are skeptical about Turkey’s ability to expand its interests in Iraq. They think Iran, as a regional competitor with more influence in Iraq, will ultimately shape Ankara’s relations with Baghdad.
"Whether Iran will agree to a NATO member to become the main character in Iraq and Tehran’s competitor is questionable,” Sardar Aziz, a researcher at the Emirates Policy Center and a former senior adviser in the Kurdistan Regional Parliament, told VOA.
Aziz argued that the term of Iraq’s current Cabinet is approaching its end, adding more uncertainty for Turkey.
“Prime Minister al-Sudani has only one year left in office, and his chances of remaining in his position are very low,” he said. “Additionally, no money has been allocated in the Iraqi budget for these projects. These make it impossible for the agreements to become long term unless Iran agrees to them.”
While competition between Turkey and Iran over influence in Iraq is not new, Tehran has had the most influence since the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq. In 2014, the Popular Mobilization Forces, an organization of Iran’s Shiite proxy militias in Iraq, further solidified Iran’s hand in Iraq.
However, experts say Turkey is seeking to balance Iran’s dominance by supporting Iraq’s Sunni and Turkmen communities.
According to the Turkish presidency, Erdogan met with several representatives of Baghdad’s Turkmen community during his visit on Monday to Iraq. That meeting followed one with the Sunni community in the Iraqi capital.
Hassan Hanzal al-Nasir, an Iraqi writer and journalist in Baghdad, argued that Turkey’s influence over Iraqi Sunnis was unlikely to help Erdogan because of a stark division in the Sunni political base, particularly after the removal of Iraq’s parliamentary speaker.
Iraq’s Sunni parliament speaker, Mohamed al-Halbousi, was removed from his position in November 2023 by the overwhelmingly Shiite Iraqi Supreme Court over forgery allegations. Some Sunni political leaders condemned the decision as an attempt to further marginalize their community.
"Iraq’s Sunni political leaders are confused between Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the Emirates and even Jordan. There is no consensus among the Iraqi Sunnis to fill the position of the parliament head,” al-Nasir told VOA.
Nazar Haidar, director of the Iraq Media Center based in Virginia, said Turkey is leveraging Iraq’s sectarian divisions as “a negotiating card.”
“Indeed, the Iraqi public has been shocked in the recent two days after seeing pictures of President Erdogan meeting with those he called the representatives of the Sunni community and the representatives of the Turkmen community. This is an extremely dangerous subject,” he told VOA.
“The Sunni and Turkmen communities see Ankara as a support force in the Iraqi political process, and Ankara sees the Sunni and Turkmen communities as the negotiating card with the Iraqi government,” Haidar added.
Experts predict Iran’s involvement will similarly complicate Iraq's and Turkey’s attempts to cooperate on security.
While speaking to reporters on his flight home, Erdogan said Iraqi officials had agreed to cooperate with his government against Turkey’s Kurdish PKK militants. He said he wished to see concrete results of Baghdad's labeling of the PKK as a "banned organization."
Aziz, of the Emirates Policy Center, told VOA, "It seems that Turkey did not achieve its goal of convincing Iraq to recognize the PKK as a terrorist organization.”
“In practice, Iraq's assistance to Turkey against the PKK is difficult, because the issue has geopolitical and regional dimensions,” he said, adding that Turkey’s possible military operations inside Iraq, particularly in the city of Sinjar, where the PKK and PMF simultaneously operate, could lead to direct involvement from Iran.
But Haidar predicted no Iranian objection to a future Turkish military operation against Kurdish militants in Iraq.
“Iran will agree on such an operation by Turkey because it will give [Iran] a good opportunity to further enhance its strategic interests inside the Iraqi territory. It will be a mutually beneficial scenario for Iran and Turkey,” Haidar said.