Thursday, December 18, 2025

AL-ABADI RETURNS AGAIN… HIS BLOC: AL-MALIKI CONCEDED THE PREMIERSHIP TO US

AL-ABADI RETURNS AGAIN… HIS BLOC: AL-MALIKI CONCEDED THE PREMIERSHIP TO US

BEHIND THE SCENES OF THE FRAMEWORK MEETING

The spokesman for the Victory Coalition, Salam al-Zubaidi, revealed on Tuesday the details of yesterday’s coordination framework meeting, indicating that al-Sudani is still clinging to the second term, but al-Maliki has no desire to assume the position of Prime Minister, and he supports the nomination of Haider al-Abadi for the position.

The Coordination Framework meeting discussed extensively the issue of deciding on a candidate for the position of the next Prime Minister.

Sudani is clinging to a second term, but Maliki has no desire to assume the position of Prime Minister and supports the nomination of Haider al-Abadi for the premiership.

The coordinating framework did not reach a final agreement on a single candidate, because the constitutional timelines gave the framework some leeway until the council convenes and its leadership and the presidency of the republic are elected, and the framework is keen not to exceed the constitutional deadlines.

The latest coordination framework statement carries political messages to Sunni leaders about the need to make their choice in the session.


MARKZ: Iraq Dinar RV Update: Banking Reforms, White Paper Progress & Why 2025 Is Critical

 Iraq Dinar RV Update: Key Developments Driving the Revaluation Narrative

As the year comes to a close, conversations around the Iraqi Dinar revaluation (RV) continue to intensify. Recent discussions highlight major banking reforms, White Paper implementation, bond processing updates, and political shifts that many believe are laying the groundwork for a significant monetary change.

While no one can claim to know exact timing, the convergence of economic reform, digitization, and sovereignty measures suggests Iraq is entering a decisive phase.

Disclaimer (MarkZ):
Please consider everything on this call as my opinion. People who take notes do not catch everything, and it’s best to watch the video so that you get everything in context. Be sure to consult a professional for any financial decisions.


Bond Updates & RV Expectations

A recent bond update indicates that processing is still ongoing, with expectations remaining that completion could happen at any time, although delays of a few days are still possible. Importantly, there is no negative news—only confirmation that systems are actively moving forward.

This aligns with long-standing expectations that bond completions and currency value changes

 are closely connected.


Iraq’s Banking Reforms: The Core of the White Paper Strategy

Monetary Policy Indicators Signal Completion

Statements from Iraqi leadership confirm that:

  • Banking and monetary reforms spanning 2023–2025 are effectively completed

  • The reforms are specifically designed to lift the purchasing power of the dinar

  • Remaining banking adjustments are expected to conclude  within this month

This supports the narrative that Iraq is no longer “planning reforms”—they are executing the final stages.


Digital Transformation: Ports, Customs & Currency Control

Iraq is rapidly modernizing its infrastructure:

  • Digital customs systems to track goods and improve tax collection

  • Sonar and networking technologies at ports

  • Full tracking of boats, trucks, planes, and trains

  • Reduction of black-market dollar leakage

These measures are essential for currency stability and international trust, both prerequisites for any meaningful RV.


Is Iraq Implementing a QFS-Style System?

Many observers note similarities between Iraq’s reforms and what’s often referred to as QFS-style financial architecture, including:

  • Real-time tracking of funds

  • Transparent customs processing

  • Digitized banking oversight

  • Reduced corruption through automation

Whether labeled QFS or not, the outcome is the same: a controlled, transparent financial ecosystem.


HCL Law, Sovereignty & Political Signals

The discussion surrounding the Hydrocarbon Law (HCL) remains critical. Many believe:

  • The HCL must be implemented with an accurate rate in place

  • Parliamentary action before year-end strongly suggests immediate economic intent

  • Statements from Prime Minister Sudani reinforce urgency—not delays until 2026

Additionally, Iraq is actively:

  • Reducing Iranian influence

  • Strengthening ties with Gulf nations

  • Preparing to export electricity in the future

All signs point toward economic independence and stability.


RV Timing: January 2025 or Earlier?

While January 2nd is often mentioned as a logical starting point for monetary changes, no one can confirm exact timing.

However:

  • New fiscal years historically align with currency adjustments

  • Banking reforms are reportedly completing now

  • Political and infrastructure readiness is accelerating

Many hoped for a “Christmas RV,” but logic suggests the start of a new year remains a strong window.


Featured Snippet: Quick Summary

Is Iraq preparing for a Dinar revaluation?
Yes. Iraq has completed major banking reforms, digitized customs and ports, strengthened monetary policy from 2023–2025, reduced foreign influence, and modernized its financial system—all key prerequisites for a currency value adjustment.


Q&A Section

Will the Vietnamese Dong RV happen at the same time as the Dinar?

Most believe they will move together, although exact coordination remains unconfirmed.

Does Iraq need a new rate before passing the HCL?

Many experts believe so, as revenue calculations depend on an accurate currency valuation.

Is Forex showing the dinar at $4.81 real?

Unverified rates appear periodically and should not be considered official until confirmed by central banks.

Is RV guaranteed?

No financial event is guaranteed. All information discussed is opinion-based and speculative.


Mindset Matters During the Waiting Period

Community discussions remind us:

  • Patience is essential

  • Humor helps during uncertainty

  • Positive attitude doesn’t change reality—but it helps us navigate it

As one member joked:

“The RV is happening at continental drift speed.”


Final Thoughts

Iraq’s progress is no longer theoretical. Digital infrastructure, banking transparency, sovereign control, and completed monetary reforms all suggest the country is positioning itself for a historic shift.

Whether the RV happens tomorrow or months from now, the foundation appears stronger than ever.


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Wednesday, December 17, 2025

WHAT AWAITS IRAQIS IS “WORSE THAN OCCUPATION”… A SUMMARY OF WASHINGTON’S MESSAGES AND ACTIONS TOWARDS BAGHDAD – URGENT

Deadly weapon….

WHAT AWAITS IRAQIS IS “WORSE THAN OCCUPATION”… A SUMMARY OF WASHINGTON’S MESSAGES AND ACTIONS TOWARDS BAGHDAD – URGENT 

While political forces in Baghdad are preoccupied with negotiations to form a new government and address post-election obligations, an Iraqi voice from Washington, privy to the inner workings of American decision-making, paints a harsher picture. Intifadh Qanbar , a resident of the US capital and privy to the behind-the-scenes workings of the Iraqi situation, succinctly summarizes these fears with a shocking statement: what awaits Iraq could be “worse than occupation,”

 because the next battle may not be fought with tanks on the ground, but rather with a financial weapon: cutting off the dollar supply to Baghdad if the political class fails to meet the conditions presented by US President Donald Trump’s envoy, Mark Savaya. This assessment raises a weighty question: what does it mean for the flow of dollars from the US Federal Reserve to become a central bargaining chip in Washington’s relationship with Baghdad under the current Trump administration, and how might such a battle impact a fragile economy that is almost entirely dependent on the US currency?

From America to Baghdad… a warning about a “deadly weapon”

In numerous media appearances and commentaries, Intifadh Qanbar emphasized that Iraq faces not so much the threat of a new military invasion as it does a financial one that could paralyze the state from within. His warning is not about a theoretical possibility, but rather an escalating trajectory whose signs began to appear years ago when the US Treasury and the Federal Reserve tightened restrictions on the currency auction and excluded several Iraqi banks from dollar transactions under the pretext of their involvement in currency smuggling and financing networks linked to Iran.

 From this perspective, Qanbar’s talk of “something worse than occupation” becomes an attempt to describe a scenario that requires no soldiers on the ground: it would suffice for Washington to gradually or suddenly tighten the flow of dollars, and for employee salaries, food and medicine imports, the value of the dinar, and the daily lives of citizens to become hostage to a political-financial decision made in New York and Washington.

The Iraqi dollar dilemma… when oil revenues pass through the Federal Reserve gate

Since 2003, a special mechanism has been in place for managing Iraqi oil revenues. The funds are deposited in accounts at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York before being used to finance Iraq’s imports and meet the budget’s dollar needs. This arrangement has made the United States an involuntary partner in Iraq’s financial cycle, and the Fed accounts a mandatory gateway for every dollar entering Baghdad.

Simultaneously, the Central Bank of Iraq continued to operate a currency auction to cover imports and private sector transfers, which opened the door to smuggling, corruption, and exploitation of the gap between the official and parallel exchange rates. With mounting suspicions that billions of dollars were leaving Iraq for neighboring countries through money laundering and the financing of sanctioned networks, Washington began to view this as a vulnerability that could be used as both a tool for punishment and control.

In recent years, the US Treasury has translated this vision into concrete steps:

Tightening controls on the electronic platform for foreign transfers, barring several banks from accessing dollars, imposing rigorous scrutiny on every transfer transaction, and even rejecting requests suspected of being linked to sanctioned entities or smuggling networks. This experience has shown Iraqis, in practice, what it means for the life of the economy to hang by a single thread called “Federal Authority approval,”

 and it has given Qanbar’s words today added weight, because Iraqis have seen firsthand how a series of US measures can drive up the dollar on the parallel market, disrupt markets, and put pressure on the government within weeks.

Savaya’s conditions… from factions to the dollar

At this critical juncture, Trump’s envoy to Iraq, Mark Savaya, arrived with a list of demands that reportedly represent the new administration’s core thinking toward Baghdad: a unified state and a single armed force; a halt to the funding of armed factions with public funds; control over the smuggling of dollars to Iran, Syria, and Lebanon; and a clearer definition of Iraq’s role in the equation of the conflict between Washington and Tehran. While these conditions have not been officially announced in full, they are being circulated behind the scenes as the “ceiling” of the American position in the coming phase, with the Federal Reserve’s leverage and the dollar’s influence being the most effective tools to push Baghdad toward this ceiling.

From this perspective, Qanbar interprets the situation as a shift from a phase of “advising and warning” to one of “dictating through financial instruments.” If the dominant forces in Baghdad—politically and militarily—accept the American conditions, the dollar can continue to flow with some restrictions and controls. However, if they decide to persist in their duplicitous stance, Qanbar believes that the American response this time will not take the form of statements and protest notes, but rather a gradual tightening of dollar channels, which could, at its most extreme, lead to a severe restriction or near-freezing of the use of Iraqi dollar reserves.

What does “cutting the dollar” mean in practice?

When Qanbar warns against “cutting off dollars to Iraq,” he is not necessarily referring to a complete and immediate halt to all transfers, as this would be a costly scenario for everyone and would unleash global financial chaos, something Washington does not want. What he is talking about is closer to a gradual punitive approach, which could include:

A wider crackdown on Iraqi banks and the denial of more of their ability to deal in dollars, which turns them into local institutions unable to finance foreign trade; tightening the ceilings on transfers allowed through the platform, which pushes traders to the black market, raises the exchange rate and weakens the dinar; and perhaps at an advanced stage, using the reserves card itself, by imposing certain formulas for their use or threatening to freeze part of them if it is considered that the Iraqi government is proceeding with policies that contradict American demands.

In such a scenario, the difference between military occupation and financial pressure becomes clear: the former destroys infrastructure and leads to direct armed clashes, while the latter gradually strangles the state from within, turning every issue—from salaries to electricity to food—into a bargaining chip on the political table. It is precisely here that Qanbar’s talk of “something worse than occupation” seems more like a warning of a silent collapse, one where tanks aren’t visible in the streets, but citizens witness it daily in a soaring exchange rate, stalled projects, and a government unable to fulfill its obligations without federal approval.

Does Iraq have any real options for escaping the grip of the federal government?

Faced with this scenario, there is much talk in Baghdad about “diversifying partners” and turning towards China and Russia, settling transactions in currencies other than the dollar, or even building reserves in other currencies. However, these ideas clash with a number of hard realities: Iraqi oil is still priced in dollars, global markets still use the dollar as the benchmark currency, and the Iraqi banking system is structurally weak and, in its current state, incapable of managing the shock of a sudden transition to a new settlement system. Furthermore, any significant shift away from the dollar requires a different international political framework and a considerable amount of time to build the confidence of markets and financial institutions—a luxury that seems unattainable given the fragile economic and social situation and mounting internal pressures.

In this sense, talk of “escaping the grip of the Federal Reserve” may be a long-term strategic goal, but it is not a realistic shield against the rapid pressure scenarios that Qanbar warns of. In the short term, Iraq remains largely exposed to American leverage, making the real arena for maneuver not only economic but also political: Where does Iraq stand in the struggle between the axes, how does it distribute the cost of its relations with Washington and Tehran, and what discourse does it use to manage the issues of factions, weapons, and the state?

The question of the moment: Will Baghdad learn before it’s too late?

Qanbar’s warning is based on the conviction that Washington, in its new iteration, does not intend to maintain the status quo; and that Savaya’s visit to Baghdad is not a courtesy call but rather the beginning of a serious pressure campaign whose objective is “either a genuine change in the behavior of the Iraqi state, or facing a system of harsh pressure, foremost among which is the weapon of the dollar.” In contrast, Savaya presents himself, in his statement, as a “partner ready to support,” affirming that the United States, “under the leadership of President Trump, stands fully prepared to support Iraq during this critical phase,” and that he and his team are “committed to working closely with Iraqi leaders to establish a strong state, a stable future, and a sovereign Iraq capable of shaping its own destiny in the new Middle East.”

Between Qanbar’s warning of “something worse than occupation” if the federal system is used as a punitive weapon, and Savaya’s talk of a “unified and rational option” that opens the door to American support, a new framework of pressure on Baghdad is taking shape: the stick of the dollar on one hand, and the carrot of “support and partnership” on the other. In this narrow space, the Iraqi state faces a new test: Does it possess the ability to formulate a unified and balanced position that spares the country a scenario of financial strangulation and prevents its reserves and oil revenues from becoming a tool for reshaping its political decision-making? Or will continued hesitation and internal conflict give Washington the pretext to use its harshest tools, leaving Iraqis suddenly at the heart of a suffocating financial crisis, unlike occupation in its outward appearance, but potentially surpassing it in its profound impact and its ability to shatter what remains of the state’s capacity to control its economic and political destiny?

📰 Jeff Report: Sanctions, Sovereignty & the Next Phase

 ⚠️ Disclaimer

This article is for informational purposes only and is not financial advice. Readers should verify updates independently and consult a financial advisor before making investment decisions.


📰 Jeff Report: Sanctions, Sovereignty & the Next Phase

According to Jeff:

  • UN sanctions: Fully lifted. Iraq is no longer restricted by UN sanctions.

  • US sanctions: A few minor restrictions remain, but these will automatically lift once Iraq revalues its currency.

  • International stage 2026: Iraq is preparing to launch a new era of sovereignty and international economic activity.

  • “Next phase” terminology: Media and officials are using the phrase “next phase” to describe Iraq’s entry into international financial markets in 2026.


💡 Key Takeaways

  1. Sanctions cleared: UN sanctions lifted; US sanctions will lift automatically with the RV.

  • International readiness: Iraq is preparing for full participation in global markets in 2026.

  • Timing of the RV: The rate change may not happen immediately in January 2026, but the groundwork is fully in place.

  • Sovereignty regained: Both US and foreign entities will step back, allowing Iraq to manage its economy independently.


  • 📌 Quick Snippet (Summary)

    Iraq is entering its “next phase” in 2026, lifting UN sanctions and preparing for international economic reforms. US sanctions will automatically lift upon the currency revaluation, setting the stage for a sovereign and tradable Iraqi dinar.


    🚀 Viral Hashtags

    #IraqDinarRV #CurrencyRevaluation #SanctionsLifted #NextPhaseIraq #ForexNormalization #Sovereignty2026 #IraqEconomy #RVUpdate #IraqDinarNews


    Jeff 

    Tradable foreign currency...requires them to be out from underneath the US and UN sanctions. They're out from the UN sanctions. They still have a few minor ones on the US side. That's not a concern because when Iraq revalues their currency, the US sanctions will automatically lift and remove. Iraq is going international in 2026.

     That's why the US and UN are ending their interactions with Iraq in the year of 2025 so that both parties or foreign entities will be out of Iraq so they can have their sovereignty in their new next stage in 2026 which is their new international beginning... 

    That gives them a clear pathway to jump in and launch the reforms in the beginning of 2026. That doesn't mean the rate is changing in January or 2026. Iraq is revealing they're going to enter into their 'next phase'. That is a key little phrase they're using right now in articles. They're entering into their next phase in the year 2026. We are extremely close to the timing of the rate change. 

    💥 The Zero Game Decoded: Could Your Iraqi Dinar Skyrocket?

    HANTOUSH: INTERNATIONAL FINANCING DIFFICULTIES AND EXCHANGE RATE CHALLENGES THREATEN THE STABILITY OF THE IRAQI ECONOMY

     HANTOUSH: INTERNATIONAL FINANCING DIFFICULTIES AND EXCHANGE RATE CHALLENGES THREATEN THE STABILITY OF THE IRAQI ECONOMY

    Economic and banking expert Mustafa Hantoush confirmed on Thursday that Iraqi companies and the private sector are facing significant difficulties in obtaining international loans to finance major projects due to Iraq’s low credit rating and the high costs of guarantees and interest rates on foreign loans.

    Hantoush added, in a statement to Al-Maalouma, that “the Iraqi banking system is going through a difficult period, with the possibility of several banks exiting the market, which limits the ability of domestic financing to cover major projects.” He pointed out that “international financing depends heavily on sovereign guarantees provided by the state, which remain limited in Iraq.”

    He noted that “the cost of external financing has risen significantly, with interest rates increasing from 5% to approximately 8-9% due to the risks associated with Iraq’s credit rating, placing additional burdens on Iraqi investors.”

    Regarding the dollar exchange rate, which has reached 2,000 dinars, Hantoush affirmed that “Iraq is experiencing relative monetary stability, and the Central Bank has no intention of changing the exchange rate at present, despite speculation about the incoming government’s intentions in this regard.”
    He warned that any “exchange rate adjustment without addressing the root causes of the country’s financial problems would be a half-measure, potentially leading to widespread negative consequences, including increased poverty rates and a decline in the value of salaries, thus exacerbating the suffering of large segments of the popula

    tion.”

    He explained that “Iraq possesses substantial resources in the form of government assets estimated at hundreds of billions of dollars, in addition to vast tracts of land and real estate, but the weakness in combating corruption and activating tax collection hinders the effective utilization of these resources.”
    He pointed out that “seriously confronting corruption and activating domestic revenues could reduce the need to adjust the exchange rate or resort to temporary solutions that could harm the economy and society.”

    He also noted the existence of “huge amounts of cash held in homes, estimated at 70 to 80 trillion dinars, which have contributed to speculation in the real estate market and an unjustified rise in prices, necessitating a sound monetary policy to control the markets.” He concluded by emphasizing that “the continuation of the current situation without genuine reforms will lead to a deterioration of economic and social conditions, with increased poverty rates and greater pressure on salaries and market liquidity.”


    SKYE PRINCE: 🇮🇶 Bond Payments, 4B Updates & Active RV Developments: 04/2026 Update #iqd #dinarnews

      Read also: REVALHUB: 🧭 🏦 IRAQ: MONETARY REFORMS, DIGITALIZATION, AND POTENTIAL LONG-TERM STRENGTHENING OF THE DINAR 🌐  FOLL...