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handle is hein.crs/govehhj0001 and id is 1 raw text is: Iraq and U.S. Policy
Vioence Shadows Post-Election Talks
Iraq held a national election on October 10, 2021, with
voters selecting 329 members for the unicameral
legislature, the Council of Representatives (COR). The
COR elects Iraq's president and approves the prime
minister's program and cabinet nominees. The election
results will inform negotiations among political groups to
identify the new COR's largest bloc, which nominates the
prime minister. The largest bloc may or may not include the
coalition or party that won the most COR seats. Past
government formation talks have taken months to resolve.
Election observers judged that officials administered the
election fairly, amid low turnout and some boycotts.
Recounts have not resulted in major changes. Some parties
nevertheless have continued to question the outcome, with
some Iran-aligned groups engaging in confrontational
protests and intimating that violence could result if Iraq's
next government excludes them. Unnamed Iraqi officials
attributed a November 2021 drone attack on the prime
minister's residence to Iran-aligned Iraqi militia, but militia
leaders and Iranian officials have denied any involvement.
Condemning the terrorist attack against Prime Minister
Al Khadimi, President Biden said, The United States
stands firmly with the government and people of Iraq as
they strive to uphold Iraq's sovereignty and independence.
Iraq adopted a new electoral law for the October election
based on individual candidacy and local districts, creating
new political opportunities for independents and members
of the protest movement that brought down the government
formed after the 2018 election. Shia leader Muqtada al
Sadr's supporters won fewer votes than in 2018 but adapted
their candidacy approach to the new system and won the
most seats (75). Independents and grassroots candidates
won 41 seats, followed by the Taqaddum (Progress)
movement of COR Speaker Mohammed al Halbousi (40),
former prime minister Nouri al Maliki's State of Law bloc
(37), and the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) (34). The
pro-Iran Fatah (Conquest) bloc drew support comparable to
Sadr's, but won 29 seats, down from 48 in 2018.
For the United States, the election result could reduce the
formal influence of Iran-aligned groups who seek to revise
or rescind plans for a continued U.S. military advisory
presence in Iraq after December 31, 2021. However, Iraqi
analysts expect a compromise coalition government to
emerge that includes or reflects the interests of Iran-backed
groups alongside their more electorally successful rivals.
Such a government could lower the risk of political
violence, but also may make systemic reforms less likely.
In assessing the government that emerges in Iraq, U.S.
officials may weigh the benefits of continued security
cooperation and other bilateral ties against risks to Iraq's
stability posed by the persistence of patronage politics,
corruption, oil dependence, and armed non-state actors.

Updated November 12, 2021

Challenges Await New Government
Prime Minister Mustafa al Kadhimi has led the government
since May 2020, after months of political deadlock
following his predecessor's protestor-demanded resignation
in late 2019. Extensive negotiations leading to Kadhimi's
nomination occurred during a period of escalating U.S.-Iran
tensions in Iraq. Attacks by Iran-backed groups targeting
U.S. and Coalition forces-and their Iraqi hosts-have
tested Prime Minister Al Kadhimi throughout his tenure.
Figure I. Iraa

Sources: CRS, using ESRI and U.S. State Department data.
The Islamic State (IS, aka ISIS/ISIL) group's control of
territory in Iraq ended in 2017, creating space for Iraqis to
seek more accountable governance, improved service
delivery, an end to corruption, and greater economic
opportunity. These demands drove mass protests in 2019
and 2020 that subsided as the Coronavirus Disease-2019
(COVID-19) pandemic spread, but resurged in May 2021
with demonstrators insisting that the government identify
and prosecute suspects in a series of assassinations and
kidnappings of protest leaders, activists, and others. The
state's use of force to contain and disperse protests and the
impunity surrounding violence against activists has
intensified public scrutiny of the Prime Minister's
credibility and his government's ability to act against armed
groups operating outside state control.
Continued dependence on oil revenues and expansive state
liabilities left Iraq vulnerable to financial collapse in 2020,
as the systemic effects of the COVID-19 pandemic
exacerbated underlying economic and fiscal challenges. A
precipitous drop in global oil prices slashed state revenues
through the middle of 2020, but price increases have since
created some fiscal breathing room. Iraq's $89 billion 2021

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