Ministry of Defence (Iraq) explained

Republic of Iraq
Ministry of Defence
Native Name:وزارة الدفاع
Type:Department
Seal:Iraqi Ministry of Defence Emblem.png
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Jurisdiction:Government of Iraq
Headquarters:Green Zone, Baghdad
Budget:$21.1 Billion (2024)[1]
Minister1 Name:Thabet Al Abbasi
Minister8 Name:-->
Deputyminister8 Name:-->
Chief9 Name:-->
Child25 Agency:-->
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Website:

The Ministry of Defence (Arabic: وزارة الدفاع العراقية) is the cabinet-level ministry responsible for defence in Iraq. It is also involved with internal security.

Authority

The Ministry directs all the Iraqi Armed Forces, comprising a Joint Headquarters, the Iraqi Ground Forces Command (which controls the Army), the Iraqi Special Operations Forces, the Iraqi Army, the Iraqi Navy (including Marines), and the Iraqi Air Force.

History

The Ministry was dissolved by Coalition Provisional Authority Order Number 2 of mid-2003. It was formally re-established by CPA Order 67 of 21 March 2004. In the interim period, the CPA Office of Security Affairs served as the de facto Ministry of Defence.[2]

The Iraqi Counter Terrorism Bureau directs the Iraqi Counter Terrorism Command, which is a further military force answerable to the Prime Minister of Iraq directly. As of 30 June 2009, there had been legislation in progress for a year to make the Iraqi Counter Terrorism Bureau a separate ministry.

Minister of defence

The position of Minister of Defence became vacant in the previous Iraqi cabinet, approved on 21 December 2010. While it was vacant, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki served as the acting defence minister. Saadoun al-Dulaimi later served as Minister of Defence from 2011 to 2014. Khaled al-Obaidi served as defence minister in the Iraqi cabinet of Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi. Juma Inad served as defense minister from May 2020 to October of 2022 under the caretaker government of Mustafa al-Kadhimi. Thabet Muhammad Al-Abasi serves as the current minister of defense as of 2022.

The previous Minister of Defence, Lieutenant General Abd al-Qadr Muhammed Jassim al-Obaidi, is a Sunni career military officer and political independent. He had limited experience and faced a number of hurdles impeding his effective governance. Some of the major problems included inheriting a staff that is notorious for favorism, corruption, and deeply divided along sectarian and ethnic lines. He was a rival of the former Minister of the Interior Jawad al-Bolani, National Security Advisor Muwafaq al-Rubai, and Minister of Staff for National Security Affairs Shirwan al-Waili. He has been criticized for not being able to stand up to the Badr Organization and Mehdi Army members which dominate his own party. In addition, as a Sunni he faced inherent challenges working within a Shiite-dominated government.

On 19 September 2005, The Independent reported that approximately one billion US dollars have been stolen by top ranking officials from the Ministry of Defence including Hazim al-Shaalan and Ziyad Cattan.[3]

Previous defence ministers under Saddam Hussein's regime included Ali Hassan al-Majid ('Chemical Ali'). Iraq's first minister of defence was Jafar al-Askari (1920–1922).

List of ministers of defence

Kingdom of Iraq (1921–1958)

NamePortraitTerm of officePolitical partyPrime Minister
Jafar al-Askari23 October 192016 November 1922Abd Al-Rahman Al-Gillani
Nuri as-Said20 November 19222 August 1924
Yasin al-Hashimi2 August 19242 June 1925
Nuri as-Said26 June 19258 January 1928
Abd al-Muhsin as-Sa'dun14 January 192820 January 1929
Muhammad Amin Zaki28 April 192925 August 1929
Nuri al-Sa’id19 September 192919 March 1930
Jafar al-Askari23 March 193027 October 1932
Rashid al-Khawja3 November 193218 March 1933
Jalal Baban20 March 193328 October 1933

Iraqi Republic (1958–1968)

NamePortraitTerm of officePolitical partyPresident
Abd al-Karim Qasim14 July 19588 February 1963IndependentMuhammad Najib ar-Ruba'i
Salah Mahdi Ammash8 February 196310 November 1963Ba'ath Party
(Iraq Region)
Abdul Salam Arif
Hardan al-Tikriti10 November 19632 March 1964
Tahir Yahya2 March 19643 September 1965Arab Socialist Union
Arif Abd ar-Razzaq6 September 196516 September 1965Arab Socialist Union
Abd al-'Aziz al-'Uqaili21 September 196518 April 1966
Shakir Mahmud Shukri18 April 196617 July 1968Abdul Rahman Arif

Ba'athist Iraq (1968–2003)

NamePortraitTerm of officePolitical partyPresident
Ibrahim Abdel Rahman Dawoud17 July 196830 July 1968IndependentAhmed Hassan al-Bakr
Hardan al-Tikriti30 July 1968April 1970Iraqi Ba'ath Party
(Iraq Region)
Hammad ShihabApril 197030 June 1973Iraqi Ba'ath Party
(Iraq Region)
Abdullah al-Khadduri (acting)30 June 197311 November 1974Iraqi Ba'ath Party
(Iraq Region)
Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr11 November 197415 October 1977Iraqi Ba'ath Party
(Iraq Region)
Adnan Khairallah15 October 19774 May 1989Iraqi Ba'ath Party
(Iraq Region)
Saddam Hussein
Abdul Jabbar Khalil Shanshal4 May 19891990Iraqi Ba'ath Party
(Iraq Region)
Saadi Toma12 December 19906 April 1991Iraqi Ba'ath Party
(Iraq Region)
Ali Hassan al-Majid19911995Iraqi Ba'ath Party
(Iraq Region)
Sultan Hashim19952003Iraqi Ba'ath Party
(Iraq Region)

Republic of Iraq (2004–present)

NamePortraitTerm of officePolitical partyPrime Minister
Ali AllawiApril 2004June 2004IndependentAyad Allawi
Hazim al-ShaalanJune 20041 June 2005Iraqi National Congress
Saadoun al-Dulaimi1 June 20056 March 2006IndependentIbrahim al-Jaafari
Qadir Obeidi6 March 200621 December 2010IndependentNouri al-Maliki
Nouri al-Maliki21 December 201017 August 2011State of Law Coalition
Saadoun al-Dulaimi17 August 201118 October 2014Unity Alliance of Iraq
Khaled al-Obaidi18 October 201419 August 2016Unity Alliance of IraqHaider al-Abadi
Othman al-Ghanmi (interim)19 August 201630 January 2017State of Law Coalition
Erfan al-Hiyali30 January 201724 June 2019State of Law Coalition
Najah al-Shammari24 June 20196 May 2020[4] Adil Abdul-Mahdi
Juma Inad6 May 202027 October 2022[5] IndependentMustafa Al-Kadhimi
Thabet Al Abbasi27 October 2022IncumbentMohammed Shia' Al Sudani

References

  1. Web site: Trends in World Military Expenditure, 2019 . . Nan . Tian . Aude . Fleurant . Alexandra . Kuimova . Pieter D. . Wezeman . Siemon T. . Wezeman . 27 April 2020 . 17 December 2020.
  2. Book: Rathmell , Andrew . Developing Iraq's security sector: the coalition provisional authority's experience. 2005. limited. 27. Rand Corporation. 0-8330-3823-0.
  3. News: What has happened to Iraq's missing $1bn? . Cockburn . Patrick . 19 September 2005 . The Independent . 1 July 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20091005233721/https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/what-has-happened-to-iraqs-missing-1bn-507397.html . 5 October 2009 . dead.
  4. Web site: Meet Iraq's new Cabinet. Ali. Mamouri. May 7, 2020. Al-Monitor.
  5. Web site: 2022-11-18 . Thabet Mohammad Al-Abbasi: The newly appointed Iraqi Minister of Defense . 2023-04-12 . Tactical Report . en.

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Further reading

External links