A fragile oil state balancing militia power, Iran-U.S. pressure, federal disputes, corruption, water stress, and reconstruction needs.
How this score is built: We rate five areas from 0 to 10, then take the average.
Public impact
7.0/10Institutional power
9.0/10Evidence reliability
5.0/10Harm risk
5.0/10Accountability
5.0/10Civic score breakdown
OAP rubric dimensions (0–10) averaged from linked coverage.
Current OAP lens
A fragile oil state balancing militia power, Iran-U.S. pressure, federal disputes, corruption, water stress, and reconstruction needs.
- Governance
- federal parliamentary republic
- Strategic posture
- oil state with contested sovereignty
- Economic model
- oil + public sector + religious tourism
- Current stress
- medium
- Reality stability
- context-dependent
- Primary situations
- militias, Iran-U.S. pressure, Kurdistan disputes, water stress
Visual overview
Profile at a glance
Institutional stress
Count of stress indicators by severity level in the OAP dossier.
- High
- Medium
Power map balance
Relative weight of each power-center category (by listed actors).
Timeline event types
How historical milestones cluster by event type.
Knowledge vs uncertainty
Known facts, open questions, and watchlist items in this profile.
- What we know
- What we don't know
- What to watch
Key facts
- Population
- refresh via World Bank pipeline
- Capital
- Baghdad
- Political system
- federal parliamentary republic
- Nuclear status
- non-nuclear-armed unless otherwise specified
- Core economic base
- oil, public sector, religious tourism, agriculture
- Key exports
- crude oil, petroleum products
- Current strategic focus
- militias, Iran-U.S. pressure, Kurdistan disputes, water stress, corruption
Core economic base
Core sectors in the economic base (equal weight for scanability).
- oil
- public sector
- religious tourism
- agriculture
Key exports
Major export categories (equal weight for scanability).
- crude oil
- petroleum products
Baseline demographic and macroeconomic context should be refreshed from World Bank / IMF data pipelines; this profile is an editorial intelligence layer, not a static encyclopedia entry.
Active situations
Active situations involving Iraq
- militias
- Iran-U.S. pressure
- Kurdistan disputes
- water stress
- corruption
Strategic lenses
Institutional capacity
How Iraq's governing institutions convert policy intent into real outcomes.
Regional position
How geography and neighbors shape Iraq's security and economic options.
Economic model
How oil, public sector, religious tourism create resilience or dependency.
Legitimacy pressures
How public trust, social cohesion, and distributional fairness shape reform durability.
External alignment
How partnerships and rivalries constrain Iraq's room for maneuver.
OAP assessment
OAP assessment
Iraq is best understood through the interaction of its institutions, economic base, regional position, and current stress points: militias, Iran-U.S. pressure, Kurdistan disputes, water stress, corruption. The central OAP question is how the country converts its assets into durable capacity while managing legitimacy, resilience, and external pressure.
Timeline
Significant events
How the situation evolved — an interpretive civic sequence, not a full chronology.
Modern state formation and institutional consolidation
Creates the political and institutional baseline for Iraq's modern trajectory.
Why it mattersCreates the political and institutional baseline for Iraq's modern trajectory.
Globalization and regional integration deepen
Trade, investment, migration, and security ties reshape Iraq's policy constraints.
Why it mattersTrade, investment, migration, and security ties reshape Iraq's policy constraints.
Resilience and geopolitical pressure rise
Energy, technology, security, climate, and legitimacy pressures become more central to Iraq's policy agenda.
Why it mattersEnergy, technology, security, climate, and legitimacy pressures become more central to Iraq's policy agenda.
Power map
Political center
- head of government
- cabinet
- parliament/legislature
- regional/local authorities
Security apparatus
- armed forces
- police/internal security
- intelligence/border agencies
Economic pillars
- oil
- public sector
- religious tourism
- agriculture
External partners
- regional partners
- major trading partners
- multilateral institutions
Pressure points
- militias
- Iran-U.S. pressure
- Kurdistan disputes
- water stress
- public trust
- fiscal space
Institutional stress
High
- militias
- Iran-U.S. pressure
Medium
- Kurdistan disputes
- water stress
- corruption
Stress indicators are OAP editorial judgments based on governance, fiscal, security, demographic, institutional, and geopolitical pressures; they should be updated when major events materially alter the trajectory.
Core tradeoffs
- Strategic autonomy vs external dependence
- Growth vs social cohesion
- Security priorities vs civil liberties
- Climate/energy transition vs incumbent economic interests
- Central control vs institutional accountability
Epistemic clarity
What we know
- Iraq has identifiable assets and constraints that shape policy outcomes.
- Regional context matters as much as domestic ideology.
- Economic structure creates both leverage and vulnerability.
- Institutional capacity determines whether reforms become durable.
What we don't know
- Whether current reforms or strategies can survive political cycles.
- How external shocks will affect fiscal and social stability.
- Whether institutions can adapt faster than pressures accumulate.
- How public legitimacy evolves under stress.
OAP watchlist
What to watch
- militias
- Iran-U.S. pressure
- Kurdistan disputes
- water stress
- corruption
- inflation and fiscal balance
- public trust
- external alignment
Reader learning
Learn Iraq through 5 questions
- What is Iraq's strongest source of leverage?
- Which institution most shapes Iraq's trajectory?
- Where are the biggest tradeoffs in Iraq's development model?
- How do regional pressures affect domestic politics?
- What would make Iraq more resilient over the next decade?
