Iraq's foreign policy and the regional context, the input of instability and mechanisms of normalization

Authors

  • أ.م.د.اسامة مرتضى باقر
  • أ.م.د.اسامة مرتضى باقر

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.30907/jj.v0i52.67

Abstract

Iraq has suffered since 1991 from international sanctions imposed on it by the dictatorial regime that existed at the time, invading Kuwait, which led to the decline of the status of Iraq and the isolation of international and regional (Arab) and clear Iraq as a strange entity living within its regional environment, after April 2003 did not change much In fact, there were no signs of détente before the Arab League summit in Baghdad in 2011, and the signs of a break in the stalemate in inter-relations over the past years have become evident. Disruption and refraction was not high (Islamic Republic of Iran, Turkey, Syrian Arab Republic, Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait). Each side is governed by perceptions about Iraq, especially after 2003, and the political and economic developments taking place.

 

Published

2019-02-20

How to Cite

Iraq’s foreign policy and the regional context, the input of instability and mechanisms of normalization. (2019). Political Sciences Journal, 52, 97-112. https://doi.org/10.30907/jj.v0i52.67

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