Iranian President Hassan Rouhani is visiting Baghdad this week to meet
with top Iraqi officials. The three-day talks are expected to center on
trade, and particularly in keeping natural gas exports flowing into Iraq going forward.
Iraq needs this natural gas for its energy production, and the two
countries are on good terms, so this seems a fairly obvious trade deal
to keep intact. US sanctions, however, have an eye toward threatening
this, and most other Iranian trade worldwide.
Iraqi officials have expressed opposition to US sanctions, and suggested
they would defy them if the US fails to come forward with waivers.
Trade with neighboring Iran is just too important, and losing access to
natural gas in particular would be potentially disastrous to Iraq’s
electricity production.
Maintaining close economic ties with Iran is very important for the
Iraqi people, as well. When the ISIS war began and Mosul fell, there was
a financial panic in Iraq, and many Iraqi investors moved their funds
to Iran. US sanctions not only harm those investments but are
threatening to prevent Iraqis from getting their money back because of
banking sanctions.