Dollar Shipments to Iraq Halted to Stop
Support to Iran
The United
States has halted dollar shipments to Iraq’s cash-based economy in an effort to
force the Baghdad government to distance itself from Iran. The money comes from
Iraq’s oil revenues.
1. U.S. Suspends Dollar Cash Shipments to Iraq
·
The United
States has reportedly halted air shipments of U.S. dollars to Iraq, affecting part
of Iraq’s cash-dependent economy.
·
The funds
involved derive from Iraq’s own oil revenues, much of which pass through accounts
at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
2. Pressure Linked to Iran Concerns
·
The move is
described as part of Washington’s broader pressure campaign to push Baghdad to distance
itself from Iran.
·
U.S. concerns
reportedly include:
o
Activities
of Iran-linked Iraqi militias
o
Attacks on
U.S. interests, including the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad
o
Alleged dollar
smuggling benefiting Iran-aligned networks
3. Economic Risks for Iraq
·
The measure
has raised concern over:
o
Increased
demand for dollars
o
Potential
pressure on Iraq’s fragile economy
o
Risks to imports,
liquidity and salary payments tied to oil revenues
·
Iraqi officials
said electronic bank transfers continue, while the current suspension appears focused
on physical cash shipments.
4. Broader Strategic Context
·
The action
has been described by analysts as a powerful financial lever — even termed a “nuclear
option” in U.S.-Iraq relations.
o
Regional tensions
linked to the U.S.-Iran conflict
o
Disruptions
affecting the Strait of Hormuz
o
Political
pressure surrounding Iraq’s government formation
5. Mixed Assessments on Impact
·
Some Iraqi
officials argued only a small share of dollar demand is affected and core banking
channels remain operational.
·
Analysts,
however, said the move carries major political significance even if immediate economic
disruption is limited.
Overall Message
The U.S. suspension
of dollar shipments signals a sharp escalation of pressure on Iraq over its Iran
ties, using financial leverage to influence security and political behavior while raising concerns about broader economic and diplomatic
fallout.
[ABS News
Service/25.04.2026]
The U.S. ability
to control the flow of dollars to Iraq’s cash-based economy has long been described
as the “nuclear option” for Washington to impose its will on Baghdad.
Now, in the
shadow of the U.S. war with Iran, the Trump administration is doing just that.
The United
States has suspended air shipments of dollars to Iraq, according to two senior Iraqi
officials, withholding money that Iraq earned from its own oil sales.
It is part
of a vigorous pressure campaign by the U.S. administration to force the Baghdad
government to distance itself from Iran. Washington has also suspended cooperation
with and funding for Iraq’s security services, two Iraqi officials said earlier this week.
The State
Department referred questions on the dollar shipments to the Treasury Department,
which declined to comment.
The U.S. measures
could potentially cripple Iraq’s already wobbly economy, which relies on cash. Demand
for dollars began to rise as news of the halt in shipments spread, stoking anxiety.
Iraq has long maintained close ties with both
Iran and the United States and often finds itself caught between the two rivals.
That tug of war has now pushed the country into crisis.
The U.S. measures send the message that Washington
is treating Iraq more as an enemy than an ally, said Ramzy Mardini, the founder
of Geopol Labs, a geopolitical risk advisory firm based
in the Middle East.
“Halting dollar transfers amounts to a nuclear
option,” he said, calling this a “weaponization” of the currency. “Iraq isn’t an
adversary of the U.S., and yet it is threatened in a way that sends a terrible signal
to other oil-producing partners in the region.”
Washington was particularly angered over a
series of recent attacks by Iran-linked Iraqi militias on U.S. interests in Iraq
in retaliation for the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran that began in late February. The
militias have also attacked close U.S. allies — the forces of Iraq’s semiautonomous
Kurdistan region — and sometimes even the Iraqi military itself.
The Iran-linked militias have claimed responsibility
for several attacks on U.S. interests in Iraq — including the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad
— since the war in Iran began. The attacks came after an airstrike hit the headquarters
of one of the militias and killed three people — an airstrike the militias blamed
on the United States and Israel.
In addition to reining in the militias, Washington
has been open about wanting to influence the impending formation of a new government
in Iraq.
In January, President Trump threatened to withdraw
U.S. support for Iraq if Nuri Kamal al-Maliki, a leading Shiite politician, returned
as the prime minister. Mr. al-Maliki was first elected prime minister in 2006, at
the time with U.S. backing. But the relationship soured over his two four-year terms
as he was increasingly seen as aligned with Iran.
Mr. al-Maliki said in a social media post at the
time that Iraqis “categorically reject this blatant American interference.”
Since the war with Iran began, the economic
effect of the Iranian and American parallel blockades on the Strait of Hormuz, a
vital shipping route for Iraq’s crude exports, has also forced a steep drop in oil
exports critical to paying state salaries that support at least a third of the Iraqi
population.
One of the legacies of the American-structured
financial system since the U.S. occupation of Iraq is that most of the country’s
oil revenues — the main source of government income and the underpinning of its
economy — are often paid not to accounts in Iraq, but to accounts held at the Federal
Reserve Bank of New York.
Every day, Iraq’s central bank facilitates
wire transfers in dollars from its account at the Fed on behalf of Iraqi businesses
and individuals to pay for imports to Iraq. Iraq also relies on planes that transport
pallets of U.S. dollars into the country every few weeks.
The planeloads have been halted since February,
initially because the war in neighboring Iran had forced
Iraq to close its airspace, according to a senior Iraqi Kurdish official briefed
on the matter. He spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive issues.
Then, in a double blow, the United States decided
to suspend dollar shipments around the time of a drone attack on April 8 near U.S.
diplomats in the Baghdad airport, two Iraqi officials said. When a cease-fire this
month allowed Iraqi airspace to reopen, the shipments did not resume.
Addressing the April 8 strike, the State Department
said that a militia had used multiple drones in the attack. Iraqi security officials
said one drone had struck 50 meters from where U.S. diplomats were escorting a recently
freed American journalist, who had been held hostage by an Iran-linked Iraqi militia,
to a helicopter flight out of the country.
The following day, the U.S. deputy secretary
of state, Christopher Landau, summoned the Iraqi ambassador in Washington, Nazar
Al Khirullah, to the State Department.
The Iraqi Kurdish official said the U.S. suspension
of dollar shipments had been intended to stem the smuggling of dollars by Iran-aligned
Iraqi militias, as well as to pressure Iraq to tighten control over the Iran-linked
militias.
He said he feared “a death by a thousand cuts”
for Iraq’s economy, which is not only dependent on U.S. dollars, but also on imports
and oil — all now being deeply affected by the mix of U.S. pressure and the regional
war.
For now, the suspension appears to affect only
the planeloads of dollars flown to Iraq, according to the Iraqi officials. Other
transfers, such as electronic banking, are continuing but the United States could
escalate by further restricting Iraq’s access to dollars if it chooses to prevent
bank-to-bank transfers.
A second Iraqi official, an economic adviser
to Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani, Mudhir Mohammad
Salih, downplayed the potential effect of the U.S. move. He told The New York Times
that the halt would affect only 5 percent of the demand for the dollar in Iraq,
mostly related to meeting the cash needs of Iraqis traveling abroad.
The other 95 percent of dollar demand, he said,
was still “being managed normally through official banking channels without any
significant interruption.”
Iraq analysts said, nonetheless, that this
was a sour point in U.S.-Iraqi relations.
Ahmed Tabaqchali, a senior fellow at the Atlantic
Council, which is an international affairs research organization, said that the
move would have a minimal effect on the country’s economy, especially since internal
transactions must be conducted in the Iraqi dinar and Iraqis were increasingly using
debit and credit cards.
But the broader importance is the message it
sends.
“It certainly is a negative development,” he
said. “Is this the opening shot? Maybe there will be more to come. I would not underestimate
the negativeness of the gesture.”