Last year, Iraqi F-16 fighter jets would swoop across the wide deserts of Anbar province twice a week, surveilling militants from the self-proclaimed Islamic State (IS) group. The pilots were “watching for leaks” across the Syrian border before heading back to the Balad airbase north of Baghdad, said a senior Iraqi official directly familiar with the program.
Now Iraq’s F-16 program “is almost gone,” the official said in interviews this month outlining the state of the high-profile fighter jet program. Three senior Western security officials familiar with the program confirmed that the program's operational effectiveness is diminished.
The decline of the F-16 program is just one example of how Iraq's security cooperation with the U.S.-led international coalition to fight IS has suffered from a rift between the Trump administration and the government of former Prime Minister Adil Abd al-Mahdi, which broke open more than four months ago after the U.S. assassination of Iranian Gen. Qassim Soleimani and deputy commander of Iraq's Popular Mobilization Forces Abu Mahdi al-Mohandis.
If you are not a registered user, you may purchase a subscription or sign up for a free trial.
All sources quoted or referenced spoke to Iraq Oil Report directly and exclusively, unless stated otherwise. Iraq Oil Report typically grants anonymity to sources that can't speak without risking their personal safety or job security. We only publish information from anonymous sources that we independently corroborate and are important to core elements of the story. We do not provide anonymity to sources whose purpose is to further personal or political agendas.
Iraq Oil Report Commitment to IndependenceIraq Oil Report strives to provide thoroughly vetted reporting and fair-minded analysis that enables readers to understand the dynamic events of Iraq. To meet this goal, we always seek to gather first-hand information on the ground, verify facts from multiple angles, and solicit input from every stakeholder involved in a given story.
We view our independence as an integral piece of our competitive advantage. Whereas many media entities in Iraq are owned or heavily influenced by political parties, Iraq Oil Report is wholly owned by several of its employees. In a landscape that is often polarized and politicized, we are able to gather and corroborate information from an unusually wide array of sources because we can speak with all of them in good faith.
To fund this enterprise, Iraq Oil Report depends on revenue from both advertising and subscriptions. Some of our advertisers and subscribers ‐ including companies, governments, and NGOs ‐ are also subjects of our reporting. Consistent with journalistic best practices, Iraq Oil Report maintains a strict firewall that removes business considerations from editorial decision-making. When we are choosing which stories to report and how to write them, our readers always come first.