Iraq’s disputed internal boundaries after ISIS: heterogeneous actors vying for influence

Conflict between Erbil and Baghdad over the disputed territories (DIBs) has long been a central destabilising feature of the post-2003 era

Abstract

Conflict between Erbil and Baghdad over the disputed territories (DIBs) has long been a central destabilising feature of the post-2003 era. However, in recent years, two major events – the rise of the Islamic State (ISIS) in 2014 and the Kurdish inde-pendence referendum of 2017 – have transformed the two-sided dispute over sovereignty into a multi-sided competition between rival military and political groups.This report argues that any framework for resolving the broader conflict between Baghdad and Erbil must first prioritise curbing the continued fragmentation of administrative and security structures at the local level.

This work is part of the Conflict Research Programme managed by the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE) and funded by the UK Department for International Development

Citation

Skelton, Mac and Ali Saleem, Zmkan (2019) Iraq’s disputed internal boundaries after ISIS: heterogeneous actors vying for influence. LSE Middle East Centre report. LSE Middle East Centre, London, UK.

Iraq’s disputed internal boundaries after ISIS: heterogeneous actors vying for influence (PDF, 3.6MB)

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Published 1 February 2019