Wrt political stability and things like that.
Hey , Iraqi here, I live in iraq , not that interested in the political situation but I’ll give an overview…
Stuff are pretty stable compared to bloody years like 2006-2008 As mentioned by some other people above , political truces are keeping everyone kinda calm with some outrage every now & then Infrastructure is still subpar , especially when it comes to electricity in peak summer temps that reach the high 40 celsius range Regarding countries that border us , Iran is as usual the one with most influence and control here , whether politically due to their connections with the major religious/ political Shia Parties or due to their stinginess with natural gas exports to us , which has an enormous effect since our electricity grid depends on it , as far as I understand at least Turkey are hurting us too with water since our two rivers originate from their land , they’re building dams and limiting the amount of water that comes to us , leading to drying down of many significant water bodies in the southern part of our country
If you have any other questions , hit me up in the replies
That water thing, more than anything else, seems quite ominous…
Any news about that?
I was just reading this article about it:
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/07/29/world/middleeast/iraq-water-crisis-desertification.htmlGot hit with the ol’ NYT paywall
take the link, go to archive.ph or other archive site and put it in the archive now field. Wait a couple min and it will return a link you can view (and share with others like this one) https://archive.ph/U7qET
Whats going on with the currency the dinar? A lot of people are convinced it’s some great investment opportunity but it sounds relatively unstable
Didn’t that originate from some QAnon nonsense? Currency speculation is hard and risky, especially when dealing with unstable nations/national banks. Also, decent chance of popping up on FinCEN’s radar when dealing with regions like the middle east. Probably not a great idea for regular folks to jump into.
From a political perspective things are quiet now between the governing parties, but it’s not gonna be for the future. The economy is falling down bit by bit with the currency inflation and with the Euphrates and Tigris drying up. I’m from Iraq and I don’t think iraq is gonna hold on for long.
things are quite now between
I think you’re missing a word.
Yeah excuse me for that. English isn’t my native language, I’m in the process of learning it.
No worries, most of us understood the first time. That other guy just wanted to be sure you were saying what the rest of us assumed. Take care, keep up the good work
Or he meant “quiet” and got autocorrected.
That’s not a very polite way to correct a non-native speaker for a minor misspelling. When you ask Iraqis a question and then correct their English it comes off a bit dickish.
Eh it’s direct but not objectively rude.
“I think you’re missing a word, idiot” would be obviously rude.
I thought he was missing a word like “quite peaceful” or something like that.
Political stability is reasonable, economy’s unstable, seems uneasy. I get curious every few years and read up.
Violence is down, but that’s mainly because communities segregated themselves since the war. Politics has evolved into some truces and the country had upheaval from Covid and economic downturn.