How Iraq can turn rivalries into a regional safety net

For much of its modern history, Iraq was defined by confrontation-internally and with its neighbours. That identity produced dictatorship, wars, and recurring breakdowns in governance. Today, Iraq faces a starkly different choice: remain a battleground of competing agendas or become a bridge that connects the region through diplomacy, trade, and interdependence. The latter course, what many now call “multi-alignment” presents a practical way forward for national security and economic resilience.

“Multi-alignment” is not a slogan; it is a survival strategy. It means ensuring that Iraq’s stability is in everyone’s interest. By converting geography into leverage and energy resources into rules-based partnerships, Iraq can create a web of interdependence that makes peace profitable. In today’s Middle East, railways, power grids, gas-capture projects, and data corridors are not just development plans, they are security compacts in physical form. Each cross-border interconnection raises the cost of escalation and rewards cooperation. Trade routes are the peace treaties of the twenty-first century.

Iraq’s challenge is not imagination but implementation. Too many plans have been announced with fanfare, only to vanish in the maze of bureaucracy. Implementation, not imagination, will decide whether Iraq’s new vision endures beyond a single cabinet. The remedy is no mystery: de-risk investment through consistent regulation and independent courts. Laws that are predictable are more valuable than oil that is abundant. A credible timetable for energy diversification - capturing flared gas, expanding renewables, and reforming wasteful subsidies - can restore investor confidence. But most important is continuity: national projects must survive electoral cycles and cabinet reshuffles.

A state that cannot control the use of force cannot guarantee either investors or citizens the predictability they need. A gun can impose silence, but only justice can secure peace.

Reforming the justice system is therefore as much a security issue as a governance one. The courtroom, not the checkpoint, should define the limits of power.

Nowhere is legal predictability more vital than in the Baghdad–Erbil relationship. Federalism is not a concession; it is a survival mechanism for Iraq. A durable energy framework, codified in federal law and implemented through predictable revenue-sharing, would send a powerful signal that Iraq can manage complex, multi-party agreements over time. What Baghdad and Erbil decide about oil today will determine what investors decide about Iraq tomorrow. Getting this right unlocks more than oil exports; it unlocks trust, the rarest commodity in the Middle East.

Regionally, Iraq’s comparative advantage lies in connectivity. The emerging corridors linking the Gulf, Turkey, the Levant, and the Caucasus can make Iraq the logistical fulcrum of a broader growth zone. When trains and cables cross borders, armies are less likely to do so. That opportunity will not wait. Countries that move fastest to harmonise customs regimes, digitise borders, and liberalise services will capture disproportionate gains. Iraq should aim to lead by offering a regulatory platform aligned with international standards and reduced non-tariff barriers. Negotiating modern trade and investment agreements would anchor expectations that Iraq is open for business. Diplomacy that moves goods and data often succeeds where speeches fail.

Critics will say this vision ignores reality: sanctions that complicate dollar flows, armed actors beyond state control, and political paralysis that blocks reform. They are right about the constraints, but wrong about the conclusion. Precisely because the status quo is costly, the coalition for change is broader than it appears. Business owners who cannot plan, graduates who cannot find work, and officials who want to govern rather than firefight all stand to gain from predictability. Institutions, not individuals, are the real infrastructure of statehood.

The task of leadership is to turn these diffuse interests into a concrete programme with measurable milestones. First, pass reforms that improve the business climate: commercial courts, bankruptcy procedures, transparent procurement, and enforceable public-private partnership frameworks. Second, prioritise flagship connectivity projects that turn slides into steel and concrete. Third, accelerate energy diversification that pays for itself-gas capture, grid upgrades, and solar generation. Every kilowatt saved is a vote for stability.

Multi-alignment does not mean indecision; it means discipline. It requires clarity about national interests and the ability to convene when others cannot. Iraq has already shown that it can host conversations that would be difficult elsewhere. It should lean into that role, not as a favour to others but as an investment in its own security.

The ultimate test of this agenda is whether Iraqis experience change they can feel: fewer blackouts, faster border crossings, more formal jobs, and cleaner air in cities where flaring and congestion have become part of daily life. Success will not be linear. There will be setbacks and spoilers. But stability will come not from choosing sides, but from making sides choose stability.
I first worked in Iraq nearly two decades ago and later served as the United Nations’ Special Representative. The lesson that stayed with me is simple: security is achieved not when one actor dominates, but when everyone is invested in your stability. For Iraq, that is not an abstraction, it is a practical blueprint for becoming a bridge rather than a battlefield, and for claiming its potential role as a facilitator of cooperation in a turbulent region.

Nickolay E. Mladenov is the Director General of the Anwar Gargash Diplomatic Academy and a Fellow of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. He is a former SRSG for Iraq and the Middle East Peace Process, and Foreign Minister of Bulgaria.

The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the position of Rudaw.