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| Funder | Bureau of Counterterrorism |
|---|---|
| Recipient Organization | Not specified |
| Country | USA |
| Start Date | Apr 14, 2026 |
| End Date | Mar 13, 2028 |
| Duration | 699 days |
| Number of Grantees | 1 |
| Data Source | Grants.gov |
| Grant ID | 10dc1ce6-8274-4466-86ec-cb8bc148016f |
The Department of State’s Bureau of Counterterrorism (CT) announces this funding opportunity to strengthen Iraq’s ability to investigate and respond to terrorist attacks and incursions along the Iraq-Syria border during a critical period of regional transition.
This program should deliver concrete returns for American taxpayers by reducing threats to U.S. diplomatic and military facilities, safeguarding American commercial operations, and preventing terrorist attacks that endanger Americans abroad.
The proliferation of Iran-aligned militia groups (IAMGs) and continued presence of ISIS in the region have created a fragile security environment with elevated risks of border exploitation for weapons, explosives, and human smuggling.
Porous borders enable IAMGs and other terrorist organizations to move personnel, material, and illicit goods that directly threaten U.S. personnel, American commercial interests, and regional stability affecting U.S. security.
Recent events illustrate the ongoing threat from IAMGs, who attacked numerous U.S. personnel and facilities in Erbil and Baghdad since February 28.
They have historically conducted rocket and drone attacks on U.S. diplomatic facilities, military installations, and commercial facilities.
By supporting Iraq’s border security capabilities, this program reduces terrorist operational capacity that threatens U.S. interests.
This program should be designed to reduce Iraq’s long-term dependency on U.S. taxpayer resources by building sustainable Iraqi civilian law enforcement capabilities to independently respond to attacks and dismantle illicit transit networks.
Consistent with the 2025 National Security Strategy (NSS)’s principle of “burden-sharing and burden-shifting,” this program should include a train-the-trainer component to enable Iraqi civilian forces to establish an Iraqi-owned training capability, reducing long-term U.S. resource commitments.
To be determined
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