"Jordanians must know their battle is doomed for failure. The Basrah-Aqaba oil pipeline will never be," said Ali al-Asadi, head of Iraq's Harakat Hezbollah al-Nujaba (HaN). "Let them try and they shall witness what happens to them and whoever collaborates with them."
HaN is known for its extremely close ties with Iran. Al-Asadi issued the statement after Iraqi lawmaker Mustafa Jabbar Sanad revealed that Jordanian officials — including the speaker of parliament, the Jordanian king's advisor and the head of intelligence — had met with senior Iraqi Shia, Sunni and Kurdish officials and agreed on the pipeline's implementation.
Sanad is a member of the pro-Iran Shia Co-ordination Framework group and was behind a lawsuit against the federal government in Baghdad over monthly payments to the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG).
Iraq's speaker of parliament Mohammed al-Halbousi said on January 14, 2023 that the Basrah-Aqaba pipeline will see the light, following a meeting with his Jordanian counterpart Ahmad Al-Safadi during an official four-day visit to Iraq.
Al-Halbousi said the project will be executed as soon as the new government in Baghdad overcomes certain obstacles, not least the high cost of the pipeline.
Baghdad's most recent estimate is that the project will not exceed US$8.5 billion, down from its previous estimate of below US$9 billion.
Costs and financing have been major barriers for the project for several years, with both Iraq and Jordan looking for ways to cut expenses.
The proposed pipeline consists of two sections. A 2 million barrels/day capacity line extending from Basrah to Haditha near the Syrian border would transport crude to Iraqi refineries and power stations. A second one million barrels/day pipeline would extend from Haditha to Aqaba in northern Jordan.
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