After
World War I and the
dissolution of the Ottoman Empire, Iraq's monetary system was administered by the
British Mandate of Mesopotamia until 1931, when the
Iraq Currency Board was established in
London to issue the new
Iraqi dinar and maintain its reserves. The Iraq Currency Board pursued a "conservative monetary policy, maintaining very high reserves behind the dinar", which was "further strengthened by its link to the
British pound". In 1947, the National Bank of Iraq (today the Central Bank of Iraq) was established. Two years later, in 1949, the Iraq Currency Board was dissolved and officially replaced by the National Bank of Iraq after the latter began to formally issue the Iraqi currency. Since switching over to its own central bank, the Iraqi monetary system was "replete with mismanagement, coercive stop-gap measures, and the production of an unstable, unreliable currency which ha[d] not been tradeable on the international market for [many] years".
Saddam Hussein wielded monetary and the dinar as "a powerful instrument of repression". Beginning on 18 March 2003 (the day before
United States forces entered
Baghdad as part of the
2003 invasion of Iraq), nearly US$1 billion was stolen from the Central Bank of Iraq. That month, a handwritten note signed by Saddam Hussein surfaced, ordering $910 million to be withdrawn and given to his son
Qusay Hussein. Bank officials state that Qusay and another unidentified man oversaw the cash, boxes of $100 bills secured with stamped seals known as security money, being loaded into trucks and trailers during a five-hour operation. This was considered the largest
bank heist in history until 2010. Qusay Hussein was later killed by the U.S.
101st Airborne Division in a battle.
U.S. Department of the Treasury and
Coalition Provisional Authority inspectors discovered the bank in ruins after the
Battle of Baghdad and mass looting after the invasion. After the fall of Saddam Hussein's government, the Central Bank of Iraq was established as Iraq's independent
central bank by the Central Bank of Iraq Law 2004, with authorised capital of 100 billion dinars. According to the law, 100% of the bank's
capital stock would be held by the State and would not be transferable. The
Constitution of Iraq states that the central bank is a financially and administratively independent institution, responsible before the
Council of Representatives of Iraq. According to the Constitution, the
Iraqi federal government has the "exclusive authority" of "establishing and administering a central bank". On 25 January 2010, the
Supreme Court of Iraq ruled that the Central Bank of Iraq should be under supervision of the
Council of Ministers of Iraq. Then Central Bank chief
Sinan Al Shabibi warned that the ruling would threaten the institution's requisite independence. During the
Battle of Mosul in June 2013,
Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) militants looted the Central Bank's regional branch in
Mosul, absconding with over US$4,29 million. ==Governors==