Post-independence: After the handover of authority from the Coalition Provisional Authority to Iraqi leaders, the Iraqi opposition are the minority political parties.
Iraqi Kurdistan | Leader of the Opposition | Leader of the Opposition (Western Australia) | Opposition to the U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War | Iraqi National Congress | Iraqi Intelligence Service | Iraqi Air Force | Iraqi | Iraqi people | Leader of the Opposition (United Kingdom) | Iraqi no-fly zones | Iraqi Army | Leader of the Opposition (South Australia) | Iraqi Communist Party | United Tajik Opposition | Leader of the Opposition (Fiji) | United Opposition | Supreme Iraqi Criminal Tribunal | Rock in Opposition#"Reunions" | Official Opposition frontbench | Mir Sham ud-Din Iraqi | leader of the opposition | Iraqi Premier League | Iraqi Police | Iraqi parliamentary election, January 2005 | Iraqi National Dialogue Front | Iraqi Islamic Party | Iraqi governorate elections, 2009 | Iraqi Governing Council | United Opposition (Philippines) |
Due to successful lobbying from influential Assyrian-Americans and from Congressman Henry Hyde, American President George W. Bush designated the ADM an officially recognized Iraqi opposition movement.
Pletka was a strong supporter of Iraqi opposition leader, Ahmed Chalabi, even after it emerged he was being investigated by the US authorities as an Iranian spy.