In 2003, the United States-based Institute of Peace estimated that around 95% of the total population of Iraq were Muslim, of which Sunnis made up around 50-60%.[1] A CIA World Factbook report from 2015 estimates that 40% of the population of Iraq is Sunni Muslim.[2] According to a 2011 survey by Pew Research, 50% of Iraqi Muslims are Sunni.[3] There were about 9 million Sunni Arabs and 4 million Sunni Kurds in Iraq as of 2015.[4]
History
In the early Islamic period, Iraq was a key center of the Abbasid Caliphate, with the city of Baghdad serving as its capital from the 8th to the 13th century. Sunni Arabs played a significant role in the administration (including the ruling Abbasid dynasty) and cultural life of the caliphate, and many important figures of Islamic scholarship and literature emerged from Iraq during this time and during the Islamic Golden Age.
During his reign, King Faisal I was keenly aware that his power-base was with the Sunni Arabs of Iraq, who comprised a minority.[5] Iraqi Sunni Arabs were also the backbone of Saddam Hussein's Ba'athist Iraq regime.[6]
Nouri al-Maliki's Shia-led government repressed Sunnis, stressing the Sunni Arab tribes' favourable disposition towards the Islamic State, although they did not share the Salafist beliefs. A number of Sunnis have now taken up arms against the Islamic State to stop its attempts at establishing hegemony.[4] In a survey in 2015, only 13 percent of Iraqi Sunni Arabs believed that their central government in Baghdad was heading in the right direction.[7]
99% of Iraqi Kurds are Sunni Muslims, while the remaining 1% are Shia Muslims.[11] As a result of the spread of Islam, Sunni Islam became the dominant religion of the Kurdish people and there is the Feyli Kurds who follow Shia Islam, following the Shafi'i school and large minority follows the Ja'fari school. Islam is thought to be a religion of governance as well as spirituality, Kurds make sure to keep both their spiritual identity and national identity strong.[12][13] Their practices and beliefs are very similar to those of Sunni Arabs.[10]
Turkmens
Primarily Iraqi Turkmen are Sunni Muslims, most Iraqi Turkmen are politically secular[14] yet remain practicing, having internalized the secularist interpretation of state–religion affairs practiced in the Republic of Turkey.[15] The religious and tribal factors and tensions inherent in Iraq’s political culture do not significantly affect the Iraqi Turkmen.