If there is a long-term war with Iraq (or other country), this may affect the British fiscal deficit. If monetary policy, b) inflation, and c) unemployment are affected, they will also be tracked. The economic policies followed by the countries involved in the war are, of course, different from the economic policies the country follows in peaceful times. Britain is now just a few steps away from the war with Iraq and for many people there are many problems with war.
Iraq is a purely legitimate being made by the division of the Ottoman Empire - after the First World War it consisted of two adventure diplomats, French and British. For the benefit of the two Western powers, the lines drawn on the map are gathered together and made up of the imported Hashidites, and since then the east kingdoms of Turkey and Arab have been king of Iraq, Kurds and sects The Tigris and Euphrates river basins, which mainly speaks Shi'a native language, are not recognized by the Ottoman empire as a legitimate religious faction, nor share the traditional government form.
Iraq is one of the oldest centers of human civilization and has long been known as Mesopotamia or "land between rivers". Modern Iraq was formed after the First World War (1914 - 18), the Empire of the Imperial War. At the end of the war, the winner took over the colony of the loser. Britain and France took over the majority of the Middle East from the defeated Turkish Ottoman Empire and separated them. The former Ottoman Basra, Baghdad, Mosul province became the new British "Iraqi mission". The UK was also given Palestine by the newly established "League of Nations". France got a "mission" in Lebanon and Syria today. These are all colonies. Basically, the mission system is reasonable and Arab people need to guide British and French to prepare for 'autonomy'.
The 58th anniversary of the revolution in Iraq. The 1958 revolution ended 40 years British rule
The second case is Iraq. Iraq was the territory of the Ottoman Empire and then became a British mission after the First World War. When Britain took over after the war, they appointed the Sunni Arab nationalist Faisal as the king of Iraq. He is not an Iraqi because he is from Hejaz (now near Mecca and Medina in Saudi Arabia). But during the war he worked side by side with British officer "Lawrence of Arabia" and Iraq was compensated. Therefore he is an Arab nationalist, but his position in Iraq is attributed to British.