The Pentagon has stopped publishing the number of coalition troops in Iraq. This table is an estimate, based upon published news reports. With the exception of the British, coalition troops operate in a non-combat capacity.
There are two sets of data: majors and minors. The definitions for each catagory may change, but currently it's 500 or more troops.
Major Non-US Coalition Troops In Iraq
Minor Non-US Coalition Troops In Iraq
< 1,300
List Origin:
23 August 2006
Numbers:
February 2007
- Albania (126)
- Armenia (46)
- Azerbaijan (150)
- Bosnia-Herzegovina (37)
- Bulgaria (150)
- Czech Republic (100)
- El Salvador (380)
- Estonia (34)
- Kazakhstan (29)
- Latvia
- Lithuania (50)
- Macedonia (33)
- Moldova (11)
- Mongolia (100)
Minor Non-US Coalition Troops In Iraq - State Department
Data out-of-date
12 September 2007
(
pdf)
- Albania
- Armenia
- Azerbaijan
- Bosnia-Herzegovina
- Bulgaria
- Czech Republic
- Denmark (withdrew all troops in August 2007)
- El Salvador
- Estonia
- Japan (withdrew all troops in July 2007)
- Kazakhstan
- Latvia
- Lithuania
- Macedonia
- Moldova
- Mongolia
- Singapore (withdrew 160, but later provided a landing ship tank and crew)
- Slovakia (unknown why not on other list)
- Ukraine (began withdrawal in 2005)
All Troops Withdrawn
- Denmark, 530
- Dominican Republic, 302
- Honduras, 370
- Hungary, 300
- Italy, 3000
- Japan, 600
- Moldova, 12
- The Netherlands, 1,400
- New Zealand, 60
- Nicaragua, 115
- Norway, 150
- The Philippines, 51
- Portugal, 127
- Spain, 1,300
- Thailand, 423
- Tonga, 44
- Ukraine, 1,650
List Sources:
July 2004,
March 2005,
March 2005,
December 2005,
July 2007