According to Nasif, former foreign affairs and transportation ministers, as well as other former Cabinet members whom she refused to name, received bribes from the Kuwaiti government in return for ratifying the 2013 agreement.
Opponents of the deal contend that ceding Iraq’s right to Khor Abdullah compromises Iraqi sovereignty.
Meanwhile, Kuwaiti Deputy Foreign Affairs Minister Khalid Al-Jarallah said in a news conference that his country did not encroach on a "single inch" of Iraqi territory. He condemned the accusations, saying there had been no new developments or changes regarding the maritime border issue.
However, Dhafer al-Ajami, executive director of Gulf Monitoring Group and a Kuwaiti national, told NRT News that Khor Abdullah and Umm Qasr belong to Kuwait, arguing that Khor Abdullah was named after Sheikh Abdullah Bin Sabah of Kuwait, who died in 1813.
Some Iraqi officials blame former Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki’s Cabinet, which they say surrendered Iraqi territory to Kuwait.
Former Basra province parliament member Wael Abdul-Latif told Al-Monitor, “Maliki’s Cabinet made a mistake on three occasions. First, the former Cabinet accepted demarcation according to the [Security Council] resolution, handing over regional water and land in addition to the Umm Qasr port city."
Second, he said, Iraq's government went along with Kuwait's plans to build the Mubarak Al Kabeer port on the disputed Bubiyan Island, impeding Iraq's access and forcing it to use the Kuwaiti port.



in plain English , the government and the cabinet are DONK. KUWAIT is as always is the evil
from hell.