no
no
Yes in December 2012
It is impossible question to answer honestly for there are too many factors to weigh, and with world currencies under pressure, as well as the U.S. dollar dropping in value, it is not possible to know what the Iraqi dinar will be worth as each currency will be different than it is now. As to the end of 2012, who knows, it could happen next month, there has been so many public announcements by officials that it is pending revalue, but in Iraq, talk is cheap, just like the dinar, so do not believe anything you hear as fact. I have been waiting since 2003 U.S. invasion, and I am still waiting. lol TV-Promotions.com
Well, on the ones who push the button will know for sure when it happens. But i do believe it will and in the not to distant future
Currency rates change every day. As of July 1, 2012 2:21 PST: 500 Iraqi Dinars = $0.43
Oh, dude, Wells Fargo probably won't exchange Iraqi Dinars for US Dollars. I mean, you could try, but they might just give you a look like, "What are you even doing with Iraqi Dinars, bro?" It's like trying to pay for a Big Mac with Monopoly money – it's just not gonna fly.
Kuwaiti dinar 1 Kuwaiti dinar costs 185.19527 Indian rupees as of October 4 2012
Iraqi insurgency - post U.S. withdrawal - happened in 2012.
The population of the Iraqi town of Ankawa in 2012 was about 30,000. Then it got bombed by the United States so lots of people let for Europe and live there now.
It has been said to the IMF (International Monetary Fund) by Iraq in a letter of Intent that they do Intend to Revalue their currency June 30, 2012 but that has been delayed due to Technical Difficulties report by Zambia, another Country set to revalue. Below is an excerpt from the letter of intent. We may interpret the ID3.2 as dinar revalue rate , the same rate pre-gulf war. This is still speculating until the Central Bank announces a statement. We conducted a review of all the bank accounts that were classified as belonging to the central government (a benchmark that had originally been envisaged for end- March 2010). Due to the very large number of accounts involved, this review took much longer than we had anticipated. We have nearly completed the review, which has enabled us to reclassify about ID3.2 dinar in accounts mistakenly classified as belonging to self-funded agencies as central government investment accounts. The bulk of the accounts, however, were found not to belong to the central government. Of the ID 29.1 trillion reported as of end-June 2010 as belonging to the public sector, only ID 11 trillion was found to belong to the central government and reconciled with Treasury records. Of the ID 16.1 trillion that were classified as public sector deposits, ID 3.4 trillion belonged to the pension fund; ID 6.1 trillion belonged to state-owned enterprises, and the remainder belonged to other public agencies and institutions that operate outside the central government. We will continue to investigate the largest accounts of enterprises and self-funded agencies to determine whether these may include outstanding advances extended by spending units that should be closed and recovered.
Libya's currency is the Lybyan Dinar. Copyright © 2012
Libya's currency is the Lybyan Dinar. Copyright © 2012 DO NOT COPY! MY DADS A FBI AGENT.