Iraq Campaign Medal


The Iraq Campaign Medal is a military award of the United States Armed Forces which was created by Executive Order of U.S. President George W. Bush on 29 November 2004, and became available for general distribution in June 2005. The medal was designed by the U.S. Army Institute of Heraldry and was awarded during the Iraq War, from 19 March 2003 to 31 December 2011.

Appearance

The medal is bronze in appearance, 1 inches in diameter. The obverse depicts a north-oriented relief of the map of Iraq, surmounted by two lines representing the Tigris and Euphrates rivers throughout, superimposed over a palm wreath. Above is the inscription "IRAQ CAMPAIGN." On the reverse, the Statue of Freedom surmounts a sunburst, encircled by two scimitars pointing down with the blades crossing at the tips. Below is the inscription "FOR SERVICE IN IRAQ." The medal is suspended from a ribbon 1 inches wide. The stripes of the ribbon invoke the colors of the Iraqi flag and are: inch scarlet at the edges, followed by inch white, inch green, and inch white. The white is separated by a inch black with a inch stripe in chamois in the center.

Criteria

The Iraq Campaign Medal was awarded to any member of the U.S. military who performed duty within the borders of Iraq for a period of thirty consecutive days or sixty non-consecutive days. The medal was awarded retroactively from 19 March 2003 until the end of on 31 December 2011.
Personnel who engaged in combat with an enemy force, or personnel wounded in combat or wounded as a result of a terrorist attack within Iraq received the Iraq Campaign Medal regardless of the number of days spent within the country.
In addition, each day participating in aerial missions as a "regularly assigned air crewmember of an aircraft flying sorties into, out of, within or over Iraq and in direct support of the military operations" established a single day of eligibility. When the required minimum days of eligibility were accrued, the medal was then awarded.
The medal was also awarded posthumously to any service member who died in the line of duty within Iraq, including from non-combat injuries such as accidents and mishaps.
On 23 April 2012, an order terminating the award of the Iraq Campaign Medal was issued by the Department of Defense. The order is effective to 31 December 2011, the day Operation New Dawn ended. U.S. military personnel serving inside the borders of Iraq after December 2011 will not be eligible to receive the ICM.

Global War on Terrorism Expeditionary Medal

The Iraq Campaign Medal replaced the Global War on Terrorism Expeditionary Medal for service in Iraq from 19 March 2003, through 30 April 2005. Personnel who previously received the GWOT-EM for Iraq service were given the option to exchange the medal for the Iraq Campaign Medal. The medals were not authorized for the same period of service in Iraq, and any Iraq service which followed the Iraq Campaign Medal's creation was recognized only with the ICM.

Operation Inherent Resolve

U.S. military personnel serving post-2014 in the Iraq conflict were originally awarded the Global War on Terrorism Expeditionary Medal and not the Iraq Campaign Medal as the latter conflict had ended and the former conflict was nameless at the time and the U.S. government did not designate the fighting to be a military campaign. However, the U.S. government dubbed their operations in Iraq post-2014 as "Operation Inherent Resolve", and in March 2016, the Inherent Resolve Campaign Medal was created. The IRCM is now awarded to those who have served in missions in Iraq against ISIL from 15 June 2014 to the present. Those who were awarded the GWOT-EM for serving in Iraq from 15 June 2014 to 30 March 2016, can put in a request for the Inherent Resolve Campaign Medal instead.

Campaign phases

The following are the established campaign phases for the Iraq Campaign Medal:
PhaseFromTo
Phase 1: Liberation of Iraq19 March 20031 May 2003
Phase 2: Transition of Iraq2 May 200328 June 2004
Phase 3: Iraqi Governance29 June 200415 December 2005
Phase 4: National Resolution16 December 20059 January 2007
Phase 5: Iraqi Surge10 January 200731 December 2008
Phase 6: Iraqi Sovereignty1 January 200931 August 2010
Phase 7: Operation New Dawn1 September 201015 December 2011

Devices

The Iraq Campaign Medal is authorized the following devices:
Examples of campaign stars worn on the ICM service ribbon:
Any one of the seven phases
Two of the seven phases
Three of the seven phases
Four of the seven phases
Five of the seven phases
Six of the seven phases
All seven phases