Congrats on taking up the pipes! As far as being away from an instructor, you've got several options:
1) You may find a piper there; there have been a few pipers on the Bob Dunsire foums (http://bobdunsire.com/cgi-bin/ultimatebb.cgi) who have been posted there. I don't know if any of them are still in Iraq or if they've come home.
2) Learn the basics as best you can and keep up with a good CD/DVD learning system. The College of Piping's Highland Bagpipe Tutor (commonly called "The Green Book") is a an absolute requirement, and Jim McGillivray's "Rhythmic Fingerwork is also quite useful. Read Andrew Lenz's article on becoming a self-taught piper (and why you shouldn't do it) for a lot of great resources, including teachers who give online lessons: http://www.bagpipejourney.com/articl...f_taught.shtml

Good luck! The pipes are frustrating, demanding, difficult and obnoxious - until the first time you get the drones to lock in and the chanter to sing and that wild, sweet, skirling sound is all around you - then you'll feel that it's all worth iit.