This study develops an integrated planning and operational framework for a next-generation electric bus with high level of service (Electric-BHLS) corridor along the Najaf–Al-Manathira–Al-Meshkhab axis in Iraq. The corridor represents a strategically important urban–rural mobility corridor characterized by rapid demographic growth, fragmented public transport services, congestion, environmental degradation, and increasing dependence on informal low-capacity vehicles. Unlike conventional electric bus operations, the proposed Electric-BHLS model combines high-service operational characteristics—including adaptive service frequency, intelligent transport systems (ITS)-based fleet control, hybrid priority lanes, opportunity charging systems, and real-time operational management—with full electric propulsion and regional accessibility planning. The methodological framework integrates engineering analysis, Geographic Information System (GIS)-based spatial accessibility assessment, operational modeling, and generalized cost optimization. Empirical calibration is based on 2024 field surveys, passenger interviews, Global Positioning System (GPS) based travel-time measurements, institutional datasets, and corridor infrastructure assessments. The proposed system includes articulated electric buses, pantograph opportunity-charging infrastructure, centralized Operations Control Center (OCC) management, smart passenger information systems, and a hierarchical station structure designed to improve operational reliability and multimodal integration. The results demonstrate substantial operational, environmental, and spatial improvements compared with the existing transport system. The optimized Electric-BHLS configuration reduces generalized transport cost by 27%, decreases average passenger waiting time by 61%, and lowers carbon dioxide (CO$_2$) emissions by approximately 29%. Corridor passenger capacity increases from approximately 15,000 to 36,000 passengers per day, while average operating speed improves from 22 km/h to 35 km/h through ITS-supported operational control and selective priority measures. GIS analysis further indicates accessibility gains of 24% in urban areas and 38% in rural catchment zones, improving access to employment, education, healthcare, and regional services. Beyond technical performance, the study evaluates governance, financial feasibility, operational risk, and long-term implementation constraints within the Iraqi context. A phased Design–Build–Operate–Maintain (DBOM) Public–Private Partnership (PPP) framework and a unified corridor governance authority are proposed to support institutional coordination and long-term operational sustainability. The study concludes that Electric-BHLS represents a scalable and economically viable mobility model capable of supporting sustainable regional development and transport modernization in Iraq and comparable developing-country contexts.