The list comes a day after the bloodiest bombing in three months killed more than 60 people in Baghdad.
The list offers a $US10 million ($A13.57 million) bounty for former Saddam deputy Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri.
It accuses Saddam's daughter, Raghad, and her mother of using millions stolen by the former Iraqi leader to finance Sunni insurgents.
Jordanian Prime Minister Maaruf Bakhit said Raghad is under the royal family's protection, after receiving asylum seeker protection.
Iraqi national security advisor Muwaffaq al-Rubaie told reporters in Baghdad that her extradition is being sought by his government, however Jordan said no request has been made.
Raghad's mother Sajida is believed to be in Qatar.
The list also includes the new head of al-Qaeda in Iraq, Abu Ayyub al-Masri, and top Baathists.
The government also offered a $US50,000 ($A67,840) reward for Masri -- far less than the $US5 million ($A6.78 million) the US placed on the man named by Osama bin Laden to succeed Zarqawi.
"We're releasing this list so that our people can know their enemies," said Mr al-Rubaie at a news conference.
He declined to say if arrest warrants had been issued for Raghad and Sajida but said Interpol had received the list.
Violence continues
At least 11 Iraqis were killed in and around Baghdad in three , and a Shiite MP escaped an assassination bid as Sunni Arab lawmakers boycotted parliament, demanding the release of an abducted Sunni woman MP.
In the capital, mortar and gunfire rang across a Sunni Arab neighbourhood and militants armed with rocket-propelled grenades prowled the streets, a Reuters witness said, with US armoured vehicles and helicopters surrounding the area.
Three car bombs rocked Baghdad and another exploded in a town south of the city, a day after a deadly attack in a busy Shiite market killed 66 people.
The blast drew angry responses from Shiites against Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's national reconciliation plan and his efforts to reach out to the once-dominant Sunni minority.
The leader began a tour to Sunni-dominated Arab Gulf nations to garner support for his plan.
The stepped-up violence came as Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden warned of retaliation against Iraqi Shiites he accused of waging a campaign of "genocide" against Sunnis, according to a purported new audio message posted on the internet.
The message also called on the US military to release the body of Jordanian Zarqawi to his family and said Jordan's King Abdullah should allow him to be buried in his home town, Zarqa.
A US military spokesman said Zarqawi's body had been turned over to the Iraqi government and buried in accordance with Muslim custom. He declined further comment.
A Shiite member of Iraq's parliament escaped an attempt to kidnap her on Sunday but several bodyguards were abducted in the second such attack on a woman lawmaker around Baghdad in as many days.
Another woman lawmaker, a Sunni, was kidnapped on Saturday, prompting colleagues to walk out of parliament.
