The Baath
of 1968 was more tightly organized and more determined to
stay in power than the Baath of 1963. The demise of
Nasserism following the June 1967 War and the emergence of a
more parochially oriented Baath in Syria freed the Iraqi
Baath from the debilitating aspects of pan-Arabism. In 1963
Nasser had been able to manipulate domestic Iraqi politics;
by 1968 his ideological pull had waned, enabling the Iraqi
Baath to focus on pressing domestic issues. The party also
was aided by a 1967 reorganization that created a militia
and an intelligence apparatus and set up local branches that
gave the Baath broader support. In addition, by 1968 close
family and tribal ties bound the Baath's ruling clique. Most
notable in this regard was the emergence of Tikritis--Sunni
Arabs from the northwest town of Tikrit--related to Ahmad
Hasan al Bakr. Three of the five members of the Baath's
Revolutionary Command Council (RCC) were Tikritis; two, Bakr
and Hammad Shihab, were related to each other. The cabinet
posts of president, prime minister, and defense minister
went to Tikritis. Saddam Husayn, a key leader behind the
scenes, also was a Tikriti and a relative of Bakr. Another
distinguishing characteristic of the Baath in 1968 was that
the top leadership consisted almost entirely of military
men. Finally, Bakr was a much more seasoned politician in
1968 than he had been in 1963. Less than
two months after the formation of the Bakr government, a
coalition of pro-Nasser elements, Arif supporters, and
conservatives from the military attempted another coup. This
event provided the rationale for numerous purges directed by
Bakr and Saddam Husayn. Between 1968 and 1973, through a
series of sham trials, executions, assassinations, and
intimidations, the party ruthlessly eliminated any group or
person suspected of challenging Baath rule. The Baath also
institutionalized its rule by formally issuing a Provisional
Constitution in July 1970. This document was a modification
of an earlier constitution that had been issued in September
1968. The Provisional Constitution, which with some
modifications is still in effect, granted the
party-dominated RCC extensive powers and declared that new
RCC members must belong to the party's Regional Command--the
top policy-making and executive body of the Baathist
organization. Two men,
Saddam Husayn and Bakr, increasingly dominated the party.
Bakr, who had been associated with Arab nationalist causes
for more than a decade, brought the party popular
legitimacy. Even more important, he brought support from the
army both among Baathist and non-Baathist officers, with
whom he had cultivated ties for years. Saddam Husayn, on the
other hand, was a consummate party politician whose
formative experiences were in organizing clandestine
opposition activity. He was adept at outmaneuvering--and at
times ruthlessly eliminating--political opponents. Although
Bakr was the older and more prestigious of the two, by 1969
Saddam Husayn clearly had become the moving force behind the
party. He personally directed Baathist attempts to settle
the Kurdish question and he organized the party's
institutional structure. In July
1973, after an unsuccessful coup attempt by a civilian
faction within the Baath led by Nazim Kazzar, the party set
out to reconsolidate its hold on power. First, the RCC
amended the Provisional Constitution to give the president
greater power. Second, in early 1974 the Regional Command
was officially designated as the body responsible for making
policy. By September 1977, all Regional Command leaders had
been appointed to the RCC. Third, the party created a more
pervasive presence in Iraqi society by establishing a
complex network of grass-roots and intelligence-gathering
organizations. Finally, the party established its own
militia, which in 1978 was reported to number close to
50,000 men. Despite
Baath attempts to institutionalize its rule, real power
remained in the hands of a narrowly based elite, united by
close family and tribal ties. By 1977 the most powerful men
in the Baath thus were all somehow related to the
triumvirate of Saddam Husayn, Bakr, and General Adnan Khayr
Allah Talfah, Saddam Husayn's brother-in-law who became
minister of defense in 1978. All were members of the party,
the RCC, and the cabinet, and all were members of the Talfah
family of Tikrit, headed by Khayr Allah Talfah. Khayr Allah
Talfah was Saddam Husayn's uncle and guardian, Adnan Khayr
Allah's father, and Bakr's cousin. Saddam Husayn was married
to Adnan Khayr Allah's sister and Adnan Khayr Allah was
married to Bakr's daughter. Increasingly, the most sensitive
military posts were going to the Tikritis. Beginning
in the mid-1970s, Bakr was beset by illness and by a series
of family tragedies. He increasingly turned over power to
Saddam Husayn. By 1977 the party bureaus, the intelligence
mechanisms, and even ministers who, according to the
Provisional Constitution, should have reported to Bakr,
reported to Saddam Husayn. Saddam Husayn, meanwhile, was
less inclined to share power, and he viewed the cabinet and
the RCC as rubber stamps. On July 16, 1979, President Bakr
resigned, and Saddam Husayn officially replaced him as
president of the republic, secretary general of the Baath
Party Regional Command, chairman of the RCC, and commander
in chief of the armed forces. In
foreign affairs, the Baath's pan-Arab and socialist leanings
alienated both the pro-Western Arab Gulf states and the shah
of Iran. The enmity between Iraq and Iran sharpened with the
1969 British announcement of a planned withdrawal from the
Gulf in 1971. In February 1969, Iran announced that Iraq had
not fulfilled its obligations under the 1937 treaty and
demanded that the border in the Shatt al Arab waterway be
set at the thalweg. Iraq's refusal to honor the Iranian
demand led the shah to abrogate the 1937 treaty and to send
Iranian ships through the Shatt al Arab without paying dues
to Iraq. In response, Iraq aided anti-shah dissidents, while
the shah renewed support for Kurdish rebels. Relations
between the two countries soon deteriorated further. In
November 1971, the shah occupied the islands of Abu Musa and
the Greater and Lesser Tunbs, which previously had been
under the sovereignty of Ras al Khaymah and Sharjah, both
member states of the United Arab Emirates. The Iraqi
Baath also was involved in a confrontation with the
conservative shaykhdoms of the Gulf over Iraq's support for
the leftist People's Democratic Republic of Yemen (South
Yemen) and the Popular Front for the Liberation of the
Occupied Arabian Gulf. The major contention between Iraq and
the conservative Gulf states, however, concerned the Kuwaiti
islands of Bubiyan and Warbah that dominate the estuary
leading to the southern Iraqi port of Umm Qasr. Beginning in
the early 1970s, Iraq's desire to develop a deep-water port
on the Gulf led to demands that the two islands be
transferred or leased to Iraq. Kuwait refused, and in March
1973 Iraqi troops occupied As Samitah, a border post in the
northeast corner of Kuwait. Saudi Arabia immediately came to
Kuwait's aid and, together with the Arab League, obtained
Iraq's withdrawal. The most
serious threat facing the Baath was a resurgence of Kurdish
unrest in the north. ln March 1970, the RCC and Mustafa
Barzani announced agreement to a fifteen-article peace plan.
This plan was almost identical to the previous
Bazzaz-Kurdish settlement that had never been implemented.
The Kurds were immediately pacified by the settlement,
particularly because Barzani was permitted to retain his
15,000 Kurdish troops. Barzani's troops then became an
official Iraqi frontier force called the Pesh Merga, meaning
"Those Who Face Death." The plan, however, was not
completely satisfactory because the legal status of the
Kurdish territory remained unresolved. At the time of the
signing of the peace plan, Barzani's forces controlled
territory from Zakhu in the north to Halabjah in the
southeast and already had established de facto Kurdish
administration in most of the towns of the area. Barzani's
group, the Kurdish Democratic Party (KDP), was granted
official recognition as the legitimate representative of the
Kurdish people. The 1970
agreement unraveled throughout the early 1970s. After the
March 1974 Baath attempt to assassinate Barzani and his son
Idris, full-scale fighting broke out. In early 1974, it
appeared that the Baath had finally succeeded in isolating
Barzani and the KDP by coopting the ICP and by signing a
treaty with the Soviet Union, both traditionally strong
supporters of the KDP. Barzani, however, compensated for the
loss of Soviet and ICP support by obtaining military aid
from the shah of Iran and from the United States, both of
which were alarmed by increasing Soviet influence in Iraq.
When Iraqi forces reached Rawanduz, threatening to block the
major Kurdish artery to Iran, the shah increased the flow of
military supplies to the Kurdish rebels. Using antitank
missiles and artillery obtained from Iran as well as
military aid from Syria and Israel, the KDP inflicted heavy
losses on the Iraqi forces. To avoid a costly stalemate like
that which had weakened his predecessors, Saddam Husayn
sought an agreement with the shah. In
Algiers on March 6, 1975, Saddam Husayn signed an agreement
with the shah that recognized the thalweg as the boundary in
the Shatt al Arab, legalized the shah's abrogation of the
1937 treaty in 1969, and dropped all Iraqi claims to Iranian
Khuzestan and to the islands at the foot of the Gulf. In
return, the shah agreed to prevent subversive elements from
crossing the border. This agreement meant an end to Iranian
assistance to the Kurds. Almost immediately after the
signing of the Algiers Agreement, Iraqi forces went on the
offensive and defeated the Pesh Merga, which was unable to
hold out without Iranian support. Under an amnesty plan,
about 70 percent of the Pesh Merga surrendered to the
Iraqis. Some remained in the hills of Kurdistan to continue
the fight, and about 30,000 crossed the border to Iran to
join the civilian refugees, then estimated at between
100,000 and 200,000. Even
before the fighting broke out in March 1974, Saddam Husayn
had offered the Kurds the most comprehensive autonomy plan
ever proposed. The major provisions of the plan stated that
Kurdistan would be an autonomous area governed by an elected
legislative and an executive council, the president of which
would be appointed by the Iraqi head of state. The Kurdish
council would have control over local affairs except in the
areas of defense and foreign relations, which would be
controlled by the central government. The autonomous region
did not include the oil-rich district of Kirkuk. To
facilitate the autonomy plan, Saddam Husayn's administration
helped form three progovernment Kurdish parties, allocated a
special budget for development in Kurdish areas, and
repatriated many Kurdish refugees then living in
Iran. In
addition to the conciliatory measures offered to the Kurds,
Saddam Husayn attempted to weaken Kurdish resistance by
forcibly relocating many Kurds from the Kurdish heartland in
the north, by introducing increasing numbers of Arabs into
mixed Kurdish provinces, and by razing all Kurdish villages
along a 1,300 kilometer stretch of the border with Iran.
Saddam Husayn's combination of conciliation and severity
failed to appease the Kurds, and renewed guerrilla attacks
occurred as early as March 1976. At the same time, the
failure of the KDP to obtain significant concessions from
the Iraqi government caused a serious split within the
Kurdish resistance. In June 1975, Jalal Talabani formed the
Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK). The PUK was urban-based
and more leftist than the tribally based KDP. Following
Barzani's death in 1975, Barzani's sons, Idris and Masud,
took control of the KDP. In October 1979, Masud officially
was elected KDP chairman. He issued a new platform calling
for continued armed struggle against the Baath through
guerrilla warfare. The effectiveness of the KDP, however,
was blunted by its violent intra-Kurdish struggle with the
PUK throughout 1978 and 1979. Beginning
in 1976, with the Baath firmly in power and after the
Kurdish rebellion had been successfully quelled, Saddam
Husayn set out to consolidate his position at home by
strengthening the economy. He pursued a state-sponsored
industrial modernization program that tied an increasing
number of Iraqis to the Baath-controlled government. Saddam
Husayn's economic policies were largely successful; they led
to a wider distribution of wealth, to greater social
mobility, to increased access to education and health care,
and to the redistribution of land. The quadrupling of oil
prices in 1973 and the subsequent oil price rises brought on
by the 1979 Islamic Revolution in Iran greatly enhanced the
success of Saddam Husayn's program. The more equitable
distribution of income tied to the ruling party many Iraqis
who had previously opposed the central government. For the
first time in modern Iraqi history, a government--albeit at
times a ruthless one, had thus achieved some success in
forging a national community out of the country's disparate
social elements. Success
on the economic front spurred Saddam Husayn to pursue an
ambitious foreign policy aimed at pushing Iraq to the
forefront of the Arab world. Between 1975 and 1979, a major
plank of Saddam Husayn's bid for power in the region rested
on improved relations with Iran, with Saudi Arabia, and with
the smaller Gulf shaykhdoms. In 1975 Iraq established
diplomatic relations with Sultan Qabus of Oman and extended
several loans to him. In 1978 Iraq sharply reversed its
support for the Marxist regime in South Yemen. The biggest
boost to Saddam Husayn's quest for regional power, however,
resulted from Egyptian President Anwar Sadat's signing the
Camp David Accords in November 1978. Saddam
Husayn viewed Egypt's isolation within the Arab world as an
opportunity for Iraq to play a leading role in Arab affairs.
He was instrumental in convening an Arab summit in Baghdad
that denounced Sadat's reconciliation with Israel and
imposed sanctions on Egypt. He also attempted to end his
long- standing feud with Syrian President Hafiz al Assad,
and, in June 1979, Saddam Husayn became the first Iraqi head
of state in twenty years to visit Jordan. In Amman, Saddam
Husayn concluded a number of agreements with King Hussein,
including one for the expansion of the port of Aqabah,
regarded by Iraq as a potential replacement for ports in
Lebanon and Syria. Coups,
Coup Attempts...
<<< Contents
>>> The
Iran-Iraq Conflict
Library of Congress Country Study
Library of Congress Country Study
This document is in the public domain. You may copy, download, print and distribute this work as you see fit.Every effort has been made to present this text accurately and cleanly, but no guarantees are made against errors. Neither Melissa Snell nor About.com may be held liable for any problems you experience with the text version or with any electronic form of the document.
More at the Medieval History Site
Site
Map
FAQs
Quizzes
Reviews
Daily
Features
More about the Knightly Newsletter

