On October 13,
1932, Iraq became a sovereign state, and it was admitted to
the League of Nations. Iraq still was beset by a complex web
of social, economic, ethnic, religious, and ideological
conflicts, all of which retarded the process of state
formation. The declaration of statehood and the imposition
of fixed boundaries triggered an intense competition for
power in the new entity. Sunnis and Shias, cities and
tribes, shaykhs and tribesmen, Assyrians and Kurds,
pan-Arabists and Iraqi nationalists--all fought vigorously
for places in the emerging state structure. Ultimately,
lacking legitimacy and unable to establish deep roots, the
British-imposed political system was overwhelmed by these
conflicting demands. The Sunni-Shia
conflict, a problem since the beginning of domination by the
Umayyad caliphate in 661, continued to frustrate attempts to
mold Iraq into a political community. The Shia tribes of the
southern Euphrates, along with urban Shias, feared complete
Sunni domination in the government. Their concern was well
founded; a disproportionate number of Sunnis occupied
administrative positions. Favored by the Ottomans, the
Sunnis historically had gained much more administrative
experience. The Shias' depressed economic situation further
widened the Sunni- Shia split, and it intensified Shia
efforts to obtain a greater share of the new state's
budget. The arbitrary
borders that divided Iraq and the other Arab lands of the
old Ottoman Empire caused severe economic dislocations,
frequent border disputes, and a debilitating ideological
conflict. The cities of Mosul in the north and Basra in the
south, separated from their traditional trading partners in
Syria and in Iran, suffered severe commercial dislocations
that led to economic depression. In the south, the British-
created border (drawn through the desert on the
understanding that the region was largely uninhabited)
impeded migration patterns and led to great tribal unrest.
Also in the south, uncertainty surrounding Iraq's new
borders with Kuwait, with Saudi Arabia, and especially with
Iran led to frequent border skirmishes. The new boundaries
also contributed to the growth of competing nationalisms;
Iraqi versus pan-Arab loyalties would severely strain Iraqi
politics during the 1950s and the 1960s, when Egyptian
leader Gamal Abdul Nasser held emotional sway over the Iraqi
masses. Ethnic groups
such as the Kurds and the Assyrians, who had hoped for their
own autonomous states, rebelled against inclusion within the
Iraqi state. The Kurds, the majority of whom lived in the
area around Mosul, had long been noted for their fierce
spirit of independence and separatism. During the 1922 to
1924 period, the Kurds had engaged in a series of revolts in
response to British encroachment in areas of traditional
Kurdish autonomy; moreover, the Kurds preferred Turkish to
Arab rule. When the League of Nations awarded Mosul to Iraq
in 1925, Kurdish hostility thus increased. The Iraqi
government maintained an uneasy peace with the Kurds in the
first year of independence, but Kurdish hostility would
remain an intractable problem for future
governments. From the start,
the relationship of the Iraqi government with the Assyrians
was openly hostile. Britain had resettled 20,000 Assyrians
in northern Iraq around Zakhu and Dahuk after Turkey
violently quelled a British-inspired Assyrian rebellion in
1918. As a result, approximately three-fourths of the
Assyrians who had sided with the British during World War I
now found themselves citizens of Iraq. The Assyrians found
this situation both objectionable and dangerous. Thousands
of Assyrians had been incorporated into the Iraqi Levies, a
British-paid and British-officered force separate from the
regular Iraqi army. They had been encouraged by the British
to consider themselves superior to the majority of Arab
Iraqis by virtue of their profession of Christianity. The
British also had used them for retaliatory operations
against the Kurds, in whose lands most of the Assyrians had
settled. Pro-British, they had been apprehensive of Iraqi
independence. The Assyrians had
hoped to form a nation-state in a region of their own. When
no unoccupied area sufficiently large could be found, the
Assyrians continued to insist that, at the very least, their
patriarch, the Mar Shamun, be given some temporal authority.
This demand was flatly refused by both the British and the
Iraqis. In response, the Assyrians, who had been permitted
by the British to retain their weapons after the dissolution
of the Iraq Levies, flaunted their strength and refused to
recognize the government. In retaliation the Iraqi
authorities held the Mar Shamun under virtual house arrest
in mid-1933, making his release contingent on his signing a
document renouncing forever any claims to temporal
authority. During July about 800 armed Assyrians headed for
the Syrian border. For reasons that have never been
explained, they were repelled by the Syrians. During this
time, King Faisal was outside the country for reasons of
health. According to scholarly sources, Minister of Interior
Hikmat Sulayman had adopted a policy aimed at the
elimination of the Assyrians. This policy apparently was
implemented by a Kurd, General Bakr Sidqi, who, after
engaging in several clashes with the Assyrians, permitted
his men to kill about 300 Assyrians, including women and
children, at the Assyrian village of Simel
(Sumayyil). The Assyrian
affair marked the military's entrance into Iraqi politics,
setting a precedent that would be followed throughout the
1950s and the 1960s. It also paved the way for the passage
of a conscription law that strengthened the army and, as
increasing numbers of tribesmen were brought into military
service, sapped strength from the tribal shaykhs. The
Assyrian affair also set the stage for the increased
prominence of Bakr Sidqi. At the time of
independence, tribal Iraq was experiencing a destabilizing
realignment characterized by the waning role of the shaykhs
in tribal society. The privatization of property rights,
begun with the tanzimat reforms in the late 1860s,
intensified when the British-supported Lazmah land reform of
1932 dispossessed even greater numbers of tribesmen. While
the British were augmenting the economic power of the
shaykhs, however, the tribal-urban balance was rapidly
shifting in favor of the cities. The accelerated pace of
modernization and the growth of a highly nationalistic
intelligentsia, of a bureaucracy, and of a powerful
military, all favored the cities. Thus, while the economic
position of the shaykhs had improved significantly, their
role in tribal society and their status in relation to the
rapidly emerging urban elite had seriously eroded. These
contradictory trends in tribal structure and authority
pushed tribal Iraq into a major social revolution that would
last for the next thirty years. The ascendancy of
the cities and the waning power of the tribes were most
evident in the ease with which the military, led by Bakr
Sidqi, put down tribal unrest. The tribal revolts themselves
were set off by the government's decision in 1934 to
allocate money for the new conscription plan rather than for
a new dam, which would have improved agricultural
productivity in the south. The monarchy's
ability to deal with tribal unrest suffered a major setback
in September 1933, when King Faisal died while undergoing
medical treatment in Switzerland. Faisal's death meant the
loss of the main stabilizing personality in Iraqi politics.
He was the one figure with sufficient prestige to draw the
politicians together around a concept of national interest.
Faisal was succeeded by his twenty-one-year-old son, Ghazi
(1933- 39), an ardent but inexperienced Arab nationalist.
Unlike his father, Ghazi was a product of Western education
and had little experience with the complexities of Iraqi
tribal life. Ghazi also was unable to balance nationalist
and British pressures within the framework of the
Anglo-Iraqi alliance; increasingly, the nationalist movement
saw the monarchy as a British puppet. Iraqi politics during
Ghazi's reign degenerated into a meaningless competition
among narrowly based tribal shaykhs and urban notables that
further eroded the legitimacy of the state and its
constitutional structures. In 1936 Iraq
experienced its first military coup d'etat--the first coup
d'etat in the modern Arab world. The agents of the coup,
General Bakr Sidqi and two politicians (Hikmat Sulayman and
Abu Timman, who were Turkoman and Shia respectively),
represented a minority response to the pan-Arab Sunni
government of Yasin al Hashimi. The eighteen-month Hashimi
government was the most successful and the longest lived of
the eight governments that came and went during the reign of
King Ghazi. Hashimi's government was nationalistic and
pan-Arab, but many Iraqis resented its authoritarianism and
its supression of honest dissent. Sulayman, a reformer,
sought to engineer an alliance of other reformers and
minority elements within the army. The reformers included
communists, orthodox and unorthodox socialists, and persons
with more moderate positions. Most of the more moderate
reformers were associated with the leftist-leaning Al
Ahali newspaper, from which their group took its
name. The Sidqi coup
marked a major turning point in Iraqi history; it made a
crucial breach in the constitution, and it opened the door
to further military involvement in politics. It also
temporarily displaced the elite that had ruled since the
state was founded; the new government contained few Arab
Sunnis and not a single advocate of a pan-Arab cause. This
configuration resulted in a foreign policy oriented toward
Turkey and Iran instead of toward the Arab countries. The
new government promptly signed an agreement with Iran,
temporarily settling the question of boundary between Iraq
and Iran in the Shatt al Arab. Iran maintained that it had
agreed under British pressure to the international
boundary's being set at the low water mark on the Iranian
side rather than the usual international practice of the
midpoint or thalweg. After Bakr Sidqi
moved against Baghdad, Sulayman formed an Ahali cabinet.
Hashimi and Rashid Ali were banished, and Nuri as Said fled
to Egypt. In the course of the assault on Baghdad, Nuri as
Said's brother-in-law, Minister of Defense Jafar Askari, was
killed. Ghazi sanctioned
Sulayman's government even though it had achieved power
unconstitutionally; nevertheless, the coalition of forces
that gained power in 1936 was beset by major contradictions.
The Ahali group was interested in social reform whereas
Sidqi and his supporters in the military were interested in
expansion. Sidqi, moreover, alienated important sectors of
the population: the nationalists in the army resented him
because of his Kurdish background and because he encouraged
Kurds to join the army; the Shias abhorred him because of
his brutal suppression of a tribal revolt the previous year;
and Nuri as Said sought revenge for the murder of his
brother-in-law. Eventually, Sidqi's excesses alienated both
his civilian and his military supporters, and he was
murdered by a military group in August 1937. In April 1939,
Ghazi was killed in an automobile accident and was succeeded
by his infant son, Faisal II. Ghazi's first cousin, Amir Abd
al Ilah, was made regent. The death of Ghazi and the rise of
Prince Abd al Ilah and Nuri as Said--the latter one of the
Ottoman-trained officers who had fought with Sharif Husayn
of Mecca--dramatically changed both the goals and the role
of the monarchy. Whereas Faisal and Ghazi had been strong
Arab nationalists and had opposed the British-supported
tribal shaykhs, Abd al Ilah and Nuri as Said were Iraqi
nationalists who relied on the tribal shaykhs as a
counterforce against the growing urban nationalist movement.
By the end of the 1930s, pan- Arabism had become a powerful
ideological force in the Iraqi military, especially among
younger officers who hailed from the northern provinces and
who had suffered economically from the partition of the
Ottoman Empire. The British role in quelling the Palestine
revolt of 1936 to 1939 further intensified anti-British
sentiments in the military and led a group of disgruntled
officers to form the Free Officers' Movement, which aimed at
overthrowing the monarchy. As World War II
approached, Nazi Germany attempted to capitalize on the
anti-British sentiments in Iraq and to woo Baghdad to the
Axis cause. In 1939 Iraq severed diplomatic relations with
Germany--as it was obliged to do because of treaty
obligations with Britain. In 1940, however, the Iraqi
nationalist and ardent anglophobe Rashid Ali succeeded Nuri
as Said as prime minister. The new prime minister was
reluctant to break completely with the Axis powers, and he
proposed restrictions on British troop movements in
Iraq. Abd al Ilah and
Nuri as Said both were proponents of close cooperation with
Britain. They opposed Rashid Ali's policies and pressed him
to resign. In response, Rashid Ali and four generals led a
military coup that ousted Nuri as Said and the regent, both
of whom escaped to Transjordan. Shortly after seizing power
in 1941, Rashid Ali appointed an ultranationalist civilian
cabinet, which gave only conditional consent to British
requests in April 1941 for troop landings in Iraq. The
British quickly retaliated by landing forces at Basra,
justifying this second occupation of Iraq by citing Rashid
Ali's violation of the Anglo-Iraqi Treaty of 1930. Many
Iraqis regarded the move as an attempt to restore British
rule. They rallied to the support of the Iraqi army, which
receiveda number of aircraft from the Axis powers. The
Germans, however, were preoccupied with campaigns in Crete
and with preparations for the invasion of the Soviet Union,
and they could spare little assistance to Iraq. As the
British steadily advanced, Rashid Ali and his government
fled to Egypt. An armis- tice was signed on May 30. Abd al
Ilah returned as regent, and Rashid Ali and the four
generals were tried in absentia and were sentenced to death.
The generals returned to Iraq and were subsequently
executed, but Rashid Ali remained in exile. The most
important aspect of the Rashid Ali coup of 1941 was
Britain's use of Transjordan's Arab Legion against the
Iraqis and their reimposition by force of arms of Abd al
Ilah as regent. Nothing contributed more to nationalist
sentiment in Iraq, especially in the military, than the
British invasion of 1941 and the reimposition of the
monarchy. From then on, the monarchy was completely divorced
from the powerful nationalist trend. Widely viewed as an
anachronism that lacked popular legitimacy, the monarchy was
perceived to be aligned with social forces that were
retarding the country's development. In January 1943,
under the terms of the 1930 treaty with Britain, Iraq
declared war on the Axis powers. Iraq cooperated completely
with the British under the successive governments of Nuri as
Said (1941-44) and Hamdi al Pachachi (1944-46). Iraq became
a base for the military occupation of Iran and of the Levant
(see Glossary). In March 1945, Iraq became a founding member
of the British-supported League of Arab States (Arab
League), which included Egypt, Transjordan, Lebanon, Saudi
Arabia, Syria, and Yemen. Although the Arab League was
ostensibly designed to foster Arab unity, many Arab
nationalists viewed it as a British-dominated alignment of
pro-Western Arab states. In December 1945, Iraq joined the
United Nations (UN). World War II
exacerbated Iraq's social and economic problems. The
spiraling prices and shortages brought on by the war
increased the opportunity for exploitation and significantly
widened the gap between rich and poor; thus, while wealthy
landowners were enriching themselves through corruption, the
salaried middle class, including teachers, civil servants,
and army officers, saw their incomes depreciate daily. Even
worse off were the peasants, who lived under the heavy
burden of the 1932 land reform that permitted their
landlords (shaykhs) to make huge profits selling cash crops
to the British occupying force. The worsening economic
situation of the mass of Iraqis during the 1950s and the
1960s enabled the Iraqi Communist Party (ICP) to establish
deep roots during this period. In addition to
its festering socioeconomic problems, post- World War II
Iraq was beset by a leadership crisis. After the 1941 Rashid
Ali coup, Iraqi politics had been dominated by the
pro-British Nuri as Said. The latter's British orientation
and autocratic manner increasingly were at variance with the
liberal, reformist philosophy of Iraq's new nationalists.
Even before the end of the war, nationalists had demanded
the restoration of political activity, which had been banned
during the war in the interest of national security. Not
until the government of Tawfiq Suwaidi (February-March
1946), however, were political parties allowed to organize.
Within a short period, six parties were formed. The parties
soon became so outspoken in their criticism of the
government that the government closed or curtailed the
activities of the more extreme leftist parties. Accumulated
grievances against Nuri as Said and the regent climaxed in
the 1948 Wathbah (uprising). The Wathbah was a protest
against the Portsmouth Treaty of January 1948 and its
provision that a board of Iraqis and British be established
to decide on defense matters of mutual interest. The treaty
enraged Iraqi nationalists, who were still bitter over the
Rashid Ali coup of 1941 and the continued influence of the
British in Iraqi affairs. The uprising also was fueled by
widespread popular discontent over rising prices, by an
acute bread shortage, and by the regime's failure to
liberalize the political system. The Wathbah had
three important effects on Iraqi politics. First, and most
directly, it led Nuri as Said and the regent to repudiate
the Portsmouth Treaty. Second, the success of the uprising
led the opposition to intensify its campaign to discredit
the regime. This activity not only weakened the monarchy but
also seriously eroded the legitimacy of the political
process. Finally, the uprising created a schism between Nuri
as Said and Abd al Ilah. The former wanted to tighten
political control and to deal harshly with the opposition;
the regent advocated a more tempered approach. In response,
the British increasingly mistrusted the regent and relied
more and more on Nuri as Said. Iraq bitterly
objected to the 1947 UN decision to partition Palestine and
sent several hundred recruits to the Palestine front when
hostilities broke out on May 15, 1948. Iraq sent an
additional 8,000 to 10,000 troops of the regular army during
the course of the 1948 Arab-Israeli War; these troops were
withdrawn in April 1949. The Iraqis had arrived at the
Palestine front poorly equipped and undertrained because of
the drastic reduction in defense expenditures imposed by
Nuri as Said following the 1941 Rashid Ali coup. As a
result, they fared very poorly in the fighting and returned
to Iraq even more alienated from the regime. The war also
had a negative impact on the Iraqi economy. The government
allocated 40 percent of available funds for the army and for
Palestinian refugees. Oil royalties paid to Iraq were halved
when the pipeline to Haifa was cut off in 1948. The war and
the hanging of a Jewish businessman led, moreover, to the
departure of most of Iraq's prosperous Jewish community;
about 120,000 Iraqi Jews emigrated to Israel between 1948
and 1952. In 1952 the
depressed economic situation, which had been exacerbated by
a bad harvest and by the government's refusal to hold direct
elections, triggered large-scale antiregime protests; the
protests turned especially violent in Baghdad. In response,
the government declared martial law, banned all political
parties, suspended a number of newspapers, and imposed a
curfew. The immense size of the protests showed how
widespread dissatisfaction with the regime had become. The
middle class, which had grown considerably as a result of
the monarchy's expanded education system, had become
increasingly alienated from the regime, in large part
because they were unable to earn an income commensurate with
their status. Nuri as Said's autocratic manner, his
intolerance of dissent, and his heavy-handed treatment of
the political opposition had further alienated the middle
class, especially the army. Forced underground, the
opposition had become more revolutionary. By the early
1950s, government revenues began to improve with the growth
of the oil industry. New pipelines were built to Tripoli,
Lebanon, in 1949 and to Baniyas, Syria, in 1952. A new oil
agreement, concluded in 1952, netted the government 50
percent of oil company profits before taxes. As a result,
government oil revenues increased almost four-fold, from
US$32 million in 1951 to US$112 million in 1952. The
increased oil payments, however, did little for the masses.
Corruption among high government officials increased; oil
companies employed relatively few Iraqis; and the oil boom
also had a severe inflationary effect on the economy.
Inflation hurt in particular a growing number of urban poor
and the salaried middle class. The increased economic power
of the state further isolated Nuri as Said and the regent
from Iraqi society and obscured from their view the tenuous
nature of the monarchy's hold on power. In the mid-1950s,
the monarchy was embroiled in a series of foreign policy
blunders that ultimately contributed to its overthrow.
Following a 1949 military coup in Syria that brought to
power Adib Shishakli, a military strongman who opposed union
with Iraq, a split developed between Abd al Ilah, who had
called for a Syrian-Iraqi union, and Nuri as Said, who
opposed the union plan. Although Shishakli was overthrown
with Iraqi help in 1954, the union plan never came to
fruition. Instead, the schism between Nuri as Said and the
regent widened. Sensing the regime's weakness, the
opposition intensified its antiregime activity. The monarchy's
major foreign policy mistake occurred in 1955, when Nuri as
Said announced that Iraq was joining a British- supported
mutual defense pact with Iran, Pakistan, and Turkey. The
Baghdad Pact constituted a direct challenge to Egyptian
president Gamal Abdul Nasser. In response, Nasser launched a
vituperative media campaign that challenged the legitimacy
of the Iraqi monarchy and called on the officer corps to
overthrow it. The 1956 British-French-Israeli attack on
Sinai further alienated Nuri as Said's regime from the
growing ranks of the opposition. In 1958 King Hussein of
Jordan and Abd al Ilah proposed a union of Hashimite
monarchies to counter the recently formed Egyptian- Syrian
union. At this point, the monarchy found itself completely
isolated. Nuri as Said was able to contain the rising
discontent only by resorting to even greater oppression and
to tighter control over the political process. World
War I
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Iraq
Library of Congress Country Study
Library of Congress Country Study
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