In February 1979,
Saddam Husayn's ambitious plans and the course of Iraqi
history were drastically altered by the overthrow of the
shah of Iran. Husayn viewed the 1979 Islamic Revolution in
Iran as both a threat and an opportunity. The downfall of
the shah and the confusion prevailing in postrevolutionary
Iran suited Saddam Husayn's regional ambitions. A weakened
Iran seemed to offer an opportunity to project Iraqi power
over the Gulf, to regain control over the Shatt al Arab
waterway, and to augment Iraqi claims to leadership of the
Arab world. More ominously, the activist Shia Islam preached
by the leader of the revolution in Iran, Ayatollah Sayyid
Ruhollah Musavi Khomeini, threatened to upset the delicate
Sunni-Shia balance in Iraq, and a hostile Iran would
threaten Iraqi security in the Gulf. Furthermore, deepseated
personal animosities separated the two leaders. The two men
held widely divergent ideologies, and in 1978 Husayn had
expelled Khomeini from Iraq--reportedly at the request of
the shah--after he had lived thirteen years in exile in An
Najaf. For much of Iraqi
history, the Shias have been both politically impotent and
economically depressed. Beginning in the sixteenth century,
when the Ottoman Sunnis favored their Iraqi coreligionists
in the matter of educational and employment opportunities,
the Shias consistently have been denied political power.
Thus, although the Shias constitute more then 50 percent of
the population, they occupy a relatively insignificant
number of government posts. On the economic level, aside
from a small number of wealthy landowners and merchants, the
Shias historically were exploited as sharecropping peasants
or menially employed slum dwellers. Even the prosperity
brought by the oil boom of the 1970s only trickled down
slowly to the Shias; however, beginning in the latter half
of the 1970s, Saddam's populist economic policies had a
favorable impact on them, enabling many to join the ranks of
a new Shia middle class. Widespread Shia
demonstrations took place in Iraq in February 1977, when the
government, suspecting a bomb, closed Karbala to pilgrimage
at the height of a religious ceremony. Violent clashes
between police and Shia pilgrims spread from Karbala to An
Najaf and lasted for several days before army troops were
called in to quell the unrest. It was the 1979 Islamic
Revolution in Iran, however, that transformed Shia
dissatisfaction with the Baath into an organized religiously
based opposition. The Baath leadership feared that the
success of Iran's Islamic Revolution would serve as an
inspiration to Iraqi Shias. These fears escalated in July
1979, when riots broke out in An Najaf and in Karbala after
the government had refused Ayatollah Muhammad Baqir as
Sadr's request to lead a procession to Iran to congratulate
Khomeini. Even more worrisome to the Baath was the discovery
of a clandestine Shia group headed by religious leaders
having ties to Iran. Baqir as Sadr was the inspirational
leader of the group, named Ad Dawah al Islamiyah (the
Islamic Call), commonly referred to as Ad Dawah. He espoused
a program similar to Khomeini's, which called for a return
to Islamic precepts of government and for social
justice. Despite the Iraqi
government's concern, the eruption of the 1979 Islamic
Revolution in Iran did not immediately destroy the
Iraqi-Iranian rapprochement that had prevailed since the
1975 Algiers Agreement. As a sign of Iraq's desire to
maintain good relations with the new government in Tehran,
President Bakr sent a personal message to Khomeini offering
"his best wishes for the friendly Iranian people on the
occasion of the establishment of the Islamic Republic." In
addition, as late as the end of August 1979, Iraqi
authorities extended an invitation to Mehdi Bazargan, the
first president of the Islamic Republic of Iran, to visit
Iraq with the aim of improving bilateral relations. The fall
of the moderate Bazargan government in late 1979, however,
and the rise of Islamic militants preaching an expansionist
foreign policy soured Iraqi-Iranian relations. The principal
events that touched off the rapid deterioration in relations
occurred during the spring of 1980. In April the
Iranian-supported Ad Dawah attempted to assassinate Iraqi
foreign minister Tariq Aziz. Shortly after the failed
grenade attack on Tariq Aziz, Ad Dawah was suspected of
attempting to assassinate another Iraqi leader, Minister of
Culture and Information Latif Nayyif Jasim. In response, the
Iraqis immediately rounded up members and supporters of Ad
Dawah and deported to Iran thousands of Shias of Iranian
origin. In the summer of 1980, Saddam Husayn ordered the
executions of presumed Ad Dawah leader Ayatollah Sayyid
Muhammad Baqr as Sadr and his sister. In September
1980, border skirmishes erupted in the central sector near
Qasr-e Shirin, with an exchange of artillery fire by both
sides. A few weeks later, Saddam Husayn officially abrogated
the 1975 treaty between Iraq and Iran and announced that the
Shatt al Arab was returning to Iraqi sovereignty. Iran
rejected this action and hostilities escalated as the two
sides exchanged bombing raids deep into each other's
territory. Finally, on September 23, Iraqi troops marched
into Iranian territory, beginning what was to be a
protracted and extremely costly war. The Iran-Iraq War
permanently altered the course of Iraqi history. It strained
Iraqi political and social life, and led to severe economic
dislocations. Viewed from a historical perspective, the
outbreak of hostilities in 1980 was, in part, just another
phase of the ancient Persian-Arab conflict that had been
fueled by twentieth-century border disputes. Many observers,
however, believe that Saddam Husayn's decision to invade
Iran was a personal miscalculation based on ambition and a
sense of vulnerability. Saddam Husayn, despite having made
significant strides in forging an Iraqi nation-state, feared
that Iran's new revolutionary leadership would threaten
Iraq's delicate SunniShia balance and would exploit Iraq's
geostrategic vulnerabilities--Iraq's minimal access to the
Persian Gulf, for example. In this respect, Saddam Husayn's
decision to invade Iran has historical precedent; the
ancient rulers of Mesopotamia, fearing internal strife and
foreign conquest, also engaged in frequent battles with the
peoples of the highlands. The most reliable
work on the ancient history of Iraq is George Roux's
Ancient Iraq, which covers the period from
prehistory through the Hellenistic period. Another good
source, which places Sumer in the context of world history,
is J.M. Roberts's The Pelican History of the World.
A concise and authoritative work on Shia Islam is Moojan
Momen's An Introduction to Shii Islam. The article
by D. Sourdel, "The Abbasid Caliphate," in The Cambridge
History of Islam, provides an excellent overview of the
medieval period. Stephen Longrigg's and Frank Stoakes's
Iraq contains a historical summary of events before
independence as well as a detailed account of the period
from independence to 1958. Majid Khadduri's Republican
Iraq is one of the best studies of Iraqi politics from
the 1958 revolution to the Baath coup of 1968. His
Socialist Iraq: A Study in Iraqi Politics since
1968 details events up to 1977. A seminal work on Iraqi
socioeconomic movements and trends between the Ottoman
period and the late 1970s is Hanna Batatu's The Old
Social Classes and the Revolutionary Movements of Iraq.
The most comprehensive study of Iraq in the modern period is
Phebe Marr's The Modern History of Iraq. Another
good study, which focuses on the political and the economic
development of Iraq from its foundation as a state until
1977, is Edith and E.F. Penrose's Iraq: International
Relations and National Development. An excellent recent
account of the Iraqi Baath is provided by Christine Helms's
Iraq, Eastern Flank of the Arab World. (For further
information and complete citations, see
Bibliography.)
Library of Congress Country Study * * *
Library of Congress Country Study
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