Iraq - Acknowledgments
Iraq
The authors wish to acknowledge the contributions of the following
individuals who wrote the 1979 edition of Iraq: A Country Study:
Laraine Newhouse Carter, Angus MacPherson, Darrel R. Eglin, Rinn S.
Shinn, and James D. Rudolph. Their work provided the organization of the
present volume, as well as substantial portions of the text.
The authors are grateful to individuals in various government
agencies and private institutions who gave their time, research
materials, and expertise to the production of this book. The authors
also wish to thank members of the Federal Research Division who
contributed directly to the preparation of the manuscript. These people
include Thomas Collelo, who reviewed all drafts and graphic material;
Richard F. Nyrop, who reviewed all drafts and who served as liaison with
the sponsoring agency; and Martha E. Hopkins, who managed editing and
production. Also involved in preparing the text were editorial
assistants Barbara Edgerton and Izella Watson.
Individual chapters were edited by Sharon Costello, Vincent Ercolano,
Ruth Nieland, and Gage Ricard. Carolyn Hinton performed the final
prepublication editorial review, and Shirley Kessel compiled the index.
Diann Johnson of the Library of Congress Composing Unit prepared the
camera-ready copy, under the supervision of Peggy Pixley.
Special thanks are owed to David P. Cabitto, who designed the cover
artwork and the illustrations on the title page of each chapter.
Invaluable graphics support also was provided by Sandra K. Cotugno and
Kimberly A. Lord. Harriett R. Blood assisted in preparing the final
maps.
The authors would like to thank several individuals who provided
research and operational support. Arvies J. Staton supplied information
on ranks and insignia, Ly H. Burnham assisted in obtaining demographic
data, Afaf S. McGowan assisted in obtaining photographs, and Gwendolyn
B. Batts assisted in word processing.
Finally, the authors acknowledge the generosity of the many
individuals and public and private agencies who allowed their
photographs to be used in this study.
Iraq
Iraq - Preface
Iraq
Like its predecessor, this study is an attempt to treat in a concise
and objective manner the dominant social, political, economic, and
military aspects of contemporary Iraqi society. Sources of information
included scholarly journals and monographs, official reports of
governments and international organizations, newspapers, and numerous
periodicals. Unfortunately there was a dearth of information from
official Iraqi sources, as well as a lack of sociological data resulting
from field work by scholars in Iraq in the 1980s. Chapter bibliographies
appear at the end of the book; brief comments on some of the more
valuable sources suggested as possible further reading appear at the end
of each chapter. Measurements are given in the metric system; a
conversion table is provided to assist those readers who are unfamiliar
with metric measurements (see <"appendix.htm#table1">table
1, Appendix). A glossary is also included.
The transliteration of Arabic words and phrases follows a modified
version of the system adopted by the United States Board on Geographic
Names and the Permanent Committee on Geographic Names for British
Official Use, known as the BGN/PCGN system. The modification is a
significant one, however, in that diacritical markings and hyphens have
been omitted. Moreover, some geographical locations, such as the cities
of Babylon, Kirkuk, Mosul, and Nineveh, are so well known by these
conventional names that their formal names--Babil, Karkuk, Al Mawsil,
and Ninawa, respectively, are not used.
Edited by
Helen Chapin Metz
Research Completed May 1988
Iraq
Iraq - History
Iraq
IRAQ, A REPUBLIC since the 1958 coup d'etat that ended the reign of
King Faisal II, became a sovereign, independent state in 1932. Although
the modern state, the Republic of Iraq, is quite young, the history of
the land and its people dates back more than 5,000 years. Indeed, Iraq
contains the world's richest known archaeological sites. Here, in
ancient Mesopotamia (the land between the rivers), the first
civilization--that of Sumer-- appeared in the Near East. Despite the
millennium separating the two epochs, Iraqi history displays a
continuity shaped by adaptation to the ebbings and flowings of the
Tigris and Euphrates rivers (in Arabic, the Dijlis and Furat,
respectively). Allowed to flow unchecked, the rivers wrought destruction
in terrible floods that inundated whole towns. When the rivers were
controlled by irrigation dikes and other waterworks, the land became
extremely fertile.
The dual nature of the Tigris and the Euphrates--their potential to
be destructive or productive--has resulted in two distinct legacies
found throughout Iraqi history. On the one hand, Mesopotamia's plentiful
water resources and lush river valleys allowed for the production of
surplus food that served as the basis for the civilizing trend begun at
Sumer and preserved by rulers such as Hammurabi (1792-1750 B.C.), Cyrus
(550-530 B.C.), Darius (520-485 B.C.), Alexander (336-323 B.C.), and the
Abbasids (750-1258). The ancient cities of Sumer, Babylon, and Assyria
all were located in what is now Iraq. Surplus food production and joint
irrigation and flood control efforts facilitated the growth of a
powerful and expanding state.
Mesopotamia could also be an extremely threatening environment,
however, driving its peoples to seek security from the vicissitudes of
nature. Throughout Iraqi history, various groups have formed autonomous,
self-contained social units. Allegiance to ancient religious deities at
Ur and Eridu, membership in the Shiat Ali (or party of Ali, the small
group of followers that supported Ali ibn Abu Talib as rightful leader
of the Islamic community in the seventh century), residence in the asnaf
(guilds) or the mahallat (city quarters) of Baghdad under the
Ottoman Turks, membership in one of a multitude of tribes--such efforts
to build autonomous security-providing structures have exerted a
powerful centrifugal force on Iraqi culture.
Two other factors that have inhibited political centralization are
the absence of stone and Iraq's geographic location as the eastern flank
of the Arab world. For much of Iraqi history, the lack of stone has
severely hindered the building of roads. As a result, many parts of the
country have remained beyond government control. Also, because it
borders nonArab Turkey and Iran and because of the great agricultural
potential of its river valley, Iraq has attracted waves of ethnically
diverse migrations. Although this influx of people has enriched Iraqi
culture, it also has disrupted the country's internal balance and has
led to deep-seated schisms.
Throughout Iraqi history, the conflict between political
fragmentation and centralization has been reflected in the struggles
among tribes and cities for the food-producing flatlands of the river
valleys. When a central power neglected to keep the waterworks in
repair, land fell into disuse, and tribes attacked settled peoples for
precious and scarce agricultural commodities. For nearly 600 years,
between the collapse of the Abbasid Empire in the thirteenth century and
the waning years of the Ottoman era in the late nineteenth century,
government authority was tenuous and tribal Iraq was, in effect,
autonomous. At the beginning of the twentieth century, Iraq's
disconnected, and often antagonistic, ethnic, religious, and tribal
social groups professed little or no allegiance to the central
government. As a result, the all-consuming concern of contemporary Iraqi
history has been the forging of a nation-state out of this diverse and
conflict-ridden social structure and the concomitant transformation of
parochial loyalties, both tribal and ethnic, into a national identity.
Beginning in the middle of the nineteenth century, the tanzimat
reforms (an administrative and legal reorganization of the Ottoman
Empire), the emergence of private property, and the tying of Iraq to the
world capitalist market severely altered Iraq's social structure. Tribal
<"glossary.htm#shaykh">shaykhs
(see Glossary) traditionally had provided both spiritual leadership and
tribal security. Land reform and increasing links with the West
transformed many shaykhs into profit-seeking landlords, whose tribesmen
became impoverished sharecroppers. Moreover, as Western economic
penetration increased, the products of Iraq's once-prosperous craftsmen
were displaced by machine-made British textiles.
During the twentieth century, as the power of tribal Iraq waned,
Baghdad benefited from the rise of a centralized governmental apparatus,
a burgeoning bureaucracy, increased educational opportunities, and the
growth of the oil industry. The transformation of the urban-tribal
balance resulted in a massive rural-to-urban migration. The disruption
of existing parochial loyalties and the rise of new class relations
based on economics fueled frequent tribal rebellions and urban uprisings
during much of the twentieth century.
Iraq's social fabric was in the throes of a destabilizing transition
in the first half of the twentieth century. At the same time, because of
its foreign roots, the Iraqi political system suffered from a severe
legitimacy crisis. Beginning with its League of Nations Mandate in 1920,
the British government had laid out the institutional framework for
Iraqi government and politics. Britain imposed a Hashimite (also seen as
Hashemite) monarchy, defined the territorial limits of Iraq with little
correspondence to natural frontiers or traditional tribal and ethnic
settlements, and influenced the writing of a constitution and the
structure of parliament. The British also supported narrowly based
groups--such as the tribal shaykhs--over the growing, urban-based
nationalist movement, and resorted to military force when British
interests were threatened, as in the 1941 Rashid Ali coup.
Between 1918 and 1958, British policy in Iraq had farreaching
effects. The majority of Iraqis were divorced from the political
process, and the process itself failed to develop procedures for
resolving internal conflicts other than rule by decree and the frequent
use of repressive measures. Also, because the formative experiences of
Iraq's post-1958 political leadership centered around clandestine
opposition activity, decision making and government activity in general
have been veiled in secrecy. Furthermore, because the country lacks
deeply rooted national political institutions, political power
frequently has been monopolized by a small elite, the members of which
are often bound by close family or tribal ties.
Between the overthrow of the monarchy in 1958 and the emergence of
Saddam Husayn in the mid-1970s, Iraqi history was a chronicle of
conspiracies, coups, countercoups, and fierce Kurdish uprisings.
Beginning in 1975, however, with the signing of the Algiers
Agreement--an agreement between Saddam Husayn and the shah of Iran that
effectively ended Iranian military support for the Kurds in Iraq--Saddam
Husayn was able to bring Iraq an unprecedented period of stability. He
effectively used rising oil revenues to fund large-scale development
projects, to increase public sector employment, and significantly to
improve education and health care. This tied increasing numbers of
Iraqis to the ruling Baath (Arab Socialist Resurrection) Party. As a
result, for the first time in contemporary Iraqi history, an Iraqi
leader successfully forged a national identity out of Iraq's diverse
social structure. Saddam Husayn's achievements and Iraq's general
prosperity, however, did not survive long. In September 1980, Iraqi
troops crossed the border into Iran, embroiling the country in a costly
war.
Iraq
Iraq - ANCIENT MESOPOTAMIA
Iraq
Sumer, Akkad, Babylon, and Assyria
Contemporary Iraq occupies the territory that historians
traditionally have considered the site of the earliest civiliza- tions
of the ancient Near East. Geographically, modern Iraq corresponds to the
Mesopotamia of the Old Testament and of other, older, Near Eastern
texts. In Western mythology and religious tradition, the land of
Mesopotamia in the ancient period was a land of lush vegetation,
abundant wildlife, and copious if unpredictable water resources. As
such, at a very early date it attracted people from neighboring, but
less hospitable areas. By 6000 B.C., Mesopotamia had been settled,
chiefly by migrants from the Turkish and Iranian highlands.
The civilized life that emerged at Sumer was shaped by two
conflicting factors: the unpredictability of the Tigris and Euphrates
rivers, which at any time could unleash devastating floods that wiped
out entire peoples, and the extreme fecundity of the river valleys,
caused by centuries-old deposits of soil. Thus, while the river valleys
of southern Mesopotamia attracted migrations of neighboring peoples and
made possible, for the first time in history, the growing of surplus
food, the volatility of the rivers necessitated a form of collective
management to protect the marshy, low-lying land from flooding. As
surplus production increased and as collective management became more
advanced, a process of urbanization evolved and Sumerian civilization
took root.
Sumer is the ancient name for southern Mesopotamia. Historians are
divided on when the Sumerians arrived in the area, but they agree that
the population of Sumer was a mixture of linguistic and ethnic groups
that included the earlier inhabitants of the region. Sumerian culture
mixed foreign and local elements. The Sumerians were highly innovative
people who responded creatively to the challenges of the changeable
Tigris and Euphrates rivers. Many of the great Sumerian legacies, such
as writing, irrigation, the wheel, astronomy, and literature, can be
seen as adaptive responses to the great rivers.
The Sumerians were the first people known to have devised a scheme of
written representation as a means of communication. From the earliest
writings, which were pictograms (simplified pictures on clay tablets),
the Sumerians gradually created cuneiform--a way of arranging
impressions stamped on clay by the wedge-like section of a chopped-off
reed. The use of combinations of the same basic wedge shape to stand for
phonetic, and possibly for syllabic, elements provided more flexible
communication than the pictogram. Through writing, the Sumerians were
able to pass on complex agricultural techniques to successive
generations; this led to marked improvements in agricultural production.
Another important Sumerian legacy was the recording of literature.
The most famous Sumerian epic and the one that has survived in the most
nearly complete form is the epic of Gilgamesh. The story of Gilgamesh,
who actually was king of the city-state of Uruk in approximately 2700
B.C., is a moving story of the ruler's deep sorrow at the death of his
friend and of his consequent search for immortality. Other central
themes of the story are a devastating flood and the tenuous nature of
man's existence. Laden with complex abstractions and emotional
expressions, the epic of Gilgamesh reflects the intellectual
sophistication of the Sumerians, and it has served as the prototype for
all Near Eastern inundation stories.
The precariousness of existence in southern Mesopotamia also led to a
highly developed sense of religion. Cult centers such as Eridu, dating
back to 5000 B.C., served as important centers of pilgrimage and
devotion even before the rise of Sumer. Many of the most important
Mesopotamian cities emerged in areas surrounding the pre-Sumerian cult
centers, thus reinforcing the close relationship between religion and
government.
The Sumerians were pantheistic; their gods more or less personified
local elements and natural forces. In exchange for sacrifice and
adherence to an elaborate ritual, the gods of ancient Sumer were to
provide the individual with security and prosperity. A powerful
priesthood emerged to oversee ritual practices and to intervene with the
gods. Sumerian religious beliefs also had important political aspects.
Decisions relating to land rentals, agricultural questions, trade,
commercial relations, and war were determined by the priesthood, because
all property belonged to the gods. The priests ruled from their temples,
called ziggurats, which were essentially artificial mountains of
sunbaked brick, built with outside staircases that tapered toward a
shrine at the top.
Because the well-being of the community depended upon close
observation of natural phenomena, scientific or protoscientific
activities occupied much of the priests' time. For example, the
Sumerians believed that each of the gods was represented by a number.
The number sixty, sacred to the god An, was their basic unit of
calculation. The minutes of an hour and the notational degrees of a
circle were Sumerian concepts. The highly developed agricultural system
and the refined irrigation and water-control systems that enabled Sumer
to achieve surplus production also led to the growth of large cities.
The most important city-states were Uruk, Eridu, Kish, Lagash, Agade,
Akshak, Larsa, and Ur (birthplace of the prophet Abraham). The emergence
of urban life led to further technological advances. Lacking stone, the
Sumerians made marked improvements in brick technology, making possible
the construction of very large buildings such as the famous ziggurat of
Ur. Sumer also pioneered advances in warfare technology. By the middle
of the third millennium B.C., the Sumerians had developed the wheeled
chariot. At approximately the same time, the Sumerians discovered that
tin and copper when smelted together produced bronze--a new, more
durable, and much harder metal. The wheeled chariot and bronze weapons
became increasingly important as the Sumerians developed the institution
of kingship and as individual city-states began to vie for supremacy.
Historians generally divide Sumerian history into three stages. In
the first stage, which extended roughly from 3360 B.C. to 2400 B.C., the
most important political development was the emergence of kings who,
unlike the first priestly rulers, exercised distinct political rather
than religious authority. Another important feature of this period was
the emergence of warring Sumerian city-states, which fought for control
of the river valleys in lower Mesopotamia. During the second phase,
which lasted from 2400 B.C. to 2200 B.C., Sumer was conquered in
approximately 2334 B.C. by Sargon I, king of the Semitic city of Akkad.
Sargon was the world's first empire-builder, sending his troops as far
as Egypt and Ethiopia. He attempted to establish a unified empire and to
end the hostilities among the city-states. Sargon's rule introduced a
new level of political organization that was characterized by an even
more clear-cut separation between religious authority and secular
authority. To ensure his supremacy, Sargon created the first conscripted
army, a development related to the need to mobilize large numbers of
laborers for irrigation and flood-control works. Akkadian strength was
boosted by the invention of the composite bow, a new weapon made of
strips of wood and horn.
Despite their military prowess, Akkadian hegemony over southern
Mesopotamia lasted only 200 years. Sargon's great- grandson was then
overthrown by the Guti, a mountain people from the east. The fall of the
Akkadians and the subsequent reemergence of Sumer under the king of Ur,
who defeated the Guti, ushered in the third phase of Sumerian history.
In this final phase, which was characterized by a synthesis of Sumerian
and Akkadian cultures, the king of Ur established hegemony over much of
Mesopotamia. Sumerian supremacy, however, was on the wane. By 2000 B.C.
the combined attacks of the Amorites, a Semitic people from the west,
and the Elamites, a Caucasian people from the east, had destroyed the
Third Dynasty of Ur. The invaders nevertheless carried on the
Sumero-Akkadian cultural legacy.
The Amorites established cities on the Tigris and the Euphrates
rivers and made Babylon, a town to the north, their capital. During the
time of their sixth ruler, King Hammurabi (1792-1750 B.C.), Babylonian
rule encompassed a huge area covering most of the Tigris-Euphrates river
valley from Sumer and the Persian Gulf in the south to Assyria in the
north. To rule over such a large area, Hammurabi devised an elaborate
administrative structure. His greatest achievement, however, was the
issuance of a law code designed "to cause justice to prevail in the
country, to destroy the wicked and the evil, that the strong may not
oppress the weak." The Code of Hammurabi, not the earliest to
appear in the Near East but certainly the most complete, dealt with land
tenure, rent, the position of women, marriage, divorce, inheritance,
contracts, control of public order, administration of justice, wages,
and labor conditions.
In Hammurabi's legal code, the civilizing trend begun at Sumer had
evolved to a new level of complexity. The sophisticated legal principles
contained in the code reflect a highly advanced civilization in which
social interaction extended far beyond the confines of kinship. The
large number of laws pertaining to commerce reflect a diversified
economic base and an extensive trading network. In politics, Hammurabi's
code is evidence of a more pronounced separation between religious and
secular authority than had existed in ancient Sumer. In addition to
Hammurabi's legal code, the Babylonians made other important
contributions, notably to the science of astronomy, and they increased
the flexibility of cuneiform by developing the pictogram script so that
it stood for a syllable rather than an individual word.
Beginning in approximately 1600 B.C., Indo-European-speaking tribes
invaded India; other tribes settled in Iran and in Europe. One of these
groups, the Hittites, allied itself with the Kassites, a people of
unknown origins. Together, they conquered and destroyed Babylon. Hittite
power subsequently waned, but, in the first half of the fourteenth
century B.C., the Hittites reemerged, controlling an area that stretched
from the Mediterranean Sea to the Persian Gulf. The military success of
the Hittites has been attributed to their monopoly in iron production
and to their use of the chariot. Nevertheless, in the twelfth century
B.C., the Hittites were destroyed, and no great military power occupied
Mesopotamia until the ninth century B.C.
One of the cities that flourished in the middle of the Tigris Valley
during this period was that of Ashur, named after the sun-god of the
Assyrians. The Assyrians were Semitic speakers who occupied Babylon for
a brief period in the thirteenth century B.C. Invasions of
iron-producing peoples into the Near East and into the Aegean region in
approximately 1200 B.C. disrupted the indigenous empires of Mesopotamia,
but eventually the Assyrians were able to capitalize on the new
alignments of power in the region. Because of what has been called
"the barbarous and unspeakable cruelty of the Assyrians," the
names of such Assyrian kings as Ashurnasirpal (883-859 B.C.),
Tiglath-Pileser III (745- 727 B.C.), Sennacherib (704-681 B.C.), and
Ashurbanipal (669-626 B.C.) continue to evoke images of powerful,
militarily brilliant, but brutally savage conquerors.
The Assyrians began to expand to the west in the early part of the
ninth century B.C.; by 859 they had reached the Mediter- ranean Sea,
where they occupied Phoenician cities. Damascus and Babylon fell to the
next generations of Assyrian rulers. During the eighth century B.C., the
Assyrians' control over their empire appeared tenuous, but
Tiglath-Pileser III seized the throne and rapidly subdued Assyria's
neighbors, captured Syria, and crowned himself king of Babylon. He
developed a highly proficient war machine by creating a permanent
standing army under the adminis- tration of a well-organized
bureaucracy. Sennacherib built a new capital, Nineveh, on the Tigris
River, destroyed Babylon (where citizens had risen in revolt), and made
Judah a vassal state.
In 612 B.C., revolts of subject peoples combined with the allied
forces of two new kingdoms, those of the Medes and the Chaldeans
(Neo-Babylonians), effectively to extinguish Assyrian power. Nineveh was
razed. The hatred that the Assyrians inspired, particularly for their
policy of wholesale resettlement of subject peoples, was sufficiently
great to ensure that few traces of Assyrian rule remained two years
later. The Assyrians had used the visual arts to depict their many
conquests, and Assyrian friezes, executed in minute detail, continue to
be the best artifacts of Assyrian civilization.
The Chaldeans became heir to Assyrian power in 612 B.C., and they
conquered formerly Assyrian-held lands in Syria and Palestine. King
Nebuchadnezzar (605-562 B.C.) conquered the kingdom of Judah, and he
destroyed Jerusalem in 586 B.C. Conscious of their ancient past, the
Chaldeans sought to reestablish Babylon as the most magnificent city of
the Near East. It was during the Chaldean period that the Hanging
Gardens of Babylon, famed as one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient
World, were created. Because of an estrangement of the priesthood from
the king, however, the monarchy was severely weakened, and it was unable
to withstand the rising power of Achaemenid Iran. In 539 B.C., Babylon
fell to Cyrus the Great (550-530 B.C.). In addition to incorporating
Babylon into the Iranian empire, Cyrus the Great released the Jews who
had been held in captivity there.
Iraq
Iraq - Iranian and Greek Intrusions
Iraq
Mesopotamia, for 2,000 years a stronghold of Semitic-speaking
peoples, now fell to Indo-European rule that persisted for 1,176 years.
Cyrus, one of history's truly great leaders, ruled with a firm hand, but
he was also well attuned to the needs of his subjects. Upon assuming
power, he immediately replaced the savagery of the Assyrians with a
respect for the customs and the institutions of his new subjects. He
appointed competent provincial governors (the predecessors of the
Persian satraps), and he required from his subjects only tribute and
obedience. Following Cyrus's death, a brief period of Babylonian unrest
ensued that climaxed in 522 B.C. with a general rebellion of Iranian
colonies.
Between 520 and 485 B.C., the efficient and innovative Iranian
leader, Darius the Great, reimposed political stability in Babylon and
ushered in a period of great economic prosperity. His greatest
achievements were in road building--which significantly improved
communication among the provinces--and in organizing an efficient
bureaucracy. Darius's death in 485 B.C. was followed by a period of
decay that led to a major Babylonian rebellion in 482 B.C. The Iranians
violently quelled the uprising, and the repression that followed
severely damaged Babylon's economic infrastructure.
The first Iranian kings to rule Iraq followed Mesopotamian
land-management practices conscientiously. Between 485 B.C. and the
conquest by Alexander the Great in 331 B.C., however, very little in
Babylon was repaired and few of its once-great cities remained intact.
Trade also was greatly reduced during this period. The established trade
route from Sardis to Susa did not traverse Babylonia, and the Iranian
rulers, themselves much closer to the Orient, were able to monopolize
trade from India and other eastern points. As a result, Babylonia and
Assyria, which together formed the ninth satrapy of the Persian Empire,
became economically isolated and impoverished. Their poverty was
exacerbated by the extremely high taxes levied on them: they owed the
Iranian crown 1,000 talents of silver a year, in addition to having to
meet the extortionate demands of the local administrators, and they were
responsible for feeding the Iranian court for four months every year.
Iranian rule lasted for more than 200 years, from 551 B.C. to 331
B.C. During this time, large numbers of Iranians were added to
Mesopotamia's ethnically diverse population. The flow of Iranians into
Iraq, which began during the rein of the Achaemenids, initiated an
important demographic trend that would continue intermittently
throughout much of Iraqi history. Another important effect of Iranian
rule was the disappearance of the Mesopotamian languages and the
widespread use of Aramaic, the official language of the empire.
By the fourth century B.C., nearly all of Babylon opposed the
Achaemenids. Thus, when the Iranian forces stationed in Babylon
surrendered to Alexander the Great of Macedon in 331 B.C. all of
Babylonia hailed him as a liberator. Alexander quickly won Babylonian
favor when, unlike the Achaemenids, he displayed respect for such
Babylonian traditions as the worship of their chief god, Marduk.
Alexander also proposed ambitious schemes for Babylon. He planned to
establish one of the two seats of his empire there and to make the
Euphrates navigable all the way to the Persian Gulf, where he planned to
build a great port. Alexander's grandiose plans, however, never came to
fruition. Returning from an expedition to the Indus River, he died in
Babylon--most probably from malaria contracted there in 323 B.C. at the
age of thirty-two. In the politically chaotic period after Alexander's
death, his generals fought for and divided up his empire. Many of the
battles among the Greek generals were fought on Babylonian soil. In the
latter half of the Greek period, Greek military campaigns were focused
on conquering Phoenician ports and Babylonia was thus removed from the
sphere of action. The city of Babylon lost its preeminence as the center
of the civilized world when political and economic activity shifted to
the Mediterranean, where it was destined to remain for many centuries.
Although Alexander's major plans for Mesopotamia were unfulfilled,
and his generals did little that was positive for Mesopotamia, the
effects of the Greek occupation were noteworthy. Alexander and his
successors built scores of cities in the Near East that were modeled on
the Greek city-states. One of the most important was Seleucia on the
Tigris. The Hellenization of the area included the introduction of
Western deities, Western art forms, and Western thought. Business
revived in Mesopotamia because one of the Greek trade routes ran through
the new cities. Mesopotamia exported barley, wheat, dates, wool, and
bitumen; the city of Seleucia exported spices, gold, precious stones,
and ivory. Cultural interchange between Greek and Mesopotamian scholars
was responsible for the saving of many Mesopotamian scientific,
especially astronomical, texts.
In 126 B.C., the Parthians (or Arsacids), an intelligent, nomadic
people who had migrated from the steppes of Turkestan to northeastern
Iran, captured the Tigris-Euphrates river valley. Having previously
conquered Iran, the Parthians were able to control all trade between the
East and the Greco-Roman world. For the most part, they chose to retain
existing social institutions and to live in cities that already existed.
Mesopotamia was immeasurably enriched by this, the mildest of all
foreign occupations of the region. The population of Mesopotamia was
enormously enlarged, chiefly by Arabs, Iranians, and Aramaeans. With the
exception of the Roman occupation under Trajan (A.D. 98- 117) and
Septimius Severus (A.D. 193-211), the Arsacids ruled until a new force
of native Iranian rulers, the Sassanids, conquered the region in A.D.
227.
Little information is available on the Sassanid occupation, which
lasted until A.D. 636. The north was devastated by battles fought
between Romans and Sassanids. For the most part, the Sassanids appear to
have neglected Mesopotamia. By the time the enfeebled Sassanid Empire
fell to Muslim Arab warriors, Mesopotamia was in ruins, and
Sumero-Akkadian civilization was entirely extinguished. Sassanid neglect
of the canals and irrigation ditches vital for agriculture had allowed
the rivers to flood, and parts of the land had become sterile.
Nevertheless, Mesopotamian culture passed on many traditions to the
West. The basic principles of mathematics and astronomy, the coronation
of kings, and such symbols as the tree of life, the Maltese cross, and
the crescent are part of Mesopotamia's legacy.
Iraq
Iraq - THE ARAB CONQUEST AND THE COMING OF ISLAM
Iraq
The power that toppled the Sassanids came from an unexpected source.
The Iranians knew that the Arabs, a tribally oriented people, had never
been organized under the rule of a single power and were at a primitive
level of military development. The Iranians also knew of the Arabs
through their mutual trading activities and because, for a brief period,
Yemen, in southern Arabia, was an Iranian satrapy.
Events in Arabia changed rapidly and dramatically in the sixth
century A.D. when Muhammad, a member of the Hashimite clan of the
powerful Quraysh tribe of Mecca, claimed prophethood and began gathering
adherents for the monotheistic faith of Islam that had been revealed to
him. The conversion of Arabia proved to be the most difficult of the
Islamic conquests because of entrenched tribalism. Within one year of
Muhammad's death in 632, however, Arabia was secure enough for the
Prophet's secular successor, Abu Bakr (632-634), the first caliph and
the father-in-law of Muhammad, to begin the campaign against the
Byzantine Empire and the Sassanid Empire.
Islamic forays into Iraq began during the reign of Abu Bakr. In 634
an army of 18,000 Arab tribesmen, under the leadership of the brilliant
general Khalid ibn al Walid (aptly nicknamed "The Sword of
Islam"), reached the perimeter of the Euphrates delta. Although the
occupying Iranian force was vastly superior in techniques and numbers,
its soldiers were exhausted from their unremitting campaigns against the
Byzantines. The Sassanid troops fought ineffectually, lacking sufficient
reinforcement to do more. The first battle of the Arab campaign became
known as the Battle of the Chains because Iranian soldiers were
reputedly chained together so that they could not flee. Khalid offered
the inhabitants of Iraq an ultimatum: "Accept the faith and you are
safe; otherwise pay tribute. If you refuse to do either, you have only
yourself to blame. A people is already upon you, loving death as you
love life."
Most of the Iraqi tribes were Christian at the time of the Islamic
conquest. They decided to pay the jizya, the tax required of
non-Muslims living in Muslim-ruled areas, and were not further
disturbed. The Iranians rallied briefly under their hero, Rustam, and
attacked the Arabs at Al Hirah, west of the Euphrates. There, they were
soundly defeated by the invading Arabs. The next year, in 635, the Arabs
defeated the Iranians at the Battle of Buwayb. Finally, in May 636 at Al
Qadisiyah, a village south of Baghdad on the Euphrates, Rustam was
killed. The Iranians, who outnumbered the Arabs six to one, were
decisively beaten. From Al Qadisiyah the Arabs pushed on to the Sassanid
capital at Ctesiphon (Madain).
The Islamic conquest was made easier because both the Byzantine
Empire and the Sassanid Empire were culturally and socially bankrupt;
thus, the native populations had little to lose by cooperating with the
conquering power. Because the Muslim warriors were fighting a jihad
(holy war), they were regulated by religious law that strictly
prohibited rape and the killing of women, children, religious leaders,
or anyone who had not actually engaged in warfare. Further, the Muslim
warriors had come to conquer and settle a land under Islamic law. It was
not in their economic interest to destroy or pillage unnecessarily and
indiscriminately.
The caliph Umar (634-44) ordered the founding of two garrisoned
cities to protect the newly conquered territory: Kufah, named as the
capital of Iraq, and Basra, which was also to be a port. Umar also
organized the administration of the conquered Iranian lands. Acting on
the advice of an Iranian, Umar continued the Sassanid office of the
divan (Arabic form diwan). Essentially an institution to
control income and expenditure through record keeping and the
centralization of administration, the divan would be used henceforth
throughout the lands of the Islamic conquest. Dihqans, minor
revenue collection officials under the Sassanids, retained their
function of assessing and collecting taxes. Tax collectors in Iraq had
never enjoyed universal popularity, but the Arabs found them
particularly noxious. Arabic replaced Persian as the official language,
and it slowly filtered into common usage. Iraqis intermarried with Arabs
and converted to Islam.
By 650 Muslim armies had reached the Amu Darya (Oxus River) and had
conquered all the Sassanid domains, although some were more strongly
held than others. Shortly thereafter, Arab expansion and conquest
virtually ceased. Thereafter, the groups in power directed their
energies to maintaining the status quo while those outside the major
power structure devoted themselves to political and religious rebellion.
The ideologies of the rebellions usually were couched in religious
terms. Frequently, a difference in the interpretation of a point of
doctrine was sufficient to spark armed warfare. More often, however,
religious disputes were the rationalization for underlying nationalistic
or cultural dissatisfactions.
Iraq
Iraq - The Sunni-Shia Controversy
Iraq
The most critical problem that faced the young Islamic community
revolved around the rightful successor to the office of caliph. Uthman,
the third caliph, had encountered opposition during and after his
election to the caliphate. Ali ibn Abu Talib, the Prophet Muhammad's
cousin and son-in-law (by virtue of his marrying the Prophet's only
surviving child, Fatima), had been the other contender.
Ali's pietism was disquieting to certain vested-interest groups, who
perceived the more conservative Uthman as more likely to continue the
policies of the previous caliph, Umar. Discontent increased, as did
Ali's formal opposition to Uthman based on religious grounds. Ali
claimed that innovations had been introduced that were not consonant
with Quranic directives. Economics was the key factor for most of the
members of the opposition, but this, too, acquired religious overtones.
As a result of the rapid military expansion of the Islamic movement,
financial troubles beset Uthman. Many beduins had offered themselves for
military service in Iraq and in Egypt. Their abstemious and hard life
contrasted with the leisured life of Arabs in the Hijaz (the western
part of the Arabian Peninsula), who were enjoying the benefits of
conquest. When these volunteer soldiers questioned the allocation of
lands and the distribution of revenues and pensions, they found a ready
spokesman in Ali.
Groups of malcontents eventually left Iraq and Egypt to seek redress
at Medina in the Hijaz. Uthman promised reforms, but on their return
journey the rebels intercepted a message to the governor of Egypt
commanding that they be punished. In response, the rebels besieged
Uthman in his home in Medina, eventually slaying him. Uthman's slayer
was a Muslim and a son of the first caliph, Abu Bakr. The Muslim world
was shaken. Ali, who had not taken part in the siege, was chosen caliph.
Two opponents of Ali enlisted Aisha, a widow of the Prophet Muhammad,
to join them in accusing Ali and demanding retribution for Uthman's
death. When the three went to Iraq to seek support for their cause,
Ali's forces engaged theirs near Basra. Aisha's two companions were
killed, and Ali was clearly victorious. Muawiyah, a kinsman of Uthman
and the governor of Syria, then refused to recognize Ali, and he
demanded the right to avenge his relative's death. In what was perhaps
the most important battle fought between Muslims, Ali's forces met
Muawiyah's at the Plain of Siffin near the largest bend of the Euphrates
River. Muawiyah's forces, seeing that they were losing, proposed
arbitration. Accordingly, two arbitrators were chosen to decide whether
Uthman's death had been deserved. Such a decision would give his slayer
status as an executioner rather than as a murderer and would remove the
claims of Uthman's relatives. When the arbitrators decided against Ali,
he protested that the verdict was not in accordance with sharia (Islamic
law) and declared his intention to resume the battle.
Ali's decision, however, came too late for the more extreme of his
followers. Citing the Quranic injunction to fight rebels until they
obey, these followers insisted that Ali was morally wrong to submit to
arbitration. In doing so, they claimed, he bowed to the judgment of
men--as opposed to the judgment of God that would have been revealed by
the outcome of the battle. These dissenters, known as Kharajites (from
the verb kharaja--to go out), withdrew from battle, an action
that had far-reaching political effects on the Islamic community in the
centuries ahead. Before resuming his dispute with Muawiyah, Ali appealed
to the Kharajites; when they rejected the appeal, he massacred many of
them. Furious at his treatment of pious Muslims, most of Ali's forces
deserted him. He was forced to return to Al Kufah--about 150 kilometers
south of Baghdad--and to await developments within the Islamic
community.
A number of Islamic leaders met at Adruh in present-day Jordan, and
the same two arbitrators from Siffin devised a solution to the
succession problem. At last it was announced that neither Ali nor
Muawiyah should be caliph; Abd Allah, a son of Umar, was proposed. The
meeting terminated in confusion, however, and no final decision was
reached. Both Ali and Muawiyah bided their time in their separate
governorships: Muawiyah, who had been declared caliph by some of his
supporters, in newly conquered Egypt, and Ali, in Iraq. Muawiyah
fomented discontent among those only partially committed to Ali. While
praying in a mosque at Al Kufah, Ali was murdered by a Kharajite in 661.
The ambitious Muawiyah induced Ali's eldest son, Hasan, to renounce his
claim to the caliphate. Hasan died shortly thereafter, probably of
consumption, but the <"glossary.htm#Shia">Shias
(see Glossary) later claimed that he had been poisoned and dubbed him
"Lord of All Martyrs." Ali's unnatural death ensured the
future of the Shia movement--Ali's followers returned to his cause--and
quickened its momentum. With the single exception of the Prophet
Muhammad, no man has had a greater impact on Islamic history. The Shia
declaration of faith is: "There is no God but God; Muhammad is his
Prophet and Ali is the Saint of God."
Subsequently, Muawiyah was declared caliph. Thus began the Umayyad
Dynasty, which had its capital at Damascus. Yazid I, Muawiyah's son and
his successor in 680, was unable to contain the opposition that his
strong father had vigorously quelled. Husayn, Ali's second son, refused
to pay homage and fled to Mecca, where he was asked to lead the
Shias--mostly Iraqis--in a revolt against Yazid I. Ubayd Allah, governor
of Al Kufah, discovered the plot and sent detachments to dissuade him.
At Karbala, in Iraq, Husayn's band of 200 men and women refused to
surrender and finally were cut down by a force of perhaps 4,000 Umayyad
troops. Yazid I received Husayn's head, and Husayn's death on the tenth
of Muharram (October 10, 680) continues to be observed as a day of
mourning for all Shias. Ali's burial place at An Najaf, about 130
kilometers south of Baghdad, and Husayn's at Karbala, about 80
kilometers southwest of Baghdad, are holy places of pilgrimage for
Shias, many of whom feel that a pilgrimage to both sites is equal to a
pilgrimage to Mecca.
The importance of these events in the history of Islam cannot be
overemphasized. They created the greatest of the Islamic schisms,
between the party of Ali (the Shiat Ali, known in the West as Shias or
Shiites) and the upholders of Muawiyah (the Ahl as Sunna, the People of
the Sunna--those who follow Muhammad's custom and example) or the <"glossary.htm#Sunni">Sunnis
(see Glossary). The Sunnis believe they are the followers of orthodoxy.
The ascendancy of the Umayyads and the events at Karbala, in contrast,
led to a Shia Islam which, although similar to Sunni Islam in its basic
tenets, maintains important doctrinal differences that have had
pervasive effects on the Shia world view. Most notably, Shias have
viewed themselves as the opposition in Islam, the opponents of privilege
and power. They believe that after the death of Ali and the ascension of
the "usurper" Umayyads to the caliphate, Islam took the wrong
path; therefore, obedience to existing temporal authority is not
obligatory. Furthermore, in sacrificing his own life for a just cause,
Husayn became the archetypal role model who inspired generations of
Shias to fight for social equality and for economic justice.
During his caliphate, Ali had made Al Kufah his capital. The transfer
of power to Syria and to its capital at Damascus aroused envy among
Iraqis. The desire to regain preeminence prompted numerous rebellions in
Iraq against Umayyad rule. Consequently, only men of unusual ability
were sent to be governors of Al Basrah and Al Kufah. One of the most
able was Ziyad ibn Abihi, who was initially governor of Al Basrah and
later also of Al Kufah. Ziyad divided the residents of Al Kufah into
four groups (not based on tribal affiliation) and appointed a leader for
each one. He also sent 50,000 beduins to Khorasan (in northeastern
Iran), the easternmost province of the empire, which was within the
jurisdiction of Al Basrah and Al Kufah.
The Iraqis once again became restive when rival claimants for the
Umayyad caliphate waged civil war between 687 and 692. Ibn Yasuf ath
Thaqafi al Hajjaj was sent as provincial governor to restore order in
Iraq in 694. He pacified Iraq and encouraged both agriculture and
education.
Iraq
Iraq - The Abbasid Caliphate, 750-1258
Iraq
Many unsuccessful Iraqi and Iranian insurrectionists had fled to
Khorasan, in addition to the 50,000 beduins who had been sent there by
Ziyad. There, at the city of Merv (present-day Mary in the Soviet
Union), a faction that supported Abd al Abbas (a descendant of the
Prophet's uncle), was able to organize the rebels under the battle cry,
"the House of Hashim." Hashim, the Prophet Muhammad's
grandfather, was an ancestor of both the Shia line and the Abbas line,
and the Shias therefore actively supported the Hashimite leader, Abu
Muslim. In 747, Abu Muslim's army attacked the Umayyads and occupied
Iraq. In 750, Abd al Abbas (not a Shia) was established in Baghdad as
the first caliph of the Abbasid Dynasty. The Abbasids, whose line was
called "the blessed dynasty" by it supporters, presented
themselves to the people as divine-right rulers who would initiate a new
era of justice and prosperity. Their political policies were, however,
remarkably similar to those of the Umayyads.
During the reign of its first seven caliphs, Baghdad became a center
of power where Arab and Iranian cultures mingled to produce a blaze of
philosophical, scientific, and literary glory. This era is remembered
throughout the Arab world, and by Iraqis in particular, as the pinnacle
of the Islamic past. It was the second Abbasid caliph, Al Mansur
(754-75), who decided to build a new capital, surrounded by round walls,
near the site of the Sassanid village of city of Baghdad. Within fifty
years the population outgrew the city walls as people thronged to the
capital to become part of the Abbasids' enormous bureaucracy or to
engage in trade. Baghdad became a vast emporium of trade linking Asia
and the Mediterranean. By the reign of Mansur's grandson, Harun ar Rashid (786-806),
Baghdad was second in size only to Constantinople. Baghdad was able to
feed its enormous population and to export large quantities of grain
because the political administration had realized the importance of
controlling the flows of the Tigris and the Euphrates rivers. The
Abbasids reconstructed the city's canals, dikes, and reservoirs , and
drained the swamps around Baghdad, freeing the city of malaria.
Harun ar Rashid, the caliph of the Arabian Nights, actively
supported intellectual pursuits, but the great flowering of Arabic
culture that is credited to the Abbasids reached its apogee during the
reign of his son, Al Mamun (813-33). After the death of Harun ar Rashid,
his sons, Amin and Al Mamun, quarreled over the succession to the
caliphate. Their dispute soon erupted into civil war. Amin was backed by
the Iraqis, while Al Mamun had the support of the Iranians. Al Mamun
also had the support of the garrison at Khorasan and thus was able to
take Baghdad in 813. Although Sunni Muslims, the Abbasids had hoped that
by astute and stern rule they would be able to contain Shia resentment
at yet another Sunni dynasty. The Iranians, many of whom were Shias, had
hoped that Al Mamun would make his capital in their own country,
possibly at Merv. Al Mamun, however, eventually realized that the Iraqi
Shias would never countenance the loss of prestige and economic power if
they no longer had the capital. He decided to center his rule in
Baghdad.
Disappointed, the Iranians began to break away from Abbasid control.
A series of local dynasties appeared: the Tahirids (821- 873), the
Suffarids (867-ca. 1495), and the Samanids (819-1005). The same process
was repeated in the West: Spain broke away in 756, Morocco in 788,
Tunisia in 800, and Egypt in 868. In Iraq there was trouble in the
south. In 869, Ali ibn Muhammad (Ali the Abominable) founded a state of
black slaves known as Zanj. The Zanj brought a large part of southern
Iraq and southwestern Iran under their control and in the process
enslaved many of their former masters. The Zanj Rebellion was finally
put down in 883, but not before it had caused great suffering.
The Sunni-Shia split had weakened the effectiveness of Islam as a
single unifying force and as a sanction for a single political
authority. Although the intermingling of various linguistic and cultural
groups contributed greatly to the enrichment of Islamic civilization, it
also was a source of great tension and contributed to the decay of
Abbasid power.
In addition to the cleavages between Arabs and Iranians and between
Sunnis and Shias, the growing prominence of Turks in military and in
political affairs gave cause for discontent and rivalry at court.
Nomadic, Turkic-speaking warriors had been moving out of Central Asia
into Transoxiana (i.e., across the Oxus River) for more than a
millennium. The Abbasid caliphs began importing Turks as slave-warriors
(Mamluks) early in the ninth century. The imperial palace guards of the
Abbasids were Mamluks who were originally commanded by free Iraqi
officers. By 833, however, Mamluks themselves were officers and
gradually, because of their greater military proficiency and dedication,
they began to occupy high positions at court. The mother of Caliph
Mutasim (who came to power in 833) had been a Turkish slave, and her
influence was substantial. By the tenth century, the Turkish commanders,
no longer checked by their Iranian and Arab rivals at court, were able
to appoint and depose caliphs. For the first time, the political power
of the caliphate was fully separated from its religious function. The
Mamluks continued to permit caliphs to come to power because of the
importance of the office as a symbol for legitimizing claims to
authority.
In 945, after subjugating western Iran, a military family known as
the Buwayhids occupied Baghdad. Shias from the Iranian province of
Daylam south of the Caspian Sea, the Buwayhids continued to permit Sunni
Abbasid caliphs to ascend to the throne. The humiliation of the
caliphate at being manipulated by Shias, and by Iranian ones at that,
was immense.
The Buwayhids were ousted in 1055 by another group of Turkic
speakers, the Seljuks. The Seljuks were the ruling clan of the Kinik
group of the Oghuz (or Ghuzz) Turks, who lived north of the Oxus River.
Their leader, Tughril Beg, turned his warriors first against the local
ruler in Khorasan. He moved south and then west, conquering but not
destroying the cities in his path. In 1055 the caliph in Baghdad gave
Tughril Beg robes, gifts, and the title, "King of the East."
Because the Seljuks were Sunnis, their rule was welcomed in Baghdad.
They treated the caliphs with respect, but the latter continued to be
only figureheads.
There were several lines of Seljuks. The main line, ruling from
Baghdad, controlled the area from the Bosporus to Chinese Turkestan
until approximately 1155. The Seljuks continued to expand their
territories, but they were content to let Iraqis and Iranians simply pay
tribute while administering and ruling their own lands. One Seljuk,
Malek Shah, extended Turkish rule to the countries of the eastern
Mediterranean, Asia Minor, and to parts of Arabia. During his rule, Iraq
and Iran enjoyed a cultural and scientific renaissance. This success is
largely attributed to Malek Shah's brilliant Iranian vizier, Nizam al
Mulk, one of the most skillful administrators in history. An
astronomical observatory was established in which Umar (Omar) Khayyam
did much of his experimentation for a new calendar, and religious
schools were built in all the major towns. Abu Hamid al Ghazali, one of
the greatest Islamic theologians, and other eminent scholars were
brought to the Seljuk capital at Baghdad and were encouraged and
supported in their work.
After the death of Malek Shah in 1092, Seljuk power disintegrated.
Petty dynasties appeared throughout Iraq and Iran, and rival claimants
to Seljuk rule dispatched each other. Between 1118 and 1194, nine Seljuk
sultans ruled Baghdad; only one died a natural death. The <"glossary.htm#atabeg">atabegs
(see Glossary), who initially had been majordomos for the Seljuks, began
to assert themselves. Several founded local dynasties. An atabeg
originated the Zangid Dynasty (1127-1222), with its seat at Mosul. The
Zangids were instrumental in encouraging Muslims to oppose the invasions
of the Christian Crusaders. Tughril (1177-94), the last Seljuk sultan of
Iraq, was killed by the leader of a Turkish dynasty, the Khwarizm shahs,
who lived south of the Aral Sea. Before his successor could establish
Khwarizm rule in Iraq, however, Baghdad was overrun by the Mongol horde.
Iraq
Iraq - The Mongol Invasion
Iraq
In the early years of the thirteenth century, a powerful Mongol
leader named Temujin brought together a majority of the Mongol tribes
and led them on a devastating sweep through China. At about this time,
he changed his name to Chinggis (Genghis) Khan, meaning "World
Conqueror." In 1219 he turned his force of 700,000 west and quickly
devastated Bokhara, Samarkand, Balkh, Merv (all in what is now the
Soviet Union), and Neyshabur (in present-day Iran), where he slaughtered
every living thing. Before his death in 1227, Chinnggis Khan, pillaging
and burning cities along the way, had reached western Azarbaijan in
Iran. After Chinggis's death, the area enjoyed a brief respite that
ended with the arrival of Hulagu Khan (1217-65), Chinggis's grandson. In
1258 he seized Baghdad and killed the last Abbasid caliph. While in
Baghdad, Hulagu made a pyramid of the skulls of Baghdad's scholars,
religious leaders, and poets, and he deliberately destroyed what
remained of Iraq's canal headworks. The material and artistic production
of centuries was swept away. Iraq became a neglected frontier province
ruled from the Mongol capital of Tabriz in Iran.
After the death in 1335 of the last great Mongol khan, Abu Said (also
known as Bahadur the Brave), a period of political confusion ensued in
Iraq until a local petty dynasty, the Jalayirids, seized power. The
Jalayirids ruled until the beginning of the fifteenth century. Jalayirid
rule was abruptly checked by the rising power of a Mongol, Tamerlane (or
Timur the Lame, 1336-1405), who had been atabeg of the reigning prince
of Samarkand. In 1401 he sacked Baghdad and massacred many of its
inhabitants. Tamerlane killed thousands of Iraqis and devastated
hundreds of towns. Like Hulagu, Tamerlane had a penchant for building
pyramids of skulls. Despite his showy display of Sunni piety,
Tamerlane's rule virtually extinguished Islamic scholarship and Islamic
arts everywhere except in his capital, Samarkand.
In Iraq, political chaos, severe economic depression, and social
disintegration followed in the wake of the Mongol invasions. Baghdad,
long a center of trade, rapidly lost its commercial importance. Basra,
which had been a key transit point for seaborne commerce, was
circumvented after the Portuguese discovered a shorter route around the
Cape of Good Hope. In agriculture, Iraq's once-extensive irrigation
system fell into disrepair, creating swamps and marshes at the edge of
the delta and dry, uncultivated steppes farther out. The rapid
deterioration of settled agriculture led to the growth of tribally based
pastoral nomadism. By the end of the Mongol period, the focus of Iraqi
history had shifted from the urbanbased Abbasid culture to the tribes of
the river valleys, where it would remain until well into the twentieth
century.
Iraq
Iraq - THE OTTOMAN PERIOD, 1534-1918
Iraq
From the sixteenth to the twentieth centuries, the course of Iraqi
history was affected by the continuing conflicts between the Safavid
Empire in Iran and the Ottoman Turks. The Safavids, who were the first
to declare Shia Islam the official religion of Iran, sought to control
Iraq both because of the Shia holy places at An Najaf and Karbala and
because Baghdad, the seat of the old Abbasid Empire, had great symbolic
value. The Ottomans, fearing that Shia Islam would spread to Anatolia
(Asia Minor), sought to maintain Iraq as a Sunni-controlled buffer
state. In 1509 the Safavids, led by Ismail Shah (1502-24), conquered
Iraq, thereby initiating a series of protracted battles with the
Ottomans. In 1514 Sultan Selim the Grim attacked Ismail's forces and in
1535 the Ottomans, led by Sultan Suleyman the Magnificent (1520-66),
conquered Baghdad from the Safavids. The Safavids reconquered Baghdad in
1623 under the leadership of Shah Abbas (1587-1629), but they were
expelled in 1638 after a series of brilliant military maneuvers by the
dynamic Ottoman sultan, Murad IV.
The major impact of the Safavid-Ottoman conflict on Iraqi history was
the deepening of the Shia-Sunni rift. Both the Ottomans and the Safavids
used Sunni and Shia Islam respectively to mobilize domestic support.
Thus, Iraq's Sunni population suffered immeasurably during the brief
Safavid reign (1623-38), while Iraq's Shias were excluded from power
altogether during the longer period of Ottoman supremacy (1638-1916).
During the Ottoman period, the Sunnis gained the administrative
experience that would allow them to monopolize political power in the
twentieth century. The Sunnis were able to take advantage of new
economic and educational opportunities while the Shias, frozen out of
the political process, remained politically impotent and economically
depressed. The Shia-Sunni rift continued as an important element of
Iraqi social structure in the 1980s.
By the seventeenth century, the frequent conflicts with the Safavids
had sapped the strength of the Ottoman Empire and had weakened its
control over its provinces. In Iraq, tribal authority once again
dominated; the history of nineteenth-century Iraq is a chronicle of
tribal migrations and of conflict. The nomadic population swelled with
the influx of beduins from Najd, in the Arabian Peninsula. Beduin raids
on settled areas became impossible to curb. In the interior, the large
and powerful Muntafiq tribal confederation took shape under the
leadership of the Sunni Saadun family of Mecca. In the desert southwest,
the Shammar--one of the biggest tribal confederations of the Arabian
Peninsula--entered the Syrian desert and clashed with the Anayzah
confederation. On the lower Tigris near Al Amarah, a new tribal
confederation, the Bani Lam, took root. In the north, the Kurdish Baban
Dynasty emerged and organized Kurdish resistance. The resistance made it
impossible for the Ottomans to maintain even nominal suzerainty over
Iraqi Kurdistan (land of the Kurds). Between 1625 and 1668, and from
1694 to 1701, local shaykhs ruled Al Basrah and the marshlands, home of
the Madan (Marsh Arabs). The powerful shaykhs basically ignored the
Ottoman governor of Baghdad.
The cycle of tribal warfare and of deteriorating urban life that
began in the thirteenth century with the Mongol invasions was
temporarily reversed with the reemergence of the Mamluks. In the early
eighteenth century, the Mamluks began asserting authority apart from the
Ottomans. Extending their rule first over Basra, the Mamluks eventually
controlled the Tigris and Euphrates river valleys from the Persian Gulf
to the foothills of Kurdistan. For the most part, the Mamluks were able
administrators, and their rule was marked by political stability and by
economic revival. The greatest of the Mamluk leaders, Suleyman the II
(1780-1802), made great strides in imposing the rule of law. The last
Mamluk leader, Daud (1816-31), initiated important modernization
programs that included clearing canals, establishing industries,
training a 20,000-man army, and starting a printing press.
The Mamluk period ended in 1831, when a severe flood and plague
devastated Baghdad, enabling the Ottoman sultan, Mahmud II, to reassert
Ottoman sovereignty over Iraq. Ottoman rule was unstable; Baghdad, for
example, had more than ten governors between 1831 and 1869. In 1869,
however, the Ottomans regained authority when the reform-minded Midhat
Pasha was appointed governor of Baghdad. Midhat immediately set out to
modernize Iraq on the Western model. The primary objectives of Midhat's
reforms, called the tanzimat, were to reorganize the army, to
create codes of criminal and commercial law, to secularize the school
system, and to improve provincial administration. He created provincial
representative assemblies to assist the governor, and he set up elected
municipal councils in the major cities. Staffed largely by Iraqi
notables with no strong ties to the masses, the new offices nonetheless
helped a group of Iraqis gain administrative experience.
By establishing government agencies in the cities and by attempting
to settle the tribes, Midhat altered the tribal-urban balance of power,
which since the thirteenth century had been largely in favor of the
tribes. The most important element of Midhat's plan to extend Ottoman
authority into the countryside was the 1858 TAPU land law (named after
the initials of the government office issuing it). The new land reform
replaced the feudal system of land holdings and tax farms with legally
sanctioned property rights. It was designed both to induce tribal
shaykhs to settle and to give them a stake in the existing political
order. In practice, the TAPU laws enabled the tribal shaykhs to become
large landowners; tribesmen, fearing that the new law was an attempt to
collect taxes more effectively or to impose conscription, registered
community-owned tribal lands in their shaykhs' names or sold them
outright to urban speculators. As a result, tribal shaykhs gradually
were transformed into profit-seeking landlords while their tribesmen
were relegated to the role of impoverished sharecroppers.
Midhat also attempted to replace Iraq's clerically run Islamic school
system with a more secular educational system. The new, secular schools
provided a channel of upward social mobility to children of all classes,
and they led slowly to the growth of an Iraqi intelligentsia. They also
introduced students for the first time to Western languages and
disciplines.
The introduction of Western disciplines in the schools accompanied a
greater Western political and economic presence in Iraq. The British had
established a consulate at Baghdad in 1802, and a French consulate
followed shortly thereafter. European interest in modernizing Iraq to
facilitate Western commercial interests coincided with the Ottoman
reforms. Steamboats appeared on the rivers in 1836, the telegraph was
introduced in 1861, and the Suez Canal was opened in 1869, providing
Iraq with greater access to European markets. The landowning tribal
shaykhs began to export cash crops to the capitalist markets of the
West.
In 1908 a new ruling clique, the Young Turks, took power in Istanbul.
The Young Turks aimed at making the Ottoman Empire a unified
nation-state based on Western models. They stressed secular politics and
patriotism over the pan-Islamic ideology preached by Sultan Abd al
Hamid. They reintroduced the 1876 constitution (this Ottoman
constitution set forth the rights of the ruler and the ruled, but it
derived from the ruler and has been called as at best an
"attenuated autocracy,"), held elections throughout the
empire, and reopened parliament. Although the Iraqi delegates
represented only the well- established families of Baghdad, their
parliamentary experience in Istanbul proved to be an important
introduction to self- government.
Most important to the history of Iraq, the Young Turks aggressively
pursued a "Turkification" policy that alienated the nascent
Iraqi intelligentsia and set in motion a fledgling Arab nationalist
movement. Encouraged by the Young Turks' Revolution of 1908,
nationalists in Iraq stepped up their political activity. Iraqi
nationalists met in Cairo with the Ottoman Decentralization Party, and
some Iraqis joined the Young Arab Society, which moved to Beirut in
1913. Because of its greater exposure to Westerners who encouraged the
nationalists, Basra became the center from which Iraqi nationalists
began to demand a measure of autonomy. After nearly 400 years under
Ottoman rule, Iraq was ill-prepared to form a nation-state. The Ottomans
had failed to control Iraq's rebellious tribal domains, and even in the
cities their authority was tenuous. The Ottomans' inability to provide
security led to the growth of autonomous, self- contained communities.
As a result, Iraq entered the twentieth century beset by a complex web
of social conflicts that seriously impeded the process of building a
modern state.
The oldest and most deeply ingrained conflict was the competition
between the tribes and the cities for control over the food-producing
flatlands of the Tigris and the Euphrates rivers. The centralization
policies of the Sublime Porte (Ottoman government), especially in the
nineteenth century, constituted a direct threat to the nomadic structure
and the fierce fighting spirit of the tribes. In addition to
tribal-urban conflicts, the tribes fought among themselves, and there
was a fairly rigid hierarchy between the most powerful tribes, the
so-called "people of the camel," and the weaker tribes that
included the "people of the sheep," marshdwellers, and
peasants. The cities also were sharply divided, both according to
occupation and along religious lines. The various guilds resided in
distinct, autonomous areas, and Shia and Sunni Muslims rarely
intermingled. The territory that eventually became the state of Iraq was
beset, furthermore, by regional differences in orientation; Mosul in the
north had historically looked to Syria and to Turkey, whereas Baghdad
and the Shia holy cities had maintained close ties with Iran and with
the people of the western and southwestern deserts.
Although Ottoman weakness had allowed Iraq's self-contained
communities to grow stronger, the modernization initiated by the Sublime
Porte tended to break down traditional autonomous groupings and to
create a new social order. Beginning with the tanzimat reforms
in 1869, Iraq's for the most part subsistence economy slowly was
transformed into a market economy based on money and tied to the world
capitalist market. Social status traditionally had been determined by
noble lineage, by fighting prowess, and by knowledge of religion. With
the advent of capitalism, social status increasingly was determined by
property ownership and by the accumulation of wealth. Most disruptive in
this regard was the TAPU land reform of 1858. Concomitantly, Western
social and economic penetration increased; for example, Iraq's
traditional crafts and craftsmen gradually were displaced by
mass-produced British machine-made textiles.
The final Ottoman legacy in Iraq is related to the policies of the
Young Turks and to the creation of a small but vocal Iraqi
intelligentsia. Faced with the rapidly encroaching West, the Young Turks
attempted to centralize the empire by imposing upon it the Turkish
language and culture and by clamping down on newly won political
freedoms. These Turkification policies alienated many of the
Ottoman-trained intelligentsia who had originally aligned themselves
with the Young Turks in the hope of obtaining greater Arab autonomy.
Despite its relatively small size, the nascent Iraqi intelligentsia
formed several secret nationalist societies. The most important of these
societies was Al Ahd (the Covenant), whose membership was drawn almost
entirely from Iraqi officers in the Ottoman army. Membership in Al Ahd
spread rapidly in Baghdad and in Mosul, growing to 4,000 by the outbreak
of World War I. Despite the existence of Al Ahd and of other, smaller,
nationalist societies, Iraqi nationalism was still mainly the concern of
educated Arabs from the upper and the middle classes.
Iraq
Iraq - WORLD WAR I AND THE BRITISH MANDATE
Iraq
By the beginning of the twentieth century, the Ottoman territories
had become the focus of European power politics. During the previous
century, enfeebled Ottoman rule had invited intense competition among
European powers for commercial benefits and for spheres of influence.
British interest in Iraq significantly increased when the Ottomans
granted concessions to Germany to construct railroad lines from Konya in
southwest Turkey to Baghdad in 1899 and from Baghdad to Basra in 1902.
The British feared that a hostile German presence in the Fertile
Crescent would threaten vital lines of communication to India via Iran
and Afghanistan, menacing British oil interests in Iran and perhaps even
India itself.
In 1914 when the British discovered that Turkey was entering the war
on the side of the Germans, British forces from India landed at Al Faw
on the Shatt al Arab and moved rapidly toward Basra. By the fall of
1915, when British forces were already well established in towns in the
south, General Charles Townshend unsuccessfully attempted to take
Baghdad. In retaliation, the Turks besieged the British garrison at Al
Kut for 140 days; in April 1916, the garrison was forced to surrender
unconditionally. The British quickly regrouped their forces, however,
and resumed their advance under General Stanley Maude in December 1916.
By March 1917 the British had captured Baghdad. Advancing northward in
the spring of 1918, the British finally took Mosul in early November. As
a result of the victory at Mosul, British authority was extended to all
the Iraqi wilayat (sing., wilayah-province) with the
exception of the Kurdish highlands bordering Turkey and Iran, the land
alongside the Euphrates from Baghdad south to An Nasiriyah, and the Shia
cities of Karbala and An Najaf.
On capturing Baghdad, General Maude proclaimed that Britain intended
to return to Iraq some control of its own affairs. He stressed that this
step would pave the way for ending the alien rule that the Iraqis had
experienced since the latter days of the Abbasid caliphate. The
proclamation was in accordance with the encouragement the British had
given to Arab nationalists, such as Jafar al Askari; his brother-in-law,
Nuri as Said; and Jamil al Midfai, who sought emancipation from Ottoman
rule. The nationa- lists had supported the Allied powers in expectation
of both the Ottoman defeat and the freedom many nationalists assumed
would come with an Allied victory.
During the war, events in Iraq were greatly influenced by the
Hashimite family of Husayn ibn Ali, sharif of Mecca, who claimed descent
from the family of the Prophet Muhammad. Aspiring to become king of an
independent Arab kingdom, Husayn had broken with the Ottomans, to whom
he had been vassal, and had thrown in his lot with the British. Anxious
for his support, the British gave Husayn reason to believe that he would
have their endorsement when the war ended. Accordingly, Husayn and his
sons led the June 1916 Arab Revolt, marching northward in conjunction
with the British into Transjordan, Palestine, and Syria.
Anticipating the fulfillment of Allied pledges, Husayn's son, Prince
Faisal (who was later to become modern Iraq's first king), arrived in
Paris in 1919 as the chief spokesman for the Arab cause. Much to his
disappointment, Faisal found that the Allied powers were less than
enthusiastic about Arab independence.
At the 1919 Paris Peace Conference, under Article 22 of the League of
Nations Covenant, Iraq was formally made a Class A mandate entrusted to
Britain. This award was completed on April 25, 1920, at the San Remo
Conference in Italy. Palestine also was placed under British mandate,
and Syria was placed under French mandate. Faisal, who had been
proclaimed king of Syria by a Syrian national congress in Damascus in
March 1920, was ejected by the French in July of the same year.
The civil government of postwar Iraq was headed originally by the
high commissioner, Sir Percy Cox, and his deputy, Colonel Arnold Talbot
Wilson. The British were confronted with Iraq's age-old problems,
compounded by some new ones. Villagers demanded that the tribes be
restrained, and tribes demanded that their titles to tribal territories
be extended and confirmed. Merchants demanded more effective legal
procedures, courts, and laws to protect their activities and interests.
Municipal authorities appealed for defined powers and grants-in-aid in
addition to the establishment of public health and education facilities.
Landlords pressed for grants of land, for the building of canals and
roads, and for the provision of tested seeds and livestock.
The holy cities of An Najaf and Karbala and their satellite tribes
were in a state of near anarchy. British reprisals after the murder of a
British officer in An Najaf failed to restore order. The Anayzah, the
Shammar, and the Jubur tribes of the western desert were beset by
violent infighting. British adminis- tration had yet to be established
in the mountains of Kurdistan. Meanwhile, from the Hakkari Mountains
beyond Iraq's northern frontier and from the plains of Urmia in Iran,
thousands of Assyrians began to pour into Iraqi territory seeking refuge
from Turkish savagery. The most striking problem facing the British was
the growing anger of the nationalists, who felt betrayed at being
accorded mandate status. The nationalists soon came to view the mandate
as a flimsy disguise for colonialism. The experienced Cox delegated
governance of the country to Wilson while he served in Persia between
April 1918 and October 1920. The younger man governed Iraq with the kind
of paternalism that had characterized British rule in India. Impatient
to establish an efficient administration, Wilson used experienced
Indians to staff subordinate positions within his administration. The
exclusion of Iraqis from administrative posts added humiliation to Iraqi
discontent.
Three important anticolonial secret societies had been formed in Iraq
during 1918 and 1919. At An Najaf, Jamiyat an Nahda al Islamiya (The
League of the Islamic Awakening) was organized; its numerous and varied
members included ulama (religious leaders), journalists, landlords, and
tribal leaders. Members of the Jamiyat assassinated a British officer in
the hope that the killing would act as a catalyst for a general
rebellion at Iraq's other holy city, Karbala. Al Jamiya al Wataniya al
Islamiya (The Muslim National League) was formed with the object of
organizing and mobilizing the population for major resistance. In
February 1919, in Baghdad, a coalition of Shia merchants, Sunni teachers
and civil servants, Sunni and Shia ulama, and Iraqi officers formed the
Haras al Istiqlal (The Guardians of Independence). The Istiqlal had
member groups in Karbala, An Najaf, Al Kut, and Al Hillah.
Local outbreaks against British rule had occurred even before the
news reached Iraq that the country had been given only mandate status.
Upon the death of an important Shia mujtahid (religious
scholar) in early May 1920, Sunni and Shia ulama temporarily put aside
their differences as the memorial services metamorphosed into political
rallies. Ramadan, the Islamic month of fasting, began later in that
month; once again, through nationalistic poetry and oratory, religious
leaders exhorted the people to throw off the bonds of imperialism.
Violent demonstrations and strikes followed the British arrest of
several leaders.
When the news of the mandate reached Iraq in late May, a group of
Iraqi delegates met with Wilson and demanded independence. Wilson
dismissed them as a "handful of ungrateful politicians."
Nationalist political activity was stepped up, and the grand mujtahid
of Karbala, Imam Shirazi, and his son, Mirza Muhammad Riza, began to
organize the effort in earnest. Arab flags were made and distributed,
and pamphlets were handed out urging the tribes to prepare for revolt.
Muhammad Riza acted as liaison among insurgents in An Najaf and in
Karbala, and the tribal confederations. Shirazi then issued a fatwa
(religious ruling), pointing out that it was against Islamic law for
Muslims to countenance being ruled by non-Muslims, and he called for a
jihad against the British. By July 1920, Mosul was in rebellion against
British rule, and the insurrection moved south down the Euphrates River
valley. The southern tribes, who cherished their long-held political
autonomy, needed little inducement to join in the fray. They did not
cooperate in an organized effort against the British, however, which
limited the effect of the revolt. The country was in a state of anarchy
for three months; the British restored order only with great difficulty
and with the assistance of Royal Air Force bombers. British forces were
obliged to send for reinforcements from India and from Iran.
Ath Thawra al Iraqiyya al Kubra, or The Great Iraqi Revolution (as
the 1920 rebellion is called), was a watershed event in contemporary
Iraqi history. For the first time, Sunnis and Shias, tribes and cities,
were brought together in a common effort. In the opinion of Hanna
Batatu, author of a seminal work on Iraq, the building of a nation-state
in Iraq depended upon two major factors: the integration of Shias and
Sunnis into the new body politic and the successful resolution of the
age-old conflicts between the tribes and the riverine cities and among
the tribes themselves over the food-producing flatlands of the Tigris
and the Euphrates. The 1920 rebellion brought these groups together, if
only briefly; this constituted an important first step in the long and
arduous process of forging a nation-state out of Iraq's conflict-ridden
social structure.
The 1920 revolt had been very costly to the British in both manpower
and money. Whitehall was under domestic pressure to devise a formula
that would provide the maximum control over Iraq at the least cost to
the British taxpayer. The British replaced the military regime with a
provisional Arab government, assisted by British advisers and answerable
to the supreme authority of the high commissioner for Iraq, Cox. The new
administration provided a channel of communication between the British
and the restive population, and it gave Iraqi leaders an opportunity to
prepare for eventual self-government. The provisional government was
aided by the large number of trained Iraqi administrators who returned
home when the French ejected Faisal from Syria. Like earlier Iraqi
governments, however, the provisional government was composed chiefly of
Sunni Arabs; once again the Shias were underrepresented.
At the Cairo Conference of 1921, the British set the parameters for
Iraqi political life that were to continue until the 1958 revolution;
they chose Faisal as Iraq's first King; they established an indigenous
Iraqi army; and they proposed a new treaty. To confirm Faisal as Iraq's
first monarch, a one-question plebiscite was carefully arranged that had
a return of 96 percent in his favor. The British saw in Faisal a leader
who possessed sufficient nationalist and Islamic credentials to have
broad appeal, but who also was vulnerable enough to remain dependent on
their support. Faisal traced his descent from the family of the Prophet
Muhammad, and his ancestors had held political authority in the holy
cities of Mecca and Medina since the tenth century. The British believed
that these credentials would satisfy traditional Arab standards of
political legitimacy; moreover, the British thought that Faisal would be
accepted by the growing Iraqi nationalist movement because of his role
in the 1916 revolt against the Turks, his achievements as a leader of
the Arab emancipation movement, and his general leadership qualities.
As a counterforce to the nationalistic inclinations of the monarchy
and as a means of insuring the king's dependence, the British cultivated
the tribal shaykhs, whose power had been waning since the end of the
nineteenth century. While the new king sought to create a national
consciousness, to strengthen the institutions of the emerging state, and
especially to create a national military, the tribal shaykhs supported a
fragmented community and sought to weaken the coercive power of the
state. A major goal of the British policy was to keep the monarchy
stronger than any one tribe but weaker than a coalition of tribes so
that British power would ultimately be decisive in arbitrating disputes
between the two.
Ultimately, the British-created monarchy suffered from a chronic
legitimacy crisis: the concept of a monarchy was alien to Iraq. Despite
his Islamic and pan-Arab credentials, Faisal was not an Iraqi, and, no
matter how effectively he ruled, Iraqis saw the monarchy as a British
creation. The continuing inability of the government to gain the
confidence of the people fueled political instability well into the
1970s.
The British decision at the Cairo Conference to establish an
indigenous Iraqi army was significant. In Iraq, as in most of the
developing world, the military establishment has been the best organized
institution in an otherwise weak political system. Thus, while Iraq's
body politic crumbled under immense political and economic pressure
throughout the monarchic period, the military gained increasing power
and influence; moreover, because the officers in the new army were by
necessity Sunnis who had served under the Ottomans, while the lower
ranks were predominantly filled by Shia tribal elements, Sunni dominance
in the military was preserved.
The final major decision taken at the Cairo Conference related to the
new Anglo-Iraqi Treaty. Faisal was under pressure from the nationalists
and the anti-British mujtahids of An Najaf and Karbala to limit
both British influence in Iraq and the duration of the treaty.
Recognizing that the monarchy depended on British support--and wishing
to avoid a repetition of his experience in Syria--Faisal maintained a
moderate approach in dealing with Britain. The twenty-year treaty, which
was ratified in October 1922, stated that the king would heed British
advice on all matters affecting British interests and on fiscal policy
as long as Iraq was in debt to Britain, and that British officials would
be appointed to specified posts in eighteen departments to act as
advisers and inspectors. A subsequent financial agreement, which
significantly increased the financial burden on Iraq, required Iraq to
pay half the cost of supporting British resident officials, among other
expenses. British obligations under the new treaty included providing
various kinds of aid, notably military assistance, and proposing Iraq
for membership in the League of Nations at the earliest moment. In
effect, the treaty ensured that Iraq would remain politically and
economically dependent on Britain. While unable to prevent the treaty,
Faisal clearly felt that the British had gone back on their promises to
him.
After the treaty had been signed, Iraq readied itself for the
country-wide elections that had been provided for in the May 1922
Electoral Law. There were important changes in the government at this
time. Cox resigned his position as high commissioner and was replaced by
Sir Henry Dobbs; Iraq's aging prime minister, Abd ar Rahman al Gailani,
stepped down and was replaced by Abd al Muhsin as Saadun. In April 1923,
Saadun signed a protocol that shortened the treaty period to four years.
As a result of the elections, however, Saadun was replaced by Jafar al
Askari, a veteran of the Arab Revolt and an early supporter of Faisal.
The elected Constituent Assembly met for the first time in March
1924, and it formally ratified the treaty despite strong (and sometimes
physical) opposition on the part of many in the assembly. The assembly
also accepted the Organic Law that declared Iraq to be a sovereign state
with a representative system of government and a hereditary
constitutional monarchy. The newly ratified constitution-- which, along
with the treaty, had been hotly debated--legislated an important British
role in Iraqi affairs. The major issue at stake in the constitutional
debate revolved around the powers of the monarchy. In the final draft,
British interests prevailed, and the monarchy was granted wide-ranging
powers that included the right to confirm all laws, to call for a
general election, to prorogue parliament, and to issue ordinances for
the fulfillment of treaty obligations without parliamentary sanctions.
Like the treaty, the constitution provided the British with a means of
indirect control in Iraq.
After the Anglo-Iraqi Treaty was ratified, the most pressing issue
confronting the newly established constitutional monarchy was the
question of boundaries, especially in the former Ottoman wilayah
of Mosul, now known as Mosul Province. The status of Mosul Province was
complicated by two factors, the British desire to gain oil concessions
and the existence of a majority Kurdish population that was seeking
independence apart from either Iraq or Turkey. According to the Treaty
of Sevres, concluded in 1920 with the Ottoman Sultan, Mosul was to be
part of an autonomous Kurdish state. The treaty was scrapped, however,
when nationalist leader Mustafa Kamal (1881-1938--also known as Atat�rk)
came to power in Turkey and established control over the Kurdish areas
in eastern Turkey. In 1923, after two failed British attempts to
establish an autonomous Kurdish province, London decided to include the
Kurds in the new Iraqi state with the proviso that Kurds would hold
government positions in Kurdish areas and that the Kurdish language
would be preserved. The British decision to include Mosul in Iraq was
based largely on their belief that the area contained large oil
deposits.
Before the collapse of the Ottoman Empire, the British- controlled
Turkish Petroleum Company (TPC) had held concessionary rights to the
Mosul wilayah. Under the 1916 Sykes-Picot Agreement--an
agreement in 1916 between Britain and France that delineated future
control of the Middle East--the area would have fallen under French
influence. In 1919, however, the French relinquished their claims to
Mosul under the terms of the Long- Berenger Agreement. The 1919
agreement granted the French a 25 percent share in the TPC as
compensation.
Beginning in 1923, British and Iraqi negotiators held acrimonious
discussions over the new oil concession. The major obstacle was Iraq's
insistence on a 20 percent equity participation in the company; this
figure had been included in the original TPC concession to the Turks and
had been agreed upon at San Remo for the Iraqis. In the end, despite
strong nationalist sentiments against the concession agreement, the
Iraqi negotiators acquiesced to it. The League of Nations was soon to
vote on the disposition of Mosul, and the Iraqis feared that, without
British support, Iraq would lose the area to Turkey. In March 1925, an
agreement was concluded that contained none of the Iraqi demands. The
TPC, now renamed the Iraq Petroleum Company (IPC), was granted a
concession for a period of seventy-five years.
In 1925 the League of Nations decided that Mosul Province would be
considered a part of Iraq, but it also suggested that the Anglo-Iraqi
Treaty be extended from four to twenty-five years as a protection for
the Kurdish minority, who intensely distrusted the Iraqi government. The
Iraqis also were to give due regard to Kurdish sensibilities in matters
of culture and of language. Although reluctant to do so, the Iraqi
assembly ratified the treaty in January 1926. Turkey was eventually
reconciled to the loss by being promised one-tenth of any oil revenues
that might accrue in the area, and a tripartite Anglo-Turco-Iraqi treaty
was signed in July 1926. This settlement was to have important
repercussions, both positive and negative, for the future of Iraq. Vast
oil revenues would accrue from the Mosul Province, but the inclusion of
a large number of well-armed and restless Kurds in Iraqi territory would
continue to plague Iraqi governments.
With the signing of the Anglo-Iraqi Treaty and the settling of the
Mosul question, Iraqi politics took on a new dynamic. The emerging class
of Sunni and Shia landowning tribal shaykhs vied for positions of power
with wealthy and prestigious urban-based Sunni families and with
Ottoman-trained army officers and bureaucrats. Because Iraq's newly
established political institutions were the creation of a foreign power,
and because the concept of democratic government had no precedent in
Iraqi history, the politicians in Baghdad lacked legitimacy and never
developed deeply rooted constituencies. Thus, despite a constitution and
an elected assembly, Iraqi politics was more a shifting alliance of
important personalities and cliques than a democracy in the Western
sense. The absence of broadly based political institutions inhibited the
early nationalist movement's ability to make deep inroads into Iraq's
diverse social structure. Thus, despite the widely felt resentment at
Iraq's mandate status, the burgeoning nationalist movement was largely
ineffective.
Nonetheless, through the late 1920s, the nationalists persisted in
opposing the Anglo-Iraqi Treaty and in demanding independence. A treaty
more favorable to the Iraqis was presented in December 1927. It remained
unratified, however, because of nationalist demands for an unconditional
promise of independence. This promise eventually was made by the new
high commissioner, Sir Gilbert Clayton, in 1929, but the confusion
occasioned by the sudden death of Clayton and by the suicide of Abd al
Muhsin as Saadun, the most powerful Iraqi advocate of the treaty,
delayed the writing of a new treaty. In June 1929, the nationalists
received their first positive response from London when a newly elected
Labour Party government announced its intention to support Iraq's
admission to the League of Nations in 1932 and to negotiate a new treaty
recognizing Iraq's independence.
Faisal's closest adviser (and soon-to-be Iraqi strongman), Nuri as
Said, carried out the treaty negotiations. Despite widespread
opposition, Nuri as Said was able to force the treaty through
parliament. The new Anglo-Iraqi Treaty was signed in June 1930. It
provided for a "close alliance," for "full and frank
consultations between the two countries in all matters of foreign
policy," and for mutual assistance in case of war. Iraq granted the
British the use of air bases near Basra and at Al Habbaniyah and the
right to move troops across the country. The treaty, of twenty-five
years' duration, was to come into force upon Iraq's admission to the
League of Nations. The terms of the treaty gained Nuri as Said favor in
British eyes but discredited him in the eyes of the Iraqi nationalists,
who vehemently opposed its lengthy duration and the leasing of air
bases. The Kurds and the Assyrians also opposed the treaty because it
offered no guarantees for their status in the new country.
Iraq
Iraq - IRAQ AS AN INDEPENDENT MONARCHY
Iraq
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. 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.
Iraq
Iraq - REPUBLICAN IRAQ
Iraq
The Hashimite monarchy was overthrown on July 14, 1958, in a swift,
predawn coup executed by officers of the Nineteenth Brigade under the
leadership of Brigadier Abd al Karim Qasim and Colonel Abd as Salaam
Arif. The coup was triggered when King Hussein, fearing that an
anti-Western revolt in Lebanon might spread to Jordan, requested Iraqi
assistance. Instead of moving toward Jordan, however, Colonel Arif led a
battalion into Baghdad and immediately proclaimed a new republic and the
end of the old regime. The July 14 Revolution met virtually no
opposition and proclamations of the revolution brought crowds of people
into the streets of Baghdad cheering for the deaths of Iraq's two
"strong men," Nuri as Said and Abd al Ilah. King Faisal II and
Abd al Ilah were executed, as were many others in the royal family. Nuri
as Said also was killed after attempting to escape disguised as a veiled
woman. In the ensuing mob demonstrations against the old order, angry
crowds severely damaged the British embassy.
Put in its historical context, the July 14 Revolution was the
culmination of a series of uprisings and coup attempts that began with
the 1936 Bakr Sidqi coup and included the 1941 Rashid Ali military
movement, the 1948 Wathbah Uprising, and the 1952 and 1956 protests. The
revolution radically altered Iraq's social structure, destroying the
power of the landed shaykhs and the absentee landlords while enhancing
the position of the urban workers, the peasants, and the middle class.
In altering the old power structure, however, the revolution revived
long-suppressed sectarian, tribal, and ethnic conflicts. The strongest
of these conflicts were those between Kurds and Arabs and between Sunnis
and Shias.
Despite a shared military background, the group of <"glossary.htm#Free">Free
Officers (see Glossary) that carried out the July 14 Revolution was
plagued by internal dissension. Its members lacked both a coherent
ideology and an effective organizational structure. Many of the more
senior officers resented having to take orders from Arif, their junior
in rank. A power struggle developed between Qasim and Arif over joining
the Egyptian-Syrian union. Arif's pro-Nasserite sympathies were
supported by the Baath Party, while Qasim found support for his
anti-union position in the ranks of the communists. Qasim, the more
experienced and higher ranking of the two, eventually emerged
victorious. Arif was first dismissed, then brought to trial for treason
and condemned to death in January 1959; he was subsequently pardoned in
December 1962.
Whereas he implemented many reforms that favored the poor, Qasim was
primarily a centrist in outlook, proposing to improve the lot of the
poor while not dispossessing the wealthy. In part, his ambiguous
policies were a product of his lack of a solid base of support,
especially in the military. Unlike the bulk of military officers, Qasim
did not come from the Arab Sunni northwestern towns nor did he share
their enthusiasm for pan- Arabism: he was of mixed Sunni-Shia parentage
from southeastern Iraq. Qasim's ability to remain in power depended,
therefore, on a skillful balancing of the communists and the
pan-Arabists. For most of his tenure, Qasim sought to counterbalance the
growing pan-Arab trend in the military by supporting the communists who
controlled the streets. He authorized the formation of a
communist-controlled militia, the People's Resistance Force, and he
freed all communist prisoners.
Qasim's economic policies reflected his poor origins and his ties
with the communists. He permitted trade unions, improved workers'
conditions, and implemented land reform aimed at dismantling the old
feudal structure of the countryside. Qasim also challenged the existing
profit-sharing arrangements with the oil companies. On December 11,
1961, he passed Public Law 80, which dispossessed the IPC of 99.5
percent of its concession area, leaving it to operate only in those
areas currently in production. The new arrangement significantly
increased oil revenues accruing to the government. Qasim also announced
the establishment of an Iraq National Oil Company (INOC) to exploit the
new territory.
In March 1959, a group of disgruntled Free Officers, who came from
conservative, well-known, Arab Sunni families and who opposed Qasim's
increasing links with the communists, attempted a coup. Aware of the
planned coup, Qasim had his communist allies mobilize 250,000 of their
supporters in Mosul. The ill-planned coup attempt never really
materialized and, in its aftermath, the communists massacred
nationalists and some well-to-do Mosul families, leaving deep scars that
proved to be very slow to heal.
Throughout 1959 the ranks of the ICP swelled as the party increased
its presence in both the military and the government. In 1959 Qasim
reestablished diplomatic relations between Iraq and Moscow, an extensive
Iraqi-Soviet economic agreement was signed, and arms deliveries began.
With communist fortunes riding high, another large-scale show of force
was planned in Kirkuk, where a significant number of Kurds (many of them
either members of, or sympathetic to, the ICP) lived in neighborhoods
contiguous to a Turkoman upper class. In Kirkuk, however, communist
rallies got out of hand. A bloody battle ensued, and the Kurds looted
and killed many Turkomans. The communist-initiated violence at Kirkuk
led Qasim to crack down on the organization, by arresting some of the
more unruly rank-and-file members and by temporarily suspending the
People's Resistance Force. Following the events at Mosul and at Kirkuk,
the Baath and its leader, Fuad Rikabi, decided that the only way to
dislodge the Qasim regime would be to kill Qasim. The future president,
Saddam Husayn, carried out the attempted assassination, which injured
Qasim but failed to kill him. Qasim reacted by softening his stance on
the communists and by suppressing the activities of the Baath and other
nationalist parties. The renewed communist-Qasim relationship did not
last long, however. Throughout 1960 and 1961, sensing that the
communists had become too strong, Qasim again moved against the party by
eliminating members from sensitive government positions, by cracking
down on trade unions and on peasant associations, and by shutting down
the communist press.
Qasim's divorce from the communists, his alienation from the
nationalists, his aloof manner, and his monopoly of power--he was
frequently referred to as the "sole leader"--isolated him from
a domestic power base. In 1961 his tenuous hold on power was further
weakened when the Kurds again took up arms against the central
government.
The Kurds had ardently supported the 1958 revolution. Indeed, the new
constitution put forth by Qasim and Arif had stipulated that the Kurds
and the Arabs would be equal partners in the new state. Exiled Kurdish
leaders, including Mullah Mustafa Barzani, were allowed to return.
Mutual suspicions, however, soon soured the Barzani-Qasim relationship;
in September 1961, full-scale fighting broke out between Kurdish
guerrillas and the Iraqi army. The army did not fare well against the
seasoned Kurdish guerrillas, many of whom had deserted from the army. By
the spring of 1962, Qasim's inability to contain the Kurdish
insurrection had further eroded his base of power. The growing
opposition was now in a position to plot his overthrow.
Qasim's domestic problems were compounded by a number of foreign
policy crises, the foremost of which was an escalating conflict with the
shah of Iran. Although he had reined in the communists, Qasim's leftist
sympathies aroused fears in the West and in neighboring Gulf states of
an imminent communist takeover of Iraq. In April 1959, Allen Dulles, the
director of the United States Central Intelligence Agency, described the
situation in Iraq "as the most dangerous in the world." The
pro-Western shah found Qasim's communist sympathies and his claims on
Iranian Khuzestan (an area that stretched from Dezful to Ahvaz in Iran
and that contained a majority of Iranians of Arab descent) to be
anathema. In December 1959, Iraqi-Iranian relations rapidly deteriorated
when Qasim, reacting to Iran's reopening of the Shatt al Arab dispute,
nullified the 1937 agreement and claimed sovereignty over the anchorage
area near Abadan. In July 1961, Qasim further alienated the West and
pro-Western regional states by laying claim to the newly independent
state of Kuwait. When the Arab League unanimously accepted Kuwait's
membership, Iraq broke off diplomatic relations with its Arab neighbors.
Qasim was completely isolated.
In February 1963, hemmed in by regional enemies and facing Kurdish
insurrection in the north and a growing nationalist movement at home,
Qasim was overthrown. Despite the long list of enemies who opposed him
in his final days, Qasim was a hero to millions of urban poor and
impoverished peasants, many of whom rushed to his defense.
The inability of the masses to stave off the nationalist onslaught
attested to the near total divorce of the Iraqi people from the
political process. From the days of the monarchy, the legitimacy of the
political process had suffered repeated blows. The government's British
legacy, Nuri as Said's authoritarianism, and the rapid encroachment of
the military (who paid only scant homage to the institutions of state)
had eroded the people's faith in the government; furthermore, Qasim's
inability to stem the increasing ethnic, sectarian, and class-inspired
violence reflected an even deeper malaise. The unraveling of Iraq's
traditional social structure upset a precarious balance of social
forces. Centuries-old religious and sectarian hatreds now combined with
more recent class antagonisms in a volatile mix.
Iraq
Iraq - COUPS, COUP ATTEMPTS, AND FOREIGN POLICY
Iraq
The Baath Party that orchestrated the overthrow of Qasim was founded
in the early 1940s by two Syrian students, Michel Aflaq and Salah ad Din
al Bitar. Its ideological goals of socialism, freedom, and unity
reflected the deeply felt sentiments of many Iraqis who, during the
monarchy, had suffered from the economic dislocationa that followed the
breakup of the old Ottoman domain, from an extremely skewed income
distribution, and from the suppression of political freedoms. Beginning
in 1952, under the leadership of Fuad Rikabi, the party grew rapidly,
especially among the Iraqi intelligentsia. By 1958 the Baath had made
some inroads into the military. The party went through a difficult
period in 1959, however, after the Mosul and Kirkuk incidents, the
failed attempt on Qasim's life, and disillusionment with Nasser. The
Baath's major competitor throughout the Qasim period was the ICP; when
Qasim was finally overthrown, strongly pitched battles between the two
ensued. The Baath was able to consolidate its bid for power only with
the emergence of Ali Salih as Saadi as leader.
Upon assuming power, the Baath established the National Council of
Revolutionary Command (NCRC) as the highest policy- making body and
appointed Ahmad Hasan al Bakr, one of the Free Officers, as prime
minister and Arif as president. The real power, however, was held by the
party leader, Saadi. Despite the dominance of the newly established
NCRC, the Baath's hold on power was extremely tenuous. The organization
was small, with an active membership of fewer than 1,000, and it was not
well represented in the officer corps or in the army at large. Its
leadership was inexperienced, and its ideology was too vague to have any
immediate relevance to the deep-seated problems besetting Iraq in the
early 1960s. Its ambiguity of purpose had served the party well during
the Qasim era, enabling it to attract a diverse membership sharing only
a common aversion for "the sole leader." In the post-Qasim
period, that ambiguity was tearing the party asunder.
The party's lack of cohesion and lack of a coherent program had two
major effects on Baath policy. First, it led party strongman Saadi to
establish a one-party state that showed little tolerance for opposing
views. Second, in the absence of strong ideological ties, the Baath
increasingly was pervaded by cliques from the same village, town, or
tribe. This tendency became even more pronounced during the 1970s.
Troubled by internal dissension and unable to suppress a new wave of
Kurdish unrest in the north, the Baath held power for less than a year.
Most damaging was the foundering of unity talks with Nasser and the new
Baathist regime in Syria. When the unity plan collapsed, Nasser launched
a vituperative campaign challenging the legitimacy of the Baath in Iraq
and in Syria. Nasser's attacks seriously eroded the legitimacy of a
regime that had continually espoused pan-Arabism. Another factor
contributing to the party's demise was Saadi's reliance on the National
Guard- -a paramilitary force composed primarily of Baath sympathizers--
to counter the Baath's lack of support in the regular army. By
bolstering the guard, Saadi alienated the regular army. Finally, the
Baath was sharply divided between doctrinaire hard-liners, such as
Saadi, and a more pragmatic moderate wing.
With its party ranks weakened, the Baath was overthrown by Arif and a
coterie of military officers in a bloodless coup in November 1963. Upon
assuming power, Arif immediately announced that the armed forces would
manage the country. The governing core consisted of Arif; his brother,
Abd ar Rahman Arif; and his trusted colleague, Colonel Said Slaibi. Arif
was chairman of the NCRC, commander in chief of the armed forces, and
president of the republic; his brother was acting chief of staff, and
the colonel was commander of the Baghdad garrison. The Arif brothers,
Slaibi, and the majority of Arif's Twentieth Brigade were united by a
strong tribal bond as members of the Jumailah tribe.
Other groups who participated in the 1963 coup included
Nasserites--an informal group of military officers and civilians who
looked to Nasser for leadership and who desired some kind of unity with
Egypt--and Baathists in the military. By the spring of 1964, Arif had
adroitly outmaneuvered the military Baathists and had filled the top
leadership posts with civilian Nasserites. Arif and the Nasserite
officers took steps to integrate the military, economic, and political
policies of Iraq with those of Egypt; this was expected to lead to the
union of the two countries by 1966. (The United Arab Republic [UAR],
which Iraq expected to join, existed from 1958 to 1961 and consisted of
Egypt and Syria. Arif proposed that Iraq join [partly as an
anticommunist measure] but this union never occurred.) In May 1964, the
Joint Presidency Council was formed, and in December the Unified
Political Command was established to expedite the ultimate
constitutional union of the two countries. In July 1964, Arif announced
that henceforth all political parties would coalesce to form the Iraqi
Arab Socialist Union. Most important for the future, Arif adopted
Nasser's socialist program, calling for the nationalization of insurance
companies, banks, and such essential industries as steel, cement, and
construction--along with the tobacco industry, tanneries, and flour
mills. Arif's nationalization program proved to be one of the few
legacies of the proposed Egyptian-Iraqi union.
By 1965 Arif had lost his enthusiasm for the proposed union, which
had received only lukewarm support from Nasser. Arif began ousting
Nasserite officers from the government. As a result, the newly appointed
prime minister, Brigadier Arif Abd ar Razzaq, who was also a leading
Nasserite, made an unsuccessful coup attempt on September 12, 1965. In
response, President Arif curtailed Nasserite activities and appointed
fellow tribal members to positions of power. Colonel Abd ar Razzaq an
Nayif, a fellow Jumailah, became head of military intelligence. Arif
also attempted to bring more civilians into the government. He appointed
the first civilian prime minister since the days of the monarchy, Abd ar
Rahman Bazzaz. Bazzaz strongly advocated the rule of law and was
determined to end the erratic, military- dominated politics that had
characterized Iraq since 1958. He also tried to implement the First
Five-Year Economic Plan (1965-70) to streamline the bureaucracy and to
encourage private and foreign investment.
In April 1966, Arif was killed in a helicopter crash and his brother,
Major General Abd ar Rahman Arif, was installed in office with the
approval of the National Defense Council and the cabinet. Abd ar Rahman
Arif lacked the forcefulness and the political acumen of his brother;
moreover, he was dominated by the ambitious military officers who were
responsible for his appointment. The government's weak hold on the
country thus became more apparent. The most pressing issue facing the
new government was a renewed Kurdish rebellion.
The 1964 cease-fire signed by Kurdish leader Mustafa Barzani and Abd
as Salaam Arif was short-lived; by April 1965, the two sides were again
engaged in hostilities. This time military support provided by the shah
of Iran helped the Kurds win important victories over the Iraqi army.
Kurdish inroads in the north and escalating Iraqi-Iranian tensions
prompted Iraq's prime minister Bazzaz to propose a more far-reaching
settlement to the Kurdish problem. Some of the more salient points of
Bazzaz's proposal included amnesty, use of the Kurdish language in
Kurdish areas, Kurdish administration of their educational, health, and
municipal institutions, and the promise of early elections by which the
Kurds would gain proportional representation in national as well as in
provincial assemblies. When Barzani indicated that he approved of these
proposals, the Kurdish conflict appeared to have ended.
The army, however, which had opposed having Bazzaz as a civilian head
of the cabinet, feared that he would reduce their pay and privileges;
consequently, it strongly denounced reconciliation with the Kurds.
President Arif yielded to pressure and asked for Bazzaz's resignation.
This ended the rapprochement with the Kurds and led to a collapse of
civilian rule. The new prime minister was General Naji Talib, a
pro-Nasserite who had been instrumental in the 1958 Revolution and who
strongly opposed the Kurdish peace plan.
Arif also sought to further the improved relations with Iran
initiated by Bazzaz. This rapprochement was significant because it
denied the Kurds access to their traditional place of asylum, which
allowed recovery from Iraqi attacks. Arif visited Tehran in the spring
of 1967; at the conclusion of his visit, it was announced that the
countries would hold more meetings aimed at joint oil exploration in the
Naft-e Shah and Naft Khaneh border regions. They also agreed to continue
negotiations on toll collection and navigation rights on the Shatt al
Arab and on the demarcation of the Persian Gulf's continental shelf.
During the winter of 1966-67, Arif faced a crisis emanating from a
new source, Syria. The IPC transported oil from its northern fields to
Mediterranean ports via pipelines in Syria. In 1966 Damascus claimed
that the IPC had been underpaying Syria, based on their 1955 agreement.
Syria demanded back payments and immediately increased the transit fee
it charged the IPC. When the IPC did not accede to Syrian demands, Syria
cut off the flow of Iraqi oil to its Mediterranean ports. The loss of
revenue threatened to cause a severe financial crisis. It also fueled
anti-Talib forces and increased public clamor for his resignation. In
response, Talib resigned, and Arif briefly headed an extremely unsteady
group of military officers.
In the opinion of Phebe Marr, a leading authority on Iraq, on the eve
of the June 1967 War between Israel and various Arab states, the Arif
government had become little more than a collection of army officers
balancing the special interests of various economic, political, ethnic,
and sectarian groups. The non-intervention of Iraqi troops while Israel
was overtaking the Egyptian, Syrian, and Jordanian armies and was
conquering large tracts of Arab territory discredited the Arif regime in
the eyes of the masses. To stave off rising discontent, Arif reappointed
strongman Tahir Yahya as prime minister (he had first been appointed by
Arif in November 1963). Yahya's only accomplishment was to lessen Iraq's
economic dependence on the Western-owned IPC: on August 6, his
government turned over all exploitation rights in the oil-rich North
Rumailah field to the state- controlled INOC. The Arif government, however, had
lost its base of power. Lacking a coherent political platform and facing
increasing charges of corruption, the government was only hanging on.
Ultimately two disaffected Arif supporters--Colonel Abd ar Razzaq an
Nayif and Ibrahim ad Daud--were able to stage a successful coup against
Arif, and the Baath quickly capitalized on the situation. Nayif and Daud
had been part of a small group of young officers, called the Arab
Revolutionary Movement, that previously had been a major source of
support for Arif. By July 1968, however, reports of corruption and
Arif's increased reliance on the Nasserites (whom both Nayif and Daud
opposed) had alienated the two officers. Nayif and Daud acted
independently from the Baath in carrying out the coup, but lacked the
organizational backing or the grass-roots support necessary to remain in
power. In only a few weeks, the Baath had outmaneuvered Nayif and Daud,
and, for the second time in five years, had taken over control of the
government.
Iraq
Iraq - THE EMERGENCE OF SADDAM HUSAYN, 1968-79
Iraq
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.
Iraq
Iraq - THE IRAN-IRAQ CONFLICT
Iraq
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.
Iraq
Iraq - The Society and Its Environment
Iraq
IRAQI SOCIETY IS composed of sizable and distinct social groups whose
differences and divisions have been only slowly and fitfully challenged
by the emergence of a strong, centralized political regime and state
apparatus. Moreover, there are regional and environmental differences
between the scattered mountain villages whose economic base is rain-fed
grain crops and the more densely populated riverine communities to the
south that are dependent on intricate irrigation and drainage systems
for their livelihood.
There are also linguistic and ethnic differences. The most important
exception to the Arab character of Iraq is the large Kurdish minority,
estimated at 19 percent of the population, or 3,092,820 in 1987.
According to official government statistics, Turkomans and other
Turkic-speaking peoples account for only 2 to 3 percent of the
population. There was previously a large Iranian population settled
around the Shia holy cities of Karbala and An Najaf, and the southern
port city of Basra; this element was largely expelled by government
decree in 1971-72 and 1979-80, and in 1987 only an estimated 133,000 or
0.8 percent of the Iranian population remained.
Divisions along religious lines are deeprooted. Although upward of 95
percent of Iraq's population is Muslim, the community is split between Sunnis
and Shias; the latter group, a minority in the Arab world
as a whole, constitutes a majority in Iraq. Numerous observers believe
that the Shias make up between 60 and 65 percent of the inhabitants,
although the data to support this figure are not firm (official
government statistics set the number at only 55 percent). Of the
non-Muslim communities, fragmented Christian sects cannot be more than 1
or 2 percent, concentrated mainly in the governorates of Nineveh and
Dahuk. A formerly extensive Jewish community is to all practical
purposes defunct. The establishment of the State of Israel in 1948 and
the defeat of the Arab armies in 1948-49 rendered the situation of Iraqi
Jews untenable and led to a mass exodus, both to Israel and to Iran in
1950.
Just before the Iran-Iraq War, the sharp cleavage between the rural
and urban communities that formerly characterized Iraqi society had
begun to break down as a result of policies instituted by the
government. The war has accelerated this process. Large areas of the
rural south have been devastated by continuous fighting, which in turn
has triggered a massive rural migration to the capital. In the late
1980s, Iraqi and foreign observers agreed that for the nation's economic
health this flight from the countryside would have to be reversed, and
they anticipated that the government would undertake measures to
accomplish this reversal once the war ended.
Iraq
Iraq - GEOGRAPHY
Iraq
Boundaries
The border with Iran has been a continuing source of conflict and was
partially responsible for the outbreak in 1980 of the present war. The
terms of a treaty negotiated in 1937 under British auspices provided
that in one area of the Shatt al Arab the boundary would be at the low
water mark on the Iranian side. Iran subsequently insisted that the 1937
treaty was imposed on it by "British imperialist pressures,"
and that the proper boundary throughout the Shatt was the thalweg. The
matter came to a head in 1969 when Iraq, in effect, told the Iranian
government that the Shatt was an integral part of Iraqi territory and
that the waterway might be closed to Iranian shipping.
Through Algerian mediation, Iran and Iraq agreed in March 1975 to
normalize their relations, and three months later they signed a treaty
known as the Algiers Accord. The document defined the common border all
along the Shatt estuary as the thalweg. To compensate Iraq for the loss
of what formerly had been regarded as its territory, pockets of
territory along the mountain border in the central sector of its common
boundary with Iran were assigned to it. Nonetheless, in September 1980
Iraq went to war with Iran, citing among other complaints the fact that
Iran had not turned over to it the land specified in the Algiers Accord.
This problem has subsequently proved to be a stumbling block to a
negotiated settlement of the ongoing conflict.
In 1988 the boundary with Kuwait was another outstanding problem. It
was fixed in a 1913 treaty between the Ottoman Empire and British
officials acting on behalf of Kuwait's ruling family, which in 1899 had
ceded control over foreign affairs to Britain. The boundary was accepted
by Iraq when it became independent in 1932, but in the 1960s and again
in the mid-1970s, the Iraqi government advanced a claim to parts of
Kuwait. Kuwait made several representations to the Iraqis during the war
to fix the border once and for all but Baghdad has repeatedly demurred,
claiming that the issue is a potentially divisive one that could enflame
nationalist sentiment inside Iraq. Hence in 1988 it was likely that a
solution would have to wait until the war ended.
In 1922 British officials concluded the Treaty of Mohammara with Abd
al Aziz ibn Abd ar Rahman Al Saud, who in 1932 formed the Kingdom of
Saudi Arabia. The treaty provided the basic agreement for the boundary
between the eventually independent nations. Also in 1922 the two parties
agreed to the creation of the diamond-shaped Neutral Zone of
approximately 7,500 square kilometers adjacent to the western tip of
Kuwait in which neither Iraq nor Saudi Arabia would build permanent
dwellings or installations (see ______). Beduins from either country
could utilize the limited water and seasonal grazing resources of the
zone. In April 1975, an agreement signed in Baghdad fixed the borders of
the countries. Despite a rumored agreement providing for the formal
division of the Iraq-Saudi Arabia Neutral Zone, as of early 1988 such a
document had not been published. Instead, Saudi Arabia was continuing to
control oil wells in the offshore Neutral Zone and had been allocating
proceeds from Neutral Zone oil sales to Iraq as a war payment.
<>Major Geographical
Features
<>Settlement Patterns
<>Climate
Iraq
Iraq - GEOGRAPHY AND POPULATION
Iraq
Most geographers, including those of the Iraqi government, discuss
the country's geography in terms of four main zones or regions: the
desert in the west and southwest; the rolling upland between the upper
Tigris and Euphrates rivers (in Arabic the Dijlis and Furat,
respectively); the highlands in the north and northeast; and the
alluvial plain through which the Tigris and Euphrates flow.
Iraq's official statistical reports give the total land area as 438,446
square kilometers, whereas a United States Department of State
publication gives the area as 434,934 square kilometers.
The desert zone, an area lying west and southwest of the Euphrates
River, is a part of the Syrian Desert, which covers sections of Syria,
Jordan, and Saudi Arabia. The region, sparsely inhabited by pastoral
nomads, consists of a wide, stony plain interspersed with rare sandy
stretches. A widely ramified pattern of wadis--watercourses that are dry
most of the year--runs from the border to the Euphrates. Some Wadis are
over 400 kilometers long and carry brief but torrential floods during
the winter rains.
The uplands region, between the Tigris north of Samarra and the
Euphrates north of Hit, is known as Al Jazirah (the island) and is part
of a larger area that extends westward into Syria between the two rivers
and into Turkey. Water in the area flows in deeply cut valleys, and
irrigation is much more difficult than it is in the lower plain. Much of
this zone may be classified as desert.
The northeastern highlands begin just south of a line drawn from
Mosul to Kirkuk and extend to the borders with Turkey and Iran. High
ground, separated by broad, undulating steppes, gives way to mountains
ranging from 1,000 to nearly 4,000 meters near the Iranian and Turkish
borders. Except for a few valleys, the mountain area proper is suitable
only for grazing in the foothills and steppes; adequate soil and
rainfall, however, make cultivation possible. Here, too, are the great
oil fields near Mosul and Kirkuk. The northeast is the homeland of most
Iraqi Kurds.
The alluvial plain begins north of Baghdad and extends to the Persian
Gulf. Here the Tigris and Euphrates rivers lie above the level of the
plain in many places, and the whole area is a delta interlaced by the
channels of the two rivers and by irrigation canals. Intermittent lakes,
fed by the rivers in flood, also characterize southeastern Iraq. A
fairly large area (15,000 square kilometers) just above the confluence
of the two rivers at Al Qurnah and extending east of the Tigris beyond
the Iranian border is marshland, known as Hawr al Hammar, the result of
centuries of flooding and inadequate drainage. Much of it is permanent
marsh, but some parts dry out in early winter, and other parts become
marshland only in years of great flood.
Because the waters of the Tigris and Euphrates above their confluence
are heavily silt laden, irrigation and fairly frequent flooding deposit
large quantities of silty loam in much of the delta area. Windborne silt
contributes to the total deposit of sediments. It has been estimated
that the delta plains are built up at the rate of nearly twenty
centimeters in a century. In some areas, major floods lead to the
deposit in temporary lakes of as much as thirty centimeters of mud.
The Tigris and Euphrates also carry large quantities of salts. These,
too, are spread on the land by sometimes excessive irrigation and
flooding. A high water table and poor surface and subsurface drainage
tend to concentrate the salts near the surface of the soil. In general,
the salinity of the soil increases from Baghdad south to the Persian
Gulf and severely limits productivity in the region south of Al Amarah.
The salinity is reflected in the large lake in central Iraq, southwest
of Baghdad, known as Bahr al Milh (Sea of Salt). There are two other
major lakes in the country to the north of Bahr al Milh: Buhayrat ath
Tharthar and Buhayrat al Habbaniyah.
The Euphrates originates in Turkey, is augmented by the Nahr (river)
al Khabur in Syria, and enters Iraq in the northwest. Here it is fed
only by the wadis of the western desert during the winter rains. It then
winds through a gorge, which varies from two to sixteen kilometers in
width, until it flows out on the plain at Ar Ramadi. Beyond there the
Euphrates continues to the Hindiyah Barrage, which was constructed in
1914 to divert the river into the Hindiyah Channel; the present day
Shatt al Hillah had been the main channel of the Euphrates before 1914.
Below Al Kifl, the river follows two channels to As Samawah, where it
reappears as a single channel to join the Tigris at Al Qurnah.
The Tigris also rises in Turkey but is significantly augmented by
several rivers in Iraq, the most important of which are the Khabur, the
Great Zab, the Little Zab, and the Uzaym, all of which join the Tigris
above Baghdad, and the Diyala, which joins it about thirty-six
kilometers below the city. At the Kut Barrage much of the water is
diverted into the Shatt al Gharraf, which was once the main channel of
the Tigris. Water from the Tigris thus enters the Euphrates through the
Shatt al Gharraf well above the confluence of the two main channels at
Al Qurnah.
Both the Tigris and the Euphrates break into a number of channels in
the marshland area, and the flow of the rivers is substantially reduced
by the time they come together at Al Qurnah. Moreover, the swamps act as
silt traps, and the Shatt al Arab is relatively silt free as it flows
south. Below Basra, however, the Karun River enters the Shatt al Arab
from Iran, carrying large quantities of silt that present a continuous
dredging problem in maintaining a channel for ocean-going vessels to
reach the port at Basra. This problem had been superseded by a greater
obstacle to river traffic, however, namely the presence of several
sunken hulks that had been rusting in the Shatt al Arab since early in
the war.
The waters of the Tigris and Euphrates are essential to the life of
the country, but they may also threaten it. The rivers are at their
lowest level in September and October and at flood in March, April, and
May when they may carry forty times as much water as at low mark.
Moreover, one season's flood may be ten or more times as great as that
in another year. In 1954, for example, Baghdad was seriously threatened,
and dikes protecting it were nearly topped by the flooding Tigris. Since
Syria built a dam on the Euphrates, the flow of water has been
considerably diminished and flooding was no longer a problem in the
mid-1980s. In 1988 Turkey was also constructing a dam on the Euphrates
that would further restrict the water flow.
Until the mid-twentieth century, most efforts to control the waters
were primarily concerned with irrigation. Some attention was given to
problems of flood control and drainage before the revolution of July 14,
1958, but development plans in the 1960s and 1970s were increasingly
devoted to these matters, as well as to irrigation projects on the upper
reaches of the Tigris and Euphrates and the tributaries of the Tigris in
the northeast. During the war, government officials stressed to foreign
visitors that, with the conclusion of a peace settlement, problems of
irrigation and flooding would receive top priority from the government.
Iraq
Iraq - Settlement Patterns
Iraq
In the rural areas of the alluvial plain and in the lower Diyala
region, settlement almost invariably clusters near the rivers, streams,
and irrigation canals. The bases of the relationship between watercourse
and settlement have been summarized by Robert McCormick Adams, director
of the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago. He notes that
the levees laid down by streams and canals provide advantages for both
settlement and agriculture. Surface water drains more easily on the
levees' backslope, and the coarse soils of the levees are easier to
cultivate and permit better subsurface drainage. The height of the
levees gives some protection against floods and the frost that often
affect low-lying areas and may kill winter crops. Above all, those
living or cultivating on the crest of a levee have easy access to water
for irrigation and household use in a dry, hot country.
Although there are some isolated homesteads, most rural communities
are nucleated settlements rather than dispersed farmsteads; that is, the
farmer leaves his village to cultivate the fields outside it. The
pattern holds for farming communities in the Kurdish highlands of the
northeast as well as for those in the alluvial plain. The size of the
settlement varies, generally with the volume of water available for
household use and with the amount of land accessible to village
dwellers. Sometimes, particularly in the lower Tigris and Euphrates
valleys, soil salinity restricts the area of arable land and limits the
size of the community dependent on it, and it also usually results in
large unsettled and uncultivated stretches between the villages.
Fragmentary information suggests that most farmers in the alluvial
plain tend to live in villages of over 100 persons. For example, in the
mid-1970s a substantial number of the residents of Baqubah, the
administrative center and major city of Diyala Governorate, were
employed in agriculture.
The Marsh Arabs (the Madan) of the south usually live in small
clusters of two or three houses kept above water by rushes that are
constantly being replenished. Such clusters often are close together,
but access from one to another is possible only by small boat. Here and
there a few natural islands permit slightly larger clusters. Some of
these people are primarily water buffalo herders and lead a seminomadic
life. In the winter, when the waters are at a low point, they build
fairly large temporary villages. In the summer they move their herds out
of the marshes to the river banks.
The war has had its effect on the lives of these denizens of the
marshes. With much of the fighting concentrated in their areas, they
have either migrated to settled communities away from the marshes or
have been forced by government decree to relocate within the marshes.
Also, in early 1988, the marshes had become the refuge of deserters from
the Iraqi army who attempted to maintain life in the fastness of the
overgrown, desolate areas while hiding out from the authorities. These
deserters in many instances have formed into large gangs that raid the
marsh communities; this also has induced many of the marsh dwellers to
abandon their villages.
The war has also affected settlement patterns in the northern Kurdish
areas. There, the persistence of a stubborn rebellion by Kurdish
guerrillas has goaded the government into applying steadily escalating
violence against the local communities. Starting in 1984, the government
launched a scorched-earth campaign to drive a wedge between the
villagers and the guerrillas in the remote areas of two provinces of
Kurdistan in which Kurdish guerrillas were active. In the process whole
villages were torched and subsequently bulldozed, which resulted in the
Kurds flocking into the regional centers of Irbil and As Sulaymaniyah.
Also as a military precaution, the government has cleared a broad strip
of territory in the Kurdish region along the Iranian border of all its
inhabitants, hoping in this way to interdict the movement of Kurdish
guerrillas back and forth between Iran and Iraq. The majority of Kurdish
villages, however, remained intact in early 1988.
In the arid areas of Iraq to the west and south, cities and large
towns are almost invariably situated on watercourses, usually on the
major rivers or their larger tributaries. In the south this dependence
has had its disadvantages. Until the recent development of flood
control, Baghdad and other cities were subject to the threat of
inundation. Moreover, the dikes needed for protection have effectively
prevented the expansion of the urban areas in some directions. The
growth of Baghdad, for example, was restricted by dikes on its eastern
edge. The diversion of water to the Milhat ath Tharthar and the
construction of a canal transferring water from the Tigris north of
Baghdad to the Diyala River have permitted the irrigation of land
outside the limits of the dikes and the expansion of settlement.
Iraq
Iraq - Climate
Iraq
Roughly 90 percent of the annual rainfall occurs between November and
April, most of it in the winter months from December through March. The
remaining six months, particularly the hottest ones of June, July, and
August, are dry.
Except in the north and northeast, mean annual rainfall ranges
between ten and seventeen centimeters. Data available from stations in
the foothills and steppes south and southwest of the mountains suggest
mean annual rainfall between thirty-two and fifty-seven centimeters for
that area. Rainfall in the mountains is more abundant and may reach 100
centimeters a year in some places, but the terrain precludes extensive
cultivation. Cultivation on nonirrigated land is limited essentially to
the mountain valleys, foothills, and steppes, which have thirty or more
centimeters of rainfall annually. Even in this zone, however, only one
crop a year can be grown, and shortages of rain have often led to crop
failures.
Mean minimum temperatures in the winter range from near freezing
(just before dawn) in the northern and northeastern foothills and the
western desert to 2o-3� C and 4o-5� C in the alluvial plains of
southern Iraq. They rise to a mean maximum of about 15.5� C in the
western desert and the northeast, and 16.6� C in the south. In the
summer mean minimum temperatures range from about 22.2� C to about 29�
C and rise to maximums between roughly 37.7o and 43.3� C. Temperatures
sometimes fall below freezing and have fallen as low as -14.4� C at Ar
Rutbah in the western desert. They are more likely, however, to go over
46� C in the summer months, and several stations have records of over
48� C.
The summer months are marked by two kinds of wind phenomena. The
southern and southeasterly sharqi, a dry, dusty wind with
occasional gusts of eighty kilometers an hour, occurs from April to
early June and again from late September through November. It may last
for a day at the beginning and end of the season but for several days at
other times. This wind is often accompanied by violent duststorms that
may rise to heights of several thousand meters and close airports for
brief periods. From mid-June to mid-September the prevailing wind,
called the shamal, is from the north and northwest. It is a
steady wind, absent only occasionally during this period. The very dry
air brought by this shamal permits intensive sun heating of the
land surface, but the breeze has some cooling effect.
The combination of rain shortage and extreme heat makes much of Iraq
a desert. Because of very high rates of evaporation, soil and plants
rapidly lose the little moisture obtained from the rain, and vegetation
could not survive without extensive irrigation. Some areas, however,
although arid do have natural vegetation in contrast to the desert. For
example, in the Zagros Mountains in northeastern Iraq there is permanent
vegetation, such as oak trees, and date palms are found in the south.
Iraq
Iraq - Population
Iraq
Although a census occurred in late 1987, only overall population
totals and some estimates were available in early 1988. The latest
detailed census information was that from the 1977 census. The total
population increased from 12,029,000 in 1977 to 16,278,000 in 1987, an
increase of 35.3 pecent.
The population has fluctuated considerably over the region's long
history. Between the eighth and the twelfth centuries A.D.,
Iraq--particularly Baghdad--was the flourishing center of a burgeoning
Arab civilization, and at the height of the region's prosperity it may
have supported a population much larger than the present society. Some
estimates range as high as 15 to 29 million. Decline came swiftly in the
late thirteenth century, however, when Mongol conquerors massacred the
populace, destroyed the cities, and ravaged the countryside. The
elaborate irrigation system that had made possible agricultural
production capable of supporting a large population was left in ruins.
A pattern of alternating neglect and oppression characterized the
Ottoman rule that began in the sixteenth century, and for hundreds of
years the three vilayets of Baghdad, Al Basrah, and
Mosul--which the British joined to form Iraq in the aftermath of World
War I--remained underpopulated backward outposts of the Ottoman Empire.
In the mid-1800s, the area had fewer than 1.3 million inhabitants.
Upon independence in 1932, the departing British officials estimated
the population at about 3.5 million. The first census was carried out in
1947, showing a population of about 4.8 million. The 1957 census gave a
population of about 6.3 million, and the 1965 census returned a count of
slightly above 8 million.
The October 1977 census gave the annual rate of population growth as
3.2 percent. According to the October 1987 census, the annual population
growth rate was 3.1 percent placing Iraq among the world's high
population growth rate countries (2.8 to 3.5 per year). In common with
many developing countries, Iraq's population was young: approximately 57
percent of the population in 1987 was under the age of twenty. The
government has never sought to implement a birth control program, a
policy reinforced by the war to offset losses in the fighting and
mitigate the threat from Iran, whose population is roughly three times
that of Iraq.
In 1977 about 64 percent of the population was listed as living in
urban areas; this was a marked change from 1965, when only 44 percent
resided in urban centers. In the 1987 government estimates, the urban
population was given as 68 percent, resulting in large measure from the
migrations to the cities since the start of the war. The partial
destruction of Basra by Iranian artillery barrages has had a
particularly devastating effect; by 1988, according to some well
informed accounts, almost half the residents of the city--its population
formerly estimated at 800,000--had fled. At the same time, approximately
95,000 persons were identified in the 1977 census as nomadic or
seminomadic beduins. This figure is a 1986 estimate by nongovernmental
sources and is higher than the 57,000 listed in the 1957 census; the
increase probably reflects either an improved counting procedure or a
change in definition or classification. Overall, the nomads and
seminomads constituted less than 1 percent of the population, whereas in
1867 they had been estimated at about 500,000 or 35 percent of the
population.
The population remains unevenly distributed. In 1987 Baghdad
Governorate had a population density of about 950 persons per square
kilometer and the Babylon Governorate 202 persons per square kilometer,
whereas Al Muthanna Governorate possessed only 5.5 persons per square
kilometer. In general the major cities are located on the nation's
rivers, and the bulk of the rural population lives in the areas that are
cultivated with water taken from the rivers.
<>The People
<>Kurds
<>Other Minorities
Updated population figures for Iraq.
Iraq
Iraq - The People
Iraq
Although the data are not absolutely reliable, the government
estimates that 76 percent of the people are Arab; 19 percent are Kurds;
while Turkomans, Assyrians, Armenians, and other relatively small groups
make up the rest. All but a small percentage adhere to Islam. The
Islamic component is split into two main sects, Sunni and Shia, with the
Shias by far the majority. Officially the government sets the number of
Shias at 55 percent. In the 1980s knowledgeable observers began to
question this figure, regarding it as low. Because the government does
not encourage birth control and the Shias, the least affluent in
society, have traditionally had the highest birthrate, a more reasonable
estimate of their numbers would seem to be between 60 and 65 percent.
All but a few of the estimated 3,088,000 Kurds are Sunni, and thus the
Sunni Arabs--who historically have been the dominant religious and
ethnic group-- constitute a decided minority vis-�-vis the Shia
majority.
Almost all Iraqis speak at least some Arabic, the mother tongue for
the Arab majority. Arabic, one of the more widely spoken languages in
the world, is the mother tongue claimed in 1988 by over 177 million
people from Morocco to the Arabian Sea. One of the Semitic languages, it
is related to Aramaic, Phoenician, Syriac, Hebrew, various Ethiopic
languages, and the Akkadian of ancient Babylonia and Assyria.
Throughout the Arab world the language exists in three forms: the
Classical Arabic of the Quran; the literary language developed from the
classical and referred to as Modern Standard Arabic, which has virtually
the same structure wherever used; and the spoken language, which in Iraq
is Iraqi Arabic. Educated Arabs tend to be bilingual--in Modern Standard
Arabic and in their own dialect of spoken Arabic. Even uneducated Arabic
speakers, who in Iraq are about 60 percent of the population, can
comprehend the meaning of something said in Modern Standard Arabic,
although they are unable to speak it. Classical Arabic, apart from
Quranic texts, is known chiefly to scholarly specialists.
Most of the words of Arabic's rich and extensive vocabulary are
variations of triconsonantal roots, each of which has a basic meaning.
The sounds of Arabic are also rich and varied and include some made in
the throat and back of the larynx which do not occur in the major
Indo-European languages. Structurally there are important differences
between Modern Standard Arabic and spoken Arabic, such as the behavior
of the verb: the voice and tense of the verb are indicated by different
internal changes in the two forms. In general the grammar of spoken
Arabic is simpler than that of the Modern Standard Arabic, having
dropped many noun declensions and different forms of the relative
pronoun for the different genders. Some dialects of spoken Arabic do not
use special feminine forms of plural verbs.
Dialects of spoken Arabic vary greatly throughout the Arab world.
Most Iraqis speak one common to Syria, Lebanon, and parts of Jordan
and--as is true of people speaking other dialects--they proudly regard
theirs as the best. Although they converse in Iraqi Arabic, there is
general agreement that Modern Standard Arabic, the written language, is
superior to the spoken form. Arabs generally believe that the speech of
the beduins resembles the pure classical form most closely and that the
dialects used by the settled villagers and townspeople are unfortunate
corruptions.
Iraq.
Iraq
Iraq - Kurds
Iraq
Kurds represent by far the largest non-Arab ethnic minority,
accounting in 1987 for about 19 percent of the population, or around 3.1
million. They are the overwhelming majority in As Sulaymaniyah, Irbil,
and Dahuk governorates. Although the government hotly denies it, the
Kurds are almost certainly also a majority in the region around Kirkuk,
Iraq's richest oilproducing area. Kurds are settled as far south as
Khanaqin. Ranging across northern Iraq, the Kurds are part of the larger
Kurdish population (probably numbering close to 16 million) that
inhabits the wide arc from eastern Turkey and the northwestern part of
Syria through Soviet Azarbaijan and Iraq to the northwest of the Zagros
Mountains in Iran. Although the largest numbers live in Turkey
(variously estimated at between 3 and 10 million), it is in Iraq that
they are most active politically.
The Kurds inhabit the highlands and mountain valleys and have
traditionally been organized on a tribal basis. In the past it was
correct to distinguish the various communities of Kurds according to
their tribal affiliation, and to a large extent this was still true in
the 1980s; tribes like the Herkki, the Sorchi, and Zibari have
maintained a powerful cohesion. But increasingly groups of Kurds
organized along political lines have grown up alongside the tribal
units. Hence, the most northern and extreme northeastern areas of Iraq
are heavily infiltrated by elements of the so-called Kurdish Democratic
Party (KDP). The area around Kirkuk and
south to Khanaqin is the preserve of the Faili Kurds, who, unlike the
majority of Kurds, are Shias. Many of the Faili Kurds belong to the
Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK). The far northwestern region of Iraq
around Sinjar is spotted with enclaves claimed by the Iraqi Communist
Party, the bulk of whose cadres are composed of Kurds.
Once mainly nomadic or seminomadic, Kurdish society was characterized
by a combination of urban centers, villages, and pastoral tribes since
at least the Ottoman period. Historical sources indicate that from the
eighteenth century onward Kurds in Iraq were mainly peasants engaged in
agriculture and arboriculture. By the nineteenth century, about 20
percent of Iraqi Kurds lived in historic Kurdish cities such as Kirkuk,
As Sulaymaniyah, and Irbil. The migration to the cities, particularly of
the young intelligentsia, helped develop Kurdish nationalism.
Since the early 1960s, the urban Kurdish areas have grown rapidly.
Kurdish migration--in addition to being part of the general trend of
urban migration--was prompted by the escalating armed conflict with the
central authorities in Baghdad, the destruction of villages and land by
widespread bombing, and such natural disasters as a severe drought in
the 1958-61 period. In addition to destroying traditional resources, the
severe fighting has hindered the development of education, health, and
other services.
The historic enmity between the Kurds and the central Arab government
has contributed to the tenacious survival of Kurdish culture. The Kurds'
most distinguishing characteristic and the one that binds them to one
another is their language. There are several Kurdish dialects, of which
Kirmanji tends to be the standard written form. Kurdish is not a mere
dialect of Farsi or Persian, as many Iranian nationalists maintain. And
it is certainly not a variant of the Semitic or Turkic tongues. It is a
separate language, part of the Indo-European family.
The Kurds have been locked in an unremittingly violent struggle with
the central government in Baghdad almost since the founding of the Iraqi
republic in 1958. It appeared in the early 1970s that the
dissident Kurds-- under the generalship of the legendary leader Mulla
Mustafa Barzani--might actually carve out an independent Kurdish area in
northern Iraq. In 1975, however, the shah of Iran--the Kurds' principal
patron--withdrew his support of the Kurds as part of the Algiers Accord
between Tehran and Baghdad, leading to a sharp decline in the Kurdish
movement. The signing of the Algiers Accord caused a breakaway faction
to emerge from the Kurdish Democratic Party (KDP), led by Masud Barzani,
the son of Mulla Mustafa Barzani. The faction that left the KDP in
opposition to the accord formed the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK)
under Jalal Talabani. The PUK continued to engage in low-level guerrilla
activity against the central government in the period from 1975 to 1980.
The war between Iraq and Iran that broke out in 1980 afforded the PUK
and other Iraqi Kurdish groups the opportunity to intensify their
opposition to the government.
The future of the Kurds in Iraq is uncertain because of the war. In
1983 the KDP spearheaded an Iranian thrust into northern Iraq and later
its cadres fanned out across the border area adjacent to Turkey where
they established a string of bases. Meanwhile, Talabani's PUK has
maintained a fighting presence in the Kirkuk region, despite ruthless
attempts by the central government to dislodge them. Thus, as of early
1988, most of the northern areas of Iraq--outside the major cities--were
under the control of the guerrillas. On the one hand, if the present
government in Iraq survives the war--which in early 1988 seemed
likely--it is almost certain to punish those Kurds who collaborated with
the Iranians. On the other hand, a number of large and powerful Kurdish
tribes as well as many prominent Kurds from nontribal families, have
continued to support the central government throughout the war, fighting
against their fellow Kurds. These loyal Kurds will expect to be rewarded
for their allegiance once the war ends.
Iraq.
Iraq
Iraq - Minorities
Iraq
The Yazidis are of Kurdish stock but are distinguished by their
unique religious fusion of elements of paganism, Zoroastrianism,
Christianity, and Islam. They live in small and isolated groups, mostly
in the Sinjar Mountains west of Mosul. They are impoverished cultivators
and herdsmen who have a strictly graded religiopolitical hierarchy and
tend to maintain a more closed community than other ethnic or religious
groups. Historically, they have been subject to sharp persecution owing
to their heretical beliefs and practices.
The Turkomans, who are believed to constitute somewhat less than 2
percent of the population, are village dwellers in the northeast living
along the border between the Kurdish and Arab regions. A number of
Turkomans live in the city of Irbil. The Turkomans, who speak a Turkish
dialect, have preserved their language but are no longer tribally
organized. Most are Sunnis who were brought in by the Ottomans to repel
tribal raids. These early Turkomans were settled at the entrances of the
valleys that gave access to the Kurdish areas. This historic
pacification role has led to strained relations with the Kurds. By 1986
the Turkomans numbered somewhere around 222,000 and were being rapidly
assimilated into the general population.
The Assyrians are considered to be the third largest ethnic minority
in Iraq. Although official Iraqi statistics do not refer to them as an
ethnic group, they are believed to represent about 133,000 persons or
less than 1 percent of the population. Descendants of ancient
Mesopotamian peoples, they speak Aramaic. The Assyrians live mainly in
the major cities and in the rural areas of northeastern Iraq where they
tend to be professionals and businessmen or independent farmers. They
are Christians, belonging to one of four churches: the Chaldean
(Uniate), Nestorian, Jacobite or Syrian Orthodox, and the Syrian
Catholic.
<>The Kurds
Iraq.
Iraq
Iraq - RELIGION
Iraq
Although members of the ruling Baath Party generally are
ideologically committed to secularism, about 95 percent of Iraqis are
Muslim and Islam is the officially recognized state religion. Islam came
to the region with the victory of the Muslim armies under Caliph Umar
over the Sassanians in A.D. 637 at the battle of Al Qadisiyah. The
majority of inhabitants soon became Muslim, including the Kurds,
although small communities of Christians and Jews remained intact in the
area of present-day Iraq. Iraq has been the scene of many important
events in the early history of Islam, including the schism over the
rightful successor to the Prophet Muhammad.
<>Islam
<>Sunnis
<>Shias
<>Sunni-Shia Relations in
Iraq
Iraq
Iraq - Islam
Iraq
Islam is a system of religious beliefs and an allencompassing way of
life. Muslims believe that God (Allah) revealed to the Prophet Muhammad
the rules governing society and the proper conduct of society's members.
It is incumbent on the individual therefore to live in a manner
prescribed by the revealed law and on the community to build the perfect
human society on earth according to holy injunctions. Islam recognizes
no distinctions between church and state. The distinction between
religious and secular law is a recent development that reflects the more
pronounced role of the state in society, and Western economic and
cultural penetration. The impact of religion on daily life in Muslim
countries is far greater than that found in the West since the Middle
Ages.
The Ottoman Empire organized society around the concept of the millet,
or autonomous religious community. The nonMuslim "People of the
Book" (Christians and Jews) owed taxes to the government; in return
they were permitted to govern themselves according to their own
religious law in matters that did not concern Muslims. The religious
communities were thus able to preserve a large measure of identity and
autonomy.
The Iraqi Baath Party has been a proponent of secularism. This
attitude has been maintained despite the fact that the mass of Iraqis
are deeply religious. At the same time, the Baathists have not hesitated
to exploit religion as a mobilizing agent; and from the first months of
the war with Iran, prominent Baathists have made a public show of
attending religious observances. Iraq's President Saddam Husayn is
depicted in prayer in posters displayed throughout the country.
Moreover, the Baath has provided large sums of money to refurbish
important mosques; this has proved a useful tactic in encouraging
support from the Shias.
Islam came to Iraq by way of the Arabian Peninsula, where in A.D.610,
Muhammad--a merchant of the Hashimite branch of the ruling Quraysh tribe
in the Arabian town of Mecca--began to preach the first of a series of
revelations granted him by God through the angel Gabriel. A fervent
monotheist, Muhammad denounced the polytheism of his fellow Meccans.
Because the town's economy was based in part on a thriving pilgrimage
business to the shrine called the Kaaba and numerous other pagan
religious sites in the area, his censure earned him the enmity of the
town's leaders. In A.D.622 he and a group of followers accepted an
invitation to settle in the town of Yathrib, later known as Medina (the
city), because it was the center of Muhammad's activities. The move, or hijra,
known in the West as the hegira, marks the beginning of the
Islamic era and of Islam as a force in history; the Muslim calendar
begins in A.D.622. In Medina Muhammad continued to preach and eventually
defeated his detractors in battle. He consolidated the temporal and the
spiritual leadership in his person before his death in A.D.632. After
Muhammad's death, his followers compiled those of his words regarded as
coming directly from God into the Quran, the holy scriptures of Islam.
Others of his sayings and teachings, recalled by those who had known
him, became the hadith. The precedent of Muhammad's personal behavior is
called the sunna. Together they form a comprehensive guide to the
spiritual, ethical, and social life of the orthodox Sunni Muslim.
The duties of Muslims form the five pillars of Islam, which set forth
the acts necessary to demonstrate and reinforce the faith. These are the
recitation of the shahada ("There is no God but God
[Allah], and Muhammad is his prophet"), daily prayer (salat),
almsgiving (zakat), fasting (sawm), and pilgrimage
(hajj). The believer is to pray in a prescribed manner after
purification through ritual ablutions each day at dawn, midday,
midafternoon, sunset, and nightfall. Prescribed genuflections and
prostrations accompany the prayers, which the worshiper recites facing
toward Mecca. Whenever possible men pray in congregation at the mosque
with an imam, and on Fridays make a special effort to do so. The Friday
noon prayers provide the occasion for weekly sermons by religious
leaders. Women may also attend public worship at the mosque, where they
are segregated from the men, although most frequently women pray at
home. A special functionary, the muezzin, intones a call to prayer to
the entire community at the appropriate hour. Those out of earshot
determine the time by the sun.
The ninth month of the Muslim calendar is Ramadan, a period of
obligatory fasting in commemoration of Muhammad's receipt of God's
revelation. Throughout the month all but the sick and weak, pregnant or
lactating women, soldiers on duty, travelers on necessary journeys, and
young children are enjoined from eating, drinking, smoking, or sexual
intercourse during the daylight hours. Those adults excused are obliged
to endure an equivalent fast at their earliest opportunity. A festive
meal breaks the daily fast and inaugurates a night of feasting and
celebration. The pious well-to-do usually do little or no work during
this period, and some businesses close for all or part of the day. Since
the months of the lunar year revolve through the solar year, Ramadan
falls at various seasons in different years. A considerable test of
discipline at any time of the year, a fast that falls in summertime
imposes severe hardship on those who must do physical work.
All Muslims, at least once in their lifetime, should make the hajj to
Mecca to participate in special rites held there during the twelfth
month of the lunar calendar. Muhammad instituted this requirement,
modifying pre-Islamic custom, to emphasize sites associated with God and
Abraham (Ibrahim), founder of monotheism and father of the Arabs through
his son Ismail.
The lesser pillars of the faith, which all Muslims share, are jihad,
or the crusade to protect Islamic lands, beliefs, and institutions; and
the requirement to do good works and to avoid all evil thoughts, words,
and deeds. In addition, Muslims agree on certain basic principles of
faith based on the teachings of the Prophet Muhammad: there is one God,
who is a unitary divine being in contrast to the trinitarian belief of
Christians; Muhammad, the last of a line of prophets beginning with
Abraham and including Moses and Jesus, was chosen by God to present His
message to humanity; and there is a general resurrection on the last or
judgment day.
During his lifetime, Muhammad held both spiritual and temporal
leadership of the Muslim community. Religious and secular law merged,
and all Muslims have traditionally been subject to sharia, or religious
law. A comprehensive legal system, sharia developed gradually through
the first four centuries of Islam, primarily through the accretion of
precedent and interpretation by various judges and scholars. During the
tenth century, legal opinion began to harden into authoritative rulings,
and the figurative bab al ijtihad (gate of
interpretation) closed. Thereafter, rather than encouraging flexibility,
Islamic law emphasized maintenance of the status quo.
After Muhammad's death the leaders of the Muslim community
consensually chose Abu Bakr, the Prophet's father-in-law and one of his
earliest followers, to succeed him. At that time some persons favored
Ali, Muhammad's cousin and the husband of his daughter Fatima, but Ali
and his supporters (the Shiat Ali, or Party of Ali) eventually
recognized the community's choice. The next two caliphs
(successors)--Umar, who succeeded in A.D.634, and Uthman, who took power
in A.D.644--enjoyed the recognition of the entire community. When Ali
finally succeeded to the caliphate in A.D.656, Muawiyah, governor of
Syria, rebelled in the name of his murdered kinsman Uthman. After the
ensuing civil war, Ali moved his capital to Iraq, where he was murdered
shortly there after.
Ali's death ended the last of the so-called four orthodox caliphates
and the period in which the entire community of Islam recognized a
single caliph. Muawiyah proclaimed himself caliph from Damascus. The
Shiat Ali refused to recognize him or his line, the Umayyad caliphs, and
withdrew in the first great schism to establish the dissident sect,
known as the Shias, supporting the claims of Ali's line to the caliphate
based on descent from the Prophet. The larger faction, the Sunnis,
adhered to the position that the caliph must be elected, and over the
centuries they have represented themselves as the orthodox branch.
Iraq
Iraq - Sunnis
Iraq
Originally political, the differences between Sunni and Shia
interpretations rapidly took on theological and metaphysical overtones.
In principle a Sunni approaches God directly; there is no clerical
hierarchy. Some duly appointed religious figures, however, exert
considerable social and political power. Imams usually are men of
importance in their communities but they need not have any formal
training; among the beduins, for example, any tribal member may lead
communal prayers. Committees of socially prominent worshipers usually
run the major mosque-owned land and gifts. In Iraq, as in many other
Arab countries, the administration of waqfs (religious
endowments) has come under the influence of the state. Qadis (judges)
and imams are appointed by the government.
The Muslim year has two religious festivals--Id al Adha, a
sacrificial festival on the tenth of Dhu al Hijjah, the twelfth month;
and Id al Fitr, the festival of breaking the fast, which celebrates the
end of Ramadan on the first of Shawwal, the tenth month. To Sunnis these
are the most important festivals of the year. Each lasts three or four
days, during which people put on their best clothes, visit,
congratulate, and bestow gifts on each other. In addition, cemeteries
are visited. Id al Fitr is celebrated more joyfully, as it marks the end
of the hardships of Ramadan. Celebrations also take place, though less
extensively, on the Prophet's birthday, which falls on the twelfth of
Rabi al Awwal, the third month, and on the first of Muharram, the
beginning of the new year.
With regard to legal matters, Sunni Islam has four orthodox schools
that give different weight in legal opinions to prescriptions in the
Quran, the hadith or sayings of the Prophet Muhammad, the consensus of
legal scholars, analogy (to similar situations at the time of the
Prophet), and reason or opinion. Named for their founders, the Hanafi
school of Imam Abu Hanifa, born in Kufa, Iraq about A.D.700, is the
major school of Iraqi Sunni Arabs. It makes considerable use of reason
or opinion in legal decisions. The dominant school for Iraqi Sunni Kurds
is that of Imam Abu Abd Allah Muhammad Shafii of the Quraysh tribe of
the Prophet, born in A.D.767 and brought up in Mecca. He later taught in
both Baghdad and Cairo and followed a somewhat eclectic legal path,
laying down the rules for analogy that were later adopted by other legal
schools. The other two legal schools in Islam, the Maliki and the
Hanbali, lack a significant number of adherents in Iraq.
Iraq
Iraq - Shias
Iraq
Shia Muslims hold the fundamental beliefs of other Muslims. But, in addition to these tenets, the distinctive
institution of Shia Islam is the Imamate--a much more exalted position
than the Sunni imam, who is primarily a prayer leader. In contrast to
Sunni Muslims, who view the caliph only as a temporal leader and who
lack a hereditary view of Muslim leadership, Shia Muslims believe the
Prophet Muhammad designated Ali to be his successor as Imam, exercising
both spiritual and temporal leadership. Such an Imam must have
knowledge, both in a general and a religious sense, and spiritual
guidance or walayat, the ability to interpret the inner
mysteries of the Quran and the sharia. Only those who have walayat
are free from error and sin and have been chosen by God through the
Prophet. Each Imam in turn designated his successor--through twelve
Imams--each holding the same powers.
The Imamate began with Ali, who is also accepted by Sunni Muslims as
the fourth of the "rightly guided caliphs" to succeed the
Prophet. Shias revere Ali as the First Imam, and his descendants,
beginning with his sons Hasan and Husayn, continue the line of the Imams
until the twelfth, who is believed to have ascended into a supernatural
state to return to earth on Judgment Day. Shias point to the close
lifetime association of the Prophet with Ali. When Ali was six years
old, he was invited by the Prophet to live with him, and Shias believe
Ali was the first person to make the declaration of faith in Islam. Ali
also slept in the Prophet's bed on the night of the hijra or
migration from Mecca to Medina when it was feared that the house would
be attacked by unbelievers and the Prophet stabbed to death. He fought
in all the battles the Prophet did except one, and the Prophet chose him
to be the husband of his favorite daughter, Fatima.
Among Shias the term imam traditionally has been used only
for Ali and his eleven descendants. None of the twelve Imams, with the
exception of Ali, ever ruled an Islamic government. During their
lifetimes, their followers hoped that they would assume the rulership of
the Islamic community, a rule that was believed to have been wrongfully
usurped. Because the Sunni caliphs were cognizant of this hope, the
Imams generally were persecuted during the Umayyad and Abbasid
dynasties. Therefore, the Imams tried to be as unobtrusive as possible
and to live as far as was reasonable from the successive capitals of the
Islamic empire.
During the eighth century the Caliph Mamun, son and successor to
Harun ar Rashid, was favorably disposed toward the descendants of Ali
and their followers. He invited the Eighth Imam, Reza (A.D. 765-816), to
come from Medina (in the Arabian Peninsula) to his court at Marv (Mary
in the present-day Soviet Union). While Reza was residing at Marv, Mamun
designated him as his successor in an apparent effort to avoid conflict
among Muslims. Reza's sister Fatima journeyed from Medina to be with her
brother, but took ill and died at Qom, in present-day Iran. A major
shrine developed around her tomb and over the centuries Qom has become a
major Shia pilgrimage and theological center.
Mamun took Reza on his military campaign to retake Baghdad from
political rivals. On this trip Reza died unexpectedly in Khorasan. Reza
was the only Imam to reside or die in what in now Iran. A major shrine,
and eventually the city of Mashhad, grew up around his tomb, which has
become the most important pilgrimage center in Iran. Several important
theological schools are located in Mashhad, associated with the shrine
to the Eighth Imam.
Reza's sudden death was a shock to his followers, many of whom
believed that Mamun, out of jealousy for Reza's increasing popularity,
had the Imam poisoned. Mamun's suspected treachery against Imam Reza and
his family tended to reinforce a feeling already prevalent among his
followers that the Sunni rulers were untrustworthy.
The Twelfth Imam is believed to have been only five years old when
the Imamate descended upon him in A.D.874 at the death of his father.
Because his followers feared he might be assassinated, the Twelfth Imam
was hidden from public view and was seen only by a few of his closest
deputies. Sunnis claim that he never existed or that he died while still
a child. Shias believe that the Twelfth Imam never died, but disappeared
from earth in about A.D. 939. Since that time, the greater occultation
of the Twelfth Imam has been in force and will last until God commands
the Twelfth Imam to manifest himself on earth again as the Mahdi or
Messiah. Shias believe that during the occultation of the Twelfth Imam,
he is spiritually present--some believe that he is materially present as
well--and he is besought to reappear in various invocations and prayers.
His name is mentioned in wedding invitations, and his birthday is one of
the most jubilant of all Shia religious observances.
The Shia doctrine of the Imamate was not fully elaborated until the
tenth century. Other dogmas were developed still later. A characteristic
of Shia Islam is the continual exposition and reinterpretation of
doctrine.
A further belief of Shia Muslims concerns divine justice and the
individual's responsibility for his acts, which are judged by a just
God. This contrasts with the Sunni view that God's creation of man
allows minimal possibility for the exercise of free will.
A significant practice of Shia Islam is that of visiting the shrines
of Imams both in Iraq and in Iran. These include the tomb of Imam Ali in
An Najaf and that of his son Imam Husayn in Karbala since both are
considered major Shia martyrs. Before the 1980 Iran-Iraq War, tens of
thousands went each year. The Iranians have made it a central aim of
their war effort to wrest these holy cities from the Iraqis. Other
principal pilgrimage sites in Iraq are the tombs of the Seventh and
Ninth Imams at Kazimayn, near Baghdad, and in Iran, the tomb of the
Eighth Imam in Mashhad and that of his sister in Qom. Such pilgrimages
originated in part from the difficulty and expense in the early days of
making the hajj to Mecca.
Commemorating the martyrdom of Husayn, killed near Karbala in A.D.
680 during a battle with troops supporting the Ummayad caliph, there are
processions in the Shia towns and villages of southern Iraq on the tenth
of Muharram (Ashura), the anniversary of his death. Ritual mourning (taaziya)
is performed by groups of men of five to twenty each. Contributions are
solicited in the community to pay transportation for a local group to go
to Karbala for taaziya celebrations forty days after Ashura.
There is a great rivalry among groups from different places for the best
performance of the passion plays.
In the villages, religious readings occur throughout Ramadan and
Muharram. The men may gather in the mudhif (tribal guesthouse),
the suq (market), or a private house. Women meet in homes. The
readings are led either by a mumin (a man trained in a
religious school in An Najaf) or by a mullah who has apprenticed with an
older specialist. It is considered the duty of shaykhs, elders,
prosperous merchants, and the like to sponsor these readings, or qirayas.
Under the monarchy these public manifestations were discouraged, as they
emphasized grievances against the Sunnis.
Two distinctive and frequently misunderstood Shia practices are mutah,
temporary marriage, and taqiyah, religious dissimulation. Mutah
is a fixed-term contract that is subject to renewal. It was practiced by
the first community of Muslims at Medina but was banned by the second
caliph. Mutah differs from permanent marriage in that it does
not require divorce to terminate it. It can be for a period as short as
an evening or as long as a lifetime. The offspring of such an
arrangement are the legitimate heirs of the man.
Taqiyah, condemned by the Sunnis as cowardly and
irreligious, is the hiding or disavowal of one's religion or its
practices to escape the danger of death from those opposed to the faith.
Persecution of Shia Imams during the Umayyad and Abbasid caliphates
reinforced the need for taqiyah.
Shia practice differs from that of the Sunnis concerning both divorce
and inheritance in that it is more favorable to women. The reason for
this reputedly is the high esteem in which Fatima, the wife of Ali and
the daughter of the Prophet, was held.
Like Sunni Islam, Shia Islam has developed several sects. The most
important of these is the Twelver or Ithna-Ashari sect, which
predominates not only in Iraq but in the Shia world generally. Broadly
speaking, the Twelvers are considered political quietists as opposed to
the Zaydis who favor political activism, and the Ismailis who are
identified with esoteric and gnostic religious doctrines. Within Twelver
Shia Islam there are two major legal schools, the Usuli and the Akhbari.
Akhbaris constitute a very small group and are found primarily around
Basra and in southern Iraq as well as around Khorramshahr in Iran. The
dominant Usuli school is more liberal in its legal outlook and allows
greater use of interpretation (ijtihad) in reaching legal
decisions, and considers that one must obey a mujtahid (learned
interpreter of the law) as well as an Imam.
Iraq
Iraq - Sunni-Shia Relations in Iraq
Iraq
Until the 1980s, the dominant view of contemporary political analysts
held that Iraq was badly split along sectarian lines. The claim was that
the Sunnis--although a minority--ran Iraq and subjected the majority
Shias to systematic discrimination. According to the prevailing belief,
the Shias would drive the Sunnis from power, if once afforded an
opportunity to do so.
There was some basis to this notion. For many years Iraq was ruled
by-and-large by Arab Sunnis who tended to come from a restricted area
around Baghdad, Mosul, and Ar Rutbah--the socalled Golden Triangle. In
the 1980s, not only was President Saddam Husayn a Sunni, but he was the
vice chairman of the ruling Baath Party (Arab Socialist Resurrection).
One of the two deputy prime ministers and the defense minister were also
Sunnis. In addition, the top posts in the security services have usually
been held by Sunnis, and most of the army's corps commanders have been
Sunnis. It is also true that the most depressed region of the country is
the south, where the bulk of the Shias reside.
Nonetheless, the theory of sectarian strife was undercut by the
behavior of Iraq's Shia community during Iran's 1982 invasion and the
fighting thereafter. Although about three-quarters of the lower ranks of
the army were Shias, as of early 1988, no general insurrection of Iraq;
Shias had occurred.
Even in periods of major setback for the Iraqi army--such as the Al
Faw debacle in 1986--the Shias have continued staunchly to defend their
nation and the Baath regime. They have done so despite intense
propaganda barrages mounted by the Iranians, calling on them to join the
Islamic revolution.
It appears, then, that, however important sectarian affiliation may
have been in the past, in the latter 1980s nationalism was the basic
determiner of loyalty. In the case of Iraq's Shias, it should be noted
that they are Arabs, not Persians, and that they have been the
traditional enemies of the Persians for centuries. The Iraqi government
has skillfully exploited this age-old enmity in its propaganda,
publicizing the war as part of the ancient struggle between the Arab and
Persian empires. For example, Baathist publicists regularly call the war
a modern day "Qadisiyah." Qadisiyah was the battle in A.D.637
in which the Arabs defeated the pagan hosts of Persia, enabling Islam to
spread to the East.
The real tension in Iraq in the latter 1980s was between the majority
of the population, Sunnis as well as Shias, for whom religious belief
and practice were significant values, and the secular Baathists, rather
than between Sunnis and Shias. Although the Shias had been
underrepresented in government posts in the period of the monarchy, they
made substantial progress in the educational, business, and legal
fields. Their advancement in other areas, such as the opposition
parties, was such that in the years from 1952 to 1963, before the Baath
Party came to power, Shias held the majority of party leadership posts.
Observers believed that in the late 1980s Shias were represented at all
levels of the party roughly in proportion to government estimates of
their numbers in the population. For example, of the eight top Iraqi
leaders who in early 1988 sat with Husayn on the Revolutionary Command
Council--Iraq's highest governing body-- three were Arab Shias (of whom
one had served as Minister of Interior), three were Arab Sunnis, one was
an Arab Christian, and one a Kurd. On the Regional Command Council--the
ruling body of the party--Shias actually predominated. During the war, a number of highly competent
Shia officers have been promoted to corps commanders. The general who
turned back the initial Iranian invasions of Iraq in 1982 was a Shia.
The Shias continued to make good progress in the economic field as
well during the 1980s. Although the government does not publish
statistics that give breakdowns by religious affiliation, qualified
observers noted that many Shias migrated from rural areas, particularly
in the south, to the cities, so that not only Basra but other cities
including Baghdad acquired a Shia majority. Many of these Shias
prospered in business and the professions as well as in industry and the
service sector. Even those living in the poorer areas of the cities were
generally better off than they had been in the countryside. In the rural
areas as well, the educational level of Shias came to approximate that
of their Sunni counterparts.
In summary, prior to the war the Baath had taken steps toward
integrating the Shias. The war placed inordinate demands on the regime
for manpower, demands that could only be met by levying the Shia
community--and this strengthened the regime's resolve to further the
integration process. In early 1988, it seemed likely that when the war
ends, the Shias would emerge as full citizens-- assuming that the Baath
survives the conflict.
Iraq
Iraq - SOCIAL SYSTEMS
Iraq
The impact of Western penetration on the indigenous social and
demographic structure in the nineteenth century was profound. Western
influence took the initial form of transportation and trading links and
the switch from tribal-based subsistence agriculture to cash crop
production--mostly dates--for export. As this process accelerated, the nomadic population decreased
both relatively and in absolute numbers and the rural sedentary
population increased substantially, particularly in the southern region.
This was accompanied by a pronounced transformation of tenurial
relations: the tribal, communal character of subsistence production was
transformed on a large scale into a landlord-tenant relationship; tribal
shaykhs, urban merchants, and government officials took title under the
open-ended terms of the newly promulgated Ottoman land codes. Incentives
and pressures on this emerging landlord class to increase production
(and thus exports and earnings) resulted in expanded cultivation, which
brought more and more land under cultivation and simultaneously absorbed
the "surplus" labor represented by the tribal, pastoral, and
nomadic character of much of Iraqi society. This prolonged process of
sedentarization was disrupted by the dismemberment of the Ottoman Empire
during and after World War I, but it resumed with renewed intensity in
the British Mandate period, when the political structure of independent
Iraq was formed.
This threefold transformation of rural society--pastoral to
agricultural, subsistence to commercial, tribal-communal to
landlord-peasant--was accompanied by important shifts in urban society
as well. There was a general increase in the number and size of
marketing towns and their populations; but the destruction of handicraft
industries, especially in Baghdad, by the import of cheap manufactured
goods from the West, led to an absolute decline in the population of
urban centers. It also indelibly stamped the subsequent urban growth
with a mercantile and bureaucratic-administrative character that is
still a strong feature of Iraqi society.
Thus, the general outline and history of Iraqi population dynamics in
the modern era can be divided into a period extending from the middle of
the nineteenth century to World War II, characterized chiefly by
urbanization, with a steady and growing movement of people from the
rural (especially southern) region to the urban (especially central)
region. Furthermore, the basic trends of the 1980s are rooted in the
particularly exploitive character of agricultural practices regarding
both the land itself and the people who work it. Declining productivity
of the land, stemming from the failure to develop drainage along the
irrigation facilities and the wretched condition of the producers, has
resulted in a potentially harmful demographic trajectory--the
depopulation of the countryside--that in the late 1980s continued to
bedevil government efforts to reverse the decades-long pattern of
declining productivity in the agricultural sector.
The accelerated urbanization process since World War II is starkly
illustrated in the shrinking proportion of the population living in
rural areas: 61 percent in 1947, fillowed by 56 percent in 1965, then 36
percent in 1977, and an estimated 32 percent in 1987; concurrently
between 1977 and 1987 the urban population rose from 7,646,054 to an
estimated 11,078,000 (see table _, Appendix). The rural exodus has been
most severe in Al Basrah and Al Qadisiyah governorates. The proportion
of rural to urban population was lowest in the governorates of Al Basrah
(37 percent in 1965, and 1 percent in 1987) and Baghdad (48 percent in
1965 and 19 percent in 1987). It was highest in Dhi Qar Governorate
where it averaged 50 percent in 1987, followed closely by Al Muthanna
and Diyala governorates with rural populations of 48 percent. Between
1957 and 1967, the population of Baghdad and Al Basrah governorates grew
by 73 percent and 41 percent respectively. During the same years the
city of Baghdad grew by 87 percent and the city of Basra by 64 percent.
Because of the war, the growth of Al Basrah Governorate has been
reversed while that of Baghdad Governorate has accelerated alarmingly,
with the 1987 census figure for urban Baghdad being 3,845,000. Iranian
forces have mounted an offensive each year of the war since 1980, except
for early 1988, seeking to capture Basra and the adjoining area and
subjecting the city to regular bombardment. As a result, large numbers
of the population fled northward from Basra and other southern areas,
with many entering Baghdad, which was already experiencing overcrowding.
The government has attempted to deal with this situation by moving war
refugees out of the capital and resettling them in other smaller cities
in the south, out of the range of the fighting.
<>Rural Society
<>Impact of Agrarian Reform
<>Urban Society
Iraq
Iraq - Rural Society
Iraq
Rural Iraq contains aspects of the largely tribal mode of social
organization that prevailed over the centuries and still survived in the
1980s--particularly in the more isolated rural areas, such as the rugged
tableland of the northwest and the marshes in the south. The tribal mode
probably originated in the unstable social conditions that resulted from
the protracted decline of the Abbasid Caliphate and the subsequent
cycles of invasion and devastation.
In the absence of a strong central authority and the urban society of
a great civilization, society devloped into smaller units under
conditions that placed increasing stress on prowess, decisiveness, and
mobility. Under these conditions, the tribal shaykhs emerged as a
warrior class, and this process facilitated the ascendancy of the
fighter-nomad over the cultivator.
The gradual sedentarization that began in the mid-nineteenth century
brought with it an erosion of shaykhly power and a disintegration of the
tribal system. Under the British Mandate, and the monarchy that was its
creation, a reversal took place. Despite the continued decline of the
tribe as a viable and organic social entity, the enfeebled power of the
shaykhs was restored and enhanced by the British. This was done to
develop a local ruling class that could maintain security in the
countryside and otherwise head off political challenges to British
access to Iraq's mineral and agricultural resources and Britain's
paramount role in the Persian Gulf shaykhdoms. Through the specific
implementation of land registration, the traditional pattern of communal
cultivation and pasturage--with mutual rights and duties between shaykhs
and tribesmen--was superseded in some tribal areas by the institution of
private property and the expropriation by the shaykhs of tribal lands as
private estates. The status of the tribesmen was in many instances
drastically reduced to that of sharecroppers and laborers. The
additional ascription of judicial and police powers to the shaykh and
his retinue left the tribesmen-cum-peasants as virtual serfs,
continuously in debt and in servitude to the shaykh turned landlord and
master. The social basis for shaykhly power had been transformed from
military valor and moral rectitude to an effective possession of wealth
as embodied in vast landholdings and a claim to the greater share of the
peasants' production.
This was the social dimension of the transformation from a
subsistence, pastoral economy to an agricultural economy linked to the
world market. It was, of course, an immensely complicated process, and
conditions varied in different parts of the country. The main impact was
in the southern half--the riverine economy-- more than in the sparsely
populated, rain-fed northern area. A more elaborate analysis of this
process would have to look specifically at the differences between
Kurdish and Arab shaykhs, between political and religious leadership
functions, between Sunni and Shia shaykhs, and between nomadic and
riverine shaykhs, all within their ecological settings. In general the
biggest estates developed in areas restored to cultivation through dam
construction and pump irrigation after World War I. The most autocratic
examples of shaykhly power were in the rice-growing region near Al
Amarah, where the need for organized and supervised labor and the
rigorous requirements of rice cultivation generated the most oppressive
conditions.
The role of the tribe as the chief politico-military unit was already
well eroded by the time the monarchy was overthrown in July 1958. The
role of some tribal shaykhs had been abolished by the central
government. The tribal system survived longest in the mid-Euphrates
area, where many tribesmen had managed to register small plots in their
names and had not become mere tenants of the shaykh. In such settings an
interesting amalgam occurred of traditional tribal customs and the newer
influences represented by the civil servants sent to rural regions by
the central government, together with the expanded government
educational system. For example, the government engineer responsible for
the water distribution system, although technically not a major
administrator, in practice became the leading figure in rural areas. He
would set forth requirements for the cleaning and maintenance of the
canals, and the tribal shaykh would see to it that the necessary
manpower was provided. This service in the minds of tribesmen replaced
the old customary obligation of military service that they owed the
shaykh and was not unduly onerous. It could readily be combined with
work on their own grazing or producing lands and benefited the tribe as
a whole. The government administrators usually avoided becoming involved
in legal disputes that might result from water rights, leaving the
disputes to be settled by the shaykh in accordance with traditional
tribal practices. Thus, despite occasional tensions in such
relationships, the power of the central government gradually expanded
into regions where Baghdad's influence had previously been slight or
absent.
Despite the erosion of the historic purposes of tribal organization,
the prolonged absence of alternative social links has helped to preserve
the tribal character of individual and group relations. The complexity
of these relations is impressive. Even in the southern, irrigated part
of the country there are notable differences between the tribes along
the Tigris, subject to Iranian influences, and those of the Euphrates,
whose historic links are with the Arab beduin tribes of the desert.
Since virtually no ethnographic studies on the Tigris peoples existed in
the late 1980s, the following is based chiefly on research in the
Euphrates region.
The tribe represents a concentric social system linked to the
classical nomadic structure but modified by the sedentary environment
and limited territory characteristic of the modern era. The primary unit
within the tribe is the named agnatic lineage several generations deep
to which each member belongs. This kinship unit shares responsibilities
in feuds and war, restricts and controls marriage within itself, and
jointly occupies a specified share of tribal land. The requirements of
mutual assistance preclude any significant economic differentiation, and
authority is shared among the older men. The primary family unit rests
within the clan, composed of two or more lineage groups related by
descent or adoption. Nevertheless, a clan can switch its allegiance from
its ancestral tribal unit to a stronger, ascendant tribe. The clans are
units of solidarity in disputes with other clans in the tribe, although
there may be intense feuding among the lineage groups within the clan.
The clan also represents a shared territorial interest, as the land
belonging to the component lineage groups customarily is adjacent.
Several clans united under a single shaykh form a tribe (ashira).
This traditionally has been the dominant politico-military unit
although, because of unsettled conditions, tribes frequently band
together in confederations under a paramount shaykh. The degree of
hierarchy and centralization operative in a given tribe seems to
correlate with the length of time it has been sedentary: the Bani Isad,
for example, which has been settled for several centuries, is much more
centralized than the Ash Shabana, which has been sedentary only since
the end of the nineteenth century.
In the south, only the small hamlets scattered throughout the
cultivated area are inhabited solely by tribesmen. The most widely
spread social unit is the village, and most villages have resident
tradesmen (ahl as suq--people of the market)
and government employees. The lines between these village dwellers and
the tribespeople, at least until just before the war, were quite
distinct, although the degree varies from place to place. As the
provision of education, health, and other social services to the
generally impoverished rural areas increases, the number and the social
influence of these nontribal people increase. Representatives of the
central government take over roles previously filled by the shaykh or
his representatives. A government school competes with the religious
school. The role of the merchants as middlemen--buyers of the peasants'
produce and providers of seeds and implements as well as of food and
clothing--has not yet been superseded in most areas by the
government-sponsored cooperatives and extension agencies. Increasingly
in the 1980s, government employees were of local or at least rural
origin, whereas in the 1950s they usually were Baghdadis who had no
kinship ties in the region, wore Western clothing, and took their
assignments as exile and punishment. In part the administrators provoked
the mutual antagonism that flourished between them and the peasants,
particularly as Sunni officials were often assigned to Shia villages.
The merchants, however, were from the region--if not from the same
village--and were usually the sons of merchants.
Despite some commercial developments in rural areas, in the late
1980s the economic base was still agriculture and, to a lesser but
increasing extent, animal husbandry. Failure to resolve the technical
problem of irrigation drainage contributed to declining rural
productivity, however, and accentuated the economic as well as the
political role of the central government. The growth of villages into
towns and whatever signs of recent prosperity there were should be
viewed, therefore, more as the result of greater government presence
than as locally developed economic viability. The increased number of
government representatives and employees added to the market for local
produce and, more important, promoted the diffusion of state revenues
into impoverished rural areas through infrastructure and service
projects. Much remained to be done to supply utilities to rural
inhabitants; just before the war, the government announced a campaign to
provide such essentials as electricity and clean water to the villages,
most of which still lacked these. The government has followed through on several of these
projects--particularly in the south--despite the hardships caused by the
war. The regime apparently felt the need to reward the southerners, who
had suffered inordinately in the struggle.
Iraq
Iraq - Impact of Agrarian Reform
Iraq
One of the most significant achievements of the fundamentally
urban-based revolutionary regime of Abd al Karim Qasim (1958-63) was the
proclamation and partial implementation of a radical agrarian reform
program. The scope of the program and the drastic shortage of an
administrative cadre to implement it, coupled with political struggles
within the Qasim regime and its successors, limited the immediate impact
of the program to the expropriation stage. The largest estates were
easily confiscated, but distribution lagged owing to administrative
problems and the wasted, saline character of much of the land
expropriated. Moreover, landlords could choose the best of the lands to
keep for themselves.
The impact of the reforms on the lives of the rural masses can only
be surmised on the basis of uncertain official statistics and rare
observations and reports by outsiders, such as officials of the United
Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). The development of
cooperatives, especially in their capacity as marketing agents, was one
of the most obvious failures of the program, although isolated instances
of success did emerge. In some of these instances, traditional elders
were mobilized to serve as cooperative directors, and former sirkals,
clan leaders who functioned as foremen for the shaykhs, could bring a
working knowledge of local irrigation needs and practices to the
cooperative.
The continued impoverishment of the rural masses was evident,
however, in the tremendous migration that continued through the 1960s,
1970s, and into the 1980s from rural to urban areas. According to the
Ministry of Planning, the average rate of internal migration from the
countryside increased from 19,600 a year in the mid-1950s to 40,000 a
year in the 1958 to 1962 period. A study of 110 villages in the Nineveh
and Babylon governorates concluded that depressed rural conditions and
other variables--rather than job opportunities in the modern sector--
accounted for most of the migration.
There was little doubt that this massive migration and the land
reform reduced the number of landless peasants. The most recent
comprehensive tenurial statistics available before the war broke
out--the Agricultural Census of 1971--put the total farmland (probably
meaning cultivable land, rather than land under cultivation) at over 5.7
million hectares, of which more than 98.2 percent was held by
"civil persons." About 30 percent of this had been distributed
under the agrarian reform. The average size of the holdings was about
9.7 hectares; but 60 percent of the holdings were smaller than 7.5
hectares, accounting for less than 14 percent of the total area. At the
other end of the scale, 0.2 percent of the holdings were 250 hectares or
larger, amounting to more than 14 percent of the total. Fifty-two
percent of the total was owner-operated, 41 percent was farmed under
rental agreements, 4.8 percent was worked by squatters, and only 0.6
percent was sharecropped. The status of the remaining 1.6 percent was
uncertain. On the basis of limited statistics released by the government
in 1985, the amount of land distributed since the inception of the
reform program totaled 2,271,250 hectares.
Political instability throughout the 1960s hindered the
implementation of the agrarian reform program, but after seizing power
in 1968 the Baath regime made a considerable effort to reactivate it.
Law 117 (1970) further limited the maximum size of holdings, eliminated
compensation to the landowner, and abolished payments by beneficiaries,
thus acknowledging the extremity of peasant indebtedness and poverty.
The reform created a large number of small holdings. Given the
experience of similar efforts in other countries, foreign observers
surmised that a new stratification has emerged in the countryside,
characterized by the rise of middle-level peasants who, directly or
through their leadership in the cooperatives, control much of the
agricultural machinery and its use. Membership in the ruling Baath Party
is an additional means of securing access to and control over such
resources. Prior to the war, the party seemed to have few roots in the
countryside, but after the ascent of Saddam Husayn to the presidency in
1979 a determined effort was made to build bridges between the party
cadre in the capital and the provinces. It is noteworthy that
practically all party officials promoted to the second echelon of
leadership at the 1982 party congress had distinguished themselves by
mobilizing party support in the provinces.
Even before the war, migration posed a serious threat of labor
shortages. In the 1980s, with the war driving whole communities to seek
refuge in the capital, this shortage has been exacerbated and was
particularly serious in areas intensively employing mechanized
agricultural methods. The government has attempted to compensate for
this shortage by importing turnkey projects with foreign professionals.
But in the Kurdish areas of the north--and to a degree in the southern
region infested by deserters--the safety of foreign personnel was
difficult to guarantee; therefore many projects have had to be
temporarily abandoned. Another government strategy for coping with the
labor shortage caused by the war has been to import Egyptian workers. It
has been estimated that as many as 1.5 million Egyptians have found
employment in Iraq since the war began.
Iraq
Iraq - Urban Society
Iraq
Iraq's society just before the outbreak of the war was undergoing
profound and rapid social change that had a definite urban focus. The
city has historically played an important economic and political role in
the life of Middle Eastern societies, and this was certainly true in the
territory that is present-day Iraq. Trade and commerce, handicrafts and
small manufactures, and administrative and cultural activities have
traditionally been central to the economy and the society,
notwithstanding the overwhelming rural character of most of the
population. In the modern era, as the country witnessed a growing
involvement with the world market and particularly the commercial and
administrative sectors, the growth of a few urban centers, notably
Baghdad and Basra, has been astounding. The war, however, has altered
this pattern of growth remarkably--in the case of Baghdad accelerating
it; in the case of Basra shrinking it considerably.
Demographic estimates based on the 1987 census reflected an increase
in the urban population from 5,452,000 in 1970 to 7,646,054 in 1977, and
to 11,078,000 in 1987 or 68 percent of the population. Census data show
the remarkable growth of Baghdad in particular, from just over 500,000
in 1947 to 1,745,000 in 1965; and from 3,226,000 in 1977 to 3,845,000 in
1987.
The population of other major cities according to the 1977 census was
1,540,000 for Basra, 1,220,000 for Mosul, and 535,000 for Kirkuk
(detailed information from the October 1987 census was lacking in early
1988). The port of Basra presents a more complex picture: accelerated
growth up to the time the war erupted, then a sharp deceleration once
the war started when the effects of the fighting around the city began
to be felt. Between 1957 and 1965, Basra actually had a higher growth
rate than Baghdad--90 percent in Basra as compared with Baghdad's 65
percent. But once the Iranians managed to sink several tankers in the
Shatt al Arab, this effectively blocked the waterway and the economy of
the port city began to deteriorate. By 1988 repeated attempts by Iran to
capture Basra had further eroded the strength of the city's commercial
sector, and the heavy bombardment had rendered some quarters of Basra
virtually uninhabitable. Because of the war reliable statistics were
unavailable, but the city's population in early 1988 was probably less
than half that in 1977.
In the extreme north, the picture was somewhat different. There, a
number of middle-sized towns have experienced very rapid
growth--triggered by the unsettled conditions in the region. Early in
the war the government determined to fight Kurdish- guerrilla activity
by targeting the communities that allegedly sustained the rebels. It
therefore cleared whole tracts of the mountainous region of local
inhabitants. The residents of the cleared areas fled to regional urban
centers like Irbil, As Sulaymaniyah, and Dahuk; by and large they did
not transfer to the major urban centers such as Mosul and Kirkuk.
Statistical details of the impact of these population shifts on the
physical and spatial character of the cities were generally lacking in
the 1980s. According to accounts by on-the- spot observers, in
Baghdad--and presumably in the other cities as well--there appeared to
have been no systematic planning to cope with the growth of slum areas.
Expansion in the capital until the mid-1970s had been quite haphazard.
As a result, there were many open spaces between buildings and quarters.
Thus, the squatter settlements that mushroomed in those years were not
confined to the city's fringes. By the late 1950s, the sarifahs
(reed and mud huts) in Baghdad were estimated to number 44,000, or
almost 45 percent of the total number of houses in the capital.
These slums became a special target of Qasim's government. Efforts
were directed at improving the housing and living conditions of the sarifah
dwellers. Between 1961 and 1963, many of these settlements were
eliminated and their inhabitants moved to two large housing projects on
the edge of the city-- Madinat ath Thawra and An Nur. Schools and
markets were also built, and sanitary services were provided. In time,
however, Ath Thawra and An Nur, too, became dilapidated, and just before
the war Saddam Husayn ordered Ath Thawra rebuilt as Saddam City. This
new area of low houses and wide streets has radically improved the
lifestyles of the residents, the overwhelming majority of whom were
Shias who had migrated from the south.
Another striking feature of the initial waves of migration to Baghdad
and other urban centers is that the migrants have tended to stay,
bringing with them whole families. The majority of migrants were peasant
cultivators, but shopkeepers, petty traders, and small craftsmen came as
well. Contact with the point of rural origin was not totally severed,
and return visits were fairly common, but reverse migration was
extremely rare. At least initially, there was a pronounced tendency for
migrants from the same village to relocate in clusters to ease the
difficulties of transition and maintain traditional patterns of mutual
assistance. Whether this pattern has continued into the war years was
not known, but it seems likely. A number of observers have reported
neighborhoods in the capital formed on the basis of rural or even tribal
origin.
The urban social structure has evolved gradually over the years. In
pre-revolutionary Iraq it was dominated by a well- defined ruling class,
concentrated in Baghdad. This was an internally cohesive group,
distinguished from the rest of the population by its considerable wealth
and political power. The economic base of this class was landed wealth,
but during the decades of the British Mandate and the monarchy, as
landlords acquired commercial interests and merchants and government
officials acquired real estate, a considerable intertwining of families
and interests occurred. The result was that the Iraqi ruling class could
not be easily separated into constituent parts: the largest commercial
trading houses were controlled by families owning vast estates; the
landowners were mostly tribal shaykhs but included many urban notables,
government ministers, and civil servants. Moreover, the landowning class
controlled the parliament, which tended to function in the most narrowly
conceived interest of these landlords.
There was a small but growing middle class in the 1950s and 1960s
that included a traditional core of merchants, shopkeepers, craftsmen,
professionals, and government officials, their numbers augmented
increasingly by graduates from the school system. The Ministry of
Education had been the one area during the monarchy that was relatively
independent of British advisers, and thus it was expanded as a
conspicuous manifestation of government response to popular demand. It
was completely oriented toward white-collar, middle-class occupations.
Within this middle class, and closely connected to the commercial
sector, was a small industrial bourgeoisie whose interests were not
completely identical with those of the more traditional sector.
Iraq's class structure at mid-century was characterized by great
instability. In addition to the profound changes occurring in the
countryside, there was the economic and social disruption of shortages
and spiraling inflation brought on by World War II. Fortunes were made
by a few, but for most there was deprivation and, as a consequence,
great social unrest. Longtime Western observers compared the situation
of the urban masses unfavorably with conditions in the last years of
Ottoman rule. An instance of the abrupt population shifts was the Iraqi
Jews. The establishment of the state of Israel led to the mass exodus of
this community in 1950, to be replaced by Shia merchants and traders,
many of whom were descendants of Iranian immigrants from the heavily
Shia populated areas of the south.
The trend of urban growth, which had commenced in the days
immediately preceding the revolution, took off in the mid-1970s, when
the effects of the sharp increases in the world price of oil began to be
felt. Oil revenues poured into the cities where they were invested in
construction and real estate speculation. The dissatisfied peasantry
then found even more cause to move to the cities because jobs--mainly in
construction--were available, and even part-time, unskilled labor was an
improvement over conditions in the countryside.
As for the elite, the oil boom of the 1970s brought greater
diversification of wealth, with some going to those attached to the
land, and some to those involved in the regime, commerce, and,
increasingly, manufacturing. The working class grew but was largely
fragmented. A relatively small number were employed in businesses of ten
or more workers, whereas a much larger number were classified as wage
workers, including those in the services sector. Between the elite and
the working masses was the lower middle class of petty bourgeoisie. This
traditional component consisted of the thousands of small handicraft
shops, which made up a huge part of the so-called manufacturing sector,
and the even more numerous one-man stores. The newer and more rapidly
expanding part of this class consisted of professionals and
semiprofessionals employed in services and the public sector, including
the officer corps, and the thousands of students looking for jobs. This
class became particularly significant in the 1980s because former
members of it have become the nation's elite. Perhaps the most important
aspect of the growth of the public sector was the expansion of
educational facilities, with consequent pressures to find white-collar
jobs for graduates in the noncommodity sectors.
Iraq
Iraq - Stratification and Social Classes
Iraq
The pre-revolutionary political system, with its parliament of
landlords and hand-picked government supporters, was increasingly
incompatible with the changing social reality marked by the quickening
pace of urban-based economic activity fueled by the oil revenues. The
faction of the elite investing in manufacturing, the petty bourgeoisie,
and the working classes pressured the state to represent their
interests. As the armed forces came to reflect this shifting balance of
social forces, a radical political change became inevitable. The social
origins and political inclinations of the Free
Officers who carried out the 1958 overthrow of the
monarchy and the various ideological parties that supported and
succeeded them clearly reflect the middle-class character of the Iraqi
Revolution. Both the agrarian reform program and the protracted campaign
against the foreign oil monopoly were aimed at restructuring political
and eonomic power in favor of the urbanbased middle and lower classes.
The political struggle between the self-styled radicals and moderates in
the 1960s mainly concerned the role of the state and the public sector
in the economy: the radicals promoted a larger role for the state, and
the moderates wanted to restrict it to the provision of basic services
and physical infrastructure.
There was a shift in the distribution of income after 1958 at the
expense of the large landowners and businessmen and in favor of the
salaried middle class and, to a lesser degree, the wage earners and
small farmers. The Baath Party, in power since July 1968, represented
the lower stratum of the middle class: sons of small shopkeepers, petty
officials, and graduates of training schools, law schools, and military
academies. In the 1980s, the ruling class tended to be composed of high
and middle echelon bureaucrats who either had risen through the ranks of
the party or had been coopted into the party because of their technical
competence, i.e., technocrats. The elite also consisted of army
officers, whose wartime loyalty the government has striven to retain by
dispensing material rewards and gifts.
The government's practice of lavishing rewards on the military has
also affected the lower classes. Martyrs' benefits under the Baath have
been extremely generous. Thus, the families of youths killed in battle
could expect to receive at least an automobile and more likely a
generous pension for life.
Iraq
Iraq - FAMILY AND SOCIETY
Iraq
Kinship groups are the fundamental social units, regulating many
activities that in Westernized societies are the functions of political,
economic, religious, or neighborhood groups. Rights and obligations
center on the extended family and the lineage. The family remains the
primary focus of loyalty; and it is in this context, rather than the
broader one of corporate loyalties defined by sectarian, ethnic, or
economic considerations, that the majority of Iraqis find the common
denominators of their everyday lives. A mutually protective attitude
among relatives is taken as a matter of course. Relatives tend to be
preferred as business partners since they are believed to be more
reliable than persons over whom one does not have the hold of kinship
ties. On higher levels, deeply ingrained family loyalty manifests itself
in business and public life.
The characteristic form of family organization involves a large group
of kinsmen related to one another through descent and marriage, that is,
an extended family usually consisting of three generations. Such an
extended family may all live together, which is the more traditional
pattern, or may reside separately like a nuclear family, but still share
the values and functions of an extended family, such as depending upon
one another and deferring to the older generation. As Iraqi society has
become increasingly urbanized, however, the tendency toward nuclear
family social organization, as opposed merely to residence, has become
more prevalent. The status of an individual is traditionally determined
by the position of his or her family in society and the individual's
position within that group. The family transmits values and standards of
behavior of the society to its members and holds them responsible for
each other's conduct. It traditionally determines occupations and
selects marriage partners. Kinsmen also cooperate in economic endeavors,
such as farming or trade, and ownership in land and other assets
frequently is vested in the group as a whole. The sharpest degree of
divergence from these patterns occurs among educated urban Iraqis, an
ever-increasing proportion of the society.
Until 1959 family life was subject to regulation only according to
religious law and tradition. All Muslims were brought under a single
body of family law for the first time in 1959 with the enactment of a
secular law on personal status, based on sharia, statutes from other
Islamic countries, and legal precedents established in Iraqi courts; a
brief amendment was enacted in 1963. The law spells out provisions
governing the right to contract marriage, the nature of the contract,
economic rights of the partners, divorce and child custody, as well as
bequests and inheritance.
The basic structural unit of the family consists of a senior couple,
their sons, the sons' wives and children, and unmarried daughters. Other
dependent relatives may also be attached to the group. The senior male
is the head of the family; he manages its properties and has the final
voice in decisions. Kinsmen are organized into still larger groups. The
next level of organization is the lineage, composed of all persons, male
and female, who trace their descent from a common ancestor. The number
of generations by which this ancestor is removed from the oldest living
one varies; a depth of four to six generations is usual.
Individuals or whole families of other descent sometimes attach
themselves to a particular lineage in an arrangement of mutual
advantage, becoming recognized after several generations as full members
of the lineage on equal terms with those born into it. In small villages
everyone is likely to belong to the same lineage; in larger ones there
may be two or more lineages in common but tempered by economic
cooperation, intermarriage, and the authority of the village leadership
or elders. Also among nontribal Iraqis, kinship organization and
traditions of common descent do not go beyond the lineage. Awareness of
distant ties is keen among recent migrants to the cities and among the
rural population.
In rural areas, new households are not usually set up until many
years after the initial recognition of a marriage. In general, the wife
moves in with her husband's parents, where the young couple remain for
some time. Often this arrangement is maintained until the death of the
father. Even when the father dies, the brothers sometimes stay together,
forming joint family households that include themselves, their wives,
and their children.
The actual number of persons who make up the household is determined
by the family's economic circumstances, pattern of living, and mode of
habitation. In an agricultural setting, as long as ownership of land and
other possessions is vested in the family as a whole, the possibilities
for a young man to set up an independent household are limited. In urban
centers, on the other hand, young men can avail themselves of
wage-earning employment.
Authority within the family is determined by seniority and sex. The
father, in theory, has absolute authority over the activities of the
members of the household, both within the confines of the house and
outside. He decides what education his children will receive, what
occupations his sons will enter, and, usually in consultation with his
wife, whom his children will marry. These authority patterns also have
been greatly weakened in the urban environment and by the shift of more
and more responsibilities from the family to larger social institutions,
such as the schools.
An even greater change in the traditional pattern of male dominance
has been brought about by the war. Because Iraq is numerically a much
smaller nation than Iran, it has experienced considerable difficulty
maintaining an adequate defense on the battlefront. To field a
sufficient force it has had to draw down the available labor pool on the
home front, and to compensate has mobilized women. In the mid-1980s,
observers reported that in many ministries the overwhelming proportion
of employees were women. Foreign contractors have encountered women
supervisors on huge construction projects, women doctors in the
hospitals, and even women performing law enforcement roles. This
emancipation-- extraordinary for an Arab country--was sanctioned by the
government, which expended a significant amount of propaganda
publicizing the role of women in helping to win the war. The government
further maintained that after the war women would be encouraged to
retain their newfound work roles; this was doubtful, however, because in
the same breath the government declared its determination to increase
the birthrate.
The Muslim majority has traditionally regarded marriage as primarily
a civil contract between two families, arranged by parents after
negotiations, which may be prolonged and conducted by an intermediary.
The arrangement of a marriage is a family matter in which the needs and
position of the corporate kin group are primary considerations.
Prospective partners are often known to each other, and they frequently
come from the same village and the same kin group. Among educated urban
dwellers, the traditional pattern of contracting marriage is giving way
to a pattern in which the young persons make their own choices, but
parents must still approve.
With regard to marriage and divorce, the 1959 Law of Personal Status,
amended in 1963, liberalized various provisions that affected the status
of women; in practice, however, the Iraqi judiciary up to the Revolution
tended to be conservative in applying the provisions of the law.
Specifically, Iraqi law required that divorce proceedings be initiated
in a court of law, but the husband still had the controlling role in
dissolving the marriage. Moreover, a man who wanted to marry a second
wife was required first to get approval from the court. Provision was
also made for the custody of children to be based on consideration of
the welfare of the child.
Economic motivation and considerations of prestige and family
strength all contribute to the high value placed on large families. The
greater the number of children, especially sons, the greater the
prestige of the father, and through him that of the family as a whole.
Boys are especially welcome because they are the carriers of the family
tradition, and because their economic contribution in an agricultural
society is greater than that of girls.
Between the ages of three and six, children are given freedom to
learn by imitating older siblings. Strong emphasis is then placed on
conformity with elders' patterns and on loyalty and obedience. Family
solidarity is stressed. The passage from adolescence to maturity is
swift. Upon reaching puberty, there traditionally is a separation of
sexes, and girls are excluded from male society except that of their
close kin. Great emphasis is placed on premarital chastity, and this is
one reason for early marriages. Boys have greater freedom during
adolescence than girls and begin to be drawn into the company of their
fathers and the world of men.
Iraq
Iraq - EDUCATION AND WELFARE
Iraq
The impact of government policies on the class structure and
stratification patterns can be imputed from available statistics on
education and training as well as employment and wage structures. Owing
to the historic emphasis on the expansion of educational facilities, the
leaders of the Baath Party and indeed much of Iraq's urban middle class
were able to move from rural or urban lower-class origins to middle and
even top positions in the state apparatus, the public sector, and the
society at large.
This social history is confirmed in the efforts of the government to
generalize opportunities for basic education throughout the country.
Between 1976 and 1986, the number of primary-school students increased
30 percent; female students increased 45 percent, from 35 to 44 percent
of the total. The number of primary-school teachers increased 40 percent
over this period. At the secondary level, the number of students
increased by 46 percent, and the number of female students increased by
55 percent, from 29 to 36 percent of the total. Baghdad, which had about
29 percent of the population, had 26 percent of the primary students, 27
percent of the female primary students, and 32 percent of the secondary
students.
Education was provided by the government through a centrally
organized school system. In the early 1980s, the system included a
six-year primary (or elementary) level known as the first level. The
second level, also of six years, consisted of an intermediate-secondary
and an intermediate-preparatory, each of three years. Graduates of these
schools could enroll in a vocational school, one of the teacher training
schools or institutes, or one of the various colleges, universities, or
technical institutes.
The number of students enrolled in primary and secondary schools was
highest in the central region and lowest in the north, although the
enrollment of the northern schools was only slightly lower than that of
the south. Before the war, the government had made considerable gains in
lessening the extreme concentration of primary and secondary educational
facilities in the main cities, notably Baghdad. Vocational education,
which had been notoriously inadequate in Iraq, received considerable
official attention in the 1980s. The number of students in technical
fields has increased threefold since 1977, to over 120,090 in 1986.
The Baath regime also seemed to have made progress since the late
1960s in reducing regional disparities, although they were far from
eliminated and no doubt were more severe than statistics would suggest.
Baghdad, for example, was the home of most educational facilities above
the secondary level, since it was the site not only of Baghdad
University, which in the academic year 1983-84 (the most recent year for
which statistics were available in early 1988) had 34,555 students, but
also of the Foundation of Technical Institutes with 34,277 students,
Mustansiriya University with 11,686 students, and the University of
Technology with 7,384 students. The universities in Basra, Mosul, and
Irbil, taken together, enrolled 26 percent of all students in higher
education in the academic year 1983-84.
The number of students seeking to pursue higher education in the
1980s increased dramatically. Accordingly, in the mid-1980s the
government made plans to expand Salah ad Din University in Irbil in the
north and to establish Ar Rashid University outside Baghdad. The latter
was not yet in existence in early 1988 but both were designed ultimately
to accommodate 50,000 students. In addition, at the end of December
1987, the government announced plans to create four more universities:
one in Tikrit in the central area, one each at Al Kufah and Al Qadisiyah
in the south, and one at Al Anbar in the west. Details of these
universities were not known.
With the outbreak of the war, the government faced a difficult
dilemma regarding education. Despite the shortage of wartime manpower,
the regime was unwilling to tap the pool of available university
students, arguing that these young people were Iraq's hope for the
future. As of early 1988, therefore, the government routinely exempted
students from military service until graduation, a policy it has adhered
to rigorously. This policy, however, has likely caused resentment among
the poorer classes and those forced to serve multiple tours at the front
because of continuing manpower shortages.
<>Health
<>Welfare
Iraq
Iraq - Health
Iraq
In the 1980s, almost all medical facilities continued to be
controlled by the government, and most physicians were Ministry of
Health officials. Curative and preventive services in the
government-controlled hospitals and dispensaries and the services of
government physicians were free of charge. The ministry included the
directorates of health, preventive medicine, medical supplies, rural
health services, and medical services. The inspector general of health,
under the ministry, was charged with the enforcement of health laws and
regulations. Private medical practice and private hospitals and clinics
were subject to government supervision. In each province Ministry of
Health functions were carried out by a chief medical officer who, before
the war, frequently had a private practice to supplement his government
salary. Provincial medical officers were occupied mainly with
administrative duties in hospitals, clinics, and dispensaries. The work
of medical officers in the rural areas before the war was seriously
curtailed by lack of transportation.
One of the most serious problems facing the Ministry of Health in the
prewar period was its shortage of trained personnel. The shortage was
accentuated by the fact that most medical personnel tended to be
concentrated in the major cities, such as Baghdad and Basra. Physicians
trained at government expense were required to spend four years in the
public health service, but they strongly resisted appointments to posts
outside the cities and made every effort to return to Baghdad.
In 1983, the latest year for which statistics were available in early
1988, Baghdad Governorate, which had about 29 percent of the population,
had nearly 37 percent of the country's hospital beds, 42 percent of the
government clinics, and 38 percent of the paramedical personnel. The
increasing number of clinics in the provinces, however, brought some
rudimentary health care within reach of the rural population. At the
same time, given the unsettled conditions in the Kurdish areas, it was
likely that health care in the northern provinces had deteriorated since
the start of the war.
Published information concerning sanitation and endemic diseases was
scanty. Reportedly in the mid-1980s Iraq had a high incidence of
trachoma, influenza, measles, whooping cough, and tuberculosis. Prior to
the war, poor sanitation and polluted water sources were principal
factors in the spread of disease. A large percentage of the population
lived in villages and towns that have been along irrigation canals and
rivers polluted with human and animal wastes. These waterways, along
with the stagnant pools of water that sometimes constitute the village
reservoir, were the major sources of drinking water and of water for
bathing, laundering, and washing food. The periodic flooding of rivers
contaminated water supplies and spread waterborne diseases.
The Tigris and Euphrates rivers and their tributaries serve as water
sources for Baghdad and some of the major provincial towns. Irbil and As
Sulaymaniyah, located in the northern mountains, have adequate supplies
of spring water. In Basra, Mosul, and Kirkuk the water is stored in
elevated tanks and chemically treated before distribution. In Baghdad
the water is filtered, chlorinated, and piped into homes or to communal
fountains located throughout the city. In the smaller towns, however,
the water supply is unprotected and is only rarely tested for
potability.
Iraq
Iraq - Welfare
Iraq
Iraq, with its socialist economy, pays considerable attention to
welfare. This regard for social benefits has been increased by the war.
No statistics were available in early 1988 by which to judge the scope
of benefits paid by the government to its servicemen and their families.
Nonetheless, journalistic reports indicated that martyrs' benefits--for
the families of war dead-- and subsidies for young men who volunteer for
service tended to be extremely generous. A family that had lost a son in
the fighting could expect to be subsidized for life; in addition, it was
likely to receive loans from the state bank on easy terms and gifts of
real estate.
Minimal information was available in early 1988 concerning social
welfare coverage. The most recent published data was that for 1983, when
the government listed 824,560 workers covered by social security. In
addition, pensions were paid to retirees and disabled persons as well as
compensation to workers for maternity and sick leaves.
* * *
Although a number of first rate military analyses of Iraq and the war
have appeared since 1980, there has been little useful research on the
social changes that were occurring. Much of the information that would
make up such studies has been withheld by the government because of
wartime censorship, and in some cases material that has been made
available appears to be untrustworthy. A number of classics therefore
continue to be required reading for those interested in the society of
Iraq. Wilfred Thesiger's Marsh Arabs graphically depicts life
among the southern Shias in the mid- and late 1950s. Robert Fernea's Shaikh
and Effendi describes social conditions in the central Euphrates
valley and Elizabeth Fernea's Guests of the Sheik deals with
the role of women particularly. Classic historical treatments of the
Kurdish question are found in Edmond Ghareeb's The Kurdish Question
in Iraq and W. Jwaideh's The Kurdish National Movement.
The latest work on the subject is The Kurds: An Unstable Element in
the Gulf by Stephen Pelletiere. For an excellent treatment of the
Baathist elite see The Old Social and the Revolutionary Movements of
Iraq by Hanna Batatu. Also on the same topic is Iraq: Eaastern
Flank of the Arab World by Christine Helm. For the best all around
treatment of Iraq in the recent period, see Phebe Marr's The Modern
History of Iraq.
Iraq
Iraq - The Economy
Iraq
FOLLOWING THE 1968 Baath (Arab Socialist Resurrection) Party
revolution, Iraq's government pursued a socialist economic policy. For
more than a decade, the economy prospered, primarily because of massive
infusions of cash from oil exports. Despite a quadrupling of imports
between 1978 and 1980, Iraq continued to accrue current account
surpluses in excess of US$10 billion per year. In 1980 on the eve of the
outbreak of the Iran-Iraq War, Iraq held reserves estimated at US$35
billion. When Iraq launched the war against Iran in 1980, the Iraqis
incorrectly calculated that they could force a quick Iranian
capitulation and could annex Iranian territory at little cost in either
men or money. Using a number of means, Iraq opted to keep the human
costs of the war as low as possible, both on the battlefield and on the
home front. In battle, Iraq attempted to keep casualties low by
expending and by losing vast amounts of materiel. Behind the lines, Iraq
attempted to insulate citizens from the effects of the war and to head
off public protest in two ways. First, the government provided a
benefits package worth tens of thousands of dollars to the surviving
relatives of each soldier killed in action. The government also
compensated property owners for the full value of property destroyed in
the war. Second, the government adopted a "guns and butter"
strategy. Along with the war, the government launched an economic
development campaign of national scope, employing immigrant laborers to
replace Iraqi fighting men.
In 1981, foreign expenditures not directly related to the war effort
peaked at an all-time high of US$23.6 billion, as Iraq continued to
import goods and services for the development effort, and construction
continued unabated. Additionally, Iraq was paying an estimated US$25
million per day to wage the war. Although the Persian Gulf states
contributed US$5 billion toward the war effort from 1980 to 1981, Iraq
raised most of the money needed for war purposes by drawing down its
reserves over several years. Iraq could not replenish its reserves
because most of its oil terminals were destroyed by Iran in the opening
days of the war. Iraqi exports dropped by 60 percent in 1981, and they
were cut further in 1982 when Syria, acting in accord with Iran, closed
the vital Iraqi oil export pipeline running through Syrian territory.
The total cost of the war to Iraq's economy was difficult to measure.
A 1987 study by the Japanese Institute of Middle Eastern Economies
estimated total Iraqi war losses from 1980 to 1985 at US$226 billion.
This figure was disaggregated into US$120.8 billion in gross domestic
product lost in the oil sector, US$64 billion GDP lost in the nonoil
sector, US$33 billion lost in destroyed materiel, and US$8.2 billion
lost in damage to non-oil sector fixed capital investment. Included in
the lost GDP was US$65.5 in lost oil revenues and US$43.4 billion in
unrealized fixed capital investment.
As the 1980s progressed, the Iran-Iraq conflict evolved into a
protracted war of attrition, in which Iran threatened to overwhelm Iraq
by sheer economic weight and manpower. Although Iraq implemented some
cost-cutting measures, the government feared that an austerity plan
would threaten its stability, so it turned to outside sources to finance
the war. Iraq's Persian Gulf neighbors assumed a larger share of the
economic burden of the war, but as the price of oil skidded in the
mid-1980s, this regional support of Iraq diminished. For the first time,
Iraq turned to Western creditors to finance its deficit spending. Iraq's
leadership calculated correctly that foreign lenders, both government
and private, would be willing to provide loans and trade credit to
preserve their access to the Iraqi economy, which would emerge as a
major market and an oil supplier after the war. But the sustained slump
in oil prices made foreign creditors more skeptical of Iraq's long-term
economic prospects, and some lenders apparently concluded that providing
more loans to Iraq amounted to throwing good money after bad. Some
creditors were also wary of Iraq's postwar prospects because of Iranian
demands for tens of billions of dollars in reparations as the price for
any peace settlement. Although Iraq would probably pay only a fraction
of the reparations demanded (and that, most likely, with the help of
other Persian Gulf countries), a large settlement would nonetheless
delay Iraq's postwar economic recovery.
In 1988, as the war entered its eighth year and Iraq's debt topped
US$50 billion, the government was implementing comprehensive economic
reforms it had announced in 1987. Iraq's new economic policy was
designed to reverse twenty years of socialism by relinquishing
considerable state control over the economy to the private sector. It
was not immediately clear if this move would result in a fundamental and
enduring restructuring of Iraq's economy, or if it was merely a stopgap
measure to boost productivity, to cut costs, to tap private sector
savings, and to reassure Western creditors.
Iraq
Iraq - GROWTH AND STRUCTURE OF THE ECONOMY
Iraq
In the 1960s, investment in industry accounted for almost one-quarter
of the development budget, about twice the amount spent under the
monarchy in the 1950s. After the 1968 Baath revolution, the share
allocated to industrial development grew to about 30 percent of
development spending. With the advent of the Iran-Iraq War, however,
this share decreased to about 18 percent. Development expenditure on
agriculture fell from about 40 percent under the prerevolutionary regime
to about 20 percent under the Baath regime in the early 1970s. By 1982,
investment in agriculture was down to 10 percent of the development
budget.
Total Iraqi GDP, as well as sectoral contribution to GDP, could only
be estimated in the 1980s. On the eve of the Iran-Iraq War, the
petroleum sector dominated the economy, accounting for two-thirds of
GDP. The outbreak of war curtailed oil production, and by 1983 petroleum
contributed only one-third of GDP. The nonpetroleum sector of the
economy also shrank, and, as a consequence, total real GDP dropped about
15 percent per year from 1981 to 1983. To a lesser extent, nominal GDP
also shrank, from about US$20 billion to US$18 billion, an indication of
high wartime inflation. The decline in GDP was reversed between 1984 and
1986, when oil production grew at about 24 percent per year as the
government secured outlets and resumed exports. But over the same
period, the nonpetroleum sector of the economy continued to contract by
about 6 percent per year, offsetting gains from increased oil
production. In 1986, the petroleum sector revived to the extent that it
contributed about 33.5 percent of GDP, while the nonpetroleum sector,
including services, manufacturing and agriculture accounted for the
remainder. Business services, the largest component of nonpetroleum GDP,
amounted to about 23 percent of GDP. Agriculture accounted for about 7.5
percent of GDP, mining and manufacturing for slightly less than 7
percent, construction for almost 12 percent, transportation and
communications for about 4.5 percent, and utilities for between 1 and 2
percent. The total estimated GDP for 1986 was equivalent to US$35
billion.
Projections based on economic trends indicated that total GDP would
grow about 6 percent annually over the five-year period from 1987 to
1991. In fact, however, 1987 GDP was estimated at a 1.7 percent real
growth rate. The petroleum sector would continue to grow, although at a
slower rate of about 8 percent per year, and it would account for more
than half of GDP. The nonpetroleum sector was expected to resume modest
growth in 1987. Construction would be the fastest growing sector, at
about 7 percent per year. Agriculture would grow only marginally, and
therefore its share of overall GDP would decline from 1986 levels. Other
nonpetroleum sectors would grow at a rate of between 3 and 4 percent per
year and, because these projected growth rates were smaller than the
overall GDP growth rate, would likewise decline as a percentage of total
GDP.
In early 1988, Iraq's total external liabilities were difficult to
determine accurately because the Iraqi government did not publish
official information on its debt. Moreover, Iraqi debt was divided into
a number of overlapping categories according to the type of lender, the
terms of disbursement or servicing, and the disposition of the funds.
For example, some loans were combined with aid grants in mixed credits,
and some loans were authorized but never disbursed. And, in a process of
constant negotiation with its creditors, Iraq had deferred payment by
rescheduling loans. Finally, some loans were partially repaid with oil
in counter-trade and barter agreements. Nevertheless, experts estimated
that Iraqi debt in 1986 totaled between US$50 billion and US$80 billion.
Of this total, Iraq owed about US$30 billion to Saudi Arabia, Kuwait,
and the other Gulf states. Most of this amount was derived from crude
oil sales on Iraq's behalf. Iraq promised to provide reimbursement in
oil after the war, but the Gulf states were expected to waive repayment.
A second important category of debt was that owed to official export
credit agencies. The authoritative Wharton Econometric Forecasting
Associates estimated in 1986 that Iraqi debt guaranteed by export credit
agencies totalled US$9.3 billion, of which US$1.6 billion was short-term
debt and US$7.7 billion was medium-term debt.
In the category of private sector debts, Iraq owed up to US$7 billion
to private companies that had not secured the trade credit they extended
to Iraq with their government export credit agencies. The firms that
were owed the most were based in Turkey, in the Republic of Korea (South
Korea), and in India, which lacked access to official export credit
guarantees. European companies were also owed large amounts. By the late
1980s, Iraq had placed a priority on settling these private sector
debts. In addition, Iraq owed an estimated US$6.8 billion to commercial
banks as of mid-1986, although much of this sum was guaranteed by
government export credit agencies.
In the realm of government debts, Iraq had accrued considerable debts
to Western governments for its purchases of military materiel. Iraq owed
France more than US$1.35 billion for weapons, which it was repaying by
permitting Elf-Aquitaine and Compagnie Fran�aise des Petroles-Total
(CFP)--two oil companies affiliated with the French government--to lift
80,000 barrels of oil per day from the Dortyol terminal near Iskenderun,
Turkey. Finally, Iraq owed money to the Soviet Union and to East
European nations. Iraq's debt to the Soviet Union was estimated at US$5
billion in 1987.
Iraq
Iraq - THE ROLE OF GOVERNMENT
Iraq
Following the Baath Party's accession to power in 1968, the
government began using central planning to manage the national economy.
The government separated its expenditures into three categories: an
annual expenditure budget for government operations, an annual
investment budget to achieve the goals of the five-year plans, and an
annual import budget. Economic planning was regarded as a state
prerogative, and thus economic plans were considered state secrets. The
government rarely published budget or planning information, although
information on specific projects, on total investment goals, and on
productivity was occasionally released.
Extremely high revenues from oil exports in the 1970s made budgeting
and development planning almost irrelevant in Iraq. The responsibility
of the state was not so much to allocate scarce resources as to
distribute the wealth, and economic planning was concerned more with
social welfare and subsidization than with economic efficiency. One
consistent and very costly development goal was to reduce the economy's
dependence on a single extractive commodity--oil--and, in particular, to
foster heavy industry. Despite this objective, in 1978 the government
began an attempt to rationalize the non-oil sector. The process of
costcutting and streamlining entailed putting a ceiling on subsidization
by making state-run industries and commercial operations semiautonomous.
The expenditures of such public entities were not aggregated into the
governmental expenditure budget. Instead, state-run companies were given
their own budgets in an attempt to make them more efficient.
Because Iraqi economic development planning was predicated on massive
expenditure, the onset of the Iran-Iraq War in 1980 brought central
planning to an impasse. Despite an effort to maintain the momentum of
its earlier development spending, the government was forced to revert to
ad hoc planning as it adjusted to limited resources and to deficit
spending. Economic planning became not just a perceived national
security issue, but a real one, as the government devoted its attention
and managerial resources to obtaining credits. The Fourth Five-Year Plan
(1981- 85) was suspended, and as of early 1988, the Fifth Five-Year Plan
(1986-90) had not been formulated.
In early 1987, President Saddam Husayn abruptly reversed the course
of Iraq's economic policy, deviating sharply from the socialist economic
ideology that the government had propounded since the 1968 Baath
revolution. Saddam Hussayn advocated a more open, if not free, market,
and he launched a program of extensive reform. Because the
liberalization was aimed primarily at dealing with the nation's mounting
and increasingly unmanageable war debt, Saddam Husayn's motivation was
more strategic than economic. He had four related goals--to conserve
money by cutting the costs of direct and of indirect government
subsidies, to tap private sector savings and to stem capital outflow by
offering credible investment opportunities to Iraqi citizens, to reduce
the balance of payments deficit by fostering import substitution and by
promoting exports, and to use the reforms to convince Western commercial
creditors to continue making loans to Iraq.
The reform process began with Revolutionary Command Council (RCC)
Decree Number 652, which in May 1987 abolished Iraq's labor law. This
law had institutionalized the differences among white collar, blue
collar, and peasant workers. Under the law, every adult had been
guaranteed lifetime employment, but workers had almost no freedom to
choose or to change their jobs or places of employment, and they had
little upward mobility. One result was that labor costs in Iraq
accounted for 20 percent to 40 percent of output, compared to about 10
percent in similar industries in nonsocialist economies. Nonproductive
administrative staff accounted for up to half the personnel in state-run
enterprises, a much higher proportion than in private sector companies
in other countries. The government immediately laid off thousands of
white-collar workers, most of whom were foreign nationals. Thousands of
other white-collar civil servants were given factory jobs. Previously,
all state blue collar-workers had belonged to government-sponsored trade
unions, while unions for private sector employees were prohibited. After
the labor law was abolished, the situation was reversed. Government
workers could no longer be union members, whereas private sector
employees were authorized to establish and to join their own unions. To
compensate state blue collar-workers for their lost job security, Saddam
Husayn established an incentive plan that permitted stateenterprise
managers to award up to 30 percent of the value of any increase in
productivity to workers.
Decree Number 652 aroused resentment and controversy among government
bureaucrats, many of whom were stalwart Baath Party members, not only
because it contradicted party ideology, but also because it imperiled
their jobs. Feeling compelled to justify his new economic thinking and
to reconcile it to Baathist ideology, Saddam Husayn wrote a long article
in Ath Thawrah, the major government-run newspaper, criticizing
the labor law for perpetuating a caste and class system that prevented
people from being rewarded according to merit and from using their
capacities fully. Perhaps writing with intentional irony, Saddam Husayn
stated that unless people were rewarded for producing more, some might
start to regard the capitalist system as superior because it permitted
the growth of wealth and the improvement of workers' lives.
In June 1987, Saddam Husayn went further in attacking the
bureaucratic red tape that entangled the nation's economy. In a speech
to provincial governors, he said, "From now on the state should not
embark on uneconomic activity. Any activity, in any field, which is
supposed to have an economic return and does not make such a return,
must be ignored. All officials must pay as much attention to economic
affairs as political ideology."
To implement this policy, Saddam Husayn announced a move toward
privatization of government-owned enterprises. Several mechanisms were
devised to turn state enterprises over to the private sector. Some state
companies were leased on long terms, others were sold outright to
investors, and others went public with stock offerings. Among the state
enterprises sold to the public were bus companies serving the provinces,
about 95 percent of the nation's network of gas stations, thousands of
agricultural and animal husbandry enterprises, state department stores,
and factories. In many instances, to improve productivity the government
turned stock over to company employees.
The most significant instance of privatization occurred in August
1987, when Saddam Husayn announced a decree to abolish the State
Enterprise for Iraqi Airways by early 1988. Two new ventures were to be
established instead: the Iraqi Aviation Company, to operate commercially
as the national airline, and the National Company for Aviation Services,
to provide aircraft and airport services. Stock was to be sold to the
public, and the government was to retain a minority share of the new
companies through the General Federation of Iraqi Chambers of Commerce
and Industry.
In a further move consistent with the trend toward privatization, the
RCC announced in November 1987 that the government would offer new
inducements for foreign companies to operate in Iraq by loosening direct
investment restrictions. Details of the new proposal were not specified,
but it was expected to entail modification of Resolution Number 1646 of
the RCC, enacted in November 1980, which forbade foreign capital
participation in private sector companies. Changes in the longstanding
government policy of preventing foreign ownership of state institutions
might also occur. According to the new regulations, all foreign firms
engaged in development projects would also be exempt from paying taxes
and duties, and foreign nationals who were employees of these companies
would pay no income tax. At the same time, Saddam Husayn announced that
development projects would no longer be paid for on credit. The new
legislation indicated that Iraq was encountering difficulty paying for
or obtaining credits for turnkey projects and was therefore willing to
permit foreign companies to retain partial ownership of the
installations that they built. Previously, Iraq had rejected exchanging
debt for equity in this manner as an infringement on its sovereignty.
Iraq
Iraq - BANKING AND FINANCE
Iraq
When Iraq was part of the Ottoman Empire, a number of European
currencies circulated alongside the Turkish pound. With the
establishment of the British mandate after World War I, Iraq was
incorporated into the Indian monetary system, which was operated by the
British, and the rupee became the principal currency in circulation. In
1931, the Iraq Currency Board was established in London for note issue
and maintenance of reserves for the new Iraqi dinar. The currency board pursued a conservative monetary policy,
maintaining very high reserves behind the dinar. The dinar was further
strengthened by its link to the British pound. In 1947 the
government-owned National Bank of Iraq was founded, and in 1949 the
London-based currency board was abolished as the new bank assumed
responsibility for the issuing of notes and the maintenance of reserves.
The National Bank of Iraq continued the currency board's conservative
monetary policy, maintaining 100 percent reserves behind outstanding
domestic currency.
Initiated during the last years of Ottoman rule, commercial banking
became a significant factor in foreign trade during the British mandate.
British banks predominated, but traditional money dealers continued to
extend some domestic credit and to offer limited banking services. The
expansion of banking services was hampered by the limited use of money,
the small size of the economy, and the small amount of savings; banks
provided services for foreign trade almost exclusively. In the
mid-1930s, the Iraqi government decided to establish banks in order to
make credit available to other sectors of the economy. In 1936, the
government formed the Agricultural and Industrial Bank. In 1940, this
bank was divided into the Agricultural Bank and the Industrial Bank,
each with substantially increased capital provided by the government.
The government established the Rafidayn Bank in 1941 as both the primary
commercial bank and the central bank, but the National Bank of Iraq
became the government's banker in 1947. The Real Estate Bank was
established in 1948, primarily to finance the purchase of houses by
individuals. The Mortgage Bank was established in 1951, and the
Cooperative Bank in 1956. In addition to these government-owned
institutions, branches of foreign banks and private Iraqi banks were
opened as the economy expanded.
In 1956 the National Bank of Iraq became the Central Bank of Iraq.
Its responsibilities included the issuing and the management of
currency, control over foreign exchange transactions, and the regulation
and supervision of the banking system. It kept accounts for the
government, and it handled government loans. Over the years, legislation
has considerably enlarged the Central Bank's authority.
On July 14, 1964, all banks and insurance companies were
nationalized, and, during the next decade, banking was consolidated. By
1987 the banking system consisted of the Central Bank, the Rafidayn
Bank, and the Agricultural, Industrial, and Real Estate banks.
In the 1980s, the Rafidayn Bank was in the contradictory position of
trying to maintain its reputation as a viable commercial bank while
acting on behalf of the government as an intermediary in securing loans
from private foreign banks. With deposits of more than US$17 billion in
1983, the Rafidayn was reportedly the largest commercial bank in the
Arab world. It managed to maintain a relatively sound commercial
reputation for the five years of the war, and in 1985 its total assets
stood at about ID10.4 billion and its total deposits, at more than ID9.5
billion--both figures having tripled since the Iran-Iraq War began in
1980. This huge increase in deposits was attributed to increased saving
by the public because of the scarcity of consumer products. Profits of
ID290 million in 1985 represented an increase of nearly 50 percent over
1980 levels. By 1985 the Ralidayn had established 215 branches in Iraq,
104 of which were in Baghdad; according to the Iraqi government, it also
had seven branches abroad. In 1986, however, the bank started to delay
payment of letters of credit owed to foreign exporters, and its failure
to make installment payments on a syndicated loan of 500 million
Eurodollars, forced rescheduling of the debt payments. In 1987, with the
exception of the Baghdad office of a Yugoslav bank, the Rafidayn was
Iraq's only commercial bank. In this same year, the government ordered
the Rafidayn Bank to double its capital to ID100 million. This increase
was to enable the bank to improve and to extend its commercial services,
so that it could tap the public for the increased deposits that would
enable the bank to offer more loans. To the extent that new loans could
bolster the emerging private sector, the move appeared consistent with
other government efforts to make state-run operations more fiscally
efficient.
The other three banks in Iraq were so-called special banks that
provided short- to long-term credit in their respective markets. Since
its establishment in 1936, the Agricultural Bank had grown to forty-five
branches, of which four were in Baghdad. In 1981, its capital stood at
ID150 million and its loans totaled ID175 million. The Agricultural Bank
had also started a project whose objective was to encourage rural
citizens to establish savings accounts. Meanwhile, the Industrial Bank
had grown to nine branches and offered loans both to private and to
public sector industrial and manufacturing companies. The Real Estate
Bank was composed of twenty-five branches and provided loans for
construction of housing and tourist facilities. The Iraq Life Insurance
Company, the Iraq Reinsurance Company, and the National Life Insurance
Company conducted the nation's insurance business. Post offices
maintained savings accounts for small depositors.
Iraq
Iraq - THE OIL SECTOR
Iraq
Developments Through World War II
Natural seepage aroused an early interest in Iraq's oil potential.
After the discovery of oil at Baku (in what is now the Soviet Union, on
the west side of the Caspian Sea) in the 1870s, foreign groups began
seeking concessions for exploration in Iran and in the area of the
Ottoman Empire that became Iraq after World War I. The Anglo-Persian Oil
Company (later renamed the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company and still later
British Petroleum) was granted a concession in Iran and discovered oil
in 1908. Shortly before World War I, the British government purchased
majority ownership of the Anglo-Persian Oil Company.
The discovery of oil in Iran stimulated greater interest in potential
Iraqi oil resources, and financial groups from several major nations
engaged in protracted negotiations and in considerable intrigue with the
Ottoman Empire in order to obtain concessions to explore for oil in
Mosul and in Kirkuk, two locations in what later was north-central Iraq.
Although a few concessions were granted prior to World War I, little
surveying or exploration was done.
Iraq
Iraq - The Turkish Petroleum Company
Iraq
In 1912, several rival groups banded together to establish the
Turkish Petroleum Company (TPC), which would seek a concession to
explore for Iraqi oil. The original purpose of the TPC was to eliminate
rivalry among the partners and to outflank American concession seekers.
The TPC's guiding hand was Calouste Gulbenkian, who had been hired by
British banking interests because of his knowledge and his ability to
influence the decisions of the Turkish government. His 5 percent
holdings in TPC reputedly made him the richest individual in the world
for many years, and were the source of his nickname, "Mr. Five
Percent."
Establishment of the TPC did not eliminate the rivalry among the
shareholders representing various national interests. Britain had a
long-standing strategic interest in Mesopotamia because of its location
in relation to Britain's military and commercial routes to India. The
British government's decision before World War I to convert its naval
fleet from coal to oil increased the importance of the area. By 1914,
the British-government- controlled Anglo-Persian Oil Company had bought
50 percent of the shares of TPC and was exerting pressure on the Turkish
government to grant the Anglo-Persian Oil Company a concession, but
World War I delayed negotiations.
World War I demonstrated to the major powers the importance of
securing their own sources of oil. The British-French San Remo
Conference of 1920 provided for permanent British control of any company
established to develop Mesopotamian oil, but allocated Iraqi interests
20 percent if they chose to invest. France claimed the German shares of
TPC that had been seized as enemy property and formed the CFP to hold
the French shares in TPC. The Italian and United States governments
protested their exclusion. After prolonged and sharp diplomatic
exchanges, American oil companies were permitted to buy into TPC,
although negotiations were not completed until 1928.
Although Iraq became a British mandate in 1920, that did not
guarantee TPC an exclusive concession. Using the promise of a concession
from the prewar Turkish government, TPC began negotiating for one in
1921. A major point of contention was Iraq's 20 percent share of any oil
development company, a condition stipulated at the San Remo Conference.
By the early 1920s, TPC consisted almost entirely of oil companies that
did not want Iraq's representation or its interference in the management
of TPC. They successfully resisted Iraqi efforts to participate despite
pressure by the British government to accept Iraqi shareholders.
A concession was granted to TPC in March 1925. Many Iraqis felt
cheated from the beginning of the concession. Its term was for
seventy-five years, and it covered twenty-four plots selected by TPC.
The Iraqi government was to receive royalties at a flat fee per ton to
be paid in English pounds sterling, but with a gold clause to guard
against devaluation of the pound. Royalty payments were linked to oil
company profits, but this clause became effective only after twenty
years. The Iraqi government had the right to tax TPC at the same rate
levied on other industrial concerns. TPC was to build a refinery to meet
Iraq's domestic needs and a pipeline for the export of crude oil. The
Iraqi government had the right to lease other plots for oil exploration
and development, and TPC was not excluded from bidding on these
additional plots.
TPC began exploratory drilling after the concession was ratified by
the Iraqi government. Oil was discovered just north of Kirkuk on October
15, 1927. Many tons of oil were spilled before the gushing well was
brought under control. This indication of a large, valuable field soon
proved well-founded.
The discovery of oil hastened negotiations over the composition and
the functions of TPC. The shareholders signed a formal agreement in July
1928. The Anglo-Persian Oil Company, the Dutch Shell Group, the CFP, and
the Near East Development Corporation (which represented the interests
of five large American oil companies) each held 23.7 percent of the
shares, and Gulbenkian the remaining, but nonvoting, 5 percent. TPC was
organized as a nonprofit company registered in Britain that produced
crude oil for a fee for its parent companies, based on their shares. TPC
was limited to refining and marketing for Iraq's internal needs to
prevent any competition with the parent companies. The Anglo-Persian Oil
Company was awarded a 10 percent royalty on the oil produced, as
compensation for its reduced share in TPC.
A major obstacle facing United States firms had been a clause in the
1914 reorganization of the TPC that stipulated that any oil activity in
the Ottoman Empire by any shareholder would be shared by all partners.
Gulbenkian had insisted on the clause so that the oil companies could
not circumvent his interests by establishing other companies without
him. This arrangement, continued in the 1928 reorganization, came to be
known as the Red Line Agreement because the TPC partners were forbidden
to act independently within the boundaries of the now-defunct Ottoman
Empire. This "red line" effectively precluded the United
States and other TPC partners from concession hunting and from oil
development in much of the Persian Gulf region until after World War II.
In 1929 the TPC was renamed the Iraq Petroleum Company (IPC). IPC
represented oil companies that had diverse and sometimes conflicting
interests. The Anglo-Persian Oil Company and Standard Oil of New Jersey
(also known as Esso and subsequently known as Exxon), for example, had
access to major sources of crude oil outside Iraq, and they therefore
wished to hold the Iraqi concessions in reserve. CFP and other
companies, in contrast, pushed for rapid development of Iraqi oil to
augment their short crude oil supplies.
IPC's parent companies delayed development of the Iraqi fields, and
IPC's concession expired because the companies failed to meet certain
performance requirements, such as the construction of pipelines and of
shipping terminals. IPC's concession was renegotiated in 1931. The new
contract gave IPC a seventy-year concession on an enlarged
83,200-square-kilometer area, all east of the Tigris River. In return,
however, the Iraqi government demanded and received additional payments
and loans as well as the promise that IPC would complete two oil
pipelines to the Mediterranean by 1935.
Iraqi politicians remained suspicious of IPC's motives. Many Iraqis
believed that IPC was deliberately withholding Iraqi crude from the
market to boost the price of the parent companies' oil produced
elsewhere. In 1932 Iraq granted a seventy-five-year concession to the
British Oil Development Company (BODC), created by a group of Italian
and British interests, to 120,000 square kilometers west of the Tigris
River. The terms were more favorable to the Iraqi government than those
of earlier agreements. BODC financing was insufficient, however, and the
company was bought out by IPC in 1941 and was renamed the Mosul
Petroleum Company (MPC). IPC shareholders asserted their monopoly
position again when they won the concession rights to southern Iraq and
in 1938 founded the Basrah Petroleum Company (BPC) as their wholly owned
subsidiary to develop the region.
Transport remained the main obstacle to the efficient export of Iraqi
oil. When France joined IPC after World War I, it wanted the Iraqi
pipeline to transit its mandate in Syria to a coastal terminal at
Tripoli, Lebanon. The Iraqis and the British preferred a terminal at
Haifa, in Palestine. In 1934, a pipeline was completed from the Kirkuk
fields to Al Hadithah, where it divided, one branch going to Tripoli
(the Tripoli branch was closed by Syria--which supported Iran--in 1982
after the outbreak of the Iran-Iraq War in 1980) and the other to Haifa
(the Haifa line was closed in 1948). In 1938, nine years after the
discovery of oil, Iraq began to export oil in significant quantities.
Iraqi production averaged 4 million tons per year until World War II,
when restricted shipping in the Mediterranean forced production down
sharply.
Iraq
Iraq - Post-World War II Through the 1970s
Iraq
With the end of World War II, IPC and its affiliates undertook repair
and development of facilities in Iraq as rapidly as financing and
materials became available. Exploration and drilling were pressed,
particularly in the Basra and the Mosul areas, to meet concession terms.
Although considered a priority, the elimination of transport constraints
was set back when a larger second, nearly completed pipeline to Haifa
was abandoned in 1948 as a result of the first Arab-Israeli war. Use of
the existing Haifa line was also discontinued. In 1951, however,
commercial exports by the BPC of good quality crude began via a new
pipeline to Al Faw, on the Persian Gulf. Exports were boosted further
with the completion in 1952 of a thirty-inch pipeline linking the Kirkuk
fields to the Syrian port of Baniyas, which had a throughput capacity of
13 million tons per year. In that year, production from Basra and Mosul
approached 2.5 million tons while the Kirkuk fields increased production
to more than 15 million tons. In the space of a year (1951-52), total
Iraqi oil production had doubled to almost 20 million tons.
Iraqi officials still harbored ambitions, dating back to the 1920 San
Remo Conference, to take control of their nation's oil resources. The
elimination of transportation bottlenecks and the subsequent rapid
growth of exports encouraged Iraqi assertiveness. IPC's costly,
irretrievable investments in Iraq's oil infrastructure gave the
government even greater leverage.
One particularly sore point among the Iraqis concerned IPC's
contractual obligation to meet Iraq's domestic requirements for gasoline
and other petroleum products. An IPC subsidiary operated a small
refinery and distribution company based near Kirkuk that supplied
two-thirds of Iraq's needs. But IPC imported the remaining third from a
large refinery in Abadan, Iran. Iraq considered this arrangement
politically imprudent, a judgment that was vindicated when, in the early
1950s, Iranian production was cut during that country's oil industry
nationalization crisis. In 1951 the Iraqi government took over, with
compensation, the small Kirkuk refinery and hired a United States
contractor to build a refinery near Baghdad. This represented Iraq's
first concrete step toward taking control of the oil industry.
In 1952 Iraq followed the examples of Venezuela and of Saudi Arabia
by demanding and receiving a 50 percent tax on all oil company profits
made in the country. The tax more than doubled Iraqi profits per ton on
exported oil.
The 1958 Iraqi revolution had little effect at first on the
government's attitude toward IPC. The government needed the oil revenues
generated by IPC; moreover, Iran's experience when it nationalized its
oil industry was a vivid reminder to the Iraqis of the power the oil
companies still wielded. In 1959 and in 1960, surpluses led the
international oil companies to reduce the posted price for Middle
Eastern oil unilaterally, which reduced government revenues
significantly. IPC's policy of exploiting and developing only .5 percent
of the total concessions it held in Iraq, and of holding the remainder
in reserve also reduced Iraqi revenues. Perhaps in response to the
general situation, Iraq convened a meeting in Baghdad of the major
oil-producing nations, which resulted in the September 1960 formation of
the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC). In December
1961, the Iraqi government enacted Law No. 80, which resulted in the
expropriation of all of the IPC group's concession area that was not in
production. The expropriation locked the government and the oil
companies in a controversy that was not resolved for more than a decade.
The companies had two paramount objectives in seeking to mitigate the
law's effect. One was to regain control of the concession to the North
Rumaylah field in southern Iraq, which was expected to be a major source
of oil. In particular, the companies did not want competitors to gain
access to it. The companies' second major objective was to limit the
impact of Iraq's actions on IPC concession agreements in other oil-
exporting nations.
In February 1964, the government established the state-owned Iraq
National Oil Company (INOC) to develop the concession areas taken over
from IPC. INOC was eventually granted exclusive rights by law to develop
Iraq's oil reserves; granting concessions to other oil companies was
forbidden, although INOC could permit IPC and other foreign companies to
participate in the further development of existing concessions.
Nevertheless, IPC continued to lift the bulk of Iraqi oil from the
Kirkuk field that it had retained, and, more important, to export and to
market it. IPC therefore remained the arbiter of existing, if not
potential, Iraqi oil production.
Iraq's disillusionment with newly formed OPEC began just after the
enactment of Law 80. Iraq applied pressure on OPEC to adopt a unified
negotiating stance vis-a-vis the oil companies. Instead, OPEC members
negotiated separately. This allowed the oil companies to extract
concessions that permitted them to switch production away from Iraq and
therefore to pressure Iraq with the prospect of lower oil revenues.
Iraq's relationship with IPC was further aggravated in 1966 when Syria
raised transit fees on the pipeline that carried two-thirds of Iraqi oil
to port and demanded retroactive payments from IPC. When IPC refused to
pay, Syria closed the pipeline for several months, an action that cost
the Iraqi government much revenue.
The eight-year shutdown of the Suez Canal that followed the June 1967
Arab-Israeli War increased the importance of Mediterranean oil producers
because of their proximity to European markets. In 1970 Libya took
advantage of this situation to win higher prices for its oil. Iraq,
which was in the unusual position of exporting oil through both the Gulf
and the Mediterranean, demanded that it be paid for its oil at the
Libyan price. IPC countered that Iraqi oil, because of its higher sulfur
content, was inferior to Libyan oil. Meanwhile, exports of Iraqi oil via
the Mediterranean began to decline, which IPC attributed to falling
tanker rates that made Gulf oil more competitive. Iraq, however,
interpreted the declining exports as pressure from the oil companies. In
general, Iraq believed that IPC was intentionally undercharging
customers for oil it sold on behalf of Iraq and was cutting back Iraqi
production to force Iraq to restore the nationalized concession areas.
In response, Iraq attempted to make INOC a viable substitute for IPC.
The INOC chairman of the board was given cabinet rank and greater
authority, but INOC's activities were hampered by lack of experience and
expertise. Iraq therefore sought assistance from countries considered
immune to potential IPC sanctions and to retaliation. In 1967 INOC
concluded a service agreement with Entreprise des Recherches et des
Activites Petrolieres (ERAP)--a company owned by the French
government--covering exploration and development of a large segment of
southern Iraq, including offshore areas. Some foreign observers doubted
that the terms of the arrangement were more favorable than IPC's terms,
but more important from Iraq's point of view, the ERAP agreement left
control in Iraqi hands. By 1976 ERAP started pumping the oil it had
discovered, at which point INOC took over operation of the fields and
began delivering the oil to ERAP.
In 1967 INOC tapped the Soviet Union for assistance in developing the
North Rumaylah field. The Soviet Union provided more than US$500 million
worth of tied aid for drilling rigs, pumps, pipelines, a deep-water port
on the Persian Gulf, tankers, and a large contingent of technicians. In
1972, the North Rumaylah field started production and produced nearly 4
million tons of crude.
In the same period, Iraq obtained aid from French, Italian, Japanese,
Indian, and Brazilian oil companies under service contracts modeled on
the 1967 ERAP agreement. The service contracts, which Iraq did not
regard as concessions, allowed the foreign oil companies to explore and
to develop areas in exchange for bearing the full costs and the risks of
development. If oil were discovered, the companies would turn their
operations over to INOC, which would sell them the oil at a discounted
rate.
Iraq's increasing ability to manage its petroleum resources finally
induced IPC to negotiate. In 1972 IPC promised to increase its
production in Iraq and to raise the price it paid for Iraqi oil to the
Libyan level. In return, IPC sought compensation for its lost concession
areas. Iraq rejected this offer and, on June 1, 1972, nationalized IPC's
remaining holdings in Iraq, the original Kirkuk fields. A state-owned
company, the Iraqi Company for Oil Operations (ICOO), was established to
take over IPC facilities. BPC was allowed to continue its operations.
In February 1973, Iraq and IPC settled their claims and
counterclaims. IPC acknowledged Iraq's right to nationalize and agreed
to pay the equivalent of nearly US$350 million to Iraq as compensation
for revenue lost to Iraq over the years when IPC was selling Iraqi oil.
In return, the government agreed to provide to IPC, free of charge, 15
million tons of Kirkuk crude, valued at the time at over US$300 million,
in final settlement of IPC claims. Some observers believed that IPC had
received a liberal settlement.
The October 1973 Arab-Israeli War impelled the Iraqis to take
complete control of their oil resources, and Iraq became one of the
strongest proponents of an Arab oil boycott of Israel's supporters.
Although Iraq was subsequently criticized by other Arab countries for
not adhering to the agreed-upon production cutbacks, Iraq nationalized
United States and Dutch interests in BPC. By 1975 all remaining foreign
interests were nationalized. Fifty-three years after the humiliating San
Remo agreement, Iraq had finally gained complete sovereignty over its
most valuable natural resource.
Throughout the mid- to late-1970s, increases in the price of oil
caused Iraqi oil revenues to skyrocket even as production fluctuated.
Iraq funneled much of this revenue into expanding the oil industry
infrastructure. Refinery capacity was doubled, and in 1977 a key
pipeline was completed from the Kirkuk fields across Turkey to a
Mediterranean terminal at Dortyol.
In 1976, the structure of the Iraqi oil industry was revamped. A new
Ministry of Oil was established to direct planning and construction in
the petroleum sector and to be responsible for oil refining, gas
processing, and internal marketing of gas products through several
subsidiary organizations. INOC would be responsible for the production,
transport, and sale of crude oil and gas. Some of its operations were
contracted out to foreign service companies. The State Organization for
Northern Oil (SONO), subordinate to INOC, replaced ICOO as the operating
company in the northern fields. In subsequent reorganizations, SONO was
renamed the Northern Petroleum Organization (NPO), and a Central
Petroleum Organization (CPO), as well as a Southern Petroleum
Organization (SPO) were also established. The State Organization of Oil
Projects (SOOP) took over responsibility for infrastructure from INOC,
and the State Organization for Marketing Oil (SOMO) assumed
responsibility for oil sales, leaving INOC free to oversee oil
production.
Iraq
Iraq - Oil in the 1980s
Iraq
In 1987 petroleum continued to dominate the Iraqi economy, accounting
for more than one-third of nominal gross national product (GNP--see
Glosssary) and 99 percent of merchandise exports. Prior to the war,
Iraq's oil production had reached 3.5 million bpd (<"glossary.htm#barrels">barrels
per day--see Glossary), and its exports had stood at 3.2 million
bpd. In the opening weeks of the Iran-Iraq War, however, Iraq's two main
offshore export terminals in the Persian Gulf, Mina al Bakr and Khawr al
Amayah, were severely damaged by Iranian attacks, and in 1988 they
remained closed. Oil exports were further restrained in April 1982, when
Syria closed the pipeline running from Iraq to the Mediterranean. In
response, Iraq launched a major effort to establish alternative channels
for its oil exports. As an emergency measure, Iraq started to transport
oil by tanker-truck caravans across Jordan and Turkey. In 1988 Iraq
continued to export nearly 250,000 bpd by this method. In mid-1984, the
expansion of the existing pipeline through Turkey was accomplished by
looping the line and by adding pumping stations. The expansion raised
the line's throughput capacity to about 1 million bpd. In November 1985,
Iraq started work on an additional expansion of this outlet by building
a parallel pipeline between Kirkuk and Dortyol that used the existing
line's pumping stations. Work was completed in July 1987. The result was
an increase in exports through Turkey of 500,000 bpd.
In September 1985, construction of a spur line from Az Zubayr in
southern Iraq to Saudi Arabia was completed; the spur linked up with an
existing pipeline running across Saudi Arabia to the Red Sea port of
Yanbu. The spur line had a carrying capacity of 500,000 bpd. Phase two
of this project was begun in late 1987 by a Japanese-South
Korean-Italian-French consortium. Phase two was to be an independent
pipeline, parallel to the existing pipeline, which would run 1,000
kilometers from Az Zubayr to Yanbu and its own loading terminal. The
parallel pipeline was expected to add 1.15 million bpd to Iraq's export
capacity when completed in late 1989. Iraq negotiated with the
contractors to pay its bill entirely in oil at the rate of 110,000 bpd.
According to Minister of Petroleum Isam Abd ar Rahim al Jalabi, Iraq
negotiated special legal arrangements with Saudi Arabia guaranteeing
Iraqi ownership of the pipeline. Iraq also considered construction of a
1-million bpd pipeline through Jordan to the Gulf of Aqaba, but in 1988
this project was shelved.
The expansion of export capacity induced Iraq to try to boost its oil
production, which in 1987 averaged 2.8 million bpd of which 1.8 million
bpd were exported. The remainder was retained for domestic use. In
addition, Iraq continued to receive oil donations of between 200,000 and
300,000 bpd from Kuwait and Saudi Arabia pumped out of the Neutral Zone
on the east end of Iraq's southern border with Saudi Arabia. By the end
of 1989, Iraq's goal was to have the capacity to produce oil for export
at the prewar level of 3.5 million bpd without having to depend on any
exports by ship through the Persian Gulf; however, at a posted price of
approximately US$18 per barrel, and with spot prices at less than US$13
per barrel, oil was worth less than half as much in 1988 as it was when
the Iran-Iraq War started. Iraq's oil revenue in 1987 was estimated at
US$11.3 billion, up about 60 percent from the 1986 level of US$6.8
billion (see <"appendix.htm#table6">table
6, Appendix).
The expanded export capacity theoretically gave Iraq greater leverage
in negotiating an increase in its OPEC quota. For the first several
years of the Iran-Iraq War, Iraq attempted to stay within its OPEC quota
in order to bring OPEC pressure to bear on Iran to curtail its
production. In early 1988, this issue was moot, however, because Iraq
had announced in 1986 that it would not recognize its 1.54 million bpd
quota and would produce whatever amount best served Iraqi national
interests. In 1987, however, Iraqi oil minister Jalabi reasserted Iraq's
willingness to hold its oil production to the 1.54 million bpd OPEC
quota if Iran adhered to an identical quota level. This would represent
a decrease of about 40 percent from the 2.61 million bpd that Iran was
authorized by OPEC to produce.
When Jalabi was appointed Iraq's oil minister in March 1987, he
instituted a new round of reorganizations in the petroleum sector. The
Ministry of Oil assimilated INOC, thus consolidating management of
Iraq's oil production and distribution. The NPO absorbed the CPO. This
organization, along with SOOP, was to be granted corporate status in an
effort to make it more efficient. Jalabi was also concerned about the
proper handling of Iraq's large hydrocarbon reserves. Although estimates
of Iraqi hydrocarbon reserves in the late 1980s varied considerably, by
all accounts they were immense. In 1984, Iraq claimed proven reserves of
65 billion barrels plus 49 billion barrels of "semiproven "
reserves. In November 1987, Iraq's state-owned Oil Exploration Company
calculated official reserves at 72 billion barrels, but the company's
director, Hashim al Kharasan, stated that this figure would be revised
upward to 100 billion barrels in the near future. In late 1987, oil
minister Jalabi said that Iraqi reserves were "100 billion barrels
definite, and 40 billion barrels probable," which would constitute
140 years of production at the 1987 rate. Western petroleum geologists,
although somewhat more conservative in their estimates, generally
concurred with Iraq's assessment; some said that Iraq has the greatest
potential for new discoveries of all Middle Eastern Countries.
Besides petroleum, Iraq had estimated natural gas reserves of nearly
850 billion cubic meters, almost all of which was associated with oil.
For this reason, most natural gas was flared off at oil wells. Of the
estimated 7 million cubic meters of natural gas produced in 1987, an
estimated 5 million cubic meters were flared. Iraq's Fifth Five-Year
Plan of 1986-90 included projects to exploit this heretofore wasted
asset.
The war did not impede Iraqi investment in the oil sector. On the
contrary, it spurred rapid development. The government announced in 1987
that, during the previous 10 years, 67 oilrelated infrastructure
projects costing US$2.85 billion had been completed and that another 19
projects costing US$2.75 billion were under way. One Iraqi priority was
to exploit natural gas reserves. Because natural gas is more difficult
to process and to market than petroleum, the Ministry of Oil in late
1987 called for the substitution of natural gas for oil in domestic
consumption, a move that could free more oil for export. Therefore, it
became a key goal to convey natural gas from oil fields to industrial
areas, where the gas could then be used. In 1987 the Soviet Union's
Tsevetmetpromexport (TSMPE) was constructing a main artery for such a
system, the strategic trans-Iraq dry gas pipeline running northward from
An Nasiriyah. In 1986 work was started on liquefaction facilities and on
a pipeline to transport 11.3 billion cubic meters per day of natural gas
from Iraq's North Rumaylah oil field to Kuwait.
Another focus of Iraqi investment was the maintenance and
augmentation of the oil industry's refining capacity. Before the war,
Iraq had a refining capacity of 320,000 bpd, 140,000 barrels of which
were produced by the southern refinery at Basra and 80,000 of which were
produced by the Durah refinery, near Baghdad. In the opening days of the
Iran-Iraq War, the Basra refinery was damaged severely, and as of early
1988 it remained closed. The Durah refinery, however, remained in
operation, and new installations, including the 70,000 bpd Salah ad Din
I refinery and the 150,000 bpd northern Baiji refinery, boosted Iraq's
capacity past 400,000 bpd. About 300,000 bpd were consumed domestically,
much of which was used to sustain the war effort.
A second thrust of Iraqi oil policy in the late 1980s was the
development, with Soviet assistance, of a major new oil field. In
September 1987, during the eighteenth session of the Iraqi-Soviet Joint
Commission on Economic and Technical Cooperation, held in Baghdad,
Iraq's SOOP signed an agreement with the Soviet Union's Techno-Export to
develop the West Al Qurnah oilfield. This oilfield was regarded as one
of Iraq's most promising, with an eventual potential yield of 600,000
bpd. Techno-Export planned to start by constructing the degassing,
pumping, storage, and transportation facilities at West Al Qurnah's
Mishrif reservoir, expected to produce 200,000 bpd.
Iraq
Iraq - INDUSTRIALIZATION
Iraq
The nonpetroleum industrial sector of the Iraqi economy grew
tremendously after Iraq gained independence in 1932. Although growth in
absolute terms was significant, high annual growth rates can also be
attributed to the very low level from which industrialization started.
Under Ottoman rule, manufacture consisted almost entirely of handicrafts
and the products of artisan shops. The availability of electricity and
lines of communication and transportation after World War I led to the
establishment of the first large-scale industries, but industrial
development remained slow in the first years after independence. The
private sector, which controlled most of the nation's capital, hesitated
to invest in manufacturing because the domestic market was small,
disposable income was low, and infrastructure was primitive; moreover,
investment in agricultural land yielded a higher rate of return than did
investment in capital stock. World War II fueled demand for manufactured
goods, and large public sector investments after 1951, made possible by
the jump in state oil revenues, stimulated industrial growth.
Manufacturing output increased 10 percent annually in the 1950s.
Industrial development slowed after the overthrow of the monarchy
during the 1958 revolution. The socialist rhetoric and the land reform
measures frightened private investors, and capital began leaving the
country. Although the regime led by Abd al Karim Qasim excepted industry
from the nationalization imposed on the agricultural and the petroleum
sectors, in July 1964 a new government decreed nationalization of the
twenty-seven largest privately owned industrial firms. The government
reorganized other large companies, put a low limit on individual
shareholdings, allocated 25 percent of corporate profits to workers, and
instituted worker participation in management. A series of decrees
relegated the private sector to a minor role and provoked an exodus of
managers and administrators, accompanied by capital flight. The
government was incapable of filling the vacuum it had created, either in
terms of money or of trained manpower, and industrial development slowed
to about 6 percent per year in the 1960s.
After the 1968 Baath revolution, the government gave a higher
priority to industrial development. By 1978 the government had revamped
the public industrial sector by organizing ten semi- independent state
organizations for major industry subsectors, such as spinning and
weaving, chemicals, and engineering. Factory managers were given some
autonomy, and an effort was made to hold them responsible for meeting
goals. Despite Iraq's attempt to rationalize and reorganize the public
sector, state organizations remained overstaffed because social
legislation made it nearly impossible to lay off or to transfer workers
and bureaucratization made the organizations top-heavy with unproductive
management. The government acknowledged that unused capacity,
overstocking of inventories, and lost production time, because of
shortages or disruptions of supply, continued to plague the industrial
sector.
The government attempted to strengthen public sector industry by
pouring money into it. According to official figures, annual investment
in the nonpetroleum industrial sector rose from ID39.5 million in 1968
to ID752.5 million in 1985. As a consequence, industrial output rose;
the government put the total value of Iraq's industrial output in 1984
at almost ID 2 billion, up from about ID300 million in 1968 and up more
than 50 percent from the start of the Iran-Iraq War. The total value of
industrial input in 1984 was ID981 million, so value added was in excess
of 100 percent. Productivity relative to investment, however, remained
low.
Because of revenues from oil exports, the government believed it
could afford to pursue an ambitious and expensive policy of import
substitution industrialization that would move the economy away from
dependence on oil exports to obtain foreign exchange. In the early
1970s, Iraq made capital investments in large-scale industrial
facilities such as steel plants. Many of the facilities were purchased
from foreign contractors and builders on a turnkey basis. But Iraq
neglected development of the next stage in the industrial process, the
transformation of processed raw materials into intermediate products,
such as construction girders, iron pipes, and steel parts. These
bottlenecks in turn hampered the development of more sophisticated
industries, such as machinery manufacture. Plant construction also
outpaced infrastructure development. Many plants, for example, were
inadequately linked by road or rail to outlets. Excess capacity remained
a problem, as the large industrial plants continued to strain the
economy's ability to absorb new goods. In an attempt to overcome these
problems, Iraq imported the finished products and materials it required,
defeating the purpose of its import substitution industrialization
strategy and making the large extractive industries somewhat redundant.
Imports of various basic commodities, such as plastics and chemicals,
doubled and tripled in the 1970s. Most imports were consumed rather than
used as intermediate components in industry; when imports were used as
industrial inputs, value added tended to be low. Concurrently, tariffs
and other trade barriers erected to protect domestic infant industry
from foreign competition impeded the importation of certain vital
materials, particularly spare parts and machinery. The growth of
small-scale industries in the private sector and the rise in the
standard of living in general were inhibited by such restrictions.
Subsidized by oil revenues, the industrialization strategy yielded
growth, but only at great cost.
In the late 1980s, the cumulative fiscal effects of the war with Iran
forced Iraq to reverse priorities and to focus on the export side of the
trade equation. Although the government previously had attempted to
diversify the economy in order to minimize dependence on natural
resources, it was now forced to concentrate on generating export income
from extractive industry, in which it had a comparative advantage,
rather than on producing more sophisticated manufactured goods. At the
same time, in conjunction with its gradual move toward privatization,
the government ceded greater responsibility to the private sector for
the manufacture of light consumer items as import substitutes. In 1983
legislation exempted the private sector from customs duties and from
excise taxes on imported spare parts and on machinery needed to build
factories. The private sector was also given tax exemptions for capital
investment and for research and development spending. Finally, the
replacement of sole proprietorships by joint stock companies was
encouraged as a means of tapping more private investment. In a 1987
reorganization, the Ministry of Light Industries was renamed the
Ministry of Industry, and the Ministry of Industry and Minerals was
renamed the Ministry of Heavy Industry. New ministers were appointed and
were charged with improving both the the quality and quantity of
industrial output; large parts of the state bureaucracy that had
controlled industry were abolished.
According to official Iraqi figures, the total industrial labor force
in 1984 consisted of about 170,000 workers. State- operated factories
employed slightly more than 80 percent of these workers, while 13
percent worked in the private sector. The remaining 7 percent worked in
the mixed economy, which consisted of factories operated jointly by the
state--which held a major share of the common stock--and the private
sector. Men constituted 87 percent of the industrial work force.
According to the Iraqi government, in 1984 there were 782 industrial
establishments, ranging in size from small workshops employing 30
workers to large factories with more than 1,000 employees. Of these, 67
percent were privately owned. The private sector owned two-thirds of the
factories, but employed only 13 percent of the industrial labor force.
Privately owned industrial establishments were, therefore, relatively
numerous, but they were also relatively small and more
capital-intensive. Only three privately owned factories employed more
than 250 workers; the great majority employed fewer than 100 people
each. Private-sector plant ownership tended to be dispersed throughout
industry and was not concentrated in any special trade, with the
exception of the production of metal items such as tools and utensils.
Although the private sector accounted for 40 percent of production in
this area, the metal items sector itself constituted no more than a
cottage industry. Figures published by the Iraqi Federation of
Industries claimed that the private sector dominated the construction
industry if measurement were based not on the number of employees or on
the value of output, but on the amount of capital investment. In 1981,
such private- sector capital investment in the construction industry was
57 percent of total investment. By this alternative measurement, private
sector involvement in the textile and the food processing industries was
above average. In contrast, about fourty-six state-owned factories
employed more than 1,000 workers apiece, and several industrial sectors,
such as mining and steel production, were entirely state-dominated.
In 1984 Iraq's top industry, as measured by the number of employees,
was the nonmetallic mineral industry, which employed 18 percent of
industrial workers and accounted for 14 percent of the value of total
industrial output. The nonmetallic mineral industry was based primarily
on extracting and processing sulfur and phosphate rock, although
manufacturing of construction materials, such as glass and brick, was
also included in this category. Production of sulfur and of sulfuric
acid was a priority because much of the output was exported; phosphates
were likewise important because they were used in fertilizer production.
Mining of sulfur began at Mishraq, near Mosul, in 1972; production
capacity was 1.25 million tons per year by 1988. With the help of Japan,
Iraq in the late 1980s was augmenting the Mishraq sulfur works with the
intent of boosting sulfur exports 30 percent from their 1987 level of
500,000 tons per year and of increasing exports of sulfuric acid by
10,000 tons annually. Iraq was also attempting to increase the rate of
sulfur recovery from oil from its 1987 level of 90 percent.
Phosphate rock reserves were located mainly in the Akashat area
northwest of Baghdad and were estimated in 1987 at 5.5 billion
tons--enough to meet local needs for centuries. A fertilizer plant at Al
Qaim, linked by rail to the Akashat mine, started production in 1984; it
was soon converting 3.4 million tons of phosphate per year into
fertilizer. As the Al Qaim operation came onstream, Iraq became
self-sufficient in fertilizer, and three-quarters of the plant's output
was exported. Iranian attacks on Iraqi fertilizer plants in the Basra
area, however, cut Iraq's surplus. In 1986 Iraq obtained a US$10 million
loan from the Islamic Development Bank to import urea fertilizer, and in
1987 Iraq continued to import fertilizer as an emergency measure.
Meanwhile, additional fertilizer plants were under construction in 1987
at Shuwairah, near Mosul, and at Baiji. Their completion would bring to
five the number of Iraqi fertilizer plants and would increase exports
considerably.
Another important component of the mineral sector was cement
production. Iraq's 1987 cement production capacity was 12 million tons,
and the government planned a near doubling of production. Domestic
consumption in 1986 was 7.5 million tons, and the surplus was exported,
1 million tons to Egypt alone.
In addition to the nonmetallic minerals industry, several other
industries employed significant percentages of the work force. The
chemical and petrochemical industry, concentrated at Khawr az Zubayr,
was the second largest industrial employer, providing work for 17
percent of the industrial work force. Chemicals and petrochemicals
accounted for a relatively high 30 percent of the total value of
industrial output because of the high value of raw material inputs and
the higher value added-- more than 150 percent. The labor-intensive
textile industry employed 15 percent of industrial workers but accounted
for only 7 percent of the value of total industrial output. A major
state- owned textile factory in Mosul produced calico from locally grown
cotton. The foodstuffs processing and packaging industry, which employed
14 percent of the total industrial labor force, accounted for 20 percent
of total output, but the value added was less than 50 percent. Light
manufacturing industries based on natural resources, such as paper,
cigarettes, and leather and shoe production, together accounted for 10
percent of the value of total industrial output.
By the mid-1980s, efforts to upgrade industrial capacity from the
extracting and processing of natural resources to heavy industry, to the
manufacturing of higher technology and to the production of consumer
items were still not fully successful. An iron and steel works built in
1978 by the French company, Creusot-Loire, at Khawr az Zubayr, was
expected to attain an annual production level of 1.2 million tons of
smelted iron ore and 400,000 tons of steel. Other smelters, foundries,
and form works were under construction in 1988. (In 1984 this sector of
the economy accounted for less than 2 percent of total output.)
Manufacture of machinery and transport equipment accounted for only 6
percent of output value, and value added was fairly low, suggesting that
Iraq was assembling imported intermediate components to make finished
products. A single factory established in the 1980s with Soviet
assistance and located at Al Musayyib, produced tractors. In 1981, Iraq
contracted with a company from the Federal Republic of Germany (West
Germay) to develop the domestic capability to produce motor vehicles.
Plans called for production of 120,000 passenger cars and 25,000 trucks
per year, but the project's US$5 billion cost led to indefinite delays.
By the late 1980s, Iraq had had some success in establishing light
industries to produce items such as spark plugs, batteries, locks, and
household appliances. The electronics industry, concentrated in Baghdad,
had grown to account for about 6 percent of output with the help of
Thompson-CSF (that is, Compagnie sans fil) of France and the Soviet
Union. Other more advanced industries just starting to develop in Iraq
in the late 1980s were pharmaceuticals and plastics.
Iraq
Iraq - AGRICULTURE
Iraq
Since the beginning of recorded time, agriculture has been the
primary economic activity of the people of Iraq. In 1976, agriculture
contributed about 8 percent of Iraq's total GDP, and it employed more
than half the total labor force. In 1986, despite a ten-year Iraqi
investment in agricultural development that totaled more than US$4
billion, the sector still accounted for only 7.5 percent of total GDP, a
figure that was predicted to decline. In 1986 agriculture continued to
employ a significant portion--about 30 percent--of Iraq's total labor
force. Part of the reason the agricultural share of GDP remained small
was that the sector was overwhelmed by expansion of the oil sector,
which boosted total GDP.
Large year-to-year fluctuations in Iraqi harvests, caused by
variability in the amount of rainfall, made estimates of average
production problematic, but statistics indicated that the production
levels for key grain crops remained approximately stable from the 1960s
through the 1980s, with yield increasing while total cultivated area
declined. Increasing Iraqi food imports were indicative of agricultural
stagnation. In the late 1950s, Iraq was self-sufficient in agricultural
production, but in the 1960s it imported about 15 percent of its food
supplies, and by the 1970s it imported about 33 percent of its food. By
the early 1980s, food imports accounted for about 15 percent of total
imports, and in 1984, according to Iraqi statistics, food imports
comprised about 22 percent of total imports. Many experts expressed the
opinion that Iraq had the potential for substantial agricultural growth,
but restrictions on water supplies, caused by Syrian and Turkish dam
building on the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, might limit this expansion.
<>Water Resources
<>Land Tenure and Agrarian
Reform
<>Cropping and Livestock
Iraq
Iraq - Water Resources
Iraq
Iraq has more water than most Middle Eastern nations, which led to
the establishment of one of the world's earliest and most advanced
civilizations. Strong, centralized governments--a phenomenon known as
"hydraulic despotism"--emerged because of the need for
organization and for technology in order to exploit the Tigris and
Euphrates rivers. Archaeologists believe that the high point in the
development of the irrigation system occurred about 500 A.D., when a
network of irrigation canals permitted widespread cultivation that made
the river basin into a regional granary. Having been poorly maintained, the irrigation
and drainage canals had deteriorated badly by the twelfth and thirteenth
centuries, when the Mongols destroyed what remained of the system.
About one-fifth of Iraq's territory consists of farmland. About half
of this total cultivated area is in the northeastern plains and mountain
valleys, where sufficient rain falls to sustain agriculture. The
remainder of the cultivated land is in the valleys of the Euphrates and
Tigris rivers, which receive scant rainfall and rely instead on water
from the rivers. Both rivers are fed by snowpack and rainfall in eastern
Turkey and in northwest Iran. The rivers' discharge peaks in March and
in May, too late for winter crops and too early for summer crops. The
flow of the rivers varies considerably every year. Destructive flooding,
particularly of the Tigris, is not uncommon, and some scholars have
placed numerous great flood legends, including the biblical story of
Noah and the ark, in this area. Conversely, years of low flow make
irrigation and agriculture difficult.
Not until the twentieth century did Iraq make a concerted effort to
restore its irrigation and drainage network and to control seasonal
flooding. Various regimes constructed several large dams and river
control projects, rehabilitated old canals, and built new irrigation
systems. Barrages were constructed on both the Tigris and the Euphrates
to channel water into natural depressions so that floods could be
controlled. It was also hoped that the water could be used for
irrigation after the rivers peaked in the spring, but the combination of
high evaporation from the reservoirs and the absorption of salt residues
in the depressions made some of the water too brackish for agricultural
use. Some dams that created large reservoirs were built in the valleys
of tributaries of the Tigris, a measure that diminished spring flooding
and evened out the supply of water over the cropping season. When the
Euphrates was flowing at an exceptionally low level in 1984, the
government was able to release water stored in reservoirs to sustain
farmers.
In 1988 barrages or dam reservoirs existed at Samarra, Dukan,
Darband, and Khan on the Tigris and Habbaniyah on the Euphrates. Two new
dams on the Tigris at Mosul and Al Hadithah, named respectively the
Saddam and Al Qadisiyah, were on the verge of completion in 1988.
Furthermore, a Chinese-Brazilian joint venture was constructing a US$2
billion dam on the Great Zab River, a Tigris tributary in northeastern
Iraq. Additional dams were planned for Badush and Fathah, both on the
Tigris. In Hindiyah on the Euphrates and in Ash Shinafiyah on the
Euphrates, Chinese contractors were building a series of barrages.
Geographic factors contributed to Iraq's water problems. Like all
rivers, the Tigris and the Euphrates carry large amounts of silt
downstream. This silt is deposited in river channels, in canals, and on
the flood plains. In Iraq, the soil has a high saline content. As the
water table rises through flooding or through irrigation, salt rises
into the topsoil, rendering agricultural land sterile. In addition, the
alluvial silt is highly saline. Drainage thus becomes very important;
however, Iraq's terrain is very flat. Baghdad, for example, although 550
kilometers from the Persian Gulf, is only 34 meters above sea level.
This slight gradient makes the plains susceptible to flooding and,
although it facilitates irrigation, it also hampers drainage. The flat
terrain also provides relatively few sites for dams. Most important,
Iraq lies downstream from both Syria and Turkey on the Euphrates River
and downstream from Turkey on the Tigris River. In the early 1970s, both
Syria and Turkey completed large dams on the Euphrates and filled vast
reservoirs. Iraqi officials protested the sharp decrease in the river's
flow, claiming that irrigated areas along the Euphrates in Iraq dropped
from 136,000 hectares to 10,000 hectares from 1974 to 1975.
Despite cordial relations between Iraq and Turkey in the late 1980s,
the issue of water allocation continued to cause friction between the
two governments. In 1986 Turkey completed tunnels to divert an estimated
one-fifth of the water from the Euphrates into the Atat�rk Dam
reservoir. The Turkish government reassured Iraq that in the long run
downstream flows would revert to normal. Iraqi protests were muted,
because Iraq did not yet exploit Euphrates River water fully for
irrigation, and the government did not wish to complicate its
relationship with Turkey in the midst of the Iran-Iraq War.
Iraq
Iraq - Land Tenure and Agrarian Reform
Iraq
Iraq's system of land tenure and inefficient government
implementation of land reform contributed to the low productivity of
farmers and the slow growth of the agricultural sector. Land rights had
evolved over many centuries, incorporating laws of many cultures and
countries. The Ottoman Land Code of 1858 attempted to impose order by
establishing categories of land and by requiring surveys and the
registration of land holdings. By World War I, only limited registration
had been accomplished and land titles were insecure, particularly under
the system of tribal tenure through which the state retained ownership
of the land although tribes used it.
By the early 1930s, large landowners became more interested in secure
titles because a period of agricultural expansion was underway. In the
north, urban merchants were investing in land development, and in the
south tribes were installing pumps and were otherwise improving land. In response, the government promulgated a law in
1932 empowering it to settle title to land and to speed up the
registration of titles. Under the law, a number of tribal leaders and
village headmen were granted title to the land that had been worked by
their communities. The effect, perhaps unintended, was to replace the
semicommunal system with a system of ownership that increased the number
of sharecroppers and tenants dramatically. A 1933 law provided that a
sharecropper could not leave if he were indebted to the landowner.
Because landowners were usually the sole source of credit and almost no
sharecropper was free of debt, the law effectively bound many tenants to
the land.
The land tenure system under the Ottomans, and as modified by
subsequent Iraqi governments, provided little incentive to improve
productivity. Most farming was conducted by sharecroppers and tenants
who received only a portion--often only a small proportion--of the crop.
Any increase in production favored owners disproportionately, which
served as a disincentive to farmers to produce at more than subsistence
level. For their part, absentee owners preferred to spend their money in
acquiring more land, rather than to invest in improving the land they
had already accumulated.
On the eve of the 1958 revolution, more than two-thirds of Iraq's
cultivated land was concentrated in 2 percent of the holdings, while at
the other extreme, 86 percent of the holdings covered less than 10
percent of the cultivated land. The prerevolutionary government was
aware of the inequalities in the countryside and of the poor condition
of most tenant farmers, but landlords constituted a strong political
force during the monarchical era, and they were able to frustrate
remedial legislation.
Because the promise of land reform kindled part of the popular
enthusiasm for the 1958 revolution and because the powerful landlords
posed a potential threat to the new regime, agrarian reform was high on
the agenda of the new government, which started the process of land
reform within three months of taking power. The 1958 law, modeled after
Egypt's law, limited the maximum amount of land an individual owner
could retain to 1,000 dunums (100 hectares) of irrigated land or twice
that amount of rain-fed land. Holdings above the maximum were
expropriated by the government. Compensation was to be paid in state
bonds, but in 1969 the government absolved itself of all responsibility
to recompense owners. The law provided for the expropriation of 75
percent of all privately owned arable land.
The expropriated land, in parcels of between seven and fifteen
hectares of irrigated land or double that amount of rainfed land, was to
be distributed to individuals. The recipient was to repay the government
over a twenty-year period, and he was required to join a cooperative.
The law also had temporary provisions maintaining the sharecropping
system in the interim between expropriation and redistribution of the
land. Landlords were required to continue the management of the land and
to supply customary inputs to maintain production, but their share of
the crop was reduced considerably. This provision grew in importance as
land became expropriated much more rapidly than it was being
distributed. By 1968, 10 years after agrarian reform was instituted, 1.7
million hectares had been expropriated, but fewer than 440,000 hectares
of sequestered land had been distributed. A total of 645,000 hectares
had been allocated to nearly 55,000 families, however, because several
hundred thousand hectares of government land were included in the
distribution. The situation in the countryside became chaotic because
the government lacked the personnel, funds, and expertise to supply
credit, seed, pumps, and marketing services--functions that had
previously been performed by landlords. Landlords tended to cut their
production, and even the best-intentioned landlords found it difficult
to act as they had before the land reform because of hostility on all
sides. Moreover, the farmers had little interest in cooperatives and
joined them slowly and unwillingly. Rural-to- urban migration increased
as agricultural production stagnated, and a prolonged drought coincided
with these upheavals. Agricultural production fell steeply in the 1960s
and never recovered fully.
In the 1970s, agrarian reform was carried further. Legislation in
1970 reduced the maximum size of holdings to between 10 and 150 hectares
of irrigated land (depending on the type of land and crop) and to
between 250 and 500 hectares of nonirrigated land. Holdings above the
maximum were expropriated with compensation only for actual improvements
such as buildings, pumps, and trees. The government also reserved the
right of eminent domain in regard to lowering the holding ceiling and to
dispossessing new or old landholders for a variety of reasons. In 1975
an additional reform law was enacted to break up the large estates of
Kurdish tribal landowners. Additional expropriations such as these
exacerbated the government's land management problems. Although Iraq
claimed to have distributed nearly 2 million hectares by the late 1970s,
independent observers regarded this figure as greatly exaggerated. The
government continued to hold a large proportion of arable land, which,
because it was not distributed, often lay fallow. Rural flight
increased, and by the late 1970s, farm labor shortages had become so
acute that Egyptian farmers were being invited into the country.
The original purpose of the land reform had been to break up the
large estates and to establish many small owner-operated farms, but
fragmentation of the farms made extensive mechanization and economies of
scale difficult to achieve, despite the expansion of the cooperative
system. Therefore, in the 1970s, the government turned to
collectivization as a solution. By 1981 Iraq had established
twenty-eight collective state farms that employed 1,346 people and
cultivated about 180,000 hectares. In the 1980s, however, the government
expressed disappointment at the slow pace of agricultural development,
conceding that collectivized state farms were not profitable. In 1983
the government enacted a new law encouraging both local and foreign Arab
companies or individuals to lease larger plots of land from the
government. By 1984, more than 1,000 leases had been granted. As a
further incentive to productivity, the government instituted a
profit-sharing plan at state collective farms. By 1987, the wheel
appeared to have turned full circle when the government announced plans
to reprivatize agriculture by leasing or selling state farms to the
private sector.
Iraq
Iraq - Cropping and Livestock
Iraq
Most farming in Iraq entails planting and harvesting a single crop
per year. In the rain-fed areas the winter crop, primarily grain, is
planted in the fall and harvested in the spring. In the irrigated areas
of central and southern Iraq, summer crops predominate. A little
multiple cropping, usually of vegetables, exists where irrigation water
is available over more than a single season.
Even with some double or triple cropping, the intensity of
cultivation is usually on the order of 50 percent because of the
practice of leaving about half the arable land fallow each year. In the
rain-fed region, land is left fallow so that it can accumulate moisture.
The fertility of fallow land is also increased by plowing under weeds
and other plant material that grow during the fallow period. On
irrigated land, fallow periods also contribute some humus to the soil.
Grain, primarily wheat and barley, was Iraq's most important crop.
Cereal production increased almost 80 percent between 1975 and 1985,
notwithstanding wide variations in the harvest from year to year as the
amount and the timing of rainfall strongly affected both the area
planted and the harvest. Between 1980 and 1985, the area under wheat
cultivation increased steadily for a cumulative growth of 30 percent, to
about 1,566,500 hectares. In 1985, the most recent year for which
statistics were available in 1988, Iraq harvested a bumper crop of 1.4
million tons of wheat. In 1984, a drought year, Iraq harvested less than
half the planted area for a yield of between 250,000 and 471,000 tons,
according to foreign and Iraqi sources respectively. The north and
central rain-fed areas were the principal wheat producers (see <"appendix.htm#table7">table
7, Appendix).
Barley requires less water than wheat does, and it is more tolerant
of salinity in the soil. For these reasons, Iraq started to substitute
barley production for wheat production in the 1970s, particularly in
southern regions troubled by soil salinity. Between 1980 and 1985, the
total area under barley cultivation grew 44 percent, and by 1985 barley
and wheat production were virtually equal in terms both of area
cultivated and of total yield. Rice, grown in paddies, was Iraq's third
most important crop as measured by cultivated area, which in 1985
amounted to 24,500 hectares. The area under cultivation, however, did
not grow appreciably between 1980 and 1985; 1985 production totaled
almost 150,000 tons. Iraq also produced maize, millet, and oil seeds in
smaller quantities.
A number of other crops were grown, but acreage and production were
limited. With the exception of tobacco, of which Iraq produced 17,000
tons on 16,500 hectares in 1985, cash crop production declined steeply
in the 1980s. Probably because of domestic competition from synthetic
imports and a declining export market, production of cotton was only
7,200 tons in 1985, compared with 26,000 tons in 1977. Production of
sugar beets was halted completely in 1983, and sugarcane production
declined by more than half between 1980 and 1985.
Iraq may have cut back on production of sugar beets and sugarcane
because of an intention to produce sugar from dates. Dates, of which
Iraq produces eight distinct varieties, have long been a staple of the
local diet. The most abundant date groves were found along the Shatt al
Arab. In the early 1960s, more than 30 million date palms existed. In
the mid-1970s, the Iraqi government estimated that the number of date
palms had declined to about 22 million, at which time production of
dates amounted to 578,000 tons. The devastation of the Shatt al Arab
area during the Iran-Iraq War hastened the destruction of date palm
groves, and in 1985 the government estimated the number of date palms at
fewer than 13 million. Date production in 1987 dropped to 220,000 tons.
The government-managed Iraqi Date Administration, however, planned to
increase production in an attempt to boost export revenue. In 1987 about
150,000 tons, or 68 percent of the harvest, was exported, primarily to
Western Europe, Japan, India, and other Arab countries. The Iraqi Date
Administration also devised plans to construct large facilities to
extract sugar, alcohol, vinegar, and concentrated protein meal from
dates. Iraq produced a variety of other fruits as well, including
melons, grapes, apples, apricots, and citrus. Production of such fruits
increased almost 30 percent between 1975 and 1985.
Vegetable production also increased, particularly near urban centers,
where a comparatively sophisticated marketing system had been developed.
Vegetable gardening usually employed relatively modern techniques,
including the use of chemical fertilizers and pesticides. Tomatoes were
the most important crop, with production amounting to more than 600,000
tons in 1985. Other vegetables produced in significant quantity were
beans, eggplant, okra, cucumbers, and onions. Overall vegetable
production increased almost 90 percent between 1975 and 1985, even
though the production of legumes dropped about 25 percent over the same
period.
Crop production accounted for about two-thirds of value added in the
agricultural sector in the late 1980s, and the raising of livestock
contributed about one-third. In the past, a substantial part of the
rural population had been nomadic, moving animals between seasonal
grazing areas. Sheep and goats were the most important livestock,
supplying meat, wool, milk, skins, and hair. A 1978 government survey,
which represented the most recent official data available as of early
1988, estimated the sheep population at 9.7 million and the goat
population at 2.1 million. Sheep and goats were tended primarily by
nomadic and seminomadic groups. The 1978 survey estimated the number of
cattle at 1.7 million, the number of water buffalo at 170,000, the
number of horses at 53,000, and the number of camels at 70,000.
In the 1970s, the government started to emphasize livestock and fish
production, in an effort to add protein to the national diet. But 1985's
red meat production (about 93,000 tons) and milk production (375,000
tons) were, respectively, about 24 and 23 percent less than the in 1975
totals, although other figures indicated that total livestock production
remained stable between 1976 and 1985. In the mid-1980s, however,
British, West German, and Hungarian companies were given contracts to
establish poultry farms. At the same time, the government expanded
aquaculture and deep-sea fishing. Total production of processed chicken
and fish almost doubled, to about 20,000 tons apiece, from 1981 to 1985,
while egg production increased substantially, to more than 1 billion per
year. The government planned to construct a US$160 million deep-sea
fishing facility in Basra and predicted that, within 10 years,
freshwater fishing would supply up to 100,000 tons of fish. Iraq
nevertheless continued to import substantial quantities of frozen
poultry, meat, and fish to meet local needs for protein.
Iraq
Iraq - TRANSPORTATION
Iraq
Transportation was one of the Iraqi economy's most active sectors in
the late 1980s; it was allocated a large share of the domestic
development budget because it was important to the government for
several reasons. Logistics became a crucial factor in Iraq's conduct of
the Iran-Iraq War. The government also recognized that transportation
bottlenecks limited industrial development more than any other factor.
Finally, the government believed that an expanded transportation system
played an important political role by promoting regional integration and
by heightening the central government's presence in the more remote
provinces. For these reasons, the government embarked on an ambitious
plan to upgrade and to extend road, rail, air, and river transport
simultaneously. Iraq's main transportation axis ran roughly northwest to
southeast from Mosul via Kirkuk to Baghdad, and then south to Basra and
the Gulf. In the 1980s, efforts were underway to link Baghdad more
closely with the Euphrates River basin to the west.
<>Roads
<>Railroads
<>Ports
<>Airports
Iraq
Iraq - Roads
Iraq
The total length of Iraq's network of paved roads almost doubled
between 1979 and 1985, to 22,397 kilometers, augmented by an additional
7,800 kilometers of unpaved secondary and feeder roads. In 1987 Iraq's
major road project was a 1,000 kilometerlong segment of a six-lane
international express highway that would eventually link the Persian
Gulf states with the Mediterranean. In Iraq, the road would stretch from
the Jordanian border through Ar Rutbah to Tulayah near An Najaf, then to
the southern Iraqi town of Ash Shaykh ash Shuyukh, and finally to the
Kuwaiti border at Safwan. Construction was underway in the late 1980s.
Plans were also being made for another highway, which would link Baghdad
with the Turkish border via Kirkuk and Mosul. There was progress as well
on a program to build 10,000 kilometers of rural roads.
Iraq
Iraq - Railroads
Iraq
Iraq possessed two separate railroads at independence, one standard
gauge and one meter gauge. The standard gauge line ran north from
Baghdad through Mosul to the Syrian border and to an eventual connection
with the Turkish railroad system, and the meter gauge line ran south
from Baghdad to Basra. Because the two systems were incompatible, until
the 1960s cargo had to be transloaded at Baghdad to be transported
between the two halves of the country. The Soviet Union helped extend
the standard gauge system to Basra, and by 1977 fully 1,129 kilometers
of Iraq's 1,589 kilometers of railroad were standard gauge. By 1985 the
total length of railroad lines had been extended to 2,029 kilometers, of
which 1,496 kilometers were standard gauge. In 1985 the railroads were
being traveled by 440 standard-gauge locomotives that moved 1.25 billion
tons of freight per kilometer. A 252-kilometer line linking Kirkuk and
Al Hadithah was completed by contractors from the Republic of Korea
(South Korea) in 1987 after five years of work. Built at a cost of
US$855 million, the line was designed to carry more than 1 million
passengers and more than 3 million tons of freight annually. The system
included maintenance and control centers and more than thirty bridges
crossing the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. By the end of the century,
Iraq planned to triple the line's passenger capacity and to double its
freight capacity. A 550-kilometer line, built by a Brazilian company and
extending from Baghdad to Qusaybah on the Syrian border, was also opened
in the same year. In 1987 Indian contractors were finishing work on a
line between Al Musayyib and Samarra. Iraqi plans also called for
replacing the entire stretch of railroad between Mosul and Basra with
modern, high-speed track, feeding all lines entering Baghdad into a
112-kilometer loop around the city, and improving bridges, freight
terminals, and passenger stations. In addition, Iraq has conducted
intermittent negotiations over the years with Turkey, Kuwait, and Saudi
Arabia concerning the establishment of rail links to complete a
continuous Europe-Persian Gulf railroad route.
Iraq
Iraq - Ports
Iraq
At independence, Iraq had little port capacity, a fact that reflected
the low level of foreign trade and the country's traditional overland
orientation toward Syria and Turkey rather than toward the Gulf. Since
then, the Gulf port of Basra has been expanded many times, and a newer
port was built at Umm Qasr to relieve pressure on Basra. Oil terminals
were located at Khawr al Amayah, and Mina al Bakr, Al Faw, and a port
was built in tandem with an industrial center at Khawr az Zubayr.
Because Iraq's access to the Gulf was an Iranian target in the Iran-Iraq
War, port activities were curtailed severely in the 1980s. Before
shipping can be resumed after the war, the Shatt al Arab will have to be
cleared of explosives and wreckage, which will take years.
Despite long-standing government interest in developing the Tigris
and the Euphrates rivers into major arteries for inland transport,
little had been accomplished by the late 1980s, primarily because of the
massive scale of such a project. Dredging and the establishment of
navigation channels had been completed on several stretches of the
Tigris south of Baghdad, and in 1987 a river freight route using barges
was opened between Baghdad and Al Amarah. Iraq investigated the
possibility of opening the entire Tigris River between Mosul and
Baghdad, as well as the feasibility of opening a stretch of the
Euphrates between Al Hadithah and Al Qurnah, but lack of funds precluded
further action.
Iraq
Iraq - Airports
Iraq
In 1988 Iraq had two international airports, one at Baghdad and one
at Basra. In 1979 a French consortium was awarded a US$900 million
contract to build a new international airport at Baghdad. By 1987 the
facility was partially completed and in use. The Basra airport was also
being upgraded with an extended 4,000- meter runway and other facilities
at a cost in excess of US$400 million. A third international airport was
planned for Mosul.
The State Enterprise for Iraqi Airways was the sole domestic airline
in operation in 1988. The company was established in 1945 by Iraqi State
Railways. In 1987, the airline's fleet included thirty-five Soviet-built
Antonov and Ilyushin cargo planes and fourteen Boeing passenger jets, as
well as smaller commuter aircraft and VIP jets. The airline provided
service throughout the Mediterranean, the Middle East, and Europe, as
well as to Brazil and to the Far East. In 1987 Saddam Husayn announced a
decree to privatize Iraqi Airways. Two new ventures were to be
established instead the Iraqi Aviation Company to operate commercially
as the national airline, and the National Company for Aviation Services
to provide aircraft and airport services. Stock would be sold to the
public, and the government would retain a minority share.
Iraq
Iraq - TELECOMMUNICATIONS
Iraq
In 1988 Iraq had a good telecommunications network of radio
communication stations, radio relay links, and coaxial cables. Iraqi
radio and television stations came under the government's Iraqi
Broadcasting and Television Establishment, which was responsible to the
Ministry of Culture and Information. The domestic service had one FM and
nine AM stations with two program networks. The domestic service
broadcast mainly in Arabic, but also in Kurdish, Turkoman, and Assyrian
from Kirkuk. The short wave foreign service broadcast in Arabic, Azeri
Turkish, English, French, German, Hebrew, Kurdish, Persian, Russian,
Spanish, and Urdu. Television stations were located in the major cities,
and they carried two program networks. In 1988 Iraq had approximately
972,000 television sets; the system was connected to both the Atlantic
Ocean and Indian Ocean systems of the International Telecommunications
Satellite Organization (INTELSAT) as well as to one Soviet Intersputnik
satellite station. It also had coaxial cable and radio relays linking it
to Jordan, Kuwait, Syria, and Turkey. Iraq had an estimated 632,000
telephones in 1988.
Iraq
Iraq - ELECTRICITY
Iraq
Iraqi electric power consumption increased by a factor of fourteen in
the twenty-year period between 1968 and 1988, and in the late 1980s it
was expected to double every four to five years. Ongoing rural
electrification contributed to increased demand; about 7,000 villages
throughout the nation were provided electricity in the same twenty-year
period. The destruction in 1980 of power-generating facilities near the
Iran-Iraq border interrupted only temporarily the rapid growth in
production and consumption. In 1981 the government awarded US$2 billion
in contracts to foreign construction companies that were building
hydroelectric and thermal generating plants as well as transmission
facilities. By 1983 the production and consumption of electricity had
recovered to the prewar levels of 15.6 billion kwh (kilowatt hours) and
11.7 billion kwh, respectively. As previously commissioned projects
continued to come onstream, Iraq's generating capacity was expected to
exceed 6,000 megawatts by 1986. In December 1987, following the
completion of power lines designed to carry 400 million kwh of power to
Turkey, Iraq became the first country in the Middle East to export
electric power. Iraq was expected to earn US$15 million annually from
this arrangement. Long-range plans entailed exporting an additional 3
billion kwh to Turkey and eventually providing Kuwait with electricity.
Iraq's plans to develop a nuclear generating capacity were set back
by Israel's June 1981 bombing of the Osiraq (OsirisIraq ) reactor, then
under construction. In 1988 French, Italian, and
Soviet technicians were exploring the feasibility of rebuilding the
reactor at a different site. Saudi Arabia had promised to provide
financing, and Brazil and Portugal reportedly had agreed to supply
uranium.
Iraq
Iraq - FOREIGN TRADE
Iraq
The pattern of Iraqi foreign trade in the 1980s was shaped primarily
by the Iran-Iraq War, its resulting deficit and debt problems, and
developments in the petroleum sector. Iranian attacks on petroleum
industry infrastructure reduced oil exports sharply and Iraq incurred a
trade deficit of more than US$10 billion in 1981. The pattern continued
in 1982 as the value of Iraqi imports peaked at approximately US$23.5
billion, while exports reached a nadir of US$11.6 billion, leading to a
record trade deficit. In 1983, however, imports were cut roughly by
half. Figures for Iraq's imports and exports from 1984 onward vary
widely and cannot be considered authoritative. Despite the partial
recovery of Iraqi oil exports in 1986, exports were valued at only about
US$7.5 billion because of the plunge in world oil prices. In 1987 imports were expected to rise to
about US$10 billion. Export revenues were also expected to rise, as Iraq
compensated for low oil prices with a higher volume of oil exports
(ssee; <"appendix.htm#table8">table
8, Appendix).
Iraq had counted heavily on solving its twin debt and deficit
problems by reestablishing and eventually by augmenting its oil export
capacity. But increases in volume were insufficient to offset lower
prices, and because demand remained low, expanded oil exports served
only to glut the market and further drive down the price of oil. The
depressed price of oil and the low prices of other raw materials that
Iraq exported, coupled with higher prices for the goods it imported,
trapped the nation in the classic dilemma of declining terms of trade.
Although Iraq was cutting the volume of its imports and was increasing
the volume of its exports, the relative values of imports and exports
had shifted fundamentally. More than 95 percent of Iraq's exports were
raw materials, primarily petroleum. Food stuffs accounted for most
additional exports. Conversely, nearly half of Iraq's imports were
capital goods and consumer durables. According to Iraqi statistics, 34.4
percent of 1984 imports were capital goods, 30 percent were raw
materials, 22.4 percent were foodstuffs, and 12.5 percent were consumer
items.
Iraq's declining imports resulted not so much from belt- tightening
or from import substitution, as from the increasing reluctance of
trading partners to extend credit. Despite its socialist orientation,
Iraq had long traded most heavily with Western Europe. Initially, Iraq's
debt accumulation worked in its favor by creating a hostage effect.
Western creditors, both governments and private companies, continued to
supply Iraq in an effort to sustain the country until it could repay
them. Additionally, the debt helped to secure outlets for Iraqi
petroleum in a tight international market through barter agreements in
which oil was exchanged for a reduction in debt. In 1987 however, as
some West European companies prepared to cut their losses and to
withdraw from the Iraqi market, and as others curtailed sales by
limiting credits, other countries were poised to fill the vacuum by
offering goods and services on concessional terms. Companies from
Brazil, South Korea, India, Yugoslavia, and Turkey, backed by their
governments' export credit guarantees, were winning an increasing share
of the Iraqi market. In 1987 the Soviet Union and East European nations
were also offering goods and services on highly concessional terms.
Eventually, Iraq's exports might also be diverted from the West toward
its new trading partners.
Iraq continued to seek Western imports when it could afford them. In
1987 Iraq was forced to ration imports for which payment was due in
cash, although nonessential imports were purchased if the seller offered
credit. Imports contributing to the war effort had top priority. Imports
of spare parts and of management services for the maintenance of large
industrial projects were also deemed vital, as Iraq sought to stave off
the extremely high costs it would incur if facilities were shut down,
mothballed, and then reopened in the future. Consumer goods were given
lowest priority.
In 1985 Iraq purchased 14.4 percent of its total imports from Japan.
Iraq bought an array of Japanese products, ranging from transport
equipment, machinery, and electrical appliances to basic materials such
as iron and steel, textiles, and rubber goods. In 1987, as Iraqi debt to
Japan mounted to US$3 billion, the government of Japan curtailed the
export insurance it had offered Japanese companies doing business with
Iraq; nevertheless, Japanese companies continued to trade with Iraq.
Iraq bought 9.2 percent of its imports from West Germany. Neighboring
Turkey provided the third largest source of Iraqi imports, accounting
for 8.2 percent of the total. Italy and France each accounted for about
7.5 percent, followed by Brazil with 7 percent and Britain with 6.3
percent. Kuwait was Iraq's most important Arab trading partner,
contributing 4.2 percent of Iraq's imports (see <"appendix.htm#table9">table
9, Appendix).
In 1985 Brazil was the main destination of Iraqi exports, accounting
for 17.7 percent of the total. France was second with 13 percent,
followed by Italy with 11 percent, Spain with 10.7 percent, Turkey and
Yugoslavia with about 8 percent each, Japan with about 6 percent, and
the United States with 4.7 percent.
In April 1987, the government attempted to streamline the trade
bureaucracy by eliminating five state trading companies that dealt in
various commodities. Although the state trading companies had been
established in the 1970s to foster increased domestic production, they
had evolved into importing organizations. In view of this orientation,
their operations were incorporated into the Ministry of Trade. Three
Ministry of Trade departments, which had administered trade with
socialist, with African, and with Arab nations, were abolished. The
responsibilities of these disbanded organizations were centralized in a
new Ministry of Trade department named the General Establishment for
Import and Export.
The Ministry of Trade implemented a national import policy by
allocating portions of a total budget among imports according to
priority. The import budget varied from year to year, depending on
export earnings and on the amount in loans that had been secured from
foreign creditors. The government's underlying intention was gradually
to replace imported manufactured products with domestic manufactured
products and then to increase export sales. In the mid-1980s, however,
the government recognized that increased domestic production required
the import of intermediate goods. In 1987 state companies were permitted
for the first time to use private agents or middlemen to facilitate
limited imports of necessary goods.
The private sector, which had long been accorded a quota of total
imports, was also deregulated to a limited extent. In 1985 the quota was
increased to 7.5 percent of total imports, and the government gave
consideration to increasing that percentage further. All imports by the
private sector had previously been subject to government licensing. In
1985, Law No. 60 for Major Development Projects exempted the private
sector from the obligation to obtain licenses to import basic
construction materials that would be used in major development projects.
In an attempt to increase remittances from Iraqis abroad, the government
also gave special import licenses to nonresident Iraqis, if the value of
the imports was invested in Iraq and was not transferred outside the
country.
In 1987 the rules concerning private sector imports were liberalized
further when private sector manufacturers were granted special licenses
that permitted them to import raw materials, spare parts, packaging,
machinery, and equipment necessary for plant modernization and for
expansion. In some cases no ceiling was placed on such imports, while in
other cases imports were limited to 50 percent of the value of the
export earnings that the manufacturer generated. Such imports were not
subject to quotas or to foreign exchange restrictions. Moreover, the
government announced that it would make no inquiry into the companies'
sources of financing. In a remarkably candid statement in a June 1987
speech, Saddam Husayn promised that citizens would not be asked where
they had acquired their money, and he admitted that the private sector
had not imported any goods because of its fear of prosecution by the
security services for foreign exchange violations.
While the government permitted more imports by the private sector, it
nevertheless continued to promote exports at the same time. Starting in
1969 it maintained an Export Subsidy Fund, which underwrote the cost of
eligible nonpetroleum exports by up to 25 percent. The Export Subsidy
Fund was financed with a tax of .5 percent levied on imports of capital
goods and .75 percent levied on imports of consumer goods. Most imports
were also charged both duty and a customs surcharge that varied from
item to item. Export licenses were granted freely both to public and to
private sector firms with only a few exceptions. The Board of Regulation
of Trade had the authority to prohibit the export of any commodity when
domestic supplies fell short of demand, and the control over export of
certain items was reserved for the General Organization of Exports. The
degree to which government economic policies would be liberalized in the
late 1980s remained to be seen. The government had taken several steps
in that direction but state controls continued to play a major role in
the economy in 1988.
Both primary and secondary source information on the Iraqi economy
tends to be both scant and dated. The government of Iraq has regarded
data on national economic performance as a state secret, particularly
since the start of the Iran-Iraq War in 1980. The government does not
publish a budget, although it releases a yearbook, the Annual
Abstract of Statistics, which contains some economic figures. The
Iran-Iraq War has also diverted scholarly attention from economic
issues. One exception is Phebe Marr's The Modern History of Iraq,
which contains a chapter titled "Economic and Social Changes under
the Revolutionary Regime." The most detailed and authoritative
periodic reports on the Iraqi economy are produced by the Wharton
Econometric Forecasting Associates in their semiannual Middle East
Economic Outlook. The Economist Intelligence Unit's Country
Report: Iraq, a quarterly, contains much useful information and
analysis. Another good source of up-to-date information is the Middle
East Economic Digest.
Iraq
Iraq - Government and Politics
Iraq
THE POLITICAL SYSTEM in 1988 was in what was officially characterized
as a "transitional" phase. This description meant that the
current method of rule by decree, which had been in effect since 1968,
would continue until the goal of a socialist, democratic republic with
Islam as the state religion was attained. The end of the transition
period was to be marked by the formal enactment of a permanent
constitution. The timing and the specific circumstances that would
terminate the transitional stage had not been specified as of early
1988.
The country remained under the regime of the Baath (Arab Socialist
Resurrection) Party, which had seized power through a coup d'etat in
July 1968. The legality of government institutions and actions was based
on the Provisional Constitution of July 16, 1970, which embodied the
basic principles of the Baath Party-- Arab unity, freedom, and
socialism. These principles were in turn rooted in the pan-Arab
aspirations of the party, aspirations sanctified through identification
with the historic right and destiny of all Arabs to unite under the
single leadership of "the Arab Nation."
The most powerful decision-making body in Iraq, the tenmember
Revolutionary Command Council (RCC), which functioned as the top
executive and legislative organ of the state, was for all practical
purposes an arm of the Baath Party. All members of the RCC were also
members of the party's Regional Command, or state apparatus. President
Saddam Husayn was both the chairman of the RCC and the secretary general
of the Baath's Regional Command. He was generally recognized as the most
powerful political figure in the country.
From its earliest days, the Baath Party was beset by personality
clashes and by factional infighting. These problems were a primary cause
of the failure of the first Baath attempt to govern Iraq in 1963. After
the Baath returned to power in 1968, intraparty fissures were generally
held in check, albeit not eliminated, by President Ahmad Hasan al Bakr.
When Saddam Husayn succeeded to the presidency in 1979, he also
commanded the loyalty of the major elements of the Baath.
Saddam Husayn and other Baath leaders have always regarded the
ability to balance endemic intraparty tensions--such as those between
military and civilian elements and among personalities across boundaries
of specialization--as the key to success in Baghdad. Above all, they
perceived harmony in the militarycivilian coalition as pivotal. Although
the Baath had begun recruiting within the Iraqi military as early as
1958, and within ten years military members constituted the backbone of
the party's power, civilian Baath leaders maintained overall control of
the party.
Iraqi politics under the Baath regime were generally geared toward
mobilizing support for the regime. Loyal opposition had no place, and it
was not recognized as legitimate. The party leaders believed competitive
politics ill-suited to Iraq, at least during the indefinite transitional
period. They condemned partisan political activity, which they insisted
had had damaging consequences on national unity and integration. The
Baath also invoked Iraq's unhappy legacy of ethnic and regional
cleavages as justification for harsh curbs on political rights.
In 1988, twenty years after the Baath had come to power, it still was
not possible to assess popular attitudes toward Saddam Husayn, toward
the Baath Party, toward political institutions, or toward political
issues because there had been insufficient field research in the
country. Even though elections for a National Assembly had been held in
1980 and again in 1984, these had been carefully controlled by the
government, and genuinely free elections had not been held for more than
thirty years. Politicians or groups opposed to the principles of the
1968 Baath Revolution of July 17 to 30 were not permitted to operate
openly. Those who aspired to be politically active had few choices: they
could join the highly selective Baath Party, remain dormant, go
underground or into exile, or join the Baath-sponsored Progressive
National Front (PNF).
The PNF, which came into existence in 1974, was based on a national
action charter that called for collaboration between the Baath and each
of the other parties considered to be both progressive and nationalist.
The PNF served as the only riskfree , non-Baath forum for political
participation, although even this channel was denied to those whose
loyalties to the regime were suspect. The Baath Party's objectives in
establishing the front were to provide the semblance of broad popular
support for the government as well as to provide the facade of alliance
among the Baath and other parties. The Baath, however, held a dominant
position within the front and therefore assumed sole responsibility for
carrying out the decisions of the front's executive commission, which
was composed of the Baath's most important members and sympathizers.
In early 1988, the war with Iran continued to preoccupy Saddam Husayn
and his associates. Approximately 75,000 Iraqis had been killed in the
war, and about 250,000 had been wounded; more than 50,000 Iraqis were
being held as prisoners of war in Iran. Property damage was estimated in
the tens of billions of dollars; destruction was especially severe in
the southern part of the country.
Iraq
Iraq - CONSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK
Iraq
The Provisional Constitution of July 16, 1970, upon which Iraq's
governmental system was based in 1988, proclaims Iraq to be "a
sovereign people's democratic republic" dedicated to the ultimate
realization of a single Arab state and to the establishment of a
socialist system. Islam is declared to be the state religion, but
freedom of religion and of religious practices is guaranteed. Iraq is
said to be formed of two principal nationalities, Arab and Kurd. A March
1974 amendment to the Constitution provides for autonomy for the Kurds
in the region where they constitute a majority of the population. In
this Autonomous
Region both Arabic and Kurdish are designated as
official languages for administrative and educational purposes. The
Constitution also prescribes, however, that the "national
rights" of the Kurds as well as the "legitimate rights"
of all minorities are to be exercised only within the framework of Iraqi
unity, and the document stipulates that no part of Iraq can be
relinquished.
The Constitution sets forth two basic aims, the establishment of a
socialist system based on "scientific and revolutionary
principles," and pan-Arab economic unity. The state is given an
active role in "planning, directing, and guiding" the economy.
National resources and the principal means of production are defined as
"the property of the people" to be exploited by the state
"directly in accordance with the requirements of the general
planning of the national economy." The Constitution describes
public properties and the properties of the public sector as inviolable.
The Constitution classifies the ownership of property as "a
social function that shall be exercised within the limits of society's
aims and the state's programs in accordance with the provisions of the
law"; nevertheless, the Constitution also guarantees private
ownership and individual economic freedom "within the limits of the
law, provided that individual ownership will not contradict or be
detrimental to general economic planning." The Constitution
stipulates that private property may not be expropriated except for the
public interest and then only with just compensation. The size of
private agricultural land holdings is to be defined by law, and the
excess is to be regarded as the property of the people. The Constitution
also bars foreign ownership of real estate, although individuals may be
granted a legal exemption from this prohibition.
Articles 19 through 36 of the Constitution spell out fundamental
rights and duties in detail. The right to fair trial through due
process, the inviolability of person and of residence, the privacy of
correspondence, and the freedom to travel are guaranteed to all
citizens. The Constitution also assures citizens of their right to
religious freedom; to the freedom of speech, of publication, and of
assembly; and to the freedom to form political parties, trade unions,
and professional societies. The Constitution directs the state to
eliminate illiteracy and to ensure the right of citizens to free
education from elementary school through the university level. According
to Article 28, the aims of education include instilling opposition to
"the doctrines of capitalism, exploitation, reaction, Zionism, and
colonialism" in order to ensure the achievement of the Baathist
goals of Arab unity, freedom, and socialism. The Constitution also
requires the state to provide every citizen with employment and with
free medical care.
The Constitution defines the powers and the functions of the
different government institutions. These include the RCC, the National
Assembly, the presidency, the Council of Ministers, or cabinet, and the
judiciary. According to Article 37, the RCC "is the supreme body in
the State." Article 43 assigns to the RCC, by a vote of two-thirds
of its members, authority to promulgate laws and regulations, to deal
with national security, to declare war and conclude peace, and to
approve the government's budget. Article 38 stipulates that all newly
elected members of the RCC must be members of the Baath Party Regional
Command. The Constitution also provides for an appointed Council of
Ministers that has responsibility for carrying out the executive
decisions of the RCC.
The chief executive of the RCC is the president, who serves as the
commander in chief of the armed forces and as the head of both the
government and the state. The powers of the president, according to the
Constitution, include appointing, promoting, and dismissing personnel of
the judiciary, civil service, and military. The president also has
responsibility for preparing and approving the budget. The first
president, Ahmad Hasan al Bakr, was in office from 1968 to 1979, when he
resigned and was succeeded by Saddam Husayn.
Articles 47 through 56 of the Constitution provide for an elected
National Assembly, but its powers are to be defined by the RCC.
Elections for the Assembly took place for the first time in June 1980.
Subsequent National assembly elections were held in October 1984.
The Constitution can be amended only by a two-thirds majority vote of
the RCC. Although the 1970 Constitution is officially designated as
provisional, it is to remain in force until a permanent constitution is
promulgated.
Iraq
Iraq - GOVERNMENT
Iraq
The Constitution provides for a governmental system that, in
appearance, is divided into three mutually checking branches, the
executive, the legislative, and the judicial. In practice, neither the
legislature nor the judiciary has been independent of the executive.
The Revolutionary Command Council
In 1988 the Revolutionary Command Council (RCC) continued to be the
top decision-making body of the state. The RCC was first formed in July
1968, and since then it has exercised both executive and legislative
powers. The chairman of the RCC is the president of the republic. The
number of RCC members has varied over time; in 1988 there were ten
members.
According to the Constitution, the RCC is the supreme organ of the
state, charged with the mission of carrying out the popular will by
removing from power the reactionary, the dictatorial, and the corrupt
elements of society and by returning power to the people. The RCC elects
its chairman, who serves concurrently as president of the republic, by a
two-thirds majority vote. In case of the chairman's official absence or
incapacitation, his constitutional powers are to be exercised by the
vice chairman, who also is elected by the RCC from among its members.
Thus the vice chairman (in 1988 Izzat Ibrahim, who had served since
1979) is first in line of succession.
The members of the RCC, including both the chairman and the vice
chairman, are answerable only to the RCC itself, which may dismiss any
of its members by a two-thirds majority vote and may also charge and
send to trial for wrongdoing any member of the council, any deputy to
the president, or any cabinet minister. Since 1977 the Baath Party has
regarded all members of the Baath Party Regional Command as members of
the RCC. The interlocking leadership structure of the RCC and the
Regional Command has served to emphasize the party's dominance in
governmental affairs.
The RCC's constitutional powers are wide ranging. It may perform
legislative functions, both in collaboration with, and independently of,
the National Assembly; approve government recommendations concerning
national defense and internal security; declare war, order general
mobilization, conclude peace, and ratify treaties and international
agreements; approve the state's general budget; lay down the rules for
impeachment of its members and set up the special court to try those
impeached; authorize the chairman or the vice chairman to exercise some
of the council's powers except for legislative ones; and provide the
internal regulations and working procedures of the council. The chairman
is specifically empowered to preside over the council's closed sessions,
to sign all laws and decrees issued by the council, and to supervise the
work of cabinet ministers and the operation of the institutions of the
state.
Iraq
Iraq - The National Assembly
Iraq
Although the 1970 Constitution provides for a parliament called the
National Assembly, this body was not instituted until 1980. The RCC
first circulated a draft law creating the assembly in December 1979;
after some changes this was promulgated as law the following March.
According to the law, the National Assembly consists of 250 members
elected by secret ballot every four years. All Iraqi citizens over
eighteen are eligible to vote for assembly candidates. The country is
divided into 250 electoral districts, each with an approximate
population of 250,000. One representative is elected to the assembly
from each of these constituencies. The National Assembly law also
stipulates, however, that there is to be a single electoral list.
Furthermore, the qualifications of all candidates for the assembly must
be reviewed and be approved by a governmentappointed election
commission. In practice, these provisions have enabled the Baath Party
to control the National Assembly.
To qualify as a candidate for National Assembly elections,
individuals need to meet certain conditions. For example, prospective
candidates must be at least twenty-five years of age, must be Iraqi by
birth, must not be married to foreigners, and must have Iraqi fathers.
Having a non-Iraqi mother is grounds for disqualification except in
those cases where the mother is of Arab origins and from another Arab
country. In addition, persons who were subject to property expropriation
under the land reform or nationalization laws are not eligible
candidates. Furthermore, all aspiring candidates are required to
demonstrate to the satisfaction of the election commission that they
believe in the principles of the 1968 Baath Revolution, that is, in the
Baath Party's objectives.
The first parliamentary elections since Iraq became a republic in
1958 were held in June 1980, and the First National Assembly convened at
the end of that month. Baath Party candidates won 75 percent, or 187, of
the 250 seats. The remaining 25 percent were won by parties allied with
the Baath and by independent parties. Elections for the Second National
Assembly were held in October 1984. Approximately 7,171,000 votes were
cast in that election, and the Baath won 73 percent (183) of the seats.
Thirty-three women were elected to the assembly. Saadun Hammadi was
elected chairman of the assembly, and two years later he was made a
member of the RCC.
Since 1980 the National Assembly generally has held two sessions per
year in accordance with Article 48 of the Constitution. The first
session is held in April and May, and the second session in November and
December. During the few weeks each year that the National Assembly is
in session, it carries out its legislative duties in tandem with the
RCC. The assembly's primary function is to ratify or reject draft
legislation proposed by the RCC. In addition, it has limited authority
to enact laws proposed by a minimum of one-fourth of its membership, to
ratify the government's budget and international treaties, and to debate
domestic and international policy. It also has authority to supervise
state agencies and to question cabinet ministers. Although the assembly
has served as a forum for limited public discussion of issues, its
actual powers were restricted and ultimate decision-making authority
pertaining to legislation continued to reside with the RCC in 1988.
Iraq
Iraq - The President and the Council of Ministers
Iraq
The president is the chief executive authority of the country. He may
exercise authority directly or through the Council of Ministers, the
cabinet. He must be a native-born Iraqi. The Constitution does not
stipulate the president's term of office, nor does it provide for his
successor. President Bakr served for eleven years before retiring for
health reasons in 1979. He was succeeded by Saddam Husayn, the former
vice chairman of the RCC, who continued to hold the office of president
in early 1988.
The position of vice-chairman, rather than the office of
vice-president, appeared to be the second most powerful political one.
The vice-presidency appeared to be a largely ceremonial post, and the
vice-president seemed to be appointed or dismissed solely at the
discretion of the president. In 1988 the vicepresident was Taha Muhy ad
Din Maruf, who was first appointed by Bakr in 1974, and was subsequently
kept in office by Saddam Husayn. The vice-chairman of the RCC, who would
presumably succeed Saddam Husayn, was Izzat Ibrahim.
The Council of Ministers is the presidential executive arm.
Presidential policies are discussed and translated into specific
programs through the council. The council's activities are closely
monitored by the diwan, or secretariat of the presidency. The
head of the diwan is a cabinet-rank official, and his assistants and
support staff are special appointees. The members of the diwan are not
subject to the regulations of the Public Service Council, the body which
supervises all civil service matters.
Cabinet sessions are convened and presided over by the president.
Some senior members of the RCC are represented on the cabinet. By
convention, about one-third of the cabinet positions may be reserved for
members of the Baath Party. In early 1988, the cabinet consisted of
forty-one members including president Saddam Husayn and vice-president
Maruf. Ministerial portfolios included those for agriculture and
agrarian reform, communications, culture and arts, defense, education,
finance, foreign affairs, health, higher education and scientific
research, industry and minerals, information, interior, irrigation,
justice, labor and social affairs, oil, planning, public works and
housing, religious trusts, trade, and transport. Additionally, there
were seven ministers of state and seven presidential advisers with
ministerial status. Of the cabinet members, the president and the
minister of defense, the minister of foreign affairs, the minister of
interior, and the minister of trade were also members of the powerful
RCC.
Iraq
Iraq - The Judiciary
Iraq
Although the Constitution guarantees an independent judiciary, it
contains no provisions for the organization of courts. Consequently, the
legal system has been formed on the basis of laws promulgated by the
RCC. In early 1988 the judicial system consisted of courts that had
jurisdiction over civil, criminal, administrative, religious and other
matters. The courts were under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of
Justice, and all judges were appointed by the president. The secular
courts continued to function partly on the basis of the French model,
first introduced prior to 1918 when Iraq was under Ottoman rule and
subsequently modified, and partly on Islamic law. The three dominant
schools of Islamic jurisprudence were the Hanafi among the Sunni Arabs,
the Shafii among the Sunni
Kurds, and the Jafari among Shia Arabs. The Christian
and Jewish minorities had their own religious courts for the
adjudication of personal status issues, such as marriage, divorce, and
inheritance.
For judicial administration, the country was divided into five
appellate districts centered, respectively, in Baghdad, Basra, Al Hillah
(Babylon), Kirkuk, and Mosul. Major civil and commercial cases were
referred to the courts of first instance, which were of two kinds: 18
courts of first instance with unlimited powers, and 150 courts of first
instance with limited powers. The former were established in the
capitals of the eighteen governorates (provinces); the latter, all of
which were single-judge courts, were located in the district and
subdistrict centers, and in the governorate capitals. Six peace courts, two in Baghdad and one in each of the other
five judicial district centers, handled minor litigation. Decisions of
these courts could be appealed to the relevant district court of
appeals.
Wherever there were civil courts, criminal cases were judged by
magistrates. Six sessions courts reviewed cases appealed from the lower
magistrates' courts. The personal status of both Shia Muslims and Sunni
Muslims and disputes arising from administration of waqfs (religious
trusts or endowments) were decided in sharia (Islamic law) courts.
Sharia courts were located wherever there were civil courts. In some
places sharia courts consisted of specially appointed qadis
(religious judges), and in other places of civil court judges.
Christians, Jews, and other religious minorities had their own separate
communal councils to administer personal status laws.
Civil litigation against government bodies and the "socialist
sector" and between government organizations were brought before
the Administrative Court, set up under a law promulgated in November
1977. Jurisdictional conflicts between this court and other courts were
adjudicated by the Court of Cassation, which on appeal could also review
decisions of the Administrative Court. Offenses against the internal or
external security of the state-- whether economic, financial, or
political offenses--were tried before the Revolutionary Court. Unlike
the other courts described above, the Revolutionary Court was not under
the jurisdiction of the appellate court system. In addition, the RCC
periodically established special security courts, under the jurisdiction
of the secret security police, to handle cases of espionage, of treason,
and of "antistate" activities. The proceedings of the
Revolutionary Court and of the special security courts, in contrast to
the practice of all other courts, are generally closed.
The court of last resort for all except security cases was the Court
of Cassation. It consisted of a president; vicepresidents ; no fewer
than fifteen permanent members; and a number of deputized judges,
reporting judges, and religious judges. It was divided into general,
civil, criminal, administrative affairs, and personal status benches. In
addition to its appellate function, the Court of Cassation assumed
original jurisdiction over crimes committed by high government
officials, including judges. The Court of Cassation also adjudicated
jurisdictional conflicts between lower courts.
Iraq
Iraq - Local Government
Iraq
In 1988 there were eighteen governorates (alwiya, sing., liwa),
each administered by a governor appointed by the president. Each
governorate was divided into districts (aqdhiya, sing., qadha)
headed by district officers (qaimaqamun; sing., qaimaqam);
each district was divided into subdistricts (nawahy; sing., nahiyah)
under the responsibility of subdistrict officers (mudara;
sing., mudir). Mayors headed cities and towns. Municipalities
were divided into several categories depending upon the size of local
revenues. Baghdad, the national capital, had special administrative
status. The mayor of Baghdad and the mayors of other cities were
presidential appointees.
In 1971 President Bakr promulgated the National Action Charter, a
broad statement of Baath Party political, economic, social, and foreign
policy objectives. This document called for the formation of popular
councils in all administrative subdivisions. These councils were to be
given the right to supervise, to inspect, and to criticize the work of
the government. The first councils were appointed in 1973 in accordance
with a law promulgated by the RCC. As late as 1988, however, there was
insufficient empirical research available to determine whether the
popular councils were autonomous forums for the channeling of grievances
or were merely Baath Party-dominated institutions used to encourage
active popular support of, and involvement in, government-initiated
activities.
Iraq
Iraq - Kurdish Autonomy
Iraq
Three governorates in the north--Dahuk, Irbil, and As
Sulaymaniyah--constitute Iraqi Kurdistan, a region that historically has
had a majority population of Kurds. Ever since Iraq became independent
in 1932, the Kurds have demanded some form of self-rule in the Kurdish
areas. There were clashes between Kurdish antigovernment guerrillas and
army units throughout most of the 1960s. When the Baath Party came to
power in July 1968, the principal Kurdish leaders distrusted its
intentions and soon launched a major revolt. In March 1970, the
government and the Kurds reached an agreement, to be implemented within
four years, for the creation of an Autonomous Region consisting of the
three Kurdish governorates and other adjacent districts that haf been
determined by census to have a Kurdish majority. Although the RCC issued
decrees in 1974 and in 1975 that provided for the administration of the
Autonomous Region, these were not acceptable to all Kurdish leaders and
a major war ensued. The Kurds were eventually crushed, but guerrilla
activities continued in parts of Kurdistan. In early 1988,
antigovernment Kurds controlled several hundred square kilometers of
Irbil and As Sulaymaniyah governorates adjacent to the Iranian frontier.
In early 1988, the Autonomous Region was governed according to the
stipulations of the 1970 Autonomy Agreement. It had a twelve-member
Executive Council that wielded both legislative and executive powers and
a Legislative Assembly that advised the council. The chairman of the
Executive Council was appointed by President Saddam Husayn and held
cabinet rank; the other members of the council were chosen from among
the deputies to the popularly elected Legislative Assembly.
The Legislative Assembly consisted of fifty members elected for
three-year terms from among candidates approved by the central
government. The Legislative Assembly chose its own officers, including
its cabinet-rank chairman, a deputy chairman, and a secretary. It had
authority to ratify laws proposed by the Executive Council and limited
powers to enact legislation relating to the development of "culture
and nationalist customs of the Kurds" as well as other matters of
strictly local scope. The Legislative Assembly could question the
members of the Executive Council concerning the latter's administrative,
economic, educational, social, and other varied responsibilities; it
could also withhold a vote of confidence from one or more of the
Executive Council members. Both the assembly and the council were
located in the city of Irbil, the administrative center of Irbil
Governorate. Officials of these two bodies were either Kurds or
"persons well-versed in the Kurdish language," and Kurdish was
used for all official communications at the local level. The first
Legislative Assembly elections were held in September 1980, and the
second elections took place in August 1986.
Despite the Autonomous Region's governmental institutions, genuine
self-rule did not exist in Kurdistan in 1988. The central government in
Baghdad continued to exercise tight control by reserving to itself the
power to make all decisions in matters pertaining to justice, to police,
to internal security, and the administration of the frontier areas. The
Baath Party, through the minister of state for regional autonomy and
other ministerial representatives operating in the region, continued to
supervise activities of all governing bodies in the region. The minister
of justice and a special oversight body set up by the Court of Cassation
reviewed all local enactments and administrative decisions, and they
countermanded any local decrees that were deemed contrary to the
"constitution, laws, or regulations" of the central
government. The central government's superior authority has been most
dramatically evident in the frontier areas, where government security
units have forcibly evacuated Kurdish villagers to distant lowlands.
Iraq
Iraq - POLITICS
Iraq
The Baath Party
In early 1988, the Baath Party continued to stress parallelism
focused on "regional" (qutri) and
"national" (qawmi) goals, following the Baath
doctrine that the territorially and politically divided Arab countries
were merely "regions" of a collective entity called "The
Arab Nation." Hence the Baath movement in one country was
considered merely an aspect of, or a phase leading to, "a unified
democratic socialist Arab nation." That nation, when it
materialized, would be under a single, unified Arab national leadership.
Theoretically, therefore, success or failure at the regional level would
have a corresponding effect on the movement toward that Arab nation.
Moreover, the critical test of legitimacy for any Baath regime would
necessarily be whether or not the regime's policies and actions were
compatible with the basic aims of the revolution-- aims epitomized in
the principles of "unity, freedom, and socialism."
The Baath Party in Iraq, like its counterparts in other Arab regions
(states), derived from the official founding congress in Damascus in
1947. This conclave of pan-Arab intellectuals was inspired by the ideas
of two Syrians, Michel Aflaq and Salah ad Din al Bitar, who are
generally regarded as the fathers of the Baath movement. Several Iraqis,
including Abd ar Rahman ad Damin and Abd al Khaliq al Khudayri, attended
this congress and became members of the party. Upon their return to
Baghdad, they formed the Iraqi branch of the Baath. Damin became the
first secretary general of the Iraqi Baath.
From its early years, the Iraqi Baath recruited converts from a small
number of college and high school students, intellectuals, and
professionals--virtually all of whom were urban Sunni Arabs. A number of
Baath high school members entered the Military College, where they
influenced several classmates to join the party. Important military
officers who became Baath members in the early 1950s included Ahmad
Hasan al Bakr, Salih Mahdi Ammash, and Abd Allah Sultan, all of whom
figured prominently in Iraqi political affairs in later years.
During the 1950s, the Baath was a clandestine party, and its members
were subject to arrest if their identities were discovered. The Baath
Party joined with other opposition parties to form the underground
United National Front and participated in the activities that led to the
1958 revolution. The Baathists hoped that the new, republican government
would favor pan-Arab causes, especially a union with Egypt, but instead
the regime was dominated by non-Baathist military officers who did not
support Arab unity or other Baath principles. Some younger members of
the party, including Saddam Husayn, became convinced that Iraqi leader
Abd al Karim Qasim had to be removed, and they plotted his
assassination. The October 1959 attempt on Qasim's life, however, was
bungled; Saddam Husayn fled Iraq, while other party members were
arrested and tried for treason. The Baath was forced underground again,
and it experienced a period of internal dissension as members debated
over which tactics were appropriate to achieve their political
objectives. The party's second attempt to overthrow Qasim, in February
1963, was successful, and it resulted in the formation of the country's
first Baath government. The party, however, was more divided than ever
between ideologues and more pragmatic members. Because of this lack of
unity, the Baath's coup partners were able to outmaneuver it and, within
nine months, to expel all Baathists from the government. It was not
until 1965 that the Baath overcame the debilitating effects of
ideological and of personal rivalries. The party then reorganized under
the direction of General Bakr as secretary general with Saddam Husayn as
his deputy. Both men were determined to return the Baath to power. In
July 1968, the Baath finally staged a successful coup.
After the Baath takeover, Bakr became president of the regime, and he
initiated programs aimed at the establishment of a "socialist,
unionist, and democratic" Iraq. This was done, according to the
National Action Charter, with scrupulous care for balancing the
revolutionary requirements of Iraq on the one hand and the needs of the
"Arab nation" on the other. According to a Baath Party
pronouncement in January 1974, "Putting the regional above the
national may lead to statism, and placing the national over the regional
may lead to rash and childish action." This protestation
notwithstanding, the government's primary concerns since 1968 have been
domestic issues rather than pan- Arab ones.
In 1968 the Baath regime confronted a wide range of problems, such as
ethnic and sectarian tensions, the stagnant condition of agriculture,
commerce, and industry, the inefficiency and the corruption of
government, and the lack of political consensus among the three main
sociopolitical groups--the Shia Arabs, the Sunni Arabs, and the Kurds.
The difficulties of consensus building were compounded by the pervasive
apathy and mistrust at the grass-roots levels of all sects, by the
shortage of qualified party cadres to serve as the standard-bearers of
the Baath regime, and by the Kurdish armed insurgency. Rivalry with
Syria and with Egypt for influence within the Arab world and the
frontier dispute with Iran also complicated the regime's efforts to
build the nation.
Since 1968 the Baath has attempted to create a strong and unified
Iraq, through formal government channels and through political campaigns
designed to eradicate what it called "harmful prerevolutionary
values and practices," such as exploitation, social inequities,
sectarian loyalties, apathy, and lack of civil spirit. Official
statements called for abandonment of traditional ways in favor of a new
life-style fashioned on the principles of patriotism, national loyalty,
collectivism, participation, selflessness, love of labor, and civic
responsibility. These "socialist principles and practices"
would be instilled by the party's own example, through the state
educational system, and through youth and other popular organizations.
The Baath particularly emphasized "military training" for
youth; such training was considered essential for creating "new men
in the new society" and for defending the republic from the hostile
forces of Zionism, imperialism, anti-Arab chauvinism (e.g., from Iran),
rightists, opportunists, and reactionaries.
The Baath's major goal since 1968 has been to socialize the economy.
By the late 1980s, the party had succeeded in socializing a significant
part of the national economy, including agriculture, commerce,
industry, and oil. Programs to collectivize agriculture were reversed in
1981, but government investment in industrial production remained
important in the late 1980s. Large-scale industries such as iron, steel,
and petrochemicals were fully owned and managed by the government, as
were many medium-sized factories that manufactured textiles, processed
food, and turned out construction materials.
The Baath's efforts to create a unified Arab nation have been more
problematic. The party has not abandoned its goal of Arab unity. This
goal, however, has become a long-term ideal rather than a short-term
objective. President Saddam Husayn proclaimed the new view in 1982 by
stating that Baathists now "believe that Arab unity must not take
place through the elimination of the local and national characteristics
of any Arab country. . . . but must be achieved through common fraternal
opinion." In practice this meant that the Iraqi Baath Party had
accepted unity of purpose among Arab leaders, rather than unification of
Arab countries, as more important for the present.
As of early 1988, the Baath Party claimed about 10 percent of the
population, a total of 1.5 million supporters and sympathizers; of this
total, full party members, or cadres, were estimated at only 30,000, or
0.2 percent. The cadres were the nucleus of party organization, and they
functioned as leaders, motivators, teachers, administrators, and
watchdogs. Generally, party recruitment procedures emphasized
selectivity rather than quantity, and those who desired to join the
party had to pass successfully through several apprentice-like stages
before being accepted into full membership. The Baath's elitist approach
derived from the principle that the party's effectiveness could only be
measured by its demonstrable ability to mobilize and to lead the people,
and not by "size, number, or form." Participation in the party
was virtually a requisite for social mobility.
The basic organizational unit of the Baath was the party cell or
circle (halaqah). Composed of between three and seven members,
cells functioned at the neighborhood or the village level, where members
met to discuss and to carry out party directives. A minimum of two and a
maximum of seven cells formed a party division (firqah).
Divisions operated in urban quarters, larger villages, offices,
factories, schools, and other organizations. Division units were spread
throughout the bureaucracy and the military, where they functioned as
the ears and eyes of the party. Two to five divisions formed a section (shabah).
A section operated at the level of a large city quarter, a town, or a
rural district. Above the section was the branch (fira), which
was composed of at least two sections and which operated at the
provincial level. There were twenty-one Baath Party branches in Iraq,
one in each of the eighteen provinces and three in Baghdad. The union of
all the branches formed the party's congress, which elected the Regional
Command.
The Regional Command was both the core of party leadership and the
top decision-making body. It had nine members, who were elected for
five-year terms at regional congresses of the party. Its secretary
general (also called the regional secretary) was the party's leader, and
its deputy secretary general was second in rank and in power within the
party hierarchy. The members of the command theoretically were
responsible to the Regional Congress that, as a rule, was to convene
annually to debate and to approve the party's policies and programs;
actually, the members were chosen by Saddam Husayn and other senior
party leaders to be "elected" by the Regional Congress, a
formality seen as essential to the legitimation of party leadership.
Above the Regional Command was the National Command of the Baath
Party, the highest policy-making and coordinating council for the Baath
movement throughout the Arab world. The National Command consisted of
representatives from all regional commands and was responsible to the
National Congress, which convened periodically. It was vested with broad
powers to guide, to coordinate, and to supervise the general direction
of the movement, especially with respect to relationships among the
regional Baath parties and with the outside world. These powers were to
be exercised through a national secretariat that would direct
policy-formulating bureaus.
In reality, the National Command did not oversee the Baath movement
as a whole in 1988 because there continued to be no single command. In
1966 a major schism within the Baath movement had resulted in the
creation of two rival National Commands, one based in Damascus and the
other in Baghdad. Both commands claim to be the legitimate authority for
the Baath, but since 1966 they have been mutually antagonistic. Michel
Aflaq, one of the original cofounders of the Baath Party, was the
secretary general of the Baghdad-based National Command, and Saddam
Husayn was the vice-chairman. In practice, the Syrian Regional Command,
under Hafiz al Assad, controlled the Damascus-based National Command of
the Baath Party, while the Iraqi Regional Command controlled the
Baghdad-based National Command.
Theoretically, the Iraqi Regional Command made decisions about Baath
Party policy based on consensus. In practice, all decisions were made by
the party's secretary general, Saddam Husayn, who since 1979 had also
been chairman of the RCC and president of the republic. He worked
closely with a small group of supporters, especially members of the
Talfah family from the town of Tikrit; he also dealt
ruthlessly with suspected opposition to his rule from within the party.
In 1979 several high-ranking Baathists were tried and were executed for
allegedly planning a coup; other prominent party members were forcibly
retired in 1982. Saddam Husayn's detractors accused him of monopolizing
power and of promoting a cult of personality.
Iraq
Iraq - The Politics of Alliance: The Progressive National Front
Iraq
In 1988 Iraq was no nearer to the goal of democracy than it had been
when the Baath came to power in 1968. The establishment of "popular
democracy" as a national objective remained essentially
unfulfilled. Political activities were restricted to those defined by
the Baath regime. The party, however, recognized that not all citizens
would become party members, and it sought to provide a controlled forum
for non-Baathist political participation. It created the Progressive
National Front (PNF) in 1974 to ally the Baath with other political
parties that were considered to be progressive. As a basis for this
cooperation President Bakr had proclaimed the National Action Charter in
1971. In presenting the charter for public discussion, the Baath had
invited "all national and progressive forces and elements" to
work for the objective of a "democratic, revolutionary, and
unitary" Iraq by participating in the "broadest coalition
among all the national, patriotic, and progressive forces."
The Iraqi Communist Party (ICP) was one of the important political
groups that the Baathists wanted involved in the PNF. Discussions
between the Baath and the ICP took place periodically over three years
before the latter was induced to join the PNF in 1974. For Baath
leaders, the PNF was a means of containing potential opposition to their
policies on the part of the ICP. Although the ICP was too small to pose
a serious armed challenge to the Baath, it was regarded as a major
ideological rival. The ICP's roots were as deep as those of the Baath,
because the former party had been formed by Iraqi Marxists in the 1930s.
Like the Baath, the ICP was an elitist party that advocated socialist
programs to benefit the masses and that appealed primarily to
intellectuals. Despite these similarities, there had been a long history
of antagonism between the two parties. Baathists tended to suspect the
communists of ultimate loyalty to a foreign power, the Soviet Union,
rather than to the Arab nation, even though the Baathists themselves
regarded the Soviet Union as a friendly and progressive state after
1968.
In return for participation in the PNF, the ICP was permitted to
nominate its own members for some minor cabinet posts and to carry on
political and propaganda activities openly. The ICP had to agree,
however, not to recruit among the armed forces and to accept Baath
domination of the RCC. The ICP also recognized the Baath Party's
"privileged" or leading role in the PNF: of the sixteen-member
High Council that was formed to direct the PNF, eight positions were
reserved for the Baath, five for other progressive parties, and only
three for the communists. The ICP also agreed not to undertake any
activities that would contravene the letter or spirit of the National
Action Charter.
The ICP may have hoped that the PNF would gradually evolve into a
genuine power-sharing arrangement. If so, these expectations were not
realized. The Baath members of the High Council dominated the PNF, while
the party retained a firm grip over government decision making. By 1975,
friction had developed between the ICP and the Baath. During the next
two years, at least twenty individual ICP members were arrested, tried,
and sentenced to prison for allegedly attempting to organize communist
cells within the army in contravention of the specific ban on such
activities. The April 1978 Marxist coup d'etat in Afghanistan seemed to
serve as a catalyst for a wholesale assault on the ICP. Convicted
communists were retried, and twenty-one of them were executed; there
were virulent attacks on the ICP in the Baathist press; and scores of
party members and sympathizers were arrested. The ICP complained, to no
apparent avail, that communists were being purged from government jobs,
arrested, and tortured in prisons. By April 1979, those principal ICP
leaders who had not been arrested had either fled the country or had
gone underground. In 1980 the ICP formally withdrew from the PNF and
announced the formation of a new political front to oppose the Baath
government. Since then, however, ICP activities against the Baathists
have been largely limited to a propaganda campaign.
The various Kurdish political parties were the other main focus of
Baath attention for PNF membership. Three seats on the PNF were reserved
for the Kurds, and initially the Baath intended that these be filled by
nominees from the Kurdish Democratic Party (KDP), the oldest and largest
Kurdish party. By the time the PNF was established in 1974, however, the
KDP was already involved in hostilities against the government. The KDP,
which originally had been formed in 1946 in Iran where Mullah Mustafa
Barzani and other party cofounders had fled following the collapse of a
1945 revolt, was suspicious of the Baath's ultimate intentions with
respect to self-rule for the Kurdish region. Even though Barzani himself
had negotiated the March 1970 Autonomy Agreement with Saddam Husayn, he
rejected Baghdad's March 1974 terms for implementing autonomy.
Subsequently, full-scale warfare erupted between central government
forces and KDP-organized fighters, the latter receiving military
supplies covertly from Iran and from the United States. The Kurdish
rebellion collapsed in March 1975, after Iran reached a rapprochement
with the Baath regime and withdrew all support from the Kurds. The KDP
leaders and several thousand fighters sought and obtained refuge in
Iran. Barzani eventually resettled in the United States, where he died
in 1979. Following Barzani's death, his son Masud became leader of the
KDP; from his base in Iran he directed a campaign of guerrilla
activities against Iraqi civilian and military personnel in the Kurdish
region. After Iraq became involved in war with Iran, Masud Barzani
generally cooperated with the Iranians in military offensives in Iraqi
Kurdistan.
Barzani's decision to fight Baghdad was not supported by all Kurdish
leaders, and it led to a split within the KDP. Some of these Kurds,
including Barzani's eldest son, Ubaydallah, believed that the Autonomy
Agreement did provide a framework for achieving practical results, and
he preferred to cooperate with the Baath. Other leaders were disturbed
by Barzani's acceptance of aid from Iran, Israel, and the United States,
and they refused to be associated with this policy. Consequently, during
1974, rival KDP factions, and even new parties such as the Kurdish
Revolutionary Party and the Kurdish Progressive Group, emerged. Although
none of these parties seemed to have as extensive a base of popular
support as did the KDP, their participation in the PNF permitted the
Baath to claim that its policies in the Autonomous Region had the
backing of progressive Kurdish forces.
The unanticipated and swift termination of KDP-central government
hostilities in March 1975 resulted in more factional splits from the
party. One breakaway group, the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) under
the leadership of Jalal Talabani, was committed to continuing the armed
struggle for Kurdish autonomy. Until 1985, however, most of the PUK's
skirmishes were with fellow Kurdish fighters of the KDP, and Talabani
himself held intermittent negotiations with Baathist representatives
about joining the PNF. Other KDP splinter groups agreed to cooperate
with the central government. In order to accommodate them, and in
recognition of the fact that no single political party represented the
Kurds, two additional seats, bringing the total to eighteen, were
created in the PNF. Thus, the number of Kurdish representatives
increased from three to five. The composition of the PNF changed again
in 1980, following the withdrawal of the three ICP members; the number
of Kurds remained constant.
In 1975 the Baath invited two independent progressive groups to
nominate one representative each for the unreserved seats on the PNF.
These seats went to the leaders of the Independent Democrats and the
Progressive Nationalists. Neither of these groups was a formally
organized political party, but rather each was an informal association
of non-Baathist politicians who had been active before 1968. These
groups had demonstrated to the satisfaction of the Baath Party that
their members had renounced the former "reactionary" ideas of
the various pre-revolutionary parties to which they had belonged.
In 1988 the Baath Party continued to hold the position that the PNF
was indispensable as long as the Arab revolutionary movement faced
dangers in Iraq and in other parts of the Arab homeland. The Baath
insisted that its policy of combining its "leading role"
within the front and a cooperative relationship based on "mutual
respect and confidence" among itself and the front's members was
correct and that, in fact, this was a major accomplishment of its rule.
Nevertheless, the PNF was not an independent political institution.
Although it served as a forum in which policy could be discussed, the
Baath actually controlled the PNF by monopolizing executive positions,
by holding half of the total seats, and by requiring that all PNF
decisions must be by unanimous vote.
Iraq
Iraq - Political Opposition
Iraq
Although the Baath in 1988 permitted the existence of several
non-Baathist political parties, it did not tolerate political opposition
to its policies. An effective security police apparatus had forced
underground those groups opposed to the Baath. Other opposition groups operated in exile in
Europe, Iran, and Syria. These included the ICP, the KDP, the PUK, a
Baath splinter that supported the Damascus-based National Command, and
several Islamic parties. Although various opposition parties
periodically succeeded in carrying out acts of violence against regime
targets, especially in Kurdistan, for the most part their activities
within Iraq did not seriously challenge the Baath regime.
The opposition to the Baath historically has been fragmented, and
efforts to form alliances--such as the ICP's November 1980 initiative to
create a Democratic and Patriotic Front of Kurdish and Arab secular
parties--foundered over ideological divisions. Personality clashes and
feuds also prevented the various Kurdish and Arab secular parties from
cooperating. In addition, many of the opposition parties seemed to have
a weak internal base of popular support because of the prevailing
perception that they had collaborated with enemies of Iraq at a time
when the country was engaged in war with Iran.
The religious opposition to the Baath was primarily concentrated
among the devout Shia population. The most important opposition party
was Ad Dawah al Islamiyah (the Islamic Call), popularly known as Ad
Dawah, which originally had been established by Shia clergy in the early
1960s. After the Baath came to power in 1968, Ad Dawah opposed the
regime's secular policies, and consequently many prominent clergy
associated with the party, as well as some who had no connections to Ad
Dawah, were persecuted. In 1979, apparently to contain any
radicalization of the Iraqi Shia clergy like that which had occurred in
Iran, the regime arrested and subsequently executed Ayatollah Sayyid
Muhammad Baqir as Sadr, the country's most respected Shia leader. Sadr's
precise relationship to Ad Dawah was not established, but his death
precipitated widespread, violent demonstrations and acts of sabotage. Ad
Dawah was banned in 1980, and membership in the organization was made a
capital offense. After the war with Iran had begun, Ad Dawah and other
Shia political groups reorganized in exile in Europe and in Iran.
In late 1982, the Iranian authorities encouraged the Iraqi Shia
parties to unite under one umbrella group known as the Supreme Assembly
for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SAIRI). Headquartered in Tehran,
SAIRI was under the chairmanship of Muhammad Baqir al Hakim, a prominent
clergyman whose father had been the leading ayatollah of Iraq in the
1960s. SAIRI's aim was to promote the cause of Islamic revolution in
Iraq by overthrowing the Baathist regime. To further that objective, in
1983 SAIRI established a government-in-exile. SAIRI's activities brought
harsh reprisals against members of the extended Hakim family still
living in Iraq but were generally ineffective in undermining the
political controls of the Baath. Another opposition element included in
SAIRI was the Organization of Islamic Action, headed by Iraqi-born
Muhammad Taqi al Mudarrissi.
Iraq
Iraq - MASS MEDIA
Iraq
In early 1988, all radio and television broadcasting in Iraq was
controlled by the government. Radio Iraq had both domestic and foreign
services. The domestic service broadcasted in Arabic, Kurdish, Syriac,
and Turkoman; the foreign service, in English, French, German, Russian,
Swahili, Turkish, and Urdu. Two radio stations based in Baghdad
broadcasted all day, and they could be picked up by the overwhelming
majority of the estimated 2.5 million radio receivers in the country.
There were also separate radio stations with programs in Kurdish and
Persian.
Baghdad Television was the main government television station. It
broadcasted over two channels throughout the day. Government-owned
commercial television stations also broadcasted from Basra, Kirkuk,
Mosul, and nineteen other locations for an average of six hours a day. A
Kurdish-language television station aired programs for eight hours each
day. There were an estimated 750,000 privately owned television sets in
the country in 1986, the latest year for which such statistics were
available.
In 1988 there were six national daily newspapers, all of which were
published in Baghdad. One of these papers, the Baghdad Observer,
was published in English; it had an estimated circulation of 220,000.
Another daily, Al-Iraq, with a circulation of abut 30,000, was
published in Kurdish. The largest of the four Arabic-language dailies
was Al Jumhuriya, which had a circulation of approximately
220,000. Ath Thawra, with a circulation of about 22,000, was
the official organ of the Baath Party. There were also seven weekly
papers, all published in Baghdad. The government's Iraqi News Agency
(INA) distributed news to the foreign press based in, or passing
through, Iraq.
Although Article 26 of the Provisional Constitution guarantees
freedom of opinion and publication "within the limits of the
law," newspapers, books, and other publications were subject to
censorship. The Ministry of Guidance monitored published material to
ensure that all writing was "in line with the nationalist and
progressive line of the revolution." The Ministry of Culture and
Information's National House for Publishing and Distributing Advertising
had the sole authority to import and to distribute all foreign
newspapers, magazines, and periodicals.
Iraq
Iraq - FOREIGN POLICY
Iraq
Iraq's relations with other countries and with international
organizations are supervised by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. In 1988
the minister of foreign affairs was Tariq Aziz, who had served in that
post since 1983. Aziz was a member of the RCC and an influential leader
of the Baath Party. Before becoming minister of foreign affairs, he had
been director of the party's foreign affairs bureau. Aziz, Saddam
Husayn, and the other members of the RCC formulated foreign policy, and
the Ministry of Foreign Affairs bureaucracy implemented RCC directives.
The Baath maintained control over the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and
over all Iraqi diplomatic missions outside the country through its party
cells that operated throughout the ministry and in all embassies abroad.
In 1988 Iraq's main foreign policy issue was the war with Iran. This
war had begun in September 1980, when Saddam Husayn sent Iraqi forces
across the Shatt al Arab into southwestern Iran. Although the reasons for Saddam
Husayn's decision to invade Iran were complicated, the leaders of the
Baath Party had long resented Iranian hegemony in the Persian Gulf
region and had especially resented the perceived Iranian interference in
Iraq's internal affairs both before and after the 1979 Islamic
Revolution. They may have thought that the revolutionary turmoil in
Tehran would enable Iraq to achieve a quick victory. Their objectives
were to halt any potential foreign assistance to the Shias and to the
Kurdish opponents of the regime and to end Iranian domination of the
area. The Baathists believed a weakened Iran would be incapable of
posing a security threat and could not undermine Iraq's efforts to
exercise the regional influence that had been blocked by non-Arab Iran
since the mid-1960s. Although the Iraqis failed to obtain the expected
easy victory, the war initially went well for them. By early 1982,
however, the Iraqi occupation forces were on the defensive and were
being forced to retreat from some of their forward lines. In June 1982,
Saddam Husayn ordered most of the Iraqi units to withdraw from Iranian
territory; after that time, the Baathist government tried to obtain a
cease-fire based on a return of all armed personnel to the international
borders that prevailed as of September 21, 1979.
Iran did not accept Iraq's offer to negotiate an end to the war.
Similarly, it rejected a July 1982 United Nations (UN) Security Council
resolution calling for an immediate cease-fire. Subsequently, Iranian
forces invaded Iraq by crossing the Shatt al Arab in the south and by
capturing some mountain passes in the north. To discourage Iran's
offensive, the Iraqi air force initiated bombing raids over several
Iranian cities and towns. The air raids brought Iranian retaliation,
which included the aerial bombing of Baghdad. Although Iraq eventually
pushed back and contained the Iranian advances, it was not able to force
Iranian troops completely out of Iraqi territory. The perceived threat
to Iraq in the summer of 1982 thus was serious enough to force Saddam
Husayn to request the Nonaligned Movement to change the venue of its
scheduled September meeting from Baghdad to India; nevertheless, since
the fall of 1982, the ground conflict has generally been a stalemated
war of attrition--although Iran made small but demoralizing territorial
advances as a result of its massive offensives in the reed marshes north
of Basra in 1984 and in 1985, in Al Faw Peninsula in early 1986, and in
the outskirts of Basra during January and February 1987. In addition, as
of early 1988 the government had lost control of several mountainous
districts in Kurdistan where, since 1983, dissident Kurds have
cooperated militarily with Iran.
Saddam Husayn's government has maintained consistently since the
summer of 1982 that Iraq wants a negotiated end to the war based upon
the status quo ante. Iran's stated conditions for ceasing hostilities,
namely the removal of Saddam Husayn and the Baath from power, however,
have been unacceptable. The main objective of the regime became the
extrication of the country from the war with as little additional damage
as possible. To further this goal, Iraq has used various diplomatic,
economic, and military strategies; none of these had been successful in
bringing about a cease-fire as of early 1988.
Although the war was a heavy burden on Iraq politically,
economically, and socially, the most profound consequence of the war's
prolongation was its impact on the patterns of Iraq's foreign relations.
Whereas trends toward a moderation of the Baath Party's ideological
approach to foreign affairs were evident before 1980, the war helped to
accelerate these trends. Two of the most dramatic changes were in Iraq's
relationships with the Soviet Union and with the United States. During
the course of the war Iraq moved away from the close friendship with the
Soviet Union that had persisted throughout the 1970s, and it initiated a
rapprochement with the United States. Iraq also sought to ally itself
with Kuwait and with Saudi Arabia, two neighboring countries with which
there had been considerable friction during much of the 1970s. The
alignment with these countries was accompanied by a more moderate Iraqi
approach to other Arab countries, such as Egypt and Jordan, which
previously Iraq had perceived as hostile.
Iraq
Iraq - The Soviet Union
Iraq
When the Baath Party came to power in 1968, relations between Iraq
and the West were strained. The Baathists believed that most Western
countries, and particularly the United States, opposed the goal of Arab
unity. The Baathists viewed the 1948 partition of Palestine and the
creation of Israel as evidence of an imperialist plot to keep the Arabs
divided. Refusal to recognize Israel and support for the reestablishment
of Palestine consequently became central tenets of Baath ideology. The
party based Iraq's relations with other countries on those countries'
attitudes toward the Palestinian issue. The Soviet Union, which had
supported the Arabs during the June 1967 Arab-Israeli War and again
during the October 1973 Arab-Israeli War, was regarded as having an
acceptable position on the Palestine issue. Thus, the Baath cultivated
relations with Moscow to counter the perceived hostility of the United
States.
In 1972 the Baathist regime signed a Treaty of Friendship and
Cooperation with the Soviet Union. Article 1 stated that the treaty's
objective was to develop broad cooperation between Iraq and the Soviet
Union in economic, trade, scientific, technical, and other fields on the
basis of "respect for sovereignty, territorial integrity and
non-interference in one another's internal affairs." Under the
treaty, Iraq obtained extensive technical assistance and military
equipment from the Soviet Union.
Despite the importance that both the Bakr and the Saddam Husayn
governments attached to the relationship with the Soviet Union, they
were reluctant to have Iraq become too closely entangled with the Soviet
Union or with its sphere of influence. Ideologically, the Baath Party
espoused nonalignment vis-a-vis the superpower rivalry, and the party
perceived Iraq as being part of the Nonaligned Movement. Indeed, as
early as 1974, the more pragmatic elements in the party advocated
broadening relations with the West to counterbalance those with the East
and to ensure that Iraq maintained a genuine nonaligned status. The
dramatic increase in oil revenues following the December 1973
quadrupling of prices by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting
Countries (OPEC) provided the government with the financial resources to
expand economic relations with numerous private and public enterprises
in Western Europe, Japan, and the United States. Iraq also was able to
diversify its source of weapons by purchasing arms from France.
The major impetus for Iraq's retreat from its close relationship with
the Soviet Union was not economic, despite Iraq's increasing commercial
ties with the West, but political. Iraqis were shocked by the December
1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, and Saddam Husayn's government took
a lead among the Arab states in condemning the invasion. Additional
strain was placed on Iraqi-Soviet relations in the fall of 1980, when
the Soviet Union cut off arms shipments to Iraq (and to Iran) as part of
its efforts to induce a cease-fire. This action angered Saddam Husayn
and his colleagues, because Iraq had already paid more than US$1 billion
dollars for the interdicted weapons. Although Moscow resumed arms
supplies to Iraq in the summer of 1982, following the Iranian advance
into Iraqi territory, Iraqi leaders remained bitter over the initial
halt.
Despite Iraq's apparent ambivalence about its relationship with the
Soviet Union, in early 1988 relations remained correct. The Soviets were
still the main source of weapons for the Iraqi military, a fact that
restrained public criticism. Nevertheless, the Saddam Husayn government
generally suspected that the Soviet Union was more interested in gaining
influence in Iran than in preserving its friendship with Iraq.
Consequently, Iraqi leaders were skeptical of Soviet declarations that
Moscow was trying to persuade Iran to agree to a cease-fire. They
expressed disappointment in late 1987 that the Soviet Union had not
exerted sufficient pressure upon Iran to force it to cooperate with the
UN Security Council cease-fire resolution of July 1987.
Iraq
Iraq - The West
Iraq
Iraq's disappointment in its relations with the Soviet Union
gradually led to a tilt toward the West. This process began as early as
1974 when prominent Baathists such as Bakr, Saddam Husayn, and Aziz
expressed the need for a more pragmatic, less ideological approach to
relations with "the Western capitalist world." For example,
the government stated in January 1974 that the West was not composed
"totally of enemies and imperialists," that some countries
were relatively moderate, and that there were contradictions among the
principal Western nations. These views became the basis on which the
regime established generally cordial relations with Britain, Italy,
France, the Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany), and Japan.
Iraq's closest ties were with France, which came to rank second to
the Soviet Union as a source of foreign weapons. Iraq imported billions
of dollars worth of French capital and consumer goods during the 1970s
and signed several agreements with French companies for technical
assistance on development projects. A major project was the Osiraq
(Osiris-Iraq) nuclear reactor, which French engineers were helping to
construct at Tuwaitha near Baghdad before it was bombed by Israel in
June 1981. Because Iraq was a signatory to the nuclear weapons
Nonproliferation Treaty and had previously agreed to permit on-site
inspections of its nuclear energy facilities by the International Atomic
Energy Agency and because France expected to reap considerable economic
benefits from Iraqi goodwill, France agreed to assist in the
reconstruction of the nuclear power station; however, as of early 1988
no major reconstruction work had been undertaken.
Economic links with France became especially important after the war
with Iran had begun. Arms purchases from France, for example, continued
in the 1980 to 1982 period when the Soviet Union was withholding weapons
supplies. France also provided Iraq generous credits, estimated at US$7
billion, during 1980 to 1983 when oil revenues were severely reduced on
account of the warrelated decline in exports. To demonstrate its support
further, in 1983 France provided Iraq with advanced weapons, including
Exocet missiles and Super Etendard jets, which Iraq subsequently used
for attacks on Iranian oil loading facilities and on tankers carrying
Iranian oil.
Iraq's ties with the United States developed more slowly, primarily
because the Baathists were antagonistic to the close United
States-Israeli relationship. Relations had been severed following the
June 1967 Arab-Israeli War, before the Baath came to power, but after
1968 the government became interested in acquiring American technology
for its development programs. State organizations were therefore
permitted to negotiate economic contracts, primarily with private
American firms. In discussing the United States during the 1970s, the
government emphasized, however, that its ties were economic, not
political, and that these economic relations involving the United States
were with "companies," not between the two countries.
Even though Iraqi interest in American technical expertise was
strong, prior to 1980 the government did not seem to be seriously
interested in reestablishing diplomatic relations with the United
States. The Baath Party viewed the efforts by the United States to
achieve "step-by-step" interim agreements between Israel and
the Arab countries and the diplomatic process that led to the Camp David
Accords as calculated attempts to perpetuate Arab disunity.
Consequently, Iraq took a leading role in organizing Arab opposition to
the diplomatic initiatives of the United States. After Egypt signed a
peace treaty with Israel in 1979, Iraq succeeded in getting members of
the League of Arab States (Arab League) to vote unanimously for Egypt's
expulsion from the organization.
Concern about the 1979 Islamic Revolution in Iran and about the
Soviet invasion of Afghanistan prompted Iraq to reexamine seriously the
nature of its relationship with the United States. This process led to a
gradual warming of relations between the two countries. In 1981 Iraq and
the United States engaged in lowlevel , official talks on matters of
mutual interest such as trade and regional security. The following year
the United States extended credits to Iraq for the purchase of American
agricultural commodities, the first time this had been done since 1967.
More significant, in 1983 the Baathist government hosted a United States
special Middle East envoy, the highest-ranking American official to
visit Baghdad in more than sixteen years. In 1984, when the United
States inaugurated "Operation Staunch" to halt shipment of
arms to Iran by third countries, no similar embargo was attempted
against Iraq because Saddam Husayn's government had expressed its desire
to negotiate an end to the war. All of these initiatives prepared the
ground for Iraq and the United States to reestablish diplomatic
relations in November 1984.
In early 1988, Iraq's relations with the United States were generally
cordial. The relationship had been strained at the end of 1986 when it
was revealed that the United States had secretly sold arms to Iran
during 1985 and 1986, and a crisis occurred in May 1987 when an Iraqi
pilot bombed an American naval ship in the Persian Gulf, a ship he
mistakenly thought to be involved in Iran-related commerce.
Nevertheless, the two countries had weathered these problems by
mid-1987. Although lingering suspicions about the United States
remained, Iraq welcomed greater, even if indirect, American diplomatic
and military pressure in trying to end the war with Iran. For the most
part, the government of Saddam Husayn believed the United States
supported its position that the war was being prolonged only because of
Iranian intransigence.
Iraq
Iraq - The Persian Gulf Countries
Iraq
Iraq's closest relations in 1988 were with the countries of the
Arabian Peninsula, especially Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. This was a
reversal of the pattern of relations that had persisted in the 1970s.
The original Baathist view of the Arabian Peninsula shaykhdoms was that
they were regimes that had been set up by the imperialist powers to
serve their own interests. This attitude was reinforced in the period
between 1968 and 1971, when Britain was preparing the countries of
Bahrain, Oman, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) for complete
independence. Iraq wished to have an influence on the governments that
would come to power, and it provided clandestine assistance to various
groups opposed to the pro-British rulers. Iraqi support of dissident
movements was particularly evident in Oman, where an organized guerrilla
force was fighting the government from the late 1960s to the mid1970s .
The Baathist perception of Iran's role in the Persian Gulf was an
important factor in Iraqi views of the Arabian Peninsula states. In 1969
Iran, which was then providing aid to dissident Iraqi Kurds,
unilaterally abrogated a 1937 treaty that had established the Shatt al
Arab boundary along the low water on the Iranian shore; in 1971 Iran
forcibly occupied three small islands in the lower gulf near the
approaches to the Strait of Hormuz; and by 1972 Iran was again giving
assistance to antigovernment Kurds. As Iraq became increasingly
concerned about Iranian policies, it tried to enlist the cooperation of
the Arab monarchies in an effort to keep the Persian Gulf independent of
Iranian influence. Iraq believed it was possible to collaborate with the
Arab kings and shaykhs because the latter had proven their Arab
nationalism by participating in the 1973 oil boycott against the Western
countries supporting Israel. Despite Iraq's new friendliness, the rulers
in countries like Kuwait and Saudi Arabia did not easily forget their
suspicions of Iraqi radicalism. Nevertheless, political discussions were
initiated, and progress was made toward resolving disputes over borders,
over oil pricing policy, and over support for subversion.
By the time the Islamic Revolution occurred in Iran in 1979, Iraq had
succeeded in establishing generally correct relations with the Arab
states of the Persian Gulf. The war with Iran served as a catalyst to
develop these relations even further. Although the Gulf states
proclaimed their neutrality in the war, in practice they gave Iraq
crucial financial support. The unexpected prolongation of the war and
the closing of Iraqi ports early in the war had produced a severe
economic crunch by the beginning of 1981. In response, Kuwait, Qatar,
Saudi Arabia, and the UAE all provided loans to help replace revenues
that Iraq had lost because of the decline of its oil exports. Saudi
Arabia and Kuwait were particularly generous, providing an estimated
US$50 billion in interest-free loans up through 1987. In addition, a
major portion of Iraq's nonmilitary imports were shipped to Kuwaiti
harbors, then transported overland to Iraq. Saudi Arabia also agreed to
provide to Iraqi contract customers part of its own oil from the Neutral
Zone, jurisdiction over which it shared with Iraq; it was understood
that Iraq would repay this oil "loan" after the war had ended.
Iraq
Iraq - Iraq and Other Arab Countries
Iraq
The war with Iran changed the Baathist perception of what constituted
the principal threat to Arab unity. Prior to 1980, the Baath leaders had
identified Zionism as the main danger to Arab nationalism. After the war
had begun, Iranian nationalism was perceived as the primary force
threatening the Arabs. Under the pressures of war, Iraq became
reconciled with Egypt and moderated its once-uncompromising stance on
Israel. This reconciliation was ironic, because Iraq had taken the lead
in 1978 and in 1979 in ostracizing Egypt for recognizing Israel and for
signing a separate peace treaty with the latter state. The war with Iran
helped to transform Egypt from an excoriated traitor into a
much-appreciated ally. Factories in Egypt produced munitions and spare
parts for the Iraqi army, and Egyptian workers filled some of the labor
shortages created by the mobilization of so many Iraqi men. As early as
1984, Iraq publicly called for Egypt's readmission into pan-Arab
councils, and in 1987 Iraq was one of the countries leading the effort
to have Egypt readmitted to the Arab League.
The Baath also abandoned its former hostility to countries such as
Jordan, Morocco, and the Yemen Arab Republic (North Yemen). On a smaller
scale than Egypt, Jordan provided Iraq with tanks and with laborers, and
it served as a transshipment point for goods intended for Iraq.
The most ideologically significant consequence of the war was the
evolution of Baathist views on the issue of Palestine. Prior to 1980,
Iraq had opposed any negotiations that might lead to the creation of a
Palestinian state on the Israeli-occupied West Bank and in the Gaza
Strip on the ground that these territories constituted only part of
historic Palestine. Accordingly, Iraq supported the most extreme
Palestinian guerrilla groups, the socalled "rejectionist"
factions, and was hostile toward the mainstream Palestine Liberation
Organization (PLO). Thus, Iraq provided financial and military aid to
such forces as George Habash's Popular Front for the Liberation of
Palestine (PFLP), the Palestine Liberation Front, and the Arab
Liberation Front. The latter group had actually been founded by the
Baath in 1969. In addition, Iraq was widely believed to have links to
various Palestinian terrorist groups such as the "Special
Operations Branch" of the PFLP, Black June, the Arab Organization
of the 15th May, and the Abu Nidal Organization.
Beginning in 1980, Iraq gradually retreated from its longheld
position that there could never be any recognition of Israel. In 1983
Baath leaders accepted the de facto partition of pre-1948 Palestine by
stating publicly that there could be negotiations with Israel for a
peaceful resolution of the ArabIsraeli dispute. Consequently, Iraq cut
its ties to the extremist Palestinian factions, including that of Abu
Nidal, who was expelled from the country in November; he subsequently
established new headquarters in Syria. Iraq shifted its support to the
mainstream Palestinian groups that advocated negotiations for a
Palestinian state. Yasir Arafat's Al Fatah organization was permitted to
reopen an office in Baghdad. Arafat, whose proposed assassination for
alleged treason against the Palestinians had been clandestinely
supported by Iraq in the late 1970s, was even invited to visit the
country. This shift represented a fundamental revolution in the thinking
of the Iraqi Baath. In effect, by 1986 the Baath Party was saying that
the Palestinians had to determine for themselves the nature of their
relationship with Israel.
Iraq's most bitter foreign relationship was with the rival Baath
government in Syria. Although there were periods of amity between the
two governments--such as the one immediately after the October 1973
Arab-Israeli War and the one in October 1978, when Iraq and Syria both
opposed Egypt's plans for a separate peace with Israel--the governments
generally were hostile to one another. Relations began to deteriorate
once again at the end of 1980 following the outbreak of the war with
Iran. Syria criticized Iraq for diverting Arab attention from the real
enemy (Israel) and for attacking a regime (Iran) supportive of the Arab
cause. Relations worsened throughout 1981 as each country accused the
other of assisting antiregime political groups. In April 1982, Syria
closed its borders with Iraq and cut off the flow of Iraqi oil through
the pipeline that traversed Syrian territory to ports on the
Mediterranean Sea. The cessation of Iraqi oil exports via this pipeline
was a severe economic blow; Iraq interpreted the move as a confirmation
of Syria's de facto alliance with Iran in the war.
The hostility between Iraq and Syria has been a source of concern to
the other Arab states. King Hussein of Jordan, in particular, tried to
reconcile the Iraqi and Syrian leaders. Although his efforts to mediate
a meeting between Saddam Husayn and Syrian president Hafiz al Assad were
finally realized in early 1987, these private discussions did not lead
to substantive progress in resolving the issues that divided the two
countries. Intense diplomatic efforts by Jordan and by Saudi Arabia also
resulted in the attendance of both presidents, Saddam and Assad, at the
Arab League summit in Amman in November 1987. The Iraqis were irritated,
however, that Syria used its influence to prevent the conference from
adopting sanctions against Iran. The animosities that have divided the
rival Iraqi and Syrian factions of the Baath appeared to be as firmly
rooted as ever in early 1988.
Iraq
Iraq - Relations with Other Countries
Iraq
In 1988 Iraq maintained cordial relations with Turkey, its non-Arab
neighbor to the north. Turkey served as an important transshipment point
for both Iraqi oil exports and its commodity imports. A pipeline
transported oil from the northern oil fields of Iraq through Turkey to
the Mediterranean Sea. Trucks carrying a variety of European
manufactured goods used Turkish highways to bring imports into Iraq.
There was also trade between Turkey and Iraq, the former selling Iraq
small arms, produce, and textiles. In addition, Iraq and Turkey have
cooperated in suppressing Kurdish guerrilla activities in their common
border area.
Outside the Middle East, Iraq maintained correct relations with other
countries. Iraq identified itself as part of the Nonaligned Movement of
primarily African and Asian nations, actively participated in its
deliberations during the late 1970s, and successfully lobbied to have
Baghdad chosen as the site for its September 1982 conference. Although
significant resources were expended to prepare facilities for the
conference, and Saddam Husayn would have emerged from the meeting as a
recognized leader of the Nonaligned Movement, genuine fears of an
Iranian bombing of the capital during the summer of 1982 forced the
government reluctantly to request that the venue of the conference be
transferred to New Delhi. Since that time, preoccupation with the war
against Iran, which also is a member of the Nonaligned Movement, has
tended to restrict the scope of Iraqi participation in that
organization.
Iraq
Iraq - Participation in International Organizations
Iraq
Iraq is a member of the UN and of its affiliated agencies. It also is
a member of the International Monetary Fund, the World Health Organization (WHO), and the International
Labor Organisation (ILO). The Iraqi Red Crescent is affiliated with the
International Committee of the Red Cross. Iraq is one of the founding
members of OPEC. Iraq also belongs to several pan-Arab organizations
including the Arab League and the Organization of Arab Petroleum
Exporting Countries.
A good overview of Iraqi politics from the overthrow of the monarchy
in 1958 until the mid-1980s is Phebe Marr's The Modern History of
Iraq. An excellent source for details about Iraqi politics during
the first ten years of Baath Party rule is Majid Khadduri's Socialist
Iraq. The social origins of the Baath leaders are exhaustively
examined in Hanna Batatu's The Old Social Classes and the
Revolutionary Movements of Iraq. An analysis of the early years of
Saddam Husayn's presidency is Christine Moss Helms's study Iraq,
Eastern Flank of the Arab World. Tim Niblock edited a collection of
essays on the state of politics at the beginning of the 1980s called Iraq:
The Contemporary State. For background on the war with Iran see
Jasim Abdulghani, Iraq and Iran: The Years of Crisis. (For
further information and complete citations, see Bibliography).
Iraq
Iraq - National Security
Iraq
SOCIAL UPHEAVALS HAVE PLAYED a major role in Iraq's perception of its
national security. Internal political instability, coupled with
recurrent revolts by the Kurdish minority, mobilized the energies of
successive regimes to crush opposition forces and to restore order.
During the mid- and late 1970s, however, the Baath (Arab Socialist
Resurrection) Party leaders succeeded in establishing a revolutionary
government, which temporarily subdued the Kurdish revolt in northern
Iraq and, using repressive measures, consolidated its power.
The higher prices of petroleum following the October 1973
Arab-Israeli War, and the Arab oil embargo, resulted in an accumulation
of wealth that enabled Iraq to expand its armed forces in an attempt to
match, in strength as well as in strategic importance, the capacity of
its neighbor, Iran. Having signed a border treaty with Tehran in 1975,
Baghdad assumed that its search for military parity would not result in
conflict, in particular because the two states enjoyed economic
prosperity; however, regional events, ranging from the Soviet Union's
expulsion from Egypt in 1972 to Egypt's eventual expulsion from the
League of Arab States (Arab League) in 1979, following the signing of
the separate Israeli-Egyptian peace treaty, strengthened Baghdad's
resolve to make a bid for regional leadership. Armed with modern weapons
and with sophisticated equipment from the Soviet Union and France, Iraq
gained a sense of invincibility and, when the opportunity arose,
implemented its resolve. Threatened by the 1979 Islamic Revolution in
Iran and by its potential influence on Iraq's majority <"glossary.htm#Shia">Shia
(see Glossary) population, Iraq attacked Iran on September 22, 1980.
For most of the 1980s, Iraq has been preoccupied with that war. In
contrast to the first forty years of Iraqi independence, when the
military participated in several coups, the Iraqi armed forces
demonstrated growing professionalism in the 1980s by limiting their
direct role in the country's political life. The armed forces' loyalty
has also been assured by the Baath Party, however, which--after
conducting purges against the military during the 1970s--continued to
maintain a close eye on every aspect of military life and national
security in the late 1980s.
Iraq
Iraq - NATIONAL SECURITY CONCERNS
Iraq
Like most developing states, but perhaps to a greater extent because
of internal schisms, Iraq was plagued with insecurity and with political
instability after independence in 1932. When Britain and France redrew
boundaries throughout the Middle East following the dismemberment of the
Ottoman Empire after World War I, the region that eventually became Iraq
(under the Sykes-Picot Agreement) included a wide variety of ethnic and
religious groups with little sense of national unity. The absence of
nation-building elements encouraged various sectors of Iraqi society to
oppose the establishment of central authority, often for personal and
ideological reasons. Consequently, clandestine activities against the
state's budding political and military institutions threatened Iraq's
political leaders. Insecurity arising from domestic opposition to the
state was compounded by Iraq's longstanding isolation from neighboring
countries because of ideological rivalries, ethnic and religious
differences, and competition for influence in the Persian Gulf. The
Iraqi political agenda was further burdened in the late 1970s by the
newly inherited Arab leadership role that came with Egypt's isolation in
the wake of the Camp David Accords and the ensuing separate
Israeli-Egyptian Peace Treaty.
The Baath Party that ruled Iraq in early 1988 came to power in July
1968 determined to restore order to a country where political turmoil
was the norm. Despite several coup
attempts during the intervening twenty years, notably in 1970 and in
1973, the Baath successfully ended the political turbulence of the 1950s
and the 1960s. Yet, this level of stability was achieved only through
harsh methods imposed by an increasingly disciplined, if intolerant,
party. Antistate conspirators, including fellow Baathists, were rushed
into exile, were kept under house arrest, or were executed. Actual or
alleged coup attempts were forcefully put down and were followed by
systematic purges of the bureaucracy and the armed forces; moreover, the
party's vigilance on internal security was supported by a thorough
indoctrination program to gain and to maintain formerly uncertain
loyalties, both within the armed forces and in the civilian population.
Baathist success in maintaining internal security resulted partly
from its 1975 limited victory against the Kurds. The Iraqi-Iranian border agreement of March
1975, subsequently formalized in the Baghdad Treaty in June 1975,
resolved a number of disputes between the two states. Its provisions
ended Iranian support for Iraqi Kurds, whose struggles for autonomy had
troubled Iraqi governments since 1932. Bolstered by this limited
success, Baghdad adopted a variety of measures in the succeeding decade
in order to emerge from its political isolation and assert its strategic
value. The 1970s closed under a cloud of insecurity, however, as the
Baathists took stock of the revolutionary Islamic regime in Tehran.
Threatened by Ayatollah Sayyid Ruhollah Musavi Khomeini's repeated calls
to Iraqi Shias to follow in the Iranian people's footsteps by
overthrowing usurpers of power, the Baathist leadership embarked on an
adventurous war. Seven years later, Baghdad was nowhere near its
objective, and it was struggling to avoid a military defeat.
Nevertheless, the Baath Party continued to maintain its influence in
Iraq throughout the early and mid-1980s. For the most part, the
Revolutionary Command Council (RCC) and its chairman, President Saddam
Husayn (also seen as Hussein), maintained their political positions
through repressive means and by what was justified as a defensive Iraqi
war against a perceived threat. Foreign observers believed that the
government remained vulnerable to challenges to its authority the lack
of any legitimate means of political dissent because of and because of
the reverberations of a war of attrition with mounting casualties.
Iraq had enjoyed a relatively favorable national security situation
in the late 1970s, but practically all its perceived politico-military
gains were lost after it attacked Iran in 1980, and in 1988 Iraq faced
serious economic and military difficulties.
Iraq
Iraq - THE REGULAR ARMED FORCES
Iraq
Size, Equipment, and Organization
During the late 1970s and the mid-1980s, the Iraqi armed forces
underwent many changes in size, structure, arms supplies, hierarchy,
deployment, and political character. Headquartered in Baghdad, the
army--of an estimated 1.7 million or more Iraqis, including reserves
(actual numbers not available) and paramilitary--in 1987 had seven
corps, five armored divisions (each with one armored brigade and one
mechanized brigade), and three mechanized divisions (each with one
armored brigade and two or more mechanized brigades). An expanded
Presidential Guard Force was composed of three armored brigades, one
infantry brigade, and one commando brigade. There were also thirty
infantry divisions, composed of the People's Army (Al Jaysh ash
Shaabi--also cited as the Popular Army or People's Militia) brigades and
the reserve brigades, as well as six Special Forces brigades.
This growth in the manpower and equipment inventories of the Iraqi
armed forces was facilitated by Iraq's capacity to pay for a large
standing army and was occasioned by Iraq's need to fight a war with
Iran, a determined and much larger neighbor. Whereas in 1978 active-duty
military personnel numbered less than 200,000, and the military was
equipped with some of the most sophisticated weaponry of the Soviet
military arsenal, by 1987 the quality of offensive weapons had improved
dramatically, and the number of new under arms had increased almost
fourfold (see <"appendix.htm#table10">table
10, Appendix).
Army equipment inventories increased significantly during the
mid-1980s. Whereas in 1977 the army possessed approximately 2,400 tanks,
including several hundred T-62 models, in 1987 the International
Institute for Strategic Studies estimated that Iraq deployed about 4,500
tanks, including advanced versions of the T72 . Other army equipment
included about 4,000 armored vehicles, more than 3,000 towed and
self-propelled artillery pieces, a number of FROG-7 and Scud-B
surface-to-surface missiles with a range of up to 300 kilometers, and an
array of approximately 4,000 (some self-propelled) antiaircraft guns.
The vast majority of the army's equipment inventory was of Soviet
manufacture, although French and Brazilian equipment in particular
continued to be acquired in Iraq's ongoing attempt to diversify its
sources of armaments (see <"appendix.htm#table11">table
11, Appendix). This mammoth arsenal gave Iraq a clear-cut advantage
over Iran in 1987. Iraq had an advantage of more than four to one in
tanks (4,500 to 1,000); four to one in armored vehicles (4,000 to
1,000); and two to one in artillery and antiaircraft pieces (7,330 to
3,000). Despite this quantitative and qualitative superiority, the Iraqi
army by the end of 1987 had not risked its strength in a final and
decisive battle to win the war.
Headquartered in Basra, the 5,000-man navy was the smallest branch of
the armed forces in early 1988, and, in contrast to the Iranian navy,
had played virtually no role in the war. Iraq's second naval facility at
Umm Qasr took on added importance after 1980, in particular because the
Shatt al Arab waterway, which leads into Basra, was the scene of
extensive fighting. It was at Umm Qasr that most of the Iraqi navy's
active vessels were based in early 1988. Between 1977 and 1987, Iraq
purchased from the Soviet Union eight fast-attack OSA-class patrol
boats--each equipped with Styx surface-to-surface missiles (SSMs). In
late 1986, from Italy, Iraq obtained four Lupo class frigates, and six
Wadi Assad class corvettes equipped with Otomat-2 SSMs. Although the
four frigates and the six corvettes was held in Italy under an embargo
imposed by the Italian government, these purchases signaled Iraq's
intention to upgrade its naval power. Observers speculated that the end
of the war with Iran could be followed by a rapid expansion of the Iraqi
navy, which could exercise its influence in northern Persian Gulf waters
(see <"appendix.htm#table12">table
12, Appendix).
In 1987 the Iraqi air force consisted of 40,000 men, of whom about
10,000 were attached to its subordinate Air Defense Command. The air
force was headquartered in Baghdad, and major bases were located at
Basra, H-3 (site of a pump station on the oil pipeline in western Iraq),
Kirkuk, Mosul, Rashid, and Ash Shuaybah. Iraq's more than 500 combat
aircraft were formed into two bomber squadrons, eleven fighter-ground
attack squadrons, five interceptor squadrons, and one counterinsurgency
squadron of 10 to 30 aircraft each. Support aircraft included two
transport squadrons. As many as ten helicopter squadrons were also
operational, although these formed the Army Air Corps. The Air Defense
Command piloted the MiG-25, MiG-21, and various Mirage interceptors and
manned Iraq's considerable inventory of surfaceto -air missiles (SAMs).
The equipment of the air force and the army's air corps, like that of
the other services, was primarily of Soviet manufacture. After 1980,
however, in an effort to diversify its sources of advanced armaments,
Iraq turned to France for Mirage fighters and for attack helicopters.
Between 1982 and 1987, Iraq received or ordered a variety of equipment
from France, including more than 100 Mirage F-1s, about 100 Gazelle,
Super-Frelon, and Alouette helicopters, and a variety of air-to-surface
and air-to-air missiles, including Exocets. Other attack helicopters
purchased included the Soviet Hind equipped with AT-2 Swatter, and
BO-105s equipped with AS-11 antitank guided weapons. In addition, Iraq
bought seventy F-7 (Chinese version of the MiG-21) fighters, assembled
in Egypt. Thus Iraq's overall airpower was considerable (see <"appendix.htm#table13">table
13, Appendix).
Although Iraq expanded its arms inventory, its war efforts may have
been hindered by poor military judgment and by lack of resolve. Saddam
Husayn was the country's head of state and premier as well as the
chairman of both the RCC and the Baath Party; moreover, in 1984 he
assumed the rank of field marshal and appointed himself commander in
chief of the Iraqi armed forces. Iraqi propaganda statements claimed
that Saddam Husayn had "developed new military ideas and theories
of global importance," but few Western military analysts gave
credence to such claims. Since 1980 General Adnan Khairallah, who served
as both deputy commander in chief of the armed forces and minister of
defense, was the highest officer in the military chain of command. In
1987 he also assumed the position of deputy prime minister. His multiple
roles reflected the predominance of the army in the organizational
structure of the armed forces. Sattar Ahmad Jassin was appointed
secretary general of defense and adjutant of the armed forces in 1985.
General Abd al Jabar Shanshal assumed the position of chief of the armed
forces general staff in 1984. Frequent changes at the general staff
level indicated to foreign observers that Iraq's military failures were
primarily the result of poor leadership and an overly rigid command
structure. Defective leadership was evident in the lack of clear orders
and in the poor responses by the army in the occupation of Susangerd. In
October 1980, armored units twice advanced and withdrew from the city,
and later in the same operation, the army abandoned strategic positions
near Dezful. Rigid control of junior officers and of noncommissioned
officers (NCOs) frustrated their initiative and may have been the reason
for the high casualty figures in the infantry, where initiative and
spontaneity in decision making can be of paramount importance. The
command structure reportedly was even more inflexible and slow in the
People's Army detachments, where political commanders routinely made
military decisions.
Iraq
Iraq - Manpower and Training
Iraq
Historically, under Turkish rule, Iraqi conscripts were often
transported to distant locations within the vast Ottoman Empire, and
they were not allowed to return home for many years. During the early
years of independence, conditions of service were nearly as onerous: pay
was irregular, troops were misused, and retention beyond the compulsory
period remained a common practice. Throughout modern history, the
majority of conscripts have fulfilled much of their service obligation
in the rugged mountains of northern Iraq, where conditions were Spartan
at best and were often very dangerous. Although conditions improved
markedly during the 1970s, and conscription was no longer as widely
resented as it had been for more than a century, there were still draft
dodgers, and they were routinely court-martialed and executed in public.
In the past, deferments and exemptions from conscription were usually
granted generously. Until 1958 exemptions could be bought. In 1988
deferments were still available to full-time students, to hardship
cases, and to those with brothers serving in the military. The increase
in manpower needs created by the rapid growth of the army after 1973 and
the war with Iran after 1980 resulted in a tightening of previously
liberal exemption policies, however. In 1987 observers estimated that a
total of 3 million Iraqi males, aged eighteen to forty-five, were fit
for military service. An additional 2 million Iraqi females in the same
age group were potentially available for military service.
Males were liable to conscription until the age of fortyfive . In
1980 the two-year compulsory period of service was extended without
specific time limitations, to support the war effort; many trained
technicians started serving as long as five years. A man could also
volunteer--for a two-year term that could be extended by periods of two
years--as an alternative to conscription or for additional service at
any time between ages eighteen and forty-three. After two years of
compulsory active service, both conscripts and volunteers were obliged
to spend eighteen years in a reserve unit. These reserve units received
intensive training during the mid-1980s because many reservists were
called up to fill manpower shortages caused by the Iran-Iraq War and to
relieve temporarily those on active duty.
Although women were not conscripted, under a law passed in 1977 they
could be commissioned as officers if they held a health-related
university degree, and they could be appointed as warrant officers or
NCOs in army medical institutes if they were qualified nurses. The vast
majority of women in the armed forces held administrative or
medical-related positions, but an increasing number of women performed
in combat functions after 1981. Women were serving in combat roles both
in the air force and in the Air Defense Command in 1987. This
integration of women into the military reflected the shortage of trained
males.
Most army officers came from the Military College in Baghdad, which
was founded in 1924. Candidates for the college were physically
qualified, secondary-school graduates of Iraqi nationality, who had
demonstrated political loyalty. Cadets were divided into two groups,
combatant (combat arms) and administrative (technology and
administration). They studied common subjects during the first two
years, and they specialized according to their group designation in the
final year. On graduation cadets received commissions as second
lieutenants in the regular army. Some were granted higher ranks because
of voluntary service on the war front.
Another source of army officers was the Reserve College founded in
1952. This school enrolled two classes annually, one for those who held
professional degrees, such as medicine and pharmacy, and one for
secondary-school graduates. During the 1970s, approximately 2,000
reserve officers were graduated each year; those with professional
degrees were commissioned as second lieutenants, and those without a
college education were appointed as warrant officers. The army also
maintained a system of service schools for training in combat arms as
well as in technical and administrative services. Most of those schools,
located in or near Baghdad, have conducted additional courses for both
officers and NCOs since 1980. Since 1928 the army has also maintained a
two-year staff college to train selected officers in all services for
command and staff positions.
In mid-1977 the navy opened its own officer training academy. This
comparatively new institution was called the Arabian Gulf Academy for
Naval Studies. Since 1933 the air force has maintained its own college
as a source of officer personnel. In 1971 the college was moved from
Rashid Airbase (southeast of Baghdad) to Tikrit. It offered
administrative and flight training courses as well as training for
technical specialists. (Iraqi officers and pilots received training in
several foreign countries as well in the 1970s; pilots were trained in
India and in France, and especially in the Soviet Union.)
The highest level of military training in Iraq was a one-year course
conducted at Al Bakr University for Higher Military Studies (also called
the War College) in Baghdad, founded in 1977. At the War College,
high-ranking officers studied modern theories and methods of warfare in
preparation for assuming top command and staff positions in the armed
forces. Little was known about the content of Iraq's military training,
although political and ideological indoctrination appeared to accompany
military training at all levels. In any case, the seven years of combat
in the Iran-Iraq War could only have enhanced technical skills; many of
these officers presumably applied their theoretical training in
conducting the war. By Western accounts, however, the battlefield
performance of military leaders did not reflect sophisticated grasp of
strategy and tactics.
Iraq
Iraq - Conditions of Service and Morale
Iraq
Conditions of service in the Iraqi army historically have been poor.
In addition to receiving low and irregular pay, during much of the
country's modern history Iraqi soldiers were involved in a costly and
unpopular war with Kurdish rebels. Having to fight the Kurds caused
morale problems and desertions, particularly among the army's Kurdish
recruits, and on at least two occasions between 1975 and 1979 the
government offered amnesties to all soldiers and security personnel who
had deserted during Kurdish conflicts. Between 1975 and 1980, Baghdad
made some progress in solving long-standing morale problems and in
improving conditions of service. The 1975 victory against the Kurds and
increased oil income contributed to these improvements. A reversal
recurred in 1981, however, when many of the Iraqi military failed to
cope with combat stress, and thousands experienced psychological
problems because of their war experiences. The surrender rate was also
high, as prisoner-of-war statistics indicated, and that further
demoralized loyal troops.
In 1975 Baghdad adopted a comprehensive Military Service and Pension
Law that established pay scales, allowances, benefits, and retirement
pay designed to attract officers and enlisted men from the civilian
sector. A second lieutenant was authorized ID65 (ID or Iraqi dinar) a month as base pay, with an increase of ID20 for each
higher rank. Moreover, an adjustable cost-of-living allowance was
established, as was a family allowance amounting to a 5 percent increase
in salary for each dependent. Service allowances were also granted to
those with special skills or duties. Retirement pay was commensurate
with rank and with civilian retirement benefits, and indemnities were
established for the families of soldiers disabled or killed in action.
After the military defeats of 1982, the entire chain of command
suffered low morale. On several occasions, signs of mutiny in opposition
to the war emerged. According to unverified Iraqi dissident reports, the
number of deserters reached 100,000, and in central and in southern
Iraq, they formed armed groups that were opposed to the regime. Many
soldiers refused to fight in Kurdistan, and many more joined the armed
Kurdish resistance movement.
Iraq
Iraq - Military Justice System
Iraq
Both political offenders and ordinary criminal offenders in the armed
forces were tried in the military courts, but Iraq's military courts had
no jurisdiction over civilians accused of security-related crimes. Such
cases were reviewed by revolutionary courts. Military tribunals were
held in camera and were often summary in nature. Although little
information was available in early 1988, observers believed that the
system of military justice differed little from the system in operation
at the time of the 1968 Baath Revolution. At that time a permanent
military court of at least five members was usually established at each
division headquarters and wherever large concentrations of nondivision
troops were stationed. In addition, emergency military courts could be
set up in combat areas to expedite the trial of offenders there. Such
courts usually consisted of three members, a president with the rank of
lieutenant colonel and two members with the rank of major or above.
The highest court was the Military Court of Cassation, which sat in
Baghdad. It was appointed by the minister of defense and was composed of
a president with the rank of brigadier general or above and two members
with the rank of colonel or above. Appeals from the sentences of lower
military courts were heard in the Military Court of Cassation; it also
conducted trials of the first instance of senior officers.
A number of changes were introduced into the Penal Code of the
Popular Army since 1980. Law No. 32 of 1982, for example, made several
offenses by service personnel punishable by death. In its 1985 report,
Amnesty International noted that RCC Resolution No. 1370 reaffirmed the
death penalty for various offenses. These included fleeing or defaulting
from military service, conspiring against the state, espionage, and
joining the Ad Dawah al Islamiyah (the Islamic Call), commonly referred
to as Ad Dawah.
Iraq
Iraq - Uniforms and Rank Insignia
Iraq
In the late 1980s, Iraqi uniforms consisted of service and field
attire for both summer and winter and a dress uniform and mess jacket
for officers. The winter service dress uniform, of olive drab wool,
consisted of a single-breasted coat having patch pockets with flaps, a
khaki shirt and tie, and trousers that were usually cuffless. The summer
uniform was similar but was made of light tan material. The winter field
uniform consisted of an olive drab shirt, wool trousers, and a
waist-length jacket. The summer field uniform was identical in style but
was made of lighter material. Both field uniforms included a web belt, a
beret or helmet, and high-top shoes.
Commissioned officers' rank insignia were identical for the army and
for the air force except that shoulder boards were olive drab for the
army and were blue for the air force. Naval officer rank insignia
consisted of gold stripes worn on the lower sleeve. Army and air force
enlisted personnel wore stripes on the sleeve to designate rank, while
the top noncommissioned officer rank, sergeant major and chief master
sergeant, respectively, consisted of a gold bar on top of the shoulders.
Iraq
Iraq - PARAMILITARY FORCES
Iraq
In 1987 the People's Army (Al Jaysh ash Shaabi--also cited as the
Popular Army or People's Militia), standing at an estimated 650,000,
approached the regular armed forces' manpower strength. Officially, it
was the Iraqi Baath Party Militia and included a special youth section.
Formed in 1970, the People's Army grew rapidly, and by 1977 it was
estimated to have 50,000 active members. Subsequently, a phenomenal
growth, giving the militia extensive internal security functions,
occurred. Whereas its original purpose was to give the Baath Party an
active role in every town and village, the People's Army in 1981 began
its most ambitious task to date, the support of the regular armed
forces.
The official functions of the People's Army were to act as backup to
the regular armed forces in times of war and to safeguard revolutionary
achievements, to promote mass consciousness, to consolidate national
unity, and to bolster the relationship between the people and the army
in times of peace. The People's Army dispatched units to Iraqi Kurdistan
before 1980 and to Lebanon to fight with Palestinian guerrillas during
the 1975-76 Civil War. Foreign observers concluded, however, that the
primary function of the People's Army was political in nature; first, to
enlist popular support for the Baath Party, and second, to act as a
counterweight against any coup attempts by the regular armed forces.
Beginning in 1974, Taha Yasin Ramadan, a close associate of President
Saddam Husayn, commanded the People's Army, which was responsible for
internal security. The command of such a large military establishment
gave Ramadan so much power, however, that some foreign observers
speculated that the primary function of his second in command was to
keep him from using the People's Army as a personal power base.
People's Army members were recruited from among both women and men
(who had completed their regular army service) eighteen years of age and
older. It was unclear whether or not Baath Party membership was a
prerequisite--especially after 1981, when the numerical strength of the
People's Army ballooned--but, clearly, party indoctrination was at least
as important as military training. Members usually underwent a two-month
annual training period, and they were paid from party funds. Although
the extent of their training was unknown in early 1988, all recruits
were instructed in the use of a rifle. Graduates were responsible for
guarding government buildings and installations, and they were
concentrated around sensitive centers in major towns. Militia members
possessed some sophisticated arms, and it was possible that disgruntled
officers contemplating a challenge to Saddam Husayn could rally the
support of a force of such militiamen.
Futuwah (Youth Vanguard) was a paramilitary organization for
secondary-school students founded by the Baath Party in 1975. Boys and
girls between the ages of fourteen and eighteen could join Futuwah and
receive training in light arms, in the use of grenades, and in civil
defense work. By early 1988, several thousand Iraqi youth had
volunteered for Futuwah training, and they had been organized into youth
platoons. Unverified reports claimed that some People's Army units and
Futuwah units were dispatched to the war front for short periods of time
in 1983 and 1985. Visitors to Baghdad in the 1980s, however, reported
that most civil defense activities in the capital were performed by
young People's Army members.
Iraq
Iraq - FOREIGN MILITARY TIES
Iraq
Military Ties Prior to the Iran-Iraq War
Iraq's armed forces were heavily dependent on foreign military
assistance after the fall of the Ottoman Empire at the end of World War
I. In 1921 British Mandate authorities undertook the training of Iraqi
soldiers who had served under the Ottomans. The British reorganized the
former Ottoman units into a force designed to uphold internal law and
order and to serve British interests by putting down frequent tribal
revolts. Until 1958 British officers guided the development of the armed
forces, and British influence was reflected in the organization,
training, and equipment of the Iraqi military. Senior Iraqi officers
regularly were sent to Britain or to India to receive advanced training.
Iraq's generally Western-oriented military posture throughout this
period culminated in the 1955 Baghdad Pact.
The revolution of July 14, 1958, and the coming to power of Abd al
Karim Qasim completely altered Iraq's military orientation. Disagreement
with the British (and with the Western world's) stance vis-a-vis Israel,
and growing pan-Arab sentiment led Qasim to abrogate the Baghdad Pact
and to turn to the Soviet Union for arms. Since 1959 the Soviet Union
has been Iraq's chief arms supplier and its most essential foreign
military tie. In April 1972, the two states signed a fifteen-year Treaty
of Friendship and Cooperation in which Iraq and the Soviet Union agreed
to "continue to develop cooperation in the strengthening of the
defense capabilities of each."
By no means, however, was Iraq a "satellite" of the Soviet
Union. Baghdad consistently insisted on its independence in policy
making, and on a number of key issues, including the ArabIsraeli
conflict, Syria's role in Lebanon, and the Nonaligned Movement, the two
states held opposing views. Furthermore, Iraq's Baathist ideology
remained fundamentally antithetical to communism. As a further sign of
its staunch independence, Iraq insisted on its freedom to purchase
weapons from Western sources, and in 1980 it demonstrated its intention
to diversify its source of armaments. Although France and Britain both
had sold some arms to Iraq during the 1966 to 1968 regime of Abd ar
Rahman Arif, between 1974 and 1980 Iraq increased its purchases from
France by acquiring helicopters, antitank missiles, and high performance
Mirage jet fighters.
Despite these expressions of Iraqi independence, both mutual
interests and practical necessity dictated the Iraqi air forces's
reliance on Soviet support. Total Soviet military aid to Iraq between
1958 and 1974 was estimated at the equivalent of US$1.6 billion; in 1975
alone such Soviet aid was estimated at US$1 billion. Soviet deliveries
of military hardware of increasingly higher quality between 1976 and
1980 were estimated at US$5 billion. In 1977, for example, Iraq ordered
the Ilyushin Il-76 long-range jet transport, the first such Soviet
aircraft provided to a foreign state. Until 1980 nearly 1,200 Soviet and
East European advisers, as well as 150 Cuban advisers, were in Iraq.
Iraqi military personnel were also trained in the use of SAMs, and
observers estimated that between 1958 and 1980, nearly 5,000 Iraqis
received military training in the Soviet Union.
Although receiving arms and training from foreign sources itself,
Iraq provided some military aid to irregular units engaged in pro-Iraqi
"national liberation movements" in the Middle East and in
Africa prior to 1980. Most of this aid was in monetary grants and in
armaments, which amounted to more than US$600 million annually.
Pro-Iraqi Palestinian groups, such as the Arab Liberation Front,
received the bulk of the aid, but some African organizations, including
the Eritrean Liberation Front, also received some. Volunteer Iraqi
soldiers fought on the side of Palestinian guerrillas in Lebanon on at
least two occasions, in 1976 against Syrian troops and in March 1978
against Israeli troops.
Iraq
Iraq - The Iran-Iraq War and the Quest for New Sources of Arms
Iraq
As a result of the Iran-Iraq War, Iraq was obliged to extend its
search for arms in 1981. By the time the war entered its eighth year in
September 1987, Iraq had become the world's biggest single arms market.
In addition to its purchases from the Soviet Union and France, Iraq
sought to buy armaments from China, the Federal Republic of Germany
(West Germany), Italy, Brazil, Poland, Czechoslovakia, and Egypt, among
others. The United States Arms Control and Disarmament Agency estimated
in 1987 that Iraq had imported about US$24 billion worth of military
equipment during the period from 1981 to 1985.
Iraq
Iraq - Arms from the Soviet Union
Iraq
From 1972 to 1979, the percentage of Iraq's military equipment
supplied by the Soviet Union declined from 95 to 63 percent. Even so, in
1987 the Soviet Union, having provided more than US$8 billion worth of
weapons since 1980, was Iraq's most important arms supplier. In its 1987
annual study, Soviet Military Power, the United States
Department of Defense stated that, while maintaining official neutrality
in the IranIraq War, the Soviet Union had provided extensive military
assistance to Iraq, and at the same time, continued its efforts to gain
leverage on Iran. In early 1987, Moscow delivered a squadron of
twenty-four MiG-29 Fulcrums to Baghdad. Considered the most advanced
fighter in the Soviet arsenal, the MiG-29 previously had been provided
only to Syria and India. The decision to export the MiG-29 to Iraq, also
assured Iraq a more advantageous payment schedule than any offered by
the West and it reflected Soviet support for one of its traditional
allies in the Middle East. Caught in a financial crisis, Baghdad
welcomed the low-interest loans Moscow extended for this equipment.
Although the Soviets might not receive payments for several years,
the sale of military hardware remained a critical source of revenue for
them, and they have tried to retain Iraq as a customer. In May 1987, for
example, the Soviets provided Iraq with better financial terms in a
successful effort to prevent Iraq from buying sixty French Mirage 2000
fighters for an estimated US$3 billion. An additional US$3 billion in
sales of helicopters and radar equipment may also have been denied to
the French, although it was not possible to determine whether the
Soviets agreed to fulfill both requirements. In early 1988, Iraq owed
the Soviet Union between US$8 billion and US$10 billion in military
debts alone.
Iraq
Iraq - Arms from France
Iraq
France became a major military supplier to Iraq after 1975 as the two
countries improved their political relations. In order to obtain
petroleum imports from the Middle East and strengthen its traditional
ties with Arab and Muslim countries, France wanted a politico-military
bridge between Paris and Baghdad.
Between 1977 and 1987, Paris contracted to sell a total of 133 Mirage
F-1 fighters to Iraq. The first transfer occurred in 1978, when France
supplied eighteen Mirage F-1 interceptors and thirty helicopters, and
even agreed to an Iraqi share in the production of the Mirage 2000 in a
US$2 billion arms deal. In 1983 another twenty-nine Mirage F-1s were
exported to Baghdad. And in an unprecedented move, France
"loaned" Iraq five SuperEtendard attack aircraft, equipped
with Exocet AM39 air-to- surface missiles, from its own naval inventory.
The SuperEtendards were used extensively in the 1984 tanker war before
being replaced by several F-1s. The final batch of twenty-nine F1s was
ordered in September 1985 at a cost of more than US$500 million, a part
of which was paid in crude oil.
In 1987 the Paris-based Le Monde estimated that, between
1981 and 1985, the value of French arms transfers to Iraq was US$5.1
billion, which represented 40 percent of total French arms exports.
Paris, however, was forced to reschedule payment on most of its loans to
Iraq because of Iraq's hard-pressed wartime economy and did so willingly
because of its longer range strategic interests. French president Fran�ois
Mitterand was quoted as saying that French assistance was really aimed
at keeping Iraq from losing the war. Iraqi debts to France were
estimated at US$3 billion in 1987.
French military sales to Iraq were important for at least two
reasons. First, they represented high-performance items. Iraq received
attack helicopters, missiles, military vehicles, and artillery pieces
from France. Iraq also bought more than 400 Exocet AM39 air-to-surface
missiles and at least 200 AS30 laserguided missiles between 1983 and
1986. Second, unlike most other suppliers, France adopted an independent
and unambiguous arms sales policy towards Iraq. France did not tie
French arms commitments to Baghdad's politico-military actions, and it
openly traded with Iraq even when Iranian-inspired terrorists took
French hostages in Lebanon. In late 1987, however, the French softened
their Persian Gulf policy, and they consummated a deal with Tehran
involving the exchange of hostages for detained diplomatic personnel. It
was impossible in early 1988 to determine whether France would curtail
its arms exports to Iraq in conjunction with this agreement.
Iraq
Iraq - The Search for Nuclear Technology
Iraq
On June 7, 1981, Israeli air force planes flew over Jordanian, Saudi,
and Iraqi airspace to attack and destroy an Iraqi nuclear facility near
Baghdad. In a statement issued after the raid, the Israeli government
stated that it had discovered from "sources of unquestioned
reliability" that Iraq was producing nuclear bombs at the Osiraq
(acronym for Osiris-Iraq) plant, and, for this reason, Israel had
initiated a preemptive strike. Baghdad, however, reiterated a previous
statement that the French atomic reactor was designed for research and
for the eventual production of electricity.
The attack raised a number of questions of interpretation regarding
international legal concepts. Those who approved of the raid argued that
the Israelis had engaged in an act of legitimate self-defense
justifiable under international law and under Article 51 of the charter
of the United Nations (UN). Critics contended that the Israeli claims
about Iraq's future capabilities were hasty and ill-considered and
asserted that the idea of anticipatory self-defense was rejected by the
community of states. In the midst of this controversy, the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) came under fire from individuals and from
governments who complained that the Vienna-based UN agency had failed to
alert the world to developments at Osiraq. IAEA officials denied these
charges and reaffirmed their position on the Iraqi reactor, that is,
that no weapons had been manufactured at Osiraq and that Iraqi officials
had regularly cooperated with agency inspectors. They also pointed out
that Iraq was a party to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear
Weapons (informally called the Non-Proliferation Treaty or NPT) and that
Baghdad had complied with all IAEA guidelines. The Israeli nuclear
facility at Dimona, it was pointed out, was not under IAEA safeguards,
because Israel had not signed the NPT and had refused to open its
facilities to UN inspections.
After the raid, Baghdad announced that it planned to rebuild the
destroyed facility. Although France agreed in principle to provide
technical assistance, no definitive timetable had been announced as of
early 1988.
Iraq
Iraq - THE IRAN-IRAQ WAR
Iraq
Of the many conflicts in progress around the world in early 1988, the
Iran-Iraq War was by far the bloodiest and the costliest. The Iran-Iraq
War was multifaceted and included religious schisms, border disputes,
and political differences. Conflicts contributing to the outbreak of
hostilities ranged from centuries-old Sunni-versus-Shia and Arab-versus-Persian religious and ethnic disputes, to a
personal animosity between Saddam Husayn and Ayatollah Khomeini. Above
all, Iraq launched the war in an effort to consolidate its rising power
in the Arab world and to replace Iran as the dominant Persian Gulf
state. Phebe Marr, a noted analyst of Iraqi affairs, stated that
"the war was more immediately the result of poor political
judgement and miscalculation on the part of Saddam Hussein," and
"the decision to invade, taken at a moment of Iranian weakness, was
Saddam's".
Iraq and Iran had engaged in border clashes for many years and had
revived the dormant Shatt al Arab waterway dispute in 1979. Iraq claimed
the 200-kilometer channel up to the Iranian shore as its territory,
while Iran insisted that the thalweg--a line running down the middle of
the waterway--negotiated last in 1975, was the official border. The
Iraqis, especially the Baath leadership, regarded the 1975 treaty as
merely a truce, not a definitive settlement.
The Iraqis also perceived revolutionary Iran's Islamic agenda as
threatening to their pan-Arabism. Khomeini, bitter over his expulsion
from Iraq in 1977 after fifteen years in An Najaf, vowed to avenge Shia
victims of Baathist repression. Baghdad became more confident, however,
as it watched the once invincible Imperial Iranian Army disintegrate, as
most of its highest ranking officers were executed. In Khuzestan
(Arabistan to the Iraqis), Iraqi intelligence officers incited riots
over labor disputes, and in the Kurdish region, a new rebellion caused
the Khomeini government severe troubles.
As the Baathists planned their military campaign, they had every
reason to be confident. Not only did the Iranians lack cohesive
leadership, but the Iranian armed forces, according to Iraqi
intelligence estimates, also lacked spare parts for their American-made
equipment. Baghdad, on the other hand, possessed fully equipped and
trained forces. Morale was running high. Against Iran's armed forces,
including the Pasdaran (Revolutionary Guard) troops, led by religious
mullahs with little or no military experience, the Iraqis could muster
twelve complete mechanized divisions, equipped with the latest Soviet
materiel. In addition, the area across the Shatt al Arab posed no major
obstacles, particularly for an army equipped with Soviet river-crossing
equipment. Iraqi commanders correctly assumed that crossing sites on the
Khardeh and Karun rivers were lightly defended against their mechanized
armor divisions; moreover, Iraqi intelligence sources reported that
Iranian forces in Khuzestan, which had formerly included two divisions
distributed among Ahvaz, Dezful, and Abadan, now consisted of only a
number of ill-equipped battalion-sized formations. Tehran was further
disadvantaged because the area was controlled by the Regional 1st Corps
headquartered at Bakhtaran (formerly Kermanshah), whereas operational
control was directed from the capital. In the year following the shah's
overthrow, only a handful of company-sized tank units had been
operative, and the rest of the armored equipment had been poorly
maintained.
For Iraqi planners, the only uncertainty was the fighting ability of
the Iranian air force, equipped with some of the most sophisticated
American-made aircraft. Despite the execution of key air force
commanders and pilots, the Iranian air force had displayed its might
during local riots and demonstrations. The air force was also active in
the wake of the failed United States attempt to rescue American hostages
in April 1980. This show of force had impressed Iraqi decision makers to
such an extent that they decided to launch a massive preemptive air
strike on Iranian air bases in an effort similar to the one that Israel
employed during the June 1967 Arab-Israeli War.
Iraq
Iraq - Iraqi Offensives, 1980-82
Iraq
On September 22, 1980, formations of Iraqi MiG-23s and MiG21s
attacked Iran's air bases at Mehrabad and Doshen-Tappen (both near
Tehran), as well as Tabriz, Bakhtaran, Ahvaz, Dezful, Urmia (sometimes
cited as Urumiyeh), Hamadan, Sanandaj, and Abadan. Iranian defenses were
caught by surprise, but the Iraqi raids failed because Iranian jets were
protected in specially strengthened hangars and because bombs designed
to destroy runways did not totally incapacitate Iran's very large
airfields. Within hours, Iranian F-4 Phantoms took off from the same
bases, successfully attacked strategically important targets close to
major Iraqi cities, and returned home with very few losses.
Concurrently with its air attack, Iraq ordered six of its divisions
across the border into Iran, where they drove as far as eight kilometers
inland and occupied 1,000 square kilometers of Iranian territory. As a
diversionary move, a mechanized division overwhelmed the border garrison
at Qasr-e Shirin, while five armored and mechanized divisions invaded
Khuzestan on two axes, one crossing over the Shatt al Arab near Basra,
which led to the siege and eventual occupation of Khorramshahr, and the
second heading for Susangerd, which had Ahvaz, the major military base
in Khuzestan, as its objective. In addition, Dehloran and several other
towns were targeted and were rapidly occupied to prevent reinforcement
from Bakhtaran and from Tehran. By mid-October, a full division advanced
through Khuzestan headed for Khorramshahr and Abadan and the strategic
oil fields nearby.
Iraq's blitz-like assaults against scattered and demoralized Iranian
forces led many observers to think that Baghdad would win the war within
a matter of weeks. Indeed, Iraqi troops did capture the Shatt al Arab
and did seize a forty-eight-kilometer- wide strip of Iranian territory.
But Tehran rejected a settlement offer and held the line against the
militarily superior Iraqi force. It refused to accept defeat, and slowly
began a series of counteroffensives in January 1981. Iran stopped Iraqi
forces on the Karun River and, with limited military stocks, unveiled
its "human wave" assaults, which used thousands of Basij
(Popular Mobilization Army or People's Army) volunteers. The recapture
of Abadan, Iran's first major victory, came in September 1981.
Iraq
Iraq - Iraqi Retreats, 1982-84
Iraq
In March 1982, Tehran launched its Operation Undeniable Victory,
which marked a major turning point, as Iran penetrated Iraq's
"impenetrable" lines, split Iraq's forces, and forced the
Iraqis to retreat. In late June 1982, Baghdad stated its willingness to
negotiate a settlement of the war and to withdraw its forces from Iran.
Iran refused, and in July 1982 Iran launched Operation Ramadan on Iraqi
territory, near Basra. Tehran used Pasdaran forces and Basij volunteers
in one of the biggest land battles since 1945. Ranging in age from only
nine to more than fifty, these eager but relatively untrained soldiers
swept over minefields and fortifications to clear safe paths for the
tanks. In doing so, the Iranians sustained an immmense number of
casualties, but they enabled Iran to recover some territory before the
Iraqis could repulse the bulk of the invading forces.
By the end of 1982, Iraq had been resupplied with new Soviet
materiel, and the ground war entered a new phase. Iraq used newly
acquired T-55 tanks and T-62 tanks, BM-21 Stalin Organ rocket launchers,
and Mi-24 helicopter gunships to prepare a Soviet-type three-line
defense, replete with obstacles, minefields, and fortified positions.
The Combat Engineer Corps proved efficient in constructing bridges
across water obstacles, in laying minefields, and in preparing new
defense lines and fortifications.
In 1983 Iran launched three major, but unsuccessful, humanwave
offensives, with huge losses, along the frontier. On February 6, Tehran,
using 200,000 "last reserve" Pasdaran troops, attacked along a
40-kilometer stretch near Al Amarah, about 200 kilometers southeast of
Baghdad. Backed by air, armor, and artillery support, Iran's
six-division thrust was strong enough to break through. In response,
Baghdad used massive air attacks, with more than 200 sorties, many flown
by attack helicopters. More than 6,000 Iranians were killed that day,
while achieving only minute gains. In April 1983, the Mandali-Baghdad
northcentral sector witnessed fierce fighting, as repeated Iranian
attacks were stopped by Iraqi mechanized and infantry divisions.
Casualties were very high, and by the end of 1983, an estimated 120,000
Iranians and 60,000 Iraqis had been killed. Despite these losses, in
1983 Iran held a distinct advantage in the attempt to wage and
eventually to win the war of attrition.
Iraq
Iraq - The War of Attrition, 1984-87
Iraq
Most foreign military analysts feel that neither Iraq nor Iran has
used its modern equipment efficiently. Frequently, sophisticated
materiel had been left unused, when a massive modern assault could have
won the battle for either side. Tanks and armored vehicles were dug in
and used as artillery pieces, instead of being maneuvered to lead or to
support an assault. William O. Staudenmaeir, a seasoned military
analyst, reported that "the land-computing sights on the Iraqi
tanks [were] seldom used. This lower[ed] the accuracy of the T-62 tanks
to World War II standards." In addition, both sides frequently
abandoned heavy equipment in the battle zone because they lacked the
skilled technical personnel needed to carry out minor repairs.
Analysts also assert that the two states' armies have shown little
coordination and that some units in the field have been left to fight
largely on their own. In this protracted war of attrition, soldiers and
officers alike have failed to display initiative or professional
expertise in combat. Difficult decisions, which should have had
immediate attention, were referred by section commanders to the capitals
for action. Except for the predictable bursts on important
anniversaries, by the mid-1980s the war was stalemated.
In early 1984, Iran had begun Operation Dawn V, which was meant to
split the Iraqi 3rd Army Corps and 4th Army Corps near Basra. In early
1984, an estimated 500,000 Pasdaran and Basij forces, using shallow
boats or on foot, moved to within a few kilometers of the strategic
Basra-Baghdad waterway. Between February 29 and March 1, in one of the
largest battles of the war, the two armies clashed and inflicted more
than 25,000 fatalities on each other. Without armored and air support of
their own, the Iranians faced Iraqi tanks, mortars, and helicopter
gunships. Within a few weeks, Tehran opened another front in the shallow
lakes of the Hawizah Marshes, just east of Al Qurnah, in Iraq, near the
confluence of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. Iraqi forces, using
Soviet- and French-made helicopter gunships, inflicted heavy casualties
on the five Iranian brigades (15,000 men) in this Battle of Majnun.
Lacking the equipment to open secure passages through Iraqi
minefields, and having too few tanks, the Iranian command again resorted
to the human-wave tactic. In March 1984, an East European journalist
claimed that he "saw tens of thousands of children, roped together
in groups of about twenty to prevent the faint-hearted from deserting,
make such an attack." The Iranians made little, if any, progress
despite these sacrifices. Perhaps as a result of this performance,
Tehran, for the first time, used a regular army unit, the 92nd Armored
Division, at the Battle of the Marshes a few weeks later.
Within a four-week period between February and March 1984, the Iraqis
reportedly killed 40,000 Iranians and lost 9,000 of their own men, but
even this was deemed an unacceptable ratio, and in February the Iraqi
command ordered the use of chemical weapons. Despite repeated Iraqi
denials, between May 1981 and March 1984, Iran charged Iraq with forty
uses of chemical weapons. The year 1984 closed with part of the Majnun
Islands and a few pockets of Iraqi territory in Iranian hands.
Casualties notwithstanding, Tehran had maintained its military posture,
while Baghdad was reevaluating its overall strategy.
The major development in 1985 was the increased targeting of
population centers and industrial facilities by both combatants. In May
Iraq began aircraft attacks, long-range artillery attacks, and
surface-to-surface missile attacks on Tehran and on other major Iranian
cities. Between August and November, Iraq raided Khark Island forty-four
times in a futile attempt to destroy its installations. Iran responded
with its own air raids and missile attacks on Baghdad and other Iraqi
towns. In addition, Tehran systematized its periodic stop-and-search
operations, which were conducted to verify the cargo contents of ships
in the Persian Gulf and to seize war materiel destined for Iraq.
The only major ground offensive, involving an estimated 60,000
Iranian troops, occurred in March 1985, near Basra; once again, the
assault proved inconclusive except for heavy casualties. In 1986,
however, Iraq suffered a major loss in the southern region. On February
9, Iran launched a successful surprise amphibious assault across the
Shatt al Arab and captured the abandoned Iraqi oil port of Al Faw. The
occupation of Al Faw, a logistical feat, involved 30,000 regular Iranian
soldiers who rapidly entrenched themselves. Saddam Husayn vowed to
eliminate the bridgehead "at all costs," and in April 1988 the
Iraqis succeeded in regaining the Al Faw peninsula.
Late, in March 1986, the UN secretary general, Javier Perez de
Cuellar, formally accused Iraq of using chemical weapons against Iran.
Citing the report of four chemical warfare experts whom the UN had sent
to Iran in February and March 1986, the secretary general called on
Baghdad to end its violation of the 1925 Geneva Protocol on the use of
chemical weapons. The UN report concluded that "Iraqi forces have
used chemical warfare against Iranian forces"; the weapons used
included both mustard gas and nerve gas. The report further stated that
"the use of chemical weapons appear[ed] to be more extensive [in
1981] than in 1984." Iraq attempted to deny using chemicals, but
the evidence, in the form of many badly burned casualties flown to
European hospitals for treatment, was overwhelming. According to a
British representative at the Conference on Disarmament in Geneva in
July 1986, "Iraqi chemical warfare was responsible for about 10,000
casualties." In March 1988, Iraq was again charged with a major use
of chemical warfare while retaking Halabjah, a Kurdish town in
northeastern Iraq, near the Iranian border.
Unable in 1986, however, to dislodge the Iranians from Al Faw, the
Iraqis went on the offensive; they captured the city of Mehran in May,
only to lose it in July 1986. The rest of 1986 witnessed small
hit-and-run attacks by both sides, while the Iranians massed almost
500,000 troops for another promised "final offensive," which
did not occur. But the Iraqis, perhaps for the first time since the
outbreak of hostilities, began a concerted air-strike campaign in July.
Heavy attacks on Khark Island forced Iran to rely on makeshift
installations farther south in the Gulf at Sirri Island and Larak
Island. Thereupon, Iraqi jets, refueling in midair or using a Saudi
military base, hit Sirri and Larak. The two belligerents also attacked
111 neutral ships in the Gulf in 1986.
Meanwhile, to help defend itself, Iraq had built impressive
fortifications along the 1,200-kilometer war front. Iraq devoted
particular attention to the southern city of Basra, where
concrete-roofed bunkers, tank- and artillery-firing positions,
minefields, and stretches of barbed wire, all shielded by an
artificially flooded lake 30 kilometers long and 1,800 meters wide, were
constructed. Most visitors to the area acknowledged Iraq's effective use
of combat engineering to erect these barriers.
On December 24, 1986, Iran began another assault on the Basra region.
This annual "final offensive" resulted in more than 40,000
dead by mid-January 1987. Although the Iranian push came close to
breaking Iraq's last line of defense east of Basra, Tehran was unable to
score the decisive breakthrough required to win outright victory, or
even to secure relative gains over Iraq.
Iraq
Iraq - The Tanker War, 1984-87
Iraq
Naval operations came to a halt, presumably because Iraq and Iran had
lost many of their ships, by early 1981; the lull in the fighting lasted
for two years. In March 1984, Iraq initiated sustained naval operations
in its self-declared 1,126-kilometer maritime exclusion zone, extending
from the mouth of the Shatt al Arab to Iran's port of Bushehr. In 1981
Baghdad had attacked Iranian ports and oil complexes as well as neutral
tankers and ships sailing to and from Iran; in 1984 Iraq expanded the
socalled tanker war by using French Super-Etendard combat aircraft armed
with Exocet missiles. Neutral merchant ships became favorite targets,
and the long-range Super-Etendards flew sorties farther south.
Seventy-one merchant ships were attacked in 1984 alone, compared with
forty-eight in the first three years of the war. Iraq's motives in
increasing the tempo included a desire to break the stalemate,
presumably by cutting off Iran's oil exports and by thus forcing Tehran
to the negotiating table. Repeated Iraqi efforts failed to put Iran's
main oil exporting terminal at Khark Island out of commission, however.
Iran retaliated by attacking first a Kuwaiti oil tanker near Bahrain on
May 13 and then a Saudi tanker in Saudi waters five days later, making
it clear that if Iraq continued to interfere with Iran's shipping, no
Gulf state would be safe.
These sustained attacks cut Iranian oil exports in half, reduced
shipping in the Gulf by 25 percent, led Lloyd's of London to increase
its insurance rates on tankers, and slowed Gulf oil supplies to the rest
of the world; moreover, the Saudi decision in 1984 to shoot down an
Iranian Phantom jet intruding in Saudi territorial waters played an
important role in ending both belligerents' attempts to internationalize
the tanker war. Iraq and Iran accepted a 1984 UN-sponsored moratorium on
the shelling of civilian targets, and Tehran later proposed an extension
of the moratorium to include Gulf shipping, a proposal the Iraqis
rejected unless it were to included their own Gulf ports.
Iraq began ignoring the moratorium soon after it went into effect and
stepped up its air raids on tankers serving Iran and Iranian
oil-exporting facilities in 1986 and 1987, attacking even vessels that
belonged to the conservative Arab states of the Persian Gulf. Iran
responded by escalating its attacks on shipping serving Arab ports in
the Gulf. As Kuwaiti vessels made up a large portion of the targets in
these retaliatory raids, the Kuwaiti government sought protection from
the international community in the fall of 1986. The Soviet Union
responded first, agreeing to charter several Soviet tankers to Kuwait in
early 1987. Washington, which has been approached first by Kuwait and
which had postponed its decision, eventually followed Moscow's lead.
United States involvement was sealed by the May 17, 1987, Iraqi missile
attack on the USS Stark, in which thirtyseven crew members were
killed. Baghdad apologized and claimed that the attack was a mistake.
Ironically, Washington used the Stark incident to blame Iran
for escalating the war and sent its own ships to the Gulf to escort
eleven Kuwaiti tankers that were "reflagged" with the American
flag and had American crews. Iran refrained from attacking the United
States naval force directly, but it used various forms of harassment,
including mines, hit-and-run attacks by small patrol boats, and periodic
stop-and-search operations. On several occasions, Tehran fired its
Chinese-made Silkworm missiles on Kuwait from Al Faw Peninsula. When
Iranian forces hit the reflagged tanker Sea Isle City in
October 1987, Washington retaliated by destroying an oil platform in the
Rostam field and by using the United States Navy's Sea, Air, and Land
(SEAL) commandos to blow up a second one nearby.
Within a few weeks of the Stark incident, Iraq resumed its
raids on tankers but moved its attacks farther south, near the Strait of
Hormuz. Washington played a central role in framing UN Security Council
Resolution 598 on the Gulf war, passed unanimously on July 20; Western
attempts to isolate Iran were frustrated, however, when Tehran rejected
the resolution because it did not meet its requirement that Iraq should
be punished for initiating the conflict.
In early 1988, the Gulf was a crowded theater of operations. At least
ten Western navies and eight regional navies were patrolling the area,
the site of weekly incidents in which merchant vessels were crippled.
The Arab Ship Repair Yard in Bahrain and its counterpart in Dubayy,
United Arab Emirates (UAE), were unable to keep up with the repairs
needed by the ships damaged in these attacks.
Iraq
Iraq - ARMED FORCES AND SOCIETY
Iraq
Status in National Life
In modern Iraq, the armed forces have intervened in the political
life of the state. Military interventions were concentrated in two
periods, the first from 1936 to 1941, when there were seven coups
d'etat, and the second between 1958 and 1968, when there were five
military seizures of power. Because Iraq had a highly developed military
institution and chronically weak civilian regimes, the armed forces felt
that they alone were capable of providing strong and stable governments;
however, personal and ideological factionalization within the armed
forces fostered heightened instability and a cycle of coups that
culminated in the Baathist takeover on July 17, 1968.
As the leadership in the previous military regime became increasingly
fragmented and weak, and as resistance movements grew, Baathist
officers, intending to end the cycle of military intervention in the
government, carried out a coup. Baath Party officials believed the Iraqi
Communist Party (ICP) and various Kurdish movements were using the
military as a vehicle to promote their own interests. Consequently, the
Baath decided to weaken the military's political power gradually and to
turn the army into a loyal and strong defensive force. Accordingly, they
steadily reduced military participation in the Revolutionary Command
Council (RCC); whereas the five-member 1968 RCC was composed exclusively
of military men, only three of the RCC's twenty-two members in 1978 were
active-duty officers.
To transform the military into an ideological army (Al Jaysh al
Aqidi), the Baath undertook purges of the armed forces and granted
military posts to civilians. They also tried to "purify" the
armed forces by providing propaganda pamphlets and indoctrination
lectures.
To institutionalize its control of the army, the Baath Party adopted
an eclectic strategy. First, it restricted admission to military
colleges and institutions to members of the Baath Party. Those accepted
could expect generous financial rewards if they remained loyal, but, if
they did not, they could expect the death penalty. Second,
discrimination, in recruitment and in promotion, on religious and
nationality grounds was intensified. At one point in 1979, all senior
posts were restricted to officers related to Saddam Husayn or to other
individuals from Tikrit.
The Ideological Army advocated national socialism, and the Baath
Party used the army to fulfill Baath objectives. By 1980 the Ideological
Army was an organized, modern force capable of rapid movement and,
strengthened by an overwhelming feeling of historical responsibility.
The officers were firmly convinced that theirs was an elite role, that
of the leading patriotic force in Iraqi society, and they, too, were
inspired to carry out the national "historical mission." In
short, the Baathization of the armed forces, based on an indoctrination
in national socialism, in reliance on force, and in a vision of this
historical mission, completed the emergence of the new army as a
national force.
During the 1970s, military officers unsuccessfully attempted to
overthrow the Baathist regime, however, on at least two occasions. In
January 1970, an attempted coup led by two retired officers, Major
General Abd al Ghani ar Rawi and Colonel Salih Mahdi as Samarrai, was
discovered and thwarted as the conspirators entered the Republican
Palace. In June 1973, a plot by Nazim Kazzar, a Shia and the director of
internal security, to assassinate President Ahmad Hasan al Bakr and
Saddam Husayn was foiled. Kazzar, who resented both Sunni and Tikriti
domination of the Baath Party, had taken a prominent part in organizing
the massacre of communists in the anarchy that followed the military's
seizure of power in February 1963. He had acquired a reputation as a
torturer, and the old palace that he had taken over as headquarters was
known as "Qasr an Nihayah," the "Palace of the End."
Few who entered ever came out, nor did their bodies receive public
burial. When his coup plans failed, Kazzar fled toward the Iranian
border. Before being apprehended, he killed the minister of defense,
Hammad Shihab, who happened to be in the area inspecting border posts.
Shortly afterward he was executed. Both coup attempts were followed by
summary trials, executions, and purges of the armed forces.
Although rumors about foiled coup attempts have circulated
periodically, the most serious attempt to assassinate Saddam Husayn
reportedly occurred in 1982, after both a military defeat on the
battlefield and an erosion in the economy. On July 11, 1982, the
presidential party was traveling through the mixed Shia-Sunni village of
Ad Dujayl, about sixty kilometers northeast of Baghdad, when it was
surrounded by Shia villagers and held for several hours before it was
rescued by the army. Subsequent reports revealed that a number of
Saddam's bodyguards and of the villagers were killed. As punishment, the
Baath government deported the villagers to Iran and razed their houses.
Iraq
Iraq - The Sociology of the Military
Iraq
The armed forces in 1988 conceivably could have been expected to
reflect the varied ethnic, religious, and class components of Iraqi
society, because universal male conscription has been compulsory since
1934. To a certain extent the enlisted men did reflect society,
especially after seven years of war. Indeed, for the purpose of unifying
the diverse minority groups in this extremely heterogeneous country, the
armed forces was one of the most important institutions in Iraq. For
political reasons, this unification was never fully accomplished,
however. Selective recruitment policies for the Military College, for
example, were instituted by the British in the 1920s to favor the Sunni
Arab community, and this bias was perpetuated by the Sunni political and
military elite, which has also tended to dominate the Baath party. The
Shia majority was represented in the officer corps, but in a proportion
far below that of their numerical presence in society.
The majority of the officers were of lower middle class urban
background; they were the sons of minor government officials and small
traders, for whom a career in the military promised considerable social
advancement. Family ties to officers also played an important role in
the recruitment of new personnel, and in the mid-1980s, Iraq's top
military commanders were from the small town of Tikrit, on the Euphrates
River in the heart of Iraq's Sunni Arab community.
Iraq
Iraq - The Defense Burden
Iraq
Military expenditures before 1980 fluctuated between 15 and 21
percent of the gross national product. In 1975, for example, Iraq allocated to its defense budget an
estimated US$3 billion, representing 17.4 percent of GNP, whereas in
1979, military expenditures were estimated at US$6.4 billion, or 14.9
percent of GNP. After 1980, however, defense expenditures skyrocketed,
exceeding 50 percent of GNP by 1982. The 1986 military budget was
estimated at US$11.58 billion.
The war's staggering financial and economic costs have proved to be
more severe than anticipated, and, because of them, most large-scale
infrastructure development projects have been halted. In 1980 Iraqi
revenues from oil exports amounted to US$20 billion, which, when added
to Iraq's estimated US$35 billion in foreign exchange reserves,
permitted the country to sustain rapid increases in military
expenditures. By 1984, however, oil revenues were so low that Iraq
sought loans from the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states and from its
foreign creditors. In 1986 annual oil revenues were estimated at US$5 to
US$8 billion, whereas the war cost between US$600 million and US$1
billion per month. Military and financial experts estimated that by the
end of 1987, Iraq had exhausted its US$35 billion reserves, and had
incurred an additional US$40 to US$85 billion debt. Most of the money
(US$30 to US$60 billion) came from GCC members, particularly Saudi
Arabia and Kuwait, which, some experts believed, may not demand
repayment. The Baathist regime adopted a strategy of "guns and
butter," trying to absorb the economic shock of the war without
imposing undue hardships on the population. Through a subsidy program,
the government continued to provide ample food and basic necessities to
the population. The policy succeeded, but it also mortgaged the state's
future. In early 1988, as the war dragged on and as military
expenditures rose, it was difficult to ascertain whether this strategy
could be sustained.
Iraq
Iraq - The Impact of Casualties on the Armed Forces
Iraq
Casualty figures in the Iran-Iraq War could not be estimated
accurately because neither belligerent permitted independent observers
to assist in verifying records, and both belligerents rarely allowed
foreign observers to visit combat areas. At the end of 1986, the most
frequently cited estimate of casualties since September 1980 was about 1
million--350,000 dead and 650,000 wounded. According to this estimate,
250,000 Iranians and 100,000 Iraqis had been killed, while 500,000
Iranians and 150,000 Iraqis had been wounded. These estimates were
probably conservative. Another reliable source claimed that the combined
death toll was between 600,000 and 800,000. In 1987, the Iraqi minister
of defense reported that as many as 1 million Iranians had been killed
and almost 3 million had been wounded, but this was impossible to
verify. During large offensives, reports indicated that casualty figures
ranged between 10,000 and 40,000, primarily because of Iran's
"human wave" tactics. The impact of this loss of life on both
societies was immense as was that of the high number of prisoners of war
(POWs). The Geneva-based International Committee of the Red Cross
estimated the number of POWs at nearly 50,000 Iraqis and 10,000 Iranians
in early 1988.
For Iraq, the most damaging social repercussion in 1988 was the
knowledge that the toll in casualties would continue to increase.
Drafting young men, and at times women, from school and from work became
unpopular, and the loss of young life weakened the regime. This human
drain also created shortages in the labor force. These shortages forced
an integration of women into the work force, a move that further
disrupted Iraq's traditional social environment.
The war also forced cutbacks in Iraq's economic development, and it
wiped out the relative prosperity of the late 1970s. Individuals were
pressured to donate savings and gold holdings to the war effort. Experts
believed in 1988 that these hardships, endured from 1980 onward, would
gradually erode what social cohesion and progress had been achieved over
the previous decade, should the war continue for a few more years.
Opposition to the war continued to grow. There were sporadic attempts
on the lives of military officers, and especially on the lives of Saddam
Hussayn's relatives. As funerals in every neighborhood reminded the
masses of the realities they faced, Iraqi morale continued to diminish.
Iraq
Iraq - Treatment of Veterans and Widows
Iraq
The regime, at least initially, provided substantial sums of money to
the families of war "heroes." Parents received, as a lump
payment, enough for a car, a piece of land, and a new house. In
addition, a victim's brother was assigned a monthly pension of
ID500--which was equivalent in purchasing power to somewhat less than
the same amount in US dollars in 1987--and his sister, in keeping with
"Iraqi tradition," received a pension of half that amount. A
widow and surviving children also received monthly pensions, in addition
to a guarantee of free university education for the children.
The government reduced its benefits packages in 1985, especially
after revenues declined. Survivors of a soldier killed in battle
continued to receive the equivalent of US$10,000, and veterans received
monthly pensions equivalent to US$500, but women whose husbands and sons
were away fighting found it increasingly difficult to make ends meet.
Iraq
Iraq - INTERNAL SECURITY
Iraq
Internal Developments and Security
In maintaining internal security, the Baath regime focused on three
main sources of opposition--the Kurds, living primarily near the borders
of Iran and Turkey, the ICP and its splinter factions, and Shia revival
movements not in sympathy with Baath socialism. In dealing with these
groups, the government tended either to provide them with benefits so as
to coopt them into the regime, or to take repressive measures against
them.
Iraq
Iraq - The Kurdish Problem
Iraq
The Kurdish minority offered the most persistent and militarily
effective security threat of Iraq's modern history. Although the Kurds had traditionally opposed any
central governments in both Iran and Iraq, most Kurdish leaders
initially saw the 1979 Islamic Revolution in Iran as a possible vehicle
for promoting Kurdish aspirations toward selfgovernment . The Iranian
government's antiminority attitude, however, along with Iraq's attempts
to support the Iranian Kurdish Democratic Party (KDP), dashed all hopes
for a unified Kurdish independent state. The Iraqi and Iranian regimes
each chose to support a Kurdish faction opposing the other's government,
and this intervention divided the Kurds along "national"
lines. As a result, during the 1980s Kurds in Iraq tended to hope for an
Iranian victory in the Iran-Iraq War, while a number of Kurds in Iran
thought that an Iraqi victory would best promote their own aspirations.
Because most Kurds were Sunni Muslims, however, their enthusiasm for a
Shia government in either country was somewhat limited.
Following the outbreak of hostilities and the ensuing stalemate in
the Iran-Iraq War, Kurdish opponents of the Iraqi regime revived their
armed struggle against Baghdad. In response to deportations, executions,
and other atrocities allegedly perpetrated by the Baath, the Kurds
seemed in the 1980s to have renewed their political consciousness,
albeit in a very limited way. Differences between the brothers Masud and
Idris Barzani, who led the KDP, and Jalal Talabani, leader of the
Iraqisupported Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), as well as the
Kurdish leadership's periodic shifts into progovernment and
antigovernment alliances, benefited Baghdad, which could manipulate
opposing factions. What the Iraqi government could not afford, however,
was to risk the opening of a second hostile front in Kurdistan as long
as it was bogged down in its war with Iran. Throughout the 1980s,
therefore, Baghdad tolerated the growing strength of the Kurdish
resistance, which, despite shortcomings in its leadership, continued its
long struggle for independence.
Data as of May 1988
Iraq
Iraq - The Iraqi Communists and Baathist Iraq
Iraq
The Iraqi Communist Party (ICP) has seen its fortunes rise and fall
repeatedly since its founding by Yusuf Salman Yusuf (known as Comrade
Fahd, or the Leopard) in 1934. During the next fifty years, the party's
fortunes fluctuated with the successes of particular regimes in Baghdad.
Although the ICP was legalized in 1937, and again in 1973, the Baath
Party regularly suppressed it after 1963 and outlawed it altogether in
1985.
In general, Iraqis rejected communism as contrary to both Islam and
Arab nationalism. Yet, the clandestine ICP survived under the repressive
policies of the monarchy, which had determined that because of its
widespread appeal, the dissemination of communist theory among the armed
forces or the police could be punished with death or with penal
servitude for life. This persecution under the Hashimite monarchy raised
communists to a status near that of martyrs in the eyes of the
antimonarchical postrevolutionary leaders plotting the 1958 uprising.
Ironically, the ICP was able to use the army to promote its goals and to
organize opposition to the monarchy. In August 1949, for example, one of
the army units returning from Palestine smuggled in a stencil printing
machine for the ICP.
Between 1958 and 1963, the ICP became closely aligned with the Qasim
regime, which used the communist militia organization to suppress its
traditional opponents brutally. By 1963 Qasim's former allies, except the ICP, had
all deserted him. When he was overthrown in February 1963, the new
Baathist leaders carried out a massive purge in which thousands of
communists were executed for supporting the hated Qasim. Survivors fled
to the relatively isolated mountainous regions of Kurdistan. This first
Baathist rise to power was short-lived, however, and under Abd as Salam
Arif (1963-66) and his brother, Abd ar Rahman Arif (1966-68), both ICP
and Baath cadre members were suppressed, largely because of their close
connections with the Communist Party of Egypt and, in turn, the
Communist Party of the Soviet Union. Although the Baath hierarchy had
earlier perceived the ICP as a Soviet arm ready to interfere in internal
affairs, after the successful 1968 coup d'etat, Baath leaders joined ICP
officials in calling for a reconciliation of their decade-long rivalry.
This reconciliation was short-lived, however, and in May 1978 Baghdad
announced the execution of twenty-one ICP members, allegedly for
organizing party cells within the armed forces. Foreign observers
contended that the executions, which took place long after the alleged
crimes were committed, were calculated to show that the Baath would not
tolerate communist penetration of the armed forces with the ultimate aim
of seizing control, probably with Soviet assistance. Attempts to
organize new communist cells within the armed forces were crushed, as
the government argued that according to the 1973 agreement creating the
Progressive National Front (PNF), only the Baath Party could organize
political activities within the military.
Unverified reports suggested that several hundred members of the armed
forces were questioned at that time concerning their possible complicity
in what was described as a plot to replace Baath leaders with military
officers more sympathetic to the Soviet Union.
Despite several decades of arrests, imprisonments, repression,
assassinations, and exile, in the late 1980s the ICP remained a credible
force and a constant threat to the Baath leadership. After the outbreak
of the Iran-Iraq War in 1980, the ICP came to depend heavily on outside
support for its survival. Syria, for example, provided material support
to the ICP's struggle against the Saddam Husayn regime, and the Syrian
Communist Party cooperated with the ICP in strongly condemning the war
with Iran.
In addition to relying more heavily on outside financial and moral
support, the ICP initiated significant structural and ideological
changes in the 1980s. Four Arab leaders (two Shias, two Sunnis) were
dropped from the Politburo, and four Central Committee members were
reportedly expelled from the party in 1984. Although the reasons for
these changes were not clear, observers speculated at the time that
party boss Aziz Muhammad and his Kurdish compatriots had gained control
of the ICP and that Kurdish interests therefore outweighed national
interests. Muhammad's tenacity in supporting the armed struggle of Iraqi
Kurds and in totally opposing the Iran-Iraq War helped to bring about a
split in the ICP leadership. His keynote address to the 1985 Fourth
Party Congress analyzed in detail the course of the Iran-Iraq War; he
assigned partial responsibility for the war to Iran, but he blamed the
Baath government in Baghdad for prolonging the conflict. In September
1986, the ICP declared the communists' fight against the Baath regime to
be inextricably linked to the achievement of peace between Iraq and
Iran. A 1986 joint statement of the Tudeh (the Tudeh Party being the
leading Marxist party of Iran) and the ICP called for an end to the war
and for establishment of "a just democratic peace with no
annexations whatsoever, on the basis of respect for the two countries'
state borders at the start of the war, each people's national
sovereignty over its territory, and endorsing each people's right to
determine the sociopolitical system they desire."
Reliable data on ICP membership were unavailable in early 1988. One
1984 estimate was 2,000 members, but other foreign sources indicated a
considerably larger ICP membership. Because it was a clandestine party
fighting for the overthrow of the Baathist regime, the ICP's true
membership strength may never be known, especially because it directed
its organizational efforts through the Kurdish Democratic National Front
(DNF). The ICP headquarters was partially destroyed in May 1984
following limited Turkish incursions to help Iraq protect its oil
pipeline to and through Turkey and was apparently relocated in
territories controlled by the DNF in 1988. Ideologically split and
physically mauled, the ICP may have lost much of its strength, and it
had no influence in the People's Army, which remained in the hands of
the Baath Party.
Iraq
Iraq - Impact of the Iranian Revolution on Iraqi Shias
Iraq
In 1964 Ayatollah Khomeini was expelled from Iran to Turkey, and he
was then granted asylum by Iraq. His theological erudition and idealism
earned him a significant following in An Najaf, where ulama (religious
leaders) and students from throughout the Shia world formed an important
circle of learned men. The Baath socialist regime, however, with its
secular, anticlerical stance, was never comfortable with Shia religious
leaders and their followers.
Relations between the Iraqi regime and the Shia clerics deteriorated
during the Imam Husayn celebrations in February 1977, when police
interference in religious processions resulted in massive antigovernment
demonstrations in An Najaf and in Karbala. Several thousand participants
were arrested, and eight Shia dignitaries, including five members of the
clergy, were sentenced to death and were executed. In 1978, in an effort
to quell the Shia unrest and to satisfy the shah's request, Baghdad
expelled Ayatollah Khomeini, who sought refuge in France.
In another attempt to minimize Shia dissent, the Iraqi government had
deported to Iran 60,000 Shias of Iranian origin in 1974. In the months
following the 1979 Islamic Revolution in Iran, the Iraqi government
deported nearly 35,000 more ethnic Iranians.
Deportations, the suppression of the Shia ulama, and the death under
suspicious circumstances of Shia leader Imam Musa as Sadr all
contributed to the deterioration of relations between Baathist Iraq and
Islamic Iran. The ranking Shia religious leader, Sayyid Abu al Qasim al
Khoi, refrained from either sanctioning or opposing the Baath
government, but the government feared Sadr because of his leadership
qualities and because of his close association with Khomeini.
Beginning in 1980, Iran actively promoted its own revolutionary
vision for Iraq. All anti-Iraqi Islamic organizations, including Ad
Dawah al Islamiyah, commonly called Ad Dawah and the Organization of Islamic Action were
based in Tehran, where they came under the political, religious, and
financial influence of the ruling clergy. To control rivalry and
infighting among the different groups, Iran helped to set up the Supreme
Assembly for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SAIRI) on November 17,
1982. It was headed by Iraqi cleric Hujjat al Islam Muhammad Baqir al
Hakim. Establishing SAIRI was viewed as a step toward unifying the
political and military work of all groups and as an attempt to unite
them under a single command directly supervised by their Iranian
counterparts. In return, SAIRI acknowledged the leadership of Khomeini
as the supreme commander of the Islamic nation. Nevertheless, the
majority of Iraqi Shias resisted Tehran's control and remained loyal to
Iraq.
Iraq
Iraq - Internal Security in the 1980s
Iraq
In addition to the regular armed forces, Iraq's state security system
consisted of at least six organizations charged with a wide variety of
security functions. Little was publicly known about these paramilitary
and police organizations, but their importance was undisputed. In
addition to the People's Army, discussed above, internal security
organizations consisted of the Security Troops (or Presidential Guard),
the Border Guard, the Frontier Force, the regular civil police, and the
Mukhabarat (or Department of General Intelligence).
The Security Troops formed an elite group of 4,800 whose primary task
was to protect the Baath leadership in Iraq. Their ranks were filled
with the most loyal troops serving in the Iraqi armed forces, whose
dedication to Baathism and to Saddam Husayn personally had been tested
on numerous occasions. These troops faced considerable danger because
the frequent assassination attempts on the president and on his close
associates usually meant loss of life among bodyguards. Survivors were
generously rewarded, however.
The Frontier Guard and the Mobile Force accounted for an estimated
50,000 additional men within the security system. Unlike the People's
Army, these forces consisted of full-time, professional men-at-arms.
Frontier Guard personnel were stationed principally in northern Iraq
along the borders with Iran, Turkey, and Syria to guard against
smuggling and infiltrations. Before 1974 the Frontier Guard was under
the control of local Kurds, but, after the defeat of the Kurdish revolt
in 1975, it was administered by the central government. The Mobile Force
was a strike force used to support the regular police in the event of
major internal disorders. It was armed with infantry weapons, with
artillery, and with armored vehicles, and it contained commando units
trained to deal with guerrilla activities.
The regular civil police handled state security in addition to its
routine duties of fighting crime, controlling traffic, and the like.
After 1982, many of these routine functions were taken over by People's
Army "volunteers" to free more able-bodied men for duty on the
war front. The regular police were under the Ministry of Interior, and
they were commanded by the director of police in Baghdad. There were
thought to be several specialized components of the police, including
forces assigned exclusively to traffic, to narcotics investigation, and
to railroad security. The police operated at least two schools: the
Police College for those with secondary degrees and the Police
Preparatory School for those without secondary education. Police
officers held military ranks identical to those of the regular armed
forces, and many were called to serve in the war with Iran.
The Department of General Intelligence was the most notorious and
possibly the most important arm of the state security system. It was
created in 1973 after the failed coup attempt by Director of Internal
Security Nazim Kazzar. In 1982 the Department of General Intelligence
underwent a personnel shake-up. At that time, it was headed by Saadun
Shakir, who was an RCC member and, like Saddam Husayn, a Tikriti, and
who was assisted by Saddam Husayn's younger half-brother, Barazan
Husayn. Foreign observers believed that the president was dissatisfied
because the agency had not anticipated the assassination attempt at Ad
Dujayl. It was also believed that several separate intelligence networks
were incorporated within the department, and that Iraqi intelligence
agents operated both at home and abroad in their mission to seek out and
eliminate opponents of the Baghdad regime.
Iraq
Iraq - Incidence of Crime
Iraq
The Baathist regime introduced a variety of laws, of which the most
important was a 1969 penal code that expanded the definition of crime to
include acts detrimental to the political, the economic, and the social
goals of the state. Baathist hegemony in the political sphere, for
example, was enforced by a law making it a crime to insult the state or
its leaders publicly. Economic goals were also enforced by several
laws--a 1970 trade regulation, for example, made both the selling of
goods at prices other than those fixed by the state and the production
of inferior products felonies. The government's free education program
was enforced by a law making it a crime to refuse to participate.
The more traditionally defined kinds of crime, including theft,
forgery, bribery, the misappropriation of public funds, and murder,
followed the pattern of most developing states. No adequate statistical
data for Iraq were available in 1987, however. Amnesty International
reported in 1986 that degrading treatment of prisoners, arbitrary
arrests, and denial of fair public trials were common. In 1985 and in
1986, several highranking officials, including the mayor of Baghdad,
were tried for corruption, were found guilty, and were executed.
Presumably, the purpose of these sentences was to make it clear that
criminals would be punished, regardless of their status.
Iraq
Iraq - Criminal Justice System
Iraq
The regular criminal justice system consisted of courts of first
instance (including magistrate courts), courts of sessions, and a Court
of Cassation. Major crimes against state security were tried in the
revolutionary courts, which operated separately from the regular
judicial system. In general this court system followed the French
pattern as first introduced during the rule of the Ottoman Turks,
although the system had undergone several modifications during the
twentieth century. Juries were not used anywhere in the Iraqi criminal
court system.
Most petty crimes, or contraventions, which carried penalties of
imprisonment from one day to three months or of fines up to ID30, were
tried in local magistrate courts. These third-class courts, which were
found in all local municipalities, were presided over by municipal
council members or by other local administrative officials. First- and
second-class criminal matters, which corresponded to felonies and to
misdemeanors, respectively, were tried within appropriate penal courts
attached to civil courts of first instance, located in provincial
capitals and in district and subdistrict centers. Misdemeanors were
punishable by three months' to five years' imprisonment; felonies by
five years' to life imprisonment or by the death penalty. One judge
conducted the trials for criminal matters at each of these courts of
original jurisdiction.
In 1986 the six courts of session continued to hold jurisdiction in
the most serious criminal matters, and they acted as courts of appeal in
relation to lower penal or magistrate courts. Four of these courts were
identical to the civil courts of appeal; two were presided over by local
judges from the courts of first instance. Three judges heard cases tried
in the courts of session.
The Court of Cassation was the state's highest court for criminal
matters. At least three judges were required to be present in its
deliberations, and in cases punishable by death, five judges were
required. The Court of Cassation also served as the highest court of
appeals, and it confirmed, reduced, remitted, or suspended sentences
from lower courts. It assumed original jurisdiction over crimes
committed by judges or by highranking government officials.
The revolutionary courts, composed of three judges, sat permanently
in Baghdad to try crimes against the security of the state; these crimes
were defined to include espionage, treason, smuggling, and trade in
narcotics. Sessions were held in camera, and the right of defense
reportedly was severely restricted. It was also believed that regular
judicial procedures did not apply in these special courts, summary
proceedings being common.
On several occasions during the 1970s--after the attempted coups of
1970 and of 1973, after the 1977 riots in An Najaf and in Karbala, and
after the 1979 conspiracy against the regime--the RCC decreed the
establishment of special temporary tribunals to try large numbers of
security offenders en masse. Each of these trials was presided over by
three or four high government officials who, not being bound by ordinary
provisions of criminal law, rendered swift and harsh sentences. In 1970
fifty-two of an estimated ninety accused persons were convicted, and
thirty-seven of these were executed during three days of proceedings. It
was believed that about thirty-five had been sentenced to death and
about twenty had been acquitted, during two days of trials in 1973. In a
one-day trial in 1977, eight were sentenced to death, and fifteen were
sentenced to life imprisonment; eighty-seven persons were believed to
have been acquitted. Thirty-eight Iraqis were executed between May 24
and May 27, 1978. The majority of them were members of the armed forces,
guilty of political activity inside the military. An additional
twenty-one leading members of the party, including ministers, trade
union leaders, and members of the RCC, were tried in camera and executed
in 1979. In general, those sentenced to death were executed, either by
hanging or by firing squad, immediately after the trials.
Administered by the Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs, the penal
system was dominated by the central prison at Abu Ghurayb near Baghdad,
which housed several thousand prisoners, and by three smaller branch
prisons located in the governorates of Al Basrah, Babylon, and Nineveh.
Additional detention centers were located throughout the country. In
early 1988, it was impossible to determine the full number of
imprisonments in Iraq.
Internal security was a matter of ongoing concern for Iraq in the
late 1980s. The end of the war with Iran would presumably bring
opportunities for liberalizing the security restrictions imposed by the
Baathist regime.
English-language literature on the subject of Iraqi national security
was scarce in 1988, largely because of the government's almost obsessive
secrecy with respect to security affairs and because of the Iran-Iraq
War. Frederick W. Axelgard's Iraq in Transition: A Political,
Economic, and Strategic Perspective was the most comprehensive and
up-to-date study of the subject in 1988. Majid Khadduri's Socialist
Iraq, dealing with military and security affairs in the larger
context of post-1968 political developments, continued to be
indispensable. Mohammad A. Tarbush's The Role of the Military in
Politics: A Case Study of Iraq to 1941, and Hanna Batatu's The
Old Social Classes and the Revolutionary Movements of Iraq,
provided invaluable background information. The rapid growth, in both
manpower and equipment, of Iraq's armed forces was best documented in
the annual The Military Balance, published by the International
Institute for Strategic Studies. Accounts by Efraim Karsh in The
Iran-Iraq War, and a series of articles by Anthony H. Cordesman,
thoroughly discussed the IranIraq War. (For further information and
complete citations, see Bibliography).
Iraq
Iraq - Appendix
Iraq
When you kow |
Multiply by |
To find |
Millimeters |
0.04 |
inches |
Centimeters |
0.39 |
inches |
Meters |
3.3 |
feet |
Kilometers |
0.62 |
miles |
Hectares |
2.47 |
acres |
Square kilometers |
0.39 |
square miles |
Cubic meters |
35.3 |
cubic feet |
Liters |
0.26 |
gallons |
Kilograms |
2.2 |
pounds |
Metric tons |
0.98 |
long tons |
|
1.1 |
short tons |
|
2,204 |
pounds |
Degrees Celsius (Centigrade) |
1.8 and add 32 |
degrees Fahrenheit |
(in thousands)
Administrative Division |
Female |
Male |
Urban |
Rural |
Total |
Governorate |
Al Anbar |
390 |
428 |
538 |
280 |
818 |
Al Basrah |
438 |
434 |
782 |
90 |
872 |
Al Muthanna |
160 |
153 |
163 |
150 |
313 |
Al Q adisiyah |
280 |
281 |
321 |
240 |
561 |
An Najaf |
362 |
361 |
568 |
155 |
723 |
At Tamim |
255 |
338 |
473 |
120 |
593 |
Babylon |
557 |
552 |
669 |
440 |
1,109 |
Baghdad |
1,890 |
1,955 |
3,600 |
245 |
3,845 |
Dhi Qar |
445 |
473 |
468 |
450 |
918 |
Diyala |
445 |
455 |
465 |
435 |
900 |
Karbala |
229 |
227 |
341 |
115 |
456 |
Maysan |
244 |
256 |
275 |
225 |
500 |
Nineveh |
745 |
762 |
982 |
525 |
1,5071 |
Salah ad Din |
350 |
374 |
400 |
324 |
724 |
Wasit |
225 |
235 |
260 |
200 |
460 |
Autonomous Region2 |
As Sulaymaniyah |
433 |
510 |
543 |
400 |
943 |
Dahuk |
125 |
168 |
160 |
133 |
293 |
Irbil |
340 |
403 |
475 |
268 |
743 |
TOTAL |
7,9131 |
8,3651 |
11,483 |
4,795 |
16,2781 |
1 From October 17, 1987, census; remaining figures are
estimates.
2 See Glossary.
Source: Based on information from Joint Publications Research
Service, Daily Report: Near East and South Asia, October 20,
1987, 22, and October 21, 1987, 25.
Administrative Division |
Land Area (in square kilometers)1 |
Population (in thousands) |
Density (persons per square kilometer |
Governorate |
Al Anbar |
137,723 |
818 |
5.9 |
Al Basrah |
19,070 |
872 |
45.7 |
Al Muthanna |
51,029 |
313 |
6.1 |
Al Qadisiyah |
8,507 |
561 |
65.9 |
An Najaf |
27,844 |
723 |
26.0 |
At Tamim |
10,391 |
593 |
57.1 |
Babylon |
5,258 |
1,1092 |
210.9 |
Baghdad |
5,159 |
3,8452 |
745.3 |
Dhi Qar |
13,626 |
918 |
67.4 |
Diyala |
19,292 |
900 |
46.7 |
Karbala |
5,034 |
456 |
90.6 |
Maysan |
14,103 |
500 |
35.5 |
Nineveh |
37,698 |
1,5072 |
40.0 |
Salah ad Din |
29,004 |
724 |
25.0 |
Wasit |
17,308 |
460 |
26.6 |
Autonomous Region3 |
As Sulaymaniyah |
15,756 |
943 |
59.9 |
Dahuk |
6,120 |
293 |
47.9 |
Irbil |
14,471 |
743 |
51.3 |
TOTAL |
437,393 |
16,2782 |
37.2 |
1 From Annual Abstract of Statistics, 1985.
2 From October 17, 1987, census; remaining figures are
estimates.
3 See Glossary.
Source: Based on information from Iraq, Ministry of Planning, Central
Statistical Organization, Annual Abstract of Statistics, 1985,
Baghdad, n.d., 10; and Joint Publications Research Service, Daily
Report: Near East and South Asia, October 20, 1987, 22 and October
21, 1987, 25.
Level |
Number of Teachers |
Number of Students |
|
Total Students |
Number of Schools |
|
|
Male |
Female |
Kindergarten |
1976-77 |
2,291 |
24,223 |
27,617 |
51,840 |
276 |
1979-80 |
3,079 |
33,156 |
47,262 |
80,418 |
358 |
1982-83 |
4,175 |
38,137 |
41,319 |
79,456 |
507 |
1985-86 |
4,657 |
38,604 |
42,827 |
81,431 |
584 |
Primary |
1976-77 |
70,799 |
687,220 |
1,259,962 |
1,947,182 |
8,156 |
1979-80 |
92,644 |
1,174,866 |
1,434,067 |
2,608,933 |
11,316 |
1982-83 |
107,364 |
1,214,410 |
1,400,517 |
2,614,927 |
10,223 |
1985-86 |
118,492 |
1,258,434 |
1,554,082 |
2,812,516 |
8,127 |
Secondary |
1976-77 |
19,471 |
164,442 |
387,600 |
552,042 |
1,319 |
1979-80 |
28,002 |
271,112 |
626,588 |
897,700 |
1,774 |
1982-83 |
32,556 |
334,897 |
636,930 |
971,827 |
1,977 |
1985-86 |
35,051 |
371,214 |
660,346 |
1,031,560 |
2,238 |
Vocational1 |
1976-77 |
1,906 |
n.a. |
n.a. |
28,365 |
82 |
1979-80 |
3,928 |
n.a. |
n.a. |
4,026 |
126 |
1982-83 |
4,733 |
n.a. |
n.a. |
61,383 |
157 |
1985-86 |
6,405 |
31,252 |
88,838 |
120,090 |
237 |
Teacher Training Schools2 |
1977-78 |
666 |
12,685 |
4,652 |
17,337 |
32 |
1982-83 |
1,022 |
15,936 |
10,255 |
26,191 |
36 |
1985-86 |
209 |
3,355 |
2,928 |
6,283 |
7 |
Teacher Training Institutes3 |
1977-78 |
241 |
3,233 |
3,019 |
6,252 |
13 |
1982-83 |
219 |
3,286 |
3,197 |
6,483 |
7 |
|
1985-86 |
1,202 |
16,820 |
11,083 |
27,903 |
37 |
University, College, or Technical Institutes4 |
1976-77 |
4,008 |
24,584 |
56,914 |
81,498 |
9 |
1979-80 |
5,680 |
9,298 |
21,884 |
31,182 |
9 |
1982-83 |
6,674 |
10,536 |
23,626 |
34,162 |
9 |
1985-86 |
7,616 |
17,015 |
36,022 |
53,037 |
9 |
1 Includes commercial, technical, and agricultural
schools.
2 A three-year course for those who had completed
intermediate studies.
3 A two-year course for secondary school graduates.
4 Includes Iraqi, other Arab, and foreign faculty and
students at University of Baghdad, University of Basra, Foundation of
Technical Institutes, University of Mosul, University of Al
Mustansiriyah, University of Salah ad Din, University of Technology, and
the religious colleges affiliated with the University of Baghdad and the
University of Al Mustansiriyah.
Source: Based on information from Iraq, Ministry of Planning, Central
Statistical Organization, Annual Abstract of Statistics, 1985,
Baghdad, n.d., 203-33.
Administrative Division |
Estimated Population (in thousands)1 |
Hospitals |
Hospital Beds |
Doctors |
Paramedics |
Governorate |
Al Anbar |
818 |
11 |
825 |
206 |
523 |
Al Basrah |
872 |
14 |
2,212 |
399 |
1,562 |
Al Muthanna |
313 |
5 |
499 |
499 |
307 |
Al Qadisiyah |
561 |
11 |
749 |
163 |
435 |
An Najaf |
723 |
8 |
1,355 |
207 |
581 |
At Tamim |
593 |
8 |
869 |
146 |
488 |
Babylon |
1,1092 |
7 |
859 |
203 |
623 |
Baghdad |
3,8452 |
41 |
10,006 |
2,145 |
4,535 |
Dhi Qar |
918 |
15 |
1,102 |
160 |
600 |
Diyala |
900 |
10 |
836 |
148 |
454 |
Karbala |
456 |
4 |
488 |
118 |
287 |
Maysan |
500 |
10 |
956 |
126 |
546 |
Nineveh |
1,5072 |
21 |
2,223 |
498 |
1,011 |
Salah ad Din |
724 |
6 |
775 |
125 |
403 |
Wasit |
460 |
10 |
590 |
137 |
506 |
Autonomous Region3 |
As Sulaymaniyah |
943 |
11 |
1,187 |
124 |
630 |
Dahuk |
293 |
7 |
490 |
124 |
344 |
Irbil |
743 |
17 |
1,684 |
196 |
848 |
TOTAL |
16,278 |
216 |
27,705 |
5,724 |
14,683 |
1 For 1987.
2 From October 17, 1987, census.
3 See Glossary.
Source: Based on information from Iraq, Ministry of Planning, Central
Statistical Organization, Annual Abstract of Statistics, 1985,
Baghdad, n.d., 192-96; and Joint Publications Research Service, Daily
Report: Near East and South Asia, October 20, 1987, 22 and
October 21, 1987, 25.
|
1982 |
1983 |
1984 |
1985 |
1986 |
1987 |
Production (in thousands of barrels per day) |
972 |
922 |
1,203 |
1,437 |
1,746 |
2,076 |
Revenue (in millions of United States dollars) |
$10,250* |
$9,650* |
$10,000* |
$11,900* |
$6,813* |
$11,300* |
*Estimated.
Source: Based on information from Central Intelligence Agency,
Directorate of Intelligence, Economic and Energy Indicators,
June 3, 1988, 9, and The Middle East and North Africa, 1989,
London: Europa, 1988, 475.
|
Production (in thousands of tons) |
|
|
Cultivated Area (in thousands of hectares) |
Crop |
1981 |
1983 |
1985 |
1981 |
1983 |
1985 |
Wheat |
902 |
841 |
1,406 |
484.7 |
512.6 |
626.6 |
Barley |
925 |
835 |
1,331 |
419.5 |
556.6 |
579.5 |
Rice |
162 |
111 |
149 |
22.9 |
22.7 |
24.5 |
Cotton |
13 |
12 |
7 |
4.5 |
5.5 |
4.3 |
Tobacco |
12 |
14 |
17 |
4.8 |
5.8 |
6.6 |
Tomatoes |
425 |
439 |
612 |
16.4 |
14.9 |
19.1 |
Eggplant |
83 |
112 |
232 |
3.0 |
3.8 |
5.6 |
Watermelon |
491 |
583 |
757 |
17.1 |
18.8 |
21.9 |
Source: Based on information from Iraq, Ministry of Planning, Central
Statistical Organization, Annual Abstract of Statistics, 1985,
Baghdad, n.d., 59-64.
Exports (in millions of Iraqi dinars*) |
|
Imports (in millions of Iraqi dinars*) |
Oil, gas and related products |
7,028 |
Machinery, including aircraft |
65,067 |
Foodstuffs |
681 |
Manufactured goods |
48,786 |
Raw materials (including fertilizers, cement) |
287 |
Foodstuffs |
43,828 |
Manufactured goods |
241 |
Chemicals, pharmaceuticals, and explosives |
17,225 |
Heating, medical equipment, furniture, and clothes |
10,285 |
Other items |
36 |
Other items |
10,653 |
TOTAL |
8,273 |
|
195,844 |
* For value of the Iraqi dinar--see Glossary.
Source: Based on information from Iraq, Ministry of Planning, Central
Statistical Organization, Annual Abstract of Statistics, 1985,
Baghdad, n.d., 164.
(in percentages)
Country |
1985 |
1986 |
Exports |
Brazil |
17.7 |
n.a. |
Britain |
n.a. |
1.2 |
France |
13.0 |
7.0 |
Italy |
11.0 |
8.1 |
Japan |
6.0 |
10.5 |
Spain |
10.7 |
n.a. |
Turkey |
8.1 |
8.1 |
United States |
4.7 |
5.8 |
West Germany |
n.a. |
10.5 |
Yugoslavia |
8.0 |
8.1 |
Imports |
Brazil |
7.0 |
n.a. |
Britain |
6.3 |
8.0 |
France |
7.5 |
6.8 |
Italy |
7.6 |
8.0 |
Japan |
14.4 |
14.8 |
Kuwait |
4.2 |
n.a. |
Turkey |
8.2 |
9.0 |
United States |
n.a. |
5.7 |
West Germany |
9.2 |
8.0 |
Yugoslavia |
n.a. |
4.5 |
n.a. -- not available.
Source: Based on information from the International Monetary Fund, Direction
of Trade Statistics, cited in the Economist Intelligence Unit, Country
Report: Iraq, No. 1, 1987, 2 and No. 1, 1988, 2.
|
1977 |
1979 |
1981 |
1983 |
1985 |
1987 |
Armed Forces |
Army |
160,000 |
190,000 |
210,0001 |
475,0001 |
475,0001 |
475,000 |
Navy |
3,000 |
4,000 |
4,2501 |
4,2501 |
5,0001 |
5,0001 |
Air Force |
15,000 |
18,000 |
28,0001 |
28,0001 |
30,0001 |
30,000 |
Air Defense |
10,000 |
10,000 |
10,0001 |
10,0001 |
10,0001 |
10,000 |
TOTAL |
188,000 |
222,000 |
252,2501 |
517,2501,2 |
520,0001 |
520,000 |
Reserves |
250,000 |
250,000 |
250,000 |
75,000 |
75,000 |
480,000 |
Paramilitary |
People's Army |
50,000 |
75,000 |
250,0003 |
250,000 |
450,000 |
650,000 |
Security Forces |
4,800 |
4,800 |
4,800 |
4,800 |
4,800 |
4,800 |
Frontier Guard |
- |
- |
- |
n.a. |
n.a. |
n.a. |
n.a. --not available.
1 Losses make estimates tentative
2 In addition, 10,000 armed forces personnel from Egypt,
Jordan, and Sudan served in Iraq.
3 75,000 of these mobilized.
Type |
Designation |
Inventory |
Armored fighting vehicles |
Heavy and medium tanks |
T-54, T-55, T- 62, T-72 |
2,790 |
|
T-59, T-69 II |
1,500 |
|
Chieftain Mark 3\5, M-60, M- 47 |
150 |
|
M-77 |
60 |
Light tanks |
PT-76 |
100 |
TOTAL |
|
4,600 |
Armored vehicles |
Mechanized infantry combat vehicles |
BMP |
1,000 |
Reconnaissance vehicles |
BRDM-2, FUG- 70, ERC-90, MOWAG Roland, EE-9
Cascavel, EE-3 Jararaca |
Armored personnel carriers |
BTR-50, BTR-60, BTR-152, OT-62, OT-64, VC-TH
(with HOT antitank guided weapons), M-113A1, Panhard M-3, EE-11
Urutu |
TOTAL |
|
4,000 |
Artillery Guns |
122mm: D-74; |
|
130mm: M-46, Type 59-1; |
|
155mm: GCT self-propelled. |
5 |
Guns\howitzers |
152mm: M- 1937; |
|
155mm: G-5, |
40 |
|
GHN-45 |
40 |
Howitzers |
105mm: M-56 pack; |
|
122mm: D-30 towed, M-1938, |
|
M-1974 (2S1); |
|
152mm: M-1943, M-1973 (2S3) self- propelled; |
155mm: M-114 |
M-109 self- propelled |
TOTAL |
|
3,000 |
Multiple rocket launchers |
Includes 122mm: BM-21 n.a. |
|
127mm: ASTROS II 60 |
|
132mm: BM-13, BM-16 |
n.a. |
TOTAL |
|
200 |
Surface-to-surface missiles |
FROG- 7 |
30 |
|
Scud-B |
20 |
TOTAL |
|
50 |
Mortars |
81mm; 120mm; 160mm |
n.a. |
Antitank weapons |
Recoilless rifles |
73mm: SPG- 9 |
|
82mm: B-10 |
|
107mm |
n.a. |
Guns |
85mm; 100mm towed; 105mm: JPz |
100 |
|
SK-105 self-propelled |
n.a. |
Antitank guided weapons |
AT-3 Sagger (including BRDM-2) |
n.a. |
|
AT-4 Spigot (reported), SS-11, Milan, HOT |
n.a. |
Army Air Corps, |
armed helicopters |
Attack helicopters |
Mil Mi24 Hind, with AT-2 Swatter |
40 |
|
SA-342 Gazelle (some with HOT) |
50 |
|
SA-321 Super Frelon (some with Exocet AM-38 ASM) |
10 |
|
SA-316B Alouette III, with AS-12 ASM |
30 |
|
BO-105, with AS-11 antitank guided weapons |
56 |
|
Hughes-530F |
26 |
|
Hughes-500D |
30 |
|
Hughes-300C |
30 |
TOTAL |
|
272 |
Transport helicopters |
Heavy |
Mi-6 Hook |
10 |
Medium |
Mi-8 |
100 |
Light |
Mi-4 |
20 |
|
SA-330 Puma |
10 |
TOTAL |
|
140 |
Air defense weapons |
Guns |
23mm: ZSU-23-4 self-propelled; 37mm: M-1939 and
twin; 57mm: includes ZSU-57-2 self-propelled; 85mm; 100mm; 130mm |
TOTAL |
|
4,000 |
Surface-to-air missiles |
SA-2 |
120 |
|
SA-3, SA-6, SA-7, SA-9 |
150 |
|
Roland |
60 |
TOTAL |
|
300 |
n.a. --not available.
* Equipment estimates are tentative because of wartime losses.
Source: Based on information from International Institute for
Strategic Studies, The Military Balance, 1987-1988. London,
1987, 100.
Type and Description |
Inventory |
Frigates |
5 |
4 Lupo class with 8 Otomat-2 SSM, 1 X 8 |
Albatros/Aspide SAM, 1 helicopter (held in Italy) |
1 Yug (training vessel) |
Corvettes |
6 |
Assad class, all with 1 X 4 |
Albatros/Aspide SAMs: |
2 with 2 Otomat-2 SSMs, 1 helicopter; |
4 with 6 Otomat-2 SSMs; |
completed (all 6 held in Italy) |
Fast-attack craft (missiles) OSA class, each with 4 Styx SSMs
(6 of model II, 2 of model I), |
8 |
Fast-attack craft (torpedoes) |
4 |
P-6 (may not be operable) |
Large patrol craft: SO-1 |
3 |
Coastal patrol craft: Zhuk (under 100 tons) |
5 |
Minesweepers |
8 |
2 Soviet T-43 (ocean); |
3 Yevgenya (ocean); and |
3 Nestin (inshore/river) |
Amphibious |
6 |
3 Polnocny (LSM1) |
3 modern cargo (LST2) |
Support ships |
5 |
1 Stromboli class |
2 Poluchat torpedo support; |
1 Agnadeen tanker; and 1 Transport |
1 Landing ship, medium.
2 Landing ship tank.
Source: Based on information from International Institute for
Strategic Studies, The Military Balance, 1987-1988, London,
1987, 100.
Type |
Designation |
Inventory |
Bombers |
Tu-16 |
8 |
|
Tu-22 |
7 |
Fighters |
MiG-29 |
28 |
|
MiG-23BM |
40 |
|
Mirage F-1C |
40 |
|
Mirage F-1EQ5 (Exocet- equipped) |
20 |
|
Mirage F-1EQ-200 |
23 |
|
F-7 (Chinese version of MiG-21 assembled in
Egypt) |
70 |
|
Su-7; Su-20 (Su-25 reported) |
n.a. |
Interceptors |
MiG-25 |
25 |
|
MiG-21 |
200 |
|
MiG-19 |
40 |
|
Mirage F-1EQ |
30 |
Reconnaissance |
MiG-25 |
5 |
Transport aircraft |
An-2 Colt |
10 |
|
An-12 Cub |
10 |
|
An-24 Coke (retiring) |
6 |
|
An-26 Curl |
2 |
|
Il-76 Candid |
19 |
|
Il-14 Crate |
19 |
|
DH Heron |
1 |
Trainers |
MiG-15, MiG-21, MiG-23U, Su- 7U |
n.a. |
|
Mirage F-1BQ |
16 |
|
L-29 Delfin |
50 |
|
L-39 Albatros |
40 |
|
PC-7 Turbo Trainer |
50 |
|
EMB-312 Tucano |
21 |
Air-to-air missiles |
R-530 |
n.a. |
|
R-550 Magic |
n.a. |
|
AA-2, AA-6, AA-7, AA-8 |
n.a. |
Air-to-surface missiles |
AS-30 Laser |
200 |
|
Armat |
n.a. |
|
Exocet AM-39 |
542 |
|
AS-4 Kitchen |
n.a. |
|
AS-5 Kelt |
n.a. |
n.a. --not available.
Source: Based on information from International Institute for
Strategic Studies, The Military Balance, 1987-1988, London:
1987, 100-1; The Military Balance, 1986-1987, London: 1986, 98;
Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, World Armaments
and Disarmament, SIPRI Yearbook 1987. Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 1987, 250-53.
Iraq
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Chapter 3
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Chapter 4
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Chapter 5
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Iraq
Iraq - Glossary
Iraq
- Autonomous Region
- Governorates of As Sulaymaniyah, Dahuk, and Irbil, the Kurdish
majority area. In this region--popularly known as Kurdistan--Kurdish
has status of official language, and residents enjoy limited
autonomy from central government.
- atabeg
- Turkish word that during the period of the Ottoman Empire meant
governor of a province.
- barrels per day
- Production of crude oil and petroleum products is frequently
measured in barrels per day, often abbreviated bpd or bd. A barrel
is a volume measure of forty-two United States gallons. Conversion
of barrels to metric tons depends on the density of a specific
product. About 7.3 barrels of average crude oil, or about 7 barrels
of heavy crude oil, weigh 1 metric ton. Light products, such as
gasoline and kerosene, average close to eight barrels per metric
ton.
- currency
- See dinar.
- dinar (ID)
- Currency unit consisting of 1,000 fils or 20 dirhams. When
officially introduced at the end of the British mandate (1932), the
dinar was equal to, and was linked to, the British pound sterling,
which at that time was equal to US$4.86. Iraqi dinar (ID) equaled
US$4.86 between 1932 and 1949 and after devaluation in 1949, equaled
US$2.80 between 1949 and 1971. Iraq officially uncoupled the dinar
from the pound sterling as a gesture of independence in 1959, but
the dinar remained at parity with the pound until the British unit
of currency was again devalued in 1967. One Iraqi dinar remained
equal to US$2.80 until December 1971, when major realignments of
world currencies began. Upon the devaluation of the United States
dollar in 1973, the Iraqi dinar appreciated to US$3.39. It remained
at this level until the outbreak of the Iran-Iraq War in 1980. In
1982 Iraq devalued the dinar by 5 percent, to a value equal to
US$3.22, and sustained this official exchange rate without
additional devaluation despite mounting debt. In early 1988, the
official dinar-dollar exchange rate was still ID1 to US$3.22;
however, with estimates of the nation's inflation rate ranging from
25 percent to 50 percent per year in 1985 and 1986, the dinar's real
transaction value, or black market exchange rate, was far lower--
only about half the 1986 official rate.
- Free Officers
- Term applied retroactively to the group of young military officers
that planned and carried out the July 14 Revolution in 1958.
- GDP (gross domestic product)
- A value measure of the flow of domestic goods and services
produced by an economy over a period of time, such as a year. Only
output values of goods for final consumption and for intermediate
production are assumed to be included in final prices. GDP is
sometimes aggregated and shown at market prices, meaning that
indirect taxes and subsidies are included; when these have been
eliminated, the result is GDP at factor cost. The word gross
indicates that deductions for depreciation of physical assets have
not been made.
- GNP (gross national product)
- GDP (q.v.) plus the net income or loss stemming from
transactions with foreign countries. GNP is the broadest measurement
of the output of goods and services by an economy. It can be
calculated at market prices, which include indirect taxes and
subsidies. Because indirect taxes and subsidies are only transfer
payments, GNP is often calculated at factor cost, removing indirect
taxes and subsidies.
- hadith
- Tradition based on the precedent of Muhammad's nondivinely
revealed words that serves as one of the sources of Islamic law
(sharia).
- hijra
- Literally to migrate, to sever relations, to leave one's tribe.
Throughout the Muslim world hijra refers to the migration of
Muhammad and his followers to Medina. In this sense the word has
come into European languages as hegira, and it is usually, and
somewhat misleadingly, translated as flight.
- ID
- Iraqi dinar. See dinar.
- Imam
- A word used in several senses. In general use and in lower case,
it means the leader of congregational prayers; as such it implies no
ordination or special spiritual powers beyond sufficient education
to carry out this function. It is also used figuratively by many
Sunni (q.v.) Muslims to mean the leader of the Islamic
community. Among Shias (q.v.) the word takes on many
complex meanings; in general, it indicates that particular
descendent of the House of Ali ibn Abu Talib, who is believed to
have been God's designated repository of the spiritual authority
inherent in that line. The identity of this individual and the means
of ascertaining his identity have been major issues causing
divisions among Shias.
- International Monetary Fund (IMF)
- Established along with the World Bank in 1945, the IMF is a
specialized agency affiliated with the United Nations and is
responsible for stabilizing international exchange rates and
payments. The main business of the IMF is the provision of loans to
its members (including industrialized and developing countries) when
they experience balance of payments difficulties. These loans
frequently carry conditions that require substantial internal
economic adjustments by the recipients, most of which are developing
countries.
- Levant
- Historically, the countries along the eastern shores of the
Mediterranean.
- shaykh
- Leader or chief. Word of Arabic origin used to mean either a
political leader or a learned religious leader. Also used as an
honorific.
- Shia, from Shiat Ali, the Party of Ali
- A member of the smaller of the two great divisions of Islam. The
Shias supported the claims of Ali and his line to presumptive right
to the caliphate and to leadership of the Muslim community, and on
this issue they divided from the Sunni (q.v.) in the great
schism within Islam. Later schisms have produced further divisions
among the Shias over the identity and the number of Imams (q.v.).
Shias revere Twelve Imams, the last of whom is believed to be in
hiding.
- Shiite
- See Shia.
- Sunni (from sunna, orthodox)
- A member of the larger of the two great divisions of Islam. The
Sunnis supported the traditional method of election to the
caliphate, and they accepted the Umayyad line that began with caliph
Muawiyah in 661. On this issue they divided from the Shias (q.v.)
in the great schism within Islam.
Iraq