I
|
INTRODUCTION
|
Iraq, country in the Middle
East that has been central to three wars since 1980. Some of the world’s
greatest ancient civilizations—Assyria, Babylonia, and Sumer—developed in the
area that now makes up Iraq. The modern state of Iraq was created in 1920 by
the British government, whose forces had occupied it during World War I
(1914-1918). The country is officially named the Republic of Iraq (Al
Jumhūrīyah al-‘Iraqia in Arabic). Baghdād is the capital and largest city.
Iraq is situated at the
northern tip of the Persian Gulf. Its coastline along the gulf is only 30 km
(19 mi) long. Thus, the country is nearly landlocked. Its only port on the gulf,
Umm Qaşr, is small and located on shallow water, and only small craft can dock
there.
Iraq is potentially one of the
richest countries in the world. It contains enormous deposits of petroleum and
natural gas. It is endowed with large quantities of water, supplied by its two
main rivers, the Tigris and the Euphrates, and their tributaries. Iraq’s
location between those two great rivers gave rise to its ancient Greek name, Mesopotamia
(“the land between the rivers”).
Most of Iraq’s people are Arabs.
Iraq has been politically active in the Arab world, with most of its regimes
trying to advance pan-Arab or partial Arab political unification under Iraqi
leadership. The country has had tense relations with its eastern neighbor,
Iran, resulting in a costly war in the 1980s. At times it has claimed
neighboring Kuwait, most recently in 1990, leading to the Persian Gulf War in
1991. Iraq was involved in all the Arab-Israeli wars except the Suez Crisis of
1956.
Set up as a monarchy, Iraq
became a republic in 1958. It became a dictatorship dominated by a single party
in 1968. That dictatorship came under the control of Saddam Hussein in 1979.
Under his leadership, Iraq’s regional and foreign policies were ambitious,
often involving great risk. In the late 20th century Iraq attained a high
international profile, unprecedented in the modern history of the Middle East,
but at an exorbitant political price. The dictatorship failed in various
attempts to topple Arab regimes and to achieve leadership status in the Arab world
or even in the Persian Gulf region. It failed in eight years of war in the
1980s to bring down the regime of neighboring Iran. It conquered Kuwait in 1990
but was forced to relinquish it by a coalition of Western and Arab countries in
the Persian Gulf War. Afterward, it found itself shackled by an oil embargo and
other sanctions imposed by the United Nations (UN). A United States-led
invasion overthrew Hussein’s regime in April 2003. Hussein was captured and
executed, and a new Iraqi government was formed. However, an insurgency
developed in resistance to the U.S. occupation, and sectarian conflict resulted
in what many observers called a civil war.
II
|
LAND AND RESOURCES
|
Iraq has an area of 438,317
sq km (169,235 sq mi). It is bounded on the north by Turkey; on the east by
Iran; on the south by Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and the Persian Gulf; and on the
west by Jordan and Syria.
A
|
Natural Regions
|
Iraq is a land of both
barren desert and broad, mighty rivers; of both tall mountains and low-lying
swamps. The country can be divided into four major regions: Mesopotamia, the
upper river plains, the northeastern mountains, and the western and southern
desert.
A1
|
Mesopotamia
|
Between the lower stretches of
the Euphrates and Tigris rivers lies the great delta plain of Mesopotamia. This
plain covers roughly 117,000 sq km (45,000 sq mi). The plain is flat and
featureless and slopes very gently toward the south. Locally the flatness is
broken by natural levees, abandoned channels, irrigation canals, and drainage
ditches. The rivers have built up their beds slightly above the general level
of the plain in many places. Above Baghdād the Euphrates is a few feet higher
than the Tigris; below Baghdād the Tigris is slightly higher than the
Euphrates. Even so, the slope of the riverbeds toward the Persian Gulf is very
slight. Consequently, the plain is poorly drained, and there are extensive
marshes in the southeast.
A2
|
Upper River Plains
|
The plain of Al Jazīah
(Arabic for “The Island”) lies between the upper Euphrates and Tigris rivers.
This dry plateau region rises gradually to 300 to 500 m (1,000 to 1,500 ft)
above sea level near the northwestern border with Turkey. The plain is
undulating and rolling, and the rivers are too deeply incised below the general
level of the land to be of much use for irrigation.
A3
|
Mountains
|
The mountains of northeastern
Iraq are an extension of the Zagros Mountains, which lie mainly in western
Iran. These peaks reach as high as 3,607 m (11,834 ft) at Mount Ebrāhīm (Kūh-e Ḩājī Ebrāhīm or Haji
Ibrahim), the highest point in Iraq. The mountains of northern Iraq are
intersected by deep valleys and fertile plains.
A4
|
Desert
|
The desert that covers most of
western Iraq is part of the Syrian Desert, which extends into Syria, Jordan,
and Saudi Arabia as well. Its surface is generally pebbly and rocky, broken in
some places by flat-topped buttes and mesas and less frequently by areas of
sand dunes. The region is crossed by numerous wadis, wide valleys that
carry water only after the infrequent rains of the desert.
B
|
Rivers and Lakes
|
Since ancient times, the Tigris
and the Euphrates rivers have been vitally important to the region, the eastern
extent of the Fertile Crescent. However, much of the Tigris-Euphrates system
lies in Syria and Turkey, which draw heavily on both rivers before they reach
Iraq. The two rivers flow through Iraq from northwest to southeast. They meet
at Al Qurnah in southeastern Iraq to form the 170-km- (110-mi)-long Shatt al
Arab. The Iraqi port city of Al Başrah is located on the Shatt al Arab, about
110 km (about 70 mi) before the river empties into the Persian Gulf.
B1
|
Euphrates
|
The Euphrates begins in Turkey,
crosses Syria, and enters Iraq at Abū Kamāl. The flow of the Euphrates into
Iraq has been greatly reduced by dams built by Turkey and Syria. The gradient
of the Euphrates above the town of Hīt, in west central Iraq, is steep. In the
2,640 km (1,640 mi) from its source in Turkey to Hīt, the river falls from
3,000 m (10,000 ft) to a low water elevation of 50 m (170 ft) above sea level,
an average drop of 1 m per km (6 ft per mi). In Iraq below Hīt the fall is very
slight—about 8.9 cm per km (about 3.5 in per mi).
B2
|
Tigris
|
The Tigris rises in Turkey
and flows southeast to form the northernmost 5 km (3 mi) of Iraq’s border with
Syria before entering Iraq. In Iraq the river falls almost 300 m (1,000 ft). At
the city of Sāmarrā’, in north central Iraq, the low water elevation of the
river is 60 m (190 ft) above sea level. Turkey also draws heavily on the
Tigris. However, the Tigris, unlike the Euphrates, receives a number of
sizable, permanent tributaries after it enters the steppe area of northern
Iraq. The Great Zab, Little Zab, Al ‘Uzaym, and Diyala enter the Tigris from
the Zagros Mountains.
B3
|
Drainage Issues
|
The flow and volume of the
Tigris and Euphrates rivers vary greatly with the seasons. Evaporation during
the long, hot, and dry summers reduces the flow of the rivers considerably by
autumn; but both rivers show an appreciable increase as winter rains fill their
catchment basins. Both rivers reach a maximum volume in spring, the Tigris
reaching flood stage in April and the Euphrates in May. Historically, Iraq has suffered
from many disastrous floods, but since the mid-20th century, dams, barrages,
and storage reservoirs have controlled the floods. In ancient times the two
rivers were joined by a network of canals and irrigation ditches, which
directed the water of the higher-lying and more westerly Euphrates across the
valley into the Tigris. In modern times irrigation canals remain important.
The Tigris-Euphrates-Shatt al Arab system
carries huge loads of chemicals and sediments in suspension, which are
deposited on the plain by floods and irrigation systems. As the water
evaporates, huge amounts of salts are left behind each year. As a result, the
soil is increasingly saline from Baghdād south to the Persian Gulf, severely
limiting agriculture in the region south of the city of Al ‘Amārah.
B4
|
Lakes
|
In the flat plains of
Mesopotamia, several large areas are permanently flooded. The largest of these
lakes are Buḩayrat ath Tharthār and Baḩr al Milh, in central
Iraq, and Hawr al Ḩammār near the junction of the Tigris and
Euphrates.
C
|
Climate
|
Iraq has two seasons: a long,
hot, and dry summer, lasting from May to or through October; and a relatively
short, cool, and occasionally cold winter, lasting from December through March.
Precipitation is sparse in almost all of Iraq. In the northeastern highlands
rainfall is considerable from October to May, ranging from 305 to 559 mm (12 to
22 in); but farther south, on the central alluvial plain and near the Persian
Gulf, precipitation is slight, averaging 150 mm (6 in) annually. The Syrian
Desert gets little or no precipitation.
Average summer temperatures in Iraq
reach 32° to 35°C (90° to 95°F). Summer daytime maximum temperatures may reach
40°C (110°F) or even 50°C (120°F). Summer nights are comfortable, as
temperatures normally drop by 14 to 19 degrees C (25 to 35 degrees F). Except
near rivers, marshes, and coasts, humidity is low. The summers are essentially
rainless, with no rainfall in four of the summer months and less than 13 mm (.5
in) of rain in the others. Skies are clear, and both sunlight and heat are
intense during the day. In the south the summers tend to be a little hotter, a
little longer, and usually somewhat more humid. The mountains in the northeast
are cooler and are high enough to receive occasional summer showers.
Average winter temperatures range from
4°C (40°F) in the north to 10° to 13°C (50°F to 55°F) in the south, but winter
nights are often quite cold. Mosul, in the north, has recorded temperatures of
-11°C (12°F), and Al Başrah, in the south, has had temperatures of -4°C (24°F).
Winter days, except during occasional cold spells, are mild. Most precipitation
occurs during winter in the form of rain. The first rainfall usually occurs in
November, but most of the rain comes in late January or early February. Heavy
snow falls in the mountains in winter.
D
|
Plant and Animal Life
|
Plant life is sparse throughout
Iraq. The natural vegetation consists mostly of bushes, shrubs, and grasses.
Forests of oak and pine cover limited parts of the northeastern mountains. In
the delta area are dense groves of date palm trees and thickets of reeds, which
may grow to 6 m (20 ft) in height. Among the animals found in Iraq are gazelle
and other antelope, wild ass, hyena, wolf, jackal, wild pig, hare, jerboa, and
bat. Numerous birds of prey are found in Iraq, including the vulture, buzzard,
raven, owl, and various species of hawk; other birds include the duck, goose,
partridge, and sand grouse. Lizards are fairly common.
E
|
Environmental Issues
|
Devastating wars and years of
economic isolation have seriously degraded Iraq's environment. During the
Persian Gulf War, much of Iraq's infrastructure was destroyed, including
equipment involved in the country's petroleum industry. Although Iraq restored
many oil wells and refineries after the end of the war, the Iraqi government
contended that the international economic embargo established by the UN
prevented the repair of equipment needed to safely process the toxic byproducts
of oil refining. As a result, hazardous wastes are being released into the air
or dumped into depleted wells.
Iraq's farmland is declining in
productivity as a result of soil salinization, which is caused by insufficient
drainage and by saturation irrigation practices. Government water-control
projects have destroyed wetland habitats in eastern Iraq by diverting or drying
up tributary streams that formerly irrigated wetland areas.
III
|
PEOPLE AND SOCIETY
|
The population of Iraq (2008
estimate) is 28,221,181. The estimated overall population density is 65 persons
per sq km (169 per sq mi). The density varies markedly, with the largest
population concentrations close to the Tigris or Euphrates rivers. Official
population figures, however, failed to reflect the growing refugee problem
resulting from the U.S. invasion and the ensuing turmoil in Iraq. As of early
2007, the United Nations (UN) estimated that 2 million Iraqis had fled the
country.
The population is 67 percent
urban. In the rural areas of the country many of the people still live in
tribal communities.
The population growth rate, which was
3.2 percent per year in the 1980s, declined in the early 1990s as the country’s
birth rate fell. By the end of the decade, however, it had regained its former
level. In 2008 the rate of population growth was 2.56 percent, the birth rate
was 30.8 per 1,000 persons, and the death rate was 5.1 per 1,000 persons.
A
|
Principal Cities
|
Baghdād is the capital and
largest city of Iraq, with a population of 4,797,000 in 2000. Other major
cities include the northern metropolises of Irbīl (population 2,369,000), Mosul
(1,034,000), and Kirkūk (418,624, in 1987); the southern port city of Al Başrah
(406,296); and the Shia Muslim center of An Najaf (309,010) in south central
Iraq.
B
|
Ethnic Groups
|
About 75 to 80 percent of
the population of Iraq is Arab. Kurds, the country’s largest minority group,
constitute 15 to 20 percent of the population. Most Kurds dwell in the
highlands of northern Iraq, where they are in the majority. Smaller groups
include Turkmen, Armenians, and Assyrians.
C
|
Language
|
Arabic and Kurdish are the
official languages of Iraq. Arabic is spoken by the majority of the population,
and the Kurdish minority speaks Kurdish. Armenian and Assyrian are spoken in
rural areas in the north and west.
D
|
Religion
|
Muslims make up 96 percent
of Iraq’s population. About 60 to 65 percent of the Muslims adhere to the Shia
branch, and the rest adhere to the Sunni branch. The Shias live mostly in
central and southern Iraq, and the Sunnis live principally in the north. Most
of the Kurds are Sunnis. Several of the holy cities of the Shias, notably An
Najaf and Karbalā’, are situated in Iraq. Among the few Christian sects in Iraq
are the Nestorians, the Jacobite Christians, and offshoots of these two sects,
respectively known as Chaldean and Syrian Catholics. In addition, smaller
religious groups include the Yazidis, who live in the hill country north of
Mosul, and a Gnostic group known as the Mandaean Baptists living in Baghdād and
Al ‘Amārah. The Yazidis are a syncretic sect, which combines the beliefs of
different religions. A small community of Jews lives in Baghdād.
E
|
Education
|
Education in Iraq is free.
Six years of primary education are compulsory, but many children do not attend
school as they must work to help support their families. Instruction is in
Arabic, although in much of the Kurdish-inhabited northern region, which has
been autonomous since 1991, Kurdish is used in all levels of education
alongside Arabic. Only 41 percent of Iraqis aged 15 or older are literate. In
the 1998–1999 academic year 3.1 million pupils attended elementary schools, and
619,114 students were enrolled in secondary schools. More students attended
vocational or teacher-training institutions. Iraq has a number of large
universities, including the University of Baghdād (founded in 1957), the
University of Al Başrah (1964), and the University of Mosul (1967). The country
also has about 20 technical institutes.
F
|
Social Structure
|
Iraq’s enormous petroleum resources
make it potentially one of the richest countries in the world. Before Iraq
invaded Iran in 1980, no less than 95 percent of the value of its exports came
from sales of petroleum. The Iran-Iraq War, which lasted from 1980 to 1988,
seriously reduced Iraq’s production and sales of petroleum and harmed the
economy as a whole. The Persian Gulf War (1991), which resulted from Iraq’s
invasion of Kuwait in 1990, further devastated the economy. An international
oil embargo and other economic sanctions imposed by the United Nations (UN) in
response to the invasion of Kuwait caused much hardship to Iraq and its
citizens.
The repressive dictatorship of Saddam
Hussein also had a stifling influence. Iraqis are relatively well educated and
considered industrious. However, the nation was unable to realize its huge
potential under Hussein’s leadership.
Under Hussein’s rule most of the
ruling elite hailed from the Sunni population. Few Shias were found in the
middle and upper ranks of society. Poverty was particularly widespread among
the Shias, even those who lived in Baghdād. The Kurds, for their part, did not
enjoy even the limited representation that the Shias had in Baghdād’s corridors
of power. Beginning in 1961 the Kurdish north was off-and-on in a state of
revolt. After Hussein was overthrown by a U.S.-led invasion in 2003 became
increasingly divided during the U.S. occupation that followed. Many observers
feared the outbreak of a civil war. Many Sunni Arabs joined or supported a
guerrilla insurgency against the U.S. occupation and boycotted elections for a
new parliament. An alliance between Shia Muslims and Kurds fashioned a new
constitution that alienated many Sunni Muslims.
G
|
Health and Welfare
|
Health standards in Iraq are low
because of poor sanitary conditions and many endemic diseases. In 2005 the
average life expectancy at birth was 41 years; the infant mortality rate was
estimated at 45 per 1,000 live births in 2008. Iraq has 1 physician for every
1,519 people and 1 hospital bed for every 769 people. Under Hussein, most of
the medical facilities were controlled by the central government. Working
conditions were regulated by a social security law introduced in 1957, which
also provided maternity, disability, old-age, and unemployment insurance.
Following the Persian Gulf War, sanctions imposed against Iraq resulted in
falling health standards.
IV
|
ARTS
|
The cultural heritage of Iraq is
primarily Arabic, although long before the advent of Islam in the 7th century ad, the area known as Mesopotamia was
the center of the Babylonian and Assyrian civilizations. The Arabic influence
is represented today in much of the surviving antiquities, including the
Kazimayn Mosque, begun in the 11th century and completed in the 19th century;
Baghdād’s Abbasid Palace, built in the 12th century; and the Shrine of
Sāmarrā’, constructed in the 9th century. Iraq is known for producing fine
handicrafts, including rugs and carpets.
A
|
Literature
|
Modern Iraq is an important
cultural powerhouse of the Arab world. Iraqi poets have been in the forefront
of contemporary Arabic culture. In the 1920s and 1930s Ma‘ruf al-Rusafi, Jamil
Sidqi al-Zahawi, and Muhammad Mahdi al-Jawahiri became prominent among the
poets of the Arab world. All three wrote in the neoclassical style, with
beautiful rhymes and strict rules of meter and verse. Rusafi wrote poems about
the suffering of the Iraqi people and their struggle toward independence. Jawahiri
drew close to the Communist Party in the 1940s and expressed strong
anticolonialist sentiment in his poetry. The early 1950s saw an explosion of
poetic and other literary creativity in Iraq. Most prominent among the new
generation of Iraqi poets, who engaged in blank or free verse poetry as opposed
to the neoclassical style, were Badr Shakir al-Sayyab and ‘Abd al-Wahhab
al-Bayati. Both dedicated much of their poetry to Iraq, its society, and its
politics, and both engaged in symbolic-mystical writing, borrowing mythological
themes from their country’s ancient pre-Islamic history. A prominent female
poet of the same generation is Nazik al-Mala’ika.
The quality of Iraqi poetry
seems to have deteriorated since the 1970s, when government control of culture
became near absolute. Poets who chose to remain in Iraq were forced to write
verses in praise of Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein. However, many Iraqi poets
also compose poetry in colloquial Arabic that many people enjoy. Their poetry
is easily understood, even by people who cannot read, as it is only recited,
never written. It fills radio and television broadcasts and has enthusiastic
listeners.
The most famous novelist in Iraq
during the first half of the 20th century was Dhu al-Nun Ayyub, whose stories revolved
mostly around social issues. Iraq has produced a number of good playwrights,
such as Khalid al-Shawaf, who wrote in the 1940s and 1950s, and ‘Adil Kazim,
who wrote in the 1960s and 1970s. From the late 1930s to the late 1960s most of
Iraq’s greatest writers were inclined toward the political left, some of them
close to the Communist Party.
B
|
Art and Architecture
|
Much like its poets, Iraq’s
painters and sculptors are among the best in the Arab world, and some of them
are world-class. The first generation, which became active in the 1940s,
included Fa’iq Hasan and Isma’il al-Shaykhali. Their paintings are figurative
works in the impressionist style. Other important artists of this generation
are Jawad Salim, Nuri al-Rawi, Mahmud Sabri, and Tariq Mazlum. Jawad Salim was
deeply influenced by the cubist style of Spanish artist Pablo Picasso, as well
as by ancient Mesopotamian art and the Soviet style known as socialist realism.
To a younger generation, active since the late 1950s, belong painters Diya al-‘Azzawi
and Hamid al-‘Attar. Baghdād is rich in open-air sculptures and monuments
designed by many of these great artists and financed by the Hussein regime.
Some of the monuments glorify Hussein, others glorify Hussein’s Baath Party,
but many are dedicated to the Iraqi people and the rich history of the country.
Iraqi architecture is best exemplified
in the sprawling metropolis of Baghdād. The city’s architecture is almost
entirely new, with some islands of exquisite old buildings and compounds. There
are many colonial buildings dating back to the period of British occupation and
mandate (1917-1932). A few buildings date back to the 18th and 19th centuries,
when the Ottoman Empire controlled the area. Some traditional private homes
built in the 18th and 19th centuries have been preserved. These buildings
include the shanashil, a porch with netlike woodwork screens overlooking
the street. Most of the public buildings in contemporary Baghdād are modern.
Government offices are usually far from aesthetic, but there are a few
beautiful modern hotels, some of which draw their inspiration from Babylonian
and classical Islamic architecture. There are modern art galleries, museums,
and public libraries, their designs mostly inspired by Islamic architecture.
Some old mosques in the Baghdād area are impressive, in particular the
gold-domed mosque in the suburb of Kazimayn, the burial place of two Shia imams
(spiritual leaders).
C
|
Music
|
Iraqi singers enjoy great
popularity in the Arab world. Jewish singers and musicians made an important
contribution to Baghdād’s culture from the 1920s until 1951, when most of them
left the country. Among them were the brothers Saleh and Da’ud al-Kuwaiti. In
the 1940s and 1950s the four most important types of music in Baghdād were
Maqamat, Monologat, Pestat, and Budhiyat. Maqamat, a form of classical Arab
music, is a kind of high-pitched, sophisticated Arab blues, accompanied by ‘ud,
violins, and drums. Monologat consists of nonclassical songs that include
elements of humor and cynicism. Pestat is popular poetry sung to music.
Budhiyat is a hymnlike type of music reminiscent of Buddhist chanting.
From the late 1940s to the
late 1970s tastes in music shifted from traditional Maqamat to a mix of Maqamat
and songs based on lighter, more popular Arab music. Uniquely Iraqi styles
blended gradually with other Arab styles, mainly under Egyptian influence.
Nazim al-Ghazali, who was popular in the 1950s and 1960s, was the main
representative of this trend, although most of his songs were in the classical
Maqamat style. Beginning in the late 1970s a combination of Arab and European
music was introduced, creating Arab pop music.
Important singers since the late 20th
century have included Ilham al-Madfa‘i, Kazim al-Sahir, Sa‘dun Jaber, Fu’ad
Salem, and Haytham Yusuf. Ilham al-Madfa‘i usually accompanies his singing with
a Spanish guitar. His main contribution is in modernizing old Maqamat songs.
Kazim al-Sahir combines traditional Arab and modern Western singing styles.
Most of his songs are personal, but some of them are political, notably
“Jerusalem,” “Risala ila al-‘Alam” (“A Message to the World”), and
“Baghdād.” The music of the late Nazim al-Ghazali is still popular, as are the
songs of his wife, Salima Murad (or Salima Pasha).
Bedouin songs, accompanied by a simple
string instrument, the rababah, are popular in the countryside. Since
the late 20th century, Bedouin music, songs, and dance became popular in
Baghdād under Hussein’s regime, owing to the rural background of the former
ruler.
D
|
Libraries and Museums
|
The leading libraries of Iraq include
the University of Al Başrah Central Library (founded in 1964); the University
of Mosul Central Library (1067); and the Iraq Museum Library (1934), in
Baghdād. Public libraries are located in most of the provincial capitals. Both
the National Library (1961), in Baghdād, and the University of Baghdād Central
Library (1960) were looted and partially destroyed in the aftermath of the 2003
U.S.-led invasion of Iraq.
Baghdād is home to the Iraq
Museum (1923), which houses important collections of relics of early
Mesopotamian cultures. In the aftermath of the 2003 U.S.-led invasion, looters
made off with many of the Iraq Museum’s prized artifacts and caused significant
damage to the museum. Also in Baghdād are the Iraq Natural History Museum
(1946) and the Iraq Military Museum (1974). Other museums include the Babylon
Museum (1949), at the site of ancient Babylon south of Baghdād, which exhibits
models, pictures, and paintings of ancient Babylon; and the Mosul Museum
(1951), containing exhibits of Assyrian art and other antiquities.
V
|
ECONOMY
|
The modern Iraqi economy is
largely based on petroleum. Most of the few large manufacturing industries have
to do with oil.
A
|
Iraqi Economy Under Hussein
|
During the rule of dictator
Saddam Hussein, the Iraqi economy was adversely affected by four major factors:
the Iran-Iraq War during the 1980s, an international oil glut in the 1980s and
1990s, the economic sanctions imposed by the United Nations (UN) after the
invasion of Kuwait in 1990, and the Persian Gulf War in 1991. The combined
effect of all these factors was the destruction of Iraq’s basic
infrastructure (roads, bridges, power grids, and the like) and the
country’s financial bankruptcy.
Studies done at the end of
the 20th century revealed that Iraq’s real gross domestic product (GDP)—that
is, its GDP adjusted for inflation—fell by 75 percent from 1991 to 1999. In the
late 1990s the country’s real GDP was estimated at about what it was in the
1940s, prior to the oil boom and the modernization of the country. As a result,
per capita income and the people’s calorie intake plunged from the levels of
relatively better-off Third World countries to those of the desperately poor
Fourth World states, such as Rwanda, Haiti, the Democratic Republic of the
Congo, and Somalia. Other reports indicated that following the end of the
Persian Gulf War all aspects of Iraq’s economy were devastated. Its valuable
assets, as well as its basic social and economic infrastructure, were
squandered, eroded, or irrevocably destroyed. Iraq’s best-educated people fled,
and the value of its national currency, the dinar, continued to decline,
driving prices ever upward. Under Hussein, the government continued to finance
its spending commitments by printing money, thus guaranteeing that inflation
would continue unabated.
The UN sanctions created
widespread unemployment, skyrocketing inflation, and severe shortages of
previously imported commodities, including medicine, medical equipment, animal
vaccines, farm machinery, electricity-generating equipment, and water
purification supplies. As a result of these shortages and the damage done to water
and sewage treatment systems during the Persian Gulf War, the incidence of
disease and malnutrition rose sharply.
In 1996 the UN began to
allow Iraq to swap oil for food and medical supplies, marking the country’s
first step away from near-total diplomatic and economic isolation since its
invasion of Kuwait. However, this program was not going to solve the
fundamental problems of a devastated economy and of a population impoverished
by two successive wars and about a decade of severe economic sanctions. To make
matters worse, Iraq’s official foreign reserves (estimated at $35 billion to
$40 billion at the beginning of the 1980s) were totally drained, either spent
to finance the war with Iran or misallocated on projects such as building
dozens of luxury palaces for Hussein and his family. On top of this, the
country was sinking in a mire of foreign debt, war reparations, and other
financial obligations, which were certain to keep it in economic shambles for
decades to come.
Following the U.S.-Iraq War, the
United States spent billions of dollars to revive Iraq’s oil industry. The U.S.
expenditures were also aimed at restoring and upgrading Iraq’s oil fields and
refineries. Much of the work was contracted to U.S. and other foreign oil
companies. By March 2004 Iraq was producing about 2.5 million barrels of oil
per day, nearly as much as it produced prior to the 2003 war. However, the
continued insurgency against the U.S. occupation in Iraq targeted oil pipelines
and oil workers, and these attacks drastically cut oil production. According to
the International Energy Agency (IEA), Iraq produced an average of 1.8 million
to 2 million barrels a day through most of 2004 and 2005. In the last three
months of 2005 production sank to 1.7 million barrels, and in January 2006, it
declined even further to 1.5 million barrels per day. By the end of 2006
production had increased to 2.2 million barrels per day.
B
|
Government Role in the Economy
|
The early 1970s was a time
of important development for the Iraqi economy and the government’s role in it.
In 1972 the government nationalized the Iraq Petroleum Company (IPC), which had
been owned by foreign oil companies. The nationalization, together with the
steep rise in the price of crude oil that the Organization of Petroleum Exporting
Countries (OPEC) engineered in 1973, had the effect of raising Iraq’s oil
revenues more than eightfold—from $1 billion in 1972 to $8.2 billion in 1975.
This sharp increase in revenue solidified the government’s role in the economy,
making the government the primary agent for transferring wealth from the
petroleum industry to the rest of the economy. In this way the government
acquired the unprecedented power to allocate economic resources to various
sectors of the economy and among different social classes and groups. Beginning
in the 1970s, the Iraqi government came to be the primary determiner of
employment, income distribution, and development, both of economic sectors and
of geographical regions. It carried out extensive economic planning and exercised
heavy control over agriculture, foreign trade, communication networks, banking
services, public utilities, and industrial production, leaving only small-scale
industry, shops, farms, and some services to the private sector.
Saddam Hussein, in power from
1979 until 2003, maintained the government’s central role in the economy. The
crushing nature of the UN sanctions meant that Iraq’s economic policy at the
start of the 21st century focused mainly on building a coalition of nations to
support the removal of the sanctions. The primary way the Iraqi government
could win support from other nations was by promising lucrative post-sanction
oil contracts to potential allies. Most experts believed that Russia, China,
and France would have been the main beneficiaries of these promises. The
Hussein government focused on circumventing the sanctions, primarily through
oil smuggling.
Following the U.S. invasion of
Iraq in 2003, the U.S. civil administrator for Iraq, L. Paul Bremer III,
undertook a number of unilateral initiatives to convert Iraq from a state-run
economy to a market economy. Bremer ordered the privatization of all
state-owned enterprises, with the exception of the oil industry, and allowed
those enterprises to be wholly owned by foreign investors. The orders also
allowed foreign investors to withdraw all of their profits and dividends
without reinvestment in Iraq. The banking sector was also privatized, and
foreign banks were allowed to enter Iraq and own up to 50 percent of an Iraqi
bank.
C
|
Labor
|
The Iran-Iraq War, the Persian
Gulf War, and the UN sanctions crippled the Iraqi economy, resulting in an
unprecedented rate of unemployment. According to World Bank statistics, in 2004
the labor force consisted of 8.06 million workers. In 1996, 66.4 percent of the
labor force was employed in services, 17.5 percent in industry, and 16.1
percent in agriculture. Women accounted for 20 percent of the labor force.
Before economic sanctions took effect in 1990, Iraq had many foreign workers,
the majority of them Egyptian agricultural workers. Following the U.S.-Iraq war
of 2003, Iraq’s minister of planning and international cooperation estimated
unemployment at more than 50 percent.
D
|
Mining
|
Petroleum is the most important
natural resource of Iraq. The country is estimated to have about 10 percent of
the world’s supply of proved petroleum reserves. The oil fields are located in
two main regions: in the southeast, just inland from the Persian Gulf, near Ar
Rumaylah, and in the north-central part of the country, near Mosul and Kirkūk.
Small deposits of various other minerals are found, principally ores of iron,
gold, lead, copper, silver, platinum, and zinc. Phosphates, sulfur, salt, and
gypsum are fairly abundant, and seams of brown coal are numerous.
The production of petroleum is
the mainstay of Iraq’s economy. The oil wells also yield sizable quantities of
natural gas. Refineries are located at Baghdād, Al Başrah, Ḩadīthah, Khānaqīn,
Kirkūk, and Al Qayyārah. A plant for processing and bottling liquefied petroleum
gases is situated at At Tājī, near Baghdād.
Falling oil prices and the war
with Iran severely hampered the petroleum industry during the 1980s. The
industry was dealt another crippling blow in 1990, when Iraq invaded Kuwait and
the UN responded with an embargo on Iraqi oil. In order to alleviate the
suffering of the Iraqi people due to the embargo, the UN in 1995 voted to allow
Iraq to export limited amounts of oil so the country could buy food, medicine,
and other basic goods. Such oil exports began at the end of 1996. Iraq produced
an estimated 478 million barrels of petroleum and 1.5 billion cu m (53 billion
cu ft) of natural gas in 2003. By comparison, in 1979, the year of its peak
production, Iraq produced almost 1.3 billion barrels of petroleum.
E
|
Agriculture
|
Although oil dominates its economy,
Iraq is also an agricultural country. Approximately 13 percent of the land is
under cultivation. Most farmland is in the region of the Tigris and Euphrates
rivers. The most important crops are wheat, barley, and rice. Before the
imposition of UN sanctions, exports of dates from Iraq accounted for a major
share of world trade in dates. Other fruits produced include apples, figs,
grapes, olives, oranges, pears, and pomegranates.
Livestock raising is an important
occupation for Iraq’s nomadic and seminomadic peoples. Sheep, goats, cattle,
and poultry are the most commonly raised livestock animals. In addition, the
world-famous Arabian horse is extensively bred.
F
|
Manufacturing
|
Despite efforts by Hussein to reduce
the country’s dependence on oil, Iraq’s manufacturing industry is not well
developed. Besides petroleum and natural gas products, manufactures are largely
limited to goods such as processed foods and beverages, textiles and clothing,
metal products, furniture, footwear, cigarettes, and construction materials.
Baghdād is the leading manufacturing center of Iraq.
G
|
Services
|
Many Iraqis work for the
government in social services such as health and education. Financial and
personal services are also important income earners.
H
|
Energy
|
Power plants fueled by oil or
natural gas produce 98 percent of Iraq’s electricity. Hydroelectric facilities
operate on the Tigris River and some of its tributaries.
I
|
Transportation
|
Iraq has railroad connections
through Syria with Turkey and Europe. The Iraqi state railway system consists
of about 2,440 km (about 1,515 mi) of track. The country’s road network is well
developed: About 84 percent of roads are paved. International airports serve
Baghdād and Al Başrah. Al Başrah, on the Shatt al Arab, and Umm Qaşr, on the
Persian Gulf, are the main ports for oceangoing vessels, and river steamers are
able to navigate the Tigris from Al Başrah to Baghdād.
During the Persian Gulf War,
bombing by United States-led coalition air forces demolished many transport
facilities, such as bridges, ports, and airports. Some estimates suggest that
the bombing destroyed more than 80 bridges. Iraq was able to rebuild some
bridges and other facilities in the years after the war.
J
|
Communications
|
Much of Iraq’s telecommunication
network was also destroyed in the Persian Gulf War. After Hussein’s overthrow
in 2003, the new Iraqi administration began rebuilding and upgrading the
country’s telephone mainline and mobile telephone systems. The Iraqi Media
Network oversees the operation of a number of television and radio stations.
Under Hussein’s rule, only a small number of newspaper and periodicals were
printed, but since his overthrow, dozens of new publications have been founded.
K
|
Foreign Trade
|
Before the UN imposed a trade
embargo on Iraq following Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait in 1990, average annual
exports were estimated at $10.4 billion and imports at about $6.6 billion.
Petroleum sales accounted for almost all the export earnings; other exports
were dates, raw wool, and hides and skins. Leading imports were machinery,
transportation equipment, foodstuffs, and pharmaceuticals.
With the trade embargo in place,
Iraq virtually ceased earning income from exports. In 1996, under the
oil-for-food agreement, the UN permitted Iraq to export oil worth $2 billion
every six months to purchase food and medicine for its civilian population.
However, Iraq could not pump that much oil for a variety of reasons, such as
damage to equipment and loss of skilled workers. Therefore Iraq did not export
as much oil as was allowed. Consequently, in 1996 Iraq exported oil worth only
$400 million and imported food and medicine worth $492 million. The UN agreed
in 1998 to increase the value of the oil-for-food arrangement to $5.2 billion
every six months.
After Hussein’s overthrow in 2003, the
UN ended the Iraqi trade embargo. The U.S.-led transitional authority
established the Trade Bank of Iraq to oversee the return of unfettered foreign
trade.
L
|
Currency and Banking
|
The monetary unit is the
Iraqi dinar, consisting of 1,000 fil or 20 dirham (1,467.40
dinars equal U.S.$1; fixed rate). Currency is issued by the Central Bank of
Iraq, which was entirely state-run and controlled the banking system and
foreign exchange transactions until Hussein’s overthrow in 2003. The banking
sector was subsequently privatized, and foreign banks were allowed to enter
Iraq and own up to 50 percent of an Iraqi bank.
VI
|
GOVERNMENT
|
From 1968 until 2003 the
Iraqi government was a dictatorship dominated by a single political party, the
Baath Party. From 1979 until 2003, the Baath Party and the government were
controlled by Saddam Hussein. Under Hussein, the people had little if any
influence on the government. There were occasional elections to the
legislature, and Hussein was once confirmed as president in 1995 in a public
referendum, but none of these seemingly democratic procedures was truly
democratic. Until 2003 Iraq was governed by a 1969 constitution that defined
Iraq as “a sovereign people’s democratic republic,” dedicated to the ultimate
realization of a single Arab state and to the establishment of a socialist
system.
A
|
Post-Hussein Government
|
A U.S.-led invasion toppled
Hussein’s regime in 2003, and the United States began the process of
establishing an interim Iraqi government. The U.S.-led coalition established
the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA), headed by U.S. administrator L. Paul
Bremer III. The CPA selected a 25-member Iraqi governing council, with seats
distributed among the country’s different religious and ethnic groups as well
as existing political organizations.
A1
|
Interim Constitution of 2004
|
The Iraqi governing council
approved an interim Iraqi constitution, also known as the transitional
administrative law, in March 2004. The constitution was hailed as one of the
most democratic in the region, consisting of a bill of rights that guaranteed
personal freedoms, including freedom of speech and freedom of religion.
The interim constitution was approved
despite the opposition of 12 Shia members of the 25-member council, who
objected to several provisions they considered undemocratic. These provisions
were also opposed by the most powerful religious leader in Iraq, the Grand
Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, a Shia cleric. Sistani objected to the fact that the
interim constitution was drafted by a handpicked council and said it would not
be legitimate until it was approved by a democratically elected national
assembly.
Shia dissenters argued particularly
against a provision requiring a two-thirds vote by at least three of Iraq’s
provinces in favor of the permanent constitution. The Kurds, who currently have
autonomy (self-rule) in three provinces, sought this provision as a way
of guaranteeing continued autonomy and other democratic rights for the Kurdish
minority. The Shia dissenters objected that this provision gave too much veto
power over the constitution to a minority of voters, including Arab Sunnis,
many of whom were supporters of Saddam Hussein.
A2
|
Interim Government
|
On June 1, 2004, the Iraqi
governing council announced the formation of a new interim government and
dissolved itself. This new government was led by a prime minister and a president.
The leaders were assisted by a deputy prime minister, two vice presidents, and
a cabinet. On June 28 Bremer dissolved the CPA and formally transferred
sovereignty to the new Iraqi interim government.
General elections to select a
transitional National Assembly were held at the end of January 2005. A Shia
coalition, the United Iraqi Alliance (UAI), won 51 percent of the vote,
followed by the Kurdistān Alliance (a coalition of the Kurdistān Democratic
Party and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistān) with 26 percent and interim prime
minister Allawi’s political group with 14 percent. About 58 percent of
registered Iraqi voters participated in the election, which was boycotted by
most of the nation’s Sunnis. Sunni Arabs had only 17 seats in the 275-member parliament,
although they represented about 20 percent of the population. In April the
National Assembly selected Kurdish leader Jalal Talabani as Iraq’s new
president, and Talabani named Shia leader Ibrahim al-Jaafari the country’s new
prime minister.
A3
|
Permanent Constitution
|
The newly elected parliament
finalized the language of a permanent constitution in the summer of 2005.
Although extra Sunni Arab members were appointed to the committee, they were
largely marginalized. The resulting document said that Islam is the religion of
state, that the civil parliament may pass no legislation contrary to the
established rules of Islam, and that Iraqis may opt to be judged by their
religious community’s canon law in matters of personal status. At the same time,
the document guaranteed civil liberties.
The new charter also provided
for a weak central government and allowed provinces to band together into
provincial confederacies, and to claim 100 percent of new petroleum and natural
gas finds in their territories. This very loose federalism and the prospect
that the Kurds and Shiites might monopolize future oil wealth, depriving the
Sunni Arabs of their share, enraged the Sunni Arabs. On October 15, 2005, the
three largely Sunni Arab provinces of Anbar, Nineveh, and Salahuddin rejected
the constitution, but it passed elsewhere in the country, and the margin of
rejection in one Sunni province was less than two-thirds, allowing it to pass.
B
|
Political Divisions
|
Iraq is divided into 18
provinces, of which 3 are officially designated as a Kurdish autonomous region.
The Kurdish autonomous region, first established in 1970, has an elected
legislature. This region came under UN and coalition protection after the
Persian Gulf War, to prevent Hussein from taking military action against
rebellious Kurds. However, infighting among Kurdish groups rendered the
government largely ineffective. In 1998 two rival Kurdish parties signed an
agreement, brokered by the United States, that provided for a transitional
power-sharing arrangement. However, the agreement has not been implemented, and
each of the two parties governs its own slice of Kurdish territory.
C
|
Political Parties
|
The leading political organization in
Iraq under Saddam Hussein was the Arab Baath Socialist Party, which bases its
policies on pan-Arab and socialist principles. Other political groups included
the Iraqi Communist Party (ICP), the Kurdistān Democratic Party (KDP), the
Patriotic Union of Kurdistān (PUK), and a few other Kurdish parties. The two
most important Shia opposition parties were the Da‘wa Party and the Supreme
Council of the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI), which was subsequently
renamed the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq (ISCI). Until Hussein’s overthrow,
all these opposition parties were illegal outside the Kurdish autonomous
region. Following the U.S. invasion, the United Iraqi Alliance (UIA), a
coalition of Shia groups including the Da‘wa Party and SIIC, emerged as the
dominant political force in Iraq. The Kurdistān Alliance, a coalition of the
Kurdistān Democratic Party and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistān, emerged as the
second most powerful political force and the most important political grouping
among the Kurds. Among Sunnis, the Iraqi Accord Front, a fundamentalist
religious coalition, was the leading electoral force. The Baath Party remained
a legal and open party.
D
|
Defense
|
Under the Hussein government,
military training in Iraq was compulsory for all males when they reached the
age of 18; it consisted of about two years in active service and an additional
period in the reserve. In 2004 the Iraqi army had about 79,000 members
(including a large active reserves); the air force, 200 members; and the navy,
700 members.
Following the U.S. invasion, the
U.S. civil administrator for Iraq dissolved the Iraqi military and outlined
plans for a new force that would be limited to about 40,000 members. While
establishing and training this new Iraqi force, the United States continued to
station more than 100,000 U.S. troops in Iraq following the transfer of
sovereignty to Iraqis in June 2004. The 2004 interim constitution called for
the dissolution of private militias, such as those maintained by Kurds and some
Shia political parties, although it allowed the Kurds to maintain their militia
for an interim period.
E
|
International Organizations
|
Iraq is a charter member of
the United Nations (UN) and a founding member of the Arab League. The country
is also a founding member of the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC),
which promotes solidarity among nations where Islam is an important religion,
and the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC).
VII
|
HISTORY
|
The territory of modern Iraq is
roughly equivalent to that of ancient Mesopotamia, which fostered a succession
of early civilizations. Of these, the earliest known was the civilization of
Sumer, which arose probably in the 4th millennium bc and had its final flowering under the 3rd Dynasty of Ur
at the close of the 3rd millennium bc.
Periods of control by Babylonia and Assyria followed. In 539 bc Cyrus the Great of Persia gained
control of the region and incorporated it into the Persian Achaemenid empire.
Achaemenid rule lasted until the military conquests of Macedonian king
Alexander the Great in 331 bc.
After Alexander’s death the Greek Seleucid dynasty reigned in Mesopotamia,
infusing the region with Hellenistic culture. About 100 years later the area
was absorbed into the Parthian Empire, which except for two brief interludes of
Roman rule survived until a new Persian force, the Sassanids, conquered the
region in ad 227. Their rule
stretched from eastern Persia to the Syrian Desert and Anatolia.
A
|
Arab Islamic Conquest
|
In the 7th century Arab
adherents of the new religion of Islam began conquering large parts of the
Middle East and North Africa. The Arab Islamic conquest of what is now Iraq
started in 633 ad and culminated
in 636 at the Battle of Qadisiyya, a village on the Euphrates south of Baghdād.
At that battle an Islamic Arab army decisively defeated a Sassanid army that
was six times larger. The Arab army moved quickly to Ctesiphon, the capital of
the Sassanid Empire, where in 637 it seized a huge Persian treasure trove. The
region was then absorbed into the expanding caliphate, or Islamic empire. Many
tribes in the conquered land were Christian Arabs. Some of them converted to
Islam, and the others were allowed to stay provided they paid a tax.
From the mid-8th century to 1258
Baghdād was the capital of the Abbasid caliphate. The Abbasid period was a
golden age of Islamic power and culture. During that period Baghdād became the
second largest city in the known world, after Constantinople, and the most
important center of science and culture. For a time, the Abbasid realm was a
mighty military power, its borders reaching southern France in the west and the
borders of China in the east. In the mid-9th century the Abbasid caliphate
began a slow decline. Turkic warrior slaves known as Mamluks became so
prominent at the caliph’s court that they almost monopolized power. In 945 the
Buwayhids, an Iranian Shia dynasty, conquered Baghdād. However, they allowed
the Abbasid caliph to remain in office as a symbol of continuity and
legitimacy. In 1055 the Seljuks, a Turkic Sunni clan, drove out the Buwayhids
and reestablished Sunni rule in Baghdād. The Seljuks respected the Abbasid
caliph but allowed him to be only a figurehead. At the end of the 11th century
Seljuk power started to decline.
B
|
Mongol and Persian Rule
|
In 1258 Baghdād was conquered
and sacked by Hulagu, grandson of the great Mongol conqueror Genghis Khan.
Hulagu had the caliph executed along with large numbers of Muslim clerics.
Mongol horse cavalry and governmental neglect wrought havoc with the elaborate
irrigation system that the Abbasids had established. Iraq became a neglected
frontier area ruled from the Mongol capital of Tabrīz in Persia. In 1335 the
last great Mongol ruler of this region died, and anarchy prevailed. The Turkic
conqueror Tamerlane sacked Baghdād in 1401, again massacring many of its
inhabitants.
Ottoman Turkish and Iranian
rulers vied for supremacy in Iraq until the Ottoman Empire finally secured
control in the 17th century. The region was brought under Persian control in
1508. The Ottoman Turks conquered much of it in 1534. The Persians recaptured
Baghdād and large parts of Iraq in 1623, holding them until 1638, when Iraq was
again brought under Ottoman rule. For almost three centuries thereafter Iraq
was part of the Ottoman Empire.
C
|
Ottoman Supremacy
|
The history of modern Iraq begins
with the last phase of Ottoman rule, during the 19th century. Until the 1830s
Ottoman rule in Iraq was tenuous, and real power shifted between powerful
tribal chieftains and local Mamluk rulers. Local Kurdish dynasties held sway
over the mountainous north. Many of the nomadic Arab tribes were never fully
brought under Ottoman control. Under the influence of the Shia shrine cities of
An Najaf and Karbalā’, which grew in importance in this period, large numbers
of Arab tribespeople began adopting the Shia branch of Islam, a process that
probably produced a Shia majority in what is now Iraq by the end of the 1800s.
In the second half of the 18th century the Mamluks established effective
control over the territory from Al Başrah to north of Baghdād. The Mamluks
imposed central authority and introduced a functioning government. In 1831 the
province of Iraq, then subdivided into the three vilayets, or
administrative districts, of Mosul, Baghdād, and Al Başrah, came under direct
Ottoman administration. From 1831 to 1869 a series of governors came and went
in rapid succession.
From 1869 to 1872 Midhat
Pasha, one of the Ottoman Empire’s ablest and most scrupulous officials, at
long last imposed effective central control throughout the region. He
modernized Baghdād, in everything from transportation to sanitation to
education, and he imposed his rule on the tribal countryside. The Arabs began
to experience the burdens of the new and more efficient methods of Ottoman
administration, particularly with regard to tax collection. Local resentment of
the centralized authority of the empire developed, giving rise to a strong
spirit of Arab nationalism.
In the latter part of the
19th century Britain and Germany became rivals in the commercial development of
the Mesopotamia area. The British first became interested in Iraq as a direct
overland route to India. In 1861 they established a steamship company for the
navigation of the Tigris to the port of Al Başrah. Meanwhile, Germany was
planning the construction of a railroad in the Middle East—to run “from Berlin
to Baghdād”—and, overcoming British opposition, obtained a concession from the
Ottoman government to build a railroad from Baghdād to the Persian Gulf.
Despite this defeat, the British government managed to consolidate its position
in the Persian Gulf area by concluding treaties of protection with local Arab
chieftains. British financiers were also successful in obtaining a concession
in 1901 to exploit the oil fields of Iran. In 1909 the Anglo-Persian Oil
Company (later the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company) was formed to develop this new
industry.
In November 1914, after the
Ottoman Empire entered World War I (1914-1918) as an ally of Germany and
Austria-Hungary, a British Indian army division landed at Al Fāw, near Iraq’s
southern tip, and quickly occupied Al Başrah. The main reason for the landing
was Britain’s need to defend the Anglo-Persian Oil Company’s oil fields and
refineries nearby in Iran. This first expedition was too small and met defeat
at Kut-al-Imara in April 1916. A second invasion, under General Frederick
Stanley Maude, proved more successful. The British army gradually pushed
northward against heavy Ottoman opposition, entering Baghdād in March 1917. The
British and the Ottoman Turks signed an armistice agreement in October 1918,
but the British army continued to move north until it captured Mosul in early
November. With the capture of Mosul, Britain exerted its control over nearly
all of what is now Iraq.
D
|
British Mandate
|
Early in the war, in order
to ensure the interest of the Arabs in a military uprising against the Ottoman
Turks, the British government promised a group of Arab leaders that their
people would receive independence if a revolt proved successful. In June 1916
an uprising occurred in Al Ḩijāz (the Hejaz), led by Faisal al-Husein, later
Faisal I, first king of Iraq. Under the leadership of British general Edmund
Allenby and the tactical direction of British colonel T. E. Lawrence (known as
Lawrence of Arabia), the Arab and British forces achieved dramatic successes
against the Ottoman army and succeeded in liberating much Arabian territory.
After signing the armistice with the Ottoman government in 1918, the British
and French governments issued a joint declaration stating their intention to
assist in establishing independent Arab nations in the Arab areas formerly
controlled by the Ottoman Empire.
At the Paris Peace Conference
in 1919, the Allies (the coalition of the victorious nations in World War I,
including Britain and France) made Iraq (the territory encompassing the three
former Ottoman vilayets of Mosul, Baghdād, and Al Başrah) a Class A mandate
entrusted to Britain. Under the mandate system, a territory that had formerly
been held by Germany or the Ottoman Empire was placed nominally under the
supervision of the League of Nations, and the administration of the mandate was
delegated to one of the victorious nations until the territory could govern
itself. Class A mandates were expected to achieve independence in a few years.
In April 1920 the Allied governments confirmed the creation of the British
mandate in Iraq at a conference in San Remo, Italy.
In July 1920, when the Iraqi
Arabs learned of the decision, they began an armed uprising against the
British, then still occupying Iraq. The British were forced to spend huge
amounts of money to quell the revolt, which they did through air raids and
bombings that left some 9,000 dead. The British government concluded that it
would be expedient to give up plans for direct British rule in Mesopotamia. The
British civil commissioner, their top administrator in Iraq, thereupon drew up
a plan for a provisional government of the new state of Iraq: It was to be a
kingdom, with a government directed by a council of Arab ministers under the
supervision of a British high commissioner. Faisal was invited to become the
ruler of the new state. In August 1921 a plebiscite elected Faisal king of
Iraq; he won 96 percent of the votes cast in the election.
The new king had to build
a local power base in Iraq. He accomplished this task primarily by winning the
support of Iraqi-born military officers who had served in the Ottoman army and
of Sunni Arab business and religious leaders in Baghdād, Al Başrah, and Mosul.
To win support in the Shia south, in the center north among the Sunni Arab
tribes, and among the Kurds, the king with British support gave tribal
chieftains wide powers over their tribes, including judicial powers and
responsibility for tax collection in their tribal domains. The British retained
some control until 1932, and launched large numbers of bombing raids in the
1920s as a way of controlling the tribes.
The Sunni Arab urban leaders
and some Kurdish chieftains came to dominate the government and the army, while
the Shia Arab chieftains and, to a lesser extent, the Sunni Arab chieftains
came to dominate the parliament, enacting laws that benefited themselves. The
lower classes had no say in the affairs of the state. They included poor
peasants and, in the towns, a growing layer of Western-educated young men who
were economically vulnerable and depended on the government for jobs. This
latter group, known as the efendiyya, grew more and more restive. Both
the Sunni Arab ruling elite and the efendiyya embraced the ideas of the
pan-Arab movement, which sought to join all the Arab lands into one powerful
state. Pan-Arabism was seen as a way of uniting most of the diverse Iraqi
population through a common Arab identity. The elite advocated achieving
pan-Arabism through diplomacy with British consent, while the efendiyya
developed a revolutionary and radically anti-British ideology. Pan-Arabism was
less popular among the Shia of the south, who favored a distinctly Iraqi
nationalism, since they knew they would be a small minority in a pan-Arab
federation, whereas they were the majority in Iraq.
E
|
Independent Kingdom of Iraq
|
The integrity of the newly
established state was challenged by various groups with separatist aspirations,
such as the Shias of the Euphrates River area and the Kurdish tribes of the
north. These groups acted in conjunction with Turkish armed forces endeavoring
to reclaim the lands in the Mosul area for Turkey. The British were thus forced
to maintain an army in Iraq, and agitation against the British mandate
continued. King Faisal I formally requested that the mandate under which Iraq
was held be transformed into a treaty of alliance between the two nations.
Although Britain did not end the mandate, in June 1922 a 20-year treaty of
alliance and protection between Britain and Iraq was signed. The treaty
required that the king heed British advice on all matters affecting British
interests and that British officials serve in specific Iraqi government posts.
In return, Britain provided military assistance and other aid to Iraq. The
British also created an Iraqi national army, which became an indispensable tool
of domestic control in the hands of the ruling elite.
In the spring of 1924 a
constituent assembly was convened. It passed an organic law establishing the
permanent form of the government of Iraq. The king was given great, but not
absolute, power. He could dismiss parliament, call for new elections, and
appoint the prime minister. Elections for the first Iraqi parliament were held
in March 1925. In the same year a concession was granted to an internationally
owned oil company to develop the oil reserves of the Baghdād and Mosul regions.
In 1927 Faisal I requested
that the British support Iraq’s application for admission to the League of
Nations. The British refused to take such action at that time, but in June 1930
a new treaty of alliance between Britain and Iraq included a recommendation by
Britain that Iraq be admitted to the League of Nations as a free and
independent state in 1932. The recommendation was made that year, and the
British mandate was formally terminated. In October 1932 Iraq joined the League
of Nations as an independent sovereign state. Faisal I died in 1933 and was
succeeded by his son, Ghazi, a radical pan-Arab and anti-British figure.
E1
|
Foreign Agreements
|
In 1931 the exploitation of the
oil reserves in Iraq was further advanced by an agreement signed by the Iraqi
government and the Iraq Petroleum Company, an internationally owned
organization composed of Royal Dutch/Shell, the Anglo-Persian Oil Company,
French oil companies, and the Standard Oil companies of New York and New
Jersey. The agreement granted the Iraq Petroleum Company the sole right to
develop the oil fields of the Mosul region, in return for which the company
guaranteed to pay the Iraqi government annual royalties. In 1934 the company
opened an oil pipeline from Mosul to Tripoli, Lebanon, and a second one to
Haifa, in what is now Israel, was completed in 1936.
In 1936 Iraq, under King
Ghazi, moved toward a pan-Arab alliance with the other nations of the Arab
world. A treaty of nonaggression, reaffirming a fundamental Arab kinship, was
signed with the king of Saudi Arabia in the same year. Iraq’s parliament, with
an elected lower house, conducted lively debates but lacked much real power.
E2
|
Military Coup
|
Iraq experienced its first military
coup d’état in 1936, when the army overthrew the pan-Arab Sunni government. The
coup opened the door to future military involvement in Iraqi politics. Its
leaders included a Kurdish general and a Shia politician. The moderate
coalition government they put in power was accepted by the king and remained in
office until 1939. In April 1939 King Ghazi was killed in an automobile
accident, leaving his three-year-old son, Faisal II, the titular king under a
regency.
E3
|
World War II
|
In accordance with its treaty of
alliance with Britain, Iraq broke off diplomatic relations with Germany early
in September 1939, at the start of World War II (1939-1945). During the first
few months of the war Iraq had a pro-British government under General Nuri
as-Said as prime minister. In March 1940, however, Said was replaced by Rashid
Ali al-Gailani, a radical nationalist, who embarked at once on a policy of
noncooperation with the British. The British pressured the Iraqis to cooperate
with them. This pressure precipitated a military revolt on April 30, 1941, and
a new pro-German government headed by Gailani was formed.
Alarmed at this development, the
British landed troops at Al Başrah. Declaring this action a violation of the
treaty between Britain and Iraq, Gailani mobilized the Iraqi army, and war
between the two countries began in May. Later that month the government of Iraq
conceded defeat. The armistice terms provided for the reestablishment of
British control over Iraq’s transport, a provision of the 1930 treaty of
alliance. Shortly afterward, a pro-British government headed by Said was
formed.
In 1942 Iraq became an
important supply center for British and United States forces operating in the
Middle East and for the transshipment of arms to the Union of Soviet Socialist
Republics (USSR). On January 17, 1943, Iraq declared war on Germany, the first
independent Muslim state to do so. Meanwhile, Iraq’s continuing assistance to
the Allied war effort made possible a stronger stand by Arab leaders on behalf
of a federation of Arab states. After the war ended, Iraq joined with other
Arab states in forming the Arab League, a regional association of sovereign
states.
E4
|
War with Israel
|
Throughout 1945 and 1946 the
Kurdish tribes of northeastern Iraq were in a state of unrest—supported, it was
believed, by the USSR. The British, fearing Soviet encroachment on the Iraqi
oil fields, moved troops into Iraq. In 1947 Said began to advocate a new
proposal for a federated Arab state. This time he suggested that Transjordan
(present-day Jordan) and Iraq be united, and he began negotiations with the
king of Transjordan regarding this proposal. In April 1947 a treaty of kinship
and alliance was signed by the two kingdoms, providing for mutual military and
diplomatic aid.
Immediately following the declaration of
independence by Israel in May 1948, the armies of Iraq and Transjordan invaded
the new state. Iraq initially only fielded 5,000 men, although it later tripled
this number. Throughout the rest of the year Iraqi armed forces continued to
fight the Israelis, and the nation continued to work politically with the
kingdom of Transjordan. In September Iraq joined Abdullah ibn Hussein, king of
Transjordan, in denouncing the establishment of an Arab government in Palestine
as being “tantamount to recognizing the partition of Palestine” into Jewish and
Arab states, which Iraq had consistently opposed. With the general defeat of
the Arab forces attacking Israel, however, the government of Iraq prepared to
negotiate an armistice, represented by Transjordan. On May 11, 1949, a
cease-fire agreement between Israel and Transjordan was signed, but Iraqi units
continued to fight Israelis in an Arab-occupied area in north central
Palestine. Transjordanian troops replaced the Iraqi units in this area under
the terms of the armistice agreement, signed on April 3, 1949.
E5
|
Oil Accords and Elections
|
Royalties paid to the government
of Iraq by the Iraq Petroleum Company increased substantially under accords
reached in 1950 and 1951. By the terms of an even more advantageous
arrangement, concluded in February 1952, Iraq obtained 50 percent of the
profits. In 1953 the 911-km (566-mi) Kirkūk-Bāniyās (Syria) pipeline of the
Iraq Petroleum Company was formally opened.
The first parliamentary elections
based on direct suffrage took place on January 17, 1953, but on a nonparty
basis. A pro-Western government dominated by powerful Sunni Arab landlords was
formed. King Faisal II formally assumed the throne on May 2, 1953, his 18th
birthday. Iraq’s society was hobbled by an extremely unequal social structure
in which a few thousand wealthy, mainly Sunni Arab families owned half the
arable land. Large numbers of Iraqis were sharecroppers or landless peasants.
E6
|
Pro-Western Pacts
|
In February 1955 Iraq concluded
the Baghdād Pact, a mutual-security treaty with Turkey fostered by the United
States as a way of creating a Middle Eastern bulwark against Soviet influence
in the area. Advancing plans to transform the alliance into a Middle Eastern
defense system, the two countries urged the other Arab states, the United
States, Britain, and Pakistan to adhere to the pact. Britain joined the
alliance in April; Pakistan became a signatory in September and Iran in
November. That month the five nations established the Middle East Treaty
Organization (METO).
E7
|
Suez Crisis
|
In July 1956 Jordan (as
Transjordan had been renamed) accused Israel of deploying an invasion army near
Jerusalem, whereupon Iraq moved forces to the Jordanian border. That same
month, in response to Egypt’s nationalization of the Suez Canal, which Britain
and France had controlled, the Iraqi government expressed unequivocal support
of Egypt. In the ensuing Suez Crisis, Egypt was invaded by Israel, Britain, and
France in October 1956. Within a week, however, the United Nations, at the
urging of both the USSR and the United States, demanded a cease-fire, forcing
Britain, France, and Israel to withdraw from the lands they had captured. In
early November, Iraqi and Syrian troops occupied positions in Jordan in accordance
with terms of a mutual-defense agreement.
In January 1957 Iraq endorsed
the recently promulgated Eisenhower Doctrine. This doctrine stated that the
United States would supply military assistance to any Middle Eastern government
whose stability was threatened by communist aggression.
As the peasant population began
to move to the cities and receive an education, significant numbers of Iraqis
from a poor background began to join or sympathize strongly with mass radical
parties. Vast inequalities of wealth and opportunity fanned these discontents.
The three most important parties were the Communist Party of Iraq, the secular
Arab nationalist Baath Socialist Party, and the Shiite Da`wa Party. The Da`wa
was founded in the late 1950s as a response to the other two parties, and aimed
at creating an Islamic state.
F
|
Republic of Iraq
|
The UAR, bitterly antagonistic to
the pro-Western Arab Union, issued repeated radio calls urging the people,
police, and army of Iraq to overthrow their government. On July 14, 1958, in a
sudden coup d’état led by the Iraqi general Abdul Karim Kassem, the country was
proclaimed a republic. King Faisal II, the crown prince, and Said were among
those killed in the uprising. On July 15 the new government announced the
establishment of close relations with the UAR and the dissolution of the Arab
Union. However, Kassem made attempts to gain the confidence of the West by
maintaining the flow of oil.
In March 1959 Iraq withdrew
from the Baghdād Pact, which was then renamed the Central Treaty Organization.
In June 1959 Iraq also withdrew from the sterling bloc (a group of
countries whose currencies are tied to the British pound sterling). The Kassem
government’s initial refusal to allow Communists into the government produced
massive protests in 1959. Kassem eventually relented and began a land reform
program to redress the maldistribution of wealth. Steady petroleum revenues and
other economic advances allowed a doubling of the urban population in the
1960s.
Following the termination of the
British protectorate over the emirate of Kuwait in June 1960, Iraq claimed the
area, asserting that Kuwait had been part of the Iraqi state at the time of its
formation. British forces entered Kuwait in July at the invitation of the
Kuwaiti ruler, and the UN Security Council declined an Iraqi request to order
their withdrawal.
Meanwhile, on the domestic front,
the Iraqi government claimed in 1961 and 1962 that it had suppressed Kurdish
revolts in northern Iraq. The Kurdish unrest persisted, however. The long
conflict was temporarily settled in early 1970, when the government agreed to
form a Kurdish autonomous region, and Kurdish ministers were added to the
cabinet.
F1
|
Rise of the Baath Party
|
From 1972 to 1975 Iraq fully
nationalized the foreign oil companies operating in Iraq. The country enjoyed a
massive increase in oil revenues starting in late 1973 when international
petroleum prices began a steep rise. The discovery of major oil deposits in the
vicinity of Baghdād was announced publicly in 1975. The petroleum wealth
largely went to Baath Party members and officials, and was spent
disproportionately on the Sunni Arab areas. Average per capita income rose in
Iraq during the 1970s, as the country began to industrialize in earnest. The
Baath Party began cracking down on its rival, the Shiite Da`wa Party,
occasionally arresting party activists. A major Shiite urban revolt in 1977 in
the slums of East Baghdād caused the regime to share slightly more of the
petroleum income with Shiites, providing increased social services.
F2
|
Kurdish Revolt
|
In early 1974 heavy fighting
erupted in northern Iraq between government forces and Kurdish nationalists,
who rejected as inadequate a new Kurdish autonomy law based on the 1970
agreement. The Kurds, led by Mustafa al-Barzani, received arms and other
supplies from Iran. After Iraq agreed in early 1975 to make major concessions
to Iran in settling their border disputes, Iran halted aid to the Kurds, and
the revolt was dealt a severe blow.
G
|
Saddam Hussein’s Rule
|
In July 1979 President al-Bakr
retired and was succeeded by Saddam Hussein, believed to have been the true
holder of power in Iraq for years. Hussein purged the Baath Party of al-Bakr
loyalists, executing 55 senior party activists and army officers for treason.
The reason for the purge was either opposition to Hussein’s replacing al-Bakr
or a dispute over the way in which Hussein would be elected. A series of
executions for disloyalty from 1982 to 1986 sent a clear message that no one
could question the new president’s decisions and survive.
G1
|
Iran-Iraq War
|
In 1979 Islamic revolutionaries
in Iran led by Ayatollah Khomeini succeeded in overthrowing the country’s
secular government and established an Islamic republic there. Tension between
the Iraqi government and Iran’s new Islamic regime increased during that year,
when unrest among Iranian Kurds spilled over into Iraq. Iraqi Shiites grew
restive and some supported Khomeini, who was also a Shia Muslim. The Baath
Party cracked down hard on the Da`wa Party leadership, making membership in the
party a capital crime and executing its chief theorist, Muhammad Baqir al-Sadr.
Many Iraqi Shiite activists fled to Iran. In September 1980 Iraq declared its
1975 agreement with Iran, which drew the border between the countries down the
middle of the Shatt al Arab, null and void and claimed authority over the
entire waterway.
The quarrel flared into a
full-scale war. Iraq quickly overran a large part of the Arab-populated
province of Khūzestān (Khuzistan) in Iran and destroyed the Ābādān refinery. In
June 1981 Iraq sustained a humiliating blow, but not from Iran. A surprise air
attack by Israel destroyed a nuclear reactor near Baghdād. The Israelis charged
that the reactor was intended to develop nuclear weapons for use against them.
In early 1982 Iran launched a counteroffensive, and by May it had reclaimed
much of the territory conquered by Iraq in 1980. In Tehrān, the capital of
Iran, Iraqi Shia expatriates formed the Supreme Council of the Islamic
Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI), which developed a paramilitary wing, the Badr
Corps. Badr conducted guerrilla attacks inside Iraq against the Baath. The
Da`wa Party leadership was also active in Tehrān and was involved in anti-U.S.
terrorist actions in Kuwait and Lebanon in reprisal for U.S. support and
weapons sales to Iraq. In 1988 Iraq and Iran signed a cease-fire, ending the
war.
As Hussein negotiated the cease fire
with Iran, the Iraqi government again moved to suppress the Kurdish insurgency.
In 1988 the Iraqi military used a variety of chemical weapons against Kurdish
civilians, especially in the Iraqi town of Ḩalabjah, killing
approximately 5,000 people. During the late 1980s Iraq rebuilt its military
machine, in part through bank credits and technology obtained from Western
Europe and the United States.
G2
|
Persian Gulf War
|
In 1990 Hussein revived Iraq’s
long-standing territorial dispute with Kuwait, its ally during the war with
Iran. Iraq claimed that overproduction of petroleum by Kuwait was injuring
Iraq’s economy by depressing the price of crude oil. Iraqi troops invaded
Kuwait on August 2 and rapidly took over the country. The UN Security Council
issued a series of resolutions that condemned the occupation, imposed a broad
trade embargo on Iraq, and demanded that Iraq withdraw unconditionally by
January 15, 1991.
When Iraq failed to comply,
a coalition led by the United States began intensive aerial bombardment of
military and infrastructural targets in Iraq and Kuwait in January 1991. The
ensuing Persian Gulf War proved disastrous for Iraq, which was forced out of
Kuwait in about six weeks. Coalition forces invaded southern Iraq, and tens of
thousands of Iraqis were killed. Many of the country’s armored vehicles and
artillery pieces were destroyed, and its nuclear and chemical weapons
facilities were severely damaged.
In April, Iraq agreed to UN terms
for a permanent cease-fire; coalition troops withdrew from southern Iraq as a
UN peacekeeping force moved in to police the Iraq-Kuwait border. Meanwhile,
Hussein used his remaining military forces to suppress rebellions by Shia in
the south and Kurds in the north. Shia activists from the underground Da`wa
Party and the Supreme Council of the Islamic Revolution in Iraq overthrew the
Baath throughout the southern provinces. Although the United States had called
for Iraqis to rise up to overthrow Saddam Hussein, the U.S. military did not
intervene when he used helicopter gunships to put down the rebellion, killing
tens of thousands.
Hundreds of thousands of Kurdish
refugees fled to Turkey and Iran, and U.S., British, and French troops landed
inside Iraq’s northern border to establish a Kurdish enclave with refugee camps
to protect another 600,000 Kurds from Iraqi government reprisals. In addition,
international forces set up no-fly zones in both northern and southern Iraq to
ensure the safety of the Kurdish and Shia populations, although the Shia
continued to suffer from severe repression. In the 1990s most Iraqi Shia
followed the spiritual guidance of Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani. His rival,
Ayatollah Muhammad Sadiq al-Sadr, gained the allegiance of poor slum dwellers
and tribesmen, as he spread a puritanical version of Shiism not far removed
from that of Ayatollah Khomeini’s in Iran. Al-Sadr was assassinated by agents
of the Iraqi state in 1999, and was succeeded by his young son Muqtada.
In November 1994 Hussein signed a
decree formally accepting Kuwait’s sovereignty, political independence, and
territorial integrity. The decree effectively ended Iraq’s claim to Kuwait as a
province of Iraq.
G3
|
Kurdish Strife
|
In 1994 Iraq continued its
efforts to crush internal resistance with an economic embargo of the Kurdish-populated
north and a military campaign against Shia rebels in the southern marshlands.
The Shia were quickly subdued, but the crisis in the Kurdish region, which had
long suffered from internal rivalries, was prolonged. Kurds had often disputed
over land rights, and as their economic and political security deteriorated in
the early 1990s, the conflicts became more extreme. In the mid-1990s clashes
between the Patriotic Union of Kurdistān (PUK) and the Kurdistān Democratic
Party (KDP) led to a state of civil war.
In August 1996 leaders of the KDP
asked Hussein to intervene in the war. He sent at least 30,000 troops into the
Kurdish enclave protected by international forces, capturing the PUK stronghold
of Irbīl. The international forces decided to leave the enclave rather than
intervene in the dispute between rival Kurdish factions. The KDP was quickly
installed in power. The United States responded to Hussein’s incursion with two
missile strikes against southern Iraq, but the following month Iraq again
helped KDP fighters, this time taking the PUK stronghold of As Sulaymānīyah. By
1997 the KDP ruled most of northern Iraq.
In September 1998 the PUK and KDP
signed an agreement calling for the establishment of a joint regional
government. Although implementation of the agreement proceeded more slowly than
planned, it resulted in an end to the fighting between the two groups.
G4
|
Sanctions
|
A UN trade embargo remained
in place after the Persian Gulf War. The Security Council laid out strict
demands on Iraq for lifting the sanctions, including destruction of its
chemical and biological weapons, cessation of nuclear weapons programs, and
acceptance of international inspections to ensure that these conditions were
met. Iraq resisted these demands, claiming that its withdrawal from Kuwait was
sufficient compliance. UN weapons inspectors entered Iraq in mid-1991 and began
destroying chemical and biological weapons and production facilities in
mid-1992.
By the mid-1990s Iraq was
suffering an economic crisis. Prices were high, food and medicine shortages
were rampant, and the free-market (unofficial) exchange rate for the dinar was
in severe decline. Although the sanctions continued, in April 1995 the UN
Security Council voted unanimously to allow Iraq to sell limited amounts of oil
to meet its urgent humanitarian needs. Iraq initially rejected the plan but
then accepted it in 1996; it began to export oil at the end of that year. In
1998 the UN increased the amount of oil Iraq was allowed to sell, but Iraq was
unable to take full advantage of this increase because its production
capabilities had deteriorated under the sanctions.
G5
|
Weapons Inspections
|
Beginning in the late 1990s Iraq
increasingly faced the possibility of another military crisis. Iraq’s
interference with UN weapons inspectors almost led to punitive U.S. air strikes
against Iraq in early 1998, a step that was averted by a last-minute compromise
brokered by UN secretary general Kofi Annan. In December of that year, in
response to reports that Iraq was continuing to block inspections, the United
States and Britain pulled out the weapons inspectors and launched a four-day
series of air strikes on Iraqi military and industrial targets. In response,
Iraq declared that it would no longer comply with UN inspection teams. In the
following years, British and U.S. planes periodically struck Iraqi missile
launch sites and other targets.
Despite interference by Iraqi
authorities, UN weapons inspectors succeeded in destroying thousands of
chemical weapons, hundreds of missiles, and numerous weapon production
facilities before leaving Iraq in late 1998. But some inspectors believed that
Hussein still possessed many more chemical weapons, and expressed concerns that
Iraq had inadequately reported the scale of its biological weapons program and
stockpile. Other inspectors declared that 85 percent of the original stockpiles
had been destroyed.
G6
|
U.S. Invasion
|
In 2002 U.S. president George W.
Bush insisted that Iraq prove that it had disarmed as required under the terms
that ended the Persian Gulf War. In November 2002, after months of heightened
diplomatic pressure from the UN and military pressure from the United States,
Iraq accepted a UN resolution ordering the immediate return of weapons
inspectors to Iraq. In March 2003 UN weapons inspectors concluded with regard
to chemical and biological weapons, “No proscribed activities, or the result of
such activities from the period of 1998-2002 have, so far, been detected
through inspections.” The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) also
reported in early March that there was no sign of a renewed nuclear weapons
program. Hans Blix, who led the UN weapons inspection team, reported that Iraq
was not in full compliance with UN Security Council resolutions, but Blix asked
for more time to complete his mission. The United States objected to the
request for more time, arguing that Hussein had failed to comply fully with UN
resolutions since 1991. Earlier, in February 2003, President Bush had privately
told Spain’s prime minister José María Aznar that he had lost patience with the
UN and that U.S. forces would be in Baghdād by the end of March. The Bush
administration argued that Iraq was continuing to hide significant quantities
of banned chemical and biological weapons. Its efforts, however, to obtain UN
Security Council approval for military measures against Iraq were unsuccessful.
The United States, with the
support of Britain and several other nations, built up a military force in the
Persian Gulf in preparation for an invasion of Iraq. Other countries, including
France, Germany, and Russia, opposed military action, arguing that diplomacy
and inspections should be given more time to work. After the UN Security
Council failed to reach consensus regarding military action against Iraq,
U.S.-led forces invaded Iraq in March 2003 with the goals of removing Hussein
from power and destroying the country’s alleged stockpiles of banned weapons.
By mid-April U.S.-led forces had swept across southern Iraq, and Kurdish
forces, with the help of the U.S. military, had captured the major cities of
the north. Baghdād fell to U.S. forces in April. Hussein remained at large, but
was no longer in power. (In December 2003 U.S. forces captured Hussein at a
farm near Tikrīt. He was later put on trial and executed for crimes against
humanity.)
In the immediate aftermath of the
fall of Baghdād, widespread looting took place throughout the capital. Criminal
gangs broke into government offices, stealing equipment and setting fires. The
Iraq Museum, which housed priceless artifacts from early Mesopotamian culture,
was extensively looted. Although U.S. forces guarded the building of the Oil
Ministry, they did nothing to intervene against the general looting. As a
result of the criminal anarchy that ensued, many Iraqis became disillusioned
early on with the U.S. occupation.
In addition, U.S. forces were
stretched thin throughout Iraq because of the limited number of troops taking
part in the invasion. U.S. generals had recommended a large invasion force of
about 400,000 troops, rather than the 160,000 troops that were eventually
deployed. As a result, numerous weapons caches throughout the country were left
unguarded and ultimately fell into the hands of insurgents.
H
|
Post-Hussein Iraq
|
After U.S. president George Bush
declared an end to major combat operations on May 1, the United States and its
allies established the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA), headed by U.S.
administrator L. Paul Bremer III. The CPA undertook a number of sweeping
measures that later proved extremely controversial. Bremer ordered the
disbandment of the Iraqi army, which left hundreds of thousands of Iraqis
unemployed and angry. He also refused to hire even low-ranking members of the
Baath Party, even though they represented Iraq’s most experienced
administrators. Many had joined the Baath Party to keep or obtain jobs with the
government, rather than for ideological reasons. The CPA’s inclination to
privatize state-run industries also created concern among many Iraqis.
The CPA soon established a
25-member Iraqi governing council, with seats distributed among the country’s
different religious and ethnic groups as well as existing political organizations.
The council was heavily weighted toward Shia and Kurdish representatives and
did not include any representatives from the former Baath Party. Many council
members were exiles, including some who had been exiled in Iran, who returned
to Iraq following the downfall of the Hussein regime. Bremer’s plan to appoint
a committee to draft a permanent constitution for Iraq was derailed by a legal
ruling (fatwa) from Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, who insisted that the
country’s charter be drafted by delegates elected by the Iraqi people. The
young cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, the son of Muhammad Sadiq al-Sadr, took an even
harder line, mounting continual demonstrations demanding immediate U.S.
withdrawal of its troops and organizing his youth cadres into a militia called
the Mahdi Army.
The interim governing council was
charged with drafting a new constitution that would pave the way for elections
and a new Iraqi government. Coalition forces and Iraqis who cooperated with
them faced persistent guerrilla resistance in the form of sniper attacks and
roadside bombs directed against coalition troops, and also terrorist bombings
directed against civilians. One such suicide bomb destroyed the UN’s Baghdād
headquarters on August 19, 2003, killing Sergio Vieira de Mello, the UN
secretary general’s special representative in Iraq, and 21 others. On August
29, a huge blast in the Shiite holy city of An Najaf killed Muhammad Baqir
al-Hakim, leader of the Supreme Council of the Islamic Revolution in Iraq
(SCIRI). Many of SCIRI’s leaders had returned from exile in Iran, where they
escaped the repression of Saddam Hussein’s government, and they emerged as a
major force in Shia politics.
A U.S. team known as the
Iraq Survey Group, charged with surveying Iraq’s weapons stockpiles and
programs, released an interim report in October stating that it had failed to
find any weapons of mass destruction (WMD) in Iraq. The team said it had found
evidence of illegal activities related to WMD programs but could not find any
buildings or other facilities used in an ongoing way to produce weapons of mass
destruction. The team’s leader, David Kay, resigned from the Survey Group in
January 2004, saying U.S. intelligence agencies were probably wrong about Iraq
possessing weapons of mass destruction. However, Kay suggested that in view of
the chaos in Hussein's government, the danger existed that if Iraq ever did
develop weapons of mass destruction, individual scientists or military officers
might furnish such weapons to terrorists.
H1
|
Interim Constitution
|
The U.S. administration of Iraq faced
so much resistance from Sunni Arab guerrillas and from Shiite parties that by
fall of 2003 it was clear that it could not hope to continue. Bremer’s plan,
announced November 15, 2003, to hold elections for an Iraqi parliament and
transfer sovereignty to it by July 1, 2004, ran into opposition from Grand
Ayatollah al-Sistani. Bremer had wanted the U.S.-installed provincial council
members to elect the parliament. Sistani insisted on a one-person, one-vote
open election, and wanted United Nations involvement in midwifing the new
state. The Bush administration gave in to Sistani’s demands after he called out
large street demonstrations in January 2004, but postponed the elections until
early 2005.
In March 2004 the Iraqi
governing council approved an interim constitution, or transitional
administrative law (TAL), for Iraq. The temporary constitution included a bill
of rights, guaranteeing individual rights of free speech and freedom of
religion. Islamic fundamentalists rejected the TAL, however, because it was
drafted under foreign occupation and because it failed to declare that Islamic
law is the only source of legislation. More moderate Muslim leaders, such as
Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani and other senior Shia clerics, objected to
portions of the transitional law that allowed a large minority group, such as
the Kurds, to have veto power over government decisions and a permanent
constitution.
H2
|
Violent Insurgency
|
In March 2004 terrorist bombings
in Karbalā’ and Baghdād killed more than 100 Iraqis and wounded hundreds more,
including Shia Muslims who were commemorating the martyrdom of Imam Hussein,
who died in 680 ad, on the holy
day of Ashura. The perpetrators were widely believed to be supporters of
al-Qaeda. From April 2003 to March 2004, about 90 percent of the attacks
against coalition and Iraqi security forces were carried out in the region
north and west of Baghdād known as the Sunni Arab triangle. The Kurdish zone in
northern Iraq was largely peaceful, with the exception of the ethnically
divided oil province of Kirkūk. Southern Iraq, where mostly Shia Muslims live,
saw increased organization of militias attached to religious parties. Although
they often established order, they also imposed puritan standards, closing
video and liquor shops and banning musical performance.
April 2004 proved to be a
particularly bloody month. In late March 2004, Sunni Arab guerrillas in the
city of Al Fallūjah killed four private security guards, three of them
Americans and one a South African, and a jubilant crowd mutilated their bodies.
Coalition forces responded by surrounding the city of Al Fallūjah and calling
for the arrest of those responsible for the contractors’ deaths. An invasion of
the city began, but heavy bombardment and initial fighting resulted in some 600
dead, many of them civilians. Members of the interim governing council
threatened to resign if the action was not stopped, and a hue and cry broke out
among the Iraqi public. The United States withdrew its military forces and
attempted to have city elders and ex-Baath officers restore calm.
Earlier, on March 27, U.S. forces
closed a newspaper aligned with radical Shia Muslim cleric Muqtada al-Sadr for
printing news stories that blamed the United States for a rocket attack on a
Shia shrine in the Baghdād suburb of Kadhimiyah. The closure sparked protest
demonstrations, including some minor violence. The CPA then issued arrest
warrants against Sadr and one of his aides, signed by an Iraqi judge, accusing
the two men of the murder of Ayatollah Abd al-Majid Kho’i in April 2003.
Sadr eluded arrest and then
launched a widespread uprising to underline that he would not go quietly. His
militiamen took control of police stations in East Baghdād, as well as of
Shiite cities in the south, including the holy cities of An Najaf and Karbalā’.
In response, coalition forces laid siege to both towns. By the end of the
month, U.S. military commanders estimated that they had killed 1,000 Mahdi Army
militiamen and lost 131 troops, the highest death toll for any single month in
the conflict up to that point. The Associated Press and The Brookings
Institution reported that 1,361 Iraqis, including civilians, insurgents, and
Iraqi security forces, were killed during the fighting in April, which was
concentrated in central and southern Iraq and the area around Al Fallūjah.
Sistani brokered a truce in late May between the United States and Sadr’s
forces. Sadr’s Mahdi Army was finally expelled from An Najaf by U.S. marines
and by civil demonstrations called for by Sistani in late August 2004.
Thereafter Sadr turned to civil politics, under pressure from Sistani and other
Shiite leaders. In late 2004, following the U.S. presidential election won by
Bush, U.S. forces returned to Al Fallūjah and laid siege to the city. An
estimated 1,200 insurgents and more than 50 U.S. soldiers died during the
three-week operation, which destroyed large parts of the city and displaced
most of the city’s population of more than 200,000 people.
Estimates of the number of Iraqi
civilians killed since the war began have varied widely, and no official count
has been undertaken. The British-based Iraq Body Count, which bases its
casualty figures on media reports, put the number of dead Iraqi civilians at
between approximately 28,000 and 31,000 at the end of 2005. Many of the deaths
derived from U.S. military action against guerrillas, which produced
“collateral damage,” as well as from guerrilla attacks on Iraqi police and
civilians. The Iraqi Ministry of Health estimated that from April to September
of 2004, coalition military forces killed twice as many Iraqis, including
civilians, as did guerrilla action. But the armed resistance to the new order also
was responsible for large numbers of deaths. The Iraq Interior Ministry
estimated that 8,175 Iraqi civilians and police officers were killed by
insurgents from August 2004 to May 2005.
H3
|
Transition to Iraqi Sovereignty
|
On June 1, 2004, the Iraqi
governing council announced the formation of a new interim government and
dissolved itself. This new government was led by an ex-Baathist secularist
named Iyad Allawi and a Sunni Muslim president, Sheik Ghazi al-Yawar, with a
charge to prepare for the scheduled January 30, 2005, elections. On June 28
Bremer dissolved the Coalition Provisional Authority, formally transferred
sovereignty to the new Iraqi government, and left the country. However,
coalition military forces remained in place in Iraq.
General elections to select a
transitional Iraqi National Assembly were held at the end of January 2005. A
Shia coalition, backed by Grand Ayatollah al-Sistani and including the Da`wa
Party and the Supreme Council of the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI, which
was later renamed the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq, or ISCI), won 51 percent
of the vote, followed by the Kurdistān Alliance (a coalition of the Kurdistān
Democratic Party and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistān) with 26 percent and
interim prime minister Allawi’s political group with 14 percent. About 58
percent of registered Iraqi voters participated in the election, which was
boycotted by most of the nation’s Sunnis. Sunni Arabs had only 17 seats in the
275-member parliament, although they represent about 20 percent of the
population. In April the National Assembly selected Kurdish leader Jalal
Talabani as Iraq’s new president, and Talabani named Shia leader Ibrahim
al-Jaafari the country’s new prime minister. The ruling United Iraqi Alliance
(UIA), a coalition of mainly fundamentalist Shia parties including SCIRI,
established warm relations with the clerical regime in Iran. The Shiite
religious parties also won control of 11 of Iraq’s provincial governments,
including Baghdād.
In the summer of 2005, a
parliamentary committee finalized the language of a permanent constitution. Although
extra Sunni Arab members were appointed to the committee, they were largely
marginalized. The resulting document said that Islam is the religion of state,
that the civil parliament may pass no legislation contrary to the established
rules of Islam, and that Iraqis may opt to be judged by their religious
community’s canon law in matters of personal status. At the same time, the
document guaranteed a variety of civil liberties.
On December 15, Iraq held
yet another parliamentary election. Turnout was high, and this time the Sunni
Arab population voted in some numbers. Despite predictions that the secular
list of former interim prime minister Iyad Allawi would do well, the Shiite
religious coalition—the UIA—again gained the largest single bloc of seats, with
128 out of 275. This time the UIA was joined by the Muqtada al-Sadr faction,
which gained a large numbers of seats. Kurds again supported the Kurdistān
Alliance, which gained 53 seats. A Kurdish Muslim religious party won 5 seats
and said it would vote with the other Kurds, giving them 58 seats altogether.
The Kurds were the only group to vote primarily for secular parties. The
attempt of secular parties to appeal across religious and ethnic boundaries was
roundly rebuffed by voters.
H4
|
Increased Sectarian Violence
|
The UIA-led coalition selected Nouri
Kamal al-Maliki of the Da`Wa Party as prime minister of Iraq. During 2006
al-Maliki faced numerous crises, including increased sectarian violence that
brought Iraq to the brink of all-out civil war. In particular the February 2006
bombing by suspected Sunni insurgents of the Askariyah Shrine in Sāmarrā, one
of Shia Islam’s holiest sites, set off a wave of intense violence as Shia
militias retaliated against Sunnis, including attacks on dozens of Sunni
mosques. But sectarian violence pitted not just Sunnis against Shias. Shia
militias also clashed with each other, including battles in southern Iraq
between the SCIRI-commanded Badr Corps and the Mahdi Army organized by al-Sadr.
Bombings and other attacks carried out by Sunni insurgents targeted the Iraqi
army and police, while the Shia-led Iraq Interior Ministry was accused of
widespread human rights violations, including torture and mass executions of
Sunni Muslims. Shia-organized death squads reportedly killed thousands of
Sunnis suspected of involvement in the insurgency.
The effectiveness of an
organization known as Al-Qaeda in Iraq, which did not exist prior to the U.S.
invasion and probably did not have any actual ties to the al-Qaeda of Osama bin
Laden, was curtailed to some extent by the killing of its leader, Abu Musab
al-Zarqawi, in June 2006. Nevertheless, the carnage in Iraq became so severe
that an epidemiological study conducted by researchers at Johns Hopkins
University, based on a cluster survey carried out by Iraqi physicians,
concluded that more than 600,000 Iraqis had died as a result of violence since
the U.S.-British invasion of 2003. The finding was controversial, however, and
was disputed by other sources. Iraq’s Health Ministry in 2006 put the total
number of civilians killed by violence at 100,000 to 150,000, but this survey
reportedly did not include Sunni deaths. In early 2008 the World Health
Organization and the Iraq Health Ministry in a study published in the New
England Journal of Medicine estimated that 151,000 Iraqis, both civilians
and fighters, died violently from March 2003 to June 2006. The study was
reportedly the largest to date, based on a survey of 10,000 Iraqi households.
Juan Cole reviewed the History
section of this article.
Contributed By:
Wajeeh Elali
Reviewed By:
Juan Cole
Microsoft
® Encarta ® 2009.
© 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
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