Iraq
WORLD WAR I AND THE BRITISH MANDATE
By the beginning of
the twentieth century, the Ottoman territories had become the
focus of European power politics. During the previous century,
enfeebled Ottoman rule had invited intense competition among European
powers for commercial benefits and for spheres of influence. British
interest in Iraq significantly increased when the Ottomans granted
concessions to Germany to construct railroad lines from Konya
in southwest Turkey to Baghdad in 1899 and from Baghdad to Basra
in 1902. The British feared that a hostile German presence in
the Fertile Crescent would threaten vital lines of communication
to India via Iran and Afghanistan, menacing British oil interests
in Iran and perhaps even India itself.
In 1914 when the British discovered that Turkey was entering
the war on the side of the Germans, British forces from India
landed at Al Faw on the Shatt al Arab and moved rapidly toward
Basra. By the fall of 1915, when British forces were already well
established in towns in the south, General Charles Townshend unsuccessfully
attempted to take Baghdad. In retaliation, the Turks besieged
the British garrison at Al Kut for 140 days; in April 1916, the
garrison was forced to surrender unconditionally. The British
quickly regrouped their forces, however, and resumed their advance
under General Stanley Maude in December 1916. By March 1917 the
British had captured Baghdad. Advancing northward in the spring
of 1918, the British finally took Mosul in early November. As
a result of the victory at Mosul, British authority was extended
to all the Iraqi wilayat (sing., wilayah-province)
with the exception of the Kurdish highlands bordering Turkey and
Iran, the land alongside the Euphrates from Baghdad south to An
Nasiriyah, and the Shia cities of Karbala and An Najaf.
On capturing Baghdad, General Maude proclaimed that Britain intended
to return to Iraq some control of its own affairs. He stressed
that this step would pave the way for ending the alien rule that
the Iraqis had experienced since the latter days of the Abbasid
caliphate. The proclamation was in accordance with the encouragement
the British had given to Arab nationalists, such as Jafar al Askari;
his brother-in-law, Nuri as Said; and Jamil al Midfai, who sought
emancipation from Ottoman rule. The nationa- lists had supported
the Allied powers in expectation of both the Ottoman defeat and
the freedom many nationalists assumed would come with an Allied
victory.
During the war, events in Iraq were greatly influenced by the
Hashimite family of Husayn ibn Ali, sharif of Mecca, who claimed
descent from the family of the Prophet Muhammad. Aspiring to become
king of an independent Arab kingdom, Husayn had broken with the
Ottomans, to whom he had been vassal, and had thrown in his lot
with the British. Anxious for his support, the British gave Husayn
reason to believe that he would have their endorsement when the
war ended. Accordingly, Husayn and his sons led the June 1916
Arab Revolt, marching northward in conjunction with the British
into Transjordan, Palestine, and Syria.
Anticipating the fulfillment of Allied pledges, Husayn's son,
Prince Faisal (who was later to become modern Iraq's first king),
arrived in Paris in 1919 as the chief spokesman for the Arab cause.
Much to his disappointment, Faisal found that the Allied powers
were less than enthusiastic about Arab independence.
At the 1919 Paris Peace Conference, under Article 22 of the League
of Nations Covenant, Iraq was formally made a Class A mandate
entrusted to Britain. This award was completed on April 25, 1920,
at the San Remo Conference in Italy. Palestine also was placed
under British mandate, and Syria was placed under French mandate.
Faisal, who had been proclaimed king of Syria by a Syrian national
congress in Damascus in March 1920, was ejected by the French
in July of the same year.
The civil government of postwar Iraq was headed originally by
the high commissioner, Sir Percy Cox, and his deputy, Colonel
Arnold Talbot Wilson. The British were confronted with Iraq's
age-old problems, compounded by some new ones. Villagers demanded
that the tribes be restrained, and tribes demanded that their
titles to tribal territories be extended and confirmed. Merchants
demanded more effective legal procedures, courts, and laws to
protect their activities and interests. Municipal authorities
appealed for defined powers and grants-in-aid in addition to the
establishment of public health and education facilities. Landlords
pressed for grants of land, for the building of canals and roads,
and for the provision of tested seeds and livestock.
The holy cities of An Najaf and Karbala and their satellite tribes
were in a state of near anarchy. British reprisals after the murder
of a British officer in An Najaf failed to restore order. The
Anayzah, the Shammar, and the Jubur tribes of the western desert
were beset by violent infighting. British adminis- tration had
yet to be established in the mountains of Kurdistan. Meanwhile,
from the Hakkari Mountains beyond Iraq's northern frontier and
from the plains of Urmia in Iran, thousands of Assyrians began
to pour into Iraqi territory seeking refuge from Turkish savagery.
The most striking problem facing the British was the growing anger
of the nationalists, who felt betrayed at being accorded mandate
status. The nationalists soon came to view the mandate as a flimsy
disguise for colonialism. The experienced Cox delegated governance
of the country to Wilson while he served in Persia between April
1918 and October 1920. The younger man governed Iraq with the
kind of paternalism that had characterized British rule in India.
Impatient to establish an efficient administration, Wilson used
experienced Indians to staff subordinate positions within his
administration. The exclusion of Iraqis from administrative posts
added humiliation to Iraqi discontent.
Three important anticolonial secret societies had been formed
in Iraq during 1918 and 1919. At An Najaf, Jamiyat an Nahda al
Islamiya (The League of the Islamic Awakening) was organized;
its numerous and varied members included ulama (religious leaders),
journalists, landlords, and tribal leaders. Members of the Jamiyat
assassinated a British officer in the hope that the killing would
act as a catalyst for a general rebellion at Iraq's other holy
city, Karbala. Al Jamiya al Wataniya al Islamiya (The Muslim National
League) was formed with the object of organizing and mobilizing
the population for major resistance. In February 1919, in Baghdad,
a coalition of Shia merchants, Sunni teachers and civil servants,
Sunni and Shia ulama, and Iraqi officers formed the Haras al Istiqlal
(The Guardians of Independence). The Istiqlal had member groups
in Karbala, An Najaf, Al Kut, and Al Hillah.
Local outbreaks against British rule had occurred even before
the news reached Iraq that the country had been given only mandate
status. Upon the death of an important Shia mujtahid
(religious scholar) in early May 1920, Sunni and Shia ulama temporarily
put aside their differences as the memorial services metamorphosed
into political rallies. Ramadan, the Islamic month of fasting,
began later in that month; once again, through nationalistic poetry
and oratory, religious leaders exhorted the people to throw off
the bonds of imperialism. Violent demonstrations and strikes followed
the British arrest of several leaders.
When the news of the mandate reached Iraq in late May, a group
of Iraqi delegates met with Wilson and demanded independence.
Wilson dismissed them as a "handful of ungrateful politicians."
Nationalist political activity was stepped up, and the grand mujtahid
of Karbala, Imam Shirazi, and his son, Mirza Muhammad Riza, began
to organize the effort in earnest. Arab flags were made and distributed,
and pamphlets were handed out urging the tribes to prepare for
revolt. Muhammad Riza acted as liaison among insurgents in An
Najaf and in Karbala, and the tribal confederations. Shirazi then
issued a fatwa (religious ruling), pointing out that
it was against Islamic law for Muslims to countenance being ruled
by non-Muslims, and he called for a jihad against the British.
By July 1920, Mosul was in rebellion against British rule, and
the insurrection moved south down the Euphrates River valley.
The southern tribes, who cherished their long-held political autonomy,
needed little inducement to join in the fray. They did not cooperate
in an organized effort against the British, however, which limited
the effect of the revolt. The country was in a state of anarchy
for three months; the British restored order only with great difficulty
and with the assistance of Royal Air Force bombers. British forces
were obliged to send for reinforcements from India and from Iran.
Ath Thawra al Iraqiyya al Kubra, or The Great Iraqi Revolution
(as the 1920 rebellion is called), was a watershed event in contemporary
Iraqi history. For the first time, Sunnis and Shias, tribes and
cities, were brought together in a common effort. In the opinion
of Hanna Batatu, author of a seminal work on Iraq, the building
of a nation-state in Iraq depended upon two major factors: the
integration of Shias and Sunnis into the new body politic and
the successful resolution of the age-old conflicts between the
tribes and the riverine cities and among the tribes themselves
over the food-producing flatlands of the Tigris and the Euphrates.
The 1920 rebellion brought these groups together, if only briefly;
this constituted an important first step in the long and arduous
process of forging a nation-state out of Iraq's conflict-ridden
social structure.
The 1920 revolt had been very costly to the British in both manpower
and money. Whitehall was under domestic pressure to devise a formula
that would provide the maximum control over Iraq at the least
cost to the British taxpayer. The British replaced the military
regime with a provisional Arab government, assisted by British
advisers and answerable to the supreme authority of the high commissioner
for Iraq, Cox. The new administration provided a channel of communication
between the British and the restive population, and it gave Iraqi
leaders an opportunity to prepare for eventual self-government.
The provisional government was aided by the large number of trained
Iraqi administrators who returned home when the French ejected
Faisal from Syria. Like earlier Iraqi governments, however, the
provisional government was composed chiefly of Sunni Arabs; once
again the Shias were underrepresented.
At the Cairo Conference of 1921, the British set the parameters
for Iraqi political life that were to continue until the 1958
revolution; they chose Faisal as Iraq's first King; they established
an indigenous Iraqi army; and they proposed a new treaty. To confirm
Faisal as Iraq's first monarch, a one-question plebiscite was
carefully arranged that had a return of 96 percent in his favor.
The British saw in Faisal a leader who possessed sufficient nationalist
and Islamic credentials to have broad appeal, but who also was
vulnerable enough to remain dependent on their support. Faisal
traced his descent from the family of the Prophet Muhammad, and
his ancestors had held political authority in the holy cities
of Mecca and Medina since the tenth century. The British believed
that these credentials would satisfy traditional Arab standards
of political legitimacy; moreover, the British thought that Faisal
would be accepted by the growing Iraqi nationalist movement because
of his role in the 1916 revolt against the Turks, his achievements
as a leader of the Arab emancipation movement, and his general
leadership qualities.
As a counterforce to the nationalistic inclinations of the monarchy
and as a means of insuring the king's dependence, the British
cultivated the tribal shaykhs, whose power had been waning since
the end of the nineteenth century. While the new king sought to
create a national consciousness, to strengthen the institutions
of the emerging state, and especially to create a national military,
the tribal shaykhs supported a fragmented community and sought
to weaken the coercive power of the state. A major goal of the
British policy was to keep the monarchy stronger than any one
tribe but weaker than a coalition of tribes so that British power
would ultimately be decisive in arbitrating disputes between the
two.
Ultimately, the British-created monarchy suffered from a chronic
legitimacy crisis: the concept of a monarchy was alien to Iraq.
Despite his Islamic and pan-Arab credentials, Faisal was not an
Iraqi, and, no matter how effectively he ruled, Iraqis saw the
monarchy as a British creation. The continuing inability of the
government to gain the confidence of the people fueled political
instability well into the 1970s.
The British decision at the Cairo Conference to establish an
indigenous Iraqi army was significant. In Iraq, as in most of
the developing world, the military establishment has been the
best organized institution in an otherwise weak political system.
Thus, while Iraq's body politic crumbled under immense political
and economic pressure throughout the monarchic period, the military
gained increasing power and influence; moreover, because the officers
in the new army were by necessity Sunnis who had served under
the Ottomans, while the lower ranks were predominantly filled
by Shia tribal elements, Sunni dominance in the military was preserved.
The final major decision taken at the Cairo Conference related
to the new Anglo-Iraqi Treaty. Faisal was under pressure from
the nationalists and the anti-British mujtahids of An
Najaf and Karbala to limit both British influence in Iraq and
the duration of the treaty. Recognizing that the monarchy depended
on British support--and wishing to avoid a repetition of his experience
in Syria--Faisal maintained a moderate approach in dealing with
Britain. The twenty-year treaty, which was ratified in October
1922, stated that the king would heed British advice on all matters
affecting British interests and on fiscal policy as long as Iraq
was in debt to Britain, and that British officials would be appointed
to specified posts in eighteen departments to act as advisers
and inspectors. A subsequent financial agreement, which significantly
increased the financial burden on Iraq, required Iraq to pay half
the cost of supporting British resident officials, among other
expenses. British obligations under the new treaty included providing
various kinds of aid, notably military assistance, and proposing
Iraq for membership in the League of Nations at the earliest moment.
In effect, the treaty ensured that Iraq would remain politically
and economically dependent on Britain. While unable to prevent
the treaty, Faisal clearly felt that the British had gone back
on their promises to him.
After the treaty had been signed, Iraq readied itself for the
country-wide elections that had been provided for in the May 1922
Electoral Law. There were important changes in the government
at this time. Cox resigned his position as high commissioner and
was replaced by Sir Henry Dobbs; Iraq's aging prime minister,
Abd ar Rahman al Gailani, stepped down and was replaced by Abd
al Muhsin as Saadun. In April 1923, Saadun signed a protocol that
shortened the treaty period to four years. As a result of the
elections, however, Saadun was replaced by Jafar al Askari, a
veteran of the Arab Revolt and an early supporter of Faisal.
The elected Constituent Assembly met for the first time in March
1924, and it formally ratified the treaty despite strong (and
sometimes physical) opposition on the part of many in the assembly.
The assembly also accepted the Organic Law that declared Iraq
to be a sovereign state with a representative system of government
and a hereditary constitutional monarchy. The newly ratified constitution--
which, along with the treaty, had been hotly debated--legislated
an important British role in Iraqi affairs. The major issue at
stake in the constitutional debate revolved around the powers
of the monarchy. In the final draft, British interests prevailed,
and the monarchy was granted wide-ranging powers that included
the right to confirm all laws, to call for a general election,
to prorogue parliament, and to issue ordinances for the fulfillment
of treaty obligations without parliamentary sanctions. Like the
treaty, the constitution provided the British with a means of
indirect control in Iraq.
After the Anglo-Iraqi Treaty was ratified, the most pressing
issue confronting the newly established constitutional monarchy
was the question of boundaries, especially in the former Ottoman
wilayah of Mosul, now known as Mosul Province. The status
of Mosul Province was complicated by two factors, the British
desire to gain oil concessions and the existence of a majority
Kurdish population that was seeking independence apart from either
Iraq or Turkey. According to the Treaty of Sevres, concluded in
1920 with the Ottoman Sultan, Mosul was to be part of an autonomous
Kurdish state. The treaty was scrapped, however, when nationalist
leader Mustafa Kamal (1881-1938--also known as Atatόrk) came to
power in Turkey and established control over the Kurdish areas
in eastern Turkey. In 1923, after two failed British attempts
to establish an autonomous Kurdish province, London decided to
include the Kurds in the new Iraqi state with the proviso that
Kurds would hold government positions in Kurdish areas and that
the Kurdish language would be preserved. The British decision
to include Mosul in Iraq was based largely on their belief that
the area contained large oil deposits.
Before the collapse of the Ottoman Empire, the British- controlled
Turkish Petroleum Company (TPC) had held concessionary rights
to the Mosul wilayah. Under the 1916 Sykes-Picot Agreement--an
agreement in 1916 between Britain and France that delineated future
control of the Middle East--the area would have fallen under French
influence. In 1919, however, the French relinquished their claims
to Mosul under the terms of the Long- Berenger Agreement. The
1919 agreement granted the French a 25 percent share in the TPC
as compensation.
Beginning in 1923, British and Iraqi negotiators held acrimonious
discussions over the new oil concession. The major obstacle was
Iraq's insistence on a 20 percent equity participation in the
company; this figure had been included in the original TPC concession
to the Turks and had been agreed upon at San Remo for the Iraqis.
In the end, despite strong nationalist sentiments against the
concession agreement, the Iraqi negotiators acquiesced to it.
The League of Nations was soon to vote on the disposition of Mosul,
and the Iraqis feared that, without British support, Iraq would
lose the area to Turkey. In March 1925, an agreement was concluded
that contained none of the Iraqi demands. The TPC, now renamed
the Iraq Petroleum Company (IPC), was granted a concession for
a period of seventy-five years.
In 1925 the League of Nations decided that Mosul Province would
be considered a part of Iraq, but it also suggested that the Anglo-Iraqi
Treaty be extended from four to twenty-five years as a protection
for the Kurdish minority, who intensely distrusted the Iraqi government.
The Iraqis also were to give due regard to Kurdish sensibilities
in matters of culture and of language. Although reluctant to do
so, the Iraqi assembly ratified the treaty in January 1926. Turkey
was eventually reconciled to the loss by being promised one-tenth
of any oil revenues that might accrue in the area, and a tripartite
Anglo-Turco-Iraqi treaty was signed in July 1926. This settlement
was to have important repercussions, both positive and negative,
for the future of Iraq. Vast oil revenues would accrue from the
Mosul Province, but the inclusion of a large number of well-armed
and restless Kurds in Iraqi territory would continue to plague
Iraqi governments.
With the signing of the Anglo-Iraqi Treaty and the settling of
the Mosul question, Iraqi politics took on a new dynamic. The
emerging class of Sunni and Shia landowning tribal shaykhs vied
for positions of power with wealthy and prestigious urban-based
Sunni families and with Ottoman-trained army officers and bureaucrats.
Because Iraq's newly established political institutions were the
creation of a foreign power, and because the concept of democratic
government had no precedent in Iraqi history, the politicians
in Baghdad lacked legitimacy and never developed deeply rooted
constituencies. Thus, despite a constitution and an elected assembly,
Iraqi politics was more a shifting alliance of important personalities
and cliques than a democracy in the Western sense. The absence
of broadly based political institutions inhibited the early nationalist
movement's ability to make deep inroads into Iraq's diverse social
structure. Thus, despite the widely felt resentment at Iraq's
mandate status, the burgeoning nationalist movement was largely
ineffective.
Nonetheless, through the late 1920s, the nationalists persisted
in opposing the Anglo-Iraqi Treaty and in demanding independence.
A treaty more favorable to the Iraqis was presented in December
1927. It remained unratified, however, because of nationalist
demands for an unconditional promise of independence. This promise
eventually was made by the new high commissioner, Sir Gilbert
Clayton, in 1929, but the confusion occasioned by the sudden death
of Clayton and by the suicide of Abd al Muhsin as Saadun, the
most powerful Iraqi advocate of the treaty, delayed the writing
of a new treaty. In June 1929, the nationalists received their
first positive response from London when a newly elected Labour
Party government announced its intention to support Iraq's admission
to the League of Nations in 1932 and to negotiate a new treaty
recognizing Iraq's independence.
Faisal's closest adviser (and soon-to-be Iraqi strongman), Nuri
as Said, carried out the treaty negotiations. Despite widespread
opposition, Nuri as Said was able to force the treaty through
parliament. The new Anglo-Iraqi Treaty was signed in June 1930.
It provided for a "close alliance," for "full and frank consultations
between the two countries in all matters of foreign policy," and
for mutual assistance in case of war. Iraq granted the British
the use of air bases near Basra and at Al Habbaniyah and the right
to move troops across the country. The treaty, of twenty-five
years' duration, was to come into force upon Iraq's admission
to the League of Nations. The terms of the treaty gained Nuri
as Said favor in British eyes but discredited him in the eyes
of the Iraqi nationalists, who vehemently opposed its lengthy
duration and the leasing of air bases. The Kurds and the Assyrians
also opposed the treaty because it offered no guarantees for their
status in the new country.
Data as of May 1988
|