Title: From Constitutional Monarchy to Authoritarian State:
1From Constitutional Monarchy to Authoritarian
State
2Iraqi Politics, Phase II
- The rise of the military the creation of the
Iraqi Republic (1936-1968)
3Iraqi Politics, Phase II
- Divisions within the state
- The fading monarchy
- Revolving Prime Ministry
- The Rise of the Army
- Seven military coups 1936-1941
- Expansion of political elites
- The Iraqi Communist Party (1935)
- Only Iraqi political organization with real
grassroots organization - The Baath (Resurrection) Party (1952)
- Unity, Freedom, Socialism
- Arab nationalist, secular, Arab socialist,
anti-imperialist, populist, revolutionary (not
reformist)
- Militarism Political Violence
- British occupy Iraq 1941
- Increasing authoritarianism
- Pan-Arabism vs the monarchy
41958 Revolution
- Violent overthrow of the monarchy
- Creation of the Republic of Iraq
- Ceremonial president
- Qasim as PM, commander in chief, minister of
defense - Reform Dictatorship under President Abd
al-Karim Qasim - Purging of western advisors, efforts to solve
Kurdish problem, land reform, public welfare
projects - Centralization of authority
Abd al Karim Qasim, President of Iraq, 1958-1963
- 1963 military coup (Baath Army)
- Qasim killed
5Results
- Violence becomes entrenched part of Iraqi
political culture - Army influence over politics prevents civilian
access, impedes societal coalition building - Between 1958 and 1968 more than 10 coups and
attempted coups, two armed rebellions,
semicontinuous civil war against Kurds. - 25-35 of all cabinet posts held by military men
- Three presidents, most PMs, and almost all
ministers of interior and defense were
ex-military men - Newly independent foreign policy
- Some land reforms sporadic inclusion of Shiites
Kurds into the political process
6Major Players in Iraqi Politics, 1936-1968
7Â Phase IIISTATE OVER SOCIETY
- Iraq as a One Party State The Baath Party and
the Authoritarian Rule of Saddam Hussein,
1968-2003
8Two coups 1963 and 1968
- 1963 Baath Party Military (Arif)
- Baath forced out of the new govt after the coup
- 1968 Baath Party coup
- Reasons for coups
- pan-Arabism vs Iraqi nationalism
- Patronage
- Those who dominate the state dominate access to
resources - Military seeks to maintain control over political
process - Lack of leadership linked to preoccupation with
managing the dispersal of the states resources
9The rise and rule of Saddam Hussein
- Biography
- DOB 04/28/37 in Tikrit, 100 m. north of Baghdad
- Peasant family with influential army relatives
- most prominent Uncle Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr a
leader of the 1963 coup and later PM. - Tribal society al-Bejat clan, Albu Nasir Tribe
- Â high school in Baghdad joined Baath Party when
20, aided in failed assassination of Qasim in
Oct. 1959. Â
Saddam Husseins identity card, when he was 10
years old. Photo PBS Frontline website
10- After 1963 coup becomes vice chair of the RCC
(main decisionmaking body for the Baath regime).
Also in charge of the security services. - Becomes president in 1979 when al-Bakr was
persuaded to step down.
Above left, SH in Cairo after failed 59 coup
above, SH at 17.
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12Points to note about S. Hussein
- Ruled through fear as well as charm and
brilliant tactical maneuvering. - Â Was able to seize 4 main centers of power in
Iraq- army, party, tribe, security services - Â His rise highlights the paradox of Iraq
politics on the one hand, a huge and elaborate
bureaucracy. On the other, real power centered on
select few linked to SH through bonds of kinship
or a history of personal trust. -
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14Single-Party Oligarchy
- Baath consolidation of power, 68-79
15Regime consolidation within the state
- a. internal purging, sentencing and public
executions of any suspected political dissidents.
- Between 1968-1970, 86 official executions.
- Saddam Hussein and the Night of Long Knives
(July 1979). - Purging of Rev. Command Council of all possible
challengers to SH. A quarter of the RCCs
membership (five out of 20) were tortured and
murdered along with another 16 Baath leaders.
Around 500 senior party members killed. - Army brought under Baath controlÂ
- new elevation of particular social groups
- Tribes, Tikritis
16Regime consolidation within society
- a. Penetration of the Baath Party into all parts
of social and political life- womens groups,
labor unions, student federations. Â - b. Substantial economic and political reforms in
the 1970s - 1972 nationalization of the Iraqi Petroleum
Company (consortium of several foreign-owned
companies) VERY popular and soon began bringing
the new regime significant new funds.
17Resistance
- Kurds open war 1970-1975, with backing of Iran
- Shiites- formation of secret, clerically led
groups - antigovernment demonstrations in the late 1970s
arrest and execution of prominent Shiite leaders
18Autocracy
- How Saddam Hussein the Baath maintained power,
1968-1991
191. Oil
- Nationalization of the Iraq Petroleum Company in
1972 OPEC oil embargo and hike in prices in
1973 skyrocketing oil revenues for Baath use - 1968 oil revenues 476 million 1980- 26
billion - In 1979 Iraqs oil production second only to
Saudi Arabias in oil-producing states of the
Persian Gulf.
20(How SH maintained power) 2. Social welfare
- reduction of taxes
- Subsidies for basic food
- Free, high quality health care
- No university tuition fees
- Improvements in status of women (In 82 more than
30 univ. students were female) - Extensive literacy campaigns
- new highway systems better infrastructure
- Subsidies of ordinary consumption items
- Land ownerships no taxes for many Shiite
peasants living in the south - Extensive reforms in the countryside new land
distributed to farmers - between 1970 and 1982 264,400 farmers received
grants of land.
21Saddam Hussein visiting homes, 1980s
22(How SH maintained power)3. Fear terror
- Wholesale political repression and persecution of
all potential dissidents - Imprisonment, extrajudicial executions
- Death sentences including for non-violent
offenses, in 1998 and 1999 hundreds of prisoners
summarily executed in a jail cleaning program - Public hangings and public executions.
- Â Creation of multiple, alternative sets of
internal security organizations - State internal security, military intelligence,
party intelligence - Massive surveillance and informant system
- Â Forced internal migration to resettle restive
areas (especially Kurds and Shiite Marsh Arabs)
23(How SH maintained power)4. Cult of Personality
241989 Victory Arch
25(How SH maintained power)5. War
- Iran-Iraq War 1980-1989
- longest conventional war of the 20th century
- Cost 100-000 200,000 Iraqis dead, 400,000
wounded, 70,000 prisoners. - 25 billion debt to Saudis, 10 billion to
Kuwait 40 billion to the US, Europe and rest
of the world. - Results
- solidified sentiments of Iraqi national identity
among the bulk of the population. - Because of concern over Shiite loyalty SH brought
greater numbers of Shiites into the regime as
well as repressing any political activity. - Islamicization of the regime
26An excerpt from a US Embassy in Italy cable to
the Dept. of State regarding Envoy Donald
Rumsfelds meeting with Saddam Hussein, Dec. 19,
1983
27(More results of Iran-Iraq War)
- armed forces grew from 190,000 to over 1 million
Republican Guard grows from 1 to 37 brigades. - Iraq becomes major regional military power
- Militarization of society as armed forces became
most important part of the state. - Gulf War (1990-1991)
- After war, SH considerably weaker, forced to rely
more on tribes to maintain authority - UN sanctions also help him maintain power
28Major Players in Iraqi politics, 1968-1991/2003