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Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party – Iraq Region

The Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party – Iraq Region (Arabic: حزب البعث العربي الاشتراكي في العراق Ḥizb al-Ba‘th al-'Arabī al-Ishtirākī fī al-'Irāq), officially the Iraqi Regional Branch, is an Iraqi Ba'athist political party founded in 1951 by Fuad al-Rikabi. It was the Iraqi regional branch of the original Ba'ath Party, before changing its allegiance to the Iraqi-dominated Ba'ath movement following the 1966 split within the original party. The party was officially banned following the American invasion of Iraq in 2003, but despite this it still continues to function underground.

Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party – Iraq Region
Arabic: حزب البعث العربي الاشتراكي في العراق
Governing bodyRegional Command[1]
SecretaryMohammed Younis al-Ahmed
FoundersFuad al-Rikabi
Sa'dun Hammadi[2]
FoundedLate 1940s[3] or early 1950s[4]
Banned16 May 2003[5][6]
HeadquartersBaghdad, Iraq (until 2003)
NewspaperAl-Thawra[7]
Paramilitary wingDefense Battalions (1963–2003)
National Guard (1963)[8]
Popular Army (1970–1991)[9]
Fedayeen Saddam (1995–2003)[10]
Militant groupsSCJL, GMCIR, JRTN[11]
MembershipIn power:
1.5 million (2003 est.)[12]
After ban:
102,900 (2013 est.)[13]
Ideology
Political positionFactions:[32][33]
Left-wing[34] to right-wing[35]
Popular frontNational Progressive Front (until 2003)
Regional affiliationBa'ath Party (until 1966)
Iraq-based Ba'ath Party (from 1966)
Colors  Black   White   Green
  Red (official, Pan-Arab colors)
Slogan"Unity, Freedom, Socialism"[36][37]
Anthem"The torch of the morning resurrection"[38]
Political allianceNational Union Front (until 1958)[39]
Council of Representatives
0 / 329 (0%)
Most MPs (1989)
207 / 250 (83%)
Party flag
Website
Statements of the Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party

History edit

Early years and 14 July Revolution: 1951–1958 edit

 
Rikabi was one of the leading figures in early Ba'athist history

The Iraqi Regional Branch of the Ba'ath Party was established in 1951[40] or 1952.[41] Some historians claim that the Iraqi Regional Branch was established by Abd ar Rahman ad Damin and Abd al Khaliq al Khudayri in 1947 after their return from the founding congress of the Ba'ath Party held in Damascus, Syria the same year.[42][unreliable source?] In another version, Fuad al-Rikabi established the Iraqi Regional Branch in 1948 with Sa'dun Hamadi, a Shia Muslim, but became secretary of the Regional Command in 1952.[43]

The Iraqi Regional Branch was Arab nationalist and vague in its socialist orientation.[44] Al-Rikabi, expelled from the party in 1961 for being a Nasserist,[45] was an early follower of Michel Aflaq, the founder of Ba'athism.[46] During the party's early days, members discussed topics regarding Arab nationalism, the social inequalities that had grown out of the British "Tribal Criminal and Civil Disputes Regulation", and the Iraqi Parliament's Law 28 of 1932 "Governing the Rights and Duties of Cultivators".[40] By 1953, the party, led by al-Rikabi, was engaged in subversive activities against the government.[47]

The party initially consisted of a majority of Shia Muslims, as al-Rikabi primarily recruited his friends and family, but it slowly became Sunni-dominated.[48] The Ba'ath Party, and others of pan-Arab orientation, found it increasingly difficult to recruit Shia members within the party organisation. Most Shias saw pan-Arab as largely Sunni, since most Arabs are Sunni. As a result, more Shias joined the Iraqi Communist Party than the Ba'ath Party.[49] In the mid-1950s, eight of 17 members of the Ba'ath leadership were Shia.[49]

According to Talib El-Shibib, the Ba'ath foreign minister in the Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr government, the sectarian background of the leading Ba'ath members was considered of little importance because most Ba'athists did not know each other's sectarian denominations.[49] Between 1952 and 1963, 54% of the members of the Ba'ath Regional Command were Shia Muslims, largely because of al-Rikabi's effective recruitment drive in Shia areas. Between 1963 and 1970, after al-Rikabi's resignation, Shia representation in the Regional Command had fallen to 14 percent. However, of the three factions within the Ba'ath Party, two out of three faction leaders were Shia.[50]

By the end of 1951, the party had at least 50 members.[51] With the collapse of the pan-Arabist United Arab Republic (UAR), several leading Ba'ath members, including al-Rikabi, resigned from the party in protest.[52] In 1958, the year of the 14 July Revolution that overthrew the Hashemite monarchy, the Ba'ath Party had 300 members nationwide.[53] Brigadier Abd al-Karim Qasim, the leader of the Free Officers Movement which overthrew the king, supported joining the UAR, but changed his position when he took power. Several members of the Free Officer Movement were also members of the Ba'ath Party. The Ba'ath Party considered the President of Egypt Gamal Abdel Nasser, the leader of the pan-Arab movement, to be the leader most likely to succeed, and supported Iraq's joining the union. Of the 16 members of Qasim's cabinet, 12 were Ba'ath Party members. However, the Ba'ath Party supported Qasim on the grounds that he would join Nasser's UAR.[54]

Qasim's Iraq: 1958–1963 edit

 
Saddam Hussein and the Ba'ath Party student cell, Cairo, in the period 1959–1963

Qasim, reluctant to tie himself too closely to Nasser's Egypt, sided with various groups within Iraq (notably the social democrats) that told him such an action would be dangerous. Instead Qasim adopted a wataniyah policy of "Iraq First".[55][56] To strengthen his own position within the government, Qasim created an alliance with the Iraqi Communist Party, which was opposed to the notion of pan-Arabism.[57]

 
Brigadier Abd al-Karim Qasim in 1959.

Qasim's policies angered several pan-Arab organisations, including the Ba'ath Party, which later began plotting to assassinate Qasim at Al-Rashid Street on 7 October 1959 and take power. One assassin was to kill those sitting in the back of the car, the rest would kill those in front. Abdul Karim al-Shaikhly, the leader of the assassination plot, recruited a young Saddam Hussein to join the conspiracy after one of the would-be assassins left.[58] During the ambush, Saddam (who was only supposed to provide cover) began shooting prematurely, which disorganised the whole operation. Qasim's chauffeur was killed and Qasim was hit in the arm and shoulder. The assassins thought they had killed him and quickly retreated to their headquarters, but Qasim survived.[58]

Richard Sale of United Press International (UPI), citing former U.S. diplomat and intelligence officials, Adel Darwish, and other experts, reported that the unsuccessful 7 October 1959 assassination attempt on Qasim involving a young Saddam Hussein and other Ba'athist conspirators was a collaboration between the CIA and Egyptian intelligence.[59] Pertinent contemporary records relating to CIA operations in Iraq have remained classified or heavily redacted, thus "allow[ing] for plausible deniability."[60] It is generally accepted that Egypt, in some capacity, was involved in the assassination attempt, and that "[t]he United States was working with Nasser on some level."[61] Sale and Darwish's account has been disputed by historian Bryan R. Gibson who concludes that available U.S. declassified documents show that "while the United States was aware of several plots against Qasim, it had still adhered to [a] nonintervention policy."[62] On the other hand, historian Kenneth Osgood writes that "the circumstantial evidence is such that the possibility of US–UAR collaboration with Ba'ath Party activists cannot be ruled out," concluding that "[w]hatever the validity of [Sale's] charges, at the very least currently declassified documents reveal that US officials were actively considering various plots against Qasim and that the CIA was building up assets for covert operations in Iraq."[61] The assassins, including Saddam, escaped to Cairo, Egypt "where they enjoyed Nasser's protection for the remainder of Qasim's tenure in power."[63]

At the time of the attack, the Ba'ath Party had less than 1,000 members,[64] however the failed assassination attempt led to widespread exposure for Saddam and the Ba'ath within Iraq, where both had previously languished in obscurity, and later became a crucial part of Saddam's public image during his tenure as president of Iraq.[61][65][66] The Iraqi government arrested some members of the operation and took them into custody. At the show trial, six of the defendants were sentenced to death and, for unknown reasons, the sentences were not carried out. Aflaq, the leader of the Ba'athist movement, organised the expulsion of leading Iraqi Ba'athist members, such as Fuad al-Rikabi, on the grounds that the party should not have initiated the attempt on Qasim's life. At the same time, Aflaq secured seats in the Iraqi Ba'ath leadership for his supporters, including Saddam.[67]

 
Qasim was executed by the Ba'athists inside the Iraqi Ministry of Defence building; the Ba'athists desecrated his corpse on Iraqi television.

In 1962, both the Ba'ath Party and the United States Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) began plotting to overthrow Qasim.[68][69] On 8 February 1963, Qasim was finally overthrown by the Ba'athists in the Ramadan Revolution; long suspected to be supported by the CIA,[70][71] however pertinent contemporary documents relating to the CIA's operations in Iraq have remained classified by the U.S. government,[72][73] although the Iraqi Ba'athists are documented to have maintained supportive relationships with U.S. officials before, during, and after the coup.[74][75] Several army units refused to support the Ba'athist coup. The fighting lasted for two days,[76] during which 1,500–5,000 were killed.[77] Qasim was captured on 9 February and, an hour later, was killed by firing squad. To assure the Iraqi public that Qasim was dead, as well as to terrorize his supporters, the Ba'athists broadcast a five minute long propaganda video called The End of the Criminals of Qasim's corpse being desecrated.[78][76] Upon the Ba'athist ascension to power, Saddam would return to Iraq after spending nearly three years living in exile, becoming a key organizer within the Ba'ath Party's civilian wing.[79]

In its ascension to power, the Ba'athists "methodically hunted down Communists" thanks to "mimeographed lists [...] complete with home addresses and auto license plate numbers,"[75][80] and while it is unlikely that the Ba'athists would've needed assistance in identifying Iraqi communists,[81][82] it is widely believed that the CIA provided the Ba'athist National Guard with lists of communists and other leftists, who were then arrested or killed.[83] Gibson emphasizes that the Ba'athists compiled their own lists, citing Bureau of Intelligence and Research reports.[84] On the other hand, historians Nathan Citino and Brandon Wolfe-Hunnicutt consider the assertions plausible because the U.S. embassy in Iraq had actually compiled such lists, were known to be in contact with the National Guard during the purge, and because National Guard members involved in the purge received training in the U.S.[82][85] Furthermore, Wolfe-Hunnicutt, citing contemporary U.S. counterinsurgency doctrine, notes that the assertions "would be consistent with American special warfare doctrine" regarding U.S. covert support to anti-communist "Hunter-Killer" teams "seeking the violent overthrow of a communist dominated and supported government",[86] and draws parallels to other CIA operations in which lists of suspected communists were compiled, such as Guatemala in 1954 and Indonesia in 1965–66.[87]

In power: February–September 1963 edit

Abdul Salam Arif became the president of Iraq and Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr became prime minister after taking power in February 1963.[77] Ali Salih al-Sa'di, secretary-general of the Regional Command of the Iraqi Ba'ath Party, became deputy prime minister and Minister of Interior – a post he lost on 11 May. Despite not being prime minister, al-Sadi had effective control over the Iraqi Ba'ath Party. Seven out of nine members supported his leadership in the party's Regional Command.[88]

According to Coughlin, in the aftermath of the coup, the National Guard initiated an "orgy of violence" against all communist and other left-wing elements.[77] This period led to the establishment in Baghdad of several interrogation chambers. The government requisitioned several private houses and public facilities, and an entire section of Kifah Street was used by the National Guard. Many of the victims of the rout were innocent, or were victims of personal vendettas.[89] According to Coughlin, the most notorious torture chamber was located at the "Palace of the End," where the royal family was killed in 1958.[better source needed] Nadhim Kazzer, who became director of the Directorate of General Security, was responsible for the acts committed there.

The party was ousted from government in November 1963, due to factionalism. The question within the Ba'ath Party was whether or not it would pursue its ideological goal of establishing a union with Syria, Egypt or both. Al-Sadi supported a union with Syria, which was ruled by the Ba'ath Party, while the more conservative military wing supported Qasim's "Iraq first policy".[90] Factionalism and the ill-disciplined behaviour of the National Guard led the military wing to initiate a coup against the party's leadership. Al-Sadi was forced into exile in Spain.

Al-Bakr, in an attempt to save the party, called for a meeting of the National Command of the Ba'ath Party. The meeting exacerbated the party's problems. Aflaq, who saw himself as the leader of the pan-Arab Ba'athist movement, declared his intent to take control of the Iraqi Ba'ath Party. The "Iraq first" wing was outraged. President Arif lost patience with the Iraqi Ba'ath Party, and the party was ousted from government on 18 November 1963.[91] The 12 Ba'ath members of the government were forced to resign, and the National Guard was dissolved and replaced with the Republican Guard.[92] Some authorities believe that Aflaq supported Arif's coup against the Ba'athist government in order to weaken al-Sadi's position within the party and strengthen his own.[93]

Union talks with Syria edit

 
Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr, as seen in 1974, led the Ba'athist coups of 1963 and 1968.

At the time of al-Sadi's removal from the post of Interior Minister, factionalism and discontent were growing within the party. al-Sadi and Mundur al-Windawi, the leader of the Ba'ath Party's National Guard, led the civilian wing. President Arif led the military wing and Talib El-Shibib led the pro-Aflaq wing.[88] However, a bigger schism was underway in the international Ba'athist movement. Four major factions were being created: the Old Guard led by Aflaq; a civilian alliance between the secretary-generals of the Regional Commands of Syria and Iraq, led by Hammud al-Shufi and al-Sadi respectively; the Syrian Ba'ath Military Committee, represented by Salah Jadid, Muhammad Umran, Hafez al-Assad, Salim Hatum and Amin al-Hafiz; and the Iraqi military wing, which supported Arif's presidency, represented by al-Bakr, Salih Mahdi Ammash, Tahir Yahya and Hardan Tikriti. The military wings in Syria and Iraq opposed the creation of a pan-Arab state, whereas al-Shufi and al-Sadi supported it. Aflaq officially supported it, but privately opposed it because he was afraid al-Sadi would challenge his position as secretary-general of the National Command of the Ba'ath Party, the leader of the international Ba'athist movement.[94]

Bilateral union edit

Both Syria and Iraq were under Ba'athist rule in 1963. When President Arif visited Syria on a state visit, Sami al-Jundi, a Syrian cabinet minister, proposed the creation of a bilateral union between the two countries. Both Arif and Amin al-Hafiz, President of Syria, supported the idea. al-Jundi was given the task of setting up a committee to begin establishing the union. al-Jundi selected al-Sadi as Iraq's chief representative in the committee in a bid to strengthen al-Sadi's position within the Ba'ath Party.

Work on the union continued with the signing of the Military Unity Charter which established the Higher Military Council, an organ which oversaw the integration and control over the Syrian and Iraqi military. Ammash, the Iraqi Minister of Defence, became the chairman of the Higher Military Council. The unified headquarters was in Syria. The establishment of the military union became evident on 20 October 1963, when Syrian soldiers were found fighting alongside the Iraqi military in Iraqi Kurdistan.[95] At this stage, both Iraqi and Syrian Ba'athists feared excluding Nasser from the union talks since he had a large following.[96]

The Syrian state and its Ba'ath Party criticised the fall of al-Bakr's first government but relented when they discovered that some members of the Iraqi cabinet were Ba'ath Party members. However, the remaining Ba'athists were slowly removed from office. The Syrian Revolutionary Command Council responded by abrogating the Military Unity Charter on 26 April 1964, ending the bilateral unification process between Iraq and Syria.[93]

Underground: 1963–1968 edit

In the aftermath of the coup-led against the Ba'ath Party, al-Bakr became the party's dominant driving force and was elected secretary-general of the Regional Command in 1964. Saddam Hussein received full party membership and a seat in the Regional Command of the Iraqi Ba'ath Party because he was a close protege of al-Bakr.[92] With al-Bakr's consent, Hussein initiated a drive to improve the party's internal security. In 1964, Hussein established the Jihaz Haneen, the party's secretive security apparatus, to act as a counterweight to the military officers in the party and to weaken the military's hold on the party.[97]

Ba'athist Iraq: 1968–2003 edit

 
The Eagle of Saladin served as the logo of the Baathist newspaper Ath-Thawra

In contrast to the coup of 1963, the 1968 coup was led by civilian Ba'ath Party members. According to historian Con Coughlin, the President of Iraq Abdul Rahman Arif, who had taken over from his brother, was a weak leader. Before the coup, Hussein, through the Jihaz Haneen, contacted several military officers who either supported the Ba'ath Party or wanted to use it as a vehicle to power. Some officers, such as Hardan al-Tikriti, were already members of the party, while Abdul Razzak al-Naif, the deputy head of military intelligence, and Colonel Ibrahim Daud, the commander of the Republican Guard, were neither party members nor sympathisers.

On 16 July 1968, al-Naif and Daud were summoned to the Presidential Palace by Arif, who asked them if they knew of an imminent coup against him. Both al-Naif and Daud denied knowledge of any coup. However, when the Ba'ath Party leadership obtained this information, they quickly convened a meeting at al-Bakr's house. The coup had to be initiated as quickly as possible, even if they had to concede to give al-Naif and Daud the posts of Prime Minister and Defence Minister, respectively. Hussein said at the meeting, "I am aware that the two officers have been imposed on us and that they want to stab the party in the back in the service of some interest or other, but we have no choice. We should collaborate with them and liquidate immediately during, or after, the revolution. And I volunteer to carry out the task".[98]

 
Then Iraqi President Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr (right) and Saddam Hussein as seen in Baghdad, 1978

The 17 July Revolution was a military coup, not a popular revolt against the incumbent government. According to Coughlin, compared to the coups of 1958 and 1963, the 1968 coup was a "relatively civil affair". The coup begun in the early morning of 17 July, when the military and Ba'ath Party activists seized several key positions in Baghdad, such as the headquarters of the Ministry of Defence, television and radio stations and the electricity station. All the city's bridges were captured, all telephone lines were cut and at exactly 03:00, the order was given to march on the Presidential Palace. President Arif was asleep and had no control over the situation.[99] al-Bakr masterminded the plot,[100] but Hussein and Saleh Omar al-Ali led operations on the ground.[99] A power struggle began between the Ba'ath Party led by al-Naif and the military led by Daud, which al-Bakr had anticipated and planned.[101] Daud lost his ministership during an official visit to Jordan, while al-Naif was exiled after Hussein threatened him and his family with death.[102]

 
Iraqi President Saddam Hussein with Ba'ath Party founder Michel Aflaq in 1979

At the time of the 1968 coup, only 5,000 people were members;[103] by the late 1970s, membership had increased to 1.2 million.[104] In 1974, the Iraqi Ba'athists formed the National Progressive Front to broaden support for the government's initiatives. Wrangling within the party continued, and the government periodically purged its dissident members,[105] including Fuad al-Rikabi, the party's first secretary-general of the Regional Command.[106] Emerging as the party strongman,[107] Hussein used his growing power[108] to push al-Bakr aside in 1979 and ruled Iraq until the 2003 Invasion of Iraq.[109]

Several major infrastructures were laid down to assist the country's growth,[110] and the Iraqi oil industry was nationalised[111] with help from the Soviet Union. Alexei Kosygin, Chairman of the USSR Council of Ministers, signed the bilateral Treaty of Friendship and Cooperation in 1972.[108]

2003 invasion and new Iraqi government edit

Downfall and de-Ba'athification edit

At the time of Saddam's fall in April 2003, the Ba'ath Party had 1.5 million members.[12] In June 2003, the U.S.-led Coalition Provisional Authority banned the Ba'ath Party, and banned all members of the party's top four tiers from the new government and from public schools and colleges, a move which some criticised for blocking too many experienced people from participating in the new government. Thousands were removed from their positions, including doctors, professors, school teachers and bureaucrats. Many teachers lost their jobs, causing protests and demonstrations at schools and universities.

Under the Ba'ath Party, one could not reach high positions in the government or in schools without becoming a party member. Membership was also a prerequisite for university admission. While many Ba'athists joined for ideological reasons, many more joined as a way to improve their options. After much pressure by the U.S., the policy of de-Ba'athification was addressed by the Iraqi government in January 2008 in the highly controversial "Accountability and Justice Act," which was supposed to ease the policy, but which many feared would lead to further dismissals.[112]

The new Constitution of Iraq, approved by a referendum on 15 October 2005, reaffirmed the Ba'ath Party ban, stating that "No entity or program, under any name, may adopt racism, terrorism, the calling of others infidels, ethnic cleansing, or incite, facilitate, glorify, promote, or justify thereto, especially the Saddamist Ba'ath in Iraq and its symbols, regardless of the name that it adopts. This may not be part of the political pluralism in Iraq."

Some or many of its members in the Iraqi Ba'ath Party who were purged and dismissed went on to join Al-Qaeda in Iraq which eventually morphed into the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.

Saddam's death and party split: 2006–present edit

On 31 December 2006, one day after Saddam Hussein's execution by hanging, a previously unknown group called the Baghdad Citizens Gathering publicly issued a statement in Amman, Jordan, at the Jordanian Regional Branch of the Ba'ath Party endorsing Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri as the new president of Iraq and the party's secretary-general following Saddam's death.[113] The statement referred to Iraqis killed in the 1980–88 war with Iran, the 1991 Gulf War over Kuwait and the 13 years of sanctions afterwards, and went on to say, "We vow to liberate our country from the heinous criminals, neo-Zionists and the Persians in order to restore Iraq's unity".[113] The party's armed wing since al-Douri's ascension is the Army of the Men of the Naqshbandi Order.

According to Abu Muhammad, a Ba'ath Party spokesman from al-Douri's faction, on the eve of Saddam's death, "Comrade Izzat has been leading the [Ba'ath] party's political and resistance factions since 2003, but it is a matter of protocol and internal regulation to appoint him officially as the party's secretary-general."[114] Al-Douri was elected the party's secretary-general in early January.[114]

Despite al-Douri's succession, another high ranking Ba'athist, Younis al-Ahmed, called for a General Conference of the Iraqi Ba'ath party in Syria to elect a new leadership (the faction's armed wing is The Return).[115] This move caused a significant amount of controversy within the party, with al-Douri issuing a statement criticizing Syria for what al-Douri claimed was an American-supported attempt to undermine the Iraqi Ba'ath party, although this statement was later downplayed.[115] The conference elected al-Ahmed as secretary-general, and al-Ahmed issued an order expelling al-Douri from the party, resulting in al-Douri issuing a counter order expelling al-Ahmed and 150 other party members.[115] These events led to the existence, in effect, of two Iraqi Ba'ath Parties: the main party led by al-Douri, and a splinter party led by al-Ahmed.[115]

al-Ahmed's Ba'ath Party is based in Syria.[115] It is believed to contain most of the remaining leading party figures who were not arrested or executed,[115] including Mezher Motni Awad, To'ma Di'aiyef Getan, Jabbar Haddoosh, Sajer Zubair, and Nihad alDulaimi.[115] In contrast to al-Douri's group, al-Ahmad's faction has had success in recruiting Shi'as to the party.[115] While al-Ahmed and the faction's senior leaders are Sunnis, there are many Shiites who are working in the organization's middle level.[115] Upon his election as leader, an al-Ahmed's faction statement said he was "of Shia origins and coming from Shia areas in Nineveh governorate".[116] In contrast to al-Ahmed, al-Douri has stuck to a more conservative policy, recruiting members from a largely Sunni-dominated areas.[115]

It could be said that al-Ahmed has returned to the Ba'ath Party's original ideology of secular pan-Arab nationalism which, in many cases, has proven successful in Iraq's Shi'a dominated southern provinces.[115] However, despite his attempts, al-Ahmed has failed in his goal to overthrow al-Douri.[115] Al-Douri's faction is the largest and the most active on the Internet, and the large majority of Ba'athist websites are aligned to al-Douri.[115] Another failure is that al-Ahmed's faction, which is based in Syria, does not have exclusive Syrian support[115] and, considering that it is based in Syria, the party is susceptible to Syrian interference in its affairs.[115] However, despite the differences between the al-Douri and al-Ahmed factions, both of them adhere to Ba'athist thought.[115]

On 2 January 2012, the Organizations of Central Euphrates and the South (OCES), believed to be headed by Hamed Manfi al-Karafi, issued a statement condemning sectarianism within the party, specifically criticizing al-Douri's faction.[116] The OCES condemned the leadership's decision of creating a primary Sunni leadership and a reserve Shiite leadership.[116]

This decision by the al-Douri faction leadership was a response to complaints by Ba'athist organizations in Shiite-dominated areas on what they considered policy errors which led to marginalization and exclusion of Shiite members.[116] The OCES rejected the decision, and considered them illegitimate.[116] In its statement, the OCES stated that "the failure to implement [its] decisions is considered a rebellion against legitimate authority [...]" and "a conscious and explicit threat, and an attempt to impose a bitter reality through decisions that are tainted by sectarian and regional motivations."[116] In its ending remarks, the OCES statement read "any connection or link with any member of the Iraqi branch leadership locally or abroad, while continuing organizational activities according to the Organizations of Central Euphrates and the South leadership's decisions that were reached last year based on prior understandings with the national leadership".[116] Despite breaking with al-Douri's faction, al-Karafi's faction has not aligned itself with either al-Ahmed's faction or Resurrection and Renewal Movement, a third Ba'athist group.[116]

al-Douri has been considered more of a symbol, but he doesn't actually hold that much power over the party. In a discussion with the American embassy in Amman, Jordan, in 2007, retired Lieutenant General Khalid al-Jibouri stated that he believed "a powerful shadow group of personnel [was] behind him who really constitute the operational leadership of his faction". He further noted that the party was modernizing, in the sense that it recognized it would be impossible to return to power alone, while, at the same time, it returned to its old, Ba'athist ideological roots. In another note, al-Jibouri noted that the Ba'ath Party had become a major enemy of al-Qaida in Iraq.[117]

In the wake of Muammar Gaddafi's downfall, the new Libyan government sent documents to the Iraqi government which claimed that Ba'athists, with help from Gaddafi, were planning a coup.[118] Because of the revelations, the Iraqi government initiated a purge of thousands of public officials.[118] The purge triggered Sunni protests, with many calling for Sunni autonomy within Iraq.[118] Surprisingly to outside observers, al-Douri's Ba'ath party opposed Sunni autonomy and, in a statement, referred to it as "a dangerous plan to divide Iraq along sectarian lines."[118] However this condemnation was mostly symbolic as Al-Douri's group participated in protests where calls for Sunni Autonomy were present and allied with groups that believed in and agitated for autonomy.[citation needed]

In July 2012, the Ba'ath Party published a videotaped speech of al-Douri, in which he condemned the existing government and American interference in Iraq.[119] However, in a change of tone, al-Douri stated he wished to establish good relations with the United States when the American forces had been withdrawn and when the government had been toppled.[119] As of 2013, it has been reported that al-Douri is living in the city of Mosul, having left Syria because of the ongoing civil war.[120] Many analysts are afraid that the Ba'ath Party has the potential power to initiate another civil war in Iraq because of al-Douri's popularity in localities with Sunni majorities.[120]

Organization and structure edit

Regional (central) level edit

The Regional Command (RC) (Arabic: al-qiyada al-qutriyya) was the Iraqi Regional Branch highest decision-making organ. Throughout its history, the RC has normally had 19-21 members.[121] When in power, the Directorate of Security Affairs was responsible for the security of the president and the senior members of the Regional Command.[122] The Regional Congress was (in theory) the de jure decision-making organ on Iraqi regional affairs when in session, but was (in practice) a tool in control of the Regional Command.

Congresses held

The Ba'ath Party had its own secretariat (Arabic: maktab amanat sir al-qutr), through which every major decision in the country was channelled. According to Joseph Sassoon, the secretariat functioned as the "party's board of directors,"[123] overseeing the running of the party branches which, in turn, controlled and collected information about civilian and military life throughout the country.[124] The secretariat had the power to propose marriages and, in certain cases, to approve and disapprove marriages for the sake of the party.[125] At the 8th Regional Congress, the leadership laid emphasis on building "a strong and central national authority."[126] The party leadership's response to the party's apparent lack of centralisation came with a Revolutionary Command Council resolution which stated that "all correspondence between state ministries and party organisations are to be sent through the party secretariat."[126]

The head of the secretariat was the deputy director, who was the second in the order of precedence. The office of director of the secretariat was the leading organ within the body. The secretariat had 11 departments: the Military and Armaments Department, Vocational Schools Department, Courses Department, Finance Department, Organisational and Political Department, Party Affairs and Information Department, Personnel and Administrative Department, Technical Department, Information and Studies Department, Legal Department and the Audit Department. The only non-department under the direct responsibility of the secretariat was the Saddam Institute for the Study of the Qur'an.[127]

The functions and responsibilities of the secretariat were drawn up in a detailed manner. The Office of the President issued a directive to formulate its hierarchy, and the functions of the sections and departments were clearly defined.[126] The secretariat encompassed all party branches. This system led to the bureaucratisation of the party, and decision-making was often cumbersome and inefficient. This inefficiency meant that Saddam could govern without fearing any rivals.[121]

The Department for Organisational and Political Affairs (DOPA) was the most important department of the secretariat. It prepared material for discussion that the secretary-general (Arabic: amin sir), the party's leader, personally ordered. The DOPA also was responsible for following up on political matters in party branches. One of DOPA's sections was responsible for gathering information for candidates for important positions within the party or the government. Some departments had a similar job to the DOPA section, and were responsible for admissions to the military colleges, institutions for higher education and the Saddam Institute for the Study of the Qur'an. The party sought to control these institutions so that no single opposition party could gain a foothold in them.[121]

Lower levels edit

Below the Regional Command were the bureau structures (Arabic: maktab al-tandhimat), which would gather all party activities in a single geographic area into the responsibility of a single unit. Until 1989, there were six bureau structures in the country: in Baghdad, Al-Forat, the centre, southern and northern Iraq, and one bureau for military affairs. By 2002, there were 17.[128] Below the bureau structures was the branch (Arabic: Fir), which supervised the activities of the sections, divisions and cells (Arabic: shu'ba, firqa and khaliyya). Several of these organs were merged or split, and the number of branches had increased to 69 branches by 2002.[128] The numbers of sections and divisions varied between provinces. As membership increased, new sections and divisions were established.[129] In Maysan province, the number of sections increased from five in 1989 to 20 in 2002, each section in turn having 93 divisions. By September 2002, there existed 4,468 party offices in the country, and there were 32,000 cells.[130]

Security functions edit

Nationally, the Ba'ath Party functioned as an institution acting as the eyes and ears of the government. During its rule, the party gained influence over the military, the government bureaucracy, labour, professional unions and, not least, the building of the cult of personality of Saddam. From the 1990s until the fall of the Ba'ath Party in 2003, it became involved in the handling of food distribution, the pursuing and apprehension of military deserters and, by the end,[130] it was responsible for the preparations for the 2003 invasion of Iraq. Branches and sections enjoyed powers similar to those of the police in the West. Outside of Baghdad, they were "legally authorised to incarcerate suspects using Extrajudicial procedures".[131]

One of the party's most important functions was gathering information about its opponents. In Northern Iraq, the Ba'ath gathered information about the Kurdish Democratic Party by tracking their activities among the local population. They tried to recruit members from Kurd-dominated areas through supplying food or a literacy campaign.[131] During the drive to Arabise Kurdistan, the party resettled several hundred loyal party officials there to strengthen the party in the area. Kurds who had moved from Kurdistan would, in most instances, not be allowed back unless they were loyal Ba'ath Party members.[132] The Military and Armament Department was responsible for coordinating the distribution of arms to party officials.[133]

Management edit

Discipline edit

The Ba'ath Party instilled party discipline in its members. According to a statement in the Revolutionary Command Council (RCC), "Party members are expected to inspire others by their exemplary behavior, sense of discipline, political consciousness, and willingness to sacrifice themselves in the interests of the Party and state."[134] Saddam was a great believer in discipline, and believed that lack of discipline and organisation were behind any failure. In accordance with this view, the party issued a myriad of rules and regulations to combat laziness, corruption and abuses of power. Members found breaching the party code were either demoted or expelled from the party.[135]

Finances edit

The Ba'ath Party was supported financially by the RCC, the highest executive and legislative body of government. Members were required to pays fees commensurate with their ranks. For instance, a supporting member would pay 25 Iraqi dinar for membership, while a branch member would pay 3,000 Iraqi dinars. Fees were important in the party's balance sheet. The central party leadership often emphasised the importance of members' financial abilities. The leadership encouraged members to contribute more to party finances.[136] According to Jawad Hashim, a former Minister of Planning and the RCC Economic Advisor, Saddam gave the Ba'ath Party the five percent of Iraqi oil revenues, which were previously owned by the Gulbenkin Foundation. Saddam's reasoning was that, if a counter-coup took place and the Ba'ath Party was forced from power, as had been the case in November 1963, the party needed financial security so that it could reclaim power.[136] By Hasim's estimates, the Ba'ath Party had accumulated US$10 billion in external revenues by 1989.[134]

Membership edit

When the party came to power in 1968 in the 17 July Revolution, it was determined to increase party membership so that it could compete with ideological opponents such as the Iraqi Communist Party. Saddam had a clear plan, and on 25 February 1976 he said, "It should be our ambition to make all Iraqis in the country Ba'athists in membership and belief or in the latter only."[137] This is contrary to his statements in the 1990s, when increasing membership was more important than recruiting members who adhered to Ba'athist ideology.[138]

Like most parties, the Ba'ath membership was organised in a hierarchical manner. The head of a branch, division or section was the secretary-general, who was responsible to the secretariat. At the bottom was sympathiser, a member seeking to climb the party ranks with the status of active members, which could take five to 10 years. In certain provinces, "national activity" was the status given to the lowest level of the hierarchy. Where this level existed, it could take two to three years to climb up to the rank of sympathiser.[138] The report to the 10th National Congress stated that "It is not sufficient for a member just to believe in the idea of the party, but what is required is total commitment and not simply a political affiliation."[139]

Electoral history edit

Presidential elections edit

Election Party candidate Votes % Result
1995 Saddam Hussein 8,348,700 99.99% Elected  Y
2002 11,445,638 100% Elected  Y

National Assembly elections edit

Election Party leader Seats +/–
1980 Saddam Hussein
187 / 250
  187
1984
183 / 250
  4
1989
207 / 250
  24
1996
161 / 250
  46
2000
165 / 250
  4
January 2005 Banned
December 2005
2010 Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri
2014
2018
2021 Mohammed Younis al-Ahmed

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ Ghareeb, Edmund A.; Dougherty, Beth K. (2004). Historical Dictionary of Iraq. The Scarecrow Press, Ltd. p. 174. ISBN 978-0810865686.
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    • Sheffer, Gabriel; Ma'oz, Moshe (2002). Middle Eastern Minorities and Diasporas. Sussex Academic Press. p. 174. ISBN 978-1-902210-84-1.
    • Ali, Tariq (2004). Bush in Babylon: The Recolonisation of Iraq. Verso. pp. 106–107. ISBN 978-1-84467-512-8.
  5. ^ Although being officially banned by the U.S. led Coalition Provisional Authority and then reaffirmed by referendum in October 2005, national leadership stopped functioning but regional chapters are still active in Iraq.
  6. ^ (PDF). Coalition Provisional Authority. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 June 2004. Retrieved 24 September 2010.
  7. ^ Ismael, Tareq (2008). The Rise and Fall of the Communist Party of Iraq. Cambridge University Press. pp. 172–173. ISBN 978-0-521-87394-9.
  8. ^ Coughlin, Con (2005). Saddam: His Rise and Fall. Harper Perennial. pp. 44–46. ISBN 0-06-050543-5.
  9. ^ "People's Army / Popular Army / People's Militia". Globalsecurity.org. 2007. from the original on 11 April 2008. Retrieved 24 April 2008.
  10. ^ "Fedayeen Enforces Loyalty Among Iraq Army" Washington Post, March 24, 2003
  11. ^ Arraf, Jane (12 March 2014). "Iraq's Sunni tribal leaders say fight for Fallujah is part of a revolution". Washington Post. from the original on 12 June 2018. Retrieved 15 June 2014. The councils include tribal leaders and former insurgent leaders but are headed by former senior army officers—among the thousands of Sunni generals cast aside when the United States disbanded the Iraqi army after the toppling of Saddam Hussein in 2003..."We consider the Iraqi government illegitimate because it is a result of [the U.S.] occupation," said Dari, head of the association's information office.
  12. ^ a b "Iraq to remove 90 former Baathists from ballots". NBC News. 23 December 2005. Retrieved 12 November 2023.
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    • Colin Freeman (18 May 2013). "Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri: the King of Clubs is back, and he may yet prove to be Saddam Hussein's trump card". The Telegraph.
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    • "How Syria's civil war is spilling over - Middle East". Al Jazeera English. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
  14. ^ Also referred to as Saddamist Ba'athism.
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  16. ^ Blamires, Cyprian; Jackson, Paul (2006). World Fascism: A Historical Encyclopedia, Volume 1. ABC-CLIO. p. 82-84. ISBN 978-1576079409.
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  21. ^ "Requiem for Arab Nationalism" by Adeed Dawisha, Middle East Quarterly, Winter 2003
  22. ^ Alnasrawi 1994, pp. 72–73.
  23. ^ Alnasrawi 1994, p. 55.
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  25. ^ a b Stokes, Jamie (2009). Encyclopedia of the Peoples of Africa and the Middle East. Infobase Publishing. p. 322. ISBN 978-1-4381-2676-0. Following two more coups in 1963 and 1968, the Baath Party, a socialist Pan-Arab political party with branches in neighboring Syria and other Arab states, established itself in power. The Baath Party was to rule Iraq for the next 35 years, for 24 of those years under President Saddam Hussein... A dominant feature of the Baath Party's ideology in Iraq was its secularism. This is a feature it shared with other Pan-Arab groups. In general, the Pan-Arab movement wanted to create secular, socialist states for Arabs in which infighting between religious sects would not occur.
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    • Baram, Amatzia (October 2011). "" (PDF). Occasional Papers. Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars: History & Public Policy Program. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 July 2015.
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    • "Saddam and Islam Interview With Univ of Penn's Dr Samuel Helfont". Musings on Iraq. BlogSpot. 2 July 2018. Retrieved 23 July 2019. Throughout the 1990s, it appears that Iraqi society became more religious, more sectarian, and more prone toward Islamism, Salafism, and other militant ideologies.
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    • Rayburn, Joel (2014). Saddam's Faith Campaign and the promotion of Salafism. Iraq after America: Strongmen, Sectarians, Resistance. Hoover Institution Press. pp. 101–104. ISBN 978-0-8179-1694-7.
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  31. ^ "Saddam calls for jihad against Israel". The Guardian, 25 Dec 2000.
  32. ^ Ideological positions in Iraq do not align neatly along a left-right spectrum, Instead, they loosely cluster around preferences for pro-market policies versus state intervention in the economy, more versus less religion in government, more versus less democracy in government, and more versus less nationalistic sentiment.
  33. ^ al-Lami, Alaa (18 January 2012). "Sectarian Divisions Plague Iraqi Baath Party". Al Akhbar. from the original on 21 July 2013. Retrieved 19 June 2013.
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    • Alekseĭ Mikhaĭlovich Vasilʹev, Alexei Vassiliev (1993). Russian Policy in the Middle East: From Messianism to Pragmatism. p. 63. ISBN 978-0863721687.
    • Rafid Fadhil Ali (9 February 2009). "Reviving the Iraqi Ba'ath: A Profile of General Muhammad Yunis al-Ahmad". Jamestown Foundation. from the original on 6 August 2018. Retrieved 6 August 2018.
  35. ^
  36. ^ Arabic: وحدة، حرية، اشتراكية, romanizedWahda, Hurriyah, Ishtirakiyah
  37. ^ Bengio, Ofra (1998). Saddam's Word: Political Discourse in Iraq (Paperback). Oxford, England, UK; New York, New York, USA: Oxford University Press. p. 35. ISBN 978-0-19-511439-3.
  38. ^ Arabic: شعلة البعث صباحي, romanizedshuelat albaeth sabahi
  39. ^ * Ghareeb, Edmund A.; Dougherty, Beth K. Historical Dictionary of Iraq. Lanham, Maryland and Oxford: The Scarecrow Press, Ltd., 2004. pp. 170-171.
    • Al-Qaisy (2019). . Al-Mada. Archived from the original on 18 February 2019. Retrieved 13 June 2022.
  40. ^ a b Polk 2006, p. 109.
  41. ^ Ghareeb & Dougherty 2004, p. 194.
  42. ^ Metz, Helen Chapin. "Iraq – Politics: The Baath Party". Library of Congress Country Studies. Retrieved 23 October 2011.
  43. ^ Sheffer & Ma'oz 2002, p. 174.
  44. ^ Tripp 2002, p. 143.
  45. ^ Davies 2005, p. 200.
  46. ^ Davies 2005, p. 320.
  47. ^ Patterson 2010, p. 229.
  48. ^ Nakash 2003, p. 136.
  49. ^ a b c Dawisha 2005, p. 174.
  50. ^ Sheffer & Ma'oz 2002, pp. 174–175.
  51. ^ Tucker 2008, p. 185.
  52. ^ Dawisha 2005, p. 224.
  53. ^ Coughlin 2005, p. 22.
  54. ^ Coughlin 2005, pp. 24–25.
  55. ^ Polk, William Roe (2005). Understanding Iraq. I.B. Tauris. p. 111. ISBN 978-0857717641.
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  57. ^ Coughlin 2005, pp. 25–26.
  58. ^ a b Coughlin 2005, p. 29.
  59. ^ Sale, Richard (10 April 2003). "Exclusive: Saddam Key in Early CIA Plot". United Press International. Retrieved 2 April 2018.
  60. ^ Osgood, Kenneth (2009). "Eisenhower and regime change in Iraq: the United States and the Iraqi Revolution of 1958". America and Iraq: Policy-making, Intervention and Regional Politics. Routledge. p. 16. ISBN 9781134036721. The documentary record is filled with holes. A remarkable volume of material remains classified, and those records that are available are obscured by redactions – large blacked-out sections that allow for plausible deniability. While it is difficult to know exactly what actions were taken to destabilize or overthrow Qasim's regime, we can discern fairly clearly what was on the planning table. We also can see clues as to what was authorized.
  61. ^ a b c Osgood, Kenneth (2009). "Eisenhower and regime change in Iraq: the United States and the Iraqi Revolution of 1958". America and Iraq: Policy-making, Intervention and Regional Politics. Routledge. pp. 21–23. ISBN 9781134036721.
  62. ^ Gibson, Bryan R. (2015). Sold Out? US Foreign Policy, Iraq, the Kurds, and the Cold War. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 25–26. ISBN 978-1-137-48711-7.
  63. ^ Wolfe-Hunnicutt, Brandon (2021). The Paranoid Style in American Diplomacy: Oil and Arab Nationalism in Iraq. Stanford University Press. pp. 53–54. ISBN 978-1-5036-1382-9.
  64. ^ Coughlin 2005, p. 30.
  65. ^ Karsh, Efraim; Rautsi, Inari (2002). Saddam Hussein: A Political Biography. Grove Press. pp. 15–22, 25. ISBN 978-0-8021-3978-8.
  66. ^ Makiya, Kanan (1998). Republic of Fear: The Politics of Modern Iraq, Updated Edition. University of California Press. p. 118. ISBN 978-0-520-92124-5.
  67. ^ Coughlin 2005, p. 34.
  68. ^ Wolfe-Hunnicutt, Brandon (2021). The Paranoid Style in American Diplomacy: Oil and Arab Nationalism in Iraq. Stanford University Press. pp. 86–87, 93–102. ISBN 978-1-5036-1382-9.
  69. ^ Gibson, Bryan R. (2015). Sold Out? US Foreign Policy, Iraq, the Kurds, and the Cold War. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 35–45. ISBN 978-1-137-48711-7.
  70. ^ For sources that agree or sympathize with assertions of U.S. involvement, see:
    • Wolfe-Hunnicutt, Brandon; Middle East Studies Pedagogy Initiative (MESPI) (20 July 2018). "Essential Readings: The United States and Iraq before Saddam Hussein's Rule". Jadaliyya. CIA involvement in the 1963 coup that first brought the Ba'th to power in Iraq has been an open secret for decades. American government and media have never been asked to fully account for the CIA's role in the coup. On the contrary, the US government has put forward and official narrative riddled with holes–redactions that cannot be declassified for "national security" reasons.
    • Citino, Nathan J. (2017). "The People's Court". Envisioning the Arab Future: Modernization in US-Arab Relations, 1945–1967. Cambridge University Press. pp. 182–183. ISBN 978-1-108-10755-6. Washington backed the movement by military officers linked to the pan-Arab Ba'th Party that overthrew Qasim in a coup on February 8, 1963.
    • Jacobsen, E. (1 November 2013). "A Coincidence of Interests: Kennedy, U.S. Assistance, and the 1963 Iraqi Ba'th Regime". Diplomatic History. 37 (5): 1029–1059. doi:10.1093/dh/dht049. ISSN 0145-2096. There is ample evidence that the CIA not only had contacts with the Iraqi Ba'th in the early sixties, but also assisted in the planning of the coup.
    • Ismael, Tareq Y.; Ismael, Jacqueline S.; Perry, Glenn E. (2016). Government and Politics of the Contemporary Middle East: Continuity and Change (2nd ed.). Routledge. p. 240. ISBN 978-1-317-66282-2. Ba'thist forces and army officers overthrew Qasim on February 8, 1963, in collaboration with the CIA.
    • Little, Douglas (14 October 2004). "Mission Impossible: The CIA and the Cult of Covert Action in the Middle East". Diplomatic History. 28 (5): 663–701. doi:10.1111/j.1467-7709.2004.00446.x. ISSN 1467-7709. Such self-serving denials notwithstanding, the CIA actually appears to have had a great deal to do with the bloody Ba'athist coup that toppled Qassim in February 1963. Deeply troubled by Qassim's steady drift to the left, by his threats to invade Kuwait, and by his attempt to cancel Western oil concessions, U.S. intelligence made contact with anticommunist Ba'ath activists both inside and outside the Iraqi army during the early 1960s.
    • Osgood, Kenneth (2009). "Eisenhower and regime change in Iraq: the United States and the Iraqi Revolution of 1958". America and Iraq: Policy-making, Intervention and Regional Politics. Routledge. pp. 26–27. ISBN 9781134036721. Working with Nasser, the Ba'ath Party, and other opposition elements, including some in the Iraqi army, the CIA by 1963 was well positioned to help assemble the coalition that overthrew Qasim in February of that year. It is not clear whether Qasim's assassination, as Said Aburish has written, was 'one of the most elaborate CIA operations in the history of the Middle East.' That judgment remains to be proven. But the trail linking the CIA is suggestive.
    • Sluglett, Peter. "The Old Social Classes and the Revolutionary Movements of Iraq: A Study of Iraq's Old Landed and Commercial Classes and of its Communists, Ba'thists and Free Officers (Review)" (PDF). Democratiya. p. 9. Batatu infers on pp. 985-86 that the CIA was involved in the coup of 1963 (which brought the Ba'ath briefly to power): Even if the evidence here is somewhat circumstantial, there can be no question about the Ba'ath's fervent anti-communism.
    • Wolfe-Hunnicutt, Brandon (2021). The Paranoid Style in American Diplomacy: Oil and Arab Nationalism in Iraq. Stanford University Press. p. 119. ISBN 978-1-5036-1382-9. Weldon Matthews, Malik Mufti, Douglas Little, William Zeman, and Eric Jacobsen have all drawn on declassified American records to largely substantiate the plausibility of Batatu's account. Peter Hahn and Bryan Gibson (in separate works) argue that the available evidence does support the claim of CIA collusion with the Ba'th. However, each makes this argument in the course of a much broader study, and neither examines the question in any detail.
    • Mitchel, Timothy (2002). Rule of Experts: Egypt, Techno-Politics, Modernity. University of California Press. p. 149. ISBN 9780520928251. Qasim was killed three years later in a coup welcomed and possibly aided by the CIA, which brought to power the Ba'ath, the party of Saddam Hussein.
    • Weiner, Tim (2008). Legacy of Ashes: The History of the CIA. Doubleday. p. 163. ISBN 9780307455628. The agency finally backed a successful coup in Iraq in the name of American influence.
  71. ^ For sources that dispute assertions of U.S. involvement, see:
    • Gibson, Bryan R. (2015). Sold Out? US Foreign Policy, Iraq, the Kurds, and the Cold War. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 58. ISBN 978-1-137-48711-7. Barring the release of new information, the balance of evidence suggests that while the United States was actively plotting the overthrow of the Qasim regime, it did not appear to be directly involved in the February 1963 coup.
    • Hahn, Peter (2011). Missions Accomplished?: The United States and Iraq Since World War I. Oxford University Press. p. 48. ISBN 9780195333381. Declassified U.S. government documents offer no evidence to support these suggestions.
    • Barrett, Roby C. (2007). The Greater Middle East and the Cold War: US Foreign Policy Under Eisenhower and Kennedy. I.B. Tauris. p. 451. ISBN 9780857713087. Washington wanted to see Qasim and his Communist supporters removed, but that is a far cry from Batatu's inference that the U.S. had somehow engineered the coup. The U.S. lacked the operational capability to organize and carry out the coup, but certainly after it had occurred the U.S. government preferred the Nasserists and Ba'athists in power, and provided encouragement and probably some peripheral assistance.
    • West, Nigel (2017). Encyclopedia of Political Assassinations. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 205. ISBN 9781538102398. Although Qasim was regarded as an adversary by the West, having nationalized the Iraq Petroleum Company, which had joint Anglo-American ownership, no plans had been made to depose him, principally because of the absence of a plausible successor. Nevertheless, the CIA pursued other schemes to prevent Iraq from coming under Soviet influence, and one such target was an unidentified colonel, thought to have been Qasim's cousin, the notorious Fadhil Abbas al-Mahdawi who was appointed military prosecutor to try members of the previous Hashemite monarchy.
  72. ^ Wolfe-Hunnicutt, Brandon (2021). The Paranoid Style in American Diplomacy: Oil and Arab Nationalism in Iraq. Stanford University Press. p. 117. ISBN 978-1-5036-1382-9. What really happened in Iraq in February 1963 remains shrouded behind a veil of official secrecy. Many of the most relevant documents remain classified. Others were destroyed. And still others were never created in the first place.
  73. ^ Matthews, Weldon C. (9 November 2011). "The Kennedy Administration, Counterinsurgency, and Iraq's First Ba'thist Regime". International Journal of Middle East Studies. 43 (4): 635–653. doi:10.1017/S0020743811000882. ISSN 1471-6380. S2CID 159490612. Archival sources on the U.S. relationship with this regime are highly restricted. Many records of the Central Intelligence Agency's operations and the Department of Defense from this period remain classified, and some declassified records have not been transferred to the National Archives or cataloged.
  74. ^ Matthews, Weldon C. (9 November 2011). "The Kennedy Administration, Counterinsurgency, and Iraq's First Ba'thist Regime". International Journal of Middle East Studies. 43 (4): 635–653. doi:10.1017/S0020743811000882. ISSN 0020-7438. S2CID 159490612. [Kennedy] Administration officials viewed the Iraqi Ba'th Party in 1963 as an agent of counterinsurgency directed against Iraqi communists, and they cultivated supportive relationships with Ba'thist officials, police commanders, and members of the Ba'th Party militia. The American relationship with militia members and senior police commanders had begun even before the February coup, and Ba'thist police commanders involved in the coup had been trained in the United States.
  75. ^ a b Wolfe-Hunnicutt, B. (1 January 2015). "Embracing Regime Change in Iraq: American Foreign Policy and the 1963 Coup d'etat in Baghdad". Diplomatic History. 39 (1): 98–125. doi:10.1093/dh/dht121. ISSN 0145-2096.
  76. ^ a b Coughlin 2005, p. 40.
  77. ^ a b c Coughlin 2005, p. 41.
  78. ^ Citino, Nathan J. (2017). "The People's Court". Envisioning the Arab Future: Modernization in US-Arab Relations, 1945–1967. Cambridge University Press. p. 221. ISBN 978-1108107556.
  79. ^ Wolfe-Hunnicutt, Brandon (2021). The Paranoid Style in American Diplomacy: Oil and Arab Nationalism in Iraq. Stanford University Press. p. 206. ISBN 978-1-5036-1382-9.
  80. ^ "Iraq: Green Armbands, Red Blood". Time. 22 February 1963. ISSN 0040-781X.
  81. ^ Batatu, Hanna (1978). The Old Social Classes and the Revolutionary Movements of Iraq: A Study of Iraq's Old Landed and Commercial Classes and of its Communists, Ba'thists and Free Officers. Princeton University Press. pp. 985–987. ISBN 978-0863565205.
  82. ^ a b Wolfe-Hunnicutt, Brandon (March 2011). "The End of the Concessionary Regime: Oil and American Power in Iraq, 1958-1972" (PDF). pp. 84–85.
  83. ^ Farouk–Sluglett, Marion; Sluglett, Peter (2001). Iraq Since 1958: From Revolution to Dictatorship. I.B. Tauris. p. 86. ISBN 9780857713735. Although individual leftists had been murdered intermittently over the previous years, the scale on which the killings and arrests took place in the spring and summer of 1963 indicates a closely coordinated campaign, and it is almost certain that those who carried out the raid on suspects' homes were working from lists supplied to them. Precisely how these lists had been compiled is a matter of conjecture, but it is certain that some of the Ba'th leaders were in touch with American intelligence networks, and it is also undeniable that a variety of different groups in Iraq and elsewhere in the Middle East had a strong vested interest in breaking what was probably the strongest and most popular communist party in the region.
  84. ^ Gibson, Bryan R. (2015). Sold Out? US Foreign Policy, Iraq, the Kurds, and the Cold War. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 59. ISBN 978-1-137-48711-7.
  85. ^ Citino, Nathan J. (2017). "The People's Court". Envisioning the Arab Future: Modernization in US–Arab Relations, 1945–1967. Cambridge University Press. pp. 220–222. ISBN 978-1-108-10755-6.
  86. ^ Wolfe-Hunnicutt, Brandon (March 2011). "The End of the Concessionary Regime: Oil and American Power in Iraq, 1958-1972" (PDF). pp. 84–85. One study from 1961 or 1962 included a section on "the capability of the U.S. Government to provide support to friendly groups, not in power, who are seeking the violent overthrow of a communist dominated and supported government." The study went on to discuss providing "covert assistance" to such groups and advised that, "Pinpointing of enemy concentrations and hideouts can permit effective use of 'Hunter‐Killer' teams." Given the Embassy's concern with the immediate suppression of Baghdad's sarifa population, it seems likely that American intelligence services would be interested in providing support to the Ba'thist "'Hunter‐Killer' teams."
  87. ^ Wolfe-Hunnicutt, Brandon (2021). The Paranoid Style in American Diplomacy: Oil and Arab Nationalism in Iraq. Stanford University Press. pp. 111–112. ISBN 978-1-5036-1382-9. The CIA had long employed the method of targeted assassination in its global crusade against Communism. In 1954, a CIA team involved in the overthrow of Guatemalan leader Jacobo Arbenz compiled a veritable "Handbook of Assassination," replete with precise instructions for committing "political murder" and a list of suspected Guatemalan Communists to be targeted for "executive action." In the 1960s, the Kennedy administration made this rather ad hoc practice into a science. According to its special warfare doctrines, covertly armed and trained "Hunter-Killer teams" were a highly effective instrument in the root-and-branch eradication of Communist threats in developing nations. In what became known as the "Jakarta Method"—named for the systematic CIA-backed purge of Indonesian Communists in 1965—the CIA was involved in countless campaigns of mass murder in the name of anti-Communism.
  88. ^ a b Mufti 1996, p. 161.
  89. ^ Coughlin 2005, pp. 41–42.
  90. ^ Coughlin 2005, p. 44.
  91. ^ Coughlin 2005, p. 45.
  92. ^ a b Coughlin 2005, pp. 45–46.
  93. ^ a b Mufti 1996, p. 165.
  94. ^ Mufti 1996, p. 159.
  95. ^ Mufti 1996, p. 160.
  96. ^ Mufti 1996, pp. 160–161.
  97. ^ Coughlin 2005, p. 48.
  98. ^ Coughlin 2005, p. 55.
  99. ^ a b Coughlin 2005, p. 52.
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Bibliography edit

arab, socialist, party, iraq, region, this, article, about, branch, that, controlled, iraq, arab, party, which, iraqi, branches, multiple, countries, party, iraqi, dominated, faction, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issu. This article is about the branch that controlled Iraq For the pan Arab Ba ath Party which is Iraqi led but has branches in multiple countries see Ba ath Party Iraqi dominated faction This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article is missing information about the party s activities after 2012 Please expand the article to include this information Further details may exist on the talk page September 2018 This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article May 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message The Arab Socialist Ba ath Party Iraq Region Arabic حزب البعث العربي الاشتراكي في العراق Ḥizb al Ba th al Arabi al Ishtiraki fi al Iraq officially the Iraqi Regional Branch is an Iraqi Ba athist political party founded in 1951 by Fuad al Rikabi It was the Iraqi regional branch of the original Ba ath Party before changing its allegiance to the Iraqi dominated Ba ath movement following the 1966 split within the original party The party was officially banned following the American invasion of Iraq in 2003 but despite this it still continues to function underground Arab Socialist Ba ath Party Iraq Region Arabic حزب البعث العربي الاشتراكي في العراقGoverning bodyRegional Command 1 SecretaryMohammed Younis al AhmedFoundersFuad al RikabiSa dun Hammadi 2 FoundedLate 1940s 3 or early 1950s 4 Banned16 May 2003 5 6 HeadquartersBaghdad Iraq until 2003 NewspaperAl Thawra 7 Paramilitary wingDefense Battalions 1963 2003 National Guard 1963 8 Popular Army 1970 1991 9 Fedayeen Saddam 1995 2003 10 Militant groupsSCJL GMCIR JRTN 11 MembershipIn power 1 5 million 2003 est 12 After ban 102 900 2013 est 13 IdeologyIraqi Ba athismSaddamism from 1979 14 15 Militarism 16 17 18 Iraqi nationalism 19 20 Arab nationalism 21 Arab socialism 22 23 24 Pan Arabism 25 Anti imperialism 26 27 Secularism until 1993 25 Political Islam from 1993 28 Anti Zionism 29 30 31 Political positionFactions 32 33 Left wing 34 to right wing 35 Popular frontNational Progressive Front until 2003 Regional affiliationBa ath Party until 1966 Iraq based Ba ath Party from 1966 Colors Black White Green Red official Pan Arab colors Slogan Unity Freedom Socialism 36 37 Anthem The torch of the morning resurrection 38 Political allianceNational Union Front until 1958 39 Council of Representatives0 329 0 Most MPs 1989 207 250 83 Party flagWebsiteStatements of the Arab Socialist Ba ath PartyPolitics of IraqPolitical partiesElections Contents 1 History 1 1 Early years and 14 July Revolution 1951 1958 1 2 Qasim s Iraq 1958 1963 1 3 In power February September 1963 1 3 1 Union talks with Syria 1 3 2 Bilateral union 1 4 Underground 1963 1968 1 5 Ba athist Iraq 1968 2003 1 6 2003 invasion and new Iraqi government 1 6 1 Downfall and de Ba athification 1 6 2 Saddam s death and party split 2006 present 2 Organization and structure 2 1 Regional central level 2 2 Lower levels 2 3 Security functions 3 Management 3 1 Discipline 3 2 Finances 3 3 Membership 4 Electoral history 4 1 Presidential elections 4 2 National Assembly elections 5 See also 6 References 6 1 BibliographyHistory editEarly years and 14 July Revolution 1951 1958 edit nbsp Rikabi was one of the leading figures in early Ba athist history The Iraqi Regional Branch of the Ba ath Party was established in 1951 40 or 1952 41 Some historians claim that the Iraqi Regional Branch was established by Abd ar Rahman ad Damin and Abd al Khaliq al Khudayri in 1947 after their return from the founding congress of the Ba ath Party held in Damascus Syria the same year 42 unreliable source In another version Fuad al Rikabi established the Iraqi Regional Branch in 1948 with Sa dun Hamadi a Shia Muslim but became secretary of the Regional Command in 1952 43 The Iraqi Regional Branch was Arab nationalist and vague in its socialist orientation 44 Al Rikabi expelled from the party in 1961 for being a Nasserist 45 was an early follower of Michel Aflaq the founder of Ba athism 46 During the party s early days members discussed topics regarding Arab nationalism the social inequalities that had grown out of the British Tribal Criminal and Civil Disputes Regulation and the Iraqi Parliament s Law 28 of 1932 Governing the Rights and Duties of Cultivators 40 By 1953 the party led by al Rikabi was engaged in subversive activities against the government 47 The party initially consisted of a majority of Shia Muslims as al Rikabi primarily recruited his friends and family but it slowly became Sunni dominated 48 The Ba ath Party and others of pan Arab orientation found it increasingly difficult to recruit Shia members within the party organisation Most Shias saw pan Arab as largely Sunni since most Arabs are Sunni As a result more Shias joined the Iraqi Communist Party than the Ba ath Party 49 In the mid 1950s eight of 17 members of the Ba ath leadership were Shia 49 According to Talib El Shibib the Ba ath foreign minister in the Ahmed Hassan al Bakr government the sectarian background of the leading Ba ath members was considered of little importance because most Ba athists did not know each other s sectarian denominations 49 Between 1952 and 1963 54 of the members of the Ba ath Regional Command were Shia Muslims largely because of al Rikabi s effective recruitment drive in Shia areas Between 1963 and 1970 after al Rikabi s resignation Shia representation in the Regional Command had fallen to 14 percent However of the three factions within the Ba ath Party two out of three faction leaders were Shia 50 By the end of 1951 the party had at least 50 members 51 With the collapse of the pan Arabist United Arab Republic UAR several leading Ba ath members including al Rikabi resigned from the party in protest 52 In 1958 the year of the 14 July Revolution that overthrew the Hashemite monarchy the Ba ath Party had 300 members nationwide 53 Brigadier Abd al Karim Qasim the leader of the Free Officers Movement which overthrew the king supported joining the UAR but changed his position when he took power Several members of the Free Officer Movement were also members of the Ba ath Party The Ba ath Party considered the President of Egypt Gamal Abdel Nasser the leader of the pan Arab movement to be the leader most likely to succeed and supported Iraq s joining the union Of the 16 members of Qasim s cabinet 12 were Ba ath Party members However the Ba ath Party supported Qasim on the grounds that he would join Nasser s UAR 54 Qasim s Iraq 1958 1963 edit See also CIA activities in Iraq and Ramadan Revolution nbsp Saddam Hussein and the Ba ath Party student cell Cairo in the period 1959 1963 Qasim reluctant to tie himself too closely to Nasser s Egypt sided with various groups within Iraq notably the social democrats that told him such an action would be dangerous Instead Qasim adopted a wataniyah policy of Iraq First 55 56 To strengthen his own position within the government Qasim created an alliance with the Iraqi Communist Party which was opposed to the notion of pan Arabism 57 nbsp Brigadier Abd al Karim Qasim in 1959 Qasim s policies angered several pan Arab organisations including the Ba ath Party which later began plotting to assassinate Qasim at Al Rashid Street on 7 October 1959 and take power One assassin was to kill those sitting in the back of the car the rest would kill those in front Abdul Karim al Shaikhly the leader of the assassination plot recruited a young Saddam Hussein to join the conspiracy after one of the would be assassins left 58 During the ambush Saddam who was only supposed to provide cover began shooting prematurely which disorganised the whole operation Qasim s chauffeur was killed and Qasim was hit in the arm and shoulder The assassins thought they had killed him and quickly retreated to their headquarters but Qasim survived 58 Richard Sale of United Press International UPI citing former U S diplomat and intelligence officials Adel Darwish and other experts reported that the unsuccessful 7 October 1959 assassination attempt on Qasim involving a young Saddam Hussein and other Ba athist conspirators was a collaboration between the CIA and Egyptian intelligence 59 Pertinent contemporary records relating to CIA operations in Iraq have remained classified or heavily redacted thus allow ing for plausible deniability 60 It is generally accepted that Egypt in some capacity was involved in the assassination attempt and that t he United States was working with Nasser on some level 61 Sale and Darwish s account has been disputed by historian Bryan R Gibson who concludes that available U S declassified documents show that while the United States was aware of several plots against Qasim it had still adhered to a nonintervention policy 62 On the other hand historian Kenneth Osgood writes that the circumstantial evidence is such that the possibility of US UAR collaboration with Ba ath Party activists cannot be ruled out concluding that w hatever the validity of Sale s charges at the very least currently declassified documents reveal that US officials were actively considering various plots against Qasim and that the CIA was building up assets for covert operations in Iraq 61 The assassins including Saddam escaped to Cairo Egypt where they enjoyed Nasser s protection for the remainder of Qasim s tenure in power 63 At the time of the attack the Ba ath Party had less than 1 000 members 64 however the failed assassination attempt led to widespread exposure for Saddam and the Ba ath within Iraq where both had previously languished in obscurity and later became a crucial part of Saddam s public image during his tenure as president of Iraq 61 65 66 The Iraqi government arrested some members of the operation and took them into custody At the show trial six of the defendants were sentenced to death and for unknown reasons the sentences were not carried out Aflaq the leader of the Ba athist movement organised the expulsion of leading Iraqi Ba athist members such as Fuad al Rikabi on the grounds that the party should not have initiated the attempt on Qasim s life At the same time Aflaq secured seats in the Iraqi Ba ath leadership for his supporters including Saddam 67 nbsp Qasim was executed by the Ba athists inside the Iraqi Ministry of Defence building the Ba athists desecrated his corpse on Iraqi television In 1962 both the Ba ath Party and the United States Central Intelligence Agency CIA began plotting to overthrow Qasim 68 69 On 8 February 1963 Qasim was finally overthrown by the Ba athists in the Ramadan Revolution long suspected to be supported by the CIA 70 71 however pertinent contemporary documents relating to the CIA s operations in Iraq have remained classified by the U S government 72 73 although the Iraqi Ba athists are documented to have maintained supportive relationships with U S officials before during and after the coup 74 75 Several army units refused to support the Ba athist coup The fighting lasted for two days 76 during which 1 500 5 000 were killed 77 Qasim was captured on 9 February and an hour later was killed by firing squad To assure the Iraqi public that Qasim was dead as well as to terrorize his supporters the Ba athists broadcast a five minute long propaganda video called The End of the Criminals of Qasim s corpse being desecrated 78 76 Upon the Ba athist ascension to power Saddam would return to Iraq after spending nearly three years living in exile becoming a key organizer within the Ba ath Party s civilian wing 79 In its ascension to power the Ba athists methodically hunted down Communists thanks to mimeographed lists complete with home addresses and auto license plate numbers 75 80 and while it is unlikely that the Ba athists would ve needed assistance in identifying Iraqi communists 81 82 it is widely believed that the CIA provided the Ba athist National Guard with lists of communists and other leftists who were then arrested or killed 83 Gibson emphasizes that the Ba athists compiled their own lists citing Bureau of Intelligence and Research reports 84 On the other hand historians Nathan Citino and Brandon Wolfe Hunnicutt consider the assertions plausible because the U S embassy in Iraq had actually compiled such lists were known to be in contact with the National Guard during the purge and because National Guard members involved in the purge received training in the U S 82 85 Furthermore Wolfe Hunnicutt citing contemporary U S counterinsurgency doctrine notes that the assertions would be consistent with American special warfare doctrine regarding U S covert support to anti communist Hunter Killer teams seeking the violent overthrow of a communist dominated and supported government 86 and draws parallels to other CIA operations in which lists of suspected communists were compiled such as Guatemala in 1954 and Indonesia in 1965 66 87 In power February September 1963 edit Abdul Salam Arif became the president of Iraq and Ahmed Hassan al Bakr became prime minister after taking power in February 1963 77 Ali Salih al Sa di secretary general of the Regional Command of the Iraqi Ba ath Party became deputy prime minister and Minister of Interior a post he lost on 11 May Despite not being prime minister al Sadi had effective control over the Iraqi Ba ath Party Seven out of nine members supported his leadership in the party s Regional Command 88 According to Coughlin in the aftermath of the coup the National Guard initiated an orgy of violence against all communist and other left wing elements 77 This period led to the establishment in Baghdad of several interrogation chambers The government requisitioned several private houses and public facilities and an entire section of Kifah Street was used by the National Guard Many of the victims of the rout were innocent or were victims of personal vendettas 89 According to Coughlin the most notorious torture chamber was located at the Palace of the End where the royal family was killed in 1958 better source needed Nadhim Kazzer who became director of the Directorate of General Security was responsible for the acts committed there The party was ousted from government in November 1963 due to factionalism The question within the Ba ath Party was whether or not it would pursue its ideological goal of establishing a union with Syria Egypt or both Al Sadi supported a union with Syria which was ruled by the Ba ath Party while the more conservative military wing supported Qasim s Iraq first policy 90 Factionalism and the ill disciplined behaviour of the National Guard led the military wing to initiate a coup against the party s leadership Al Sadi was forced into exile in Spain Al Bakr in an attempt to save the party called for a meeting of the National Command of the Ba ath Party The meeting exacerbated the party s problems Aflaq who saw himself as the leader of the pan Arab Ba athist movement declared his intent to take control of the Iraqi Ba ath Party The Iraq first wing was outraged President Arif lost patience with the Iraqi Ba ath Party and the party was ousted from government on 18 November 1963 91 The 12 Ba ath members of the government were forced to resign and the National Guard was dissolved and replaced with the Republican Guard 92 Some authorities believe that Aflaq supported Arif s coup against the Ba athist government in order to weaken al Sadi s position within the party and strengthen his own 93 Union talks with Syria edit nbsp Ahmed Hassan al Bakr as seen in 1974 led the Ba athist coups of 1963 and 1968 At the time of al Sadi s removal from the post of Interior Minister factionalism and discontent were growing within the party al Sadi and Mundur al Windawi the leader of the Ba ath Party s National Guard led the civilian wing President Arif led the military wing and Talib El Shibib led the pro Aflaq wing 88 However a bigger schism was underway in the international Ba athist movement Four major factions were being created the Old Guard led by Aflaq a civilian alliance between the secretary generals of the Regional Commands of Syria and Iraq led by Hammud al Shufi and al Sadi respectively the Syrian Ba ath Military Committee represented by Salah Jadid Muhammad Umran Hafez al Assad Salim Hatum and Amin al Hafiz and the Iraqi military wing which supported Arif s presidency represented by al Bakr Salih Mahdi Ammash Tahir Yahya and Hardan Tikriti The military wings in Syria and Iraq opposed the creation of a pan Arab state whereas al Shufi and al Sadi supported it Aflaq officially supported it but privately opposed it because he was afraid al Sadi would challenge his position as secretary general of the National Command of the Ba ath Party the leader of the international Ba athist movement 94 Bilateral union edit Both Syria and Iraq were under Ba athist rule in 1963 When President Arif visited Syria on a state visit Sami al Jundi a Syrian cabinet minister proposed the creation of a bilateral union between the two countries Both Arif and Amin al Hafiz President of Syria supported the idea al Jundi was given the task of setting up a committee to begin establishing the union al Jundi selected al Sadi as Iraq s chief representative in the committee in a bid to strengthen al Sadi s position within the Ba ath Party Work on the union continued with the signing of the Military Unity Charter which established the Higher Military Council an organ which oversaw the integration and control over the Syrian and Iraqi military Ammash the Iraqi Minister of Defence became the chairman of the Higher Military Council The unified headquarters was in Syria The establishment of the military union became evident on 20 October 1963 when Syrian soldiers were found fighting alongside the Iraqi military in Iraqi Kurdistan 95 At this stage both Iraqi and Syrian Ba athists feared excluding Nasser from the union talks since he had a large following 96 The Syrian state and its Ba ath Party criticised the fall of al Bakr s first government but relented when they discovered that some members of the Iraqi cabinet were Ba ath Party members However the remaining Ba athists were slowly removed from office The Syrian Revolutionary Command Council responded by abrogating the Military Unity Charter on 26 April 1964 ending the bilateral unification process between Iraq and Syria 93 Underground 1963 1968 edit In the aftermath of the coup led against the Ba ath Party al Bakr became the party s dominant driving force and was elected secretary general of the Regional Command in 1964 Saddam Hussein received full party membership and a seat in the Regional Command of the Iraqi Ba ath Party because he was a close protege of al Bakr 92 With al Bakr s consent Hussein initiated a drive to improve the party s internal security In 1964 Hussein established the Jihaz Haneen the party s secretive security apparatus to act as a counterweight to the military officers in the party and to weaken the military s hold on the party 97 Ba athist Iraq 1968 2003 edit Main article Ba athist Iraq nbsp The Eagle of Saladin served as the logo of the Baathist newspaper Ath Thawra In contrast to the coup of 1963 the 1968 coup was led by civilian Ba ath Party members According to historian Con Coughlin the President of Iraq Abdul Rahman Arif who had taken over from his brother was a weak leader Before the coup Hussein through the Jihaz Haneen contacted several military officers who either supported the Ba ath Party or wanted to use it as a vehicle to power Some officers such as Hardan al Tikriti were already members of the party while Abdul Razzak al Naif the deputy head of military intelligence and Colonel Ibrahim Daud the commander of the Republican Guard were neither party members nor sympathisers On 16 July 1968 al Naif and Daud were summoned to the Presidential Palace by Arif who asked them if they knew of an imminent coup against him Both al Naif and Daud denied knowledge of any coup However when the Ba ath Party leadership obtained this information they quickly convened a meeting at al Bakr s house The coup had to be initiated as quickly as possible even if they had to concede to give al Naif and Daud the posts of Prime Minister and Defence Minister respectively Hussein said at the meeting I am aware that the two officers have been imposed on us and that they want to stab the party in the back in the service of some interest or other but we have no choice We should collaborate with them and liquidate immediately during or after the revolution And I volunteer to carry out the task 98 nbsp Then Iraqi President Ahmed Hassan al Bakr right and Saddam Hussein as seen in Baghdad 1978 The 17 July Revolution was a military coup not a popular revolt against the incumbent government According to Coughlin compared to the coups of 1958 and 1963 the 1968 coup was a relatively civil affair The coup begun in the early morning of 17 July when the military and Ba ath Party activists seized several key positions in Baghdad such as the headquarters of the Ministry of Defence television and radio stations and the electricity station All the city s bridges were captured all telephone lines were cut and at exactly 03 00 the order was given to march on the Presidential Palace President Arif was asleep and had no control over the situation 99 al Bakr masterminded the plot 100 but Hussein and Saleh Omar al Ali led operations on the ground 99 A power struggle began between the Ba ath Party led by al Naif and the military led by Daud which al Bakr had anticipated and planned 101 Daud lost his ministership during an official visit to Jordan while al Naif was exiled after Hussein threatened him and his family with death 102 nbsp Iraqi President Saddam Hussein with Ba ath Party founder Michel Aflaq in 1979 At the time of the 1968 coup only 5 000 people were members 103 by the late 1970s membership had increased to 1 2 million 104 In 1974 the Iraqi Ba athists formed the National Progressive Front to broaden support for the government s initiatives Wrangling within the party continued and the government periodically purged its dissident members 105 including Fuad al Rikabi the party s first secretary general of the Regional Command 106 Emerging as the party strongman 107 Hussein used his growing power 108 to push al Bakr aside in 1979 and ruled Iraq until the 2003 Invasion of Iraq 109 Several major infrastructures were laid down to assist the country s growth 110 and the Iraqi oil industry was nationalised 111 with help from the Soviet Union Alexei Kosygin Chairman of the USSR Council of Ministers signed the bilateral Treaty of Friendship and Cooperation in 1972 108 2003 invasion and new Iraqi government edit Downfall and de Ba athification edit At the time of Saddam s fall in April 2003 the Ba ath Party had 1 5 million members 12 In June 2003 the U S led Coalition Provisional Authority banned the Ba ath Party and banned all members of the party s top four tiers from the new government and from public schools and colleges a move which some criticised for blocking too many experienced people from participating in the new government Thousands were removed from their positions including doctors professors school teachers and bureaucrats Many teachers lost their jobs causing protests and demonstrations at schools and universities Under the Ba ath Party one could not reach high positions in the government or in schools without becoming a party member Membership was also a prerequisite for university admission While many Ba athists joined for ideological reasons many more joined as a way to improve their options After much pressure by the U S the policy of de Ba athification was addressed by the Iraqi government in January 2008 in the highly controversial Accountability and Justice Act which was supposed to ease the policy but which many feared would lead to further dismissals 112 The new Constitution of Iraq approved by a referendum on 15 October 2005 reaffirmed the Ba ath Party ban stating that No entity or program under any name may adopt racism terrorism the calling of others infidels ethnic cleansing or incite facilitate glorify promote or justify thereto especially the Saddamist Ba ath in Iraq and its symbols regardless of the name that it adopts This may not be part of the political pluralism in Iraq Some or many of its members in the Iraqi Ba ath Party who were purged and dismissed went on to join Al Qaeda in Iraq which eventually morphed into the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant Saddam s death and party split 2006 present edit On 31 December 2006 one day after Saddam Hussein s execution by hanging a previously unknown group called the Baghdad Citizens Gathering publicly issued a statement in Amman Jordan at the Jordanian Regional Branch of the Ba ath Party endorsing Izzat Ibrahim al Douri as the new president of Iraq and the party s secretary general following Saddam s death 113 The statement referred to Iraqis killed in the 1980 88 war with Iran the 1991 Gulf War over Kuwait and the 13 years of sanctions afterwards and went on to say We vow to liberate our country from the heinous criminals neo Zionists and the Persians in order to restore Iraq s unity 113 The party s armed wing since al Douri s ascension is the Army of the Men of the Naqshbandi Order According to Abu Muhammad a Ba ath Party spokesman from al Douri s faction on the eve of Saddam s death Comrade Izzat has been leading the Ba ath party s political and resistance factions since 2003 but it is a matter of protocol and internal regulation to appoint him officially as the party s secretary general 114 Al Douri was elected the party s secretary general in early January 114 Despite al Douri s succession another high ranking Ba athist Younis al Ahmed called for a General Conference of the Iraqi Ba ath party in Syria to elect a new leadership the faction s armed wing is The Return 115 This move caused a significant amount of controversy within the party with al Douri issuing a statement criticizing Syria for what al Douri claimed was an American supported attempt to undermine the Iraqi Ba ath party although this statement was later downplayed 115 The conference elected al Ahmed as secretary general and al Ahmed issued an order expelling al Douri from the party resulting in al Douri issuing a counter order expelling al Ahmed and 150 other party members 115 These events led to the existence in effect of two Iraqi Ba ath Parties the main party led by al Douri and a splinter party led by al Ahmed 115 al Ahmed s Ba ath Party is based in Syria 115 It is believed to contain most of the remaining leading party figures who were not arrested or executed 115 including Mezher Motni Awad To ma Di aiyef Getan Jabbar Haddoosh Sajer Zubair and Nihad alDulaimi 115 In contrast to al Douri s group al Ahmad s faction has had success in recruiting Shi as to the party 115 While al Ahmed and the faction s senior leaders are Sunnis there are many Shiites who are working in the organization s middle level 115 Upon his election as leader an al Ahmed s faction statement said he was of Shia origins and coming from Shia areas in Nineveh governorate 116 In contrast to al Ahmed al Douri has stuck to a more conservative policy recruiting members from a largely Sunni dominated areas 115 It could be said that al Ahmed has returned to the Ba ath Party s original ideology of secular pan Arab nationalism which in many cases has proven successful in Iraq s Shi a dominated southern provinces 115 However despite his attempts al Ahmed has failed in his goal to overthrow al Douri 115 Al Douri s faction is the largest and the most active on the Internet and the large majority of Ba athist websites are aligned to al Douri 115 Another failure is that al Ahmed s faction which is based in Syria does not have exclusive Syrian support 115 and considering that it is based in Syria the party is susceptible to Syrian interference in its affairs 115 However despite the differences between the al Douri and al Ahmed factions both of them adhere to Ba athist thought 115 On 2 January 2012 the Organizations of Central Euphrates and the South OCES believed to be headed by Hamed Manfi al Karafi issued a statement condemning sectarianism within the party specifically criticizing al Douri s faction 116 The OCES condemned the leadership s decision of creating a primary Sunni leadership and a reserve Shiite leadership 116 This decision by the al Douri faction leadership was a response to complaints by Ba athist organizations in Shiite dominated areas on what they considered policy errors which led to marginalization and exclusion of Shiite members 116 The OCES rejected the decision and considered them illegitimate 116 In its statement the OCES stated that the failure to implement its decisions is considered a rebellion against legitimate authority and a conscious and explicit threat and an attempt to impose a bitter reality through decisions that are tainted by sectarian and regional motivations 116 In its ending remarks the OCES statement read any connection or link with any member of the Iraqi branch leadership locally or abroad while continuing organizational activities according to the Organizations of Central Euphrates and the South leadership s decisions that were reached last year based on prior understandings with the national leadership 116 Despite breaking with al Douri s faction al Karafi s faction has not aligned itself with either al Ahmed s faction or Resurrection and Renewal Movement a third Ba athist group 116 al Douri has been considered more of a symbol but he doesn t actually hold that much power over the party In a discussion with the American embassy in Amman Jordan in 2007 retired Lieutenant General Khalid al Jibouri stated that he believed a powerful shadow group of personnel was behind him who really constitute the operational leadership of his faction He further noted that the party was modernizing in the sense that it recognized it would be impossible to return to power alone while at the same time it returned to its old Ba athist ideological roots In another note al Jibouri noted that the Ba ath Party had become a major enemy of al Qaida in Iraq 117 In the wake of Muammar Gaddafi s downfall the new Libyan government sent documents to the Iraqi government which claimed that Ba athists with help from Gaddafi were planning a coup 118 Because of the revelations the Iraqi government initiated a purge of thousands of public officials 118 The purge triggered Sunni protests with many calling for Sunni autonomy within Iraq 118 Surprisingly to outside observers al Douri s Ba ath party opposed Sunni autonomy and in a statement referred to it as a dangerous plan to divide Iraq along sectarian lines 118 However this condemnation was mostly symbolic as Al Douri s group participated in protests where calls for Sunni Autonomy were present and allied with groups that believed in and agitated for autonomy citation needed In July 2012 the Ba ath Party published a videotaped speech of al Douri in which he condemned the existing government and American interference in Iraq 119 However in a change of tone al Douri stated he wished to establish good relations with the United States when the American forces had been withdrawn and when the government had been toppled 119 As of 2013 it has been reported that al Douri is living in the city of Mosul having left Syria because of the ongoing civil war 120 Many analysts are afraid that the Ba ath Party has the potential power to initiate another civil war in Iraq because of al Douri s popularity in localities with Sunni majorities 120 Organization and structure editThis article relies largely or entirely on a single source Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help improve this article by introducing citations to additional sources Find sources Arab Socialist Ba ath Party Iraq Region news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2020 Regional central level edit Further information Regional Command of the Arab Socialist Ba ath Party Iraq Region The Regional Command RC Arabic al qiyada al qutriyya was the Iraqi Regional Branch highest decision making organ Throughout its history the RC has normally had 19 21 members 121 When in power the Directorate of Security Affairs was responsible for the security of the president and the senior members of the Regional Command 122 The Regional Congress was in theory the de jure decision making organ on Iraqi regional affairs when in session but was in practice a tool in control of the Regional Command Congresses held 1st Regional Congress December 1955 2nd Regional Congress late 1957 3rd Regional Congress July 1960 4th Regional Congress May 1962 5th Regional Congress 13 25 September 1963 6th Regional Congress October 1966 7th Regional Congress 1969 8th Regional Congress 1974 9th Regional Congress June 1982 10th Regional Congress September 1991 11th Regional Congress 1993 12th Regional Congress May 2001 The Ba ath Party had its own secretariat Arabic maktab amanat sir al qutr through which every major decision in the country was channelled According to Joseph Sassoon the secretariat functioned as the party s board of directors 123 overseeing the running of the party branches which in turn controlled and collected information about civilian and military life throughout the country 124 The secretariat had the power to propose marriages and in certain cases to approve and disapprove marriages for the sake of the party 125 At the 8th Regional Congress the leadership laid emphasis on building a strong and central national authority 126 The party leadership s response to the party s apparent lack of centralisation came with a Revolutionary Command Council resolution which stated that all correspondence between state ministries and party organisations are to be sent through the party secretariat 126 The head of the secretariat was the deputy director who was the second in the order of precedence The office of director of the secretariat was the leading organ within the body The secretariat had 11 departments the Military and Armaments Department Vocational Schools Department Courses Department Finance Department Organisational and Political Department Party Affairs and Information Department Personnel and Administrative Department Technical Department Information and Studies Department Legal Department and the Audit Department The only non department under the direct responsibility of the secretariat was the Saddam Institute for the Study of the Qur an 127 The functions and responsibilities of the secretariat were drawn up in a detailed manner The Office of the President issued a directive to formulate its hierarchy and the functions of the sections and departments were clearly defined 126 The secretariat encompassed all party branches This system led to the bureaucratisation of the party and decision making was often cumbersome and inefficient This inefficiency meant that Saddam could govern without fearing any rivals 121 The Department for Organisational and Political Affairs DOPA was the most important department of the secretariat It prepared material for discussion that the secretary general Arabic amin sir the party s leader personally ordered The DOPA also was responsible for following up on political matters in party branches One of DOPA s sections was responsible for gathering information for candidates for important positions within the party or the government Some departments had a similar job to the DOPA section and were responsible for admissions to the military colleges institutions for higher education and the Saddam Institute for the Study of the Qur an The party sought to control these institutions so that no single opposition party could gain a foothold in them 121 Lower levels edit Below the Regional Command were the bureau structures Arabic maktab al tandhimat which would gather all party activities in a single geographic area into the responsibility of a single unit Until 1989 there were six bureau structures in the country in Baghdad Al Forat the centre southern and northern Iraq and one bureau for military affairs By 2002 there were 17 128 Below the bureau structures was the branch Arabic Fir which supervised the activities of the sections divisions and cells Arabic shu ba firqa and khaliyya Several of these organs were merged or split and the number of branches had increased to 69 branches by 2002 128 The numbers of sections and divisions varied between provinces As membership increased new sections and divisions were established 129 In Maysan province the number of sections increased from five in 1989 to 20 in 2002 each section in turn having 93 divisions By September 2002 there existed 4 468 party offices in the country and there were 32 000 cells 130 Security functions edit Nationally the Ba ath Party functioned as an institution acting as the eyes and ears of the government During its rule the party gained influence over the military the government bureaucracy labour professional unions and not least the building of the cult of personality of Saddam From the 1990s until the fall of the Ba ath Party in 2003 it became involved in the handling of food distribution the pursuing and apprehension of military deserters and by the end 130 it was responsible for the preparations for the 2003 invasion of Iraq Branches and sections enjoyed powers similar to those of the police in the West Outside of Baghdad they were legally authorised to incarcerate suspects using Extrajudicial procedures 131 One of the party s most important functions was gathering information about its opponents In Northern Iraq the Ba ath gathered information about the Kurdish Democratic Party by tracking their activities among the local population They tried to recruit members from Kurd dominated areas through supplying food or a literacy campaign 131 During the drive to Arabise Kurdistan the party resettled several hundred loyal party officials there to strengthen the party in the area Kurds who had moved from Kurdistan would in most instances not be allowed back unless they were loyal Ba ath Party members 132 The Military and Armament Department was responsible for coordinating the distribution of arms to party officials 133 Management editDiscipline edit The Ba ath Party instilled party discipline in its members According to a statement in the Revolutionary Command Council RCC Party members are expected to inspire others by their exemplary behavior sense of discipline political consciousness and willingness to sacrifice themselves in the interests of the Party and state 134 Saddam was a great believer in discipline and believed that lack of discipline and organisation were behind any failure In accordance with this view the party issued a myriad of rules and regulations to combat laziness corruption and abuses of power Members found breaching the party code were either demoted or expelled from the party 135 Finances edit The Ba ath Party was supported financially by the RCC the highest executive and legislative body of government Members were required to pays fees commensurate with their ranks For instance a supporting member would pay 25 Iraqi dinar for membership while a branch member would pay 3 000 Iraqi dinars Fees were important in the party s balance sheet The central party leadership often emphasised the importance of members financial abilities The leadership encouraged members to contribute more to party finances 136 According to Jawad Hashim a former Minister of Planning and the RCC Economic Advisor Saddam gave the Ba ath Party the five percent of Iraqi oil revenues which were previously owned by the Gulbenkin Foundation Saddam s reasoning was that if a counter coup took place and the Ba ath Party was forced from power as had been the case in November 1963 the party needed financial security so that it could reclaim power 136 By Hasim s estimates the Ba ath Party had accumulated US 10 billion in external revenues by 1989 134 Membership edit When the party came to power in 1968 in the 17 July Revolution it was determined to increase party membership so that it could compete with ideological opponents such as the Iraqi Communist Party Saddam had a clear plan and on 25 February 1976 he said It should be our ambition to make all Iraqis in the country Ba athists in membership and belief or in the latter only 137 This is contrary to his statements in the 1990s when increasing membership was more important than recruiting members who adhered to Ba athist ideology 138 Like most parties the Ba ath membership was organised in a hierarchical manner The head of a branch division or section was the secretary general who was responsible to the secretariat At the bottom was sympathiser a member seeking to climb the party ranks with the status of active members which could take five to 10 years In certain provinces national activity was the status given to the lowest level of the hierarchy Where this level existed it could take two to three years to climb up to the rank of sympathiser 138 The report to the 10th National Congress stated that It is not sufficient for a member just to believe in the idea of the party but what is required is total commitment and not simply a political affiliation 139 Electoral history editPresidential elections edit Election Party candidate Votes Result 1995 Saddam Hussein 8 348 700 99 99 Elected nbsp Y 2002 11 445 638 100 Elected nbsp Y National Assembly elections edit Election Party leader Seats 1980 Saddam Hussein 187 250 nbsp 187 1984 183 250 nbsp 4 1989 207 250 nbsp 24 1996 161 250 nbsp 46 2000 165 250 nbsp 4 January 2005 Banned December 2005 2010 Izzat Ibrahim al Douri 2014 2018 2021 Mohammed Younis al AhmedSee also editBa ath Party archivesReferences edit Sassoon Joseph 2012 Saddam Hussein s Ba th Party Inside an Authoritarian Regime 1st ed Cambridge University Press pp 36 99 ISBN 978 0 521 14915 0 Ghareeb Edmund A Dougherty Beth K 2004 Historical Dictionary of Iraq The Scarecrow Press Ltd p 174 ISBN 978 0810865686 Sheffer Gabriel Ma oz Moshe 2002 Middle Eastern Minorities and Diasporas Sussex Academic Press p 174 ISBN 978 1 902210 84 1 Metz Helen Chapin Iraq Politics The Baath Party Library of Congress Country Studies Retrieved 23 October 2011 Ghareeb Edmund A Dougherty Beth K 2004 Historical Dictionary of Iraq The Scarecrow Press Ltd p 194 ISBN 978 0810865686 Polk William Roe 2006 Understanding Iraq A Whistlestop Tour from Ancient Babylon to Occupied Baghdad I B Tauris p 109 ISBN 978 1 84511 123 6 Sheffer Gabriel Ma oz Moshe 2002 Middle Eastern Minorities and Diasporas Sussex Academic Press p 174 ISBN 978 1 902210 84 1 Ali Tariq 2004 Bush in Babylon The Recolonisation of Iraq Verso pp 106 107 ISBN 978 1 84467 512 8 Although being officially banned by the U S led Coalition Provisional Authority and then reaffirmed by referendum in October 2005 national leadership stopped functioning but regional chapters are still active in Iraq Coalition Provisional Authority Order Number 1 De Ba athification of Iraqi Society PDF Coalition Provisional Authority Archived from the original PDF on 21 June 2004 Retrieved 24 September 2010 Ismael Tareq 2008 The Rise and Fall of the Communist Party of Iraq Cambridge University Press pp 172 173 ISBN 978 0 521 87394 9 Coughlin Con 2005 Saddam His Rise and Fall Harper Perennial pp 44 46 ISBN 0 06 050543 5 People s Army Popular Army People s Militia Globalsecurity org 2007 Archived from the original on 11 April 2008 Retrieved 24 April 2008 Fedayeen Enforces Loyalty Among Iraq Army Washington Post March 24 2003 Arraf Jane 12 March 2014 Iraq s Sunni tribal leaders say fight for Fallujah is part of a revolution Washington Post Archived from the original on 12 June 2018 Retrieved 15 June 2014 The councils include tribal leaders and former insurgent leaders but are headed by former senior army officers among the thousands of Sunni generals cast aside when the United States disbanded the Iraqi army after the toppling of Saddam Hussein in 2003 We consider the Iraqi government illegitimate because it is a result of the U S occupation said Dari head of the association s information office a b Iraq to remove 90 former Baathists from ballots NBC News 23 December 2005 Retrieved 12 November 2023 Colin Freeman 18 May 2013 Izzat Ibrahim al Douri the King of Clubs is back and he may yet prove to be Saddam Hussein s trump card The Telegraph Heras Nicholas A The Tribal Component of Iraq s Sunni Rebellion The General Military Council for Iraqi Revolutionaries Jamestown Retrieved 12 September 2014 Daniel Cassman Islamic Army in Iraq Mapping Militant Organizations Stanford edu Retrieved 14 September 2012 How Syria s civil war is spilling over Middle East Al Jazeera English Retrieved 19 August 2014 Also referred to as Saddamist Ba athism Bengio Ofra 1998 Saddam s Word Political Discourse in Iraq Oxford University Press p 208 ISBN 978 0195151855 Niblock Tim 1982 Iraq the contemporary state Croom Helm Ltd p 62 ISBN 978 0 7099 1810 3 al Marashi Ibrahim Salama Sammy 2008 Iraq s Armed Forces an Analytical History Paperback Oxon England UK New York New York USA Routledge p 108 ISBN 978 0 415 40078 7 Blamires Cyprian Jackson Paul 2006 World Fascism A Historical Encyclopedia Volume 1 ABC CLIO p 82 84 ISBN 978 1576079409 Kieran Matthew 1998 The Myth of Saddam Hussein New Militarism and the Propaganda Function of the Human Interest Story ISBN 978 0203003619 Niblock Tim 1982 Iraq the Contemporary State Croom Helm Ltd p 65 ISBN 978 0 7099 1810 3 Kienle Eberhard 1991 Ba th versus Ba th The Conflict between Syria and Iraq 1968 1989 I B Tauris p 38 ISBN 1 85043 192 2 Motyl Alexander J 2001 Encyclopedia of Nationalism Leaders Movements and Concepts Volume II Credo Reference Academic Press p 240 ISBN 978 0122272325 Tripp Charles 2002 A History of Iraq Cambridge University Press p 143 ISBN 978 0 521 52900 6 Niblock Tim 1982 Iraq the contemporary state Croom Helm Ltd p 64 ISBN 978 0 7099 1810 3 Requiem for Arab Nationalism by Adeed Dawisha Middle East Quarterly Winter 2003 Alnasrawi 1994 pp 72 73 Alnasrawi 1994 p 55 Tripp Charles 2002 A History of Iraq Cambridge University Press p 143 ISBN 978 0 521 52900 6 a b Stokes Jamie 2009 Encyclopedia of the Peoples of Africa and the Middle East Infobase Publishing p 322 ISBN 978 1 4381 2676 0 Following two more coups in 1963 and 1968 the Baath Party a socialist Pan Arab political party with branches in neighboring Syria and other Arab states established itself in power The Baath Party was to rule Iraq for the next 35 years for 24 of those years under President Saddam Hussein A dominant feature of the Baath Party s ideology in Iraq was its secularism This is a feature it shared with other Pan Arab groups In general the Pan Arab movement wanted to create secular socialist states for Arabs in which infighting between religious sects would not occur Attacks draw mixed response in Mideast CNN 12 September 2001 Archived from the original on 13 August 2007 Retrieved 30 March 2007 February 24 1972 Report on the Visit of Saddam Hussein to the USSR History and Public Policy Program Digital Archive Translated for CWIHP by Daniel Rozas Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars p 3 Baram Amatzia October 2011 From Militant Secularism to Islamism The Iraqi Ba th Regime 1968 2003 PDF Occasional Papers Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars History amp Public Policy Program Archived from the original PDF on 22 July 2015 Lewis Paul 21 August 1994 Iraq Bans Public Use Of Alcohol The New York Times Saddam and Islam Interview With Univ of Penn s Dr Samuel Helfont Musings on Iraq BlogSpot 2 July 2018 Retrieved 23 July 2019 Throughout the 1990s it appears that Iraqi society became more religious more sectarian and more prone toward Islamism Salafism and other militant ideologies Archive Wilson Center Digital Wilson Center Digital Archive digitalarchive wilsoncenter org Retrieved 27 March 2018 Rayburn Joel 2014 Saddam s Faith Campaign and the promotion of Salafism Iraq after America Strongmen Sectarians Resistance Hoover Institution Press pp 101 104 ISBN 978 0 8179 1694 7 The Jews started the War Again this time it s the Iraq war Retrieved 23 April 2015 Saddam to be formally charged The Washington Times July 1 2004 Retrieved 2011 10 09 Saddam calls for jihad against Israel The Guardian 25 Dec 2000 Ideological positions in Iraq do not align neatly along a left right spectrum Instead they loosely cluster around preferences for pro market policies versus state intervention in the economy more versus less religion in government more versus less democracy in government and more versus less nationalistic sentiment al Lami Alaa 18 January 2012 Sectarian Divisions Plague Iraqi Baath Party Al Akhbar Archived from the original on 21 July 2013 Retrieved 19 June 2013 Alekseĭ Mikhaĭlovich Vasilʹev Alexei Vassiliev 1993 Russian Policy in the Middle East From Messianism to Pragmatism p 63 ISBN 978 0863721687 Rafid Fadhil Ali 9 February 2009 Reviving the Iraqi Ba ath A Profile of General Muhammad Yunis al Ahmad Jamestown Foundation Archived from the original on 6 August 2018 Retrieved 6 August 2018 Coughlin Con 2005 Saddam His Rise and Fall Harper Perennial p 41 ISBN 0 06 050543 5 A I Dawisha 1976 Egypt in the Arab World The Elements of Foreign Policy American Political Science Review Cambridge University Press p 56 ISBN 978 0333191958 Blamires Cyprian Jackson Paul 2006 World Fascism A Historical Encyclopedia Volume 1 ABC CLIO p 82 84 ISBN 978 1576079409 Alan John Day ed 1983 Political Dissent An International Guide to Dissident Extra parliamentary Guerrilla and Illegal Political Movements Gale Research Company p 223 ISBN 9780810320505 Arabic وحدة حرية اشتراكية romanized Wahda Hurriyah Ishtirakiyah Bengio Ofra 1998 Saddam s Word Political Discourse in Iraq Paperback Oxford England UK New York New York USA Oxford University Press p 35 ISBN 978 0 19 511439 3 Arabic شعلة البعث صباحي romanized shuelat albaeth sabahi Ghareeb Edmund A Dougherty Beth K Historical Dictionary of Iraq Lanham Maryland and Oxford The Scarecrow Press Ltd 2004 pp 170 171 Al Qaisy 2019 National Union Front and the fall of the monarchy Al Mada Archived from the original on 18 February 2019 Retrieved 13 June 2022 a b Polk 2006 p 109 Ghareeb amp Dougherty 2004 p 194 Metz Helen Chapin Iraq Politics The Baath Party Library of Congress Country Studies Retrieved 23 October 2011 Sheffer amp Ma oz 2002 p 174 Tripp 2002 p 143 Davies 2005 p 200 Davies 2005 p 320 Patterson 2010 p 229 Nakash 2003 p 136 a b c Dawisha 2005 p 174 Sheffer amp Ma oz 2002 pp 174 175 Tucker 2008 p 185 Dawisha 2005 p 224 Coughlin 2005 p 22 Coughlin 2005 pp 24 25 Polk William Roe 2005 Understanding Iraq I B Tauris p 111 ISBN 978 0857717641 Simons Geoff 1996 Iraq From Sumer to Saddam St Martin s Press p 221 ISBN 978 0312160524 Coughlin 2005 pp 25 26 a b Coughlin 2005 p 29 Sale Richard 10 April 2003 Exclusive Saddam Key in Early CIA Plot United Press International Retrieved 2 April 2018 Osgood Kenneth 2009 Eisenhower and regime change in Iraq the United States and the Iraqi Revolution of 1958 America and Iraq Policy making Intervention and Regional Politics Routledge p 16 ISBN 9781134036721 The documentary record is filled with holes A remarkable volume of material remains classified and those records that are available are obscured by redactions large blacked out sections that allow for plausible deniability While it is difficult to know exactly what actions were taken to destabilize or overthrow Qasim s regime we can discern fairly clearly what was on the planning table We also can see clues as to what was authorized a b c Osgood Kenneth 2009 Eisenhower and regime change in Iraq the United States and the Iraqi Revolution of 1958 America and Iraq Policy making Intervention and Regional Politics Routledge pp 21 23 ISBN 9781134036721 Gibson Bryan R 2015 Sold Out US Foreign Policy Iraq the Kurds and the Cold War Palgrave Macmillan pp 25 26 ISBN 978 1 137 48711 7 Wolfe Hunnicutt Brandon 2021 The Paranoid Style in American Diplomacy Oil and Arab Nationalism in Iraq Stanford University Press pp 53 54 ISBN 978 1 5036 1382 9 Coughlin 2005 p 30 Karsh Efraim Rautsi Inari 2002 Saddam Hussein A Political Biography Grove Press pp 15 22 25 ISBN 978 0 8021 3978 8 Makiya Kanan 1998 Republic of Fear The Politics of Modern Iraq Updated Edition University of California Press p 118 ISBN 978 0 520 92124 5 Coughlin 2005 p 34 Wolfe Hunnicutt Brandon 2021 The Paranoid Style in American Diplomacy Oil and Arab Nationalism in Iraq Stanford University Press pp 86 87 93 102 ISBN 978 1 5036 1382 9 Gibson Bryan R 2015 Sold Out US Foreign Policy Iraq the Kurds and the Cold War Palgrave Macmillan pp 35 45 ISBN 978 1 137 48711 7 For sources that agree or sympathize with assertions of U S involvement see Wolfe Hunnicutt Brandon Middle East Studies Pedagogy Initiative MESPI 20 July 2018 Essential Readings The United States and Iraq before Saddam Hussein s Rule Jadaliyya CIA involvement in the 1963 coup that first brought the Ba th to power in Iraq has been an open secret for decades American government and media have never been asked to fully account for the CIA s role in the coup On the contrary the US government has put forward and official narrative riddled with holes redactions that cannot be declassified for national security reasons Citino Nathan J 2017 The People s Court Envisioning the Arab Future Modernization in US Arab Relations 1945 1967 Cambridge University Press pp 182 183 ISBN 978 1 108 10755 6 Washington backed the movement by military officers linked to the pan Arab Ba th Party that overthrew Qasim in a coup on February 8 1963 Jacobsen E 1 November 2013 A Coincidence of Interests Kennedy U S Assistance and the 1963 Iraqi Ba th Regime Diplomatic History 37 5 1029 1059 doi 10 1093 dh dht049 ISSN 0145 2096 There is ample evidence that the CIA not only had contacts with the Iraqi Ba th in the early sixties but also assisted in the planning of the coup Ismael Tareq Y Ismael Jacqueline S Perry Glenn E 2016 Government and Politics of the Contemporary Middle East Continuity and Change 2nd ed Routledge p 240 ISBN 978 1 317 66282 2 Ba thist forces and army officers overthrew Qasim on February 8 1963 in collaboration with the CIA Little Douglas 14 October 2004 Mission Impossible The CIA and the Cult of Covert Action in the Middle East Diplomatic History 28 5 663 701 doi 10 1111 j 1467 7709 2004 00446 x ISSN 1467 7709 Such self serving denials notwithstanding the CIA actually appears to have had a great deal to do with the bloody Ba athist coup that toppled Qassim in February 1963 Deeply troubled by Qassim s steady drift to the left by his threats to invade Kuwait and by his attempt to cancel Western oil concessions U S intelligence made contact with anticommunist Ba ath activists both inside and outside the Iraqi army during the early 1960s Osgood Kenneth 2009 Eisenhower and regime change in Iraq the United States and the Iraqi Revolution of 1958 America and Iraq Policy making Intervention and Regional Politics Routledge pp 26 27 ISBN 9781134036721 Working with Nasser the Ba ath Party and other opposition elements including some in the Iraqi army the CIA by 1963 was well positioned to help assemble the coalition that overthrew Qasim in February of that year It is not clear whether Qasim s assassination as Said Aburish has written was one of the most elaborate CIA operations in the history of the Middle East That judgment remains to be proven But the trail linking the CIA is suggestive Sluglett Peter The Old Social Classes and the Revolutionary Movements of Iraq A Study of Iraq s Old Landed and Commercial Classes and of its Communists Ba thists and Free Officers Review PDF Democratiya p 9 Batatu infers on pp 985 86 that the CIA was involved in the coup of 1963 which brought the Ba ath briefly to power Even if the evidence here is somewhat circumstantial there can be no question about the Ba ath s fervent anti communism Wolfe Hunnicutt Brandon 2021 The Paranoid Style in American Diplomacy Oil and Arab Nationalism in Iraq Stanford University Press p 119 ISBN 978 1 5036 1382 9 Weldon Matthews Malik Mufti Douglas Little William Zeman and Eric Jacobsen have all drawn on declassified American records to largely substantiate the plausibility of Batatu s account Peter Hahn and Bryan Gibson in separate works argue that the available evidence does support the claim of CIA collusion with the Ba th However each makes this argument in the course of a much broader study and neither examines the question in any detail Mitchel Timothy 2002 Rule of Experts Egypt Techno Politics Modernity University of California Press p 149 ISBN 9780520928251 Qasim was killed three years later in a coup welcomed and possibly aided by the CIA which brought to power the Ba ath the party of Saddam Hussein Weiner Tim 2008 Legacy of Ashes The History of the CIA Doubleday p 163 ISBN 9780307455628 The agency finally backed a successful coup in Iraq in the name of American influence For sources that dispute assertions of U S involvement see Gibson Bryan R 2015 Sold Out US Foreign Policy Iraq the Kurds and the Cold War Palgrave Macmillan p 58 ISBN 978 1 137 48711 7 Barring the release of new information the balance of evidence suggests that while the United States was actively plotting the overthrow of the Qasim regime it did not appear to be directly involved in the February 1963 coup Hahn Peter 2011 Missions Accomplished The United States and Iraq Since World War I Oxford University Press p 48 ISBN 9780195333381 Declassified U S government documents offer no evidence to support these suggestions Barrett Roby C 2007 The Greater Middle East and the Cold War US Foreign Policy Under Eisenhower and Kennedy I B Tauris p 451 ISBN 9780857713087 Washington wanted to see Qasim and his Communist supporters removed but that is a far cry from Batatu s inference that the U S had somehow engineered the coup The U S lacked the operational capability to organize and carry out the coup but certainly after it had occurred the U S government preferred the Nasserists and Ba athists in power and provided encouragement and probably some peripheral assistance West Nigel 2017 Encyclopedia of Political Assassinations Rowman amp Littlefield p 205 ISBN 9781538102398 Although Qasim was regarded as an adversary by the West having nationalized the Iraq Petroleum Company which had joint Anglo American ownership no plans had been made to depose him principally because of the absence of a plausible successor Nevertheless the CIA pursued other schemes to prevent Iraq from coming under Soviet influence and one such target was an unidentified colonel thought to have been Qasim s cousin the notorious Fadhil Abbas al Mahdawi who was appointed military prosecutor to try members of the previous Hashemite monarchy Wolfe Hunnicutt Brandon 2021 The Paranoid Style in American Diplomacy Oil and Arab Nationalism in Iraq Stanford University Press p 117 ISBN 978 1 5036 1382 9 What really happened in Iraq in February 1963 remains shrouded behind a veil of official secrecy Many of the most relevant documents remain classified Others were destroyed And still others were never created in the first place Matthews Weldon C 9 November 2011 The Kennedy Administration Counterinsurgency and Iraq s First Ba thist Regime International Journal of Middle East Studies 43 4 635 653 doi 10 1017 S0020743811000882 ISSN 1471 6380 S2CID 159490612 Archival sources on the U S relationship with this regime are highly restricted Many records of the Central Intelligence Agency s operations and the Department of Defense from this period remain classified and some declassified records have not been transferred to the National Archives or cataloged Matthews Weldon C 9 November 2011 The Kennedy Administration Counterinsurgency and Iraq s First Ba thist Regime International Journal of Middle East Studies 43 4 635 653 doi 10 1017 S0020743811000882 ISSN 0020 7438 S2CID 159490612 Kennedy Administration officials viewed the Iraqi Ba th Party in 1963 as an agent of counterinsurgency directed against Iraqi communists and they cultivated supportive relationships with Ba thist officials police commanders and members of the Ba th Party militia The American relationship with militia members and senior police commanders had begun even before the February coup and Ba thist police commanders involved in the coup had been trained in the United States a b Wolfe Hunnicutt B 1 January 2015 Embracing Regime Change in Iraq American Foreign Policy and the 1963 Coup d etat in Baghdad Diplomatic History 39 1 98 125 doi 10 1093 dh dht121 ISSN 0145 2096 a b Coughlin 2005 p 40 a b c Coughlin 2005 p 41 Citino Nathan J 2017 The People s Court Envisioning the Arab Future Modernization in US Arab Relations 1945 1967 Cambridge University Press p 221 ISBN 978 1108107556 Wolfe Hunnicutt Brandon 2021 The Paranoid Style in American Diplomacy Oil and Arab Nationalism in Iraq Stanford University Press p 206 ISBN 978 1 5036 1382 9 Iraq Green Armbands Red Blood Time 22 February 1963 ISSN 0040 781X Batatu Hanna 1978 The Old Social Classes and the Revolutionary Movements of Iraq A Study of Iraq s Old Landed and Commercial Classes and of its Communists Ba thists and Free Officers Princeton University Press pp 985 987 ISBN 978 0863565205 a b Wolfe Hunnicutt Brandon March 2011 The End of the Concessionary Regime Oil and American Power in Iraq 1958 1972 PDF pp 84 85 Farouk Sluglett Marion Sluglett Peter 2001 Iraq Since 1958 From Revolution to Dictatorship I B Tauris p 86 ISBN 9780857713735 Although individual leftists had been murdered intermittently over the previous years the scale on which the killings and arrests took place in the spring and summer of 1963 indicates a closely coordinated campaign and it is almost certain that those who carried out the raid on suspects homes were working from lists supplied to them Precisely how these lists had been compiled is a matter of conjecture but it is certain that some of the Ba th leaders were in touch with American intelligence networks and it is also undeniable that a variety of different groups in Iraq and elsewhere in the Middle East had a strong vested interest in breaking what was probably the strongest and most popular communist party in the region Gibson Bryan R 2015 Sold Out US Foreign Policy Iraq the Kurds and the Cold War Palgrave Macmillan p 59 ISBN 978 1 137 48711 7 Citino Nathan J 2017 The People s Court Envisioning the Arab Future Modernization in US Arab Relations 1945 1967 Cambridge University Press pp 220 222 ISBN 978 1 108 10755 6 Wolfe Hunnicutt Brandon March 2011 The End of the Concessionary Regime Oil and American Power in Iraq 1958 1972 PDF pp 84 85 One study from 1961 or 1962 included a section on the capability of the U S Government to provide support to friendly groups not in power who are seeking the violent overthrow of a communist dominated and supported government The study went on to discuss providing covert assistance to such groups and advised that Pinpointing of enemy concentrations and hideouts can permit effective use of Hunter Killer teams Given the Embassy s concern with the immediate suppression of Baghdad s sarifa population it seems likely that American intelligence services would be interested in providing support to the Ba thist Hunter Killer teams Wolfe Hunnicutt Brandon 2021 The Paranoid Style in American Diplomacy Oil and Arab Nationalism in Iraq Stanford University Press pp 111 112 ISBN 978 1 5036 1382 9 The CIA had long employed the method of targeted assassination in its global crusade against Communism In 1954 a CIA team involved in the overthrow of Guatemalan leader Jacobo Arbenz compiled a veritable Handbook of Assassination replete with precise instructions for committing political murder and a list of suspected Guatemalan Communists to be targeted for executive action In the 1960s the Kennedy administration made this rather ad hoc practice into a science According to its special warfare doctrines covertly armed and trained Hunter Killer teams were a highly effective instrument in the root and branch eradication of Communist threats in developing nations In what became known as the Jakarta Method named for the systematic CIA backed purge of Indonesian Communists in 1965 the CIA was involved in countless campaigns of mass murder in the name of anti Communism a b Mufti 1996 p 161 Coughlin 2005 pp 41 42 Coughlin 2005 p 44 Coughlin 2005 p 45 a b Coughlin 2005 pp 45 46 a b Mufti 1996 p 165 Mufti 1996 p 159 Mufti 1996 p 160 Mufti 1996 pp 160 161 Coughlin 2005 p 48 Coughlin 2005 p 55 a b Coughlin 2005 p 52 Coughlin 2005 p 53 Coughlin 2005 p 56 Coughlin 2005 p 57 Coughlin 2005 p 74 Coughlin 2005 p 120 Coughlin 2005 p 94 Coughlin 2005 p 85 Coughlin 2005 p 98 a b Coughlin 2005 p 106 Coughlin 2005 p 150 Coughlin 2005 p 107 Coughlin 2005 p 105 Paley Amit R Joshua Partlow 23 January 2008 Iraq s New Law on Ex Baathists Could Bring Another Purge The Washington Post Retrieved 27 April 2009 a b Staff writer 31 December 2006 Fugitive Baathists Pledge Support to New Leader Izzat Ibrahim After Saddam Hussein s Execution Fox News Associated Press Retrieved 21 June 2013 a b Staff writer 5 January 2007 Iraq s Baath party names new leader Aljazeera Retrieved 19 June 2013 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Ali Fadhil 5 January 2007 Reviving the Iraqi Ba ath A Profile of General Muhammad Yunis al Ahmad Jamestown Vol VII no 3 Jamestown Foundation Retrieved 10 February 2009 a b c d e f g h al Lami Alaa 18 January 2012 Sectarian Divisions Plague Iraqi Baath Party Al Akhbar Retrieved 19 June 2013 Former Iraqi Defense Intelligence Chief Requests Resettlement Comments on Ba th Party And AQI Cablegate 17 April 2007 Archived from the original on 10 June 2012 Retrieved 10 July 2013 a b c d al Lami Alaa 1 November 2011 Iraq s Rising Tide of Separatism Ahead of US Withdrawal Al Akhbar Retrieved 19 June 2013 a b Nasrawi Salah 4 July 2012 Fugitive Saddam Aide Calls For Better US Ties After Troops Leave Govt Toppled The Huffington Post Retrieved 19 June 2013 a b Freeman Colin 18 May 2013 Izzat Ibrahim al Douri the King of Clubs is back and he may yet prove to be Saddam Hussein s trump card The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 19 June 2013 a b c Sassoon 2012 p 36 Sassoon 2012 p 99 Sassoon 2012 p 11 Sassoon 2012 pp 11 12 Sassoon 2012 p 12 a b c Sassoon 2012 p 35 Sassoon 2012 p 285 a b Sassoon 2012 p 37 Sassoon 2012 pp 37 38 a b Sassoon 2012 p 38 a b Sassoon 2012 p 39 Sassoon 2012 pp 39 40 Sassoon 2012 p 40 a b Sassoon 2012 p 42 Sassoon 2012 p 43 a b Sassoon 2012 p 41 Sassoon 2012 p 45 a b Sassoon 2012 p 46 Sassoon 2012 p 47 Bibliography edit Alnasrawi Abbas 1994 The Economy of Iraq Oil Wars Destruction of Development and Prospects 1950 2010 ABC CLIO ISBN 978 0 313 29186 9 Bengio Ofra 1998 Saddam s Word Political Discourse in Iraq Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 511439 6 Coughlin Con 2005 Saddam His Rise and Fall Harper Perennial ISBN 978 0 06 050543 1 Davies Eric 2005 Memories of State Politics History and Collective Identity in modern Iraq University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 23546 5 Dawisha Addid 2005 Arab nationalism in the Twentieth Century From Triumph to Despair Princeton University Press p 224 ISBN 978 0691102733 Farouk Sluglett Marion Sluglett Peter 2001 Iraq since 1958 From Revolution to Dictatorship London New York I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 86064 622 5 Ghareeb Edmund A Dougherty Beth K 2004 Historical Dictionary of Iraq The Scarecrow Press Ltd ISBN 978 0 8108 4330 1 Harris William 1997 Challenges to Democracy in the Middle East Markus Wiener Publishers ISBN 978 1 55876 149 0 Malik Mufti 1996 Sovereign Creations pan Arabism and Political order in Syria and Iraq 1st ed Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 3168 5 Nakash Yitzhak 2003 The Shi is of Iraq Revised ed Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 11575 7 Niblock Tim 1982 Iraq the contemporary state Croom Helm Ltd ISBN 978 0 7099 1810 3 Patterson David 2010 A Genealogy of Evil Anti Semitism from Nazism to Islamic Jihad Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 13261 9 Polk William Roe 2006 Understanding Iraq A Whistlestop Tour from Ancient Babylon to Occupied Baghdad I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 84511 123 6 Salem Paul 1994 Bitter Legacy Ideology and Politics in the Arab World Syracuse University Press ISBN 978 0 8156 2628 2 Sassoon Joseph 2012 Saddam Hussein s Ba th Party Inside an Authoritarian Regime 1st ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 14915 0 Sheffer Gabriel Ma oz Moshe 2002 Middle Eastern Minorities and Diasporas Sussex Academic Press ISBN 978 1 902210 84 1 Tripp Charles 2002 A History of Iraq Cambridge University Press p 143 ISBN 978 0 521 52900 6 Tucker Spencer C Roberts Priscilla Mary 2008 The encyclopedia of the Arab Israeli conflict a Political Social and Military History A F Vol 1 1st ed ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 85109 841 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Arab Socialist Ba 27ath Party Iraq Region amp oldid 1221749959, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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