fbpx
Wikipedia

Ramadan Revolution

The Ramadan Revolution, also referred to as the 8 February Revolution and the February 1963 coup d'état in Iraq, was a military coup by the Ba'ath Party's Iraqi-wing which overthrew the Prime Minister of Iraq, Abd al-Karim Qasim in 1963. It took place between 8 and 10 February 1963. Qasim's former deputy, Abdul Salam Arif, who was not a Ba'athist, was given the largely ceremonial title of President, while prominent Ba'athist general Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr was named Prime Minister. The most powerful leader of the new government was the secretary general of the Iraqi Ba'ath Party, Ali Salih al-Sa'di, who controlled the National Guard militia and organized a massacre of hundreds—if not thousands—of suspected communists and other dissidents following the coup.[4]

Ramadan Revolution
Part of the Cold War and the Arab Cold War

The corpse of Abd al-Karim Qasim.
Date8–10 February 1963
Location
Result
Belligerents

Iraqi Government

National Council of the Revolutionary Command

Commanders and leaders
Abd al-Karim Qasim  Ali Salih al-Sa'di
Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr
Abdul Salam Arif
Casualties and losses
100[1] 80[2]
1,500–5,000 alleged civilian supporters of Qasim and/or the Iraqi Communist Party killed during a three day "house-to-house search"[1][3]
A sign with the image of Qasim taken down during the coup

The government lasted approximately nine months, until Arif disarmed the National Guard in the November 1963 Iraqi coup d'état, which was followed by a purge of Ba'ath Party members.

Background

Some time after the Homeland Officers' Organization, or "Al-Ahrar" ("The Free") succeeded in toppling the monarchy and transforming the Iraqi government into a republic in 1958, signs of differences between political parties and forces and the Homeland Officers' Organization began when Pan-Arab nationalist forces led by Abdul Salam Arif and the Ba'ath Party called for immediate unification with the United Arab Republic (UAR). In an attempt to create a state of political equilibrium, the Iraqi Communist Party (ICP), which opposed unity, tried to discount cooperation with the UAR in economics, culture, and science rather than political and military agreements.

Gradually, Abd al-Karim Qasim's relations with some of his fellow members of Al-Ahrar worsened, and his relationship with the unionist and nationalist currents, which had played an active role in supporting the 1958 movement, became strained. As for conflicting currents in the ICP, they were aspiring for a coalition with General Qasim and had long been extending their relationship with him. Qasim thought that some of his allies in the Communist party were coming close to leapfrogging the proposition, especially after the increasing influence of the Communist party in the use of the slogan, proclaimed by many Communists and government supporters during marches: "Long live leader Abd al-Karim and the Communist Party in governing great demand!"[5] Qasim began to minimize the Communist movement, which was poised to overthrow the government. He ordered the party to be disarmed and most of the party leaders to be arrested. However, the party retained Air Commander Jalal al-Awqati and Lt. Col. Fadhil Abbas Mahdawi, Qasim's cousin.

An overlapping set of both internal and regional factors created conditions conducive to the overthrow of Prime Minister Abd al-Karim Qasim and his staff. Some historians have argued that the overthrow can be attributed to the blundering individualism of Qasim and the errors committed in the execution of leaders and locals as well as acts of violence which arose from the Communist militias allied with Qasim.[6] Also to blame may be an increasingly forceful disagreement with Field Marshal Abdul Salam Arif, who was under house arrest. Qasim also made statements reiterating his support for Syrian General Abdel-Karim and Colonel Alnhlaoi Mowaffaq Asasa, with the intent of encouraging a coup to divide Syria, which was then joined with Egypt as part of the UAR.

Coup

 
Soldier in the ruins of the Ministry of Defence, where Qasim made his last stand

Qasim's removal took place on 8 February 1963, the fourteenth day of Ramadan, and so the coup was called the 14 Ramadan Coup. It had been in its planning stages since 1962, and several attempts had been planned, only to be abandoned for fear of discovery.[7] The coup had been initially planned for January 18, but was moved to 25 January and then 8 February after Qasim gained knowledge of the proposed attempt and arrested some of the plotters.

The coup began in the early morning of 8 February 1963, when the communist air force chief, Jalal al-Awqati, was assassinated, and tank units occupied the Abu Ghraib radio station. A bitter two-day struggle unfolded with heavy fighting between the Ba'athist conspirators and pro-Qasim forces. Qasim took refuge in the Ministry of Defence, where fighting became particularly heavy. Communist sympathisers took to the streets to resist the coup, which added to the high casualties: "An estimated eighty Ba'thists and between 300 and 5,000 communist sympathizers were killed in the two days of fighting to control Baghdad's streets," as recounted by Ariel Ira Ahram.[2]

On 9 February, Qasim eventually offered his surrender in return for safe passage out of the country. His request was refused, and in the afternoon, he was executed on the orders of the newly formed National Council of the Revolutionary Command (NCRC).[8] Qasim was given a mock trial over Baghdad radio and then killed. Many of his Shi'ite supporters believed that he had merely gone into hiding and would appear like the Mahdi to lead a rebellion against the new government. To counter that sentiment and to terrorize his supporters, Qasim's dead body was displayed on television in a five-minute propaganda video, The End of the Criminals, which included close-up views of his bullet wounds amid disrespectful treatment of his corpse, which is spat on in the final scene.[9][10]

Qasim's former deputy, Abdul Salam Arif, who was not a Ba'athist, was given the largely-ceremonial title of President, and the prominent Ba'athist General Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr was named Prime Minister. However, the secretary general of the Ba'ath Party, Ali Salih al-Sa'di, used his control of the National Guard militia, commanded by Mundhir al-Wanadawi, to establish himself as the de facto new leader of Iraq and had more authority in reality than al-Bakr or Arif. The nine-month rule of al-Sa'di and his civilian branch of the Ba'ath Party has been described as "a reign of terror" as the National Guard, under orders from the Revolutionary Command Council (RCC) "to annihilate anyone who disturbs the peace," detained, tortured, or executed thousands of suspected Qasim loyalists. Furthermore, the National Guard, which developed from a core group of perhaps 5,000 civilian Ba'athist partisans but increased to 34,000 members by August 1963, who were identified by their green armbands, was poorly-disciplined, as militiamen engaged in extensive infighting and created a widespread perception of chaos and disorder.[2][4]

U.S. involvement

While there have been persistent rumors that the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) orchestrated the coup, publicly declassified documents[11] and the testimony of former CIA officers do not support claims of direct American involvement, although the U.S. had been notified of two aborted Ba'athist coup plots in July and December 1962 and its post-coup actions suggested that "at best it condoned and at worst it contributed to the violence that followed," in the words of Nathan J. Citino.[12][13][14] Despite evidence that the CIA had been closely tracking the Ba'ath Party's coup planning since "at least 1961," a CIA official working with Archie Roosevelt Jr. to instigate a military coup against Qasim, and who later became the head of the CIA's operations in Iraq and Syria, has "denied any involvement in the Ba'ath Party's actions," stating instead that the CIA's efforts against Qasim were still in the planning stages at the time.[15] Bryan R. Gibson believes that "barring the release of new information, the preponderance of evidence substantiates the conclusion that the CIA was not behind the February 1963 Ba'thist coup."[16] By contrast, Brandon Wolfe-Hunnicutt states that "Scholars remain divided in their interpretations of American foreign policy toward the February 1963 coup in Iraq," but along with several other authors cites "compelling evidence of an American role in the coup."[17]

Although it may not have organized the coup, U.S. officials were undoubtedly pleased with the outcome, ultimately approving a $55 million arms deal with Iraq and urging America's Arab allies to oppose a Soviet-sponsored diplomatic offensive accusing Iraq of genocide against its Kurdish minority at the United Nations (UN) General Assembly.[18] It is also widely believed that the CIA provided the new government with lists of communists and other leftists, who were then arrested or killed by the National Guard. This allegation originated in a 27 September 1963 Al-Ahram interview with King Hussein of Jordan, who—seeking to dispel reports that he was on the CIA's payroll—declared:

You tell me that American Intelligence was behind the 1957 events in Jordan. Permit me to tell you that I know for a certainty that what happened in Iraq on 8 February had the support of American Intelligence. Some of those who now rule in Baghdad do not know of this thing but I am aware of the truth. Numerous meetings were held between the Ba'ath party and American Intelligence, the more important in Kuwait. Do you know that ... on 8 February a secret radio beamed to Iraq was supplying the men who pulled the coup with the names and addresses of the Communists there so that they could be arrested and executed? ... Yet I am the one accused of being an agent of America and imperialism![19][20]

"While it's still early, the Iraqi revolution seems to have succeeded. It is almost certainly a net gain for our side. ... We will make informal friendly noises as soon as we can find out whom to talk with, and ought to recognize as soon as we're sure these guys are firmly in the saddle. CIA had excellent reports on the plotting, but I doubt either they or UK should claim much credit for it."

Robert Komer to President John F. Kennedy, February 8, 1963.[21]

According to Hanna Batatu, however, "The Ba'athists had ample opportunity to gather such particulars in 1958-1959, when the Communists came wholly into the open, and earlier, during the Front of National Unity Years—1957-1958—when they had frequent dealings with them on all levels." In addition, "The lists in question proved to be in part out of date", which could be taken as evidence they were compiled well before 1963.[19] Batatu's explanation is supported by Bureau of Intelligence and Research reports stating that "[Communist] party members [are being] rounded up on the basis of lists prepared by the now-dominant Ba'th Party" and that the ICP had "exposed virtually all its assets" whom the Ba'athists had "carefully spotted and listed."[3] On the other hand, Citino notes that two officials in the U.S. embassy in Baghdad—William Lakeland and James E. Akins—"used coverage of the July 1962 Moscow Conference for Disarmament and Peace in Iraq's leftist press to compile lists of Iraqi communists and their supporters ... Those listed included merchants, students, members of professional societies, and journalists, although university professors constituted the largest single group." Furthermore, "Weldon C. Mathews has meticulously established that National Guard leaders who participated in human rights abuses had been trained in the United States as part of a police program run by the International Cooperation Administration and Agency for International Development."[22] The U.S. provided $120,000 in "police assistance" to Iraq during 1963–1965, considerably less than the $832,000 in assistance that it provided to Iran during those years.[23]

Soviet tank "scandal"

The Kennedy administration officially advocated a diplomatic settlement to the First Iraqi–Kurdish War, but its provision of military aid to the Ba'athist government emboldened Iraqi hardliners to resume hostilities against Kurdish rebels on June 10, after which Iraq requested additional emergency U.S. assistance including napalm weapons. President Kennedy approved the arms sale in part on the recommendation of senior adviser Robert Komer and the weapons were provided, but an offer by Iraqi general Hasan Sabri al-Bayati to reciprocate this gesture by sending a Soviet T-54 tank in Iraq's possession to the U.S. embassy in Baghdad for inspection became something of a "scandal" as Bayati's offer had not been approved by al-Bakr, Foreign Minister Talib El-Shibib, or other senior Iraqi officials. Ultimately, the Ba'ath Party leadership reneged on that part of the agreement, fearing that handing over the tank to the U.S. would irrevocably harm Iraq's reputation. Shibib subsequently recounted that the incident damaged Iraq's relations with both the U.S. and the Soviet Union: "On the one side Iraq would lose the Soviets as a source of intelligence. On the other the United States would see us as a bunch of kid swindlers."[24]

Soviet reaction

Throughout 1963, the Soviet Union actively worked to undermine the Ba'athist government, supporting Kurdish rebels under the leadership of Mustafa Barzani with propaganda and a "small monthly stipend for Barzani," suspending military shipments to Iraq in May, convincing its ally Mongolia to make charges of genocide against Iraq at the UN General Assembly from July to September, and sponsoring a failed communist coup attempt on July 3.[25]

Influence on Syria

The same year, the party's military committee in Syria succeeded in persuading Nasserist and independent officers to make common cause with it and successfully carried out a military coup on 8 March. A National Revolutionary Command Council took control, assigned itself legislative power, and appointed Salah al-Din al-Bitar as head of a "national front" government. The Ba'ath participated in the government, along with the Arab Nationalist Movement, the United Arab Front, and the Socialist Unity Movement.

As Batatu notes, that took place without the fundamental disagreement over immediate or "considered" reunification having been resolved. The Ba'ath moved to consolidate its power within the new government by purging Nasserist officers in April. Subsequent disturbances led to the fall of the al-Bitar government, and in the aftermath of Jasim Alwan’s failed Nasserist coup in July, the Ba'ath monopolized power.

Aftermath

The attacks on the people's freedoms carried out by the ... bloodthirsty members of the National Guard, their violation of things sacred, their disregard of the law, the injuries they have done to the state and the people, and finally their armed rebellion on November 13, 1963, has led to an intolerable situation which is fraught with grave dangers to the future of this people which is an integral part of the Arab nation. We have endured all we could. ... The army has answered the call of the people to rid them from this terror.

—President Abdul Salam Arif, 1963.[26]

The Ba'athist government collapsed in November 1963 over the question of unification with Syria and the extremist and uncontrollable behavior of al-Sa'di's National Guard. President Arif, with the overwhelming support of the Iraqi military, purged Ba'athists from the government and ordered the National Guard to stand down and disarm. Although al-Bakr had conspired with Arif to remove al-Sa'di, on 5 January 1964, Arif removed al-Bakr from his new position as Vice President for fear of allowing the Ba'ath Party to retain a foothold inside his government.[2][27]

After the November coup, mounting evidence of Ba'athist atrocities emerged, which Lakeland predicted "will have a more or less permanent effect on the political developments in the country—particularly on the prospects of a Ba'athi revival."[28] Marion Farouk-Sluglett and Peter Sluglett describe the Ba'athists as having cultivated a "profoundly unsavory image" by "acts of wanton brutality" on a scale without prior precedent in Iraq, including "some of the most terrible scenes of violence hitherto experienced in the postwar Middle East." "As almost every family in Baghdad was affected—and both men and women were equally maltreated—the Ba'athists' activities aroused a degree of intense loathing for them that has persisted to this day among many Iraqis of that generation." More broadly, the Slugletts state, "Qasim's failings, serious as they were, can scarcely be discussed in the same terms as the venality, savagery and wanton brutality characteristic of the regimes which followed his own."[29] Batatu recounts:

In the cellars of al-Nihayyah Palace, which the [National Guard's] Bureau [of Special Investigation] used as its headquarters, were found all sorts of loathsome instruments of torture, including electric wires with pincers, pointed iron stakes on which prisoners were made to sit, and a machine which still bore traces of chopped-off fingers. Small heaps of blooded clothing were scattered about, and there were pools on the floor and stains over the walls.[26]

See also

Bibliography

  • Gibson, Bryan R. (2015). Sold Out? US Foreign Policy, Iraq, the Kurds, and the Cold War. Palgrave Macmillan. 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. ISBN 9781108107556.

Further reading

  • 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. ISBN 978-0863565205.
  • Wolfe-Hunnicutt, Brandon (March 2011). "The End of the Concessionary Regime: Oil and American Power in Iraq, 1958-1972" (PDF).
  • Gibson, Bryan R. (April 2013). "U.S. Foreign Policy, Iraq, and the Cold War 1958-1975" (PDF).

References

  1. ^ a b Makiya, Kanan (1998). Republic of Fear: The Politics of Modern Iraq, Updated Edition. University of California Press. p. 29. ISBN 9780520921245.
  2. ^ a b c d Ahram, Ariel Ira (2011). Proxy Warriors: The Rise and Fall of State-Sponsored Militias. Stanford University Press. pp. 75–77. ISBN 9780804773591.
  3. ^ a b Gibson 2015, p. 59.
  4. ^ a b Gibson 2015, pp. 59–60, 77.
  5. ^ Monsour, Ahmed and Aaraf Abd Alrazaq. 2002. Interview. "Witnessing the Age." Al-Jazeera Television.
  6. ^ Pachachi, D. Adnan. Recorded Program. Al-Sharqiya Satellite Channel.
  7. ^ Citino 2017, p. 218.
  8. ^ Marr, Phebe; "The Modern History of Iraq", p. 184-185
  9. ^ Makiya, Kanan (1998). Republic of Fear: The Politics of Modern Iraq, Updated Edition. University of California Press. pp. 58-59. ISBN 9780520921245.
  10. ^ Citino 2017, p. 221.
  11. ^ Hahn, Peter (2011). Missions Accomplished?: The United States and Iraq Since World War I. Oxford University Press. pp. 47–48. ISBN 9780195333381. Declassified U.S. government documents offer no evidence to support these suggestions.
  12. ^ Gibson 2015, pp. 45, 57–58.
  13. ^ Citino 2017, pp. 218–219, 222.
  14. ^ Longtime CIA officer Harry Rositzke later claimed "the CIA's major source, in an ideal catbird seat, reported the exact time of the coup and provided a list of the new cabinet members," but this remains unverified. See Rositzke, Harry (1977). The CIA's Secret Operations. Reader's Digest Press. p. 109. ISBN 0-88349-116-8.
  15. ^ Gibson 2015, pp. xxi, 45, 49, 55, 57–58, 121, 200.
  16. ^ Gibson 2015, p. 200.
  17. ^ Wolfe-Hunnicutt, Brandon (2017). "Oil Sovereignty, American Foreign Policy, and the 1968 Coups in Iraq". Diplomacy & Statecraft. Routledge. 28 (2): 248, footnote 4. doi:10.1080/09592296.2017.1309882. S2CID 157328042.
  18. ^ Gibson 2015, pp. 60–61, 72, 80.
  19. ^ a b Batatu, Hanna (1978). The Old Social Classes and the Revolutionary Movements of Iraq. Princeton University Press. pp. 985–987. ISBN 978-0863565205.
  20. ^ Mufti, Malik (1996). Sovereign Creations: Pan-Arabism and Political Order in Syria and Iraq. Cornell University Press. p. 144. ISBN 9780801431685.
  21. ^ Komer, Robert (1963-02-08). "Secret Memorandum for the President". Retrieved 2017-05-01.
  22. ^ Citino 2017, pp. 220–222.
  23. ^ Wolfe-Hunnicutt, Brandon (March 2011). "The End of the Concessionary Regime: Oil and American Power in Iraq, 1958-1972" (PDF). p. 116. Retrieved 2020-05-29.
  24. ^ Wolfe-Hunnicutt, Brandon (March 2011). "The End of the Concessionary Regime: Oil and American Power in Iraq, 1958-1972" (PDF). pp. 117–119, 128, 275. Retrieved 2020-05-29.
  25. ^ Gibson 2015, pp. 69–71, 76, 80.
  26. ^ a b Makiya, Kanan (1998). Republic of Fear: The Politics of Modern Iraq, Updated Edition. University of California Press. p. 30. ISBN 9780520921245.
  27. ^ Gibson 2015, pp. 77, 85.
  28. ^ Wolfe-Hunnicutt, Brandon (March 2011). "The End of the Concessionary Regime: Oil and American Power in Iraq, 1958-1972" (PDF). pp. 138–139. Retrieved 2017-07-10.
  29. ^ Farouk–Sluglett, Marion; Sluglett, Peter (2001). Iraq Since 1958: From Revolution to Dictatorship. I.B. Tauris. pp. 83, 85–87. ISBN 9780857713735.

ramadan, revolution, also, referred, february, revolution, february, 1963, coup, état, iraq, military, coup, party, iraqi, wing, which, overthrew, prime, minister, iraq, karim, qasim, 1963, took, place, between, february, 1963, qasim, former, deputy, abdul, sa. The Ramadan Revolution also referred to as the 8 February Revolution and the February 1963 coup d etat in Iraq was a military coup by the Ba ath Party s Iraqi wing which overthrew the Prime Minister of Iraq Abd al Karim Qasim in 1963 It took place between 8 and 10 February 1963 Qasim s former deputy Abdul Salam Arif who was not a Ba athist was given the largely ceremonial title of President while prominent Ba athist general Ahmed Hassan al Bakr was named Prime Minister The most powerful leader of the new government was the secretary general of the Iraqi Ba ath Party Ali Salih al Sa di who controlled the National Guard militia and organized a massacre of hundreds if not thousands of suspected communists and other dissidents following the coup 4 Ramadan RevolutionPart of the Cold War and the Arab Cold WarThe corpse of Abd al Karim Qasim Date8 10 February 1963LocationRepublic of IraqResultOverthrow of Abd al Karim Qasim Establishment of Ba athist governmentBelligerentsIraqi Government Army loyalistsNational Council of the Revolutionary Command Ba ath Party National Guard Ba athist Militia Commanders and leadersAbd al Karim Qasim Ali Salih al Sa diAhmed Hassan al Bakr Abdul Salam ArifCasualties and losses100 1 80 2 1 500 5 000 alleged civilian supporters of Qasim and or the Iraqi Communist Party killed during a three day house to house search 1 3 A sign with the image of Qasim taken down during the coup The government lasted approximately nine months until Arif disarmed the National Guard in the November 1963 Iraqi coup d etat which was followed by a purge of Ba ath Party members Contents 1 Background 2 Coup 3 U S involvement 3 1 Soviet tank scandal 4 Soviet reaction 5 Influence on Syria 6 Aftermath 7 See also 8 Bibliography 9 Further reading 10 ReferencesBackground EditSome time after the Homeland Officers Organization or Al Ahrar The Free succeeded in toppling the monarchy and transforming the Iraqi government into a republic in 1958 signs of differences between political parties and forces and the Homeland Officers Organization began when Pan Arab nationalist forces led by Abdul Salam Arif and the Ba ath Party called for immediate unification with the United Arab Republic UAR In an attempt to create a state of political equilibrium the Iraqi Communist Party ICP which opposed unity tried to discount cooperation with the UAR in economics culture and science rather than political and military agreements Gradually Abd al Karim Qasim s relations with some of his fellow members of Al Ahrar worsened and his relationship with the unionist and nationalist currents which had played an active role in supporting the 1958 movement became strained As for conflicting currents in the ICP they were aspiring for a coalition with General Qasim and had long been extending their relationship with him Qasim thought that some of his allies in the Communist party were coming close to leapfrogging the proposition especially after the increasing influence of the Communist party in the use of the slogan proclaimed by many Communists and government supporters during marches Long live leader Abd al Karim and the Communist Party in governing great demand 5 Qasim began to minimize the Communist movement which was poised to overthrow the government He ordered the party to be disarmed and most of the party leaders to be arrested However the party retained Air Commander Jalal al Awqati and Lt Col Fadhil Abbas Mahdawi Qasim s cousin An overlapping set of both internal and regional factors created conditions conducive to the overthrow of Prime Minister Abd al Karim Qasim and his staff Some historians have argued that the overthrow can be attributed to the blundering individualism of Qasim and the errors committed in the execution of leaders and locals as well as acts of violence which arose from the Communist militias allied with Qasim 6 Also to blame may be an increasingly forceful disagreement with Field Marshal Abdul Salam Arif who was under house arrest Qasim also made statements reiterating his support for Syrian General Abdel Karim and Colonel Alnhlaoi Mowaffaq Asasa with the intent of encouraging a coup to divide Syria which was then joined with Egypt as part of the UAR Coup Edit Soldier in the ruins of the Ministry of Defence where Qasim made his last stand Qasim s removal took place on 8 February 1963 the fourteenth day of Ramadan and so the coup was called the 14 Ramadan Coup It had been in its planning stages since 1962 and several attempts had been planned only to be abandoned for fear of discovery 7 The coup had been initially planned for January 18 but was moved to 25 January and then 8 February after Qasim gained knowledge of the proposed attempt and arrested some of the plotters The coup began in the early morning of 8 February 1963 when the communist air force chief Jalal al Awqati was assassinated and tank units occupied the Abu Ghraib radio station A bitter two day struggle unfolded with heavy fighting between the Ba athist conspirators and pro Qasim forces Qasim took refuge in the Ministry of Defence where fighting became particularly heavy Communist sympathisers took to the streets to resist the coup which added to the high casualties An estimated eighty Ba thists and between 300 and 5 000 communist sympathizers were killed in the two days of fighting to control Baghdad s streets as recounted by Ariel Ira Ahram 2 On 9 February Qasim eventually offered his surrender in return for safe passage out of the country His request was refused and in the afternoon he was executed on the orders of the newly formed National Council of the Revolutionary Command NCRC 8 Qasim was given a mock trial over Baghdad radio and then killed Many of his Shi ite supporters believed that he had merely gone into hiding and would appear like the Mahdi to lead a rebellion against the new government To counter that sentiment and to terrorize his supporters Qasim s dead body was displayed on television in a five minute propaganda video The End of the Criminals which included close up views of his bullet wounds amid disrespectful treatment of his corpse which is spat on in the final scene 9 10 Qasim s former deputy Abdul Salam Arif who was not a Ba athist was given the largely ceremonial title of President and the prominent Ba athist General Ahmed Hassan al Bakr was named Prime Minister However the secretary general of the Ba ath Party Ali Salih al Sa di used his control of the National Guard militia commanded by Mundhir al Wanadawi to establish himself as the de facto new leader of Iraq and had more authority in reality than al Bakr or Arif The nine month rule of al Sa di and his civilian branch of the Ba ath Party has been described as a reign of terror as the National Guard under orders from the Revolutionary Command Council RCC to annihilate anyone who disturbs the peace detained tortured or executed thousands of suspected Qasim loyalists Furthermore the National Guard which developed from a core group of perhaps 5 000 civilian Ba athist partisans but increased to 34 000 members by August 1963 who were identified by their green armbands was poorly disciplined as militiamen engaged in extensive infighting and created a widespread perception of chaos and disorder 2 4 U S involvement EditMain articles CIA activities in Iraq and Iraq United States relations While there have been persistent rumors that the Central Intelligence Agency CIA orchestrated the coup publicly declassified documents 11 and the testimony of former CIA officers do not support claims of direct American involvement although the U S had been notified of two aborted Ba athist coup plots in July and December 1962 and its post coup actions suggested that at best it condoned and at worst it contributed to the violence that followed in the words of Nathan J Citino 12 13 14 Despite evidence that the CIA had been closely tracking the Ba ath Party s coup planning since at least 1961 a CIA official working with Archie Roosevelt Jr to instigate a military coup against Qasim and who later became the head of the CIA s operations in Iraq and Syria has denied any involvement in the Ba ath Party s actions stating instead that the CIA s efforts against Qasim were still in the planning stages at the time 15 Bryan R Gibson believes that barring the release of new information the preponderance of evidence substantiates the conclusion that the CIA was not behind the February 1963 Ba thist coup 16 By contrast Brandon Wolfe Hunnicutt states that Scholars remain divided in their interpretations of American foreign policy toward the February 1963 coup in Iraq but along with several other authors cites compelling evidence of an American role in the coup 17 Although it may not have organized the coup U S officials were undoubtedly pleased with the outcome ultimately approving a 55 million arms deal with Iraq and urging America s Arab allies to oppose a Soviet sponsored diplomatic offensive accusing Iraq of genocide against its Kurdish minority at the United Nations UN General Assembly 18 It is also widely believed that the CIA provided the new government with lists of communists and other leftists who were then arrested or killed by the National Guard This allegation originated in a 27 September 1963 Al Ahram interview with King Hussein of Jordan who seeking to dispel reports that he was on the CIA s payroll declared You tell me that American Intelligence was behind the 1957 events in Jordan Permit me to tell you that I know for a certainty that what happened in Iraq on 8 February had the support of American Intelligence Some of those who now rule in Baghdad do not know of this thing but I am aware of the truth Numerous meetings were held between the Ba ath party and American Intelligence the more important in Kuwait Do you know that on 8 February a secret radio beamed to Iraq was supplying the men who pulled the coup with the names and addresses of the Communists there so that they could be arrested and executed Yet I am the one accused of being an agent of America and imperialism 19 20 While it s still early the Iraqi revolution seems to have succeeded It is almost certainly a net gain for our side We will make informal friendly noises as soon as we can find out whom to talk with and ought to recognize as soon as we re sure these guys are firmly in the saddle CIA had excellent reports on the plotting but I doubt either they or UK should claim much credit for it Robert Komer to President John F Kennedy February 8 1963 21 According to Hanna Batatu however The Ba athists had ample opportunity to gather such particulars in 1958 1959 when the Communists came wholly into the open and earlier during the Front of National Unity Years 1957 1958 when they had frequent dealings with them on all levels In addition The lists in question proved to be in part out of date which could be taken as evidence they were compiled well before 1963 19 Batatu s explanation is supported by Bureau of Intelligence and Research reports stating that Communist party members are being rounded up on the basis of lists prepared by the now dominant Ba th Party and that the ICP had exposed virtually all its assets whom the Ba athists had carefully spotted and listed 3 On the other hand Citino notes that two officials in the U S embassy in Baghdad William Lakeland and James E Akins used coverage of the July 1962 Moscow Conference for Disarmament and Peace in Iraq s leftist press to compile lists of Iraqi communists and their supporters Those listed included merchants students members of professional societies and journalists although university professors constituted the largest single group Furthermore Weldon C Mathews has meticulously established that National Guard leaders who participated in human rights abuses had been trained in the United States as part of a police program run by the International Cooperation Administration and Agency for International Development 22 The U S provided 120 000 in police assistance to Iraq during 1963 1965 considerably less than the 832 000 in assistance that it provided to Iran during those years 23 Soviet tank scandal Edit The Kennedy administration officially advocated a diplomatic settlement to the First Iraqi Kurdish War but its provision of military aid to the Ba athist government emboldened Iraqi hardliners to resume hostilities against Kurdish rebels on June 10 after which Iraq requested additional emergency U S assistance including napalm weapons President Kennedy approved the arms sale in part on the recommendation of senior adviser Robert Komer and the weapons were provided but an offer by Iraqi general Hasan Sabri al Bayati to reciprocate this gesture by sending a Soviet T 54 tank in Iraq s possession to the U S embassy in Baghdad for inspection became something of a scandal as Bayati s offer had not been approved by al Bakr Foreign Minister Talib El Shibib or other senior Iraqi officials Ultimately the Ba ath Party leadership reneged on that part of the agreement fearing that handing over the tank to the U S would irrevocably harm Iraq s reputation Shibib subsequently recounted that the incident damaged Iraq s relations with both the U S and the Soviet Union On the one side Iraq would lose the Soviets as a source of intelligence On the other the United States would see us as a bunch of kid swindlers 24 Soviet reaction EditMain article Ar Rashid revolt See also Iraq Russia relations Throughout 1963 the Soviet Union actively worked to undermine the Ba athist government supporting Kurdish rebels under the leadership of Mustafa Barzani with propaganda and a small monthly stipend for Barzani suspending military shipments to Iraq in May convincing its ally Mongolia to make charges of genocide against Iraq at the UN General Assembly from July to September and sponsoring a failed communist coup attempt on July 3 25 Influence on Syria EditMain article 1963 Syrian coup d etat The same year the party s military committee in Syria succeeded in persuading Nasserist and independent officers to make common cause with it and successfully carried out a military coup on 8 March A National Revolutionary Command Council took control assigned itself legislative power and appointed Salah al Din al Bitar as head of a national front government The Ba ath participated in the government along with the Arab Nationalist Movement the United Arab Front and the Socialist Unity Movement As Batatu notes that took place without the fundamental disagreement over immediate or considered reunification having been resolved The Ba ath moved to consolidate its power within the new government by purging Nasserist officers in April Subsequent disturbances led to the fall of the al Bitar government and in the aftermath of Jasim Alwan s failed Nasserist coup in July the Ba ath monopolized power Aftermath EditMain article November 1963 Iraqi coup d etat The attacks on the people s freedoms carried out by the bloodthirsty members of the National Guard their violation of things sacred their disregard of the law the injuries they have done to the state and the people and finally their armed rebellion on November 13 1963 has led to an intolerable situation which is fraught with grave dangers to the future of this people which is an integral part of the Arab nation We have endured all we could The army has answered the call of the people to rid them from this terror President Abdul Salam Arif 1963 26 The Ba athist government collapsed in November 1963 over the question of unification with Syria and the extremist and uncontrollable behavior of al Sa di s National Guard President Arif with the overwhelming support of the Iraqi military purged Ba athists from the government and ordered the National Guard to stand down and disarm Although al Bakr had conspired with Arif to remove al Sa di on 5 January 1964 Arif removed al Bakr from his new position as Vice President for fear of allowing the Ba ath Party to retain a foothold inside his government 2 27 After the November coup mounting evidence of Ba athist atrocities emerged which Lakeland predicted will have a more or less permanent effect on the political developments in the country particularly on the prospects of a Ba athi revival 28 Marion Farouk Sluglett and Peter Sluglett describe the Ba athists as having cultivated a profoundly unsavory image by acts of wanton brutality on a scale without prior precedent in Iraq including some of the most terrible scenes of violence hitherto experienced in the postwar Middle East As almost every family in Baghdad was affected and both men and women were equally maltreated the Ba athists activities aroused a degree of intense loathing for them that has persisted to this day among many Iraqis of that generation More broadly the Slugletts state Qasim s failings serious as they were can scarcely be discussed in the same terms as the venality savagery and wanton brutality characteristic of the regimes which followed his own 29 Batatu recounts In the cellars of al Nihayyah Palace which the National Guard s Bureau of Special Investigation used as its headquarters were found all sorts of loathsome instruments of torture including electric wires with pincers pointed iron stakes on which prisoners were made to sit and a machine which still bore traces of chopped off fingers Small heaps of blooded clothing were scattered about and there were pools on the floor and stains over the walls 26 See also Edit1959 Mosul uprising 17 July RevolutionBibliography EditGibson Bryan R 2015 Sold Out US Foreign Policy Iraq the Kurds and the Cold War Palgrave Macmillan 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 ISBN 9781108107556 Further reading EditBatatu 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 ISBN 978 0863565205 Wolfe Hunnicutt Brandon March 2011 The End of the Concessionary Regime Oil and American Power in Iraq 1958 1972 PDF Gibson Bryan R April 2013 U S Foreign Policy Iraq and the Cold War 1958 1975 PDF References Edit a b Makiya Kanan 1998 Republic of Fear The Politics of Modern Iraq Updated Edition University of California Press p 29 ISBN 9780520921245 a b c d Ahram Ariel Ira 2011 Proxy Warriors The Rise and Fall of State Sponsored Militias Stanford University Press pp 75 77 ISBN 9780804773591 a b Gibson 2015 p 59 a b Gibson 2015 pp 59 60 77 Monsour Ahmed and Aaraf Abd Alrazaq 2002 Interview Witnessing the Age Al Jazeera Television Pachachi D Adnan Recorded Program Al Sharqiya Satellite Channel Citino 2017 p 218 Marr Phebe The Modern History of Iraq p 184 185 Makiya Kanan 1998 Republic of Fear The Politics of Modern Iraq Updated Edition University of California Press pp 58 59 ISBN 9780520921245 Citino 2017 p 221 Hahn Peter 2011 Missions Accomplished The United States and Iraq Since World War I Oxford University Press pp 47 48 ISBN 9780195333381 Declassified U S government documents offer no evidence to support these suggestions Gibson 2015 pp 45 57 58 Citino 2017 pp 218 219 222 Longtime CIA officer Harry Rositzke later claimed the CIA s major source in an ideal catbird seat reported the exact time of the coup and provided a list of the new cabinet members but this remains unverified See Rositzke Harry 1977 The CIA s Secret Operations Reader s Digest Press p 109 ISBN 0 88349 116 8 Gibson 2015 pp xxi 45 49 55 57 58 121 200 Gibson 2015 p 200 Wolfe Hunnicutt Brandon 2017 Oil Sovereignty American Foreign Policy and the 1968 Coups in Iraq Diplomacy amp Statecraft Routledge 28 2 248 footnote 4 doi 10 1080 09592296 2017 1309882 S2CID 157328042 Gibson 2015 pp 60 61 72 80 a b Batatu Hanna 1978 The Old Social Classes and the Revolutionary Movements of Iraq Princeton University Press pp 985 987 ISBN 978 0863565205 Mufti Malik 1996 Sovereign Creations Pan Arabism and Political Order in Syria and Iraq Cornell University Press p 144 ISBN 9780801431685 Komer Robert 1963 02 08 Secret Memorandum for the President Retrieved 2017 05 01 Citino 2017 pp 220 222 Wolfe Hunnicutt Brandon March 2011 The End of the Concessionary Regime Oil and American Power in Iraq 1958 1972 PDF p 116 Retrieved 2020 05 29 Wolfe Hunnicutt Brandon March 2011 The End of the Concessionary Regime Oil and American Power in Iraq 1958 1972 PDF pp 117 119 128 275 Retrieved 2020 05 29 Gibson 2015 pp 69 71 76 80 a b Makiya Kanan 1998 Republic of Fear The Politics of Modern Iraq Updated Edition University of California Press p 30 ISBN 9780520921245 Gibson 2015 pp 77 85 Wolfe Hunnicutt Brandon March 2011 The End of the Concessionary Regime Oil and American Power in Iraq 1958 1972 PDF pp 138 139 Retrieved 2017 07 10 Farouk Sluglett Marion Sluglett Peter 2001 Iraq Since 1958 From Revolution to Dictatorship I B Tauris pp 83 85 87 ISBN 9780857713735 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ramadan Revolution amp oldid 1146808059, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.