Abd al-Karim Qasim
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Abd al-Karim Qasim | |
1st Prime Minister of Iraq
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In office July 1958 – February 1963 |
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Succeeded by | Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr |
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Born | 1914 Baghdad, Iraq |
Died | February 9, 1963 Baghdad, Iraq |
Abd al-Karim Qasim (Arabic: عبد الكريم قاسم `Abd al-Karīm Qāsim); also various other spellings; including Qassim, Kassem, Quasim; popularly known as "az-Za‘īm" (Arabic: الزعيم) "the leader") (1914 – February 9, 1963), was an Iraqi military officer involved in the 1958 military coup d'état. Named Prime Minister of Iraq, Qasim associated himself with the ordinary Iraqi people.
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[edit] Early life and career
Abd al-Karim Qasim's father was of Sunni Arab descent who died shortly after his son's birth during World War I as a soldier for the Ottoman Khalifah. Qasim's mother was a Shiite and the daughter of a Kurdish farmer from Baghdad.
When Qasim was six years of age his family moved to Suwayra, a small town near the Tigris, then to Baghdad in 1926. Qasim was an excellent student; he entered secondary school on a government scholarship. After his graduation in 1931, he taught at the Shamiyya Elementary School. He began his teaching on October 22, 1931 and resigned on September 3, 1932. His resignation was due to the fact that he was accepted into the Military College. In 1934, he graduated as a second lieutenant. Qasim then attended al-Arkan (Iraqi Staff) College and graduated with honor (grade A) in December 1941. In 1951, he completed a senior officers’ course in Britain.
Militarily, he participated in the suppression of the tribal disturbances in the Middle Euphrates region in 1935, during the Anglo-Iraqi War in May 1941 and in the Kurdistan War in 1945. Qassim also served during the Iraqi military involvement in Palestine from May 1948 to June 1949. Toward the latter part of the Palestinian mission, he commanded a battalion of the First Brigade, which was situated in the Kafr Qasem area south of Qilqilya. In 1956-57, he served with his brigade at Mafraq in Jordan in the wake of the Suez Crisis. By 1957 Qassim had assumed leadership of several opposition groups that had formed in the army.
On 14 July 1958, Qasim and his followers used troop movements planned by the government as an opportunity to seize military control of Baghdad and overthrew the monarchy. This resulted in the executions of several members of the royal family and their close associates, including the reviled[citation needed] Nuri as-Said.
[edit] 14 Tammuz Revolution
Prince Abdul Ilah did not want any resistance to the forces that besieged the Royal Rihab Palace, hoping to gain permission to leave the country. The commander of the Royal Guards battalion on duty, Col. Taha Bamirni, ordered the palace guards to cease fire.
On July 14, 1958, as the royal family included King Faisal II; the Prince 'Abd al-Ilah; Princess Hiyam, Abdul Ilah's wife; Princess Nafeesa, Abdul Ilah’s mother, Princess Abadiya, the king’s aunt; and several servants. When all of them arrived in the courtyard they were told to turn towards the palace wall, and were all shot down by Captain Abdus Sattar As Sab’ a member of the coup led by Colonel Abd al-Karim Qasim.
King Faisal II and Princess Hiyam were injured. The King died later before reaching the hospital. Princess Hiyam was not recognized at the hospital and managed to receive treatment. Later she left for Saudi Arabia where her family lived and then moved to Egypt until her death.
The coup was discussed and planned by the Free Officers, but was mainly executed by Qasim and Col. Abdes Salam Aref.
By 1956, the committee of Free Officers included; Qasim, Naji Talib, Abdul Wahab Ameen, Muhiddeen Abdel Hameed, Abdes~Salam Aref, Abdul Wahab Ash Shawwaf, Abdul Kareem Farhan, Rifat al-Hajj Sirri, Col. Tahir Yihya, Rijab Abdul Majeed, Wasfi Tahir, Col. Sabeeh Ali Ghalib and Mohammed As Sab’.
Iraqi Ba'thists accuse Qasim of giving orders to kill the royal family.
[edit] Prime Minister
Qasim was Prime Minister from July 1958 - February 1963.
After the Military Uprising, Qasim assumed the post of Prime Minister and Defense Minister, while Colonel Abdul Salam Arif was selected Deputy Prime Minister and Interior Minister. They became the highest authority in Iraq with both executive and legislative powers.
Qasim soon withdrew Iraq from the pro-Western Baghdad Pact and established friendly relations with the Soviet Union. Iraq also abolished its Treaty of mutual security and bilateral relations with Britain. Also, Iraq withdrew from the agreement with the United States that was signed by the monarchy from 1954 to 1955 regarding military, arms, and equipment. On May 30, 1959, the last of the British soldiers and military officers departed the al-Habbāniyya base in Iraq.
On July 26, 1958, the Interim Constitution was adopted, proclaiming the equality of all Iraqi citizens under the law and granting them freedom without regard to race, nationality, language or religion. The government freed political prisoners and granted amnesty to the Kurds who participated in the 1943 to 1945 Kurdish uprisings. The exiled Kurds returned home and were welcomed by the republican regime.
Qasim lifted a ban on the Iraqi Communist Party, and demanded the annexation of Kuwait. He was also involved in the 1958 Agrarian Reform, modeled after the Egyptian experiment of 1952.
Qasim worked to improve the position of ordinary people in Iraq, after the long period of self-interested rule by a small elite under the monarchy which had resulted in widespread social unrest. Qasim passed law No. 80 which seized 98% of Iraqi land from the British-owned Iraq Petroleum Company, distributed farms to more of the population. This increased the size of the middle class. Qasim also oversaw the building of 35,000 residential units to house the poor and low middle class. The most notable example, and indeed symbol, of this was the new suburb of Baghdad named Madinat al-Thawra (revolution city), renamed Saddam City under the Baath regime and now widely referred to as Sadr City. Qasim rewrote the constitution to encourage women’s participation in the society.
Qasim supported the Algerian and Palestinian struggles against France and Israel.
Qasim tried to maintain the political balance by using the traditional opponents of pan-Arabs, the right wing and nationalists. Up until the war with the Kurdish factions in the north he was able to maintain the loyality of the army.
[edit] Iran and the Kurdish revolts
During his term in office, he is also blamed to have paved the ground for the Iran-Iraq war. On December 18, 1959, Abd al-Karim Qasim declared:
"We do not wish to refer to the history of Arab tribes residing in Al-Ahwaz and Mohammareh [Khorramshahr]. The Ottomans handed over Mohammareh, which was part of Iraqi territory, to Iran."
After this, Iraq started supporting secessionist movements in Khuzestan, and even raised the issue of its territorial claims in the next meeting of the Arab League, without any success.
It was also during his rule as Prime Minister that confrontation with the Kurdish minority started. The new Government declared Kurdistan “one of the two nations of Iraq.” During his rule, the Kurdish groups selected Mustafa Barzani to negotiate with the government, seeking an opportunity to declare independence.
After a period of relative calm, the issue of Kurdish autonomy (self-rule or independence) went unfulfilled, sparking discontent and eventual rebellion among the Kurds in 1961.
[edit] Pan-Arab revolts and overthrow
During Qasim term, there was a lot of debate over whether Iraq should join the United Arab Republic, led by Gamal Abdel Nasser. Having dissolved the Arab Union with the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, Qasim refused entry into the federation, although his government recognized the republic and considered joining it later.
A major pan-Arabist concern was the repression of the Iraqi branch of the Baath Party.
An assassination attempt in 1959 by dedicated pan-Arabists (including Saddam Hussein) led to a harsh crackdown on domestic opposition and the development of a personality cult. Qasim was a strong opponent of British military intervention in the Middle East, and repeatedly called for the removal of foreign troops.
Rebellions in Mosul and Iraqi Kurdistan, allegedly assisted by Nasser and the UAR, also complicated political matters.
Another assassination attempt, motivated by suspected pan-Arabist influence and state control over the petroleum sector, was carried out with the backing of the British government and the American CIA in on February 9, 1963.[1][2][3][4][5]
[edit] Death
Qasim was killed after a show trial on February 9, 1963.
At least than 5,000 Iraqis were killed in the fighting from February 8 to 10, 1963, and in the house-to-house hunt for Communists that immediately followed. Ba'athists put the losses of their own party at around 80.
In July 2004, Qasim's body was discovered by a news team associated with Radio Dijla in Baghdad.[6]
Preceded by Ahmad Mukhtar Baban |
Prime Minister of Iraq July 1958 – February 1963 |
Succeeded by Ahmad Hasan al-Bakr |
[edit] Notes
- ^ (January 1 1994) "Cabinet Papers 1963: Iraq: Ministers Eager to Sell Arms to New Rulers After Bloody Coup". The Guardian: 5.
- ^ Morris, Roger (March 14 2003). "Remember: Saddam was our man A Tyrant 40 Years in the Making". New York Times.
- ^ Morgan, David (April 20 2003). "Ex-U.S. Official Says CIA Aided Baathists". Reuters.
- ^ How west helped Saddam gain power and decimate the Iraqi elite. www.muslimedia.com. Retrieved on September 5, 2006.
- ^ Batatu, Hanna. "CIA Lists Provide Basis for Iraqi Bloodbath". Global Policy Forum. Excerpt from The Old Social Classes and the Revolutionary Movements of Iraq (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1978).
- ^ Iraqis Recall Golden Age. Institute for War and Peace. Retrieved on September 5, 2006. Reporting article on discovery of Qasim's body
Categories: Articles lacking sources from January 2007 | All articles lacking sources | Articles with unsourced statements since February 2007 | All articles with unsourced statements | Prime Ministers of Iraq | 1914 births | 1963 deaths | Past leaders by coup | Ouster by coup | Executed politicians