1st Edition

Iraq's Armed Forces An Analytical History

By Ibrahim Al-Marashi, Sammy Salama Copyright 2008
    268 Pages 3 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    272 Pages 3 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This book provides the first comprehensive study of the evolution of the Iraqi military from the British mandate era to post-Baathist Iraq.

    Ethnic and sectarian turmoil is endemic to Iraq, and its armed forces have been intertwined with its political affairs since their creation. This study illustrates how the relationship between the military and the political centre in Iraq has evolved, with the military bringing about three regime changes in Iraq’s history before being brought under control by Saddam Hussein, up until the 2003 war. The instability that followed was partly due to the failure to create a new military that does not threaten the government, yet is still strong enough to deter rival factions from armed conflict. The reconstitution of the armed forces will be a prerequisite for an American withdrawal from Iraq, but this book argues that immense challenges lie ahead, despite the praise from the Bush administration for the progress of the new Iraqi army.

    1. Introduction  Section 1: The Mandate Army  2. Creation, Conscription, and Cohesion 1921-1936  Section 2: Praetorian Iraq  3. The Military Moderator Regimes 1936-1941  4. Dismantling the Military Moderator Regime 1941-1958  5. Military Coups and the Ruler Regimes 1958-1968  Section 3: The Totalitarian Military  6. The Baathification of the Military 1968-1980  7. The Totalitarian Military and the Iran-Iraq War 1980-1984  8. The Reassertion of the Iraqi Officers 1984-1988  9. Wars, Coups, Sanctions, and Collapse 1988-2003  Section 4: The Mandate Army Redux  10. The US and the Iraqi Army  11. Conclusion 

    Biography

    Ibrahim Al-Marashi is an adjunct faculty member at the Department of History at Bogazici University in Istanbul, Turkey.

    Sammy Salama is a Middle East expert with the Monterey Institute of International Studies, California.

    "A must addition to the collection of any academic library." -- C. C. Lovett, Emporia State University