Wednesday, April 13, 2011

It's Increidible Background History!! ♥

Government Type of Government:
Parliamentary democracy- is a system of representative government in which the dominant party in the legislature determines the Prime Minister.

Independence:

 On October 3, 1932, Iraq gained independence from British administration under a League of Nations Mandate. Several acts after 1958 resulted in dictatorship, with the Ba’ath Party seizing power in 1963 and again in 1968. From July 1979 to March 2003, Iraq was ruled by Saddam Hussein and the Ba’ath Party.  On June 28, 2004, the CPA (Coalition Provisional Authority) transferred sovereignty(independent authority over a geographic area, such as a territory) to the Iraqi government. On June 31, 2009, U.S. troops withdrew from urban areas, a step that reinforced Iraqi sovereignty. On March 7, 2010, Iraq held a second round of national elections to choose the members of the Council of Representatives and, in turn, the executive branch of government.
Branches:

  • Executive- Presidency Council (one president and two vice presidents; this configuration may change following the March 2010 national elections and the formation of a new government; Council of Ministers (one prime minister, two deputy prime ministers, and 37 cabinet ministers).
  • Judicial- Supreme Court appointed by the prime minister and confirmed by the Council of Representatives.
  • Legislative- Council of Representatives (COR) consisting of 325 members.
Constitution:
 October 15, 2005.

Leaders:
Heads of State 
 
  • King- Faysal II ibn Ghazi al-Hashimi  4 Apr 1939 - 14 Jul 1958   
 
 
 
 
Presidents of the state
  • Ghazi Mashal `Ajil al-Yawar    28 Jun 2004 -  7 Apr 2005
  • Jalal at-Talabani               7 Apr 2005 




Heads of the Government
Prime Ministers:
  • Hamdi al-Bajaji 4 Jun 1944 - 23 Feb 1946
  • Sulayman Tawfiq Bey as-Suwaydi 23 Feb 1946 - 1 Jun 1946
  • Arshad al-Umari 1 Jun 1946 - 21 Nov 1946
  • Nuri Pasha as-Said 21 Nov 1946 - 29 Mar 1947 (+1958)e 





  • Salih Jabr 29 Mar 1947 - 29 Jan 1948
  • Muhammad as-Sadr 29 Jan 1948 - 26 Jun 1948
  • Muzahim al-Bajaji 26 Jun 1948 - 6 Jan 1949
  • Nuri Pasha as-Said 6 Jan 1949 - 10 Dec 1949
  • Ali Jawdat al-Aiyubi 10 Dec 1949 - 5 Feb 1950
  • Sulayman Tawfiq Bey as-Suwaydi 5 Feb 1950 - 15 Sep 1950
  •  Nuri Pasha as-Said 15 Sep 1950 - 12 Jul 1952
  • Mustafa Mahmud al-Umari 12 Jul 1952 - 23 Nov 1952
  • Nureddin Mahmud 23 Nov 1952 - 29 Jan 1953 military
  • Jamil Bey al-Midfai 29 Jan 1953 - 17 Sep 1953 (+1959)
  •  Muhammad Fadhel al-Jamali 17 Sep 1953 - 29 Apr 1954 Arshad al-Umari 29 Apr 1954 - 4 Aug 1954
  • Nuri Pasha as-Said 4 Aug 1954 - 20 Jun 1957 (+1958)e
  • Ali Jawdat al-Aiyubi 20 Jun 1957 - 15 Dec 1957
  • `Abd al-Wahhab Marjan 15 Dec 1957 - 3 Mar 1958 (+1964)
  • Nuri Pasha as-Said 3 Mar 1958 - 18 May 1958 (+1958)e
  • Ahmad Mukhtar Baban 18 May 1958 - 14 Jul 1958 (+)e
  • `Abd al-Karim Kassem 14 Jul 1958 - 8 Feb 1963 (+)e  military
  •  Ahmad Hassan al-Bakr 8 Feb 1963 - 18 Nov 1963 (+1982)military/Baath
  • Tahir Yahya 20 Nov 1963 - 6 Sep 1965 (+1986) military/ASU
  • `Aref `Abd ar-Razzaq 6 Sep 1965 - 21 Nov 1965 military/ASU
  • `Abd ar-Rahman al-Bazzaz 21 Nov 1965 - 9 Aug 1966 (+1973)e
  • Naji Talib 9 Aug 1966 - 10 May 1967
  • `Abd ar-Rahman Muhammad `Aref 10 May 1967 - 10 Jul 1967 (+2007) military/ASU
  • Tahir Yahya 10 Jul 1967 - 17 Jul 1968 (+1986) military/ASU
  • `Abd ar-Razzaq Said an-Najif 17 Jul 1968 - 30 Jul 1968 (+1978)a military
  • Ahmad Hassan al-Bakr 31 Jul 1968 - 16 Jul 1979 (+1982)  military/Baath
  • Saddam Hussein at-Tikriti 16 Jul 1979 - 23 Mar 1991 (+2006)e  Baath
  • Saadun Hammadi 23 Mar 1991 - 13 Sep 1991 (+2007)  Baath
  • Muhammad Hamzah az-Zubaydi 16 Sep 1991 - 5 Sep 1993 (+2005)  Baath
  • Ahmad Hussein as-Samarraj 5 Sep 1993 - 29 May 1994
  • Baath Saddam Hussein at-Tikriti 29 May 1994 - 9 Apr 2003 (+2006)e Baath

 It's Amazing History
Muslims conquered Iraq in the seventh century A.D. In the eighth century, the Abassid caliphate established its capital at Baghdad. The territory of modern Iraq came under the rule of the Ottoman Turks early in the 1500s. At the end of World War I, Ottoman control ended and Iraq came under the authority of a British mandate. When it was declared independent in 1932, the Hashemite family, a branch of which also ruled Jordan, ruled as a constitutional monarchy. In 1945, Iraq joined the United Nations and became a founding member of the Arab League. In 1956, the Baghdad Pact allied Iraq, Turkey, Iran, Pakistan, and the United Kingdom, and established its headquarters in Baghdad.Gen. Abdul Karim Qasim took power in a July 1958 coup, during which King Faysal II and Prime Minister Nuri as-Said were killed. Qasim ended Iraq's membership in the Baghdad Pact in 1959. Qasim was assassinated in February 1963, when the Arab Socialist Renaissance Party (Ba'ath Party) took power under the leadership of Gen. Ahmad Hasan al-Bakr as prime minister and Col. Abdul Salam Arif as president.Nine months later, Arif led a coup ousting the Ba'ath government. In April 1966, Arif was killed in a plane crash and was succeeded by his brother, Gen. Abdul Rahman Mohammad Arif. On July 17, 1968, a group of Ba'athists and military elements overthrew the Arif regime. Ahmad Hasan al-Bakr reemerged as the President of Iraq and Chairman of the Revolutionary Command Council (RCC).In July 1979, Bakr resigned, and his cousin Saddam Hussein, already a key figure in the Ba’ath party and the RCC, assumed the two offices of President and RCC Chairman. The Iran-Iraq war (1980-88) devastated the economy of Iraq. Iraq declared victory in 1988 but actually achieved a weary return to the status quo antebellum. The war left Iraq with the largest military establishment in the Gulf region but with huge debts and an ongoing rebellion by Kurdish elements in the northern mountains. The government suppressed the rebellion by using chemical and biological weapons on civilian targets, including a mass chemical weapons attack on the Kurdish city of Halabja that killed several thousand civilians.

Iraq invaded Kuwait in August 1990, but a U.S.-led coalition acting under United Nations (UN) resolutions expelled Iraq in February 1991. After the war, Kurds in the north and Shi'a Muslims in the south rebelled against the government of Saddam Hussein. The government responded quickly and with crushing force, killing thousands, and pursued damaging environmental and agricultural policies meant to drain the marshes of the south.
As a result, the United States, United Kingdom, and France established protective no-fly zones in northern and southern Iraq. Coalition forces enforced no-fly zones in southern and northern Iraq to protect Iraqi citizens from attack by the regime and a no-drive zone in southern Iraq to prevent the regime from massing forces to threaten or again invade Kuwait. In addition, the UN Security Council required the regime to surrender its weapons of mass destruction (WMD) and submit to UN inspections. A U.S.-led coalition invaded Iraq in March-April 2003 and removed the Ba'ath regime, leading to the overthrow of the dictator Saddam Hussein. (Following his capture in December 2003 and subsequent trial, Saddam Hussein was executed on December 30, 2006 by the Government of Iraq.) The Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) assumed security and administrative responsibility for Iraq while Iraqi political leaders and the Iraqi people established a transitional administration. The CPA’s mission was to restore conditions of security and stability and to create conditions in which the Iraqi people could freely determine their own political future. The UN Security Council acknowledged the authority of the Coalition Provisional Authority and provided a role for the UN and other parties to assist in fulfilling these objectives.

The CPA disbanded on June 28, 2004, transferring sovereign authority for governing Iraq to the Iraqi Interim Government (IIG). Based on the timetable laid out in the Transitional Administrative Law (TAL), the IIG governed Iraq until elections were held on January 30, 2005; thereafter, the Iraqi Transitional Government assumed authority.

In May 2005, the Iraqi Transitional Government appointed a multi-ethnic committee to draft a new Iraqi constitution. The new constitution was finalized in September 2005, and was ratified in a nationwide referendum on October 15, 2005. On December 15, 2005, Iraqis again went to the polls to participate in the first national legislative elections as established by the new constitution. The new 4-year, constitutionally based government took office in March 2006, and the new cabinet was approved and installed in May 2006. By that time, following the February 2006 bombing of the Golden Mosque in Samara, violence in the country was widespread.The ongoing violence and instability prompted President George W. Bush to increase troop numbers in Iraq (the “surge” in U.S. forces) in an attempt to improve the security situation and give Iraqi political leaders an opportunity to address the many problems that plagued the Iraqi people. Following the troop increase and adjustments to military strategy, violence declined, thereby providing political space and an improved environment for leaders to make progress on difficult national issues. In January 2009 two bilateral agreements between the United States and the Government of Iraq took effect: 1) the “Agreement between the United States of America and the Republic of Iraq On the Withdrawal of United States Forces from Iraq and the Organization of Their Activities During Their Temporary Presence in Iraq” (referred to as the “Security Agreement”) governs the presence and status of U.S. forces in Iraq, and addresses the withdrawal of these forces; and, 2) the “Strategic Framework Agreement for a Relationship of Friendship and Cooperation between the United States of America and the Republic of Iraq” (referred to as the“Strategic Framework Agreement” or “SFA”) sets out a variety of areas and aims for bilateral cooperation and forms the basis for a long-term partnership with the people and Government of Iraq.

On January 31, 2009, Iraq held elections for provincial councils in all provinces except the three provinces comprising the Kurdistan Regional Government and at-Ta’mim (Kirkuk) province. On March 7, 2010, Iraq held national elections in which parties competed for positions in the Council of Representatives and the executive branch. In June 2009, in accordance with the bilateral Security Agreement, U.S. forces withdrew from urban areas in Iraq. On August 31, 2010, President Barack Obama announced the end of major combat operations, the completion of the withdrawal of all U.S. combat brigades, and the transition of the role of the remaining U.S. military force of 50,000 troops to advising and assisting Iraqi security forces. By December 31, 2011, all U.S. military forces will withdraw from the country.

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