Iraq's Jihad: Past as Prologue
June 8th, 2005
Courtecy of the American Thinker
www.americanthinker.com
We are now in the middle of a full-blown
Jihad, that is to say we have against us the fiercest prejudices
of a people in a primeval state of civilization.Gertrude Bell, Baghdad, Iraq, September 5, 1920
The carnage in Iraq continues--much as Bell
described 85 years ago--despite Saddam Hussein's removal, and
capture, along with many of his former high ranking administrators.
And this bloody contemporary "insurgency" is also a
jihad-waged by jihadists of two ilks: Al Qaeda types (like Zarqawi)
united with so-called "secular" Baathist jihadists.
This is hardly surprising as Baathist Arabism is deeply rooted
in Islam, and bears no resemblance to Western conceptions of
secularism. (Other than perhaps Saddam Hussein's expensive "secular"
wardrobe-as Fouad Ajami once uttered on live television, doing
his best Saddam impersonation, to a stunned Dan Rather: "You
wear pantsI wear pants!").
Indeed, the very founder of the Baath Party,
Michel Aflaq, was a Greek Orthodox Christian who converted to
Islam, and declared emphatically, "Islam is to Arabism what
bones are to the flesh." (For an enlightening discussion
of the Baathism is secularism canard, see this blog by Professor
Frank Salameh , Monday May, 9, 2005, "The Myth of
Arab Nationalism"). The Baathists just added another incendiary
element to Iraq's long brewing cauldron of sectarian strife,
which was so apparent during the British attempt at statecraft
during the 1920s, through early 1930s.
It is edifying to review that experience
through the writings, and unfulfilled hopes of the British diplomat,
Gertrude Bell. One wishes that a careful reading and thoughtful
discussion of Bell's detailed analyses were a required exercise
for all our policymaking elites and chattering classes. Regardless,
Bell's narrative sounds eerily familiar as the cast of characters-from
the 1920s, versus the present-seems quite literally frozen in
time: Shi'ites led by the very same Sadr family; irredentist
Sunnis educated in the Wahhabi tradition; Kurdish "separatists";
and the indigenous, pre-Islamic community of Assyrian Christians,
soon to be preyed upon, primarily by their traditional Kurdish
Muslim enemies, joined by the other Muslim communities.
Fond Foolishness Redux - Iraq Through Gertrude
Bell's Prism
Gertrude Bell (1868-1926) was a brilliant
archaeologist and explorer, who traveled extensively in the Middle
East, later becoming a British intelligence officer and diplomat
in Egypt and Mesopotamia. Due to her unparalleled knowledge of
the Middle East, Bell was made part of the delegation to the
Paris Conference of 1919, and worked subsequently with British
officials attempting to create the modern state of Iraq from
three disparate ethnic and religious vilayets (i.e., Mosul,
Baghdad, and Basra) of the collapsed Ottoman Empire.
Bell, perhaps the most important female Civil
Servant in the entire British Empire during this period, also
persuaded Winston Churchill to appoint Faisal, the recently deposed
King of Syria, as the first King of Iraq. Her letters written
from Baghdad, excerpted below, were originally published in a
compilation, "The Letters of Gertrude Bell", [Volume
II, New York, 1927]. Bell's brief, worried comments about the
Assyrians foreshadowed their terrible plight, within seven years
of her death.
In the last years of her life, Gertrude Bell
created, and was the first Director of the Baghdad Archaeological
Museum; she died in 1926, and may have committed suicide. Bell's
utopian dreams for Iraq, what the historian Elie Kedourie termed
her "fond foolishnessthinking to stand godmother to a new
Abbasid Empire...", went unfulfilled. Indeed, one
of her worst fears was realized: Muslim violence directed against
the Assyrian Christian minority.
The 1930 Anglo-Iraq treaty under which Britain
withdrew all its forces from Iraq by late 1932, deliberately
excluded any guarantees for Assyrian autonomy or protection.
The Assyrians concerns were trivialized, and their appeals condemned
as inflammatory, as evidenced by these statements of the British
High Commissioner for Iraq, Sir Francis Humphreys:
Too much importance should not be attached
to local sectarian dissensions, the explanation for which was
often to be found in some purely trivial matter or incident
reports [i.e., of potential threats to the Assyrian community]
can only serve to excite religious animosities, to estrange the
Iraqi government, and to unsettle the Assyrians themselves, whose
hopes of future welfare depend upon their being merged into the
body politic of Iraq, being accepted as loyal subjects of King
Faisal, and living in peace with their neighbors
Thus were the Assyrians sacrificed to Britain's
Muslim Arabophile policy. On August 11, 1933, less than
a year after the British withdrawal, the "new" Iraqi
armed forces, aided by local Arab and Kurdish tribesmen, began
the wholesale massacre of Assyrians in the Mosul area (Simel,
Dohuk). The carnage was described in a contemporary chronicle
believed to have been written by Mar Eshai Shimun XXIII, a Cambridge
University graduate and Patriarch of the Church of the East:
The inoffensive population was indiscriminately
massacred, men, women and children alike, with rifle, revolver
and machine gun fire. In one room alone, eighty-one men from
the Baz tribe, who had taken shelter were barbarously massacred.
Priests were tortured and their bodies mutilated. Those who showed
their Iraqi nationality papers were the first to be shot. Girls
were raped and women violated and made to march naked before
the Arab army commander. Holy books were used as fuel for burning
girls. Children were run over by military cars. Pregnant women
were bayoneted. Children were flung in the air and pierced on
to the points of bayonets. Those who survived in the other villages
were now exposed day and night to constant raids and acts of
violence. Forced conversion to Islam of men and women was the
next process. Refusal was met with death. Sixty five out of ninety
five Assyrian villages and settlements were either sacked, destroyed
or burnt to the ground. Even the settlements which existed from
the year 1921 and who had no connection in any way with the trouble
were wrecked and all property looted by Iraq army and tribesmen.
Before the end of August, 1933, 3000 Assyrians
were murdered, and thousands more displaced.
Bell's letters, specifically, her complaints
about Shi'ite fanaticism, including the very same Sadr family
lineage that Coalition Forces are dealing with today, the Sunni
fanaticism of clerics trained in Saudi Arabia, Kurdish "separatism",
and the vulnerability of the Assyrian Christian minority - reveal
an unchanging dynamic - confirmed by the current experience following
Saddam Hussein's removal. Thus, over eight decades later, Gertrude
Bell's elegant prose still reveals a keen understanding of the
irredentist forces which continue to grip Iraq, shaping present
events.
Baghdad, January 4th, 1920
And this country, which way will it go with
all these agents of unrest to tempt it? I pray that the people
at home may be rightly guided and realize that the only chance
here is to recognize political ambitions from the first, not
to try to squeeze the Arabs into our mold and have our hands
forced in a year -- who knows? Perhaps less, the world is moving
so fast -- with the result that the chaos to north and east overwhelms
Mesopotamia also.
Baghdad, March 14, 1920
It's a problem here how to get into touch
with the Shiahs, not the tribal people in the country; we're
on intimate terms with all of them, but the grimly devout citizens
of the holy towns and more especially the leaders of religious
opinion, the Mujtahids, who can loose and bind with a word by
authority which rests on an intimate acquaintance with accumulated
knowledge entirely irrelevant to human affairs and worthless
in any branch of human activity. There they sit in an atmosphere
which reeks of antiquity and is so thick with the dust of ages
that you can't see through it -- nor can they. And for the most
part they are very hostile to us, a feeling we can't alterThere's
a group of these worthies in Kadhimain, the holy city, 8 miles
from Baghdad, bitterly pan-Islamic, anti-BritishChief among them
are a family called Sadr, possibly more distinguished for religious
learning than any other family in the whole Shiah world.I went
yesterday [to visit them] accompanied by an advanced Shiah of
Baghdad whom I knew well.
Baghdad May 20, 1920
Meantime our Nestorians (Assyrians) are going
back to their country which is all in Kurdish hands and far from
anywhere we can help them. 6000 left last week. I look upon it
with the gravest apprehension. I think the men ought to have
been sent first to prepare the way and I fear there will be some
awful disaster. If there is, we can't acquit our own conscience.
Baghdad, June 14th, 1920
We have had a stormy week. The Nationalist
propaganda increases. There are constant meetings in mosques
where the mental temperature rises a great deal above 113.
The extremists are out for independence, without a mandate. They
play for all they are worth on the passions of the mob and what
with the Unity of Islam and the Rights of the Arab Race they
make a fine figure. They have created a reign of terror; if anyone
says boo in the bazaar it shuts like an oyster. There has been
practically no business done for the last fortnight.
Baghdad, August 16, 1920
And now I'll tell you about the revolution.
The committee of ex-deputies co-opted at the beginning of the
week a number of people among whom were 4 of the leading extremists.
On Wed. these 4 all refused the invitation and at the same time
the police gave warning that there was to be a monster meeting
in the big mosque next day, after which a procession through
the town was to be organized. It would undoubtedly have led to
disturbances and that was the object desired. For the extremists
have seen the ground cut under their feet by the formation of
a moderate constitutional party round the committee of ex-deputies
and they have no card left but an appeal to the mob. The police
were therefore ordered to arrest the 4 leaders. I think they
must have bungled the matter for they only got one, the others
got away to Kadhimain and are now, I hear, in Najaf. Orders were
then issued forbidding the holding of meetings in Mosques, together
with a curfew -- no one to be out in the streets after 10 p.m.
The combined effect has been excellent as far as Baghdad is concerned.
The town has returned to its normal life and I think there is
scarcely anyone who doesn't breathe a sigh of relief. Most of
them asked why it wasn't done sooner but I think that A.T. has
behaved with great wisdom in the matter. He has waited until
it was clear that if the agitation was allowed to continue the
town would be given over to rioters -- most of those who attended
the mosque meetings were riffraff of the worst sort -- and there
he has struck for the protection of public securityThe worst
news is that Colonel Leachman has been ambushed and killed on
his way from Baghdad to Ramadi. He was holding the whole Euphrates
up to Anak single handed by means of the tribes, troops having
all been withdrawn, and we don't know what will happen in those
regions
Baghdad, September 5, 1920
The problem is the future. The tribes don't
want to form part of a unified state; the towns can't do with
out it. How are we going to support and protect the elements
of stability and at the same time conform to the just demand
for economy from home? For you can't have a central government
if no one will pay taxes and the bulk of the population won't
pay taxes unless they are constrained to do so. Nor will they
preserve a sufficient amount of order to permit of trade
We are now in the middle of a full-blown Jihad,
that is to say we have against us the fiercest prejudices of
a people in a primeval state of civilization. Which means that
it's no longer a question of reason.The unthinking people, who
form the great mass of the world, follow suit in a blind revolt
against the accepted order. They don't now how to substitute
anything better, but it's clear that few things can be worse.
We're near to a complete collapse of society -- the end of the
Roman empire is a very close historical parallel. We've practically
come to the collapse of society here and there's little on which
you can depend for its reconstruction.
Baghdad, October 10, 1920
All the Nestorians (Assyrians) have
been moved from Ba'qubah to a camp under the hills 16 miles or
so from Mosul with the idea of getting them back to their own
country. But it's now far too late in the year to think of their
marching through the hills and as far as I can learn the local
Kurds are all determined to oppose them to the death - not being
wishful to give up their property which they have meantime annexed.
It's not a cheerful prospect.
Baghdad, November 1, 1920
Oh, if we can pull this thing off; rope together
the young hotheads and the Shiah obscurantists, and enthusiasts
like Jafar, polished old statesmen like Sasun, and scholars like
Shukri -- if we can make them work together and find their own
salvation for themselves, what a fine thing it would be. I see
visions and dream dreams.
Baghdad, November 29, 1920
We are greatly hampered by the tribal rising
which has delayed the work of handing over to the Arab Govt.
Sir Percy(Cox), I think rightly, decided that the tribes must
be made to submit to force. In no other way was it possible to
make them surrender their arms or teach them that you mustn't
lightly engage in revolution, even when your holy men tell you
to do so
Baghdad, December 18, 1920
The Council is aware and Sir Percy has constantly
impressed upon them, the vital need of getting down to the formation
of a native army to relieve ours. No Govt. in this country, whether
ours or an Arab administration, can carry on without force behind
it. The Arab Government has no force till its army is organized
therefore it can't exist unless we lend it troops. Mesopotamia
is not a civilized state, it is largely composed of wild tribes
who do not wish to shoulder the burden and expense of citizenship
January 30, 1921
I had them to dinner tonight . It was the
most interesting and curious dinner party I ever gave. Besides
the two Najdis I had Major Easdie, Saiyid Muhi ud Din and Shukri
Eff. Al Arusi. The latter is one of the finest figures in Baghdad.
An old scholar who comprises in himself all knowledge as such
is understood by Islam -- he teaches Mechanics, using the Hadith
(traditions of the prophet) as textbook and other sciences by
like methods --a true Wahhabi, he neither drinks nor smokesHe
found in Wahhabi Central Arabia the land of his dreams and looks
upon it as the true source of all inspiration and learning.So
we sat down to tableShukrihanging on Ahmad Thanayan's words while
the latter described the immense progress of the extreme Wahhabi
sect, the Akhwan (brotherhood), in NajdAhmad with his long sunken
face lighted up by the purest spirit of fanatical Islam. 'The
Imam, God preserve him, under God has guided the tribes in the
right way,' -- 'Praise be to God,' ejaculated ?Shukri - "They
are learning wisdom and religion under the rules of the Brotherhood,'-Shukri
Eff: 'God is great,' - "Not that they show violence,' -
"Ahmed Effend. 'God forbid.' - 'No such things happen among
us as happened in Europe with the Inquisition and with Calvins'
-(I must tell you incidentally that the Akhwan when they do battle
kill all wounded and then put the women and children of their
enemies, who are also infidels else they wouldn't fight the Akhwan,
to death.)
May 29, 1921
I'm thinking of going to Sulaimaniyah at the
end of the week for a few days -- to Kurkuk for a couple of nights
and so on by motor. Sulaimaniyah has refused, on a plebiscite,
to come in under the Arab Govt. and is going for the present
to be a little Kurdish enclave administered directly under Sir
Percy.The population is wholly Kurdish and they say they don't
want to be part of an Arab state
June 12, 1921
We can't continue direct British control though
the country would be better governed by it, but it's rather a
comic position to be telling people over and over again that
whether they like it or not they must have Arab not British Government.
June 23, 1921
I'm told that Naji Suwaidi is in favor of
a mandate rather than the proposed treaty, because a mandate
gives us more authority! Faisal wants a treaty I know, so probably
that's the way it will work out, and for my part I think it's
quite immaterial. You can't run a mandate without the goodwill
of the people, and if you've got that it doesn't matter whether
it is a mandate or a treaty, but what rejoices me is the fulfillment
of my dream that we should sit by in an attitude of repose and
have them coming up our front door steps to beg us to be more
active
August 28, 1921
We have had a terrific week but we've got
our King (Faisal) crowned and Sir Percy and I agree that we're
now half seas over, the remaining half is the Congress and the
Organic LawIt was an amazing thing to see all Iraq, from North
to South gathered together. It is the first time it has happened
in history.
NOTE: I would like to thank Hugh Fitzgerald
for kindly bringing to my attention "The Letters of Gertrude
Bell", [Volume II, New York, 1927], and also providing me
with all the specific excerpts I have used save for the two letters
regarding the Nestorians (Assyrians), i.e., the letters of May
20 and October 10.
Dr. Bostom is an Associate Professor
of Medicine, and the author of the forthcoming The Legacy of Jihad, from Prometheus Books
(2005).
Andrew G. Bostom
|