A new Hashd bill is in parliament right now which is supposed to introduce reforms but will make no real changes. This is part of a process of empty promises by Iraq to curb pro-Iran armed factions to try to appease the new Trump administration.
1915 UK Foreign Office wrote India Viceroy Lord Hardinge Agreed UK should take Basra
province and perhaps make Baghdad a protectorate
1921 Cairo Conference decided on indirect rule in Iraq Would make Faisal King of a pro-British
Iraqi govt allowing withdrawal of British forces
1946 Iraq-Turkey Friendship Treaty Would cooperate over Tigris and Euphrates security
education communication economies
Schlosser, Nicholas, U.S. Marines in Battle, Al-Qaim, September 2005-March 2006, Marine Corps University, 2014
U.S. Marines in Battle, Al-Qaim, September 2005-March 2006 is one of the better volumes in the Marine history of the Iraq War series. That’s because it includes both background and the aftermath to the Marine deployment to western Iraq. It’s main argument is that how the Marines stayed in cities while working with the Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) and local tribes starting in 2005 created a new dynamic that would dramatically change the security situation in Anbar province in the following years.
1915 French Amb to UK Cambon suggested that UK and France begin discussions on
dividing Ottoman Empire Would lead to creation of Iraq
1921 UK Cabinet approved Colonial Sec Churchill’s choice of Faisal as new ruler in
Mesopotamia
(Musings On Iraq Churchill In His Own Words On Mesopotamia/Iraq)
(Musings On Iraq review Cairo 1921, Ten Days That Made the Middle East)
(Musings On Iraq review Churchill’s Folly, How Winston Churchill Created Modern Iraq)
(Musings On Iraq review Inventing Iraq: The Failure of Nation Building and a History Denied)
(Musings On Iraq review Imagining The Nation, Nationalism, Sectarianism and Socio-Political Conflict in Iraq)
(Musings On Iraq review The Chatham House Version and other Middle-Eastern Studies)
(Musings On Iraq review When God Made Hell, The British Invasion of Mesopotamia and the Creation of Iraq, 1914-1921)
(Musings On Iraq review Empires of the Sand, The Struggle For Mastery In The Middle East 1789-1923)
McWilliams, Chief Warrant Officer 4 Timothy, with Schlosser, Nicholas, U.S. Marines in Battle, Fallujah, November-December 2004, Marine Corps University, 2014
U.S. Marines in Battle, Fallujah, November-December 2004 was part of a series of books released by the Marine Corps to document its involvement in the Iraq War. It is a detailed military history covering the fighting by Marines and soldiers during Operation Phantom Fury the 2nd Battle of Fallujah. That is also its drawback as there is nothing on the politics or impact of the battle.
1920 Iraq political officer Wilson wrote India Secretary Montague Said no connection between Iraq and Syria
and would reject rule by Faisal who’d been declared king of both before overthrown by France Said Iraq should have its own govt
1933 Rashid al-Gaylani became PM 1st of 3 times Included opposition Ikha Party who got Yasin
al-Hashemi as Finance Min and Hikmat Sulaiman as Interior Min
(Musings On Iraq review The Chatham House Version and other Middle-Eastern Studies)
1914 Ottomans agreed to merger of Turkish Petroleum Company that was to get oil concession in Mosul
vilayet with Anglo-Persian Oil Company
1914 US consulate in Baghdad reported Ottomans had reconciled with Sayid Talib and Sheikh
Ajaimi of Montafiq Confederation They had de facto control of Basra vilayet
1639 Treaty of Zuhab ended Ottoman-Safavid War and gave Ottomans most of Mesopotamia
(Musings On Iraq review An Analysis of Hanna Batatu’s The Old Social Classes and the Revolutionary Movements of Iraq)
1917 UK War Cabinet created Mesopotamia administration committee to decide on form of
govt in captured areas
(Musings On Iraq review When God Made Hell, The British Invasion of Mesopotamia and the Creation of Iraq, 1914-1921)
1915 Viceroy of India wrote UK interests were protecting Persian oil concession which meant Basra
vilayet should be controlled by UK while Baghdad vilayet should be ceded by Turkey and given native administration under UK influence
(Musings On Iraq review Enemy On The Euphrates, The Battle For Iraq 1914-1921)
(Musings On Iraq review When God Made Hell, The British Invasion of Mesopotamia and the Creation of Iraq, 1914-1921)
Sayle, Timothy Andrews, Engel, Jeffrey, Brands, Hal and Inboden, William, Edited by, The Last Card, Inside George W. Bush’s Decision To Surge In Iraq, Cornell University Press, 2019
The Last Card, Inside George W. Bush’s Decision To Surge In Iraq provides the most comprehensive view of how the Bush administration decided to order the Surge in 2007. It consists of two halves. The first is interviews with 28 members of the White House starting with President Bush himself along with Vice President Dick Cheney, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, and various members of the National Security Council, State Department, and Pentagon. The second part is a series of articles by academics trying to evaluate the decision making process and giving some views of whether the Surge worked or not. It’s those firsthand accounts of most of the major players within the government that makes this a must read for those interested in the Surge.
1921 Colonial Sec Churchill wrote PM Lloyd George Said making Faisal king of Iraq best
chance for UK to save money in Iraq
(Musings On Iraq review Cairo 1921, Ten Days That Made the Middle East)
(Musings On Iraq review Empires of the Sand, The Struggle For Mastery In The Middle East 1789-1923)
1910 Ottoman army defeated Montafiq tribal confederation in present day Maysan province for rejecting
taxes
1914 UK sent ultimatum to Ottomans If they wanted to increase tariffs had to allow merger
of Turkish Petroleum Company that was going to get oil concession in Mosul vilayet with Anglo-Persian Oil Company 1st sign UK wanted to control Mesopotamian oil
1917 British army captured Baghdad Led to widespread looting Driven off by soldiers
Population then celebrated arrival of British
(Musings On Iraq review Enemy On The Euphrates, The Battle For Iraq 1914-1921)
(Musings On Iraq review When God Made Hell, The British Invasion of Mesopotamia and the Creation of Iraq, 1914-1921)
(Musings On Iraq Interview Iraqi Women Before And After The 2003 Invasion, Interview With Prof Nadje Al-Ali Univ of London)
(Musings On Iraq review Iraqi Women, Untold Stories from 1948 to the Present)
(Musings On Iraq review What Kind of Liberation? Women and the Occupation of Iraq)
Svoboda, Peter, Headhunter, 5-73 CAV and Their Fight for Iraq’s Diyala River Valley, Casemate, 2020
Most books on the U.S. war in Iraq focus upon Anbar because of the Awakening there and Baghdad since it was the capital and the major sight of the civil war. Peter Svoboda’s Headhunter covers the 5th Squadron of the 82nd Airborne Division’s deployment to Diyala in eastern Iraq from 2006-07. The book focuses almost exclusively upon kinetic operations against the insurgency and the bond between the soldiers especially when they suffered losses.
1922 King Faisal threatened to end Anglo-Iraq treaty talks if term mandate wasn’t dropped
from Iraq
(Musings On Iraq review Supremacy And Oil, Iraq, Turkey, and the Anglo-American World Order, 1918-1930)
1917 British forces started march on Baghdad from Kut
(Musings On Iraq review Enemy On The Euphrates, The Battle For Iraq 1914-1921)
(Musings On Iraq review When God Made Hell, The British Invasion of Mesopotamia and the Creation of Iraq, 1914-1921)
1916 Gen Townshend cmdr of besieged Kut force told command that he overestimated his
supplies and could only hold out until end of March
1914 US consulate reported Ottomans reconciled with Sayid Talib who’d pushed for
autonomy in Basra vilayet
1917 Gen Maude started campaign to take Baghdad without adequate supplies
(Musings On Iraq review When God Made Hell, The British Invasion of Mesopotamia and the Creation of Iraq, 1914-1921)
1916 Battle of Sannaiyat by Kut British attacked Ottomans Took Hanna and Fallahiya British had 1,885 casualties