The Iraqi Revolution of 1958 by Romero Juan;
Author:Romero, Juan;
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: UPA
Published: 2011-08-15T00:00:00+00:00
Peaceful and violent popular reactions
The population of Baghdad and other cities took to the streets in celebration of the overthrow of the old regime and their newly won freedom. Some scholars and analysts have argued that the crowds that filled the streets in Baghdad were âa mob of hundreds of thousands . . . milling through the streets screaming its joy and its thirst for vengeance . . . The revolutionaries were apparently unprepared for this reaction . . .â21 The Baghdadis had been encouraged earlier in the morning in âArifiâs radio address to come out into the streets and watch the revolution unfold. A report from the American Embassy in Baghdad refers to another public announcement, the issuance by the Military Command on July 15 of Republic Order No. 8. The Order can without too much stretch of the imagination be interpreted as inciting the Baghdadis, since it promised a reward of ID 10,000 ($28,000) âto whomever arrests the traitor Nuri al-Saâid who escaped from the peopleâs anger.â22 A third instance of the Free Officers inciting the population occurred later the same day after Nuri al-Saâid had been killed and âAbd al-Salam âArif called on Baghdadis to âcome and see the body of the âenemy of Allahâ and the peopleâ.23 âThe enemy of Allah,â âadu al-Ilah is a pun on âAbd al-Ilah, the meaning of which is âservant of god.â The American Embassy report from Baghdad also states that â[s]ome reliable sources reported that the larger mobs and groups were harangued and incited to specific action by known Baâthists.â24
One can infer from the account referred to in the above paragraph that the demonstrators had evil intentions and that they appeared to have been âorganizedâ by the insurgents to a certain extent over the radio; the latter assertion is confirmed by the Embassy report quoted above. This does not exclude the possibility that some crowds could have been organized or incited by other forces. The report, written by the Second Secretary at the American Embassy in Baghdad, also states the following: â[T]he mob was called out, assisted with transportation, and incited to action early on the morning of July 14.25 The secretary further states that the task of mobilizing mob support had been âsub-contractedâ by the Free Officers to Baâthist leaders. This was confirmed by reliable sources who had identified some of the agitators inciting the mob as individuals âassociated with the local Baâthist organization.â26 Furthermore, the Iraqi Army had, according to Embassy witnesses, been directly involved in transporting young men early on the morning of July 14 from outlying areas of Baghdad in military vehicles; other young men were transported in civilian vehicles.
Norman Daniel, an eye-witness to the Iraqi revolution, gives an account of the first hours of the revolution diametrically opposite to that of Dann and the second secretary at the American Embassy, emphasizing: âNo one who was on the streets that morning will doubt the cheerful air of spontaneity with which this celebration of sudden freedom began .
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