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Anglo-Iraqi Treaty of 1922

Anglo-Iraq Treaty of 1922
The Anglo Iraq Treaty of 1922, Cmd 2370[1]
Created1922
Ratified1924
SignatoriesPercy Cox and Abd Al-Rahman Al-Gillani
PurposeCodification of the British Administration of the newly created Kingdom of Iraq

The Anglo-Iraqi Treaty of October 1922 was an agreement signed between the British and Iraqi governments. The treaty was designed to allow for Iraqi self-government while giving the British control of Iraq's foreign policy. It was intended to conclude an agreement made at the Cairo Conference of 1921 to establish a Hashemite Kingdom in Iraq.

In the aftermath of the First World War, the former possessions of the Ottoman Empire were divided between France and Britain, with the remainder becoming the present-day country of Turkey. The former Ottoman provinces of Baghdad, Mosul, and Basra were proposed to become a League of Nations Class A mandate under direct British rule, known as the British Mandate for Mesopotamia. The general public in the region reacted negatively to the mandate, resenting the imposition of British control; this led to the Iraqi revolt of 1920, which caused the British to instead decide that the mandate territories would instead become the Kingdom of Iraq. On 23 August 1921, Faisal ibn Hasayn was crowned as Faisal I, King of Iraq.

Concurrently, the area acquired by the new kingdom was going through a period of political turmoil. Nationalists who believed that the expulsion of the Ottomans would lead to greater independence were disappointed at the system of government decided for the British Mandate of Mesopotamia. Rather than the people of the region gaining a new sense of national identity through self-government, the British imported civil servants from India who had previous knowledge and experience of how to manage the administration of an overseas possession.

The Anglo-Iraqi Treaty of 1922 served to prevent uprisings in the intended new Kingdom of Iraq by giving Britain direct control of the kingdom's military, and significant influence over its economic and political affairs.

French interests in the Middle East in blue, British in red. The overlap in Palestine, marked in purple, was created to allow for a British railroad concession between the oil-rich Persian Gulf and the Levant, and for the French to gain the former German railroad concessions between Allepo and oil-rich northern Mesopotamia.[2]
  1. ^ "The Anglo Iraq Treaty of 1922" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2019-05-21.
  2. ^ Coughlan, Robert (27 November 1950). "Mystery Billionaire". Life. Vol. 29, no. 22. pp. 81–107. ISSN 0024-3019.

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