Iraq after the Invasion: From Fragmentation to Rebirth and Reintegration

Iraq after the Invasion: From Fragmentation to Rebirth and Reintegration

by Saad N. Jawad
Iraq after the Invasion: From Fragmentation to Rebirth and Reintegration

Iraq after the Invasion: From Fragmentation to Rebirth and Reintegration

by Saad N. Jawad

Paperback(1st ed. 2021)

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Overview

This book states that one calamitous result of the invasion and occupation of Iraq (2003) was the dismantling of the state and the destruction of all the structures and processes of government. The invading powers, the USA and UK, were obsessed with the removal of the regime of Saddam Hussein, which they regarded a clear danger and a serious threat to their strategies designs and in the region. To justify their atrocity, they trumped up a number of falsehoods and charges, such as the issue of WMD.

Before that and over a period of 13 years, they had imposed unprecedented, fierce and relentless sanctions on the country. These sanctions not only impoverished and aggrieved the people of Iraq, but also instilled and deeply etched a sense of pessimistic impassivity among many Iraqis in that they felt no longer cared whatever the future might hold for them. The regime’s totalitarian nature also helped in creating this attitude. To add insult to injury, the provisional US-installed administration passed many resolutions which have had catastrophic consequences, such as the total dissolution of the security and armed forces and the de-baathification law. The hurriedly contrived new constitution confounded the situation even further and negatively impacted the integrity of the state. Exploiting the inconclusiveness and ambiguities contained in it, the Iraqi Kurdish Region became a de facto independent entity. In time, the central government became weaker than the regions. The hardest hit in this chaotic state of affairs was national unity. The sectarian and ethnic quota-based policies followed by the occupying forces and the expatriate Iraqis who came along with them dealt successive blows to the laws and institutions of the land which further disintegrated the Iraqi state. Iraq now is in dire need of national reconciliation programme aimed at re-uniting the people and the country.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9783030721084
Publisher: Springer International Publishing
Publication date: 07/05/2021
Series: Middle East Today
Edition description: 1st ed. 2021
Pages: 219
Product dimensions: 5.83(w) x 8.27(h) x (d)

About the Author

Saad N. Jawad was Professor of Political Science, Retired, 2008–2010, IR department LSE, 2010–2013 MEC, LSE, and College of Political Science, University of Baghdad 1978–2010. He was Secretary General and then Acting President of the Arab Association of Political Science between 1998 and 2018.

Table of Contents

Introduction.- Iraq: pre-occupation years.- Iraq Occupation and its aftermath.- Iraq's Constitution: A solution or a continuous predicament?.- The Kurdish dilemma.- National Reconciliation.- Conclusion.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“Saad N. Jawad provides a global readership with an Iraqi viewpoint of the events that led up to the 2003 Anglo-American invasion and occupation as well as the consequences of its aftermath. His book notes the longstanding relationship between Iraq and Western power and how this has impacted Iraqi development. This provides his reader with clear argumentation that charts the degradation of the Iraqi state, through a longer-term process of coercion initiated by the United States beginning well before 2003. In doing so Jawad allows the reader to differentiate between the former regime and the interests of ordinary Iraqis, while also piercing the seeming amnesia of past events that characterize most English-language works.” (Tareq Ismael, Professor, University of Calgary, Canada)

“Saad N. Jawad brings something new and vitally important to our understanding of contemporary Iraq. It is the narrative of someone who was integral to Iraqi domestic dialogues prior to 2003, yet who retained an independent voice within the system. He upends many of the assumptions which have guided and misguided the policies of outside powers towards Iraq in recent years. The narrative carries weight, as also does his analysis of the country’s current and future prospects.” (Tim Niblock, Emeritus Professor, Institute of Arab and Islamic Studies, University of Exeter, UK)

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