Anglo-Iraqi War

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The Anglo-Iraqi War is the name of hostilities between the United Kingdom and the Iraqi nationalist government during the second world war. It lasted from April 18 to May 30 1941. Although it was barely a month long, the war resulted in a renewal of British occupation of the country and further fuelled nationalist resentment of the British-supported monarchy.

Causes

Although Iraq (also referred to as Mesopotamia) was nominally granted independence from the United Kingdom in 1932, before then, it had been governed by the British under a League of Nations mandate. In preparation for independence, a number of conditions had been stipulated under the Anglo-Iraqi Treaty of 1930, including the provision of military bases for British use and the free movement for British troops through the country without restriction. Many Iraqis were angry at these conditions and felt that their country was still under the effective control of Britain and the monarchy it had created. This was dictated by the British before independence, principally to ensure that they would continue to have control of Iraq's oil resources.

In 1939, the British government wanted the regent Nuri as-Said to declare war on Nazi Germany following the September invasion of Poland. However, the anti-British sentiment meant that the government was only able to cut off diplomatic relations with Germany. An anti-British prime minister, Rashid Ali, staged a coup d'etat in 1941. He overthrew the monarchy, and attempted to restrict the rights of the British under the 1930 treaty. Rashid Ali had already made covert contacts with the Nazi representatives in the Middle East, but was not openly pro-Nazi in 1941.

The British Army's Middle East Command in Cairo despatched a formation known as Iraqforce — which included the Indian 10th Infantry Division under the command of General Sir Edward Quinan — and it landed at Basra on April 18. The landing was intended to reinstate a more compliant Iraqi government and to protect British interests in the country.

There were two main British military bases in Iraq, at Basra and RAF base at Lake Habbaniya, west of Baghdad. On April 30, twelve days after the initial British landings in Basra, the Iraqi Army established itself on the high ground to the south of the Habbaniya air force base. An Iraqi envoy was sent to demand that no movements, either ground or air, were to take place from the base. The British refused the demand and then themselves demanded that the Iraqi army leave the area at once. The British opened fire on the Iraqi troops threatening the base, without further warning, at 0500 hours on May 2.

British response and resolution

The British had at their disposal 96, mostly obsolete, aircraft at Habbaniya which was a training base and a refuelling point for flights to India. Many of the aircraft were trainers which were modified on the spot to carry bombs and other offensive weapons. On May 3, four Bristol Blenheim fighter bombers arrived to further strengthen the base. On the ground, Habbaniya was defended by 2,200 men and 18 armoured cars.

Opening the British attack, close to forty aircraft took off to attack the Iraqi positions on May 2. The garrison was soon augmented by another British relief force Habforce, and its flying column KingCol moving in from Palestine. The aircraft stationed at the base eventually destroyed the poorly equipped Iraqi airforce. After air superiority was in hand, the portions of the Iraqi Army defending the capital were defeated in a battle for Fallujah. Minor aid had been received from a handful of aircraft from the German Luftwaffe operating from Mosul, but by the time of the Fallujah battle the British aircraft operated unopposed against the Iraqi army.

British forces pressed on to Baghdad, where the government of Rashid Ali collapsed. Rashid Ali and his supporters fled to Persia and then on to Germany. On June 1, an armistice was signed and the monarchy and a pro-British government was put back in place. Large numbers of British forces remained in Iraq until 1947 and the country remained effectively under British control. The British considered the occupation of Iraq necessary to ensure that access to its strategic oil resources be maintained. Iraq was subsequently used as a base for the British invasion of Iran in 1942. Forward defenses against a possible German invasion from the north were created in 1942. After 1942, Iraq and Iran were used to transit war material to the Soviet Union.

While Rashid Ali and his supporters were in alliance with the Nazi regime in Germany, the war demonstrated that Iraq's independence was at best conditional on British approval of the government's actions.

Military occupation of Iraq continued long after the war and finally ended on October 26, 1947.

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