An eyewitness account of mid-century Iraq that reveals the deep-seated tensions that existed before and after the reign of Saddam Hussein.
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1 Kirkuk
2 Kurds, Turkomans, Arabs, and the Others
3 From Tranquility to Conflict
4 A Communist Offensive
5 Mr. Chapman, A. J. B. Chapman
6 Soviet Plans for Baba Gurgur
7 Communism and the Youth
8 1948
9 The IPC and Us
10 The Dawn of the Kurdish Era
11 The Western Trajectory
12 The Fermenting Coups
13 The Morning of July 14, 1958
14 The Turmoil of the 1940s
15 Kirkuk, the Jerusalem of Iraq
16 Kurdistan
17 A Disastrous Task
18 A Long Journey
19 Room # 11
20 Courts, Kurds, and the Communists
21 Triumphs and Defeats
22 Baghdad
23 The Winds of Change
24 A "U-Turn"
25 More Turmoil
26 "Your Destiny Is Charted for You the Minute You Are Born"
27 A Chitchat
Index
Henry D. Astarjian is a neurologist who grew up in Iraq. He has lived in the United States since 1966. He attended the Royal College of Medicine in Baghdad and was in the Iraqi Army during the 1950s. He is the author of several articles on Iraqi Kurds and Armenian issues. He is the only witness to the assassination attempt by Saddam Hussein on Iraq's Sole Leader Abdul-Kareem Qasim, organized by the Ba'th Party.
Among the plethora of recent books on Iraq, this is unique because
it offers a provocative view into Iraq's tumultuous past through
the eyes of an Iraqi American physician. This is a historical
memoir about the struggle over Kirkuk's great oil fields and the
crises besetting Iraqi society before the Baath party takeover and
rise of Saddam Hussein. Astarjian, the son of Armenian genocide
survivors, chronicles Kirkuk's ethnosectarian diversity as Jews,
Kurds, Turkmen, Assyrians, Armenians, and Arabs lived together in
peace, despite the power plays over the oil fields involving
British officials, Soviet agents, and others representing national
or ethnic interests. Included are fascinating accounts of the
overthrow of the Royal Hashemite regime in 1958, the author's
incarceration and torture at the hands of his childhood friend (who
had become a communist), and his imprisonment in a Baghdad military
prison with Baath party leaders….[t]his is a compelling story about
the formative years of modern Iraq, intended to enlighten Americans
about the immense challenges and perils facing them in a tragic
land. Sadly, it may be too late to make it a must read for US
policy makers. Recommended. General readers, lower-division
undergraduates through practitioners.
*Choice*
Iraqi-American Astarjian combines memoir with history in describing
the oil politics of Kirkuk in Northern Iraq from the 1940s through
to the mid 1960s, when he left for America shortly after Saddam
Hussein's assassination attempt on Prime Minister Abd-al-Karim
Qasim. His description of the political life of Kirkuk during this
era gives a small window into the complex forces at work Kurdish
versus Arab, Arab versus Turkomen, Communist versus Baathist, etc.
and Astarjian is not shy about letting his own anti-communist,
anti-Baathist, and other views out into the open.
*Reference & Research Book News*
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