Palestinians in Iraq: From Asylum to Homelessness; with comment

4 views
Skip to first unread message

John Churchilly

unread,
Mar 19, 2026, 6:31:37 PM (9 days ago) Mar 19
to themeritocracy



Comment

 A Historical Arc of Iraq, Palestine, and the Forces That Shaped a Region
History in the Middle East has never unfolded in isolation. Every political shift, every coup, every foreign intervention has rippled across borders, reshaping identities and destinies. My own family lived through these turning points. My father, who managed Palestinian affairs in Iraq in 1948, witnessed firsthand how global powers and regional ambitions intertwined to produce consequences still felt today.

The Early Years: Palestinians in a Constrained Iraq
In 1948, Iraq was fragile and heavily constrained by British influence. Support for Palestinians was limited, and even basic employment was restricted to those with formal credentials. The state was weak, and its sovereignty was conditional.

By the 1950s, Arab Jews were stripped of their Iraqi citizenship and sent one‑way to Israel — a transformation that reshaped the demographic and political landscape. Meanwhile, Britain viewed Iraq’s growing regional influence with suspicion. When Kuwait sought to join the Arab Union, London intervened decisively, helping dismantle the Iraqi monarchy under the supervision of Henry Trevelyan.

Coups, Armies, and the Battle for Palestine

Abd al‑Karim Qasim’s attempt to form the Palestine Liberation Army was short‑lived; he was toppled soon after. The Baath Party then rose to power, exploiting Washington’s miscalculations and seizing control of Iraq’s political machinery.

Saddam Hussein later made a strategic error by dismantling the Baath hierarchy and rejecting unity with Syria — a union that would have made him prime minister rather than president. Yet Saddam’s motivations were rooted in Arab nationalism, not personal ambition alone.

The Iranian Revolution and a New Regional Order

The fall of the Shah, supported by Western powers, ushered in a new ideological force. Khomeini redirected Shiism toward rejectionism and expansionism, and with American tolerance, Iran attempted to occupy Iraq. The result was the devastating eight‑year Iran–Iraq war.

at its peak, could have fundamentally altered the regional balance — a possibility underscored by Israel’s current struggle in Gaza.

Kuwait, Oil, and the Road to Catastrophe

Kuwait’s aggressive demands for war‑debt repayment, combined with its decision to flood the oil market, pushed Iraq to the brink. When an Iraqi delegation was insulted by Kuwait’s aging ruler, Saddam — shaped by a rural sense of honor — reacted with fury. The invasion of Kuwait followed.

The Post‑2003 Era: A Nation Handed Over

Under the guidance of American strategists, Washington coordinated with Iran’s clerical establishment, paying senior clerics to declare resistance to the invasion “haram.” After 2003, the United States effectively handed Iraq to Iran — a fact openly acknowledged by Paul Bremer.

Iranian‑backed militias began assassinating Iraqi pilots who had bombed Iran during the war. Mossad‑linked groups joined in, particularly in northern Iraq. Twelve thousand scientists were killed. Former military officers were massacred, especially in Mosul. One and a half million Iraqis died, and more than ten million were displaced.

Palestinians: From Allies to Victims

championed their cause. Iran interpreted this as betrayal. After 2003, Palestinians became targets — one community among millions who suffered at the hands of both Washington and Tehran.

A Region Shaped by Power, Not Justice

The story of Iraq and Palestine is not simply a sequence of events; it is a chronicle of how global powers, regional ambitions, and ideological movements reshaped the Middle East. The human cost — Iraqi, Palestinian, and beyond — remains immeasurable.

=============IIIIIIIIIIIIII=================
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages