Tribe and State in a Nested Polity - Imagining Iraq, 1534 to the Present

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    Tribe and State in a Nested Polity

    Imagining Iraq, 1534 to the Present

    Michael A. Cole

    GOVT 796,Final Paper

    Prof. Peter Mandaville

    March 2008

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    Iraq can best be understood as a network of discrete polities arranged under a single state.

    The state has shallow roots in Iraq despite the countrys long history, but the country has never

    been ungoverned bysome form of authority. The Islamic, Ottoman, and British Empires, the

    Arab Sharifians, and Baathists have conceived of, and claimed to govern, an Iraq from abroad

    or from Baghdad as a frontier between kingdoms (Persia, the Hejaz, and Ottoman Anatolia), a

    collection of provinces, a united kingdom, and a modern territorial-state, respectively. Much of

    the historical and political science literature on Iraq records its development as a unified political

    entity, whether autonomous or subject to another state, and therefore fails to capture much of the

    substance of life and politics in Iraq.1

    In fact, the critical political exchanges that impact Iraqis

    lives are those between Baghdad (Iraqs political center) and the local authorities whom Iraqis

    recognize and trust. These creative, dynamic exchanges articulate the substance of various Iraqi

    identities, define or deny Iraqs state, and determine the contours of both state and tribe through

    so that neither can be understood in isolation from the other. (This paper will focus on tribes, but

    could also have profitably explored the relationship between the Iraqi state and clergy; state and

    leading families; or state and village councils). Beyond descriptions of competition among

    1Sluglett 141

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    various actorsrural and urban, indigenous and foreign, traditional and modernthe history of

    tribe-state interaction brings useful concepts to bear upon the question of a united Iraq its

    reality, desirability, solvency, and definition and should inform policies pursued by the Iraqi

    government, as well as foreign governments engaged in Iraq, as they engage Iraqs tribes in the

    future.

    Definition of a set of concepts polity,state, nation, and tribe lends clarity to each of

    Iraqs component parts, as well as to the whole. A review of Iraqs history informed by these

    concepts exposes the dynamic relationships among groups in the production of Iraqi identities.

    The ideologies, structures, and internal power-balance of the Iraqi tribes and the Iraqi state may

    change with each era, but the ideal constructs oftribe andstate remain consistent. Ferguson

    and Mansbach explain,

    Today, as in the past, a rich variety of polity types interact across global and

    regional issues. There is, moreover, great variety within each type family,

    tribe, city, and so on. Each is merely an ideal construct, or model, which

    manifests itself in a range of forms in real-world polities during a particular

    time and also over time.2

    Indeed, Iraqs history bears out the consistent relevance of its central social groups and power

    relationships across distinct periods. These central concepts are closely intertwined: Whereas the

    state, tribe and nation are each polities, the state and tribe are also potentially, but not

    necessarily, nations. The faultlines that define Iraqs political world develop where the Iraqi

    state and indigenous groups contend to either define or to deny the Iraqi nation.

    2Ferguson and Mansbach 37

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    Thepolity is a community with a distinct identity, a hierarchy with roles and means for

    continuity, loyalties based on a shared belief in linked fates, and capacities to mobilize for the

    satisfaction of collective values.3

    Among other things, polities differ in degree of hierarchy,

    centralization of authority, institutionalization, mobilization capacity, homogeneity, and size,

    and these qualities affect polities strength relative to one another.4

    As readers of Classical and

    Enlightenment philosophy well know, man has conceived a wide variety of means of organizing

    communities to realize shared values. Thestate, a form of a polity, is distinguished by its

    bounded territoriality and its institutional character. Conventional definitions of the state

    indicate that it possesses a permanent population, a defined territory, and a national government

    capable of maintaining effective control over its territory, as well as the Weberian claim to a

    monopoly of the legitimate use of physical force or violence within a given territory.5

    As a concept, the nation is more amorphous and contentious than the state, and history

    bears out that it is among the most forceful drivers of human events. Benedict Anderson defines

    the nation as an imagined political community and imagined as both inherently limited and

    sovereign.6

    Each quality is salient: The nations limited character distinguishes it from

    messianic religious communities that anticipate absolute hegemony; sovereignty indicates the

    nations temporality, its ability to change despite unchanging religion, and its independence from

    religious authority; that it is a community suggests fraternal, horizontal relations among its

    members. The nation is real only when it is imagined, which is to say, only when a sufficient

    3Ferguson and Mansbach 36

    4Ferguson and Mansbach 37

    5Lim 6

    6Anderson 6

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    number of a communitys members perceive a current uniting them across physical distance and

    individual differences that clearly distinguishes them from other groups of humans.

    Anderson uses history to expose the means by which nationalists assert their

    independence from others, define themselves, describe their histories and aspirations, construct

    or identify concrete manifestations of their nations, and pursue and marshal resources (both

    intellectual and physical) for national action (e.g., cultural pursuits, state-building).

    Long before Anderson showed us the need for nations to be imagined, Ernest

    Renan pointed out in 1882 that if a nation is to perpetuate itself it needs to

    be willed. The existence of a nation is a daily plebiscite. Now, there can

    be no doubt that this stress on consciousness, imagination, and will is indeed

    true to life, although (as we shall see later) different nations are imagined and

    willed in different ways.7

    Just as nationality is brought into existence by its members imagining, the nation wields no

    power without its members, and can only inform action as its members desire.

    The concept of the tribe calls for articulation, but does not bear precise definition. As the

    set of behaviors and institutions developed by each tribe (e.g., leadership, conflict mediation,

    property rights) is unique, and understanding a tribes actions relative to other tribes and to the

    state depends heavily on historical context, precise categories of tribes tend to mislead more than

    they explain. Philip Khoury warns against conceiving of ideal types of tribes and states

    because these types obscure important complexity. For example, idealized concepts might

    suggest tribes and states are inherently incompatible, but examples of their sustained coexistence

    are plentiful (e.g., Iraq and Iran). Tribes are often multi-confessional and trans-national; some

    7Canovan 54

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    claim between 250,000 and 550,000 members across the Middle East; and few remain

    exclusively urban or rural. Iraqis belong to about 150 trans-national tribes, as well as hundreds

    of smaller tribes resident only in Iraq. Although Middle Eastern tribes have developed oral

    histories that recount many generations, few can claim truly unbroken lineages. This is

    particularly true of Iraqi tribes due to their encounters with the state between the sixteenth

    century and the present, as the states regnant in Iraq have, in various situations, attempted to

    disbanded or buttress Iraqi tribes, replace their leadership, disperse their members, or otherwise

    utilize them for the states ends.

    Richard Tapper suggests that the tribe is a state of mind, a construction of reality, a

    model for organization and action.8

    The term generally refers to a variety of localized groups

    whose members are united by blood or kinship myths, which contribute to the identity and

    organization of the community:

    Many anthropologists of the Middle East adopt the notion of tribe as a descent

    group, the classical model of tribal society among Arabs and in the Middle

    East generally, conforming with Ibn Khalduns conception.... Such groups

    may not be territorially distinct and politically united under a chief, but many

    modern proponents of this notion of tribe would deny the term to any group

    without a descent ideology.9

    The tribe is near the core of a language of symbols and cultural references that continue to feed

    Arab political discourses and resonate with many Arabs from traditional villages to modern

    cities. The term tribe supplies rhetorical means to identify common ground among diverse

    publics through shared ethics (e.g., traditional values of generosity, fellowship, and courage), and

    8Khoury 56

    9Koury 52.

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    lends significance to public exchange that transcends politics by virtue of the terms close

    associations with religion. As a source of symbolic continuity with the past, the Arab tribe and

    its related imagery have remained uniquely stable through many centuries of sharp change.

    Following his death in 632 CE, the Prophet Muhammads success at achieving Arab

    unity under the banner of Islam was immediately diminished as the ummah divided by sect and

    by tribe.10

    When the Islamic Empire reached Iraq under Abu Bakr between 636 and 639 CE, the

    Islamic armies arrived with their tribal networks intact.11 The Qurans forty-ninth Sura affirms

    tribes central role in Muslims lives, explaining in the Divinitys voice,

    O mankind, We have created you from a male and female, and set you up as

    nations and tribes so you may recognize [and cooperate with] one another.

    The Quran identifies historical figures with their tribes, making the tribe a recognizable part of

    the human landscape for Muslims. The seventh Sura even classifies each of the devils that

    monitor sinners as the member of a tribe, establishing a supernatural parallel for the human tribe

    that is comparable to the armies of angels and families of prophets found in each of the

    monotheistic faiths.

    Bassam Tibi places the tribe in a political context that includes Islam:

    In Ibn Khaldouns world there were three effective principles of political

    order: the natural cohesion of tribal life; the principle of military-

    administrative slavery; and religion. No single one of these was perfect or

    exempt from eventual decay; but, in various forms of combination with each

    11Ferguson & Mansbach 282

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    other, they held out some hope of at least a measure of political stability,

    temporary place, and effective government.12

    Indeed, the tribe is the oldest and most stable social institution in the Middle East; it is second

    only to Islam as a legitimate source of authority for many Arabs; and it remains a fertile source

    of commonality among and within communities and states across the region. As Tapper

    explains, [W]hether tribes should be identified culturally (a descent ideology) or structurally

    (chiefship and/or politicoterritorial unity), there is broad agreement among scholars that tribes

    function on a scale smaller than that of the state, possibly constituting secondary states with

    ambiguous and sometimes contentious relationships to the states within which their members

    reside and potentially creating a redundancy of functionality and taxation that is essential to

    understanding tribe/state interactions in Iraq.13

    Despite nearly five centuries of interaction with various states and empires, Iraq has

    never retained a stable, native state-structure for long and its people have never fully dispensed

    with their tribal associations. However, through sustained engagement in a still-ongoing

    dialectic process, the parties involved have repeatedly reconceived of Iraq as a single polity or as

    the home of multiple polities, variously imagining and denying an Iraqi nation or asserting the

    existence of multiple nations. Beyond two-dimensional discourses of modernization and

    domination, history shows that Iraqs central social institutions and central governments have

    molded the Iraqi polity and each other through intermittent rivalry and cooperationthe present-

    12Khoury 122

    13Khoury 53

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    day product of which is a nested polity of layered, overlapping, or embedded polities.14

    In a

    nested polity,

    It is as though one political form were superimposed on another. The latter

    may lose some of its separate identity, but in the process, the dominant polity

    may assume some of the trappings and features of the nested polity. The

    impact of nested polities will be felt in the unique attributes of the successor

    polity and show up in significant variations among institutions, ideologies,

    and behavior in each type of polity.15

    Politics are always changing or becoming, as they come from, or move toward, another polity-

    type.16

    In Iraq, hybrid political and institutional forms have created unique modes of political

    action.

    The literature on imperialism and modernization is dominated by portrayals of

    asymmetry (technological, military, etc.) between Western empires and traditional societies, but

    in Iraq, indigenous political cultures and the political culture of each imperial state have long

    exerted power on each other:

    If the rulers of the Middle East have been preoccupied by a tribal problem

    the tribes could be said to have had a perennial state problem. A focus on

    the role of tribes in state formation in the Middle East needs to be

    complemented by awareness of the role of states in tribe formation and

    deformation.17

    14Ferguson and Mansbach 395

    15Ferguson and Mansbach 395

    16Ferguson and Mansbach 29

    17Khoury 52

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    A review of Iraqs history confirms that the effects of these cultures on each other were, in turns,

    creative, transformative, and destructive. Talal Asad summarizes a history of worldwide

    imperialism in which,

    The conditions of reinvention were increasingly defined by a new scheme of

    things new forms of power, work, and knowledge. It tells of European

    imperial dominance not as a temporary repression of subject populations but

    as an irrevocable process of transmutation, in which old desires and ways of

    life were destroyed and new ones took their place.18

    Asad continues, The radically altered form and terrain of conflict inaugurated by [encounters

    between modern and traditional societies produced] new political languages, new powers, new

    social groups, new desires and fears, new subjectivities.19

    As elsewhere, political actors in Iraq have employed technologies of power to change

    Iraqs political cultures and identities. Iraqis interaction with both Ottomans and Europeans

    increased dramatically in the min-nineteenth century. For example, during the period 1870-

    1914, Iraqs international trade increased eighteen-fold.20

    This increased interaction coincided

    with modernitys rapid technological development, with effects felt even in Iraq, (e.g., the

    opening the Suez canal and the deployment of powered river transport in Iraq) and the aggressive

    implementation of Enlightenment political ideas in Europe as well as the Ottoman Empire (if not

    immediately or consistently in Iraq). The various technologies (broadly understood)

    developed by states to organize and control populations and territories (e.g., police, the courts,

    the military, taxation, record-keeping), and by industry to increase production and efficiency,

    18Vincent 133

    19Vincent 135

    20CARDRI 1

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    also affected deep cultural change when they were introduced to traditional societies such as

    Iraq:

    Just as modern modes of locomotion (railways, motorcars, etc.) have altered

    concepts of time and space, so Turner reminds us that modern modes of

    representation (e.g., film and video) have helped to reconstitute colonized

    subjectivies. All these things have certainly been very important for the

    changes that Western hegemony has brought about. It is necessary, however,

    to extend the concept of technology to include all institutionalized techniques

    that depend on and extend varieties of social power.

    21

    European powers controlled industrial technologies in Iraq, including steamship and rail

    transport well into the Baathist period, and the best agricultural and manufacturing tools still

    remain out of reach for most Iraqis. However, from the late nineteenth century and throughout

    the Hashemite monarchy, modern transport (especially automobiles), print media, bureaucracy,

    modern management methods, ideologies, and centralized legal systems permeated Iraq and

    changed it forever. Government, military, universities, social movements, private citizens and

    tribes all capitalized on modern tools and ideas for personal gain, to build the Iraqi state, to

    contend for authority against foreign powers, and to increase the capabilities of non-state

    authorities. Even today, Iraqs modernization remains incomplete by the standards of most

    modernization theorists, as Iraqis employ modern tools (for their tactical utility) to achieve

    objectives that are distinctly mixed if judged by the standards of modernization.22 Iraqs history

    shows that technologies of power, which have elsewhere generally advantaged empires over

    21Vincent 132

    22Inglehart and Baker 49

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    traditional peoples and governments over civil societies (including tribes), have instead

    empowered Iraqis to mitigate that asymmetry.

    The Ottoman Empires 1534 conquest of Iraq marks a turning point in the historical

    record of Iraq and the Empires tenure in Iraq, which effectively ended in 1917, set the terms for

    Iraqs modern tribe-state relations. A detailed historical study of discrete tribes interactions

    with the state and other tribes, and their social and economic foundations remains, notably, in its

    infancy.23 Writing in Baghdad in 1925 about Iraqi tribes in the seventeenth century, during the

    Ottoman occupation, the British administrator and historian Stephen Longrigg lamented, We

    can but study examples of that process [of the tribal body, ever building up and breaking down,]

    assigning name and date to a few among countless cells.24

    Contemporary oral history traditions

    suggest the presence of a vibrant community of tribes in Iraq across the pre-Islamic period, and

    travelers of the Islamic Imperial period refer to tribes oral histories.25 The Ottoman Empires

    copious administrative records offer the first regular accounts of Iraqs tribes. They refer

    intermittently to Ottomans relationships and conflicts with tribal groups, well as to the methods

    the Imperial government devised to administer Iraqs provinces, and to conditions throughout the

    period.

    The Ottomans finally took control of Baghdad in 1534 after repeated attempts to wrest

    the territory from Persias sphere of influence and to acquire a foothold among fiercely

    independent tribes. They set out to re-establish Baghdad as the administrative center of what

    became the three Ottoman-Iraqi provinces: Mosul, Baghdad, and Basra. Garrisons were built

    throughout the provinces to secure trade-routes and to support imperial administrators, especially

    23Khoury 56

    24Longrigg 78

    25Mandaville 487

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    in their management of revenue, tax-yielding agricultural properties, and of conflicts with tribes

    and tribe-supported sects in Mosul and southern Baghdad (e.g., Wahhabists and Shiite Persians

    in the mid-eighteenth century).26

    The historical record indicates little interest among Ottoman leaders in programs intended

    to improve living conditions in Iraq or to bring Iraqis into the broader life of the Empire until the

    mid-nineteenth century; those first three centuries saw Iraq riven with difficulties. Hitti

    describes the Arab provinces government under the complicated pre-1864 Ottoman system of

    regional government, in which both apasha and a bey claimed authority over a single area:

    It was not long [after arriving] before the Ottoman pasha sent from

    Constantinople ceased to exercise any real control over local affairs. His

    ignorance of the colloquial and of the local scene was a decided handicap.

    His tenure of office was at best of short duration. Under the dual form of

    control, the native sank deeper in the abyss of misery and poverty. By pasha

    and Mamluk the cultivator of the soil was relentlessly exploited and driven

    into a state of abjectness. Corruption and bribery prevailed. Insecurity,

    famine, and pestilence added their quota of misery.27

    Batatu charts Baghdads recorded calamities between the seventeenth and twentieth centuries:

    He recounts seven floods, four wars in which populations were enslaved or slaughtered, four

    famines, two mass-starvations, six plagues, and two episodes of civil strife.28

    The floods are

    blamed on the Ottomans failure to maintain the citys ancient levies and their intentional

    destruction of northern damns to irrigate the Sultans farmlands.

    26Nakash 443

    27Hitti 720

    28Batatu 15

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    Iraqs late Ottoman period brought protracted new conflicts between tribes and the

    government as the Empire responded to its increased interaction with Europe and to its dramatic

    financial and institutional ills by entering a period of attempted large-scale modernization.

    Although Napoleon I intended primarily to upset British interests in Egypt when he landed in

    Alexandria in July 1798, his support for the Ottoman Sultans provincial government set off

    more than a century of regional conflict and Imperial administrative reformsnot only in Egypt,

    but also across the Empire.29 While buttressing the Portes authority in Egypt, French officials

    and the governor Muhammad Ali instituted policies informed by Bonapartes French Revolution

    and Western modernization.

    30

    Napoleon IIIs assertion of authority in the Holy Land in 1851,

    the resulting War in the Crimea (1853-1856), and the Russo-Turkish War (1877-1878)

    continued, by providing external stimulus for reform, the introduction of Western ideas and

    technologies to Ottoman cities and governments, while also depleting the Empires treasuries:

    The Empire took out its first international loan in 1854, and by the end of the nineteenth century,

    payment on its debt consumed nearly all of its annual revenues.

    Governments from Europe to Russia accepted by the end of the Crimean War that the

    Ottoman Empire was both an integral part of international political and economic affairs, and

    that it would become insolvent without dramatic change. (In 1881, European creditors

    established the Ottoman Public Debt Administration as a parallel, European-controlled

    bureaucracy within the Empire responsible for ensuring the payment of the Empires foreign

    debt.) Urged by his advisors, principally the future Grand Vizier Mustafa Resid, to reform the

    Empire by engaging the West and its ideas, Sultan Abdulmecid in 1839 commissioned the

    Gulhane Decree, which promulgated basic values for Imperial government, including

    29Palmer 57-60

    30Palmer 61

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    liberalization, increased equality and protection for religious minorities, and a renewed focus on

    the Sultan as the center of government.

    The word Tanzimat, which indicates the specific reforms that followed the Gulhane

    Decree and which lends its name to the period of Ottoman history between 1839 and 1876,

    means auspicious restructuring. Tellingly, its translation to Russian is perestroika.31

    Historians remained divided over the precise years of the Tanzimatperiod for decades, but most

    now accept a broad period of change indicated by specific pieces of legislation presented to the

    Sultan and his Divan.32

    It was the most sustained attempt by the Ottoman Empire to preserve the

    state by centralizing authority and secularizing government. Emerging as they did from the

    exhaustion of the Sultans armies and navy in Europe and the Mediterranean (against Egyptian

    forces), and requiring the support of military leaders, the Tanzimatreforms began with

    modernization of the army (e.g., conscription, European-style drilling, new weaponry and ships).

    As Palmer describes the Tanzimatprograms chronology of reforms, increased military spending

    drove reformation of tax collection, and thus of the bureaucracy that supported it. He asks:

    But how could taxes be raised without closer administrative links between the

    capital and the provinces without the improvisation of a new civil service?

    And good gunnery, accurate navigation, skilled accountancy, as well as

    efficient administration all required better learning than the old religious

    foundations could give; hence the appointment in 1845 of a council to

    report on ways of developing a widespread secular educational system.

    The Ottoman polity was comprehensively reimagined as a new, modern state closer to the model

    of the Empires European competitors. The TanzimatMen, Constantinoples cosmopolitan

    31Palmer 134

    32Palmer 111

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    young modernizers, organized and launched reform programs as modern, central social-planners

    of the day were taught, but they also engaged broader international discourses (of culture,

    modernization, secularism, etc.) and attempted to extend the application of new ideas to their

    rural countrymen. The urban landscape of Constantinople soon featured boulevards with

    theaters and open, public spaces that reflected the new Ottomans cosmopolitan outlook. The

    bureaucratic center reached out to the periphery in new ways. Although they were

    unaccustomed to Constantinoples attentions, the vilayets (Turkish and foreign)soon received

    bureaucrats in their coffeehouses,33

    and found themselves linked to the state by administrators at

    the neighborhood (muhtar) and provincial (pasa) levels. Increased global cultural exchange and

    a newly pervasive state thus delivered the world to the Ottoman and the Ottoman Empire to its

    many component societies.

    The Tanzimatreforms effectiveness varied by issue and region.34 While many historians

    agree that they failed in their most progressive objectives their goals of abolishing religious

    discrimination and the increasingly inadequate feudal structures of taxation, in particular35

    the

    reforms nonetheless had, by implementing new technologies of power, a dramatic impact that

    reverberates to the present. Writing about the state and tribes on the frontiers of Iraq and

    Transjordan, Eugene Rogan remarks, A shadow Ottoman paternalism long outlived the empire

    of the Sultans.36

    The Provincial Reform Law of 1864 created twenty-seven provinces (vilayets)

    and divided each into districts (sanjaks) and neighborhoods (nahiyes), with the village and urban

    quarter forming the basic administrative units. Governors and bureaucrats sent from Istanbul

    33Beeley

    34Hitti 727

    35Hitti 727

    36Paler 266

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    were advised by councils composed of local leaders. (This structure was implemented in rural

    and urban settings alike; it persists in Jordan and the Arab Gulf States, and was revived in Iraq in

    2003). The new law facilitated thePortes central control at an increasingly local level, while

    also providing a forum to incorporate local opinion in decisions by Imperial administrators.

    The Provincial Reform Law of 1864 and the Land Law of 1858 reached Iraq in 1867

    when the reform-minded TanzimatMan Midhat Pasa arrived in Baghdad, succeeding a series

    of ineffective and corrupt administrators and intent on implementing modernizing reform in Iraq.

    The Land Law had two objectives: to reestablish the states legal right of ownership, and to

    provide each cultivator with a secure title to his fields, without which he would neither invest in

    improving production nor pay his taxes on a regular basis.37

    Whereas the previous,

    longstanding regime had operated inconsistently across the Iraqi provinces using land categories

    for Sultanate and state lands, and private and tribal properties, often overlapping and disputed,

    the new regime (implemented in Iraq by Midhat Pasa) defined categories based on use, including

    private property, state property, religious endowment lands, communal or public land, and barren

    land.38

    Importantly, the new law codified for the first time the Lockean principle that those who

    cultivated a parcel of land for a specific period of time could acquire title to that land. The new

    law also established a system of verifiable titles and corresponding maps to inform the state and

    landowners, and to regulate the lands management.

    Both the Provincial Reform Law and the Land Law met resistance from Iraqi tribes.

    Whereas the prior, more fluid technologies of power had permitted tribal shaykhs to define their

    properties and commitments as necessary to meet the needs of their communities, the new laws

    37Cetinsaya 8

    38Cetinsaya 8

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    reflected the needs of the Ottoman state as it struggled to compete on the world stage, and

    imposed impersonal, formal procedures from afar.

    The manpower demands raised by the new state structures were met by an

    expanding bureaucracy, trained in growing numbers by a modern school

    system, whose authority was not personal but inherent to their office.

    Through the public bureaucracy, the Ottoman state extended its infrastructural

    power by new systems of accounts and book-keeping. Government officials

    were able to exchange information with increasing ease along new roads,

    shipping connections and telegraph lines. In effect, the Tanzimatreforms had

    extended the infrastructural power of the Ottoman state and replaced the

    interest groups in the military, land regime and bureaucracy with salaried

    professionals. By the 1850s local elites no longer posed a challenge to the

    central governments rule in the provincial centers of the Empire.39

    Midhat Pasa understood the tribal problem as one of land and taxes, and he attempted to

    achieve harmony between the laws sent from Istanbul and the tribes needs (as expressed by the

    shaykhs) by providing new classes of land-tenure and tax-duties intended to reflect tribal

    identities and customs, including shaykhly privileges, cyclical land-use, and tribal taxes.40

    By the end of Midhat Pasas tenure in Iraq in 1872, the TanzimatReforms had provided

    opportunities for Iraqs native elites, especially tribal shaykhs, to establish themselves as land-

    owners without necessarily extending the privileges of law and property to the communities (or

    individuals) the shaykhs claimed to represent. However, despite the changes in the technologies

    of power used by the Ottoman state in its relationship with Iraqs tribes, the Iraqi tribe remained

    39Rogan 4-5

    40Cetinsaya 9

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    intact as a social institution. The Ottoman state struggled to extract badly-needed tax revenue

    from its Iraqi holdings without the tribes cooperation. Rogan explains:

    The frontier order of tribes and chiefdoms [in Iraq and Transjordan] was the

    single greatest barrier to direct Ottoman rule. In effect, tribes performed many

    of the same functions which the state claimed as its prerogative. Foremost

    was taxation. The Ottomans frequently sought to extract taxes from

    agricultural communities only to find that the cultivators had already paid a

    large part of their surplus to the dominant tribe in that region. Such double

    taxation frequently provoked peasant flight and village abandonment. The

    military strength of the tribes also challenged the states monopoly of coercive

    force. Ottoman attempts to subordinate tribes by military means were costly

    and seldom effective.... Tribes provided a system of justice which proved

    effective as resolving disputes and preserving order. In effect, a functional

    chiefdom provided security and a system of justice all defined in indigenous

    terms in return for taxation, making the state redundant in a frontier. While

    the frontier might not have needed the state, by the second half of the

    nineteenth century the state needed the frontier.41

    Rogans discussion of competition between Iraqi tribes and the Ottoman state amply bears out

    Tappers suggestion that tribes may, in general, function as secondary states within larger

    states.42 Surveying the Ottoman period, it becomes clear that the tribe-state relationship is a

    dialectic process by which each is molded and defined. As the country moved toward

    independence throughout the Mandate period, the challenge of defining an Iraq and the roles

    41Rogan 9 (emphasis added).

    42Khoury 53

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    of its component parts in the future unitary Iraqi state were added to the dilemma of resolving its

    internal power-balance.

    Writing in 1926, at the height of Iraqs inter-war Mandate period (1917-1932) and five

    years into Emir Faisal Is reign (1921-1933) in Baghdad, Quincy Wright wrote,

    The government of Iraq is a compromise of Wilsonian ideas, British

    traditions, and Iraq conditions. Thus the doctrines of government by the

    consent of the governed, nationality, and self-determination, which had in fact

    become the liberal criteria of political progress in Europe during the

    nineteenth century, were taken to the East.

    43

    British administrators, most of whom had recently been transferred from Colonial Office staffs in

    India, expressed their intention to build a new state-structure and to develop the countrys

    infrastructure for successful participation in the international community and international

    commerce. As in the Ottoman period, the primary foci of legislation and contention between the

    administration and Iraqi tribes were land and tax reform, and administrative and authority

    structures. However, the British Mandate administration, and later the Hashemite Monarchy,

    developed complex relationships of patronage, dependence, and administrative integration with

    the shaykhs and tribes that signaled the possibility of a new synthesis of interests, if not

    necessarily of identities.

    Short of staff, in need of allies in post-Ottoman Iraq, and possibly at the suggestion of

    former Ottoman officials who worked for the post-War mandatory regimes, British

    administrators were compelled by practical necessity to engage tribal shaykhs and large land

    owners to assist in local government (a pattern that would be repeated by Saddam Hussein after

    43Wright 743

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    the 1991 ShiaIntifada and by the Coalition after the 2003 occupation). The British estimated

    that the shaykhs had been disempowered by the tribes permanent settlement as farmers and

    townspeople under the late Ottoman regime due to the tribes diminished need for leadership in

    martial campaigns for resources, and due to the distribution of tribal lands among property

    owners under the Tanzimatreforms. The British therefore concluded that the tribes would prove

    loyal to either the Mandate authority or the Iraqi government.44

    The tribes appeared to be in a

    transitional period: Former nomads in the south established farms with small family groups

    where they would formerly have depended on extended tribal groups; tribes in the middle

    Euphrates area divided their time between grazing on traditional tribal land and months or years

    spent in the desert as nomads; and still other tribes were engaged by large landowners as tenant

    farmers in feudal arrangements that they lacked the resources to escape.45

    Secure that the

    Ottomans violent tribe problem had been resolved by the tribes newfound stability (economic

    and otherwise), the British and Iraqi governments invested shaykhs with land, landlords rights,

    and official positions as arbitrators in the new Mandatory regime.46

    Sir Henry Dobbs, the High Commissioner of Iraqs Occupation and Mandate for six years

    (1923-1929), is credited with the design of Britains land and tribal policy. In a note to the

    Colonial Office in 1926, he advised that difficult communication and travel in Iraq would inhibit

    the administration of its vast land, and that the large-scale redistribution of land to the cultivator

    of each small parcel would ease the administrative burden for the Mandatory government.47

    Citing the importance of Iraqs tribes to its social structure and the distribution of its resources,

    44Sluglett 232

    45Sluglett 233

    46Sluglett 240

    47Sluglett 249

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    and asserting that shaykhs with land were generally humane leaders, he recommended that

    shaykhs should receive and administer land on behalf of their tribes. The Tribal Civil and

    Criminal Disputes Regulation of 1916 operated under the conservative principle that the British

    would not confer new rights on those who had none, but would recognize rights already in

    existence.48

    Therefore, it recognized the tribes authority to pursue traditional means of dispute

    resolution. Those Iraqis without tribe memberships and those who lived outside tribal

    communities were subject instead to the administrative legal code administered by British

    Political Officers and the Iraqi officials who were to succeed them. The tribes dominance in

    Iraqs rural society informed the design of Britains post-Ottoman government. By

    acknowledging the tribal shaykhs authority and by placing the additional authority of the

    Mandatory state behind them, the British began a process of reviving tribal loyalties and

    authority while attempting to gain the shaykhs loyalty for the new Iraqi Hashemite Kingdom, as

    well as their support for the new states police and administrative functions.49

    British expectations of the shaykhs benign, efficient leadership and loyalty proved

    unfounded. While the tribes did use the land granted by the state, the investiture of ownership of

    large pieces of land in the shaykhs as individuals (as contrasted with the Tanzimatprinciple of

    recognize cultivators rights to small parcels) departed significantly from traditional tribal

    conceptions of semi-communal land-ownership and land-acquisition through conquest.50

    Therefore, Iraqs tribes did not always acquiesce to the state or cease their efforts to acquire new

    territory through the more traditional means of conquest.51 Traditionally, the balance of power

    48Sluglett 239

    49Sluglett 246

    50Vinogradov 128

    51Vinogradov 128

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    within a tribe among tribesmen, their shaykh, and eligible contenders for the shaykhs mantel

    had traditionally assured communities ability to replace their leader with one more humane or

    more effective at promoting the tribes interests. But the Mandatory states new identification of

    a single shaykh from each tribal group as a quasi-feudal land owner and as an object of

    patronage by the state afforded him the latitude to abuse his authority with little fear that a

    competitor would arise from within the tribe to offer the community more than the shaykh (as

    supported by the state) could provide. Moreover, as Amal Vinogradov notes in her discussion of

    tribes role in the 1920 Revolt, many factors militated against tribal loyalty to the Mandatory

    government, including increased religious fundamentalism and nascent nationalism.

    52

    British

    patronage failed to earn the tribes loyalty or to prevent the countrys first concerted national

    movement in the 1920 Revolt. The policy, which was recommended and encouraged by some

    shaykhs, served to undermine the tribes fragile internal power-balances, and to codify in Iraqs

    national character some characteristics of the tribe.53

    Upon his installation on Iraqs new throne in 1921, one of Emir Faisals most important

    tasks was to assemble a government of leaders for a country that did not consistently recognize

    itself as a united country. Batatu explains, The chief accent of royal policy was on the urgent

    and yet exceedingly difficult task of cultivating among Iraqs diverse elements enduring ties of

    common feeling and common purpose.54

    This task was complicated by the precedent of the

    Mandatory Authoritys Tribal Disputes Regulations, which remained in place until the 1958

    Revolution and which established distinct standards of rights, justice, and administration for

    52Vinogradov 129

    53Pool 340

    54Batatu 25

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    tribal and non-tribal Iraqis, and therefore (in most cases) between rural and urban populations.55

    Moreover, the elites selected by the British and by Faisal were provided with incentives through

    the Mandate reforms to maintain the status quo throughout the Mandatory and Hashemite

    periods of Iraqs history.

    Two centers of political power came to dominate the attention of the British, and

    remained in government during Faisals reign: the tribal shaykhs and Sharifians, identified with

    rural and urban populations, respectively.

    Parliament and cabinet symbolized that complementarity: cabinets were

    dominated by Sharifians and parliaments by the shaykhs and rural landowning

    interest so that these two institutions ensured the persistence of the great

    bargain: The stability of the dominance of the shaykhs in the rural areas and

    the stability of the dominance of the Sharifians at the centre.56

    British Mandate officials, overestimating the shaykhs role as Iraqs de facto elite,

    reserved for them positions in government, but discounted non-tribal elites without clear

    constituencies, such as notable families with respected lineages, clergy, and major-

    landowners. The Sharifians careers had been shaped by the same Ottoman provincial

    system which they helped to expel from Iraq and Transjordan: Most had attended

    boarding and military schools in Baghdad and Istanbul and served the Empire in various

    capacities, only to join Faisal and various Arab-nationalist movements in the construction

    of the new Hashemite state.

    The differences between the principal factions in Faisals government grew more acute

    throughout his reign and until his dynastys sudden ouster in 1958. Whereas the shaykhs in

    55Batatu 23

    56Pool 348

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    government proved disorganized and lacked a comprehensive vision for Iraq, they enjoyed social

    standing and proximity to the landowners on whom the Hashemite states revenues depended.

    The Sharifians, who had few roots in Iraq, brought a modern professionalism to government

    and a facility with the urban effendiyya, but were dependent on (and often grew wealthy from)

    Faisals patronage in land grants. The shaykhs and the Sharifians both lacked qualities for

    critical governing, but within a generation, both had emerged from separate, traditional elites to

    effectively join in forming a distinct economic class dependant for the development of their new

    land-holdings on the government and the wealthy.

    The initial structural complementariness of central politicos and provincial

    tribal shaykhs burgeoned into a fused systematic class interest of landowners.

    On the surface, Iraqi politics was one of instability: cabinet changes, political

    crises, personal rivalries and manoeuvres. Yet the developments described

    here point to a firm socio-economic cement underpinning this stability in

    instability.57

    Each factions internal stability, and the stable system produced by the two factions,

    ultimately proved inadequate to maintain the support of the mass of Iraqis. The feudal

    arrangements facilitated by British reforms were perpetuated by the shayks and

    Sharifians shared dependence on large landholders, and the urban effendiyya

    increasingly turned away from the new state and toward communism and nationalism for

    solutions to various social ills.

    Revolts, protests, and coup-attempts by peasants, tribesmen, communists, nationalists,

    and students so plagued the reigns of Iraqs three Hashemite kings that Faisal IIs deposition in a

    57Pool 347

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    driven forward by experiments in the collectivization of land ownership in

    1970 and nationalization of land in 1971.61

    The Baathists collective land ownership schemes failed, but other economic developments

    succeeded in generating jobs in cities, and Iraqs urban population climbed 206.1% between

    1965 and 1988, while the rural population increased a mere 18.6%.62

    Concerted effort to recruit

    Baath Party members in the rural towns and to implant Party observers within communities

    drove both mass urbanization and large-scale departure from tribal lands.63 Saddam Hussein also

    drove wedges between the classes (peasants and shaykhs, and tribes andsadah) and generated

    animosity towards shaykhs in general by arguing that land-reforms that redistributed large

    parcels were in the interest of the poor. When opportunities presented themselves and served

    Husseins interests, he replaced overly independent shaykhs with more pliable client-shaykhs or

    simply dissolved certain tribes and confiscated their lands. Dale Eikelman noted in 1989 that,

    despite having been officially outlawed, the tribes remained a critical link in public

    administration of rural areas.64

    The continued de facto strength of traditional tribal communities

    became an embarrassing symbol of the Baathist governments weakness. The open secret that

    Hussein recruited his personal guards from his own tribe and hired close advisors from select,

    powerful Sunni tribes from the center of the country also argued for the tribes institutional

    strength and relevance to Iraqi social stratification.

    Saddam Hussein began to reverse his position on the tribes and tribalism during the last

    phase of the exhausting Iran/Iraq war in the late 1980s, when he granted explicit recognition for

    61Dodge 162

    62Baram 3

    63Baram 3

    64Baram 4

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    the first time to Shaykhs who pledged their loyalty to him.65

    This growing recognition of the

    Baathist states long-standing, but furtive, reliance on the tribes accelerated after the 1991 Shia

    Intifada as Hussein came to identify the tribes generally and the shaykhs personally as sources of

    support and symbolism. In his consistent effort to articulate an Arab-Iraqi national identity that

    would bridge the divide between the sects, the southern tribes were valuable allies as Iraqi

    Shiites, and in the countryside, where Husseins regime (like all others before his) found the

    greatest resistance.66 Amatzia Baram explained in 1997, Since then tribalism has become,

    alongside Arabism, the glory that was pre-Islamic Mesopotamia, and Islam, a major ingredient of

    the Baath-manufactured Iraqi identity.

    67

    Hussein expanded his practice of appointing loyalists

    as shaykhs, while deposing disloyal shaykhs and taking land from tribes as a punishment for

    disloyalty; he also resumed the practice of granting land to shaykhs as a form of patronage (an

    Ottoman practice which had continued without interruption until Qasims renunciation of the

    tribes in 1958); he appointed loyal shaykhs as mukhtars to enforce Baathist orthodoxy in the

    villages; and he armed the tribesmen, and appointed them as officers in both the regular Iraqi

    army and special tribesmen units. Many tribes that had, for decades, withdrawn into the

    countryside or integrated into the cities (including al-Dura and Khadamiyya) emerged in support

    of the Baathist government in exchange for its patronage.

    As the Baath sought to extend their totalitarian and patrimonial grip on

    society, they tried to either co-opt tribal groupings, where they would be

    useful for the stability of the ruling elites power, or break them where they

    were perceived as a threat . In effect, [Hussein] decentered responsibility

    65Baram 7

    66Baram 7

    67Baram 7

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    for the provision of order to reinvigorated and recreated tribal networks and

    tribal shaikhs. By appointing recognised shaikhs across Iraq, Saddam

    Hussein targeted another channel of power to run alongside the others that

    served him so well over the twenty or so years of his rule.68

    By 1993, Hussein adopted the position that the Baath [Party] is the tribe of all tribes.69

    In the

    Republican Palace, which he expanded and redecorated after the Gulf War and Intifada, the

    North Wings largest ballroom was lined with statues representative of Iraqs most powerful

    tribes. Baram notes that while Hussein asserted that the tribes were of a lower order than the

    party, he tribalized the party itself, and by extension, the Iraqi state.

    70

    Today, tribes across Iraq are assuming a leadership role in rebuilding communities and

    security, though their relationships with government and foreigners are often tense. Following

    the Hussein regimes deposition in 2003, even tribes that had supported the Baathist government

    remained stable, and many shaykhs rose to prominence as community leaders who had survived

    the Baath without fleeing Iraq. Wherever their loyalties lay under the former regime, their

    appeal to tradition resonates with many Iraqis in the ongoing struggle to re-imagine Iraq after

    decades of Baathist propaganda that shifted almost kaleidoscopically in the vision of Iraq the

    regime portrayed. These shaykhs have an important voice in many of the debates that will shape

    Iraqs future.

    The Coalition Provisional Authority never developed a policy with regard to Iraqs tribes,

    and its leadership hesitated to release directives to guide relationships with any of the countrys

    indigenous authorities. However, the U.S. occupation, like every administration and government

    68Dodge 163

    69Baram 18

    70Baram 18

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    in Iraq, initially found Iraq to be well stratified and organized for action despite its lack of a

    functioning government in the capital. The U.S. military has since come to forge partnerships

    with certain tribes in order to maintain security in communities and to prevent the development

    of terrorist cells, but the relationship is characteristically ambiguous and lacking in trustjust as

    tribe/state relationships have been since the Ottoman period. In a typical example, U.S. officers

    in Ramadi have partnered with Shaykh Abdul Sittar and a coalition of Sunni tribal leaders from

    throughout Anbar Province to secure important towns and stretches of road. Soldiers often

    deliver tens of thousands of dollars to shaykhs for the task, and the United States has spent more

    than five million dollars in a similar fashion with excellent results throughout Ramadi. The Iraqi

    government is working with a number of tribes to combat terrorist groups (particularly, Al Qaeda

    in Iraq), but the partnership is fraught with tension.

    Some members of the Shiite-controlled government in Baghdad have accused Sunni

    tribes of prolonging the Baathist resistance prior to Saddam Husseins execution, and remain

    wary of arming the tribes, as weapons can be used to further sectarian violence just as easily as

    in the present counterterrorist partnership. However, both the U.S. military and the Iraqi

    government increasingly find that productive, public relationships with tribes, often through

    multi-tribe councils, can produce solutions to pressing problems and gain broad public approval.

    For example, the U.S. Institute of Peace worked with Iraqi local governments in the autumn of

    2007 to broker an agreement between tribes in Mahmoudiyya (south of Baghdad) to cooperate in

    preventing terrorism and redeveloping the local infrastructure and economy. Although the

    present governments official documents rarely acknowledge tribes as a component of Iraqs

    diverse (multi-ethnic, multi-confessional) body politic, their capacity to weather hard times and

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    Nakash, Yitzhak. Conversion of Iraqs Tribes to Shiism. International Journal of Middle EastStudies, 26.3 (1994): 443-463

    Palmer, Alan. The Decline and Fall of the Ottoman Empire. New York: Barnes & Noble

    Publishing, 1992.

    Pool, David. From Elite to Class: The Transformation of Iraqi Leadership, 1920-1939.International Journal of Middle East Studies, 12.3 (1980): 331-350.

    Rogan, Eugene. Frontiers of the State in the Late Ottoman Empire. Cambridge: CambridgeUniversity Press, 1999.

    Sluglett, Peter. Britain in Iraq, 1914-1932. Essex: St. Antonys Middle East Monographs, 1976.

    Vincent, Joan, ed. The Anthropology of Politics: A Reader in Ethnography, Theory and

    Critique. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing, 2002.

    Vinogradov, Amal. The 1920 Revolt in Iraq Reconsidered: The Role of Tribes in National

    Politics," International Journal of Middle East Studies, 3, 2 (April 1972): 123-139.

    Wright, Quincy. The American Political Science Review, 20. 4 (1926): 743-769.

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    Appendix A: Iraqs Tribal Land Patterns

    www.baghdadmuseum.org/dq02.htm