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Iraq’s July 1958 revolution ends the monarchy and launches a new republic

On the morning of 14 July 1958 C.E., tanks rolled through Baghdad and a radio announcer read words that stunned the Arab world: Iraq was no longer a kingdom. A group of military officers calling themselves the Free Officers had overthrown the Hashemite monarchy in a matter of hours, and for the first time in its modern history, Iraq became a republic.

Key facts

  • Iraqi Republic: The new state was proclaimed on 14 July 1958 C.E., with General Abd al-Karim Qasim serving as Prime Minister and Muhammad Najib ar-Ruba’i as President, dissolving both the Kingdom of Iraq and the short-lived Arab Federation with Jordan.
  • 14 July Revolution: The coup was carried out by a secret military network modeled on Egypt’s Free Officers movement, which had ended the Egyptian monarchy six years earlier — part of a broader wave of anti-monarchical, anti-colonial politics sweeping the Middle East.
  • Arab nationalism: Although many Free Officers were Pan-Arab nationalists inspired by Egypt’s Gamal Abdel Nasser, Qasim himself was an Iraqi nationalist who promoted a civic identity encompassing Arabs, Kurds, Assyrians, and Yazidis as equal partners in the new state.

Why the revolution happened when it did

Iraq in the years after World War II was a country under pressure. British influence remained deep — a 1948 C.E. treaty negotiated at Portsmouth had established a joint defense board that effectively gave Britain oversight of Iraqi military planning and foreign affairs. Inflation had gutted living standards. The educated urban class was growing and restless.

Pan-Arab nationalism, broadcast through radio and print and embodied by Egypt’s Nasser, gave the discontented officer class an ideological frame. Within the Iraqi military, opposition circles organized quietly. Prime Minister Nuri al-Said’s government was seen by many as too tied to British and Western interests to serve ordinary Iraqis. When the moment came — in the early hours of 14 July 1958 C.E. — it moved fast.

The monarchy fell within hours. King Faisal II was killed. The Arab Federation with Jordan was dissolved. Iraq’s Hashemite dynasty, which had ruled since 1921 C.E. under British sponsorship, was finished.

Qasim’s civic nationalism and the Kurdish question

What made Qasim’s early rule historically notable was his departure from the ethnic and sectarian hierarchies that had defined the monarchy. Qasim promoted what he called an Arabo-Kurdish vision of Iraq, insisting that the country belonged equally to all its peoples.

Kurdish language rights expanded dramatically under his government. Kurdish was not only legally permitted — it became the medium of instruction in educational institutions across Iraq, including outside Kurdish regions, and the Kurdish version of the Arabic alphabet was adopted for official state use. Qasim’s government promised, in explicit terms, “Kurdish national rights within Iraqi unity.”

Kurdish leader Mustafa Barzani, returning from exile imposed by the monarchy, welcomed the revolution publicly. “On behalf of all my Kurdish brothers who have long struggled,” Barzani said in 1958 C.E., “I congratulate you and the Iraqi people, Kurds and Arabs, for the glorious Revolution putting an end to imperialism and the reactionary and corrupt monarchist gang.”

Across the Middle East, Qasim was referred to by Kurdish communities as “the leader of the Arabs and the Kurds.” It was a moment, however brief, in which Iraq’s diverse population seemed to have a government that acknowledged them.

An economic vision for a post-colonial state

The Qasim government also articulated a clear economic philosophy — one oriented toward breaking from both colonial dependency and entrenched domestic inequality. Its stated principles included dismantling monopolies, strengthening the middle class, abolishing the land tenure system that had kept rural Iraqis in near-feudal conditions, and expanding trade beyond the relationships inherited from the monarchy.

The government promoted economic planning across the whole economy while simultaneously encouraging a private sector. It was an ambitious, sometimes contradictory agenda, but it reflected a genuine attempt to redirect Iraq’s oil wealth and agricultural base toward its own population.

These principles also expressed a desire for what Qasim called liberation from imperialism — the sense that Iraq’s resources and foreign policy should serve Iraqis, not external powers. That aspiration resonated far beyond Iraq’s borders at a moment when decolonization was reshaping much of the world.

Lasting impact

The Iraqi Republic of 1958 C.E. set precedents that outlasted Qasim himself. It established republican governance as the political norm in Iraq — a form that, however imperfectly realized, the country has never fully abandoned. It gave Iraq’s Kurdish population their most expansive set of legal rights up to that point in modern history, normalizing Kurdish language and culture in state institutions in ways that influenced later negotiations and demands for autonomy.

The revolution also signaled, across the Arab world, that monarchies backed by European powers were not permanent. It accelerated conversations about sovereignty, self-determination, and the relationship between national identity and ethnic diversity that continue to shape Iraqi and regional politics today.

The model of civic nationalism that Qasim articulated — an Iraq that belonged to Arabs, Kurds, Assyrians, and Yazidis alike — has never been fully achieved, but it has never fully disappeared either. It resurfaces in Iraqi constitutional debates, in cultural movements, and in the demands of communities that have long insisted on recognition.

The BBC’s historical coverage of modern Iraq has documented how the republic’s founding tensions — between civic nationalism and ethnic politics, between independence and regional pressure — shaped every subsequent Iraqi government.

Blindspots and limits

The Iraqi Republic’s promise was never fully kept. The Qasim government itself made irredentist claims on Kuwait and on Iranian Kurdish territories, revealing the gap between civic idealism and expansionist nationalism. Qasim was overthrown in the Ramadan Revolution of February 1963 C.E. by Arab nationalists, and the era of the First Republic ended entirely with the Ba’athist coup of July 1968 C.E. — a transition that ushered in decades of authoritarian rule and, eventually, catastrophic conflict.

The Kurdish rights that seemed secured in 1958 C.E. would be reversed, contested, and paid for in blood across the following decades. The republic’s founding was a genuine opening — but it was also fragile, and that fragility had consequences that Iraqis are still living with.

Historians also note that the record of this period is shaped by who kept records. The perspectives of rural communities, women, non-Arab minorities, and the Iraqi working class during these years remain less documented than those of the political and military elites whose decisions drove events. Scholarly work published by the Middle East Research and Information Project has pointed to the limits of existing accounts and the importance of recovering those missing voices.

The revolution’s ambitions were real. So were its contradictions. Both are part of the record.

For further historical context, the International Journal of Middle East Studies has published extensive peer-reviewed scholarship on the 1958 C.E. revolution and its aftermath. The Human Rights Watch annual report on Iraq traces the long arc from the republic’s founding promises to present-day conditions. And the Al Jazeera coverage of the revolution’s 65th anniversary offers contemporary Iraqi perspectives on what the founding of the republic means today.

Read more

For more on this story, see: Iraqi Republic (1958–1968) — Wikipedia

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