The Struggle for Kirkuk: The Rise of Hussein, Oil, and the Death of Tolerance in Iraq
Henry D. Astarjian, "The Struggle for Kirkuk: The Rise of Hussein, Oil, and the Death of Tolerance in Iraq"
Publisher: Praeger Security International General Interest-Cloth | 2007 | ISBN 0275995895 | PDF | 200 pages | 1.5 MB
Seldom in history has a nation engaged in war without knowing the enemy, as the United States has in Iraq. This book explores, through real life stories, the social and political dynamics at play in Iraq and Iraqi Kurdistan before the rise of Saddam Hussein. Kirkuk is a hotly contested oil city--a time bomb with the potential to shatter the fragile hope for unity in Iraq. In this book-half memoir, half-history-- Iraqi-American physician Henry Astarjian reveals the turmoil of life under Communism then as a political prisoner in a death row cell in Iraq and a military prison in Baghdad. Told from an eyewitness perspective, his book gives the history of Iraq through the life of one of its most volatile towns, through the eyes of a citizen who witnessed death, kidnapping, corruption, political indoctrination, and open murder in the streets. Originally a Jewish enclave, Kirkuk was home to Jews, Kurds, Armenians, Turks, and Communists--diverse peoples whose uncommon experiences contributed to the broader political tensions of the 1958 Revolution that brought Saddam Hussein to power.
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