Tariq Aziz was the Deputy Prime Minister of Iraq, primarily responsible for explaining Iraq's policies to the world. Aziz was born into a Christian Arab family in 1936 in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul, and originally named Michael Yuhanna. After graduating from the Baghdad College of Fine Arts, Aziz worked at several newspapers, becoming the chief editor at al-Jamaheer and al-Thawra, the Ba'ath Party's newspaper. It was then that he first met Saddam Hussein and became a strong supporter of the Ba'ath Party. He served as a member of the Regional Command — the Ba'ath party's highest governing unit — from 1974 to 1977, and in 1977 became a member of Saddam's Revolutionary Command Council.
After the fall of the Saddam Hussein regime, Aziz's home was quickly looted by Iraqis, stripping it of any incriminating documentation as well. He surrendered to United States forces on April 24, 2003. He is in prison at Camp Cropper in Baghdad, and is currently on trial.
Last updated: March 24, 2009.
1936 -
Iraqi politician.
Tariq Aziz was born Mikhaʾil Yuhanna to a lower-middle-class Chaldean Christian family in the village of Baʾshiqa, near Mosul. He lost his father at the age of seven. Joining the Baʿth party in the early 1950s, he became one of its first members in Iraq. In 1958 he graduated from Baghdad University with a degree in English and later received a master of arts degree. From his first days in the party he was one of its leading intellectuals. During most of the 1950s and 1960s, he edited the clandestine party magazines al-Ishtiraki and al-Jamahir. After the Ramadan Revolution of 1963, Aziz supported the centrist faction in the party, under General Ahmad Hasan al-Bakr.
During the mid-1960s Aziz became very close to the Baʿthist figure Saddam Hussein. After Hussein became the strongman in Baghdad during the early 1970s, Aziz served as his close confidant and mouthpiece. Winning Hussein's trust may have been easier for a Christian than for a Muslim, since he posed no threat to the ruler. Under the Baʿthist regime, Aziz served as chief editor of the party daily newspaper and as minister of information. Beginning in 1977 he was a member of the two highest bodies: the Revolutionary Command Council and the party's Regional (Iraqi) Leadership. Beginning in 1979 he served as a deputy prime minister. From 1983 to 1991 Aziz was Iraq's foreign minister, in which capacity he managed to greatly improve Iraq's foreign relations during the Iran - Iraq War (1980 - 1988).
During the Gulf Crisis of 1990 to 1991, however, he did not dare to oppose Hussein, and thus his contacts with the West were of no use to his country. He traveled to the Soviet Union to seek Soviet help, which also was not forthcoming. Aziz finally met with U.S. secretary of state James A. Baker in Geneva in January 1991 to discuss a negotiated end to the crisis, once again to no avail. After the Gulf War, he was relieved of his position as foreign minister but retained his position as a deputy prime minister. Because of his level of education and relations with the West, Aziz (along with Saʿdun Hammadi) remained an exceptional figure at the top of the Baʿth hierarchy. It was he who served as the regime's point man in Iraq's controversial dealings with United Nations weapons inspectors from 1991 to 1998.
Following the U.S. invasion and occupation of Iraq in March 2003, Aziz became a wanted man. He surrendered to U.S. forces and was detained in April 2003.
Bibliography
Baram, Amatzia. "The Ruling Political Elite in Baʿthi Iraq, 1968 - 1986." International Journal of Middle East Studies 21 (1989): 447 - 493.
Cockburn, Andrew, and Cockburn, Patrick. Out of theAshes: the Resurrection of Saddam Hussein. New York: HarperCollins, 1999.
— AMATZIA BARAM UPDATED BY MICHAEL R. FISCHBACH
| Tariq Aziz طارق عزيز |
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| Member of the Iraqi Revolutionary Command Council | |
| In office 16 July 1979 – 9 April 2003 |
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| President | Saddam Hussein |
| Succeeded by | Jay Garner as Head of the Coalition Provisional Authority |
| Foreign Minister of Iraq | |
| In office 1983–1991 |
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| President | Saddam Hussein |
| Succeeded by | Mohammed Saeed al-Sahhaf |
| Personal details | |
| Born | Mikhail Yuhanna 28 April 1936 Tel Keppe, Iraq |
| Nationality | Iraqi |
| Political party | Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party (until 1966) Baghdad-based Ba'ath Party (1966–1982) (Ba'ath Party – Iraq Region) |
| Profession | Journalist, politician |
| Religion | Chaldean Catholic |
Tariq Aziz (Arabic: طارق عزيز Ṭāriq ʿAzīz, né: Mikhail Yuhanna (Syriac: ܡܝܟܐܝܠ ܝܘܚܢܢ Mīḵāil Yōḥānon, Arabic: ميخائيل يوحنا Mīḫāʾīl Yūḥannā baptized Manuel Christo; born 28 April 1936) was the Foreign Minister (1983 – 1991) and Deputy Prime Minister (1979 – 2003) of Iraq and a close advisor of former President Saddam Hussein. Their association began in the 1950s when both were activists for the then-banned Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party. He is an ethnic Assyrian but an Arab Nationalist and a member of the Chaldean Catholic Church.
Because of security concerns, Hussein rarely left Iraq, so Aziz would often represent Iraq at high-level diplomatic summits. What the United States wanted, he averred, was not "regime change" in Iraq but rather "region change". He summed up the Bush Administration's reasons for war against Iraq tersely: "oil and Israel."[1]
Since surrendering to American forces on 24 April 2003, Aziz has been held in prison, first by American forces and subsequently by the Iraqi government. He is currently in prison in Camp Cropper in western Baghdad.[2] He was acquitted of some charges on 1 March 2009 following a trial, but was sentenced to 15 years on 11 March 2009 for the executions of 42 merchants found guilty of profiteering in 1992 and another 7 years for relocating Kurds.[3] On 26 October 2010, he was sentenced to death by the Iraqi High Tribunal, and this has sparked regional and international condemnation from Iraqi bishops and other Iraqis, the Vatican, the United Nations, and the human rights organization Amnesty International, as well as various governments around the world, such as those of the European Union and Russia.[4] On 28 October 2010, it was reported that Tariq Aziz, as well as 25 fellow prison inmates, had begun a hunger strike to protest the fact that they could not receive their once-monthly visit from friends and relatives, which was normally set for the last Friday of each month.[5]
On 17 November 2010, it was reported that Iraqi President Jalal Talabani had declared that he would not sign Aziz's execution order.[6]
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Aziz was born on 28 April 1936, in Tel Keppe,[7] to an Assyrian family and is a member of the Chaldean Catholic church. Aziz studied English at the Baghdad University of Fine Arts, and later worked as a journalist, before joining the Ba'ath Party in 1957. In 1963, he was editor of the newspaper Aj-Jamahir (al-Jamaheer) and al Thawra, the newspaper of the Ba'ath party.[8]
In April 1980 he survived an Iranian-backed assassination attempt carried out by members of the Islamic Dawa Party. In the attack, members of Islamic Dawa Party threw a grenade at Aziz in central Baghdad. The attack killed several people.[9] It was among the casus belli of the Iran–Iraq War.
His son Ziad Aziz lives in Jordan with his wife, four children, and Tariq Aziz's two sisters. Tariq Aziz's wife and another son live in Yemen.[10]
He began to rise through the ranks of Iraqi politics after the Ba'ath party came to power in 1968. He served as a member of the Regional Command, the Ba'ath Party's highest governing organization from 1974 to 1977, and in 1977 became a member of Hussein's Revolutionary Command Council.
In 1979, Aziz became Deputy Prime Minister of Iraq, and worked as a diplomat to explain Iraq's policies to the world. When Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990, Tariq Aziz served as the international spokesman in support of the military action. He claimed the invasion was justified because Kuwait's increased oil production was harming Iraqi oil revenues. He condemned Arab states for "subservience to the United States' hegemony in the Middle East and their support for punitive sanctions."[11]
On 9 January 1991, Aziz was involved in the Geneva Peace Conference which included the United States Secretary of State, James Baker. The goal of the meeting was to discuss a possible resolution to the occupation of Kuwait.
In 2001 Aziz's son Ziad was arrested for corruption. In January 1999 Ziad was accused by his former mistress of using the official position of his father (mostly his cars) to facilitate smooth crossing of the Jordanian border with contraband, attempted murder on her husband and family, as well as for corruption involving French and Indonesian companies. He was arrested and sentenced to 22 years in prison. Tariq Aziz resigned from his post but Hussein did not accept his resignation. Ziad was eventually released from prison when Hussein decided that Aziz had paid enough for his mistakes.
On 14 February 2003, Aziz reportedly had an audience with Pope John Paul II and other officials in Vatican City, where, according to a Vatican statement, he communicated "the wish of the Iraqi government to co-operate with the international community, notably on disarmament". The same statement said that the Pope "insisted on the necessity for Iraq to faithfully respect and give concrete commitments to resolutions of the United Nations Security Council, which is the guarantor of international law".[12]
In October 2000 the then-junior Minister for Foreign Affairs from Britain, Peter Hain, set up a secret war avoidance team to carry messages back and forth between himself and Aziz.[13] After initial cooperation, Aziz rebuffed the delegations.[13]
On 19 March 2003, reports surfaced from Iraq that Aziz had been shot dead while trying to enter the Kurdish part of the country. The rumor was quashed rather quickly when Aziz held a press conference assuring the world he was still alive and well.
After the fall of the Saddam Hussein regime, his home was swiftly looted by Iraqis.
Shortly after the invasion of Iraq, President George W. Bush claimed Tariq Aziz as one of the Iraqi regime who was responsible for hiding Iraqi WMD:
| “ | President Bush expressed unshakable confidence Saturday about finding banned weapons in Iraq and complained that Tariq Aziz, one of Saddam Hussein's closest deputies, is not cooperating with U.S. forces who have him in custody. Bush said the deputy prime minister, the most visible face of the former Iraqi government other than Hussein, 'still doesn't know how to tell the truth.' | ” |
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— USA Today[14]
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He voluntarily surrendered to American forces on 24 April 2003, after negotiations had been mediated by his son.[15] His chief concern at the time was for the welfare of his family. At the time of his surrender, Aziz was ranked number 43 out of 55 in the American list of most-wanted Iraqis despite a belief "he probably would not know answers to questions like where weapons of mass destruction may be hidden and where Saddam Hussein might be."[15]
Before the war, Aziz claimed he would rather die than be a U.S. prisoner of war: "Do you expect me, after all my history as a militant and as one of the Iraqi leaders, to go to an American prison – to go to Guantanamo? I would rather die", he told Britain's ITV.
On 24 May 2006, Aziz testified in Baghdad as a defense witness for Ibrahim Barzan and Mukhabarat employees, claiming that they did not have any role in the 1982 Dujail crackdown. He stated that the arrests were in response to the assassination attempt on Saddam Hussein, which was carried out by the Shiite Dawa Party. "If the head of state comes under attack, the state is required by law to take action. If the suspects are caught with weapons, it's only natural they should be arrested and put on trial".[16]
He further testified that the Dujail attack was "part of a series of attacks and assassination attempts by this group, including against me." He said that in 1980, Dawa Party insurgents threw a grenade at him as he visited a Baghdad university, killing civilians around him. "I'm a victim of a criminal act conducted by this party, which is in power right now. So put it on trial. Its leader was the prime minister and his deputy is the prime minister right now and they killed innocent Iraqis in 1980," he said.[16] The Dawa Party is now a party in the Shiite coalition that dominates the Iraqi government. The party's leader, Ibrahim al-Jaafari was prime minister until mid-May, when another leading Dawa Party figure, Nouri al-Maliki was picked and he was able to form a new government before the end of May 2006.[17]
In closing he stated that "Saddam is my colleague and comrade for decades, and Barzan is my brother and my friend and he is not responsible for Dujail's events."
On 29 May 2005, the British newspaper The Observer published letters (in Arabic and English) from Aziz written in April and May 2005, while he was in American custody, addressed to "world public opinion" pleading for international help to end "his dire situation":[18]
| “ | It is imperative that there is intervention into our dire situation and treatment ... We hope that you will help us. We have been in prison for a long time and we have been cut from our families. No contacts, no phones, no letters. Even the parcels sent to us by our families are not given to us. We need a fair treatment, a fair investigation and finally a fair trial. Please help us. | ” |
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— Tariq Aziz[19]
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In August 2005, Aziz's family was allowed to visit him. At the time the location of Aziz's prison was undisclosed; his family was brought in a bus with blackened out windows.
Due to security reasons he has since been moved to Camp Cropper, part of the huge US base surrounding Baghdad airport.[20] His son has said that while his father is in poor health, he is being well treated by prison officials. He can make 30 minutes of telephone calls monthly and has access to US Arabic-language radio and television stations. Every two months his family can send a parcel containing clothes, cigarettes, chocolate, coffee and magazines.[20]
The spiritual leader of Iraq's Chaldean community, Emmanuel III Delly, called for Aziz's release in his 2007 Christmas message. Aziz was acquitted of crimes against humanity, and his health conditions demand an immediate release from his prison Camp Cropper.[10]
Aziz is currently in prison in Camp Cropper in western Baghdad.[2] On 17 January 2010 he suffered a stroke and was transferred from prison to hospital.[21] On 5 August 2010, The Guardian released his first face-to-face interview since his surrender.[22] On 22 September 2010 documents were released that he had given an interview about how he had told the FBI that the dictator Hussein was "delighted" in the 1998 terrorist bombings of two U.S. embassies in East Africa but had no interest in partnering with Osama bin Laden.[23]
He was set to appear before the Iraqi High Tribunal set up by the Iraq Interim Government, but not until April 2008 was he brought up on any charges.[10] This changed when, on 29 April 2008, Aziz went on trial over the deaths of a group of 42 merchants who were executed by the Iraqi regime in 1992, after the merchants had been charged by the Iraqi regime with manipulating food prices when Iraq was under international sanctions.[24] The charges brought against Aziz were reported by The Independent to be "surprising" as the deaths of the 42 merchants had always previously been attributed to Saddam Hussein.[25] Nevertheless, on 11 March 2009 the Iraqi High Tribunal ruled that Aziz was guilty of crimes against humanity, and he was sentenced to 15 years in prison.[26] On 2 August 2009, Aziz was convicted by the Iraqi High Tribunal of helping to plan the forced displacement of Kurds from northeastern Iraq and sentenced to seven years in jail.[27] After these judgments had been passed, the BBC News published an article stating that, "there was no evidence that a Western court would regard as compelling that he had anything like final responsibility for the carrying out of the executions" of the 42 merchants and "there was no real evidence of his personal involvement and guilt" with regards to the displacement of Kurds.[28] That same year, he was acquitted in a separate trial which concerned the suppression of an uprising in Baghdad during the 1990s.[26]
On 26 October 2010, the Iraqi High Tribunal handed down a death sentence against Aziz for the offense of "persecution of Islamic parties,"[29] amongst them the serving Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's Islamic Dawa Party, following a crackdown on a Shia uprising after the 1991 Gulf War.[20] The Associated Press reports that "the judge gave no details of Aziz's specific role" in the crackdown.[30] His lawyer stated that Tariq Aziz's role in the former Iraqi government was in the arena of "Iraq's diplomatic and political relations only, and had nothing to do with the executions and purges carried during Hussein's reign."[31] His lawyer further stated that the death sentence itself was politically motivated and that timing of the death sentence may have been aimed at diverting international attention away from documents released by WikiLeaks, which detailed crimes in which Maliki government officials have been implicated.[32] His lawyers have 30 days to lodge an appeal, following which the court would have another 30 days to look into the appeal; if the appeal is turned down the sentence would be carried out after another 30 days.[32] On 26 October 2010 the Vatican urged the Iraqi government not to carry out his execution,[30] and European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton stated that Aziz's execution would be "unacceptable and the EU will seek to commute his sentence."[33] That same day, the human rights organization Amnesty International issued a statement condemning the use of the death penalty in this case, as well as for the cases of two other former Iraqi officials; the statement also expressed concern regarding the manner in which trials may have been conducted by the Iraqi High Tribunal.[34] On 27 October 2010, Greek President Karolos Papoulias and the Russian Foreign Ministry both released statements urging the Iraqi government not to carry out the death penalty against Tariq Aziz.[35][36] Also on 27 October 2010, a spokesperson for United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon was reported to have "stressed that the UN is against the death sentence and in this case, as in all others, it is calling for the verdict to be cancelled."[37] On 28 October 2010, it was reported that Iraqi Bishops and ordinary Iraqis also condemned the death penalty for Tariq Aziz.[38] Furthermore, according to the Wall Street Journal, "several international human-rights groups have criticised the procedures and questioned the impartiality of the court."[39]
According to AFP, his family had stated that Tariq Aziz, along with 25 fellow inmates, has been on a hunger strike following the sentence to protest the denial of their once-monthly visits with family and friends, but an Iraqi court official has denied this.[40] According to AFP, Aziz and the other prisoners were "still at the site of the court in Baghdad’s Green Zone and had not been transferred back to prison where they could have received their monthly visit."
On 17 November 2010, it was reported that Iraqi President Jalal Talabani had declared that he would not sign Aziz's execution order. However, there is still a possibility that the execution will be carried out anyway.[6]
According to press reports on 29 November 2010, Tariq Aziz will likely not be executed. He was accused of only minimal involvement in connection with atrocities committed against Kurdish people during the Iraq-Iran War and received a 10 year prison sentence from an Iraqi court in addition to previous convictions.[41]
On 5 December 2011, Saad Yousif al-Muttalibi, an adviser to the Prime Minister, indicated that the execution of Aziz would "definitely take place" after the withdrawal of American forces.[42]
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Tariq Aziz |
| Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Tariq Aziz |
| Political offices | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by Nasser al-Hani |
Foreign Minister of Iraq 1983–1991 |
Succeeded by Muhammad Saeed al-Sahhaf |
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