Salah al-Din al-Sabbagh
Salah al-Din al-Sabbagh | |
---|---|
Born |
1889 Mosul, Iraq |
Died |
1945 (aged 56) Iraq |
Allegiance |
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Years of service | 1915-1918, 1921-1941 |
Battles/wars |
First World War Anglo-Iraqi War |
Salah al-Din al-Sabbagh (Arabic: صلاح الدين الصباغ; l889 - 1945) was an Iraqi Army officer and Arab nationalist that led the Golden Square group which had opposed the government at the time and had highly influenced politics between the years of 1939 to 1941.[1]
Early life and career
Born in Mosul to a Lebanese father and an Iraqi mother,[1] he was educated in Mosul and later attended the Ottoman Military College in Istanbul where he graduated as an officer in 1915.
Sabbagh served in Palestine and Macedonia during World War I where he was imprisoned only to later joined Amir Faisal I ibn Hussein, who became king of Iraq, and then returned to Iraq in 1921 to partake in the Iraqi army. His military education extends to courses taken both in Belgium and Britain. In 1924 he became an instructor at the Baghdad Military College where he later taught at the Staff College. Sabbagh was then awarded the position of assistant chief of staff of the Iraqi army in 1940.[1]
He was an Arab nationalist which led him to become the head of the Golden Square[2] between 1939 to 1941, a group of army officers that had placed heavy influence on Iraq's political scene.
Having admired the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, Mohammad Amin al-Husayni, he worked both with him and Rashid Ali al-Kaylani to negotiate with the Axis powers for support of their pan-Arab goals. Al-Sabbagh supported Rashid Ali as prime minister in 1941 and was responsible as a major advocate of the Anglo-Iraqi War in April and May. Soon after the Iraqi defeat in the Anglo - Iraqi War of 1941, Sabbagh fled to Iran and later to Turkey, where he was extradited to Iraq and executed in 1945.[1]
Sabbagh had written an autobiography titled "Fursan al-Uruba fi al-Iraq" ("The knights of Arabism in Iraq"), which had been published in Baghdad in 1956 which had detailed the account of his pan-Arabism.[1]
References
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