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Iran-Iraq: Role of the Shatt Al-'Arab URL:
http://www.suite101.com/article.cfm/3874/21610 |
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The Shatt Al-'Arab is the narrow waterway formed by the confluence of
the Tigris and Euphrates rivers at Al-Qurnah, Iraq, and running south
approximately 120 miles to the Persian Gulf. The southern 50 miles of the
Shatt form the international border between the countries of Iraq and Iran.
More than just a border between two countries, it is the cultural and
philosophical dividing line between the Arabs and the Persians-the former
name applied to the Iranians. In fact, the words Shatt Al-'Arab in
Arabic translates to "the Arab coast."
After the defeat of the Turks in World War One and the subsequent
breakup of their empire, the League of Nations granted Britain the mandate of
the area that is now Israel, Jordan, Iraq and Kuwait. The British drew the
current borders and granted Iraq its independence in 1932. The new kingdom
demanded that it be allowed to continue the Ottoman sovereignty over the
waterway, and based on British might at the time, received it. Although Iran
appealed to the League of Nations a few years later, Iraqi retained its
sovereignty over the entire width of the waterway. In 1937, however, the two
countries did agree to some slight modifications to the sovereignty line to
allow unimpeded Iranian access to its oil refinery loading areas at Abadan
and the port of Khorramshahr. In 1969, the Iranians unilaterally abrogated the 1937 agreement. The
Shah of Iran, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, openly challenged Iraqi authority over
the Shatt. Iran also began supporting armed Kurdish separatist movements in
northern Iraq, and allowing the United States Central Intelligence Agency to
do the same via northern Iran. Under the Nixon Doctrine, the United States
began to supply Iran with the state-of-the-art military hardware and
training. Although the Iraqi Kurds in were not likely to overthrow the Ba'ath
Party regime in power, they were exhausting the Iraqi army in the rugged,
mountainous terrain of northern Iraq. On March 6, 1975, Iraq and Iran signed the Algiers Agreement, or more
precisely the Iran-Iraq Treaty on International Borders and Good Neighborly
Relations, whose provisions were brokered by Jordan's King Hussein. The
agreement delineated the international border between the two countries as
the thalweg, or the deepest point of the waterway, as opposed to the eastern
shore. Baghdad agreed to the treaty in return for Tehran's commitment to stop
covert U.S. and Iranian support for the Kurds. Immediately after signing the
agreement, the Baghdad sent the Iraqi army north on a brutal campaign and
crushed the Kurdish guerrilla organizations, driving many Kurds out of Iraq
and into neighboring Iran. The situation remained static until 1979. In 1979, leadership changes in both Iran and Iraq brought the issue of
the Shatt to the forefront again. With the start of the Iran-Iraq War, sovereignty over the Shatt became
a moot issue. Commercial ships were sunk or trapped in the waterway and it
was closed to navigation. Even after the war ended in 1988, sunken ships,
tons of unexploded ordnance, and silt kept the waterway closed for years.
Just as efforts to clear the Shatt of explosives and the trapped ships, the
Gulf War precipitated by Iraq's invasion of Kuwait in August of 1990
effectively closed the waterway again. Faced with imminent coalition military action, Iraq sought to defuse
the tensions remaining after the end of the Iran-Iraq War by reinstating the
provisions of the Treaty of Algiers, in effect turning the clock back to 1975
and giving up sovereignty over the entire width of the waterway. United
Nations (UN) sanctions against Iraq in place since 1990 have stopped Iraqi
trade through the Shatt and Persian Gulf. Iranian traffic does move through
the Shatt at this time. The future of UN sanctions against Iraq is being debated now, with
Russia, China and France in favor of lifting the restrictions. If they are
lifted, Iraq will attempt to revive the Shatt city of Al-Basrah as a
commercial shipping center. |