President of Iraq
Following the overthrow of Saddam Hussein during the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, an interim council ran Iraq under the American-led Coalition Provisional Authority. The council decided to have a 9-member collective presidency, in which formal chairmanship of the group would rotate on a monthly basis.
| Name | Born-Died | Term in Office | Ethnic Group |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mohammed Bahr al-Uloum (1st time, acting) | 1923- | 13 July - 31 July 2003 | Shiite Arab |
| Ibrahim al-Jaafari | 1947- | August 2003 | Shiite Arab |
| Ahmed Chalabi | 1944- | September 2003 | Shiite Arab |
| Iyad Allawi | 1945- | October 2003 | Shiite Arab |
| Jalal Talabani | 1933- | November 2003 | Kurdish |
| Abdel-Aziz al-Hakim | 1950- | December 2003 | Shiite Arab |
| Adnan Pachachi | 1923- | January 2004 | Sunni Arab |
| Mohsen Abdel Hamid | 1937- | February 2004 | Sunni Arab |
| Mohammed Bahr al-Uloum (2nd time) | 1923- | March 2004 | Shiite Arab |
| Massoud Barzani | 1946- | April 2004 | Kurdish |
| Ezzedine Salim | 1943-2004 | 1 May - 17 May 2004 | Shiite Arab |
| Ghazi Mashal Ajil al-Yawer | 1958- | 17 May - 28 June 2004 | Sunni Arab |
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Presidents of the State of Iraq (2004-Present)
In 2004 the council approved an interim constitution, called the Law of Administration for the State of Iraq for the Transitional Period. Following the transfer of sovereignty to the Iraqi people on June 28, 2004, Iraq's new Head of State is a "President of State", chosen by the elected National Assembly and run the three-person executive Presidency Council. The State President's powers are limited, with most executive authority belonging to the Prime Minister of Iraq.
According to the Constitution, the Presidency Council currently functions as the role of the President until one successive term after the Constitution is ratified[1] and a government is seated.[2]
| Name | Born-Died | Term start | Term end | Political Party | Ethnic Group |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ghazi Mashal Ajil al-Yawer | 1958- | 28 June 2004 | 6 April 2005 | The Iraqis | Sunni Arab |
| Jalal Talabani | 1933- | 6 April 2005 | Present | Patriotic Union of Kurdistan | Kurdish |
- In May 2004, outgoing council president Ghazi Mashal Ajil al-Yawer was chosen by the council to serve as the first Interim Iraqi State President under the Iraqi Interim Government until parliamentary elections could be held.
- On April 6, 2005 Jalal Talabani, the head of the PUK, became the first State President to be properly chosen by the newly-elected National Assembly.
- In April 2006, after the ratification of the new Iraqi Constitution in 2005, Jalal Talabani was elected as President of the Republic of Iraq under the new Constitution, and thus became the first President of the permanent Government established by the new constitutional order.
- During the trial of Saddam Hussein from 2004-2006, Hussein often referred to himself as "Saddam Hussein, President of Iraq", despite the fact he had been overthrown. However, some international law scholars and critics of the U.S. invasion of Iraq argued that under international law, Hussein was still legally the President of Iraq even though he no longer was in power. Under international law, a head of state can lose his position only by actions undertaken by the indigenous people of that nation; e.g. defeat in a popular election, or a military coup. Since the Iraqi people did not take action against Hussein or demand his resignation as did the Indonesian people with Suharto in 1998, it was not considered valid that he lost his status. Hussein's removal from office was a result of the US invasion, which may also be questionable under international law as to its legitimacy. All-in-all, this is considered irrelevant simply because the Iraqi people as a whole were glad to let Saddam keep his title in exchange for their new freedom. Furthermore, no one demanded Sadaam be given his position back. Hussein was executed in 2006.
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See also
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References
- ^ Constitution of Iraq, Section 6, Chapter 2, Article 134
- ^ Constitution of Iraq, Section 6, Chapter 2, Article 139
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