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This is the tragic story of the short-lived Iraqi monarchy. The
first king of Iraq, Faisal I, was installed by the British in 1921.
Faisal, who had led the Arab Revolt and fought alongside T.E.
Lawrence, was a major player in the politics of the Middle East. He
was also, most importantly, pro-British and thus 'suitable' to lead
an independent Iraq. His son and successor, Ghazi, a strong
pan-Arab nationalist, felt very differently. He supported the first
military coup in the Arab world and was said to hold German
sympathies. Ghazi's suspicious death in a car accident left his
son, also named Faisal, King at the age of four. So Iraq was ruled
by his uncle, Abdulillah, as regent until the boy came of age.
Iraq's artificially-imposed monarchy came to an abrupt and bloody
end in July 1958 when Faisal II and Abdulillah, along with the
Prime Minister, Nuri al Said, and many members of Faisal's family,
were gunned down and the country was declared a republic. "Three
Kings in Baghdad" is a unique and timely account of this portentous
moment in Iraq's history.
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