Kingdom of Iraq
Historical national government
of 100 · declining trend · Some good traits but inconsistent
Standing
39/100
Raw Score
33/85
Confidence
82%
Evidence
Broad
About
The Kingdom of Iraq built a sovereign Iraqi state, expanded parliamentary and development institutions, and later used oil revenue for schools, hospitals, and infrastructure, but its record is deeply weakened by British dependence, minority-rights failures, violent crisis politics, and collapse in the 1958 revolution.
Its legacy is mixed but below clearly positive. The monarchy helped establish the modern Iraqi state and achieved visible developmental gains in its final decade, yet integrity and social-care alignment were repeatedly compromised by elite capture, broken minority-protection commitments, harsh repression during political crises, and an inability to sustain legitimacy under pressure.
Five Pillars
Pillar scores (0–100%)
The kingdom scores best on state-building ambition and later public-works delivery, but repeated failures in minority protection, elite accountability, and crisis handling keep the overall alignment mixed to negative.
Goodness over time
Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.
17 Criteria Scores
Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes
Core Worldview
The Kingdom of Iraq was created in 1921 under Faisal I, and the Hashemite monarchy ruled until the 1958 coup.
Iraq entered the League of Nations as an independent state in 1932, formalizing sovereignty after the mandate.
Several hundred Assyrians were brutally killed in 1933 less than a year after Iraq had given assurances that minorities would be protected.
The Farhud was a two-day anti-Jewish pogrom in Baghdad in June 1941 and marked a turning point for Iraqi Jews.
The 1948 Portsmouth treaty was repudiated after a popular uprising, and Prime Minister Salih Jabr was forced to resign.
Contribution to Others
The Development Board was funded from 70 percent of oil royalties and financed schools, hospitals, flood control, bridges, and other long-term infrastructure.
The kingdom ended when Iraqi Army officers overthrew the monarchy in July 1958.
The kingdom ended when Iraqi Army officers overthrew the monarchy in July 1958.
The kingdom ended when Iraqi Army officers overthrew the monarchy in July 1958.
The kingdom ended when Iraqi Army officers overthrew the monarchy in July 1958.
The kingdom ended when Iraqi Army officers overthrew the monarchy in July 1958.
Personal Discipline
The kingdom ended when Iraqi Army officers overthrew the monarchy in July 1958.
The kingdom ended when Iraqi Army officers overthrew the monarchy in July 1958.
Reliability
The kingdom ended when Iraqi Army officers overthrew the monarchy in July 1958.
Stability Under Pressure
The kingdom ended when Iraqi Army officers overthrew the monarchy in July 1958.
The kingdom ended when Iraqi Army officers overthrew the monarchy in July 1958.
The kingdom ended when Iraqi Army officers overthrew the monarchy in July 1958.
Timeline
Key events and documented turning points
Faisal I is proclaimed king and the monarchy is established
After the 1920 revolt and British mandate settlement, Faisal I was proclaimed king and the Kingdom of Iraq was formed as a constitutional monarchy meant to give the new state representative institutions and sovereign form.
→ Created the governing framework of the modern Iraqi state, but under substantial British influence from the outset.
highIraq joins the League of Nations as an independent state
The British mandate ended in 1932 and Iraq was admitted to the League of Nations, formalizing sovereignty while leaving continued British informal leverage in security and elite politics.
→ The kingdom gained formal international recognition, but the gap between nominal sovereignty and practical dependence remained.
highAssyrian killings expose failure to protect minorities after independence
Within a year of independence, clashes involving Assyrians and Iraqi troops ended with several hundred Assyrians brutally killed, undermining the kingdom's assurances that minority rights would be protected.
→ The incident damaged the monarchy's integrity record and showed how quickly nationalist politics could override formal commitments.
highWar pressure, coup politics, and the Farhud reveal severe breakdown
After Rashid Ali's anti-British coup and the return of the regent under British military pressure, anti-Jewish violence in Baghdad erupted in the Farhud, killing and terrorizing Jewish civilians in a crisis shaped by nationalism, antisemitism, and wartime instability.
→ The monarchy survived with British support, but its moral authority and ability to keep vulnerable citizens safe were badly compromised.
highThe Portsmouth treaty crisis triggers the Wathbah uprising
The monarchy tried to replace the 1930 Anglo-Iraqi treaty with a new alliance with Britain, but mass protests in Baghdad rejected the deal, forced its repudiation, and exposed the exclusion of younger political forces from decision-making.
→ The treaty was abandoned and the prime minister resigned, but repression and elite exclusion persisted.
highOil revenue is channeled into the Development Board
The kingdom created an independent Development Board financed largely by oil royalties; it expanded flood control, bridges, schools, hospitals, and other public works, even as critics argued that the program favored landlords and influential politicians.
→ Produced real material development in the 1950s while leaving unresolved questions about who benefited most.
highThe 14 July Revolution overthrows the monarchy
Army officers overthrew the Hashemite monarchy in July 1958, ending the kingdom in a violent coup after years of unrest, regional pressure, elite distrust, and declining legitimacy.
→ The monarchy collapsed and Iraq became a republic.
highPressure Tests
Behavior under crisis or scrutiny
Minority-rights test after independence
1933The new state faced minority insecurity and ended up with brutal killings of Assyrians instead of credible protection.
Response: The kingdom allowed nationalist force to override the spirit of its independence-era minority guarantees.
negativeWartime coup and communal violence
1941Rashid Ali's coup, British intervention, and the Farhud exposed the fragility of state authority in wartime.
Response: The monarchy returned under British protection but failed to shield Jewish civilians from catastrophic violence.
negativePopular treaty uprising
1948Mass protests rejected the Portsmouth treaty and the exclusionary politics behind it.
Response: The regime repudiated the treaty and forced a resignation, but did not resolve the deeper legitimacy crisis.
mixedFinal military challenge
1958Years of pressure culminated in a military coup that destroyed the monarchy.
Response: The institution failed to transition peacefully or reform itself quickly enough to survive.
negativeProgression
crisis years
Minority violence, treaty protests, coup politics, and dependence on outside backing steadily weakened legitimacy.
decliningcurrent stage
The kingdom no longer exists, and its legacy remains split between modern Iraqi state-building and a durable record of elite exclusion and crisis failure.
mixedearly years
State formation paired constitutional monarchy with British-backed institution-building and unresolved sovereignty constraints.
mixedgrowth years
The monarchy later converted more oil income into visible infrastructure, schools, hospitals, and administrative capacity.
improvingBehavioral Patterns
Positive
- • Repeated use of formal state institutions, diplomacy, and parliamentary procedure rather than pure personal rule
- • Visible 1950s investment in schools, hospitals, irrigation, and public infrastructure through oil-financed development
- • Sustained effort to build an internationally recognized Iraqi sovereign state
Concerns
- • British informal control and elite bargaining repeatedly diluted sovereignty and public accountability
- • Minority-rights guarantees proved unreliable during moments of nationalist pressure
- • Political crises repeatedly escalated into coups, repression, or violent breakdown instead of durable reform
Evidence Quality
6
Strong
1
Medium
0
Weak
Overall: broad
This profile evaluates observable institutional behavior and outcomes, not private belief or hidden intention.