Iraqi–Kurdish conflict In 1963, after the
Ramadan Revolution, the
Ba'ath Party government led by
Ahmad Hassan al-Bakr, launched a campaign against the Kurdish rebellion, that had been seeking independence from Iraq. The Ba'ath led government collapsed after the
November 1963 coup led by
Abdul Salam Arif. Relations between the new government and the Kurds had not been agreed. In 1968, another revolution occurred with the Ba'ath Party and the Iraqi government, called the
17 July Revolution. Tensions between the new government and the Kurds increased, with the
Iraqi Armed Forces engaging in military action against Kurdish separatists. The actions of Kurdish rebels caused massive economic disruption. On 11 March 1970, a treaty was signed between the Vice-Chairman of the
Revolutionary Command Council (Iraq),
Saddam Hussein, called the "March Manifesto" and the leader of the Kurdish rebellion,
Mustafa al-Barzani, in
Tikrit, to end the conflict. Under the agreement, militias were to be merged into the
Iraqi Army, cut all ties with
Iran and the rebellion would come to an end. In return, the Iraqi government promised the Kurds autonomy, with Kurdish representatives to be included in the Iraqi government. The government had previously encouraged the "
Arabization" of the oil-rich Kurdish regions. By 1974, there remained unresolved problems between the government and the Kurds about the oil resources of the Kurdish regions of Iraq. Kurdish ministers resigned from the government, Kurdish employees withdrew, and Kurdish police and soldiers no longer cooperated with the government. The Iraqi government insisted that the Kurds were bound by the agreement, but the Kurds believed that it was the government who had breached the accord. On 11 March 1974, the agreement was incorporated into the Iraqi constitution. Fighting again broke out between the Iraqi army and Kurdish forces, with
Iran supporting the Kurds.
Iran–Iraq border disputes With the
Ba'ath Party in control of the government, in 1968, Iraq demanded full control over the
Shatt al-Arab (Arvand Rud). On 19 April 1969,
Iran withdrew from the 1937 agreement, which had been signed between
Iraq and Iran to resolve border problems, arguing that Iraq interfered with Iranian boats in the Shatt al-Arab. In April 1969, both armies were deployed on the banks of the
Persian Gulf. After
Iran took control of four islands in the Persian Gulf, diplomatic relations between
Baghdad and
Tehran deteriorated markedly. == Negotiations ==