Similar movements were organised by other groups of junior officers seeking to mimic the Free Officers' ascent to power. In Iraq, a faction of
Arab and
Iraqi nationalist officers, who referred to themselves as the "Free Officers",
toppled the pro-British
Hashemite government of
Nuri al-Said and
Faisal II in 1958. Said and Faisal, Nasser's chief regional rivals at the time, were both killed during the coup. In 1963 some of the same officers aligned themselves with the
Ba'ath Party and overthrew the government of
Abd al-Karim Qasim, who was killed by the organizers of the coup. In Syria, a coalition of Arab nationalist officers, including
Nasserists, Ba'athists, and independents,
toppled the secessionist government of
Nazim al-Qudsi in 1963 and vowed to restore the union with Egypt in the
United Arab Republic (1958–1961). In
Saudi Arabia during the 1960s
Prince Talal invoked a similar idea, the
Free Princes Movement, in an unsuccessful effort to overthrow his country's conservative monarchy. He was exiled to Egypt as a result and was given asylum by Nasser. Then
Libyan leader
Muammar al-Gaddafi used a similar group to overthrow the Libyan
King Idris in 1969. The anniversary of the
Egyptian revolution of 1952 led by the Free Officers is commemorated as
Revolution Day, an annual
public holiday in Egypt on 23 July. The name was consciously assumed by the
Free Officers and Civilians Movement, led by Brigadier-General
Najib al-Salihi who opposed Saddam Hussein. ==Members==