
Looking north along the Tigris towards Saddam's Presidential palace in April 2003
'Tikrit' (تكريت, ''Tikrīt'' also transliterated as ''Takrit'' or ''Tekrit'') is a town in
Iraq, located
140 km northwest of
Baghdad on the
Tigris river (at 34.61°N, 43.68°E). The town, with an estimated population in
2002 of about 28,900, is the administrative center of the province of
Salah ad Din.
History
The town is first mentioned in the "Fall of
Assyria Chronicle", as being a refuge for the Babylonian king
Nabopolassar during his attack on the city of
Assur in
615 BCE.
Tikrit is usually identified with the
Mesopotamian Birtha.
[1] As 'Tagrit', it was the seat of the
Maphrian of the
Monophysites.
Over a thousand years ago, it possessed a fortress and a large
Christian monastery. It was renowned as a centre for the production of woolen textiles. The Arab
Uqaylid Dynasty took hold of Tikrit in 1036.
Around
1137, the legendary
Kurdish leader
Saladin was born there; his many achievements include defending
Egypt against the Christian
Crusaders and recapturing
Jerusalem in
1187. The modern province of which Tikrit is the capital is named after him.
The town, and much of Iraq with it, was devastated in the
14th century by the
Mongol invasion under
Hulagu.
In September
1917,
British forces captured the town during a major advance against the
Ottoman Empire during
World War I.
The town is now perhaps best known for being the birthplace, in
1937, of
Saddam Hussein, who frequently liked to compare himself with
Saladin. Many senior members of the Iraqi government during his rule were drawn from Saddam's own Tikriti tribe, the
Al Bu Nasir, as were members of his
Iraqi Republican Guard, chiefly because Saddam apparently felt that he was most able to rely on relatives and allies of his family. The Tikriti domination of the Iraqi government became something of an embarrassment to Hussein and, in
1977, he abolished the use of surnames in Iraq to conceal the fact that so many of his key supporters bore the same surname, 'al-Tikriti' (as did Saddam himself). Saddam Hussein was buried near Tikrit in his hometown of Owja following his hanging on
December 30,
2006.
2003
In the opening weeks of the
2003 invasion of Iraq, many observers speculated that Saddam would return to Tikrit as his "last stronghold". The town was subjected to intense aerial bombardment meant to throw Saddam's Republican Guard out of the city. On
April 13,
2003 several thousand
US Marines and other coalition members aboard 300 armored vehicles converged on the town, meeting little or no resistance. With the fall of Tikrit, U.S. Major General
Stanley McChrystal said, "I would anticipate that the major combat operations are over."
However, during the subsequent
occupation Tikrit became the scene of a number of
insurgent attacks against the occupation forces. It is commonly regarded as being the northern angle of the "
Sunni Triangle" within which the National Resistance is at its most intense. In June 2003,
Abid Hamid Mahmud, Saddam Hussein's Presidential Secretary and the Ace of Diamonds on the most wanted 'Deck of Cards,' was captured in a joint raid by special operations forces and the 1st Battalion,
22nd Infantry Regiment of 1st Brigade, 4th Infantry Division.
After the fall of
Baghdad, Saddam Hussein was also sheltered in and around Tikrit by relatives, supporters and allies for a period of about six months. During his final period in hiding, he lived just outside the town of
ad-Dawr, fifteen kilometres south of Tikrit on the eastern bank of the Tigris, a few kilometers southeast of his hometown of Owja. He was captured by
Coalition forces, primarily the
U.S. 4th Infantry Division, on
December 13,
2003.
During the 2003 invasion of Iraq,
AFN Iraq ("Freedom Radio") broadcast propaganda and entertainment within Tikrit, among other locations.
2005
On
November 22,
2005, HHC 42nd Infantry Division New York Army National Guard , handed over control of Saddam Hussein's primary palace complex in Tikrit to the governor of Salah ah Din Province, who represented the Iraqi government. The palace complex had served as a headquarters for
U.S. 4th Infantry Division,
U.S. 1st Infantry Division, and
42nd Infantry Division. The palace complex now serves several purposes for the Iraqi police and army, including headquarters and jails. The U.S. Military has subsequently moved their operations to al Sahra Airfield, now COB Speicher, northwest of Tikrit.
2006
The 402nd Civil Affairs Detachment of the US Army, and the government of Salah Ah Din province, began plans to improve local economic conditions. One of the many projects they are working on is building an industrial vocational school in the Tikrit area. The school will teach local people skills in different fields of technology, which will help to build and improve Iraq’s economic stability.
[1] The curriculum will educate men and women in multiple occupational fields such as the production of high-tech products, plastic production technology, masonry, carpentry, petroleum equipment maintenance and repair, farm machinery and automotive repair. This self-supporting educational institution owns a textile mill where many of the graduates will work producing uniforms. The mill is scheduled to begin producing and selling products within the year, with the profits from the mill going to fund the school.
The vocational school’s operation, support and funding are modeled after a system South Korea used in another part of Iraq.
[2]
In popular culture
"The Birthday Palace", as it was called by U.S. troops, is the place of the famous film clips of Saddam firing a rifle into the air from a balcony overlooking his troops. It's now known as Mahmood Palace, named for an Iraqi intelligence officer who was killed when a suicide bomber disguised as an Iraqi Army officer infiltrated the compound. It is a smaller palace used by Saddam and his regime for parades and troop reviews. It is located in the northwest of Tikrit on Saddam Boulevard.
In the hit TV series ''
Lost'',
Sayid Jarrah, a former soldier in the Republican Guard, was born in Tikrit.
See also
★
List of places in Iraq
References
1. Smith, ''Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography'', ''s.v.'' Birtha
Sources and External links
★
BBC NEWS: Tikrit: Iraq's last stronghold
★
Google Local Satellite Photo of Tikrit
★
GlobalSecurity.org: Tikrit
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Al Sahra Airfield