Preface and Acknowledgements
Introduction: Religion and Authoritarianism in Saddam's Iraq
Part I: The Penetration of Iraq's Religious Landscape 1979-1989
Chapter 1: Saddam Takes Control
Chapter 2: Co-opting and Coercing Religion in Saddam's Iraq
Chapter 3: Co-opting and Coercing Shi'ism
Chapter 4: Suppressing the Islamist Opposition
Chapter 5: Addressing the Limits of Coercion and Co-optation
Part II: The Gulf War and its Aftermath 1990-1993
Chapter 6: Continuity and Change in the Gulf War
Chapter 7: Iraq's Religious Landscape in the Wake of the Gulf
War
Part III: The Faith Campaign 1993-2003
Chapter 8: A Transformed Religious Landscape
Chapter 9: The Regime and the Shi'is in the 1990s
Chapter 10: Mechanisms of Control
Chapter 11: Putting the System to Work
Part IV: The Invasion of Iraq War and the Emergence of Religious
Insurgencies
Chapter 12: American Misconceptions about Iraq and the 2003
Invasion
Chapter 13: Emergence of Religious Insurgencies in Iraq
Conclusion: Saddam the Counter-Insurgent and other Reflections on
Ruling Iraq
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Samuel Helfont is an Assistant Professor of Strategy and Policy in the Naval War College program at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California.
Samuel Helfont has convincingly clarified a number of key factors
that eluded most Americans two decades ago. That alone makes
Compulsion in Religion essential reading for anyone wishing to
understand recent Iraqi and American history
*Jonathan M. House, Michigan War Studies Review*
Helfont gives us a compelling picture of religious life under
Saddam. This book can serve as an invaluable resource for anyone
who wants to understand Iraq and its sectarian conflicts better.
The Western media and politicians love to paint Iraq in single
colors, focusing on corruption or the constant violence. Helfont
gives us a nuanced and rich view of the Iraqi religious
landscape.
*Joshua Karnes, H-Net*
Compulsion in Religion is the definitive account of the religious
policies of Saddam's regime and mosque-state relations in Ba'thist
Iraq. It will be of interest to scholars of Iraq, religion,
comparative politics, and general readers searching for an antidote
to inaccurate information on the subject.
*Middle East Journal*
This work is indispensable for scholars of religion and
authoritarianism as a hypothesis-generating case study and is a
welcome contribution to the field of religion and politics in
particular.
*Ann Wainscott, Perspectives in Politics *
[S]cholars have been hard at work refining and challenging
conventional narratives regarding Ba'thist Iraq. ... Compulsion in
Religion forms a significant contribution to this more general
effort. â [It] will be of great interest to students of Iraqi
history and modern Iraqi politics alike.
*Cole Bunzel, Yale Law School, Orbis *
[A] fascinating new book.
*Gareth Smyth, The Arab*
Samuel Helfont has provided us with groundbreaking insights into
the way Saddam Hussein's Ba'th Party used Islam to control the
Iraqi population during his dictatorship-and how the abrupt removal
of that control influenced the insurgencies that erupted in the
wake of the American invasion in 2003. Most importantly, this book
illuminates why those insurgencies were so virulent, and how the
wake of Saddam Hussein's use of Islamic institutions to control the
Iraqi population will continue to ignite conflict in the Middle
East for generations to come."
*John Nagl, Lieutenant Colonel, USA (Retired), and author of
Learning to Eat Soup with a Knife: Counterinsurgency Lessons from
Malaya and Vietnam "Samuel Helfont tackles an important subject
that is significant*
Samuel Helfont tackles an important subject that is significant not
only for its historical aspects but also for its relevance to
current affairs given the rise of Islamic fundamentalism and ISIL.
He has tapped the Iraqi archives, providing a real contribution to
the literature on Iraq's history and issues related to current
politics."
*Joseph Sassoon, author of The Iraqi Refugees: The New Crisis in
the Middle East*
Compulsion In Religion is one of a series of recent books to use
the Baathist documents to shed new light on the former regime.
Helfont provides a totally original look at how Saddam observed,
co-opted, repressed, and then operationalized religion to secure
his rule and use it as another means to control society. He
counters much of the previous research that largely dismissed
religion in Iraq under the Baath. The book could also lead to a
whole new range of research into how the insurgency and militias
emerged in post-2003 Iraq. It's therefore essential reading for
Iraq researchers." - Musings on Iraq
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