Flag of Iraq#2008–present
{{short description|none}}
{{Infobox flag
| Name = Republic of Iraq
| Image = Flag of Iraq.svg
| Nickname = "New flag"
| Use = 011100
| Symbol =
{{FIAV|011100}} {{FIAV|sinister}} {{IFIS|Equal}}
| Proportion = 2:3
| Adoption = {{start date and age|2008|01|22|df=yes}} (current design)
{{start date and age|1963|07|31|df=yes}} (original three-star design)
| Design = A horizontal tricolour of red, white, and black, charged with the {{translit|ar|takbīr}} in green Kufic script, centered on the white stripe.
| Image2 = Flag of Iraq (2008).png
| Imagetext2 = Script variant, used commonly by the Iraqi Government directly following the official flag modification
| Image3 = Vertical_Flag_of_Iraq.svg
| Imagetext3 = Vertical
}}
Since the 1958 Iraqi coup d'état, the various republican governments of Iraq have used a number of different flags, all featuring the pan-Arab colors of green, black, white, and red. The current official and internationally recognized flag of Iraq ({{lang|ar|علم العراق}}) was adopted in 2008 as a temporary compromise, and consists of the three equal horizontal red, white, and black stripes of the Arab Liberation Flag, that was first used by Gamal Abdel Nasser during the Egyptian Revolution, with the takbīr written in green in the Kufic script that was originally added by Saddam Hussein following the Gulf War.
This basic tricolour has been in use since its adoption on 31 July 1963, with several changes to the green symbols in the central white stripes; the most recent version adopted on 22 January 2008FOTW bears the takbīr rendered in dark green and removes the three green stars present since 1963. The flag was initially meant to be temporary but has remained the official flag long past originally intended.[https://www.reuters.com/article/idUSEGO658997/ استياء في العراق تجاه العلم الوطني الجديد]
Colour scheme
class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;"
! ! style="background:#cd1125; width:200px" | White ! style="background:#017b3d; width:200px" | Green ! style="background:#000000ff; width:200px" | Black | |||
style="background:#F2F2F2; text-align:right" | RGB
| | 255/255/255 | 1/123/61 | 0/0/0 |
style="background:#F2F2F2; text-align:right" | Hexadecimal
| | #ffffff | #017b3d | #000000 |
style="background:#F2F2F2; text-align:right" |CMYK
| | 0/0/0/0 | 99/0/50/52 | 0/0/0/100 |
History
= Iraq as part of the [[Abbasid Caliphate]] (750–1258) =
The Abbasid Revolution against the Umayyad Caliphate adopted black for its {{Transliteration|ar|rāyaʾ}} for which their partisans were called the {{Transliteration|ar|musawwid}}s.{{citation | title=Abbāsid Authority Affirmed | author=Tabari | year=1995 | publisher=SUNY | volume=28 |editor1=Jane McAuliffe |page=124}} Their rivals chose other colours in reaction; among these, forces loyal to Marwan II adopted red.{{cite book | author=Patricia Crone | author-link=Patricia Crone | title=The Nativist Prophets of Early Islam |year=2012 |page=122}} As remembered in pro-Umayyad apocalyptic: p. 125} The choice of black as the colour of the Abbasid Revolution was already motivated by the "black standards out of Khorasan" tradition associated with the Mahdi. The contrast of white vs. black as the Fatimid vs. Abbasid dynastic colour over time developed in white as the colour of Shia Islam and black as the colour of Sunni Islam."The proselytes of the ʿAbbasid revolution took full advantage of the eschatological expectations raised by black banners in their campaign to undermine the Umayyad dynasty from within. Even after the ʿAbbasids had triumphed over the Umayyads in 750, they continued to deploy black as their dynastic colour; not only the banners but the headdresses and garments of the ʿAbbasid caliphs were black [...] The ubiquitous black created a striking contrast with the banners and dynastic color of the Umayyads, which had been white [...] The Ismaili Shiʿite counter-caliphate founded by the Fatimids took white as its dynastic color, creating a visual contrast to the ʿAbbasid enemy [...] white became the Shiʿite color, in deliberate opposition to the black of the ʿAbbasid 'establishment'." Jane Hathaway, A Tale of Two Factions: Myth, Memory, and Identity in Ottoman Egypt and Yemen, 2012, [https://books.google.com/books?id=L-lPC7DgepEC&pg=PA96 pp. 97f.] After the revolution, Islamic apocalyptic circles admitted that the Abbasid banners would be black but asserted that the Mahdi's standard would be black and larger.{{cite book|title=Studies in Muslim Apocalyptic |url=https://archive.org/details/studiesmuslimapo00cook |url-access=limited |author=David Cook |year=2002 |publisher=Darwin Press
|isbn=9780878501427 |pages=125, 153, 206}} Anti-Abbasid circles cursed "the black banners from the East", "first and last".{{cite book | author=Patricia Crone | title=The Nativist Prophets of Early Islam |year=2012 |page=243}}
=Iraq as part of the [[Ottoman Empire]] (1534–1920)=
{{See also|Flags of the Ottoman Empire}}File:Flag of the Ottoman Empire (1844–1922).svg, used in Iraq (1844–1920)]]Starting in 1534, the territory that is now Iraq was administered by the Ottoman Empire. In 1844, the Ottoman Empire had adopted a national flag as part of the Tanzimat reforms, this flag was used in Iraq until the Arab Revolt, and inspired the flags of the modern Iraqi Turkmen.
=[[Kingdom of Iraq]] (1921–1959)=
File:Flag of Iraq (1924–1959).svgThe first flag of modern Iraq was in Mandatory Iraq, and was adopted in 1921. It was a black-white-green horizontal flag, with a red triangle extending from the mast side, inspired by the flag of the Arab Revolt. It was soon changed to a new version with a red trapezoid replacing the triangle containing two, seven-point white stars denoting the Tigris River and the Euphrates River. Both designs also reflected the newly installed Hashemite Dynasty in Iraq (originally from the Hejaz in the Arabian Peninsula), who had played a leading role in the Arab Revolt. As such, it was similar to the flags of Hashemite Jordan, and the short-lived Kingdom of Hejaz.{{cite web|author=ben cahoon |url=http://www.worldstatesmen.org/Iraq.htm |title=Iraq |publisher=Worldstatesmen.org |access-date=2020-05-29}}{{cite web|url=http://www.vexilla-mundi.com/iraq_history.html |title=Vexilla Mundi |publisher=Vexilla Mundi |access-date=2020-05-29}} The new flag continued to be used in the Kingdom of Iraq.
=Iraq as part of the [[Arab Federation]] (1958)=
{{main|Flag of the Arab Federation}}File:Flag of the Arab Federation.svgIn 1958, in response to the merger of Egypt and Syria in the United Arab Republic, the two Hashemite kingdoms of Iraq and Jordan established the Arab Federation, a confederation of the two states. The flag of the union was essentially that of Jordan but without seven pointed star in the red chevron.{{cite web |url=http://iraqflag.parliament.iq/icor.php?name=iraqiflag&pa=showpage&pid=10 |title=مسابقة تصميم علم جمهورية العراق - iraqiflag |access-date=2008-08-09 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080809182058/http://iraqflag.parliament.iq/icor.php?name=iraqiflag&pa=showpage&pid=10 |archive-date=2008-08-09 }} This flag is identical to the flag of Palestine adopted in 1964, and almost identical to the flag of the Ba'ath Party. The union lasted less than six months, being terminated by the Iraqi Revolution of 1958 in July.
=[[Iraqi Republic (1958–1968)|Qasimist Iraq]] (1959–1963)=
File:Flag of Iraq (1959–1963).svg
Following the Revolution of 14 July 1958, led by Abd al-Karim Qasim, which abolished the Hashemite monarchy in Iraq and turned the country into a republic, Iraq adopted a new flag (Law 102 of 1959) that consisted of a black-white-green vertical tricolour, with a red eight-pointed star with a yellow circle at its centre. The black, white, green, and red are the Pan-Arab colors, representing pan-Arabism, with the yellow Kurdish Sun in the middle to represent the Iraqi Kurds, surrounded by the red Star of Ishtar to represent the indigenous Assyrians.{{cite web|url=http://www.pjsymes.com.au/articles/CBI-First.htm|title=The First Banknotes of the Central Bank of Iraq|author=Peter Symes|website=Pjsymes.com.au|access-date=8 January 2018}}{{cite journal|url=http://www.meforum.org/518/requiem-for-arab-nationalism#_ftn13|title=Requiem for Arab Nationalism|first=Adeed|last=Dawisha|date=1 January 2003|journal=Middle East Quarterly|access-date=9 January 2018}}Amatzia Baram, "Mesopotamian Identity in Ba'thi Iraq," Middle Eastern Studies, Oct. 1983, p. 427.
=[[Ba'athist Iraq]] (1963–2004)=
{{Distinguish|Flag of the United Arab Republic|text=the Flag of the United Arab Republic, which this flag is based on}}{{Multiple image
| direction = vertical
| image1 = Flag of the United Arab Republic (1958–1971), Flag of Syria (1980–2024) (stars variant 1).svg
| total_width = 120
| image2 = Flag of Iraq (1963–1991).svg
| caption2 = Iraq adopted a variation of the UAR's flag with a third star to represent Iraqi aspirations to join a new Arab Union
| align = left
}}
{{Infobox flag
| Name = Pre-Invasion Flag
(Flag of the Iraqi Republic)
| Image = Flag of Iraq (1963-1991).svg
| Imagetext = National flag adopted in 1963, under the rule of Abdul Salam Arif to represent a reformed United Arab Republic with Iraq as a member state, this flag was used as the exclusive national flag until being modified by Saddam Hussein in 1991, but remained in common use as a secular variant until 2008
| Nickname =
| Proportion = 2:3
| Adoption = {{Start date and age|1963}}
{{Start date and age|2012}} (by Sunni opposition)
| Relinquished = {{Start date and age|2008}} (all variants)
| Design = A horizontal tricolour of red, white, and black, charged with 3 equal stars, centered on the white stripe. (with the {{translit|ar|takbīr}} on both sides on the second star in later variations)
| Designer = National Union of the United Arab Republic (modified by the Iraqi Ba'ath Party and later, directly by Saddam Hussein)
| Image2 = Flag of Iraq (1991–2004).svg
| Imagetext2 = Variant modified by the Ba'ath Party following the Gulf War as part of the Faith Campaign. Following the war, this flag was used as a symbol of loyalist forces and later, as a symbol of Sunni opposition
| Nickname2 = Late Ba'athist Flag
| Adoption2 = {{Start date and age|1991}}
{{Start date and age|2012}} (by Sunni opposition)
| Relinquished2 = {{Start date and age|2004}} (by Coalition Provisional Authority)
| Designer2 = Saddam Hussein (through Flag Law No. 6 of 1991)
}}
After Qassim was overthrown by the Ba'ath Party in 1963, the new government, led by the Nasserist Abdul Salam Arif (under the influence of what would become the Arab Socialist Union), adopted a modified version of the Arab Liberation Flag as the new flag of Iraq on 31 July 1963 (Law 28 of 1963). This horizontal tricolour of red, white, and black bands (a subset of the Pan-Arab colours, first used in the Egyptian Revolution of 1952) formed the basis of the flag of the United Arab Republic (UAR). Though the UAR broke up in 1961, hopes for Arab unity persisted. As such, whereas the UAR flag had two green stars in the white band, signifying its two members (Egypt and Syria), the new Iraqi flag had three stars, symbolising the aspiration that Iraq would join with Egypt and Syria in a new union. Sharing this goal, Syria adopted the new Iraqi flag as its own later that same year. This remained the flag of Syria until 1971, when the green stars were replaced by the Hawk of Quraish as the Coat of arms of Syria.
File:Fight-for-a-government-building-flag-ribbon30fblue.jpg, showcasing the 1963 flag]]
File:Iraqi Model 214ST SuperTransport helicopter, 1991.JPEG helicopter used during the occupation of Kuwait (captured in Saudi Arabia)]]
During the presidency of Saddam Hussein, the Iraqi Flag Law No. 28 of 1963 was replaced by Flag Law No. 33 of 1986, which did not alter the flag but changed the meaning of the three stars from their original geographic meaning to representations of the three tenets of the Ba'ath Party motto: {{transliteration|ar|wahda, hurriyah, ishtirakiyah}} (unity, freedom and socialism).
File:Iraq Sunni Protests 2013 7.png
On 13 January 1991, the flag was modified by Flag Law No. 6 of 1991. At the instigation of President Saddam Hussein, the {{transliteration|ar|takbīr}} (the phrase Allahu akbar, meaning "God is the greatest" in Arabic) was added in green between the stars. The form of the {{transliteration|ar|takbīr}} was said to be Saddam's own handwriting.{{Cite book|title=The Politics of National Celebrations in the Arab Middle East|last1=Podeh|first1=Elie|last2=Pôde|first2=Ēlî|date=2011-06-30|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=9781107001084|page=144|language=en}} Many{{Who|date=March 2011}} interpreted the addition of the sacred Islamic text as an attempt to garner wartime support from previously outlawed religious Iraqi leaders, to stop the disrespect of the Iraqi flag in Iraqi-occupied Kuwait, and to bolster the Iraqi government's Islamist credentials in the period immediately preceding the Gulf War. Despite this, the flag without the Takbir remained legal and remained in co-official use until 2004, most commonly as a civil ensign or in places where a less religiously sensitive flag was needed. It was also sometimes used by Iraqi opposition prior to the U.S. Invasion such as the Iraqi National Accord, as the "true flag" of Iraq, viewing the new text added to the flag as an example of Saddam’s authorian tendencies by adding his personal imprint onto the national flag, which had been the most nationally and internationally recognized symbol of Iraq for decades. This use contrasts its post-2003 use as a symbol of loyalism towards Saddam and the Ba'athist government. The version without the Takbir was never officially used by the American administration.
As with other flags inscribed with Arabic script, the hoist is to the right of the obverse (front) of the flag. The hamza over the alif of “Allah” in the main variant seems to be a spelling error according to formal Arabic grammar, but it is a common mistake found in many texts.{{cite web |title=Evolution of the Iraqi Flag |url=https://www.fotw.info/flags/iq_evol.html |website=Flags of the world |access-date=2020-07-31}}
This flag remerged during the 2012–2013 Iraqi protests as a symbol of Sunni Iraqi identity (mainly among ethnic Arab and Turkmen), and remains in use by Sunni Iraqi diaspora worldwide. The flag also remains in use by rebel groups such as the Free Iraqi Army, the Naqshbandi Army, the Islamic Front for the Iraqi Resistance, the Supreme Command for Jihad and Liberation and the Anbar Tribal Council, often swapping between the original 1963 and takbir versions of the flag. The stars of this flag still remain a recognizable symbol of Iraq, as seen in the logo of the Iraqi Communist Party. Because of the associations between these movements and the flag, the flag is commonly retroactively known or perceived as being a Ba'athist flag, Saddamist flag or Sunni flag, despite being an inherently non-sectarian symbol with Nasserist origins that had widespread use long before the rule of Saddam Hussein.
The flag also continued to be used as the design of the Iraqi national flag on multiple emoji design sets including the OpenMoji project and on Huawei devices (both until 2024) and still remains the design of the flag on sites such as Steam, despite not being in official use for over a decade.
=2004–2008=
File:BaghdadSign.jpg during the Iraq War (2007)]]
File:Flag of Iraq 2004-2008.svg script (ratio: 2:3)]]
File:An Iraqi crewmember.jpg to represent Iraq after the invasion in 2006 ]]
Owing to differing views on a flag proposed by the United States-appointed administration, and the prevailing opposition to an outright abandonment of the current Iraqi flag, a compromise measure was adopted by the U.S.-appointed Iraqi interim administration in 2004. The basic form of the existing flag was retained;{{cite web|url=http://www.worldflags101.com/i/iraq-flag.aspx|title=Republic of Iraq flag|access-date=2008-02-10|publisher=World flags 101|archive-date=2022-04-11|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220411002321/http://www.worldflags101.com/i/iraq-flag.aspx|url-status=dead}} however, the takbīr was rendered in traditional stylized Kufic script, as opposed to the handwriting of Saddam Hussein.
The modified flag was unveiled at the ceremony marking the technical "handover" of power from the Coalition Provisional Authority occupation forces to the U.S.-appointed administration on 28 July 2004.{{cite news|url=http://www.cnn.com/2004/WORLD/meast/06/28/iraq.handover/ |title=CNN.com - U.S. returns sovereignty to Iraq - Jul 28, 2004 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040803084929/http://www.cnn.com/2004/WORLD/meast/07/28/iraq.handover/ |archive-date=August 3, 2004 }}
Despite this measure, the Kurdish population still opposed the flag, as it contained the three stars associated with the Ba'athist regime of Saddam Hussein, and thus, the atrocities that were committed upon the Kurds by the Ba'athists. This eventually led to the removal of the three stars in 2008, which also provoked some criticism among non-Kurdish Iraqis, who flew it in protest.
=2008–present=
File:Iraqi and Kurdish flags.jpg in Erbil (2011)]]
On 22 January 2008, the Council of Representatives of Iraq approved its new design for the national flag, confirmed by Law 9 of 2008 as the compromising temporary replacement for the Ba'athist Saddam-era flag. In this current version, the three stars were removed, leaving only the takbīr (which confused some Iraqis, as this was the part added to the flag directly by Saddam), with the two words of the takbīr being brought closer together and rendered in bold, and corrected the previous spelling of Allah ({{lang|ar|ألله}} to {{lang|ar|الله}}). The removal of the three stars was demanded by the Kurdish population of Iraq, who associated the three stars with the Al-Anfal genocide. But their removal provoked criticism among non-Kurdish Iraqis, mainly Iraqi Arabs, who argued that the stars did not represent the Ba'athist regime, and the city of Fallujah refused to fly the temporary flag that year unless instructed otherwise.{{Cite news |date=2008-01-26 |title=Discontent in Iraq over new national flag |language=en |work=Reuters |url=https://www.reuters.com/article/us-iraq-flag-idUSL2662290320080126 |access-date=2022-11-07}} The parliament intended for the new design to last one year, after which a final decision on the flag would be made. However, the flag law was reviewed in parliament on 30 August 2009.{{cite web|url= http://www.parliament.iq/Iraqi_Council_of_Representatives.php?name=schedule|title=Council of Representatives of Iraq (parliament) schedule includes Iraqi law review on April 30, 2009. (in Arabic)|access-date=2009-04-29|publisher=Council of Representatives of Iraq|date=2009-04-29}}
{{Clear}}
Symbolism
The Iraqi flag consists of four colours: red, white, green and black, inspired by the poetic verse of Safi al-Din al-Hilli: "Our actions are bright, our battlefields are dark, our lands are green, and our swords are red with the blood of our enemies".{{Cite web |title=علم الدولة – protocol-PMO |url=https://protocol-pmo.gov.iq/the-countrys-flag/ |access-date=2022-10-02 |language=ar |archive-date=2022-10-02 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221002140859/https://protocol-pmo.gov.iq/the-countrys-flag/ |url-status=dead }}
Specifications
File:Flag of Iraq (construction sheet).svg
The flag is in the form of a rectangle, the width of which is two-thirds of its length, and it consists of three horizontal bands of equal dimensions, the top in red, the middle in white, and the bottom in black, and the words ʾAllāhu ʾakbar "الله اكبر" in Kufic script coloured green is in the middle of the middle white rectangle. The ratio of flag is 2:3.
Flag proposals and flag contest
=2004 flag proposal and controversy=
Following the military invasion of Iraq by the United States in 2003, the Iraqi government was overthrown, and the Ba'ath party was outlawed. Strong speculation followed that the U.S. government would press for a change in the Iraqi flag to remove its pan-Arab symbolism, and to make a definitive break with the period of Ba'athist rule. To a degree, this view was shared by some groups in Iraq. In addition to some displeasure among Iraqis who had suffered under Saddam Hussein to retaining national symbols used by his government, there was also strong aversion to the flag from Iraq's Kurdish minority, who resented its evocation of pan-Arabism. However, Iraqi opponents of changing the flag argued that since the flag had been used since 1963, long before Saddam Hussein's presidency, it was unfair to characterise it as a "Saddamist" flag. They also stressed that pan-Arabism has been a dominant popular principle among Iraqi's majority population for decades prior to Iraqi independence in 1932.
On 14 August 2004 the U.S.-appointed Iraqi Governing Council (IGC) announced a new flag during Saddam's Iraq. The IGC stated that, from around 30 competing entries, it had chosen a design by the distinguished Iraqi artist-architect Rifat Chadirji, who lived in London, and is a brother of a member of the IGC. Chadirji commented that the guidelines stipulated that Iraq should be portrayed as part of the Western world, with historical elements included. The simplicity of his design was inspired by the flags of Canada and Switzerland,{{cite news |last1=Beck |first1=Ernest |last2=Lasky |first2=Julie |title=In Iraq, Flag Design, Too, Comes Under Fire |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2004/04/29/garden/in-iraq-flag-design-too-comes-under-fire.html |access-date=10 May 2022 |work=The New York Times |date=29 April 2004}} and it also shares elements (a crescent, stripes, a light blue shade) with the flag of his ethnic group, the Iraqi Turkmen.
The proposed flag had several meanings:
class="wikitable" |
Symbol
! Meaning |
---|
White background
| Purity |
Two blue bands
| The blue bands represent the Tigris and the Euphrates rivers. |
Yellow band
| Kurdish minority. The flag of Kurdistan features a yellow sun. |
Blue crescent
| The crescent represents Islam. |
File:Proposed_flag_of_Iraq_(Coalition_Provisional_Authority,_2004).svg.]]
The design marked a notable break with the three flags of modern Iraqi history (namely the Arab Revolt-inspired flag of the Kingdom, the flag introduced by Abd al-Karim Qasim, and the Arab Liberation inspired flag of 1963), all of which were based on the four Pan-Arab colours. Indeed, of these colours, only white was represented in the IGC design. Moreover, Islamic crescents are usually depicted in green or red in Arab heraldry. The proposed change provoked an intensely negative reaction across groups of Iraq's Arab majority, including those vehemently opposed to Saddam Hussein. Those opposed to the U.S. occupation, including Shi'a cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, decried the design as an attempt by the U.S. government to strip Iraq of its identity, and its historically prominent role in the Arab world. In particular, critics lamented the proposed abandonment of the Arab Liberation Flag, the omission of the traditional colours of pan-Arabism, and the removal of the takbīr.
Additionally, the new flag's predominantly blue-on-white appearance immediately antagonized many in Iraq because of the claim that it was similar to the flag of Israel.
The new flag was reported to have been burned by insurgents in Fallujah on 27 April 2004, the day before its planned official adoption. {{Citation needed|date=August 2024}}
On 28 April 2004, IGC President Masoud Barzani formally presented a modified version of the flag in which the originally very light shade of blue as reported by the press on 26 April 2004 had been changed to a darker tone. It was unclear whether this was a change made because of the protests made against the original design or, as the Council claimed, a rectification of printing errors in the earlier news reports. Barzani also explained that the flag was a temporary design, to be used over the ensuing months until the adoption of a definitive flag.
In the face of the overwhelming public outcry, adoption of the blue crescent flag was abandoned entirely.{{Clear}}
=2008 flag proposal=
File:Proposed flag of Iraq (first proposal, 2008).svg
Despite the compromise in 2004, opposition to the flag persisted from Kurdish groups. In January 2008, a new design was proposed, removing the three green stars, instead placing a green eight pointed star around a yellow circle in the middle of the takbīr, which is written in the Kufic script and prized as a Mesopotamian Arabic style, having originated in Iraq.{{cite web | url=https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=18049763 | title=Iraq to Restore Former Baath Party Followers | last=Garrels | first=Anne | access-date=2008-01-24 | publisher=National Public Radio | date=2008-01-12 }}{{Clear}}
=2008 flag contest=
File:Proposed flag of Iraq (second proposal, 2008).svg
In July 2008, the Iraqi parliament launched a contest to design a new Iraqi flag. The contest ran until September 2008, with 50 designs submitted. Six designs were chosen and sent to the parliament which was to choose a new flag before the end of 2008.{{cite web |url=http://pukmedia.com/english/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=8111&Itemid=53 |title=Iraqi new flag to be identified before year end |access-date=2008-10-12 |publisher=Patriotic Union of Kurdistan |date=2008-10-12 }}
Another proposed design was also similar to the 2004–2008 flag, but the script was changed to yellow to represent the Kurdish people in northern Iraq. The meaning of the three stars would be changed to symbolize peace, tolerance and justice.{{cite web |url=http://www.radionetherlands.nl/currentaffairs/080115-new-iraq-flag |title=Iraq's new flag half satisfies everyone |publisher=Radio Netherlands |access-date=2008-01-24 |date=2008-01-15 |last=Charif |first=Chalaan |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080118074558/http://www.radionetherlands.nl/currentaffairs/080115-new-iraq-flag |archive-date=2008-01-18 }}
Subnational flags
=Regions=
class="wikitable" | |||
style="width:110px;"|Flag | style="width:100px;"|Date
!Ratio | style="width:250px;" |Use | style="width:250px;"|Description |
---|---|---|---|
File:Flag of Kurdistan.svg | 2005–present
|2:3 | Flag of Kurdistan, used in Kurdistan Region |
=Governorates=
{{see also|Governorates of Iraq}}
Gallery
= Military flags =
= Political/Rebel flags =
See also
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
{{Commons category|Flags of Iraq}}
- [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/7203222.stm Iraq parliament approves new flag]
- [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/3660663.stm Iraq unveils new national flag] (BBC)
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20061008121650/http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/94E338BA-2CAF-4267-A9FC-5C425A108CE1.htm Controversial new Iraqi flag unfurled] (al-Jazeera)
- [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/3663387.stm Iraqis unimpressed by flag design] (BBC; refers to the sibling relationship between the al-Chaderchis, accusations of nepotism)
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20121010095800/http://www.commondreams.org/headlines04/0428-03.htm Burning with anger: Iraqis infuriated by new flag that was designed in London] (The Independent, reaction of Iraqis, sibling relationship)
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20080202071100/http://www.arabic-radio-tv.com/Iq_flags.htm Flags of Modern Iraq] (Arabic-Radio-TV, The Flags of Modern Iraq (1921–present)
- {{FOTW|id=iq|title=Iraq}}
- [https://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/23/world/middleeast/23iraq.html?bl&ex=1201323600&en=a0708912c54bf08f&ei=5087%0A New York Times article on new flag]
- [http://www.gjpi.org/ Global Justice Project: Iraq]
{{clear}}
{{Asia topic|Flag of|title=Flags of Asia}}
{{Arab Flags}}
{{National flags}}
{{Iraq topics}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Flag Of Iraq}}
Category:National symbols of Iraq