Tariq
Aziz Iraqi
Deputy Prime Minister Tariq Aziz is something of an anomaly among Iraqi officials,
both because he is a Christian and because he is not related to Saddam's Tikriti
clan. Aziz
was born in 1936 in the northern city of Mosul to a family of little means. He
was originally named Michael Yuhanna but changed his name to Tariq Aziz -- which
means "glorious past" -- to be more acceptable with the Muslim majority.
Aziz studied
English literature at the Baghdad College of Fine Arts, and in 1958 launched a
career as a journalist. He worked at several Iraqi newspapers, and was chief editor
at two papers: al-Jamaheer and al-Thawra, the Ba'ath Party's newspaper. It was
during this time with the Ba'ath Party paper that Aziz first met Saddam Hussein.
His support for
the Ba'ath Party strong, he began to rise through the ranks of Iraqi politics
after his party came to power in 1968. He served as a member of the Regional Command
-- the Ba'ath party's highest governing unit -- from 1974 to 1977, and in 1977
became a member of Saddam's Revolutionary Command Council. In
1979, Aziz was named Deputy Prime Minister of Iraq, where his primary role is
to act as diplomat and explain Iraq's policies to the world. Shortly after he
assumed his new leadership role he survived a reportedly Iranian-back assassination
attempt in 1980. When Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990, Aziz served as the
international spokesman in support of the military action, saying the move was
justified because Kuwait's increased oil production was dampening Iraqi oil revenues.
He has condemned Arab states for "subservience to the United States' hegemony
in the Middle East and their support for punitive sanctions." Aziz
blamed the United States rather than the United Nations for the sanctions that
followed the Gulf War, believing they were implemented as a result of U.S. government
policies. He used these beliefs to back the expulsion of Americans working for
the United Nations Special Commission [UNSCOM] in 1997.
-- By Jessica Moore, Online NewsHour
|