Iran-Iraq border

Iran-Iraq border

The Iran-Iraq boundary runs for 1,458 kilometers, from the Shatt al-Arab (known as Arvand Rud in Iran) waterway to the tripoint boundary with modern Turkey at the Kuh e-Dalanper. Although the boundary was first determined in 1639, certain disputes fester, particularly disputes surrounding navigation on the Shatt al-Arab waterway. The currently binding treaty, the Algiers Agreement (1975) [cite news|url=http://untreaty.un.org/English/treaty.asp|title='UN Treaty Series Vol. 1017 full text of treaty' |publisher=United Nations |date=1985] has been in force since signed by both nations in 1975 and ratified by both nations in 1976.

Boundary line

The boundary begins in the Persian Gulf at the "lowest point of low water" at the mouth of the Shatt al-Arab at coord|29|51|16|N|48|44|45|E (WGS84.) It then closely following the thalweg of the Shatt al-Arab for some 105 kilometers in a series of short straight line segments, reaching the confluence of the Shatt al-Arab and the Nahr al-Khayin tributary. From there it winds northward, following a series of boundary markers across plain and hill, through the Zagros Mountains Nahr at-Tib, and Nahr Wadi. It meets the boundary with Turkey at 37° 08' 44" N and 44° 47' 05" E.

History

The boundary dates back to the 1639 Zohab Treaty between the Ottoman Empire, which controlled Iraq, and Persia. The agreement stipulated that the boundary would run between the Zagros Mountains and the Tigris River. In 1724, the Ottomans rejected the boundary-line and invaded Persia, but when peace was finally concluded in 1746, the two states recognized the 1639 boundary as official. This was affirmed by the 1847 Treaty of Erzerum, however, the new treaty first raised the issue of the Shatt al-Arab waterway. The boundary was set at the eastern bank of the Persian gulf, so that the entire waterway remained under Turkish (i.e., Iraqi) control. In the following years, the boundary-line was further delineated, and a detailed map was produced in 1860.

A more precise demarcation was begun in 1911 at the urging of Russia and Great Britain, both of whom had colonial aspirations in the region. In 1913-1914, a commission established by the Constantinople Protocol set the revised boundary, with control of the Shatt al-Arab going to Turkey. In general, the line was to follow the east bank of the waterway, except in the region surrounding the Persian town of Khorramshahr, where it was to follow the thalweg.

This was challenged by Iran in 1934, as the validity of both the Treaty of Erzerum and the Constantinople Protocol was called into question. The dispute was resolved in 1937, following the general lines of the old boundary, with the exception of the area immediately around the Iranian town of Abadan, where the boundary was moved from the east bank to the thalweg, as had been done around Khorramshahr two decades earlier.

While this resolved Iran's major grievances, it failed to respond to the issue of freedom of navigation in the Shatt al-Arab. This was resolved in 1975, when Iran and Iraq signed an agreement in Algiers in which the thalweg was determined to be the boundary throughout the Shatt al-Arab waterway. In return, Iran promised to cease its support for Kurdish rebels in northern Iraq. The new treaty was rejected by Iraq five years later, and was a cause of the Iran-Iraq war. Iraq finally accepted the new boundary in 1990 following its failed invasion of Kuwait, in accordance with United Nations .

Today

Although Iraq accepted Resolution 598, it continues to question the validity of the Algiers Agreement (1975) regarding its boundary with Iran. Under international law, a bilateral or multilateral treaty cannot be abrogated by one party and one party only, and thus various statements to that effect about this agreement have had no legal effect. In 2004 and again in March, 2007, the boundary question rose to international prominence when Iranian soldiers seized British sailors operating in the vicinity of the Shatt al-Arab, in what Iran alleged were its own territorial waters.

ource

Biger, Gideon. "The Encyclopedia of International Boundaries," Facts on File, 1995. ISBN 0816032335

Notes


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Iran–Iraq War — Infobox Military Conflict conflict=Iran–Iraq War caption=Iranian soldier with gas mask in the battlefield. date=22 September 1980 ndash; 20 August 1988 place=Persian Gulf, Iranian Iraqi border result=Stalemate; UN Resolution 598 (ceasefire);… …   Wikipedia

  • Iran-Iraq War — (1980–90) Protracted and indecisive conflict prompted by Iraq s invasion of its eastern neighbour. Following the 1979 Iranian revolution, the Iraqi leadership sought to exploit Iran s military and political chaos in order to resolve border… …   Universalium

  • United States support for Iraq during the Iran–Iraq war — The United States supported Iraq during the Iran–Iraq War as a counterbalance to post revolutionary Iran. The support took the form of technological aid, intelligence, the sale of dual use and military equipment, and direct involvement in warfare …   Wikipedia

  • Order of battle during the Iran–Iraq War — These are the orders of battle of the Iraqi and Iranian armies for the start of the Iran–Iraq War in 1980. The data is drawn from the Air Combat Information Group s Arabian Peninsula and Persian Gulf Database. Iraqi Army See also: Iraqi Army 1st… …   Wikipedia

  • Soviet support for Iran during the Iran–Iraq war — The Soviet Union did not provide extensive support to Iran during the Iran–Iraq War, not surprisingly given its massive assistance to Iraq, the mutual antagonism between Marxist Leninist ideology and the Islamist government of Iran, and Muslim… …   Wikipedia

  • Iraq — /i rak , i rahk /, n. a republic in SW Asia, N of Saudi Arabia and W of Iran, centering in the Tigris Euphrates basin of Mesopotamia. 22,219,289; 172,000 sq. mi. (445,480 sq. km). Cap.: Baghdad. Also, Irak. * * * Iraq Introduction Iraq Background …   Universalium

  • Iran–Party for a Free Life in Kurdistan conflict — Infobox Military Conflict conflict=Iran PJAK conflict caption= partof= place=Iran, North of Iraq date=2004 – present result=Ongoing combatant1= combatant2=Party for a Free Life in Kurdistan (PJAK) commander1= commander2= strength1= strength2=… …   Wikipedia

  • Iran–Contra affair — Iran–Contra Scandal Other names Iran–Contra Participants Ronald Reagan, Robert McFarlane, Caspar Weinberger, Hezbollah, Nicaraguan contras, Oliver North, Manucher Ghorbanifar, John Poindexter Date August 20, 1985 …   Wikipedia

  • Iran — /i ran , i rahn , uy ran /, n. a republic in SW Asia. 67,540,002; ab. 635,000 sq. mi. (1,644,650 sq. km). Cap.: Teheran. Formerly (until 1935), Persia. * * * Iran Introduction Iran Background: Known as Persia until 1935, Iran became an Islamic… …   Universalium

  • Iraq War — This article is about the war that began in 2003. For other uses, see Iraq War (disambiguation). Further information: 2003 invasion of Iraq and Post invasion Iraq …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”