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Tahir Yahya

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President
  
Abdul Rahman Arif

Preceded by
  
Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr

President
  
Abdul Salam Arif

Died
  
1986, Baghdad, Iraq

Name
  
Tahir Yahya

Preceded by
  
Abdul Rahman Arif

Succeeded by
  
Arif Abd ar-Razzaq


Tahir Yahya httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Similar People
  
Abdul Rahman Arif, Abdul Salam Arif, Ahmed Hassan al‑Bakr, Abd al‑Karim Qasim, Abdul Aziz al‑Hakim

Succeeded by
  
Abd ar-Razzaq an-Naif

Political party
  
Arab Socialist Union

Tahir Yahya (1916−1986) (Arabic: طاهر يحيى‎) was Prime Minister of Iraq twice, from 1963 to 1965 and a short term in 1967-1968. He was educated at the Baghdad Military College and the Staff College. Born in Tikrit 1916. He was the 4th child to Mulla Yahya el-ogaily, a prominent tobacco merchant between North and Central Iraq. At the age of sixteen, he joined the Baghdad Teachers College, then became a teacher in Baghdad for one year after graduation. He then pursued further education in military sciences. He was a cavalry officer and played polo for the Iraqi army. He led the Iraqi armored company where he was wounded in the battle at the Kfar Masaryk , earning two medals bestowed by Crown Prince Abd al-Ilāh.

In November 1963 he was appointed as Prime Minister by President Abdul Salam Arif.

At the end of his term, Yahya warned president Arif of the upcoming Ba'ath coup d'état and their plans to overthrow his government, but Arif did not take any action. This led to Yahya submitting his resignation on 8 July 1968, one week before the coup d'état took place. That same morning Yahya was arrested and Arif was deported to London.

Yahya spent three years in prison, torture, and health neglect. In 1971 he was released, only to be put under house arrest until dying in his house in Mansur, Baghdad, in 1986.

Head officer Khalid Battalion 1952.

Commander of 20th Brigade 1955.

General Director of Police and security Directorate July 14, 1958.

Chief of staff February 8, 1963.

Minister of Defense, Interim 1964.

References

Tahir Yahya Wikipedia