Rashid Ali al-Gaylani (born 1892, Baghdad, Iraq, Ottoman Empire [now in Iraq]—died August 28, 1965, Beirut, Lebanon) was an Iraqi lawyer and politician who was prime minister of Iraq (1933, 1940–41, 1941) and one of the most celebrated political leaders of the Arab world during his time.
The scion of an aristocratic Sunni family, Gaylani studied law at Baghdad Law School. After several years of practice, he entered public life and held several cabinet posts in the 1920s and ’30s, including minister of justice (1924) and minister of the interior (1925–28). After briefly serving as prime minister in 1933, he was reappointed to the post in 1940. At the time, World War II (1939–45) was underway, and Gaylani, a strident Arab nationalist, supported the Axis powers, believing that they would back Arab unity. Thus, he did not sever ties with Italy after that country entered the war alongside the Germans. His response angered Britain, which still had a strong presence in Iraq, and in January 1941 Gaylani was forced to resign. On April 3, 1941, he staged a pro-Nazi coup in Baghdad, seizing control from the regent, ʿAbd al-Ilāh. British troops were sent to the country, and Gaylani’s regime was toppled in May 1941. Gaylani thereupon fled to Berlin, where he was received by German leader Adolf Hitler. Afterward he lived in exile in Saudi Arabia and Egypt and returned to Iraq only in 1958 following the revolution that overthrew Iraq’s Hashemite monarchy. In December of that year, Gaylani was implicated in a plot against Iraqi Prime Minister ʿAbd al-Karīm Qāsim and was later imprisoned and sentenced to death. In 1961, however, he was released from prison by a special amnesty and soon afterward settled in Beirut, where he lived out his remaining days.