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Iraq gets new flag, drops 'God is Great'

Iraq’s U.S.-picked leaders have approved a new flag for the country, dumping the Saddam Hussein-era colors and slogan “God is great” and using symbols of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers.
An Iraqi newspaper showed the nation's new flag on its cover Monday. The crescent represents Islam.
An Iraqi newspaper showed the nation's new flag on its cover Monday. The crescent represents Islam.APTN
/ Source: The Associated Press

Iraq’s U.S.-picked leaders approved a new flag for the country, making a dramatic change that dumps the Saddam Hussein-era colors and slogan “God is great” and introduces symbols of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, a spokesman said Monday.

The new flag is white, with two parallel blue strips across the bottom representing the rivers and a yellow stripe between them representing Iraq’s Kurdish minority. Above the stripes is a blue crescent representing Islam.

Council spokesman, Hameed al-Kafaei, said the U.S.-picked council approved the design as the new official flag — though the artist was asked to touch up the color of the crescent, perhaps to a darker blue or a different color.

Saddam's addition
The old Iraq flag had a red and white bands across the top and bottom, with a white band between them with three green stars. During the 1980s Iran-Iraq war, Saddam added the Arabic words “Allahu akbar,” or “God is great,” to boost the religious credentials of his secular regime.

A masked militant from the Al Aqsa martyrs brigade holds the flag of Iraq, right, and the Palestinian flag, left, as others hold pictures of former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein during a small demonstration supporting the former Iraqi leader in the town of Khan Younis, in the southern Gaza Strip, Monday, Dec. 15, 2003. (AP Photo/Kevin Frayer)
A masked militant from the Al Aqsa martyrs brigade holds the flag of Iraq, right, and the Palestinian flag, left, as others hold pictures of former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein during a small demonstration supporting the former Iraqi leader in the town of Khan Younis, in the southern Gaza Strip, Monday, Dec. 15, 2003. (AP Photo/Kevin Frayer)Kevin Frayer / AP

“This is a new era,” al-Kafaei said. “We cannot continue with Saddam’s flag.” An official declaration of the flag will come later this week, he said.

The new design appeared on the front pages of the Al-Sabah newspaper Monday, and Iraqis crowded around to check it out. “It is the real model as it represents all spectrum of the Iraqi society,” said one man, Mohammed Faris.

Legitimacy issues?
But the dramatic change in a national symbol could raise some complaints — particularly since it came from U.S.-picked leaders seen by many Iraqis as American puppets. U.S. administrators have tried quietly in the past to change the flag by dropping the words “Allahu akbar,” but Iraqis have refused to abide by the change.

One council member said the Iraqi leadership should wait for an elected government before altering such a major national symbol.

“In my opinion, it should be not be passed until we have a parliament,” Mahmoud Othman said. “I think there are issues more important to concentrate on now than the changing of the flag.”