Sir Percy Cox
- In full:
- Sir Percy Zachariah Cox
- Died:
- February 20, 1937, Melchbourne, Bedfordshire (aged 72)
Sir Percy Cox (born November 20, 1864, Herongate, Essex, England—died February 20, 1937, Melchbourne, Bedfordshire) was a diplomat who was especially important in the development of independent Iraq from a British mandated territory after World War I. Interpreting the mandate favourably to Iraqi interests, he oversaw the transition from a provisional and largely military regime to a national government under King Fayṣal I.
Educated at the Royal Military Academy, Sandhurst, he served in the army in India from 1884 to 1890, when he joined the Indian political service. From 1893 to 1914 he held various political posts in the Persian Gulf area and Persia. He was knighted in 1911. During World War I, as chief political officer of the Indian Expeditionary Force, Cox was responsible for all relations with local authorities in British-occupied Iraq. From 1918 to 1920 he acted as British minister to Persia.
In October 1920 Cox went to Baghdad as British high commissioner to the new state of Iraq, which had been placed under British mandate by the Supreme Allied Council earlier that year. He established an all-Iraqi ministry and provincial administration, subject to British supervision; organized an Iraqi army; and conducted the referendum in which the emir Fayṣal was elected king as Fayṣal I (crowned August 23, 1921). Cox and Fayṣal shared the credit for overcoming serious difficulties in establishing the constitution and the political structure of the nation. On October 10, 1922, Cox signed the Anglo-Iraq Treaty (not ratified by Iraq until 1924), which provided for a 20-year alliance, later reduced to 4 years. He retired in May 1923.