Iran-Iraq war |
Unfinished journey (25)
(Part twenty-five, Depok, West Java, Indonesia, 1
September 2014, 15:14 pm)
In about 1986, the government of Oman (Sultan Al Qabus)
invited a number of journalists from Southeast Asia to Muscat, Oman, to cover
the countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), which is conducting a
peace conference the Iran-Iraq war.
This prolonged war troubling the Head of State the Gulf,
because it is not clear when it ends. Though this war was terrible, although in
one hand accuse the other party to use chemical gas, but it does not produce a
war who's the winner.
Iranian Embassy in Jakarta since the Iran-Iraq war broke
out often play video of this battle, which seems a terrible addition, there
seems also no winning of this war falls apart many casualties on both sides.
It was purely national territorial disputes and conflicts
that have been going on since long. Not a war of ideology, because both Iran
and Iraq are both majority Shiite Islam. So many Gulf countries such as Saudi
Arabia that helped Iraq because both the Arabs.
Iran-Iraq War occurred shortly after Iran's supreme
leader Ayatollah Khamenei returned from exile in Paris to Tehran that followed
the Iranian Revolution which dropped King Reza Pahlavi, Iran is what divides
people, especially student / Iranian student from outside the State, especially
in the United States split between the two supports Khamenei and there is
support Pahlavi. Many of these Iranian students on college campuses support the
campaign of either party. Sometimes they physically fight including female student.
Iran-Iraq war map |
Iran–Iraq War
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article may be too long to read and navigate
comfortably. Please consider splitting content into sub-articles or condensing
it. (January 2014)
Iraq–Iran War
Part of the Persian Gulf conflicts
Chemical weapon1.jpg
Iranian soldier with gas mask in the battlefield
Date 22 September
1980 – 20 August 1988
(7 years, 10 months, 4 weeks and 1 day)
Location Iran–Iraq
border
Result Military
stalemate
United Nations Security Council Resolution 598 passed,
accepted by both Iraq and Iran
Territorial
changes Status
quo ante bellum; observed by UNIIMOG based on Security Council Resolution 619
Belligerents
Iran
Kurdish Democratic Party KDP
Patriotic Union of Kurdistan PUK
Logistic support:[show]
Iraq
Flag of the People's Mujahedin of Iran - from Commons.svg
People's Mujahedin of Iran (MEK)
Democratic Party
of Iranian Kurdistan (KDP-I)
Support:[show]
Commanders and leaders
Ruhollah Khomeini
Supreme Leader of Iran
Abulhassan Banisadr
1st President of Iran
Mohammad-Ali Rajai
†
2nd President of Iran
Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani
Chairman of the Parliament
Ali Khamenei
3rd President of Iran[7]
Mir-Hossein Mousavi
Prime Minister of Iran
Mostafa Chamran †
Minister of Defence
Mohsen Rezaee
IRGC Commander
Ali Sayad Shirazi
Chief of Staff
Massoud Barzani
Leader of the Kurdistan Democratic Party
Jalal Talabani
Leader of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan
Nawshirwan Mustafa
Deputy Secretary General of the Patriotic Union of
Kurdistan
Mohammed Baqir al-Hakim
Leader of the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq
Abdul Aziz al-Hakim
Unfinished journey (25)
(Part twenty-five, Depok, West Java, Indonesia, 1
September 2014, 15:14 pm)
In about 1986, the government of Oman (Sultan Al Qabus)
invited a number of journalists from Southeast Asia to Muscat, Oman, to cover
the countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), which is conducting a
peace conference the Iran-Iraq war.
This prolonged war troubling the Head of State the Gulf,
because it is not clear when it ends. Though this war was terrible, although in
one hand accuse the other party to use chemical gas, but it does not produce a
war who's the winner.
Iranian Embassy in Jakarta since the Iran-Iraq war broke
out often play video of this battle, which seems a terrible addition, there
seems also no winning of this war falls apart many casualties on both sides.
It was purely national territorial disputes and conflicts
that have been going on since long. Not a war of ideology, because both Iran
and Iraq are both majority Shiite Islam. So many Gulf countries such as Saudi
Arabia that helped Iraq because both the Arabs.
Iran-Iraq War occurred shortly after Iran's supreme leader
Ayatollah Khamenei returned from exile in Paris to Tehran that followed the
Iranian Revolution which dropped King Reza Pahlavi, Iran is what divides
people, especially student / Iranian student from outside the State, especially
in the United States split between the two supports Khamenei and there is
support Pahlavi. Many of these Iranian students on college campuses support the
campaign of either party. Sometimes they physically fight including female
student.
Saddam Husein |
Saddam Hussein
President of Iraq
Ali Hassan al-Majid
General and Iraqi Intelligence Service head
Taha Yassin Ramadan
General and Deputy Party Secretary
Izzat Ibrahim ad-Douri
Deputy chairman, Revolutionary Command Council
Salah Aboud Mahmoud
General
Tariq Aziz
Foreign Minister and Revolutionary Command council member
Adnan Khairallah
Minister of Defence
Saddam Kamel
Republican Guard Commander
Abdul Rahman Ghassemlou
Leader of the Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan
Uday Hussein
Son of Saddam Hussein
Qusay Hussein
Son of Saddam Hussein
Maher Abd al-Rashid
General
Massoud Rajavi
President of the National Council of Resistance of Iran
Maryam Rajavi
co-leader of PMOI
Strength
At the onset of the war: 110,000–150,000 soldiers,
2,100 tanks,[8]
1,000 armoured vehicles,
1072 artillery pieces,[9]
320 aircraft,
750 helicopters
After Iraq withdrew from Iran in 1982: 350,000 soldiers,
700 tanks,
2,700 armoured vehicles,
400 artillery pieces,
350 aircraft,
700 helicopters
At the end of the war: 900,000 soldiers,
2,500,000 militia,
400 tanks,
800 armoured vehicles,
600 artillery pieces,
60–80 aircraft,
70–90 helicopters At
the onset of the war: 350,000 soldiers,
2,650 tanks,
4,000 armoured vehicles,
800 artillery pieces,
600 aircraft,
350 helicopters
After Iraq withdrew from Iran in 1982: 175,000 soldiers,
1,200 tanks,
2,300 armoured vehicles,
400 artillery pieces,
450 aircraft,
180 helicopters
At the end of the war: 1,500,000 soldiers,[citation
needed]
5,500–6,700 tanks,
8,500–10,000 armoured vehicles,
6,000–12,000 artillery pieces,
1,500 aircraft,
1,000 helicopters
Casualties and losses
123,220–160,000 KIA and 60,711 MIA (Iranian
claim)[10][11]
200,000–600,000 killed (other
estimates)[10][12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19]
800,000 killed (Iraqi claim)[10]
320,000–500,000 WIA[13][20][21]
40,000–42,875 POW[20][21]
11,000–16,000 civilian dead[10][11]
Economic loss of US$627 billion[10][12]
105,000–375,000 killed[10][20][22][23][24]
400,000 WIA[23]
70,000 POW[13][23]
Economic loss of $561 billion[10][12]
100,000+ civilians killed on both sides[25]
(not including 182,000 civilians killed in the Al-Anfal Campaign)[26]
¹ The exact number of Iraqi Shia that fought alongside
Iran is unknown. The Iraqi political parties SCIRI and Islamic Da'wa Party
supported Iran during the war. Iran would sometimes organise divisions of Iraqi
POWs to fight against Iraq.
[show] v t e
Iran–Iraq War
[show] v t e
Persian Gulf Wars
The Iran–Iraq War, also known as the First Persian Gulf
War,[27][28][29][30][31] was an armed conflict between the Islamic Republic of
Iran and the Republic of Iraq lasting from September 1980 to August 1988,
making it the 20th century's longest conventional war.[32][33] It was initially
referred to in English as the "Gulf War" prior to the Persian Gulf
War of the early 1990s.[34]
The Iran–Iraq War began when Iraq invaded Iran via air
and land on 22 September 1980. It followed a long history of border disputes,
and was motivated by fears that the Iranian Revolution in 1979 would inspire
insurgency among Iraq's long-suppressed Shia majority as well as Iraq's desire
to replace Iran as the dominant Persian Gulf state. Although Iraq hoped to take
advantage of Iran's revolutionary chaos and attacked without formal warning,
they made only limited progress into Iran and were quickly repelled; Iran
regained virtually all lost territory by June 1982. For the next six years,
Iran was on the offensive.[35] A number of proxy forces participated in the
war, most notably the Iranian Mujahedin-e-Khalq siding with Ba'athist Iraq and
Iraqi Kurdish militias of Kurdish Democratic Party and Patriotic Union of
Kurdistan siding with Iran—all suffering a major blow by the end of the
conflict.
Despite calls for a ceasefire by the United Nations
Security Council, hostilities continued until 20 August 1988. The war finally
ended with Resolution 598, a U.N.-brokered ceasefire which was accepted by both
sides. At the war's conclusion, it took several weeks for Iranian armed forces
to evacuate Iraqi territory to honour pre-war international borders set by the
1975 Algiers Agreement.[36] The last prisoners of war were exchanged in 2003.[35][37]
The war cost both sides in lives and economic damage:
half a million Iraqi and Iranian soldiers, with an equivalent number of
civilians, are believed to have died, with many more injured; however, the war
brought neither reparations nor changes in borders. The conflict has been
compared to World War I[38]:171 in terms of the tactics used, including
large-scale trench warfare with barbed wire stretched across trenches, manned
machine-gun posts, bayonet charges, human wave attacks across a no-man's land,
and extensive use of chemical weapons such as mustard gas by the Iraqi
government against Iranian troops, civilians, and Iraqi Kurds. At the time of
the conflict, the U.N. Security Council issued statements that "chemical
weapons had been used in the war." U.N. statements never clarified that
only Iraq was using chemical weapons, and according to retrospective authors
"the international community remained silent as Iraq used weapons of mass
destruction against Iranian[s] as well as Iraqi Kurds."[39][40][41]
Contents [hide]
1 Terminology
2 Origins
2.1 Iran–Iraq relations
2.2 After the Iranian Revolution
2.3 Iraqi preparations
2.4 Iranian preparations
2.5 Border conflicts leading to war
3 Geographic analysis
4 Course of the war
4.1 1980: Iraqi invasion
4.1.1 First Battle of Khorramshahr
4.1.2 Iraqi advance stalls
4.2 1981: Stalemate
4.2.1 Battle of Dezful
4.2.2 Attack on H3
4.2.3 Iran introduces the human wave attack
4.2.4 Operation Eighth Imam
4.2.5 Operation Tariq al-Qods
4.3 1982: Iraqi retreat, Iranian offensive
4.3.1 Operation Undeniable Victory
4.3.2 Operation Beit ol-Moqaddas
4.3.2.1 Liberation of Khorramshahr (Second Battle of
Khorramshahr)
4.3.3 State of Iraqi armed forces
4.3.4 International response in 1982
4.3.5 Ceasefire proposal
4.3.6 Iran invades Iraq
4.3.6.1 Iraqi tactics against Iranian invasion
4.3.6.2 Operation Ramadan (First Battle of Basra)
4.3.6.3 Fighting during the rest of 1982
4.4 1983–84: Strategic stalemate and war of attrition
4.4.1 Operation Before the Dawn
4.4.2 Dawn Operations
4.4.3 Iran's change in tactics
4.4.4 Battle of the Marshes
4.4.5 The "Tanker War" and the "War of the
Cities"
4.4.5.1 Attacks on shipping
4.4.5.2 Attacks on cities
4.4.6 Strategic situation in 1984
4.5 1985–86: Offensives and retreats
4.5.1 Operation Badr
4.5.2 Strategic situation at the beginning of 1986
4.5.3 First Battle of al-Faw
4.5.4 Battle of Mehran
4.5.5 Strategic situation at the end of 1986
4.5.5.1 Iraq's Dynamic Defense Strategy
4.6 1987–88: Towards a ceasefire
4.6.1 Karbala Operations
4.6.1.1 Operation Karbala-4
4.6.1.2 Operation Karbala-5 (Second Battle of Basra)
4.6.1.3 Operation Karbala-6
4.6.2 Iran's increasing war-weariness
4.6.2.1 Strategic Situation in late 1987
4.6.2.2 Air and Tanker War in 1987
4.6.3 1988: Iraqi offensives and the UN ceasefire
4.6.3.1 Iran's Kurdistan Operations
4.6.3.2 Second Battle of al-Faw
4.6.3.3 Operation Praying Mantis
4.6.3.4 Iranian counteroffensive
4.6.3.5 Operation Forty Stars
4.6.3.6 Tawakalna ala Allah Operations
4.6.3.7 Iran accepts the ceasefire
4.6.4 Operation Mersad and end of the war
5 Aftermath
5.1 Peace Talks and Postwar Situation
5.2 Financial situation
5.3 Science and technology
6 Home front
6.1 Iraq
6.1.1 Gaining civilian support
6.2 Iran
6.2.1 Civil unrest
6.2.2 Economy
7 Comparison of Iraqi and Iranian military strength
8 Foreign support to Iraq and Iran
8.1 Iraq
8.1.1 Financial support
8.2 Iran
8.3 Both countries
9 U.S. involvement
9.1 U.S. Embargo
9.2 Iraqi attack on U.S. warship
9.3 U.S. military actions toward Iran
9.4 U.S. shoots down civilian airliner
10 Use of chemical weapons by Iraq
11 Dissimilarities from other conflicts
12 See also
13 Notes
14 References
15 Works cited
16 External links
Terminology[edit]
The Iran–Iraq War was originally referred to as the Gulf
War until the Persian Gulf War of 1990 and 1991, after which it was referred to
as the First Persian Gulf War. The Iraq–Kuwait conflict, while originally known
as the Second Persian Gulf War, eventually became known simply as the Gulf War.
The Iraq War from 2003 to 2011 has since been called the Second Persian Gulf
War.
In Iran, the war is known as the Imposed War (جنگ تحمیلی,
Jang-e Tahmīlī) and the Holy Defense (دفاع مقدس, Defā'-e Moqaddas). In Iraq,
Saddam Hussein had initially dubbed the conflict the Whirlwind War.[42]:219 It
was also referred to as Saddām's Qādisiyyah (قادسية صدام, Qādisiyyat Ṣaddām),
in reference to the Battle of al-Qādisiyyah.
Origins[edit]
Iran–Iraq relations[edit]
Main article: Iran–Iraq relations
The Arvand Roud waterway on the Iran–Iraq border
Since the Ottoman–Persian Wars of the 16th and 17th
centuries, Iran (known as Persia prior to 1935) and the Ottomans fought over
Iraq (then known as Mesopotamia) and full control of the Arvand Roud/Shatt
al-Arab waterway until the signing of the Treaty of Zuhab in 1639 which
established the final borders between Iran and Iraq.[43]:4 The Arvand Roud was
considered an important channel for both states' oil exports, and in 1937, Iran
and the newly independent Iraq signed a treaty to settle the dispute. In the
same year, Iran and Iraq both joined the Saadabad Pact, and relations between
the two states remained good for decades afterwards.[44]
The 1937 treaty recognised the Iran–Iraq border to be
along the low-water mark on the Shatt's eastern side, except at Abadan and
Khorramshahr, where the frontier ran along the deep water line (thalweg). This
gave Iraq control of most of waterway and required Iran to pay tolls whenever
its ships used it.[44]
In 1955, both nations joined the Baghdad Pact.[44]
However, the overthrow of the Hashemites in Iraq in 1958 brought a nationalist
government to power which promptly abandoned the pact. On 18 December 1959,
Iraq's new leader, General Abdul Karim Qassim, declared: "We do not wish
to refer to the history of Arab tribes residing in al-Ahwaz and Mohammareh
[Khorramshahr]. The Ottomans handed over Mohammareh, which was part of Iraqi
territory, to Iran." The Iraqi government's dissatisfaction with Iran's
possession of the oil-rich Khuzestan province (which the Iraqis called
Arabistan) that had a large Arabic-speaking population was not limited to
rhetorical statements. Iraq began supporting secessionist movements in
Khuzestan, and raised the issue of its territorial claims at an Arab League
meeting, though unsuccessfully.[44]
Iraq showed reluctance in fulfilling existing agreements
with Iran—especially after Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser's death in
1970 and the Iraqi Ba’ath Party's rise which took power in a 1968 coup, leading
Iraq to take on the self-appointed role of "leader of the Arab
world". At the same time, by the late 1960s, the build-up of Iranian power
under Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, who had gone on a military spending spree,
led Iran to take a more assertive stance in the region.[44]
In April 1969, Iran abrogated the 1937 treaty over the
Arvand Roud, and as such, ceased paying tolls to Iraq when its ships used the
waterway.[44] The Shah justified his move by arguing that almost all river
borders around the world ran along the thalweg, and by claiming that because
most of the ships that used the waterway were Iranian, the 1937 treaty was
unfair to Iran.[45]:37 Iraq threatened war over the Iranian move, but when, on
24 April 1969, an Iranian tanker escorted by Iranian warships sailed down the
river, Iraq—being the militarily weaker state—did nothing.[44]
Iran's abrogation of the treaty marked the beginning of a
period of acute Iraqi-Iranian tension that was to last until the Algiers
Accords of 1975.[44] In 1969, Saddam Hussein, Iraq's deputy prime minister,
stated: "Iraq's dispute with Iran is in connection with Khuzestan, which
is part of Iraq's soil and was annexed to Iran during foreign rule."[46]
Soon, Iraqi radio stations began exclusively broadcasting into
"Arabistan", encouraging Arabs living in Iran and even Balūchīs to
revolt against the Shah's government.[46] Basra TV stations began showing
Iran's Khuzestan province as part of Iraq's new province Nasiriyyah, renaming
all its cities with Arabic names.
In 1971, Iraq (now under Saddam's effective rule) broke
diplomatic relations with Iran after claiming sovereignty rights over the
islands of Abu Musa, Greater Tunb, and Lesser Tunb in the Persian Gulf following
the withdrawal of the British.[47] As retaliation for Iraq's claims to
Khuzestan, Iran became the main patron of Iraq's Kurdish rebels in the early
1970s, giving the Iraqi Kurds bases in Iran and arming the Kurdish groups.[44]
In addition to Iraq fomenting separatism in Iran's Khuzestan and Balochistan
provinces, both states encouraged separatist activities by Kurdish nationalists
in the other state. From March 1974 to March 1975, Iran and Iraq fought border
wars over Iran's support of Iraqi Kurds.[44][48] In 1975, the Iraqis launched
an offensive into Iran using tanks, though the Iranians defeated them.[36]
Several other attacks took place; however, Iran had the world's fifth most
powerful military at the time and easily defeated the Iraqis with their air
force. As a result, Iraq decided against continuing the war, choosing instead
to make concessions to Tehran to end the Kurdish rebellion.[44][48]
Iranian AH-1J Sea Cobra attack helicopters, circa 1970s
In the 1975 Algiers Agreement, Iraq made territorial
concessions—including the Shatt al-Arab waterway—in exchange for normalised
relations.[44] In return for Iraq recognising that the frontier on the waterway
ran along the entire thalweg, Iran ended its support of Iraq's Kurdish
guerrillas.[44] Iraqis viewed the Algiers Agreement as humiliating.[44][49]:260
However, the agreement meant the end of Iranian and American support for the
Peshmerga, who were defeated by Iraq's government in a short campaign that
claimed 20,000 lives.[49]:298 The British journalist Patrick Brogan wrote that
"...the Iraqis celebrated their victory in the usual manner, by executing
as many of the rebels as they could lay their hands on."[49]:298
The relationship between the governments of Iran and Iraq
briefly improved in 1978, when Iranian agents in Iraq discovered plans for a
pro-Soviet coup d'état against Iraq's government. When informed of this plot,
Saddam ordered the execution of dozens of his army's officers and in a sign of
reconciliation, expelled Ruhollah Khomeini, an exiled leader of clerical
opposition to the Shah, from Iraq. Despite that, Saddam merely considered the
Algiers Agreement to be a truce, rather than a definite settlement and waited
for the opportunity to contest it.[36][50]
After the Iranian Revolution[edit]
See also: Iranian Revolution and Iranian Embassy siege
Anti-Shah protests in Iran, 1978
Iraqi 25-dinar note, as with the Battle of al-Qādisiyyah
depicted in the background
Tensions between Iraq and Iran were fueled by Iran's
Islamic revolution and its appearance of being a Pan-Islamic force, in contrast
to Iraq's Arab nationalism. Despite Iraq's goals of regaining the Shatt
al-Arab,[note 1] the Iraqi government seemed to initially welcome Iran's
Revolution, which overthrew Iran's Shah, who was seen as a common
enemy.[44][50] It is difficult to pinpoint when tensions began to build, but
there were frequent cross border skirmishes, largely at Iran's instigation.[7]
After this incident, the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini
called on Iraqis to overthrow the Ba'ath government, and it was received with
considerable anger in Baghdad.[44] On 17 July 1979, despite Khomeini's call,
Saddam gave a speech praising the Iranian Revolution and called for an
Iraqi-Iranian friendship based on non-interference in each other's internal
affairs.[44] When Khomeini rejected Saddam's overture by calling for Islamic
revolution [36] in Iraq, Saddam was alarmed.[44] Iran's new Islamic
administration was regarded in Baghdad as an irrational, existential threat to
the Ba'ath government, especially because the Ba'ath party, having a secular
nature, discriminated and posed a threat to the Shia movement in Iraq, whose
clerics were Iran's allies within Iraq and whom Khomeini saw as oppressed.[44]
However, Iraq's regime was very politically secure, and
in little danger of being overthrown by alleged plots of revolution-wracked
Iran.[36] According to some sources, Khomeini's hostility towards Saddam was
actually milder than his Arab neighbors hostility towards Saddam.[51] Saddam's
primary interest in war stemmed from his desire to right the supposed
"wrong" of the Algiers Agreement, in addition to finally achieving
his desire of annexing Khuzestan and becoming the regional superpower.[36]
Saddam's goal was to replace Egypt as the "leader of the Arab world"
and to achieve hegemony over the Persian Gulf.[52] He saw Iran's increased
weakness due to revolution, sanctions, and international isolation.[46] Saddam
had heavily invested in Iraq's military since his defeat against Iran in 1975,
buying large amounts of weaponry from the Soviet Union and France. By 1980,
Iraq possessed 200,000 soldiers, 2,000 tanks and 450 aircraft.[50]:1 Watching
the powerful Iranian army that frustrated him in 1974–1975 disintegrate, he saw
an opportunity to attack, using the threat of Islamic Revolution as a
pretext.[50][53]
A successful invasion of Iran would enlarge Iraq's
petroleum reserves and make Iraq the region's dominant power. With Iran
engulfed in chaos, an opportunity for Iraq to annex the oil-rich Khuzestan
Province materialized.[49]:261 In addition, Khuzestan's large ethnic Arab
population would allow Saddam to pose as a liberator for Arabs from Persian
rule.[49]:260 Fellow Gulf states such as Saudi Arabia and Kuwait (despite being
hostile to Iraq) encouraged Iraq to attack, as they feared that an Islamic
revolution would take place within their own borders. Certain Iranian exiles
also helped convince Saddam that if he invaded, the fledgling Islamic republic
would quickly collapse.[36]
In 1979–80, Iraq was the beneficiary of an oil boom that
saw it take in US$33 billion, which allowed Iraq's government to go on a
spending spree on both civilian and military projects.[44] On several occasions,
Saddam alluded to the Islamic conquest of Iran in promoting his position
against Iran. For example, on 2 April 1980, half a year before the war's
outbreak, in a visit to Baghdad's al-Mustansiriya University, he drew parallels
to Persia's defeat at the 7th century Battle of al-Qādisiyyah:
In your name, brothers, and on behalf of the Iraqis and
Arabs everywhere we tell those Persian cowards and dwarfs who try to avenge
al-Qadisiyah that the spirit of al-Qadisiyah as well as the blood and honor of
the people of al-Qadisiyah who carried the message on their spearheads are
greater than their attempts.[54]
[55][56]
In 1979–1980, anti-Ba'ath riots arose in the Iraq's Shia
areas by groups who were working toward an Islamic revolution in their
country.[44] Saddam and his deputies believed that the riots had been inspired
by the Iranian Revolution and instigated by Iran's government.[36] On 10 March
1980, when Iraq declared Iran's ambassador persona non-grata, and demanded his
withdrawal from Iraq by 15 March,[57] Iran replied by downgrading its
diplomatic ties to the charge d'affaires level, and demanded that Iraq withdraw
their ambassador from Iran. In April 1980, Grand Ayatollah Mohammad Baqir
al-Sadr and his sister Amina Haydar (better known as Bint al-Huda) were hanged
as part of a crackdown to restore Saddam's control. The execution of Iraq's
most senior Ayatollah caused outrage throughout the Islamic world, especially
among Shias.[44]
Iraq soon after expropriated the properties of 70,000
civilians believed to be of Iranian origin and expelled them from its
territory.[51] Many, if not most, of those expelled were in fact
Arabic-speaking Iraqi Shias who had little to no family ties with Iran.[58]
This caused tensions between the two nations to increase further.[51]
Map of Baathist Iraq's hegemonic, ideological and
territorial ambitions. Saddam Hussein wanted Iraq to be the leader of the Arab
World and the Persian Gulf
In April 1980, Shia militants assassinated 20 Ba'ath
officials, and Deputy Prime Minister Tariq Aziz was almost assassinated on 1
April;[44] Aziz survived, but 11 students were killed in the attack.[36] Three
days later, the funeral procession being held to bury the students was
bombed.[59] Iraqi Information Minister Latif Nusseif al-Jasim also barely
survived assassination by Shia militants.[44] The Shias' repeated calls for the
overthrow of the Ba'ath party and the support they allegedly received from
Iran's new government led Saddam to increasingly perceive Iran as a threat
that, if ignored, might one day overthrow him;[44] he thus used the attacks as
pretext for attacking Iran later that September,[59] though skirmishes along
the Iran–Iraq border had already become a daily event by May that year.[44]
Iraq also helped to instigate riots among Iranian Arabs
in Khuzestan province,[50] supporting them in their labor disputes,[50] and
turning uprisings into armed battles between Iran's Revolutionary Guards and
militants, killing over 100 on both sides.[clarification needed] At times, Iraq
also supported armed rebellion by the Kurdish Democratic Party of Iran in
Kurdistan.[60][61] The most notable of such events was the Iranian Embassy
siege in London, in which six armed Khuzestani Arab insurgents took the Iranian
Embassy's staff as hostages,[62][63] resulting in an armed siege that was
finally ended by Britain's Special Air Service.
According to former Iraqi general Ra'ad al-Hamdani, the
Iraqis believed that in addition to the Arab revolts, the Revolutionary Guards
would be drawn out of Tehran, leading to a counter-revolution in Iran that
would cause Khomeini's government to collapse and thus ensure Iraqi
victory.[64] However, rather than turning against the revolutionary government
as experts had predicted, Iran's people (including Iranian Arabs) rallied in
support of their country and put up a stiff resistance.[36][50][65]
Iraqi preparations[edit]
Iraq began planning offensives, confident that they would
succeed. Iran lacked both cohesive leadership and spare parts for their
American-made equipment. Iraq, on the other hand, possessed a fully equipped
and trained modern military, consisting of 190,000 men, 2,200 tanks, and 450
aircraft. The Iraqis could mobilise up to 12 mechanised divisions, and morale
was running high. Through the 1970s, Saddam had armed his forces with the most
advanced material available from the Soviet Union.[50]
In addition, the area around the Shatt al-Arab posed no
obstacle for the Iraqis, as they were armed with Soviet equipment to cross
rivers. Iraq correctly deduced that Iran's defences at the crossing points
around the Kharkeh and Karoun Rivers were undermanned and that the rivers could
be easily crossed. Iraqi intelligence was also informed that the Iranian forces
in Khuzestan (which consisted of two divisions prior to the revolution) now
only consisted of several ill-equipped battalions. Only a handful of
company-sized tank units remained operational.[50]
The only qualms the Iraqis had were over the Islamic
Republic of Iran Air Force (formerly the Imperial Iranian Air Force). Despite
the purge of several key pilots and commanders as well as the lack of spare
parts, the air force showed its power during local uprisings and rebellions.
They were also active after the failed U.S. attempt to rescue its hostages,
Operation Eagle Claw. As such, Iraq's leaders decided to carry out a surprise
airstrike against the Iranian air force's infrastructure prior to the main
invasion.[50]
Iranian preparations[edit]
In Iran, severe officer purges (including numerous
executions ordered by Sadegh Khalkhali, the new Revolutionary Court judge), and
shortages of spare parts for Iran's U.S.-made equipment had crippled Iran's
once-mighty military. Between February and September 1979, Iran's government
executed 85 senior generals and forced all major-generals and most
brigadier-generals into early retirement.[44] By September 1980, the government
had purged 12,000 army officers.[44] These purges resulted in a drastic decline
in the Iranian military's operational capacities.[44] Their regular army
(which, in 1978, was considered the world's fifth most powerful)[66] had been
badly weakened by purges and lack of spare parts. The desertion rate had
reached 60%, and the officer corps was devastated. The most highly skilled
soldiers and aviators were exiled, imprisoned, or executed. Throughout the war,
Iran never managed to fully recover from this flight of human capital.[67]
Continuous sanctions prevented Iran from acquiring many heavy weapons, such as
tanks and aircraft. When the invasion occurred, many pilots and officers were
released from prison, or had their executions commuted to combat the Iraqis. In
addition, many junior officers were promoted to generals, resulting in the army
being more integrated as a part of the regime by the war's end, as it is
today.[67] Iran still had at least 1,000 operational tanks and several hundred
functional aircraft, and could cannibalize equipment to procure spare
parts.[68]
Meanwhile, a new paramilitary organisation gained
prominence in Iran, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (often shortened to
Revolutionary Guards, and known in Iran as the Sepah-e-Pasdaran),[69] which
intended to protect the new regime and counterbalance the decaying army.
Despite having been trained as a paramilitary organisation, after the Iraqi
invasion, they were forced to act as a regular army. Initially, they refused to
fight alongside the army, which resulted in many defeats, but, by 1982, the two
groups began carrying out combined operations.[68] Another paramilitary militia
was founded in response to the invasion, the "Army of 20 Million",
commonly known as the Basij.[70] The Basij were poorly armed and had members as
young as 12 and as old as 70. They often acted in conjunction with the
Revolutionary Guard, launching so-called human wave attacks and other campaigns
against the Iraqis.[70] They were subordinate to the Revolutionary Guards, and
they made up most of the manpower that was used in the Revolutionary Guard's
attacks.[36]
Border conflicts leading to war[edit]
By September, skirmishes between Iran and Iraq were
increasing in number. Iraq began to grow bolder, both shelling and launching
border incursions in disputed territories.[36] Iran responded by shelling
several Iraqi border towns and posts, though this did little to alter the
situation on the ground. By 10 September, Saddam declared that the Iraqi Army
had "liberated" all disputed territories within Iran.[36] With the
conclusion of the "liberating operations", on 17 September, in a
statement addressed to Iraq's parliament, Saddam stated:
The frequent and blatant Iranian violations of Iraqi
sovereignty...have rendered the 1975 Algiers Agreement null and void... This
river [Shatt al-Arab]...must have its Iraqi-Arab identity restored as it was
throughout history in name and in reality with all the disposal rights
emanating from full sovereignty over the river...We in no way wish to launch
war against Iran.[36]
An armed Iranian militia woman in front of a mosque
during the Iraqi invasion of Khorramshahr, September–October 1980
Despite Saddam's claim that Iraq did not want war with
Iran, the next day his forces proceeded to attack Iranian border posts in
preparation for the planned invasion.[36] Iraq's 7th Mechanised and 4th
Infantry Divisions attacked the Iranian border posts leading to the cities of
Fakkeh and Bostan, opening the route for future armoured thrusts into Iran. Weakened
by internal chaos, Iran was unable to repel the attacks; which in turn led to
Iraq becoming more confident in its military edge over Iran and prompting them
to believe in a quick victory.[36]
Geographic analysis[edit]
The mountainous border between Iran and Iraq made a deep
ground invasion almost impossible,[71] and air strikes were used instead. The
invasion's first waves were a series of air strikes targeted at Iranian
airfields. Iraq also attempted to bomb Tehran, Iran's capital and command
centre, into submission.[44][72]
Course of the war[edit]
1980: Iraqi invasion[edit]
Location of Khūzestān Province in Iran
Main articles: Operation Kaman 99, Operation Scorch Sword
and Operation Sultan 10
Destroyed Iranian C-47 Skytrain
Iraq launched a full-scale invasion of Iran on 22
September 1980. The Iraqi Air Force launched surprise air strikes on ten
Iranian airfields with the objective of destroying the Iranian Air Force.[44]
The attack damaged some of Iran's airbase infrastructure, but failed to destroy
a significant number of aircraft: the Iraqi Air Force was only able to strike
in depth with a few MiG-23BN, Tu-22, and Su-20 aircraft. Three MiG-23s managed
to attack Tehran, striking its airport but destroyed only a few aircraft.[72]
Buildings destroyed by battle in the Iranian city of
Abadan
The next day, Iraq launched a ground invasion of Iran
along a front measuring 644 km (400 mi) in three simultaneous attacks.[44] The
invasion's purpose, according to Saddam, was to blunt the edge of Khomeini's
movement and to thwart his attempts to export his Islamic revolution to Iraq
and the Persian Gulf states.[59] Saddam hoped that by annexing Khuzestan, he
would send such a blow to Iran's prestige that it would lead to the new
government's downfall, or, at very least, end Iran's calls for his
overthrow.[44]
Of Iraq's six divisions that were invading by ground,
four were sent to Khuzestan, which was located near the border's southern end,
to cut off the Arvand Roud[note 1] from the rest of Iran and to establish a
territorial security zone.[44]:22 The other two divisions invaded across the
northern and central part of the border to prevent an Iranian
counter-attack.[44] Two of the four Iraqi divisions, one mechanised and one
armoured, operated near the southern end and began a siege of the strategically
important port cities of Abadan and Khorramshahr.[44]:22
The other two divisions, both armoured, secured the
territory bounded by the cities of Khorramshahr, Ahvaz, Susangerd, and
Musian.[44]:22 On the central front, the Iraqis occupied Mehran, advanced
towards the foothills of the Zagros Mountains, and were able to block the
traditional Tehran–Baghdad invasion route by securing territory forward of
Qasr-e Shirin, Iran.[44]:23 On the northern front, the Iraqis attempted to
establish a strong defensive position opposite Suleimaniya to protect the Iraqi
Kirkuk oil complex.[44]:23 Iraqi hopes of an uprising by the ethnic Arabs of
Khuzestan failed to materialise, as most of the ethnic Arabs remained loyal to
Iran.[44] The Iraqi troops advancing into Iran in 1980 were described by
Patrick Brogan as "badly led and lacking in offensive
spirit".[49]:261 The first known chemical weapons attack by Iraq on Iran
probably took place during the fighting around Susangerd.[73]
Though the Iraqi air invasion surprised the Iranians, the
Iranian air force retaliated with an attack against Iraqi military bases and
infrastructure in Operation Kaman 99 (Bow 99). Groups of F-4 Phantom and F-5
Tiger fighter jets attacked targets throughout Iraq, such as oil facilities,
dams, petrochemical plants, and oil refineries, and included Mosul Airbase,
Baghdad, and the Kirkuk oil refinery. Iraq was taken by surprise at the
strength of the retaliation, as Iran took few losses while the Iraqis took
heavy defeats and economic disruptions.
The Iranian force of AH-1 Cobra helicopter gunships began
attacks on the advancing Iraqi divisions, along with F-4 Phantoms armed with
Maverick missiles;[36] they destroyed numerous armoured vehicles and impeded
the Iraqi advance, though not completely halting it.[74][75] Iran had
discovered that a group of two or three low-flying F-4 Phantoms could hit
targets almost anywhere in Iraq.[50] Meanwhile, Iraqi air attacks on Iran were
repulsed by Iran's F-14 Tomcat interceptor fighter jets, using Phoenix
missiles, which downed a dozen of Iraq's Soviet-built fighters in the first two
days of battle.[74][dubious – discuss]
The Iranian regular military, police forces, volunteer
Basij, and Revolutionary Guards all conducted their operations separately;
thus, the Iraqi invading forces did not face coordinated resistance.[44]
However, on 24 September, the Iranian Navy attacked Basra, Iraq, destroying two
oil terminals near the Iraqi port Faw, which reduced Iraq's ability to export
oil.[44] The Iranian ground forces (primarily consisting of the Revolutionary
Guard) retreated to the cities, where they set up defences against the
invaders.[76]
On 30 September, Iran's air force launched Operation
Scorch Sword, striking and badly damaging the Osirak nuclear reactor near
Baghdad.[44]
Iranian soldier in Khorramshahr
By 1 October, Baghdad had been subjected to eight air
attacks.[44]:29 In response, Iraq launched aerial strikes against Iranian
targets.[44][74]
First Battle of Khorramshahr[edit]
Main article: Battle of Khorramshahr
On 22 September, a prolonged battle began in the city of
Khorramshahr, eventually leaving 7,000 dead on each side.[44] Reflecting the
bloody nature of the struggle, Iranians came to call Khorramshahr "City of
Blood" (خونین شهر, Khunin shahr).[44]
The battle began with Iraqi air raids against key points
and mechanised divisions advancing on the city in a crescent-like formation.
They were slowed by Iranian air attacks and Revolutionary Guard troops with
recoilless rifles, rocket-propelled grenades, and Molotov cocktails.[77] The
Iranians flooded the marsh areas around the city, forcing the Iraqis to
traverse through narrow strips of land.[77] Iraqi tanks launched attacks with
no infantry support, and many tanks were lost to Iranian anti-tank teams.[77]
However, by 30 September, the Iraqis had managed to clear the Iranians from the
outskirts of the city. The next day, the Iraqis launched infantry and armoured
attacks into the city. After heavy house-to-house fighting, the Iraqis were
repelled. On 14 October, the Iraqis launched a second offensive. The Iranians
launched a controlled withdrawal from the city, street by street.[77] By 24
October, most of the city was captured, and the Iranians evacuated across the
Karun River. Some partisans remained, and fighting continued until 10 November.
Iranian journalists exit by jumping from an IRI Army
Aviation Bell 214 helicopter in the Western front (Kermanshah and neighbouring
provinces) of the Iran-Iraq War.
Iraqi advance stalls[edit]
Main articles: Siege of Abadan and Operation Morvarid
The people of Iran, rather than turning against their
still-weak Islamic Republic, rallied around their country to resist invasion.
An estimated 200,000 fresh troops had arrived at the front by November, many of
them ideologically committed volunteers.[65]
Ayatullah Rohullah Khamenei |
Though Khorramshahr was finally captured, the battle had
delayed the Iraqis enough to allow the large-scale deployment of the Iranian
military.[44] In November, Saddam ordered his forces to advance towards Dezful
and Ahvaz, and lay sieges to both cities. However, the Iraqi offensive had been
badly damaged by Iranian militias and air power. Iran's air force had destroyed
Iraq's army supply depots and fuel supplies, and was strangling the country
through an aerial siege.[74] On the other hand, Iran's supplies had not been
exhausted, despite sanctions, and they often cannibalised spare parts from
other equipment and began searching for more parts on the black market. On 28
November, Iran launched Operation Morvarid (Pearl), a combined air and sea
attack which destroyed 80% of Iraq's navy and all of their radar sites in the
southern portion of the country. When Iraq laid siege to Abadan and dug their
troops in around the city, they were unable to blockade the port, which allowed
Iran to resupply Abadan by sea.[78]
Iraq's strategic reserves had been depleted, and by now
they lacked the power to go on any major offensives until nearly the end of the
war.[44] On 7 December, Hussein announced that Iraq was going on the
defensive.[44] By the end of 1980 the Iraqis had destroyed about 500 of
Western-built Iranian tanks and captured 100 others.[79][80]
For the next eight months, both sides were to be on a
defensive footing (with the exception of the Battle of Dezful), as the Iranians
needed more time to reorganise their forces and the damage inflicted by the
purge of 1979–80.[44] During this period, fighting consisted mainly of
artillery duels and raids.[44] Iraq had mobilised 21 divisions for the
invasion, while Iran countered with only 13 regular army divisions and one
brigade. Of the regular divisions, only seven were deployed to the border. The
war bogged down into World War I-style trench warfare with tanks and modern
late-20th century weapons. Due to the power of anti-tank weapons such as the
RPG-7, armored maneuver by the Iraqis was very costly, and they consequently
entrenched their tanks into static positions.[36][68]
Iraq also began firing Scud missiles into the cities of
Dezful and Ahvaz and used terror bombing to bring the war to the Iranian
civilian population.[78] Iran launched dozens of human wave assaults.
1981: Stalemate[edit]
Battle of Dezful[edit]
Main article: Battle of Dezful
On 5 January 1981, Iran had reorganised its forces enough
to launch a large-scale offensive, Operation Nasr (Victory).[77][81][82] The
Iranians launched their major armoured offensive from Dezful in the direction
of Susangerd, consisting of the 16th Qazvin and the 77th Khorasan armoured
divisions,[82] and broke through Iraqi lines.[44]:32 However, the Iranian tanks
had raced through Iraqi lines with their flanks unprotected and with no
infantry support;[36] as a result, they were cut off by Iraqi tanks.[44] In the
ensuing Battle of Dezful, the Iranian division was nearly wiped out in one of
the biggest tank battles of the war.[44] When the Iranian tanks tried to
manoeuvre, they became stuck in the mud of the marshes, and many tanks were
abandoned.[77] The Iraqis lost 45 T-62 tanks, while the Iranians lost 100-200
Chieftain and M-60 tanks. Reporters counted roughly 150 destroyed or deserted
Iranian tanks, and also 40 Iraqi tanks.[44] 141 Iranians were killed during
this battle.[82]
The battle had been ordered by Iranian president
Abulhassan Banisadr, who was hoping that a victory might shore up his deteriorating
political position; instead, the failure hastened his fall.[44]:71 Many of
Iran's problems took place because of political infighting between President
Banisadr, who supported the regular army, and the hardliners who supported the
IRGC. Once he was impeached and the competition ended, the performance of the
Iranian military improved. Iran was further distracted by internal fighting
between the regime and the Islamic Marxist Mujaheddin e-Khalq (MEK) on the
streets of Iran's major cities in June 1981 and again in September.[49]:250–251
After the end of these battles, the MEK gradually leaned towards Saddam
Hussein, completely taking his side by the mid-1980s.[clarification needed] The
Battle of Dezful became a critical battle in Iranian military thinking. Less
emphasis was placed on the Army with its conventional tactics, and more
emphasis was placed on the Revolutionary Guard with its unconventional
tactics.[77][83]
Attack formation of six Iranian F-4 Phantoms during the
airstrike on Iraqi Kirkuk Refinery
Attack on H3[edit]
Main article: Attack on H3
The Iraqi Air Force, badly damaged by the Iranians, was
moved to the H-3 Airbase in Western Iraq, near the Jordanian border and away
from Iran. However, on 3 April 1981, the Iranian air force used eight F-4
Phantom fighter bombers, four F-14 Tomcats, three Boeing 707 refuelling
tankers, and one Boeing 747 command plane to launch a surprise attack on H3,
destroying 27–50 Iraqi fighter jets.[84]
Despite the successful H-3 airbase attack (in addition to
other air attacks), in April, the Iranian Air Force was forced to cancel its
successful 180-day air offensive against Iraq. In addition, they gave up trying
to hold total control of Iranian airspace. Due to the heavy toll of sanctions
and pre-war purges, the Iranian air force could not suffer further heavy
attrition, and made the decision in order to limit their losses. They were also
damaged by a fresh purge, after the impeachment crisis of President
Banisadr.[85] The Iranian air force would fight heavily on the defensive,
trying to hold back the Iraqis rather than engaging them. While throughout
1981–1982 the Iraqi air force would remain weak, within the next few years they
would rearm and expand again, and begin to regain the strategic initiative.[86]
Iran introduces the human wave attack[edit]
Iranian woman ties headband around combatant's head
before he leaves for the front
Since the Iranians suffered from a shortage of heavy
weapons[68]:225 but had a large number of devoted volunteer troops, they began
using human wave attacks against the Iraqis. Typically, an Iranian assault
would consist of the following: First, the poorly trained Basij would launch
the primary human wave assaults to swamp the weakest portions of the Iraqi
lines en masse (on some occasions even bodily clearing minefields).[68][87]
They would be followed up by the more experienced Revolutionary Guard infantry,
who would breach the weakened Iraqi lines.[68][76] Afterwards, the regular army
using mechanized forces would maneuver through the breach and encircle and
defeat the enemy.[68][77]
According to historian Stephen C. Pelletiére, the idea of
Iranian "human wave attacks" were a misconception. Instead, the
Iranian tactics consisted of using groups of 22 man infantry squads which moved
forward to attack specific objectives. As the squads surged forward to execute
their missions, that gave the impression of a "human wave attack".
Nevertheless, the idea of "human wave attacks" remained virtually
synonymous with any large-scale infantry frontal assault Iran carried out.[88]
Large amounts of troops would be used, aimed at overwhelming the Iraqi lines
(usually the weakest portion manned by the Iraqi Popular Army) regardless of
losses.[68]
According to the former Iraqi general Ra'ad al-Hamdani,
the Iranian human waves charges consisted of armed "civilians" who
carried most of their necessary equipment themselves into battle and often
lacked command and control and logistics.[64] However, Iranian tactics also
were sophisticated as well.[68][76] Operations were often carried out during
the night, and deception operations, infiltrations, and maneuvers became more
common.[78]
The Iranians attempted to add the element of surprise to
most of their attacks, differing them from those in World War I.[36] During
1982, Iran used the same marshes that proved fatal to their tank forces during
the Battle of Dezful to infiltrate to the rear of the Iraqi lines.[76] The
Iranians would reinforce the infiltrating forces with new units to keep up
their momentum. Once a weak point was found, the Iranians would concentrate all
of their forces into that area in an attempt to break through with human waves
attacks.[64]
The human wave attacks, while extremely bloody (tens of
thousands of troops died in the process),[87] when used in combination with
infiltration and surprise caused major Iraqi defeats. As the Iraqis would dig
in their tanks and infantry into static, entrenched positions, the Iranians
would manage to break through the lines and encircle entire divisions.[68]
Merely the fact that the Iranian forces used maneuver warfare using their light
infantry against static Iraqi defenses was often the decisive factor in the
battle.[76] However, lack of coordination between the Army and IRGC and
shortages of heavy weaponry did play a detrimental role, with most of the
infantry not supported by artillery and armor.[68][76]
Triumphant Iranian soldiers atop captured Iraqi vehicle
Operation Eighth Imam[edit]
Main article: Operation Eighth Imam
For about a year after the Iraqi offensive stalled in
March 1981, there was little change in the front other than Iran retaking the
high ground above Susangerd in May. However, by late 1981, Iran returned to the
offensive and the Iraqi military was forced to retreat. Iran launched a new
operation, Operation Samen-ol-A'emeh (The Eighth Imam),[89] ending the Iraqi
Siege of Abadan on 27–29 September 1981.[44]:9 The Iranians used a combined
force of regular army artillery with small groups of armor, supported by
Pasdaran and Basij infantry.[85] Iranians lost 150 M-48A tanks on September
29.[90] On October 15, after the end of the siege, a large Iranian convoy was
ambushed by Iraqi tanks. During tank battle between T-55s tanks and Chieftains,
Iranians lost 20 Chieftains and other armored vehicles and withdrew.[91]
Operation Tariq al-Qods[edit]
Main article: Operation Tariq al-Qods
By the fall of 1981, serious problems with morale had
developed in the Iraqi Army, with many soldiers seeing no point to the
invasion.[44]
On 29 November 1981, Iran began Operation Tariq al-Qods
with three army brigades and seven Revolutionary Guard brigades. The Iraqis
failed to properly patrol their occupied areas, and the Iranians constructed a
14 km (14,000 m) road through the unguarded sand dunes, infiltrating in and
launching their attack from the Iraqi rear.[77] The battle saw the town of
Bostan being retaken from Iraqi divisions by 7 December.[44]:10 Operation Tariq
al-Qods also saw the first use of the Iranian "human wave" tactics,
where the Revolutionary Guard light infantry charged at Iraqi positions
repeatedly, oftentimes without the support of armour or air power.[44] The fall
of Bostan exacerbated the Iraqis' logistical problems, forcing them to use a
roundabout route from Ahvaz far to the south to resupply its troops.[44] 6,000
Iranians and over 2,000 Iraqis were killed in the operation.[44]
1982: Iraqi retreat, Iranian offensive[edit]
Iraqi prisoners of war at Khorramshahr
The Iraqis, realising that the Iranians were planning to
attack, decided to preempt them with Operation al-Fawz al-'Azim (Supreme
Success)[92] on 19 March. Using a large number of tanks, helicopters, and
fighter jets, they attacked the Iranian buildup around the Roghabiyeh pass.
Though Saddam and his generals assumed they had succeeded, in reality the
Iranian forces remained fully intact.[36] The Iranians had concentrated much of
their forces by bringing them directly from the cities and towns throughout Iran
via trains, buses, and private cars. The concentration of forces did not
resemble a traditional military buildup, and although the Iraqis detected a
population buildup near the front, they failed to realise that this was an
attacking force.[64] As a result, Saddam's army was unprepared for the Iranian
offensives to come.[36]
Operation Undeniable Victory[edit]
Main article: Operation Undeniable Victory
Iran's next major offensive, led by General Ali Sayad
Shirazi, was Operation Fath-ol-Mobeen (Undeniable Victory). On 22 March 1982,
Iran launched an attack which took the Iraqi forces by surprise: using Chinook
helicopters, they landed behind Iraqi lines, silenced their artillery, and
captured an Iraqi headquarter.[36] The Iranian Basij then launched human wave
attacks, consisting of 1,000 fighters per wave. Though they took heavy losses,
they eventually broke through Iraqi lines.
Iraqi T-62 tank wreckage in Khuzestan province, Iran
The Revolutionary Guard and regular army followed up by
surrounding the Iraqi 9th and 10th Armoured and 1st Mechanised divisions that
had camped close to the Iranian town of Shush. The Iraqis launched a
counter-attack using their 12th Armoured division to break the encirclement and
rescue the surrounded divisions. Iraqi tanks came under attack by 95 Iranian
F-4 Phantom and F-5 Tiger fighter jets, effectively destroying the entire
division.[93]
Operation Undeniable Victory ended decisively in Iran's
favour, and Iraqi forces were driven away from, Shush, Dezful and Ahvaz. The
Iranian armed forces destroyed almost 320-400 Iraqi tanks and armored vehicles
in combat. But the price they paid for it was high. In just the first day of
the battle the Iranians lost 196 tanks.[36] By this time, most of the Khuzestan
province had returned to Iran's hands.[44]
Operation Beit ol-Moqaddas[edit]
Main article: Operation Beit ol-Moqaddas
In preparation for Operation Beit ol-Moqaddas, the
Iranians had launched numerous air raids against Iraq air bases, destroying 47
jets (including Iraq's brand new Mirage F-1 fighter jets from France); this
gave the Iranians air superiority over the battlefield while allowing them to
monitor Iraqi troop movements.[36]
On 29 April, Iran launched the offensive. 70,000
Revolutionary Guard and Basij members struck on several axes – Bostan,
Susangerd, the west bank of the Karun River, and Ahvaz. The Basij launched
human wave attacks, which were followed up by the regular army and
Revolutionary Guard support along with tanks and helicopters.[36] Under heavy
Iranian pressure, the Iraqi forces retreated. By 12 May, Iran had driven out
all Iraqi forces from the Susangerd area.[44]:36 The Iranians captured several
thousand Iraqi troops and a large number of tanks.[36] Nevertheless, the
Iranians took many losses as well, especially among the Basij.
The Iraqis retreated to the Karun River, with only
Khorramshahr and a few outlying areas remaining in their possession.[68] Saddam
ordered 70,000 troops to be placed around the city of Khorramshahr. The Iraqis
created a hastily constructed defence line around the city and outlying
areas.[36] To discourage airborne commando landings, the Iraqis also placed
metal spikes and destroyed cars in areas likely to be used as troop landing
zones. Saddam Hussein even visited Khorramshahr in a dramatic gesture, swearing
that the city would never be relinquished.[36] However, Khorramshahr's only
resupply point was across the Arvand Roud,[note 1] and the Iranian air force
began bombing the supply bridges to the city, while their artillery zeroed in on
the besieged garrison.
Liberation of Khorramshahr (Second Battle of
Khorramshahr)[edit]
Main article: Liberation of Khorramshahr
An admonitory declaration issued from the Iraqi
government in order to warn Iranian troops in the Iran-Iraq war. The statement
says: «Hey Iranians! No one has been downtrodden in the country where Ali ibn
Abi Ṭālib, Husayn ibn Ali and Abbas ibn Ali are buried. Iraq has undoubtedly
been honorable country. All refugee should be precious. Everybody who wants to
live in exile can choose Iraq freely. We Iraq's sons have been ambushing to
foreign aggressors. The enemies who plan to assault to Iraq are going to be
disfavored with God in this world and eternity universe. Be careful to think to
attack to Iraq and Ali ibn Abi Ṭālib! If you surrender you will be in peace.»
In the early morning hours of 23 May 1982 the Iranians
began the drive towards Khorramshahr across the Karun River.[44] This part of
Operation Beit ol-Moqaddas was spearheaded by the 77th Khorasan division with
tanks along with the Revolutionary Guard and Basij. The Iranians hit the Iraqis
with destructive air strikes and massive artillery barrages, crossed the Karun
River, captured bridgeheads, and launched human waves attacks towards the city.
Saddam's defensive barricade collapsed;[36] in less than 48 hours of fighting,
the city fell and 19,000 Iraqis surrendered to the Iranians. A total of 10,000
Iraqis were killed or wounded in Khorramshahr, while the Iranians suffered
30,000 casualties.[94] During the whole of Operation Beit ol-Moqaddas, 33,000
Iraqi soldiers were taken prisoner by the Iranians.[36]
State of Iraqi armed forces[edit]
Iraqi Mirage F1-EQ pilots prior to a mission
The fighting had battered the Iraqi military: its
strength fell from 210,000 to 150,000 troops; over 20,000 Iraqi soldiers were
killed and over 30,000 captured; two out of four active armoured divisions and
at least three mechanised divisions fell to less than a brigade's strength; and
the Iranians had captured over 450 tanks and armoured personnel carriers.[95]
The Iraqi Air Force was also left in poor shape: after
losing up to 55 aircraft since early December 1981, they had only 100 intact
fighter-bombers and interceptors. A defector who flew his MiG-21 to Syria in
June 1982 revealed that the Iraqi Air Force had only three squadrons of
fighter-bombers left that were capable of mounting offensive operations into
Iran. The Iraqi Army Air Corps was in slightly better shape, and could still
operate more than 70 helicopters.[95] Despite that, the Iraqis still held 3,000
tanks, while Iran held 1,000.[36]
At this point, Saddam believed that his army was too
demoralised and damaged to hold onto Khuzestan and major swaths of territory in
Iran, and withdrew his remaining armed forces from those areas. He redeployed
them along the border between Iraq and Iran as a means of defence.[44] However,
his troops continued to occupy some key border areas of Iran, and continued to
hold onto the disputed territories that prompted his invasion, including the
Shatt al-Arab waterway which was the primary cause of the war.[36][51] In
response to their failures against the Iranians in Khorramshahr, Saddam ordered
the executions of General Juwad Shitnah, General Salah al-Qadhi, and Colonel
Masa abd al-Jalil.[64] At least a dozen high-ranking officers were also
executed during this time.[85] This became increasingly common punishment for
those who failed him in battle.[64]
International response in 1982[edit]
In April 1982, the rival Baathist regime in Syria, one of
the few nations that supported Iran, closed the Kirkuk–Banias pipeline that had
allowed Iraqi oil to reach tankers on the Mediterranean, reducing the Iraqi
budget by US$5 billion per month.[44] Journalist Patrick Brogan wrote, "It
appeared for a while that Iraq would be strangled economically before it was
defeated militarily."[49]:263 Syria's closure of the Kirkuk-Banis pipeline
left Iraq with the pipeline to Turkey as the only mean of exporting oil.
However, that pipeline had a capacity of only 500,000 barrels per day (79,000
m3/d), which was insufficient to pay for the war.[45]:160 However, Saudi
Arabia, Kuwait, and the other Gulf states saved Iraq from bankruptcy[44] by providing
it with an average of $60 billion in subsidies per year.[49]:263[clarification
needed] Though Iraq had previously been hostile towards other Gulf states,
"the threat of Persian fundamentalism was far more
feared."[45]:162–163[49]:263 They were especially inclined to fear Iranian
victory after Ayatollah Khomeini declared monarchies to be illegitimate and an
un-Islamic form of government.[44] Khomeini's statement was widely received as
a call to overthrow the Gulf monarchies.[44] Journalists John Bulloch and
Harvey Morris wrote:
The virulent Iranian campaign, which at its peak seemed
to be making the overthrow of the Saudi regime a war aim on a par with the
defeat of Iraq, did have an effect on the Kingdom [of Saudi Arabia], but not
the one the Iranians wanted: instead of becoming more conciliatory, the Saudis
became tougher, more self-confident, and less prone to seek compromise.[45]:163
Saudi Arabia was said to provide Iraq with $1 billion per
month starting mid-1982.[45]:160
Iraq began receiving support from the United States and
west European countries as well. Saddam Hussein was given diplomatic, monetary,
and military support by the U.S., including massive loans, political clout, and
intelligence on Iranian deployments gathered using American spy satellites,
which allowed them to coordinate attacks against the Iranians.[41] The Iraqis
relied heavily on American satellite footage and radar planes to detect Iranian
troop movements, and they enabled Iraq to move troops to the site before the
battle.[96]
With Iranian success on the battlefield, the U.S. made
its backing of Iraq more pronounced, supplying intelligence, economic aid, and
dual-use equipment and vehicles, as well as normalizing their intergovernmental
relations (which had been broken during the 1967 Six-Day War).[41] President
Ronald Reagan decided that the United States "could not afford to allow
Iraq to lose the war to Iran", and that the United States "would do
whatever was necessary to prevent Iraq from losing the war with Iran".[97]
President Reagan formalised this policy by issuing a National Security Decision
Directive to this effect in June 1982.
In 1982, Reagan removed Iraq from the list of countries
"supporting terrorism" and sold weapons such as howitzers to Iraq via
Jordan and Israel.[41] France sold Iraq millions of dollars worth of weapons,
including Gazelle helicopters, Mirage F-1 fighters, and Exocet missiles. Both
the United States and West Germany sold Iraq dual-use pesticides and poisons
that would be used to create chemical[41] and other weapons, such as Roland
missiles.
At the same time, the Soviet Union, angered with Iran for
purging and destroying the Tudeh Party (Iran's national communist party), sent
large shipments of weapons to Iraq. The Iraqi Air Force was rearmed with Soviet
and French fighter jets and helicopters. Iraq also bought weapons such as
AK-47s and rocket-propelled grenades from the Chinese. The depleted tank forces
were replenished with Soviet tanks, and the Iraqis were rearmed in the face of
renewed Iranian attacks. Iran was portrayed as the aggressor, and would be seen
as such until the 1990–1991 Persian Gulf War, when Iraq would be condemned.
Iran was unable to get very many new weapons, though they
did gain some from China, North Korea, and Libya.[citation needed] There were
also clandestine purchases from certain elements within Israel and the United
States, who also bought small arms from China, via North Korea.[citation
needed]
Ceasefire proposal[edit]
95,000 Iranian child soldiers were made casualties during
the Iran–Iraq War, mostly between the ages of 16-17, but a few even younger
than that.[98][99]
On 20 June 1982 Saddam announced that he wanted to sue
for peace and proposed an immediate ceasefire. Khomeini rejected the Iraqi
peace offer because an immediate ceasefire would mean that Iraqi troops would
remain on Iran's borders in the disputed territory.[51] He proclaimed that Iran
would invade Iraq and would not stop until the Ba'ath regime was replaced by an
Islamic republic (or at least until Iraq withdrew from the disputed
territories).[44][51] Iran supported a government in exile for Iraq, the
Supreme Council of the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, led by exiled Iraqi cleric
Mohammad Baqer al-Hakim, was dedicated to overthrowing the Ba'ath party. They
recruited dissidents, exiles, and Shias to join the Badr Brigade, the military
wing of the organisation.[36]
The decision to invade Iraq was taken after much debate
within the Iranian government.[44] One faction, comprising Prime Minister
Mir-Hossein Mousavi, Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Velayati, President Ali
Khamenei, and Army Chief of Staff General Ali Sayad Shirazi, wanted to accept
the ceasefire, as most of Iranian soil had been recaptured.[44] In particular,
General Shirazi was opposed to the invasion of Iraq on logistical grounds, and
stated he would consider resigning if "unqualified people continued to meddle
with the conduct of the war."[44]:38 Of the opposing view was a hardline
faction led by the clerics on the Supreme Defence Council, whose leader was the
politically powerful speaker of the Majlis, Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani.[44]
The most important factor for continuing the war (as
Rafsanjani argued) was that despite Iran having foiled Iraq's major territorial
ambitions, they still held nearly 3,000 square miles of Iranian territory,
areas such as Shalamcheh, Mehran, the Naft Shahr oil fields, and many of the
pre-war disputed areas (ex. Shatt al-Arab).[36][51] In the event of an
immediate ceasefire, the Iraqis would remain in those territories and the fear
was they wouldn't relinquish those areas, but instead reinforce them for a
future invasion.[51] Iran understood that it was internationally isolated and
unlikely to receive foreign support to pressure Iraq to withdraw, nor receive
compensation, nor get an international condemnation of Iraq, making it unlikely
that they could gain an advantageous peace unless they scored a major military
victory.[51] While western sources often believe that because Saddam's
ceasefire plea of 1982 served as a basis for the 1988 ceasefire, they blame
Khomeini's decision for extending the war for the next six years;[45]:11,147
Iranian sources point out that Saddam's ceasefire plea would have Iraqi troops
occupying Iran's border areas and Iran would receive no compensation, nor would
Iraq be found guilty for starting the war, while the 1988 UN ceasefire ordered
a return to the pre-war borders, and allowed a commission to determine war
guilt and compensation, meaning that continuing the war was advantageous for
Iran after all (although very bloody and costly).[51]
While many officials wanted to fight the war until total
victory, according to a 2003 interview with Rafsanjani (the architect of Iran's
strategy against Iraq), Iran's main strategy was to occupy key portions of
Iraqi territory to use as bargaining chips to force a diplomatic and political
solution to the war (possibly in an international court), primarily getting
Iraq to withdraw from the remaining areas of Iranian territory and to accept
Iranian rights, have Iraq recognized as the aggressor, and pay
compensation.[51] The areas Rafsanjani had in mind were the Al-Faw Peninsula
and the major port of Umm Qasr (cutting Iraq off from the sea), isolating and
capturing Basra (the second largest city of Iraq), and capturing part of the
Tigris River and Highway 8 (Baghdad-Basra Highway), which would effectively
split Iraq in two and sever the Iraqi government from their main oil fields in
the south. They also wanted to capture Darbandikhan Dam in northern Iraq, which
supplied most of Iraq's water.[51] They also hoped that their attacks would
ignite a revolt against Saddam's rule by the Shia and Kurdish population of
Iraq, possibly resulting in his downfall (or at least forcing him to the
negotiation table). They were successful in doing so with the Kurdish
population, but not the Shia.[36] Iran had captured large quantities of Iraqi
equipment (enough to create several tank battalions, Iran once again had 1,000
tanks) and also managed to clandestinely procure spare parts as well.[68]
At a cabinet meeting in Baghdad, Minister of Health
Riyadh Ibrahim Hussein suggested that Saddam could step down temporarily as a
way of easing Iran towards a ceasefire, and then afterwards would come back to
power.[45]:147 Saddam, annoyed, asked if anyone else in the Cabinet agreed with
the Health Minister's idea. When no one raised their hand in support, he
escorted Riyadh Hussein to the next room, closed the door and shot him with his
pistol.[45]:147 Saddam returned to the room and continued with his meeting.
Iran invades Iraq[edit]
Iraqi tactics against Iranian invasion[edit]
For most part, Iraq remained on the defensive for the
next six years of war, unable and unwilling to launch any major offensives,
while Iran launched over 60 offensives against the Iraqis. Iraq's strategy
changed from holding territory in Iran to denying Iran any major gains in Iraq
(as well as holding onto disputed territories and Iran's border areas).[50]
Saddam commenced a policy of total war, gearing most of his country towards
defending against Iran. By 1988, Iraq was spending 40–75% of their GDP on
military equipment.[100] Saddam had also more than doubled the size of the
Iraqi army, from 200,000 soldiers (12 divisions and 3 independent brigades) to
500,000 (23 divisions and nine brigades).[44] They also began launching air
raids against Iranian border cities, greatly increasing the practice by 1984.
By the end of 1982, Iraq had been resupplied with new Soviet material, and the
ground war entered a new phase. Iraq used newly acquired T-55, T-62 and T-72
tanks, BM-21 truck-mounted rocket launchers, and Mi-24 helicopter gunships to
prepare a Soviet-type three-line defence, replete with obstacles, minefields,
and fortified positions. The Combat Engineer Corps built bridges across water
obstacles, laid minefields, and prepared new defence lines and
fortifications.[50]:2
Iraq began to focus on using defense in depth to defeat
the Iranians.[68] Iraq created multiple static defense lines to bleed the
Iranians through sheer size.[68] When faced against large Iranian attack, where
human waves would overrun Iraq's entrenched infantry defences, the Iraqis would
often retreat, but their static defences would bleed the Iranians and channel
them into certain directions, drawing them into a trap. Afterwards, Iraqi air
and artillery attacks would pin the Iranians down, while tanks and mechanised
infantry attacks using mobile warfare would push them back.[96] Sometimes, the
Iraqis would launch "probing attacks" into the Iranian lines to
provoke them into launching their attacks sooner. Chemical weapons were used as
well,[95][not in citation given] and were a major source of Iranian infantry
casualties. While Iranian human wave attacks were successful against the dug in
Iraqi forces in Khuzestan, they had trouble breaking through Iraq's defense in
depth lines.[36] Iraq had a logistical advantage in their defence: the front
was located near the main Iraqi bases and arms depots, allowing their army to
be efficiently supplied.[49]:260,265 By contrast, the front in Iran was a
considerable distance away from the main Iranian bases and arms depots, and as such,
Iranian troops and supplies had to travel through roads across mountain ranges
before arriving at the front.[49]:260
Column of Iranian T-55 tanks
In addition, Iran's military power was weakened once
again by large purges in 1982, resulting from another supposedly attempted
coup.[101]
Wreckage of Iranian F-4 Phantom II at Iraqi Air Base
Operation Ramadan (First Battle of Basra)[edit]
Main article: Operation Ramadan
The Iranian generals wanted to launch an all-out attack
on Baghdad and seize it before the weapon shortages continued to manifest
further. Instead, that was rejected as being unfeasable,[51] and the decision
was made to capture one area of Iraq after the other in the hopes that a series
of blows delivered foremost by the Revolutionary Guards Corps would force a
political solution to the war (including Iraq withdrawing completely from
disputed territories of Iran).[51]
The Iranians planned their attack in southern Iraq, near
Basra, the second most important city in Iraq.[44] Called Operation Ramadan, it
involved over 180,000 troops from both sides, and was one of the largest land
battles since World War II.[50]:3 Iranian strategy dictated that they launch
their primary attack on the weakest point of the Iraqi lines; however, the
Iraqis were informed of Iran's battle plans and moved all of their forces to
the area the Iranians planned to attack.[95] The Iraqis were also were equipped
with tear gas to use against the enemy, which would be first major use of
chemical warfare during the conflict, throwing an entire attacking division
into chaos.[101]
Iranian 55th Airborne Special Forces Brigade prepare to
board a Lockheed C-130H for a training exercise
Over 100,000 Revolutionary Guards and Basij volunteer
forces charged towards the Iraqi lines.[44] The Iraqi troops had entrenched
themselves in formidable defences, and had set up a network of bunkers and
artillery positions.[44] The Basij used human waves, and were even used to
bodily clear the Iraqi minefields and allow the Revolutionary Guards to
advance.[44] Combatants came so close to one another that Iranians were able to
board Iraqi tanks and throw grenades inside the hulls. By the eighth day, the
Iranians had gained 16 km (9.9 mi) inside Iraq and had taken several bridges.
Iran's Revolutionary Guards also used the T-55 tanks they had captured in
earlier battles.[68]
However, the attacks came to a halt and the Iranians
turned to defensive measures. Seeing this, Iraq used their Mi-25 helicopters,
along with French-built Gazelle helicopters armed with Euromissile HOT, against
columns of Iranian mechanised infantry and tanks. These
"hunter-killer" teams of helicopters, which had been formed with the
help of East German advisors, proved to be very costly for Iranians. Aerial
dogfights occurred between Iraqi Migs and Iranian F-4 Phantoms.[101]
On 16 July, Iran tried again further north and managed to
push the Iraqis back. However, only 13 km (8.1 mi) from Basra, the poorly
equipped Iranian forces were surrounded on three sides by Iraqis with heavy
weaponry. Some were captured, while many were killed. Only a last-minute attack
by Iranian AH-1 Cobra helicopters stopped the Iraqis from routing the
Iranians.[95] Three more similar attacks occurred around the
Khorramshar-Baghdad road area towards the end of the month, but none were
significantly successful.[68] Iraq had concentrated three armoured divisions,
the 3rd, 9th, and 10th, as a counter-attack force to attack any penetrations.
They were successful in defeating the Iranian breakthroughs, but suffered heavy
losses. The 9th Armoured Division in particular had to be disbanded, and was
never reformed. 80,000 soldiers from both sides were killed. 400 Iranian tanks
and armored vehicles were destroyed or abandoned, while Iraq lost 100
tanks.[102][103]
Fighting during the rest of 1982[edit]
After Iran's defeat in Operation Ramadan, they carried
out only a few smaller attacks. Iran launched two limited offensives aimed at
liberating the Sumar Hills and isolating the Iraqi pocket at Naft Shahr near
the Iraqi border, both of which were Iranian territory still under Iraq
occupation. They then aimed to capture the Iraqi border city of Mandali.[95]
They planned to take the Iraqis by surprise using Basij militiamen, army
helicopters, and some armoured forces, then stretch their defences and possibly
break through them to open a road to Baghdad for future exploitation.[95]
During Operation Muslim ibn Aqil (1–7 October),[note 2] Iran recovered 150 km2
(58 sq mi) of its own territory and reached the outskirts of Mandali before
being stopped by Iraqi helicopter and armoured attacks.[78][95] During
Operation Muharram (1–21 November),[note 3] the Iranians captured part of the
Bayat oilfield with their fighter jets and helicopters, destroying 105 Iraqi
tanks, 70 APCs, and 7 planes with few losses. They nearly breached the Iraqi
lines but failed to capture Mandali after the Iraqis sent reinforcements,
including brand new T-72 tanks, which possessed armour that could not be
pierced from the front by Iranian TOW missiles.[95] The Iranian advance was
also impeded by heavy rains. 3,500 Iraqis and an unknown number of Iranians
died, with only minor gains for Iran.[95]
1983–84: Strategic stalemate and war of attrition[edit]
Furthest ground gains
Ali Khamenei, with Iranian soldiers on the front-line.
Khamenei initially opposed Khomeini's decision to extend the war into Iraq.[44]
After the failure of the 1982 summer offensives, Iran
believed that a major effort along the entire breadth of the front would yield
the victory. During the course of 1983, the Iranians launched five major
assaults along the front, though none achieved substantial success, as the
Iranians staged more massive "human wave" attacks.[44] By this time,
it was estimated that more than 70 Iranian fighter aircraft were still
operational at any given time; Iran had their own helicopter repair facilities,
left over from before the revolution, and thus often used helicopters for close
air support.[95][105] While Iranian fighter pilots had superior training
compared to their Iraqi counterparts,[citation needed] and would continue to
dominate in combat,[citation needed] due to shortages of aircraft, the size of
defended territory and American intelligence supplied to Iraq, the Iraqis could
exploit gaps in Iranian airspace. The Iraqis were able to gain air superiority
towards the end of the war. Iraqi air campaigns met little opposition, striking
over half of Iran.
Operation Before the Dawn[edit]
Main article: Operation Before the Dawn
Operation Fajr al-Nasr (Before the Dawn/Dawn of Victory),
launched 6 February 1983, saw the Iranians shift focus from the southern to the
central and northern sectors. Iran, using 200,000 "last reserve"
Revolutionary Guard troops, attacked along a 40 km (25 mi) stretch near
al-Amarah, Iraq about 200 km (120 mi) southeast of Baghdad, in an attempt to
reach the highways connecting northern and southern Iraq. The attack was
stalled by 60 km (37 mi) of hilly escarpments, forests, and river torrents
blanketing the way to al-Amarah, but the Iraqis could not force the Iranians
back. Iran directed artillery on Basra and Al Amarah, and Mandali.[105]
The Iranians suffered a large number of casualties
clearing minefields and breaching Iraqi anti-tank mines, which Iraqi engineers
were unable to replace. After this battle, Iran reduced its use of human wave
attacks, though they still remained a key tactic as the war went on.[105]
The Mandali–Baghdad northcentral sector also witnessed
fighting in April 1983, as Iranian attacks were stopped by Iraqi mechanised and
infantry divisions. Casualties were high, and by the end of 1983, an estimated
120,000 Iranians and 60,000 Iraqis had been killed. Iran, however, held the
advantage in the war of attrition.[50]:2
Dawn Operations[edit]
Main articles: Operation Dawn 1, Operation Dawn 2,
Operation Dawn 3, Operation Dawn 4, Operation Dawn 5 and Operation Dawn 6
From early 1983–1984, Iran launched a series of four
Valfajr (Dawn) Operations (that eventually numbered to 10). During Operation
Dawn-1, in early February 1983, 50,000 Iranian forces attacked westward from
Dezful and were confronted by 55,000 Iraqi forces. The Iranian objective was to
cut off the road from Basra to Baghdad in the central sector. The Iraqis
carried out 150 air sorties against the Iranians, and even bombed Dezful,
Ahvaz, and Khorramshahr in retribution. The Iraqi counterattack was broken up
by Iran's 92nd Armoured Division.[105]
During Operation Dawn-2, the Iranian's directed
insurgency operations by proxy in April 1983 by supporting the Kurds in the
north. With Kurdish support, the Iranians attacked on 23 July 1983, capturing
the Iraqi town of Haj Omran and maintaining it against an Iraqi poison gas
counteroffensive.[106] This operation incited Iraq to later conduct
indiscriminate chemical attacks against the Kurds.[105] The Iranians attempted
to further exploit activities in the north on 30 July 1983, during Operation
Dawn-3. Iran saw an opportunity to sweep away Iraqi forces controlling the
roads between the Iranian mountain border towns of Mehran, Dehloran and Elam.
Iraq launched airstrikes, and equipped attack helicopters with chemical
warheads; while ineffective, it demonstrated both the Iraqi general staff's and
Saddam's increasing interest in using chemical weapons. In the end, 17,000 had
been killed on both sides,[clarification needed] with no gain for either
country.[105]
Iranian soldier killed in action
The focus of Operation Dawn-4 in September 1983 was the
northern sector in Iranian Kurdistan. Three Iranian regular divisions, the
Revolutionary Guard, and Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) elements amassed in
Marivan and Sardasht in a move to threaten the major Iraqi city Suleimaniyah.
Iran's strategy was to press Kurdish tribes to occupy the Banjuin Valley, which
was within 45 km (28 mi) of Suleimaniyah and 140 km (87 mi) from the oilfields
of Kirkuk. To stem the tide, Iraq deployed Mi-8 attack helicopters equipped
with chemical weapons and executed 120 sorties against the Iranian force, which
stopped them 15 km (9.3 mi) into Iraqi territory. 5,000 Iranians and 2,500
Iraqis died.[105] Iran gained 110 km2 (42 sq mi) of its territory back in the
north, gained 15 km2 (5.8 sq mi) of Iraqi land, and captured 1,800 Iraqi
prisoners while Iraq abandoned large quantities of valuable weapons and war
materiel in the field. Iraq responded to these losses by firing a series of
SCUD-B missiles into the cities of Dezful, Masjid Soleiman, and Behbehan.
Iran's use of artillery against Basra while the battles in the north raged
created multiple fronts, which effectively confused and wore down Iraq.[105]
Iran's change in tactics[edit]
Iranian troops boarding a Sea King helicopter, many
helicopters were used during Operation Kheibar
Previously, the Iranians had outnumbered the Iraqis on
the battlefield, but Iraq expanded their military draft (pursuing a policy of
total war), and by 1984, the armies were equal in size. By 1986, Iraq had twice
as many soldiers as Iran. By 1988, Iraq would have 1 million soldiers, giving
it the fourth largest army in the world. Some of their equipment, such as
tanks, outnumbered the Iranians' by at least five to one. Iranian commanders,
however, remained more tactically skilled.[68]
Iranian child soldier
After the Dawn Operations, Iran attempted to change
tactics. In the face of increasing Iraqi defense in depth, as well as increased
armaments and manpower, Iran could no longer rely on simple human wave
attacks.[77] Iranian offensives became more complex and involved extensive
maneuver warfare using primarily light infantry. Iran launched frequent, and
sometimes smaller offensives to slowly gain ground and deplete the Iraqis
through attrition.[76] They wanted to drive Iraq into economic failure by
wasting money on weapons and war mobilization, and to deplete their smaller
population by bleeding them dry, in addition to creating an anti-government
insurgency (they were successful in Kurdistan, but not southern
Iraq).[36][76][101] Iran also kept its goal of capturing important territory to
force Iraq to negotiate.[51] Iran also supported their attacks with heavy
weaponry when possible and with better planning (although the brunt of the
battles still fell to the infantry). The Army and Revolutionary Guards worked
together better as their tactics improved.[36] Human wave attacks became less
frequent (although still used).[64] To defeat Iraqi defense in depth, static
positions, and heavy firepower, Iran began to focus on fighting in areas that
the Iraqis could not use their heavy weaponry, such as marshes, valleys, and
mountains, and frequently using infiltration tactics.[64]
Iran began training troops in infiltration, patrolling,
night-fighting, marsh warfare, and mountain warfare.[77] They also began
training thousands of Revolutionary Guard commandos in amphibious warfare,[107]
as southern Iraq is marshy and filled with wetlands. Iran used speedboats to
cross the marshes and rivers in southern Iraq and landed troops on the opposing
banks, where they would dig and set up pontoon bridges across the rivers and
wetlands to allow heavy troops and supplies to cross. Iran also learned to
integrate foreign guerrilla units as part of their military operations.[77] On
the northern front, Iran began working heavily with the Peshmerga, Kurdish
guerrillas.[77] Iranian military advisors organised the Kurds into raiding
parties of 12 guerrillas, which would attack Iraqi command posts, troop
formations, infrastructure (including roads and supply lines), and government
buildings.[77] The oil refineries of Kirkuk became a favourite target, and were
often hit by homemade Peshmerga rockets.[77]
Battle of the Marshes[edit]
Main articles: Battle of the Marshes, Operation Dawn 5,
Operation Dawn 6 and Operation Kheibar
By 1984, the Iranian ground forces were reorganised well
enough for the Revolutionary Guard to start Operation Kheibar (named after
Kheibar, Saudi Arabia),[105][108] which lasted from 24 February to 19
March.[45]:171 On 15 February 1984, the Iranians began launching attacks
against the central section of the front, where the Second Iraqi Army Corps was
deployed: 250,000 Iraqis faced 250,000 Iranians.[44] The goal of this new major
offensive was the capture of Basra-Baghdad Highway, cutting off of Basra from
Baghdad and setting the stage for an eventual attack upon the city [36] (one of
Iran's major goals to force Iraq to negotiate).[51] The Iraqi high command had
assumed the marshlands above Basra were natural barriers to attack, and had not
reinforced them. The marshes negated Iraqi advantage in armor, and absorbed
artillery and bombs.[36]
Prior to the attack, Iranian commandos on helicopters had
landed behind Iraqi lines and destroyed Iraqi artillery. Iran launched two
preliminary attacks prior to the main offensive, Operation Dawn 5 and Dawn
6.[105] They saw the Iranians attempting to capture Kut al-Imara, Iraq and
sever the highway connecting Baghdad to Basra, which would impede Iraqi
coordination of supplies and defences. Iranian troops crossed the river on
motorboats in a surprise attack, though only came within 24 km (15 mi) of the
highway.
Operation Kheibar began on 24 February with Iranian
infantrymen crossing the Hawizeh Marshes using motorboats and transport
helicopters in an amphibious assault.[36] The Iranians attacked the vital
oil-producing Majnoon Island by landing troops via helicopters onto the islands
and severing the communication lines between Amareh and Basra.[108] They then
continued the attack towards Qurna.[36] By 27 February, they had captured the
island, but suffered catastrophic helicopter losses to IRAF. On that day, a
massive array of Iranian helicopters transporting Pasdaran troops were
intercepted by Iraqi combat aircraft (MiGs, Mirages and Sukhois). In what was
essentially an aerial slaughter, Iraqis jets shot down 49 of 50 Iranian
helicopters.[36] At times, fighting took place in waters over 2 m (6.6 ft)
deep. Iraq ran live electrical cables through the water, electrocuting numerous
Iranian troops and then displaying their corpses on state television.[105]
By 29 February, the Iranians had reached the outskirts of
Qurna and were closing in on the Baghdad–Basra highway.[36] They had broken out
of the marshes and returned to open terrain, where they were confronted by
conventional Iraqi weapons, including artillery, tanks, air power, and mustard
gas. 1,200 Iranian soldiers were killed in the counter-attack. The Iranians
retreated back to the marshes, though they still held onto them along with
Majnoon Island.[36][44]:44
The Battle of the Marshes saw an Iraqi defence that had
been under continuous strain since 15 February; they were relieved by their use
of chemical weapons and defence-in-depth, where they layered defensive lines:
even if the Iranians broke through the first line, they were usually unable to
break through the second due to exhaustion and heavy losses.[45]:171 They also
largely relied on Mi-24 Hind to "hunt" the Iranian troops in the
marshes,[36] and at least 20,000 Iranians were killed in the marsh
battles.[105] Iran used the marshes as a springboard for future
attacks/infiltrations.[36]
Four years into the war, the human cost to Iran had been
170,000 combat fatalities and 340,000 wounded. Iraqi combat fatalities were
estimated at 80,000 with 150,000 wounded.[36]
The "Tanker War" and the "War of the
Cities"[edit]
IS Hengam LST built by Yarrow Shipbuilders, Scotstoun and
commissioned by the Iranian Navy in 1974 [109]
Cargo ship under attack
Operation Earnest Will: Tanker convoy No. 12 under U.S.
Navy escort (21 October 1987)
Unable to launch successful ground attacks against Iran,
Iraq used their now expanded air force to carry out strategic bombing against
Iranian shipping, economic targets, and cities in order to damage Iran's
economy and morale.[36][110] Iraq also wanted to provoke Iran into doing
something that would cause the superpowers to be directly involved in the
conflict on the Iraqi side.[50]
Attacks on shipping[edit]
Further information: Operation Earnest Will and Operation
Prime Chance
The so-called "Tanker War" started when Iraq
attacked the oil terminal and oil tankers at Kharg Island in early 1984.[44]
Saddam's aim in attacking Iranian shipping was to provoke the Iranians to retaliate
with extreme measures, such as closing the Strait of Hormuz to all maritime
traffic, thereby bringing American intervention: the United States had
threatened several times to intervene if the Strait of Hormuz were closed.[44]
As such, the Iranians limited their retaliatory attacks to Iraqi shipping,
leaving the strait open to general passage.[44]
Iraq declared that all ships going to or from Iranian
ports in the northern zone of the Persian Gulf were subject to attack.[44] They
used air power, primarily helicopters, F-1 Mirage, and MiG-23 fighters armed
with Exocet anti-ship missiles, to enforce their threats. Iraq began to
repeatedly bomb Iran's main oil export facility on Khark Island, causing
increasingly heavy damage. After these attacks, Iran attacked a Kuwaiti tanker
carrying Iraqi oil near Bahrain on 13 May 1984, as well as a Saudi tanker in
Saudi waters on 16 May. Because Iraq had become landlocked during the invasion,
they had to rely on their Arab allies, primarily Kuwait, to transport their
oil. Iran attacked tankers carrying Iraqi oil from Kuwait, later attacking
tankers from any Persian Gulf state supporting Iraq. Attacks on ships of
noncombatant nations in the Persian Gulf sharply increased thereafter, with
both nations attacking oil tankers and merchant ships of neutral nations in an
effort to deprive their opponent of trade.[44] The Iranian attacks against
Saudi shipping led to Saudi F-15s shooting down a pair of F-4 Phantom II on 5
June 1984.[44]
The air and small-boat attacks, however, did little
damage to Persian Gulf state economies, and Iran moved its shipping port to
Larak Island in the Strait of Hormuz.[111]
The Iranian Navy imposed a naval blockade of Iraq, using
its British-built frigates to stop and inspect any ships thought to be trading
with Iraq. They operated with virtual impunity, as Iraqi pilots had little
training in hitting naval targets. Some Iranian warships attacked tankers with
ship-to-ship missiles, while others used their radars to guide land-based
anti-ship missiles to their targets.[112] Iran began to rely on its new
Revolutionary Guard's navy, which used Boghammar speedboats: fitted with rocket
launchers, RPGs, and heavy machine guns, these speedboats would launch surprise
attacks against tankers and cause substantial damage. Iran also used aircraft
and helicopters to launch Maverick missiles and unguided rockets at
tankers.[36]
A U.S. Navy ship, the Stark, was struck on 17 May 1987 by
two Exocet anti-ship missiles fired from an Iraqi F-1 Mirage plane.[113][114]
The missiles had been fired at about the time the plane was given a routine
radio warning by the Stark.[115] The frigate did not detect the missiles with
radar, and warning was given by the lookout only moments before they
struck.[116] Both missiles hit the ship, and one exploded in crew quarters,
killing 37 sailors and wounding 21.[116]
Lloyd's of London, a British insurance market, estimated
that the Tanker War damaged 546 commercial vessels and killed about 430
civilian sailors. The largest portion of the attacks was directed by Iraq
against vessels in Iranian waters, with the Iraqis launching three times as
many attacks as the Iranians.[50]:3 But Iranian speedboat attacks on Kuwaiti
shipping led Kuwait to formally petition foreign powers on 1 November 1986 to
protect its shipping. The Soviet Union agreed to charter tankers starting in
1987, and the United States Navy offered to provide protection for foreign
tankers reflagged and flying the U.S. flag starting 7 March 1987 in Operation
Earnest Will.[44][115] Neutral tankers shipping to Iran were unsurprisingly not
protected by Earnest Will, resulting in reduced foreign tanker traffic to Iran,
since they risked Iraqi air attack. Iran accused the US of helping
Iraq.[36][41][50]
During the course of the war, Iran attacked two Soviet
Navy ships which were protecting Kuwaiti tankers.[117] Notably, the Seawise
Giant, the largest ship ever built, was struck and damaged by Iraqi Exocet
missiles as it was carrying Iranian crude oil out of the Gulf.[118]
Attacks on cities[edit]
Meanwhile, Iraq's air force also began carrying out
strategic bombing raids against Iranian cities. While Iraq had launched
numerous attacks with aircraft and missiles against border cities from the
beginning of the war and sporadic raids on Iran's main cities, this was the
first systematic strategic bombing that Iraq carried out during the war. This
would become known as the "War of the Cities". With the help of the
USSR and the west, Iraq's air force had been rebuilt and expanded.[86] Meanwhile
Iran, due to sanctions and lack of spare parts, had heavily curtailed their air
force operations. Iraq used Tu-22 Blinder and Tu-16 Badger strategic bombers to
carry out long-range high-speed raids on Iranian cities, including Tehran.
Fighter-bombers such as the Mig-25 Foxbat and Su-22 Fitter were used against
smaller or shorter range targets, as well as escorting the strategic
bombers.[86] Civilian and industrial targets were hit by the raids,[citation
needed] and each successful raid inflicted economic damage from regular
strategic bombing.[86]
A map indicating the attacks on civilian areas of Iran,
Iraq, and Kuwait targeted during the "War of the cities".
In response, the Iranians deployed their F-4 Phantoms to
combat the Iraqis, and eventually they deployed F-14s as well. Most of the
Iraqi air raids were intercepted by the Iranian fighter jets and air
defense,[citation needed] but some also successfully hit their targets,
becoming a major headache for Iran. By 1986, Iran also expanded their air
defense network heavily to take the load of the fighting off the air force. By
later in the war, Iraqi raids primarily consisted of indiscriminate missile
attacks[citation needed]while air attacks were used only on fewer, more
important targets.[119] Starting in 1987, Saddam also ordered several chemical
attacks on civilian targets in Iran, such as the town of Sardasht.[120]
Iran also launched several retaliatory air raids on Iraq,
while primarily shelling border cities such as Basra. Iran also bought some
Scud missiles from Libya, and launched them against Baghdad. These too
inflicted damage upon Iraq.[36]
On 7 February 1984, (during the first war of the cities)
Saddam ordered his air force to attack eleven Iranian cities;[44] bombardments
ceased on 22 February 1984. Though Saddam had aimed for the attacks to
demoralise Iran and force them to negotiate, they had little effect, and Iran
quickly repaired the damage.[citation needed] Iraq's air force took heavy
losses,[citation needed] however, and Iran struck back, hitting Baghdad and
other Iraqi cities. Nevertheless, the attacks resulted in tens of thousands of
civilian casualties on both sides, and became known as the first "war of
the cities". It was estimated that 1,200 Iranian civilians were killed
during the raids in February alone.[citation needed][36] There would be five
such major exchanges throughout the course of the war, and multiple minor ones.
While interior cities such as Tehran, Qom, Isfahan and Shiraz did receive
numerous raids, it was the cities of western Iran that suffered the most death
and destruction.
Strategic situation in 1984[edit]
By 1984, Iran's losses were estimated to be 300,000
soldiers, while Iraq's losses were estimated to be 150,000.[50]:2 Foreign
analysts agreed that both Iran and Iraq failed to use their modern equipment
properly, and both sides failed to carry out modern military assaults that
could win the war. Both sides also abandoned equipment in the battlefield
because their technicians were unable to carry out repairs. Iran and Iraq
showed little internal coordination on the battlefield, and in many cases units
were left to fight on their own. As a result, by the end of 1984, the war was a
stalemate.[50]:2
[121] One limited offensive Iran launched (Dawn 7) took
place from 18–25 October 1984, when they recaptured the Iranian city of Mehran,
which had been occupied by the Iraqis from the beginning of the war.[44][101]
1985–86: Offensives and retreats[edit]
By 1985, Iraqi armed forces were receiving financial
support from Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and other Arab Gulf states, and were making
substantial arms purchases from the Soviet Union, China, and France. For the
first time since early 1980, Saddam launched new offensives.
On 6 January 1986, the Iraqis launched an offensive
attempting to retake Majnoon Island. However, they were quickly bogged down
into a stalemate against 200,000 Iranian infantrymen, reinforced by amphibious
divisions.[105] However, they managed to gain a foothold in the southern part
of the island.[72]
Iraq also carried out another "war of the
cities" between 12–14 March, hitting up to 158 targets in over 30 towns
and cities, including Tehran. Iran responded by launching 14 Scud missiles for
the first time, purchased from Libya. More Iraqi air attacks were carried out
in August, resulting in hundreds of additional civilian casualties. Iraqi
attacks against both Iranian and neutral oil tankers in Iranian waters continued,
with Iraq carrying out 150 airstrikes using French bought Super Etendard and
Mirage F-1 jets as well as Super Frelon helicopters, using Exocet
missiles.[110]
Operation Badr[edit]
Main article: Operation Badr (1985)
The Iraqis attacked again on 28 January 1985; they were
defeated, and the Iranians retaliated on 11 March 1985 with a major offensive
directed against the Baghdad-Basra highway (one of the few major offensives
conducted in 1985), codenamed Operation Badr (after the Battle of Badr, Muhammad's
first military victory in Mecca).[44][122] Ayatollah Khomeini urged Iranians
on, declaring:
It is our belief that Saddam wishes to return Islam to
blasphemy and polytheism...if America becomes victorious...and grants victory
to Saddam, Islam will receive such a blow that it will not be able to raise its
head for a long time...The issue is one of Islam versus blasphemy, and not of
Iran versus Iraq.[123]
This operation was similar to Operation Kheibar, though
it invoked more planning. Iran used 100,000 troops, with 60,000 more in
reserve. They assessed the marshy terrain, plotted points where they could land
tanks, and constructed pontoon bridges across the marshes. The Basij forces
were also equipped with anti-tank weapons.[105]
The ferocity of the Iranian offensive broke through the
Iraqi lines. The Revolutionary Guard, with the support of tanks and artillery,
broke through north of Qurna on 14 March. That same night 3,000 Iranian troops
reached and crossed the Tigris River using pontoon bridges and captured part of
the Baghdad–Basra Highway 8, which they had failed to achieve in Operations
Dawn 5 and 6.[36]
Saddam responded by launching chemical attacks against
the Iranian positions along the highway and by initiating the aforementioned
second "war of the cities", with an air and missile campaign against
twenty to thirty Iranian population centres, including Tehran.[44] Under
General Sultan Hashim Ahmad al-Tai and General Jamal Zanoun (both considered to
be among Iraq's the most skilled commanders), the Iraqis launched air attacks
against the Iranian positions and pinned them down. They then launched a pincer
attack using mobile infantry and heavy artillery.[36] Chemical weapons were
used, and the Iraqis also flooded Iranian trenches with specially constructed
pipes delivering water from the Tigris River.
Wounded Iranian soldiers evacuated by motorboat
The Iranians retreated back to the Hoveyzeh marshes while
being attacked by helicopters,[36] and the highway was recaptured by the
Iraqis. Operation Badr resulted in 10,000–12,000 Iraqi casualties and 15,000
Iranian ones.[44]
Strategic situation at the beginning of 1986[edit]
The failure of the human wave attacks in earlier years
had prompted Iran to develop a better working relationship between the Army and
the Revolutionary Guard[44] and to mould the Revolutionary Guard units into a
more conventional fighting force. To combat Iraq's use of chemical weapons,
Iran began producing an antidote.[105] They also created and fielded their own
homemade drones, the Mohajer 1's, fitted with six RPG-7's to launch attacks.
They were primarily used in observation, being used for up to 700 sorties.[124]
For the rest of 1986, and until the spring of 1988, the
Iranian Air Force's efficiency in air defence increased, with weapons being
repaired or replaced and new tactical methods being used. For example, the
Iranians would loosely integrate their SAM sites and interceptors to create
"killing fields" in which dozens of Iraqi planes were lost (which was
reported in the West as the Iranian Air Force using F-14s as
"mini-AWACs"). The Iraqi Air Force reacted by increasing the sophistication
of its equipment, incorporating modern electronic countermeasure pods, decoys
such as chaff and flare, and anti-radiation missiles.[108] Due to the heavy
losses in the last war of the cities, Iraq reduced their use of aerial attacks
on Iranian cities. Instead, they would launch Scud missiles, which the Iranians
could not stop. Since the range of the Scud missile was too short to reach
Tehran, they converted them to al-Hussein missiles with the help of East German
engineers, cutting up their Scuds into three chunks and attaching them
together. Iran responded to these attacks by using their own Scud
missiles.[124] Iranian attacks were fewer, and meant primarily to deter the
Iraqis from launching their air/missile strikes.
Aside from extensive foreign help to Iraq, Iranian
attacks were severely hampered by their shortages of weaponry, including heavy
weaponry. Large portions of them had been lost during the last several years.
Iran still managed to maintain 1,000 tanks (often by capturing Iraqi ones) and
additional artillery, but many needed repairs to be operational. But by this
time Iran managed to procure spare parts from various sources, helping them to
restore some weapons. They secretly imported some weapons, such as RBS-70
anti-aircraft MANPADS.[36] In an exception to the US's support for Iraq, in
exchange for Iran using its influence to help free western hostages in Lebanon,
the US secretly sold Iran some limited supplies (in the Ayatollah Rafsanjani's
postwar interview, he stated that during the period when Iran was succeeding,
for a short time the US supported Iran, then shortly after began helping Iraq
again).[51] Iran managed to get some advanced weapons, such as anti-tank TOW
missiles, which worked better than rocket-propelled grenades. Iran later
reverse-engineered and produced those weapons on their own as well.[36][110]
All of these almost certainly helped increase the effectiveness of Iran,
although it did not reduce the human cost of their attacks.[36][110]
First Battle of al-Faw[edit]
Main articles: First Battle of al-Faw and Operation Dawn
8
Entrenched Iranian troops near destroyed Iraqi T-55 tanks
in the mud
On the night of 10–11 February 1986, the Iranians
launched Operation Dawn 8,[125] in which 30,000 troops comprising five Army divisions
and men from the Revolutionary Guard and the Basij advanced in a two-pronged
offensive to capture the al-Faw peninsula in southern Iraq, the only area
touching the Persian Gulf.[44] The capture of Al Faw and Umm Qasr was a major
goal for Iran to force Iraq to negotiate a favorable settlement.[51] Iran began
with a feint attack against Basra, which was stopped by the Iraqis;[44][107]
Meanwhile, an amphibious strike force landed at the foot of the peninsula. The
resistance, consisting of several thousand poorly trained soldiers of the Iraqi
Popular Army, fled or were defeated, and the Iranian forces set up pontoon
bridges crossing the Shatt al-Arab,[note 1] allowing 30,000 soldiers to cross
in a short period of time.[107] They drove north along the peninsula almost
unopposed, capturing it after only 24 hours of fighting.[44][45]:240[68]
Afterwards they dug in and set up defenses.[68]
The sudden capture of al-Faw took the Iraqis by shock,
since they had thought it impossible for the Iranians to cross the Shatt
al-Arab. On 12 February 1986, the Iraqis began a counter-offensive to retake
al-Faw, which failed after a week of heavy fighting.[44][68] On 24 February
1986, Saddam sent one of his best commanders, General Maher Abd al-Rashid, and
the Republican Guard to begin a new offensive to recapture al-Faw.[44] A new
round of heavy fighting took place, However, their attempts again ended in
failure, costing them many tanks and aircraft:[44] their 15th mechanised
division was almost completely wiped out.[36] The capture of al-Faw and the
failure of the Iraqi counter-offensives were blows to the Ba'ath regime's
prestige, and led the Gulf countries to fear that Iran might win the war.[44]
Kuwait in particular felt menaced with Iranian troops only 16 km (9.9 mi) away,
and increased its support of Iraq accordingly.[45]:241
In March 1986, the Iranians tried to follow up their
success by attempting to take Umm Qasr, which would have completely severed
Iraq from the Gulf and placed Iranian troops on the border with Kuwait, which
was a major Iranian goal in forcing Iraq into negotiations.[44][51] However,
the offensive failed due to Iranian shortages of armor.[44] By this time,
10,000 Iraqis and 30,000 Iranians were casualties.[44] The First Battle of
al-Faw ended in March, but heavy combat operations lasted on the peninsula into
1988, with neither side being able to displace the other. The battle bogged
down into a World War I-style stalemate in the marshes of the peninsula.[64]
53,000 Iraq troops and an unknown number of Iranian troops were killed.[64]
Battle of Mehran[edit]
Main article: Battle of Mehran
Immediately after the Iranian capture of al-Faw, Saddam
declared a new offensive against Iran, designed to drive deep into the
state.[36] The Iranian border city of Mehran, on the foot of the Zagros
Mountains, was selected as the first target. On 15–19 May, Iraqi Army's Second
Corps, supported by helicopter gunships, attacked and captured the city. Saddam
then offered the Iranians to exchange Mehran for al-Faw.[36] The Iranians
rejected the offer. Iraq then continued the attack, attempting to push deeper
into Iran. However, Iraq's attack was quickly warded off by Iranian AH-1 Cobra
helicopters with TOW missiles, which destroyed numerous Iraqi tanks and
vehicles.[36]
The Iranians built up their forces on the heights
surrounding Mehran. On 30 June, using mountain warfare tactics they launched
their attack, recapturing the city by 3 July.[36] Saddam ordered the Republican
Guard to retake the city on 4 July, but their attack was ineffective. Iraqi
losses were heavy enough to allow the Iranians to also capture territory inside
Iraq,[36] and depleted the Iraqi military enough to prevent them from launching
a major offensive for the next two years.[36] Iraq's defeats at al-Faw and at
Mehran were severe blows to the prestige of the Iraqi regime, and western
powers, including the U.S., became more determined to prevent an Iraqi
loss.[36]
Strategic situation at the end of 1986[edit]
Through the eyes of international observers, Iran was
prevailing in the war by the end of 1986.[107] In the northern front, the
Iranians began launching attacks toward the city of Suleimaniya with the help
of Kurdish fighters, taking the Iraqis by surprise. They came within 16 km (9.9
mi) of the city before being stopped by chemical and army attacks. Iran's army
had also reached the Meimak Hills, only 113 km (70 mi) from Baghdad.[107] Iraq
managed to contain Iran's offensives in the south, but was under serious
pressure, as the Iranians were slowly overwhelming them.
Injured Iranians being evacuated by Chinook helicopter
Iraq responded by launching another "war of the
cities". In one attack, Tehran's main oil refinery was hit, and in another
instance, Iraq damaged Iran's Assadabad satellite dish, disrupting Iranian
overseas telephone and telex service for almost two weeks.[107] Civilian areas
were also hit, resulting in many casualties. Iraq continued to attack oil
tankers via air.[36] Iran responded by launching Scud missiles and air attacks
at Iraqi targets.
Iraq continued to attack Kharg Island and the oil tankers
and facilities as well. Iran created a tanker shuttle service of 20 tankers to
move oil from Kharg to Larak Island, escorted by Iranian fighter jets. Once
moved to Larak, the oil would be moved to ocean going tankers (usually
neutral).[126] They also rebuilt the oil terminals damaged by Iraqi air raids
and moved shipping to Larak Island, while attacking foreign tankers that
carried Iraqi oil (as Iran had blocked Iraq's access to the open sea with the
capture of al-Faw). By now they almost always used the armed speedboats of the
IRGC navy, and attacked many tankers.[36] The tanker war escalated drastically,
with attacks nearly doubling in 1986 (the majority carried out by Iraq). Iraq
got permission from the Saudi government to use its airspace to attack Larak
Island, although due to the distance attacks were less frequent there. The
escalating tanker war in the Gulf became an ever increasing concern to foreign
powers, especially the United States.[126]
In April 1986, Ayatollah Khomeini issued a fatwa
declaring that the war must be won by March 1987. The Iranians increased
recruitment efforts, obtaining 650,000 volunteers.[105] The animosity between
the Army and the Revolutionary Guard arose again, with the Army wanting to use
more refined, limited military attacks while the Revolutionary Guard wanted to
carry out major offensives.[105] Iran, confident in its successes, began
planning their largest offensives of the war, which they called their
"final offensives."[105]
Iraq's Dynamic Defense Strategy[edit]
Faced with their recent defeats in al-Faw and Mehran,
Iraq appeared to be losing the war. Iraq's generals, angered by Saddam's
interference, threatened a full-scale mutiny against the Ba'ath Party unless
they were allowed to conduct operations freely. In one of the few times during
his career, Saddam gave in to the demands of his generals.[68] Up to this
point, Iraqi strategy was to ride out Iranian attacks. However, the defeat at
al-Faw led Saddam to declare the war to be Al-Defa al Mutahharakkha (The
Dynamic Defense),[36] and announcing that all civilians had to take part in the
war effort. The universities were closed and all of the male students were
drafted into the military. Civilians were instructed to clear marshlands to
prevent Iranian amphibious infiltrations and to help build fixed defenses.
The government tried to integrate the Shias into the war
effort by recruiting many as part of the Ba'ath Party.[68] In an attempt to
counterbalance the religious fervor of the Iranians and gain support from the
devout masses, the regime also began to promote religion and, on the surface,
Islamization, despite the fact that Iraq was run by a socialist regime. Scenes
of Saddam praying and making pilgrimages to shrines became common on state-run
television. While Iraqi morale had been low throughout the war, the attack on
al-Faw raised patriotic fervor, as the Iraqis feared invasion.[68] Saddam also
recruited volunteers from other Arab countries into the Republican Guard, and
received much technical support from foreign nations as well.[36] While Iraqi
military power had been depleted in recent battles, through heavy foreign
purchases and support, they were able to expand their military even to much
larger proportions by 1988.[36]
At the same time, Saddam ordered the genocidal al-Anfal
Campaign in an attempt to crush the Kurdish resistance, who were now allied
with the Iranians. The result was the deaths of several hundred thousand Iraqi
Kurds, and the destruction of villages, towns, and cities.[127]
Iraq began to try to perfect their maneuver tactics.[68]
The Iraqis began to prioritize the professionalization of their military. Prior
to 1986, the conscription-based Iraqi regular army and the volunteer-based
Iraqi Popular Army conducted to bulk of the operations in the war, to little
effect. The Republican Guard, formerly an elite praetorian guard, was expanded
as a volunteer army and filled with Iraq's best generals.[68] Loyalty to the
state was no longer a primary requisite for joining. However, due to Saddam's
paranoia, the former duties of the Republican Guard were transferred to a new
unit, the Special Republican Guard.[68] Full-scale war games against hypothetical
Iranian positions were carried out in the western Iraqi desert against mock
targets, and they were repeated over the course of a full year until the forces
involved fully memorized their attacks.[68] Iraq built its military massively,
eventually possessing the 4th largest in the world, in order to overwhelm the
Iranians through sheer size.[68]
1987–88: Towards a ceasefire[edit]
The People's Mujahedin of Iran, supported by Saddam,
started a ten-day operation after both the Iranian and Iraqi governments
accepted UN Resolution 598. Casualty estimates range from 2,000 to 10,000.
Meanwhile, as the Iraqis were planning their strike, the
Iranians continued to attack. 1987 saw a renewed series of major Iranian human
wave offensives in both northern and southern Iraq. The Iraqis had constructed
heavy static fortifications around the city. They built 5 defensive rings,
supported by natural waterways such as the Shatt-al-Arab, and manmade ones,
such as Fish Lake and the Jasim River, along with manmade earth barriers. Fish
Lake was a massive lake filled with mines, underwater barbed wire, electrodes,
and various sensors. In addition, behind each waterway and defensive line was
radar-guided artillery, ground attack aircraft, and combat helicopters; all
capable of firing poison gas in addition to conventional munitions.[36]
Iran's strategy was to penetrate through these massive
defensive lines, and encircle Basra, cutting off the city as well as the Al-Faw
peninsula from the rest of Iraq. The Iranians hoped that the capture of Basra
would be such a major blow to Iraq that they would be forced to negotiate a
settlement favorable to Iran.[51][107] Iran's plan was for three assaults: a
diversionary attack near Basra, the main offensive, and another diversionary attack
using Iranian armor in the north to have Iraqi heavy armor diverted away from
Basra.[36] For these battles, Iran had re-expanded their military by recruiting
many new Basij and Pasdaran volunteers.[107] Iran brought 150,000–200,000 total
troops into the battles.[68]
Karbala Operations[edit]
Operation Karbala-4[edit]
Main article: Operation Karbala-4
On 25 December 1986, Iran launched Operation Karbala-4
(Karbala referring to Hussein ibn Ali's Battle of Karbala).[128] According to
General Ra'ad al-Hamdani, this was a diversionary attack.[64] The Iranians
launched an amphibious assault against the Iraqi island of Umm al-Rassas which
lie in the Shatt-Al-Arab river parallell to Khoramshahr; they then set up a
pontoon bridge and continued the attack, eventually capturing it after taking
many casualties and failing to advance further; they had taken 60,000 casualties,
while the Iraqis took 9,500.[105] The Iraqi commanders exaggerated Iran's
losses to Saddam, and it was assumed that the main Iranian attack on Basra had
been fully defeated and that the Iranians were depleted for six months.
Therefore, when the main Iranian attack, Operation Karbala 5 began, many Iraqi
troops had gone on leave.[64]
Iranian soldiers with a ZPU-2 heavy machine-gun on a
Toyota Land Cruiser
Operation Karbala-5 (Second Battle of Basra)[edit]
Main article: Operation Karbala-5
Operation Karbala-5 began midnight 8 January 1987, when a
strike force of 35,000 Pasdaran crossed Fish Lake, while 4 Iranian divisions
attacked at the southern end shore of the lake, overrunning the Iraqi forces
and capturing Duaiji, an irrigation canal. They used their bridgehead at Duaiji
as a springboard to recapture the Iranian town of Shalamcheh. Between 9–10
January, the Iranians broke through the first and second defense lines of Basra
at the north of Fish Lake with tanks.[36][68] The Iranians rapidly reinforced
their forces with 60,000 troops and began to clear the remaining Iraqis in the
area.[36]
As early as 9 January, the Iraqis began their
counterattack, supported by newer Su-25 and Mig-29 aircraft, by the 10th the
Iraqis were throwing every available heavy weapon in a bid to eject the
Iranians. Despite being outnumbered 10–1 in the air, Iran's air defense system
downed many Iraqi aircraft (50–60 jets total; 10% of Iraq's air force),
allowing Iran to provide close air support with their smaller air force, which
also proved superior in dog-fighting, causing the Iraqis to temporarily stop
providing their troops air support.[36] Iraqi tanks floundered in the marshland
and were defeated by Cobra helicopters and TOW missile-equipped anti-tank
commandos. Later in the battle, after their ground forces taking heavy losses
due to the lack of air support, the Iraqi aircraft came back to the battlefield
once again, facing their Iranian counterparts.[36]
However, despite superior Iranian infantry tactics, it
was the sheer size of the Iraqi defensive lines that prevented the Iranians
from achieving a victory.[36] On 19–24 January, Iran launched another major
infantry offensive, breaking the third line and driving the Iraqis across the
Jasim river.[107] The battle became a contest of which side could bring more
reinforcements.[36][68][107] By 29 January, the Iranians launched a new attack
from the west of the Jasim river, breaking through the fourth line.[36] They
were within 12 km (7.5 mi) of the city. At this point, the battle became a
stalemate. Iranian TV broadcast footage of the outskirts of Basra, but the
Iranians pushed no further.[36] Iranian losses were so severe that Iraq took
the offensive and pushed them back to their original positions.[107] Despite
that, the fighting continued, and 30,000 Iranians still held positions around
Fish Lake. The battle bogged down into a trench war, where neither side could
displace the other. Iran launched several more unsuccessful attacks. Karbala-5
officially ended by the end of February, but heavy combat operations continued,
and Iran continued to besiege the city.[107]
Iranian soldier aiming a DShK heavy machine gun from a
sangar during Operation Karbala-5.
Among those killed was Iranian commander Hossein
Kharrazi. Possibly 65,000 Iranians and 40,000 Iraqis were casualties because of
Operation Karbala-5. Basra was largely destroyed, and Iraq's army had taken
many material losses.[107][129][129] The fighting during this operation was the
heaviest and bloodiest during the war, with the area around Shalamcheh becoming
known as the "Somme of the Iran-Iraq War".[64] At one point, the
situation had declined to the point that Saddam ordered several of his officers
to be executed.[107] With Iranian aircraft fighting at Basra, the Iraqis bombed
Iranian supply routes with chemical weapons, as well as Iranian cities with
conventional bombs, including Tehran, Isfahan, and Qom. It is believed that
around 3,000 Iranian civilians were killed in these attacks. Iran retaliated by
firing eleven long-range missiles further into Iraqi territory, inflicting
heavy casualties among civilians and killing at least 300.
Operation Karbala-6[edit]
Main article: Operation Karbala-6
At the same time as Operation Karbala 5, Iran also
launched Operation Karbala-6 against the Iraqis in Qasr-e Shirin in central
Iran to prevent the Iraqis from rapidly transferring units down to defend
against the Karbala-5 attack. The attack was carried out by Basij infantry and
the Revolutionary Guard's 31st Ashura and the Army's 77th Khorasan armored
divisions. The Basij attacked the Iraqi lines, forcing the Iraqi infantry to
retreat. An Iraqi armored counter-attack surrounded the Basij in a pincer
movement, but the Iranian tank divisions attacked, breaking the encirclement. The
Iranian attack was finally stopped by mass Iraqi chemical weapons attacks.[129]
Iran's increasing war-weariness[edit]
Iranian troops fire 152mm D-20 howitzer
Operation Karbala-5 was a severe blow to Iran's military
and morale.[101] To foreign observers, it appeared that Iran was continuing to
strengthen. By 1988, Iran had become self-sufficient in many areas, such as
anti-tank TOW missiles, Scud ballistic missiles (Shahab-1), Silkworm anti-ship
missiles, Oghab tactical rockets, and producing spare parts for their weaponry.
Iran had also beefed up their air defenses with smuggled surface to air
missiles.[36] Iran even was producing UAV's and the Pilatus PC-7 propellor
aircraft for observation.[36] Iran also doubled their stocks of artillery, and
was self-sufficient in manufacture of ammunition and small arms.[130]
But, while it was not obvious to foreign observers, the
Iranian public had become increasingly war-weary and disillusioned with the
fighting, and relatively few volunteers joined the fight in 1987–88. Because
the Iranian war effort relied on popular mobilization, their military strength
actually declined, and Iran was unable to launch any major offensives after
Karbala-5. As a result, for the first time since 1982, the momentum of the
fighting shifted towards the regular army. Since the regular army was
conscription based, it made the war even less popular. Many Iranians began to
try to escape the conflict. As early as May 1985, anti-war demonstrations took
place in 74 cities throughout Iran; however, they were crushed by the regime,
resulting in some protesters being shot and killed.[131] By 1987, draft-dodging
had become a serious problem, and the Revolutionary Guards and police set up
roadblocks throughout cities to capture those who tried to evade conscription.
However, other people (including the more nationalistic and religious) as well
as the clergy, the Revolutionary Guards, and the regular army wanted to
continue the war to achieve their goals. The issue of Iranian border territory
in Iraqi hands still was a major motivating factor.[51]
The leadership acknowledged that the war was a stalemate,
and began to plan accordingly.[68] There were no more "final
offensives" planned.[36] The head of the Supreme Defense Council Hashemi
Rafsanjani announced during a news conference to finally end the use of human
wave attacks.[132] Mohsen Rezaee, head of the IRGC, announced that Iran would
focus exclusively on limited attacks/infiltrations, while arming and supporting
opposition groups inside of Iraq (such as the Kurds and Badr Brigade).[107]
On the Iranian home front, the combination of sanctions,
declining oil prices, and Iraqi attacks on Iranian oil facilities and shipping
took a heavy toll on the economy. While the attacks themselves were not as
destructive as some analysts believed, the US-led Operation Earnest Will (which
protected Iraqi and allied oil tankers, but not Iranian ones) led many neutral
countries to stop trading with Iran because of rising insurance and fear of air
attack.[36][41][50] Iranian oil and non-oil exports fell by 55%, inflation
reached 50% by 1987, and the unemployment rate skyrocketed.[36] At the same
time, Iraq was experiencing crushing debt and shortages of workers, encouraging
its leadership to try to end the war quicker.[101]
Strategic Situation in late 1987[edit]
Main articles: Operation Nimble Archer, Operation Nasr 4
and Operation Karbala 10
By the end of 1987, Iraq possessed 5,550 tanks
(outnumbering the Iranians five to one) and 900 fighter aircraft (outnumbering
the Iranians ten to one).[36] However, after Operation Karbala-5, Iraq only had
100 qualified fighter pilots remaining; therefore, Iraq began to invest in
recruiting foreign pilots from countries such as Belgium, Australia, South
Africa, both East and West Germany, and the Soviet Union. They replenished their
manpower by integrating volunteers from other Arab countries into their army
(for example, Iran eventually captured 3,000 Egyptian soldiers).[36] Iraq also
became self-sufficient in chemical weapons and some conventional ones and
received much equipment from abroad.[36] Foreign support helped Iraq bypass its
economic troubles and massive debt to continue the war and increase the size of
its military.[36][36]
Iranian F-14 Tomcats armed with both Phoenix and modified
Hawk missiles, circa 1986-87; usually tasked with defending Kharg Island oil
facilities
While the southern and central fronts were at a
stalemate, Iran began to focus on carrying out offensives in northern Iraq with
the help of the Peshmerga (Kurdish insurgents). The capture of Iraq northern
oil fields, and dams remained an important goal for Iran to force Iraq to
negotiate, and with the help of the Peshmerga, there was a good chance it could
succeed.[51] The Iranians used a combination of semi-guerrilla and infiltration
tactics in the Kurdish mountains with the Peshmerga. During Operation Karbala-9
in early April, Iran captured territory near Suleimaniya, provoking a severe
poison gas counterattack. During Operation Karbala-10, Iran attacked near the
same area, capturing more territory. During Operation Nasr-4, the Iranians
surrounded the city of Suleimaniya, and with the help of the Peshmerga
infiltrated over 140 kilometers into Iraq and raided and threatened to capture
the oil-rich city of Kirkuk and other northern oilfields.[101] Nasr-4 was
considered to be Iran's most successful individual operation of the war.
However, Iranian forces were unable to consolidate their gains and continue
their advance, and while these offensives coupled with the Kurdish uprising
sapped Iraqi strength, losses in the north would not mean a catastrophic
failure for Iraq.
On 20 July, the UN Security Council passed the
US-sponsored Resolution 598, which called for an end to the fighting and a
return to pre-war boundaries.[65] This resolution was noted by Iran for being
the first resolution to call for a return to the pre-war borders, and setting
up a commission to determine the aggressor and compensation. This was in
contrast to previous settlements that only allowed a ceasefire (leaving Iraq in
possession of disputed Iranian territories). The head of the IRGC, Mohsen
Rezaee believed that it was a direct result of the capture of Al-Faw and Iran
began to consider the ceasefire. While Iraq accepted the resolution, according
to Iran's then foreign minister Ali Akbar Velayati, Iraq refused to set a
timetable for withdrawing their troops from Iran, and thus Iran did not adopt
the ceasefire yet, although they seriously considered it. The resolution was
very ambiguous as well. Velayati stated that as a result, the western nations
claimed that it was Iran that refused to accept peace.[51]
Air and Tanker War in 1987[edit]
With the stalemate on land, the air/tanker war began to
play an increasingly major role in the conflict.[126]
The Iranian air force had become very small, containing
only 20 F-4 Phantoms, 20 F-5 Tigers, and 15 F-14 Tomcats in operation. Despite
that, Iran managed to restore some damaged planes into service. The Iranian Air
force, despite its once sophisticated equipment, lacked enough equipment and
personnel to sustain the war of attrition that had arisen, and was unable to
lead an outright onslaught against Iraq.[108] The Iraqi Air Force, however, had
originally lacked modern equipment and experienced pilots, but after pleas from
Iraqi military leaders, Saddam decreased political influence on everyday
operations and left the fighting to his combatants. In addition, the Soviets
began delivering more advanced aircraft and weapons to Iraq, while the French
improved training for flying crews and technical personnel and continually
introduced new methods for countering Iranian weapons and tactics.[108]
However, at the same time, Iran's ground air defense downed many Iraqi
aircraft.[36][108]
The main Iraqi air effort had shifted to the destruction
of Iranian war-fighting capability (primarily Persian Gulf oil fields, tankers,
and Kharg Island), and starting late 1986 the Iraqi Air Force moved on a
comprehensive campaign against the Iranian economic infrastructure.[108] By
late 1987, the Iraqi Air Force could count on direct American support for
conducting long-range operations against Iranian infrastructural targets and
oil installations deep in the Persian Gulf. U.S. Navy ships actively tracked
and reported movements of Iranian shipping and defences. They supplied targeting
information on several occasions in February and March 1988; when they failed
to warn Iraqi aircraft of Iranian interceptors' presence, the Iraqis suffered
considerable losses. The massive Iraqi air strike against Kharg Island, flown
on 18 March 1988, was one such occasion: the Iraqis destroyed two supertankers
but lost five aircraft to Iranian F-14 Tomcats, including two Tupolev Tu-22Bs
and one Mikoyan MiG-25RB.[108] The U.S. Navy was now becoming more involved in
the fight in the Persian Gulf, launching Operations Earnest Will and Prime
Chance against the Iranians.
IRGC navy speedboats using swarm tactics
The attacks on oil tankers continued. Both Iran and Iraq
carried frequent attacks during the first four months of the year. Iran was
effectively waging a naval guerrilla war with its IRGC navy speedboats, while
Iraq attacked with its aircraft. In 1987, Kuwait asked to reflag its tankers to
the US flag. They did so in March, and the US navy began Operation Earnest Will
to escort the tankers.[126] The result of Earnest Will would be that while oil
tankers shipping Iraqi/Kuwaiti oil were protected, Iranian tankers, and neutral
tankers shipping to Iran would be unprotected, resulting in both losses for
Iran and the undermining of its trade with foreign countries, damaging Iran's
economy further. Iran also deployed Silkworm missiles to attack some ships, but
only a few were actually fired. Both the US and Iran jockeyed for influence in
the Gulf. To discourage the US from escorting tankers, Iran secretly mined some
areas in the Gulf. The US began to escort the reflagged tankers, but one of
them was destroyed by a mine while under escort. While being a public-relations
victory for Iran, the US increased its reflagging efforts. While Iran mined the
Persian Gulf, their speedboat attacks were reduced, primarily attacking
unflagged tankers shipping in the area.[126]
On 24 September, US Navy SEALS captured the Iranian
mine-laying ship Iran Ajr, a diplomatic disaster for the already isolated
Iranians. On 8 October, the US Navy destroyed four Iranian speedboats, and in
response to Iranian Silkworm missile attacks on Kuwaiti oil tankers launched
Operation Nimble Archer, destroying two Iranian oil rigs in the Persian
Gulf.[36] During November and December, the Iraqi air force launched a bid to
destroy all Iranian airbases in Khuzestan and all remaining Iranian air force.
However, Iran managed to shoot down 30 Iraqi fighters with their jets,
anti-aircraft guns, and missiles, allowing the Iranian air force to survive to
the end of the war.[36]
Bodies of Iranian students killed in an Iraqi bomber
attack on a school in Borujerd, 10 January 1987.
On 28 June, Iraqi fighter bombers attacked the Iranian
town of Sardasht near the border, using chemical mustard gas bombs. While many
towns and cities had been bombed before, and troops attacked with gas, this was
the first time that the Iraqis had attacked a civilian area with poison
gas.[133] One quarter of the town's then population of 20,000 was burned and
stricken, and 113 were killed immediately, with many more dying and suffering
health effects over the next decades.[120] Saddam ordered the attack in order
to test the effects of the newly developed "dusty mustard" gas, which
was designed to be even more crippling than traditional mustard gas, in
addition to the area for suspected Kurdish rebels. While little known outside
of Iran (unlike the later Halabja chemical attack), the Sardasht bombing (and
future similar attacks) had a tremendous effect on the Iranian people's psyche.
1988: Iraqi offensives and the UN ceasefire[edit]
Main articles: Operation Praying Mantis and Iran Air
Flight 655
By 1988, with massive equipment imports and reduced
Iranian volunteers, Iraq was ready to launch major offensives against Iran.[68]
On February 1988, Saddam began the fifth and most deadly "war of the
cities".[44] Over the next two months, Iraq launched over 200 al-Hussein
missiles at 37 Iranian cities.[44][130] Saddam also threatened to use chemical
weapons in his missiles, which caused 30% of Tehran's population to leave the
city.[44] Iran retaliated, launching at least 104 missiles against Iraq in 1988
and shelling Basra.[105][130] This event was nicknamed the "Scud
Duel" in the foreign media.[36] In all, Iraq launched 520 Scuds and
al-Husseins against Iran and Iran fired 177 at them.[46] However, the Iranian
attacks were too few in number to deter Iraq from launching their attacks.[130]
Iraq also increased their airstrikes against Kharg Island and Iranian oil
tankers. With their allies tankers protected by US warships, they could operate
with virtual impunity.[36][126] To make matters worse, the West supplied Iraq's
air force with laser-guided smart bombs, allowing them to attack economic
targets while evading anti-aircraft defenses. These attacks began to have a
major toll on the Iranian economy, morale, and caused many casualties as
well.[36][51][126]
Iran's Kurdistan Operations[edit]
In March 1988, the Iranians carried out Operation Dawn
10, Operation Beit-ol-Moqaddas 2, and Operation Zafar 7 (Victory 7) in Iraqi
Kurdistan with the aim of capturing the Darbandikhan Dam and the power plant at
Lake Dukan, which supplied Iraq with much of its electricity and water, as well
as the city of Suleimaniya.[49]:264 Iran hoped that the capture of these areas
would bring more favorable terms to the ceasefire agreement.[51] This
infiltration offensive was carried out in conjunction with the Peshmerga.
Iranian airborne commandos landed behind the Iraqi lines and Iranian
helicopters hit Iraqi tanks with TOW missiles. The Iraqis were taken by
surprise, and Iranian F-5E Tiger fighter jets even damaged the Kirkuk oil
refinery.[36] Iraq carried out executions of multiple officers for these
failures in March–April 1988, including Colonel Jafar Sadeq.[64] The Iranians
used infiltration tactics in the Kurdish mountains, captured the town of
Halabja and began to fan out across the province.[64]
Though the Iranians advanced to within sight of Dukan,
and captured around 1,040 km2 (400 sq mi) and 4,000 Iraqi troops, the offensive
failed due to the Iraqi use of chemical warfare.[49]:264 The Iraqis launched
the deadliest chemical weapons attacks of the war. The Republican Guard
launched 700 chemical shells, while the other artillery divisions launched
200–300 chemical shells each, unleashing a chemical cloud over the Iranians,
killing or wounding 60% of them, the blow was felt particurarly by the Iranian
84th infantry division and 55th paratrooper division.[64] The Iraqi special
forces then stopped the remains of the Iranian force.[64] In retaliation for
Kurdish collaboration with the Iranians, Iraq launched a massive poison gas
attack against Kurdish civilians in Halabja, recently taken by the Iranians,
killing thousands of civilians.[134] Iran airlifted foreign journalists to the
ruined city, and the images of the dead were shown throughout the world.
However, Western mistrust of Iran and collaboration with Iraq led them to also
blame Iran for the attack. At one point, the United States claimed that Iran
had launched the attack and then tried to blame Iraq for it.[134]
Victims of the Halabja chemical attack. Chemical weapons
used by Iraq killed and injured numerous Iranians and Kurds.
Second Battle of al-Faw[edit]
Main article: Second Battle of al-Faw
On 17 April 1988, Iraq launched Operation Ramadan Mubarak
(Blessed Ramadan), a surprise attack against the 15,000 Basij troops on the
peninsula.[68] The attack on al-Faw was preceded by Iraqi diversionary attacks
in northern Iraq, with a massive artillery and air barrage of Iranian front
lines. Key areas, such as supply lines, command posts, and ammunition depots,
were hit by a storm of mustard gas and nerve gas, as well as by conventional
explosives. Helicopters landed Iraqi commandos behind Iranian lines while the
main Iraqi force attacked in a frontal assault. Within 48 hours, all of the
Iranian forces had been killed or cleared from the al-Faw Peninsula.[68] The
day was celebrated in Iraq as Faw Liberation Day throughout Saddam's rule. The
Iraqis had planned the offensive well. Prior to the attack the Iraqi soldiers
gave themselves poison gas antidotes to shield themselves from the effect of
the saturation of gas. The heavy and well executed use of chemical weapons was
the decisive factor in the Iraqi victory.[135] Iraqi losses were relatively
light, especially compared to Iran's casualties.[64] The Iranians eventually
managed to halt the Iraqi drive as they pushed towards Khuzestan.[36]
To the shock of the Iranians, rather than breaking off
the offensive, the Iraqis kept up their drive, and a new force attacked the
Iranian positions around Basra.[44] Following this, the Iraqis launched a
sustained drive to clear the Iranians out of all of southern Iraq.[49]:264
One of the most successful Iraqi tactics was the
"one-two punch" attack using chemical weapons. Using artillery, they
would saturate the Iranian front line with rapidly dispersing cyanide and nerve
gas, while longer-lasting mustard gas was launched via fighter-bombers and
rockets against the Iranian rear, creating a "chemical wall" that
blocked reinforcement.[36]
Operation Praying Mantis[edit]
The Iranian frigate IS Sahand burns after being hit by
twenty US air launched missiles and bombs, killing a third of the crew. April
1988 [136]
The same day as Iraq's attack on al-Faw peninsula, the
United States Navy launched Operation Praying Mantis in retaliation against
Iran for damaging a warship with a mine. Iran lost oil platforms, destroyers,
and frigates in this battle, which ended only when President Reagan decided
that the Iranian navy had been put down enough. However, the Revolutionary
Guard's navy continued their speedboat attacks against oil tankers.[68]
However, the combined defeats at al-Faw and in the Persian Gulf nudged Iranian
leadership towards quitting the war, especially when faced with the prospect of
fighting the Americans.[68]
Iranian counteroffensive[edit]
Faced with such losses, Khomeini appointed the cleric
Hashemi Rafsanjani as the Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces, though he had
in actuality occupied that position for months.[130] Rafsanjani ordered a
surprise counter-attack into Iraq, which was launched 13 June 1988. The
Iranians infiltrated through the Iraqi trenches and moved 10 km (6.2 mi) into
Iraq, and managed to strike Saddam's presidential palace in Baghdad using
fighter aircraft.[36] After 10 hours of fighting, the decimated Iranians were
driven back to their original positions again as the Iraqis launched 650
helicopter and 300 aircraft sorties.[130]
Operation Forty Stars[edit]
On 18 June, Iraq launched Operation Forty Stars (چل چراغ
chehel cheragh) in conjunction to the Mujahideen-e-Khalq (MEK) around Mehran.
With 530 aircraft sorties and heavy use of nerve gas, they crushed the Iranian
forces in the area, killing 3,500, and nearly destroying a Revolutionary Guard
division.[130] Mehran was captured once again and occupied by the MEK.[130]
Iraq also launched air raids on Iranian population centers and economic
targets, setting 10 oil installations on fire.[130]
Tawakalna ala Allah Operations[edit]
Main article: Tawakalna ala Allah Operations
On 25 May 1988, Iraq launched the first of four Tawakalna
ala Allah (Trust in God) Operations,[64] consisting of one of the largest
artillery barrages in history, coupled with chemical weapons. The marshes had
been dried by drought, allowing the Iraqis to use tanks to bypass Iranian field
fortifications, expelling the Iranians from the border town of Shalamcheh after
less than 10 hours of combat.[44]:11[49]:265[130]
On 25 June, Iraq launched the second Tawakal ala Allah
operation against the Iranians on Majnoon Island. Iraqi commandos used
hovercraft to block the Iranian rear,[36] then used hundreds of tanks with
heavy conventional and chemical artillery barrages to recapture the island
after 8 hours of combat.[64][130] Saddam appeared live on Iraqi television to
"lead" the charge against the Iranians.[130] The majority of the
Iranian defenders were killed during the quick assault.[64] The final two
Tawakal ala Allah operations took place near al-Amarah and Khaneqan.[64] By 12
July, the Iraqis had captured the city of Dehloran, 40 km (25 mi) inside Iran,
along with 2,500 troops and much armour and material, which took four days to
transport to Iraq. These losses includes more 570 of the 1,000 remaining
Iranian tanks, over 430 armored vehicles, 45 self-propelled artillery weapons,
620 towed artillery and antiaircraft guns.[130] The Iraqis withdrew from
Dehloran soon after, claiming that they had "no desire to conquer Iranian
territory."[36] Historian Kaveh Farrokh considered this to be Iran's
greatest military disaster during the war. Pelletier notes that “Tawakal ala
Allah … resulted in the absolute destruction of Iran’s military machine.”[36]
Iranian soldiers captured during Iraq's 1988 offensives
During the 1988 battles, the Iranians put up little resistance
to the Iraqi offensives, having been worn out by nearly eight years of
war.[49]:253 They lost large amounts of equipment; however, they managed to
rescue most of their troops from being captured by the Iraqis, leaving Iraq
with relatively few prisoners.[36] On 2 July, Iran belatedly set up a joint
central command which unified the Revolutionary Guard, Army, and Kurdish
rebels, and dispelled the rivalry between the Army and the Revolutionary Guard.
However, this came too late, and Iran was believed to have fewer than 200
remaining tanks on the southern front, faced against thousands of Iraqi
ones.[130] The only area where the Iranians were not suffering major defeats
was in Kurdistan.[101]
Iran accepts the ceasefire[edit]
Saddam sent a warning to Khomeini in mid-1988,
threatening to launch a full-scale invasion and attack Iranian cities with
weapons of mass destruction. Shortly afterwards, Iraqi aircraft bombed the
Iranian town of Oshnavieh with poison gas, immediately killing and wounding
over 2,000 civilians. The fear of an all out chemical attack against Iran's
largely unprotected civilian population weighed heavily on the Iranian
leadership, and they realized that the international community had no intention
of restraining Iraq.[137] The lives of the civilian population of Iran were
becoming very disrupted, with a third of the urban population evacuating major
cities in fear of the seemingly imminent chemical war. Meanwhile, Iraqi
conventional bombs and missiles continued to strike continuously, as the death
toll among the population increased. Iran did reply with missile and air
attacks as well, but not enough to deter the Iraqis from attacking.[130]
Under the threat of a new and even more powerful
invasion, Commander-in-Chief Akbar Rafsanjani ordered the Iranians to retreat
from Haj Omran, Kurdistan on 14 July.[130][138] The Iranians did not publicly
describe this as a retreat, instead called it a "temporary
withdrawal".[138] By July, Iran's army inside Iraq (except Kurdistan) had
largely disintegrated.[36] Iraq put up a massive display of captured Iranian
weapons in Baghdad, claiming they "captured" 1,298 tanks, 5,550
recoil-less rifles, and thousands of other weapons.[130] However, Iraq had
taken heavy losses as well, and the battles were very costly.[64]
On July 1988, Iraqi aeroplanes dropped cyanide bombs on
the Iranian Kurdish village of Zardan (as they had done four months earlier on
their own Kurdish village of Halabja). Dozens of villages, and some larger
towns, such as Marivan, were attacked with poison gas, resulting in even
heavier civilian casualties.[139] About the same time, the USS Vincennes shot
down Iran Air Flight 655, killing 290 passengers. The lack of international
sympathy disturbed the Iranian leadership, and they came to the conclusion that
the United States was on the verge of waging a full-scale war against them, and
that Iraq was on the verge of unleashing its entire chemical arsenal upon their
major cities.[137]
At this point, elements of the Iranian leadership, led by
Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani (who had pushed for the war initially), persuaded
Khomeini to accept the UN ceasefire.[44] They stated that in order to win the
war, Iran's military budget would have to be increased by 700% and the war
would last until 1993.[130] Many officials also pointed out to Khomeini that
while Resolution 598 would not give all of the gains that Iran wanted, it was
better than anything else that had been proposed before, and likely would be
proposed afterward, considering that it provided a return to the pre-war status
quo, rather than having Iraq occupy Iranian border areas like previous
agreements. While many parts were ambiguous, it could be negotiated with
Iraq.[51]
On 20 July 1988, Iran accepted Resolution 598, showing
its willingness to accept a ceasefire.[44]:11 A statement from Khomeini was
read out in a radio address, and he expressed deep displeasure and reluctance
about accepting the ceasefire:
Happy are those who have departed through martyrdom.
Happy are those who have lost their lives in this convoy of light. Unhappy am I
that I still survive and have drunk the poisoned chalice...[44][45]:1
The news of the end of the war was greeted with
celebration in Baghdad, with people dancing in the streets; in Tehran, however,
the end of the war was greeted with a somber mood.[45]:1
Kurdish civilians fleeing the Al-Anfal Campaign are
airlifted to Iran
Operation Mersad and end of the war[edit]
Main article: Operation Mersad
Operation Mersad (مرصاد "ambush") was the last
major military operation of the war. Both Iran and Iraq had accepted Resolution
598. But despite the ceasefire, after seeing Iraqi victories in the previous
months, MEK decided to launch an attack of its own and wished to advance all
the way to Teheran. Saddam and the Iraqi high command decided on a two pronged
offensive across the border: central Iran, and Iranian Kurdistan.[36] Shortly
after Iran accepted the ceasefire the MEK army began its offensive, attacking
into Ilam province under cover of Iraqi air power.
In the north, Iraq also launched an attack into Iraqi
Kurdistan, which was blunted by the Iranians.[36]
On 26 July 1988, the Mujahadeen-e-Khalq (MEK), with the
support of the Iraqi army, started their campaign, Operation Forough Javidan
(Eternal Light) in central Iran. The MEK supported by Iraq attacked western
Iran, advancing towards Kermanshah. The Iranians had withdrawn their remaining
soldiers to Khuzestan in fear of a new Iraqi invasion attempt, and as a result
the Mujahedeen advanced rapidly, seizing Qasr-e Shirin, Sarpol-e Zahab,
Kerend-e Gharb, and Islamabad-e-Gharb, and towards Kermanshah. The MEK expected
the Iranian population to rise up and support their advance; however, the
uprising never materialised, but they reached 145 km (90 mi) deep into Iran. In
response, the Iranian military launched its counter-attack, Operation Mersad,
under Lieutenant General Ali Sayyad Shirazi. Iranian paratroopers landed behind
the MEK lines while the Iranian Air Force and helicopters launched an air
attack, destroying much of the enemy columns.[36] The Iranians defeated the MEK
in the city of Kerend-e Gharb on 29 July 1988.[130] On 31 July, Iran drove the
MEK out of Qasr-e-Shirin and Sarpol Zahab, though MEK claimed to have "voluntarily
withdrawn" from the towns.[36][130] Iran estimated that 4,500 MEK were
killed, while 400 Iranian soldiers died.[140]
People's Mujahedin of Iran Soldiers killed in Operation
Mersad in 1988
The last notable combat actions of the war took place on
3 August 1988, in the Persian Gulf when the Iranian navy fired on a freighter
and Iraq launched chemical attacks on Iranian civilians, killing an unknown
number of them and wounding 2,300.[130]
Iraq came under heavy international pressure to end the
war. Resolution 598 became effective on 8 August 1988, ending all combat
operations between the two countries.[138] By 20 August 1988, peace with Iran
was restored.[138] UN peacekeepers belonging to the UNIIMOG mission took the
field, remaining on the Iran–Iraq border until 1991. The majority of Western
analysts believe that the war had no winners while some believed that Iraq
emerged as the victor of the war, based on Iraq’s overwhelming successes
between April and July 1988.[36] While the war was now over, Iraq spent the
rest of August and early September clearing the Kurdish resistance. Using
60,000 troops along with helicopter gunships, chemical weapons (poison gas),
and mass executions, Iraq hit 15 villages, killing rebels and civilians, and
forced tens of thousands of Kurds to relocate to settlements.[130] Many Kurdish
civilians immigrated to Iran. By 3 September 1988, the anti-Kurd campaign
ended, and all resistance had been crushed.[130] 400 Iraqi soldiers and 50,000
Kurdish civilians and soldiers had been killed.[130][141]
Aftermath[edit]
Damage to a mosque in Khoramshahr, Iran
Iranian Martyr Cemetery in Yazd
An Iraqi Mil Mi-24 on display at the military museum of
Sa'dabad Palace in Iran
The Iran–Iraq War was the deadliest conventional war ever
fought between regular armies of developing countries.[53] Iraqi casualties are
estimated at 105,000–200,000 killed,[10][20][20][23][24] while about 400,000
had been wounded and some 70,000 taken prisoner.[13][23] Thousands of civilians
on both sides died in air raids and ballistic missile attacks.[46] Prisoners
taken by both countries began to be released in 1990, though some were not
released until more than 10 years after the end of the conflict.[35] Cities on
both sides had also been considerably damaged. While revolutionary Iran had
been bloodied, Iraq was left with a large military and was a regional power,
albeit with severe debt, financial problems, and labor shortages.[101]
According to Iranian government sources, the war cost
Iran an estimated 200,000–220,000 killed,[10][11][13][20] or up to 262,000
according to the conservative Western estimates.[10][12] This includes 123,220
combatants,[10][11] 60,711 MIA[10] and 11,000-16,000 civilians.[10][11]
Combatants include 79,664 members of the Revolutionary Guard Corps and
additional 35,170 soldiers from regular military.[11] In addition, prisoners of
war comprise 42,875 Iranian casualties, they were captured and kept in Iraqi
detention centers from 2.5 to more than 15 years after the war was over.[21]
According to the Janbazan Affairs Organization, 398,587 Iranians sustained
injuries that required prolonged medical and health care following primary
treatment, including 52,195 (13%) injured due to the exposure to chemical
warfare agents.[21] From 1980 to 2012, 218,867 Iranians died due to war
injuries and mean age of combatants was 23 years old.[21] This includes 33,430
civilians, mostly women and children.[21] More than 144,000 Iranian children
were orphaned as a consequence of these deaths.[21] Other estimates put Iranian
casualties up to 600,000.[15][16][17][18][142][143][144]
Both Iraq and Iran manipulated loss figures to suit their
purposes. At the same time, Western analysts accepted improbable
estimates.[145] By April 1988, such casualties were estimated at between
150,000 to 340,000 Iraqis dead, and 450,000 to 730,000 Iranians.[145] Shortly
after the end of the war, it was thought that Iran suffered even more than a
million dead.[11] Considering the style of fighting on the ground and the fact
that neither side penetrated deeply into the other's territory, USMC analysts
believe events do not substantiate the high casualties claimed.[145] Iraqi
government has claimed 800,000 Iranians were killed in conflict, four times
more than Iranian official figures.[10] Iraqi losses were also revised
downwards over time.[24]
Peace Talks and Postwar Situation[edit]
With the ceasefire in place, and UN peacekeepers
monitoring the border, Iran and Iraq sent their representatives to Geneva,
Switzerland, to negotiate a peace agreement on the terms of the ceasefire.
However, peace talks stalled. Iraq, in violation of the UN ceasefire, refused
to withdraw its troops from 3,000 square miles of Iranian territory unless the
Iranians accepted Iraq's full sovereignty over the Shatt al-Arab waterway (as
Iran had feared in 1982). Foreign powers continued to support Iraq, which wanted
to gain at the negotiating table what they failed to achieve on the
battlefield, and Iran was portrayed as the one who was not wanting peace.[146]
Iran, in response, refused to release 70,000 Iraqi prisoners of war (twice as
many compared to Iranian prisoners of war in Iraq). They also continued to
carry out a naval blockade of Iraq, although its effects were mitigated by
Iraqi trade with its Arab neighbors. Iran also began to improve relations with
many of the states that opposed it during the war. Because of Iranian actions,
by 1990, Saddam had become more conciliatory, and in a letter to the now
President Rafsanjani, he became more open to the idea of a peace agreement,
although he still insisted on full sovereignty over the Shatt al-Arab.[146]
By 1990, Iran was undergoing military rearmament and
reorganization, purchasing from the USSR and China $10 billion worth of heavy
weaponry, including aircraft, tanks, and missiles. Rafsanjani reversed Iran's
self-imposed ban on chemical weapons, and ordered the manufacture and stockpile
of them (in 1993, Iran ratified the Chemical Weapons Convention, and
subsequently destroyed them).[147] Saddam realized that if Iran attempted to
expel the Iraqis from their territory, it was likely they would succeed.[36] As
war with the western powers loomed, Iraq became concerned about Iran mending
their relations with the west in order to attack Iraq. Iraq had lost their
support from the West, and their position in Iran was increasingly
untenable.[146] Shortly after his invasion of Kuwait, Saddam wrote a letter to
Rafsanjani stating that Iraq recognised Iranian rights over the eastern half of
the Shatt al-Arab, a reversion to the status quo ante bellum that he had
repudiated a decade earlier,[148] and that he would accept Iran's demands and
withdraw Iraq's military from the disputed territories at the border. A peace
agreement was signed finalizing the terms of the UN resolution, diplomatic
relations was restored, and by late 1990-early 1991, the Iraqi military
withdrew from the disputed territories. The UN peacekeepers withdrew from the
border shortly afterward. Most of the prisoners of war were released in 1990,
although some remained as late as 2003.[146] Iranian politicians declared it to
be the "greatest victory in the history of the Islamic Republic of
Iran".[146]
Most historians and analysts consider the war to be a
stalemate. Certain analysts believe that Iraq won, on the basis of the success
of their 1988 offensives which thwarted Iran's major territorial ambitions in
Iraq and persuaded Iran to accept the ceasefire.[36] Iranian analysts believe
that they won the war because although they did not succeed in defeating Iraq
militarily, they did manage to gain their political goals of driving Iraq
entirely from their territory (which was an important purpose of the post 1982
invasion of Iraq, to force the Iraqis to negotiate a withdrawal from Iran's
border areas).[51] They also cite the fact that Iran achieved its goals against
Iraq's superior military, they thwarted Iraq's major territorial ambitions in
Iran, and that, 2 years after the war had ended, Iraq permanently gave up its
claims to the Shatt al-Arab as well.[36]
On 9 December 1991, Javier Pérez de Cuéllar, UN Secretary
General at the time, reported that Iraq's initiation of the war was
unjustified, as was its occupation of Iranian territory and use of chemical
weapons against civilians:
That [Iraq's] explanations do not appear sufficient or
acceptable to the international community is a fact...[the attack] cannot be justified
under the charter of the United Nations, any recognized rules and principles of
international law, or any principles of international morality, and entails the
responsibility for conflict. Even if before the outbreak of the conflict there
had been some encroachment by Iran on Iraqi territory, such encroachment did
not justify Iraq's aggression against Iran—which was followed by Iraq's
continuous occupation of Iranian territory during the conflict—in violation of
the prohibition of the use of force, which is regarded as one of the rules of
jus cogens...On one occasion I had to note with deep regret the experts'
conclusion that "chemical weapons ha[d] been used against Iranian
civilians in an area adjacent to an urban center lacking any protection against
that kind of attack".[149]
He also stated that had the UN accepted this fact
earlier, the war would have almost certainly not lasted as long as it did.
Iran, encouraged by the announcement, sought reparations from Iraq, but never
received any.[146]
United Nations observers on the Iran–Iraq border,
inspecting Iraqi chemical shells
Throughout the 1990s and early 2000s, Iran and Iraq
relations remained at a limbo between a cold war and a cold peace. Despite
renewed and somewhat thawed relations, both sides continued to have low level
conflicts with each other. Iraq continued to host and support the
Mujahedeen-e-Khalq, which carried out multiple attacks throughout Iran up until
the 2003 US led invasion (including the assassination of Iranian general Ali Sayyad
Shirazi in 1998, cross border raids, and mortar attacks). Iran carried out
several airstrikes and missile attacks against Mujahedeen targets inside of
Iraq (the largest taking place in 2001, when Iran fired 56 Scud missiles at
Mujahedeen targets).[150] In addition, according to General Hamdani, Iran
continued to carry out low-level infiltrations of Iraqi territory, using Iraqi
dissidents and anti-government activists rather than Iranian troops, in order
to incite revolts. After the fall of Saddam in 2003, Hamdani claimed that
Iranian agents infiltrated and created numerous militias in Iraq and built an
intelligence system operating within the country.[64]
In 2005, the new government of Iraq apologised to Iran
for starting the war.[151] The Iraqi government also commemorated the war with
various monuments, including the Hands of Victory and the al-Shaheed Monument,
both in Baghdad. The war also helped to create a forerunner for the Coalition
of the Gulf War, when the Gulf Arab states banded together early in the war to
form the Gulf Cooperation Council to help Iraq fight Iran.[101]
With the US invasion of Iraq in 2003, and Iran's
involvement in Iraq's new government and backing of proxy militias, many
observers believe that Iran has effectively gained influence over Iraq.[152]
Financial situation[edit]
The financial loss at the time was believed to exceed
US$500 billion for each country ($1.2 trillion total).[153] In addition,
economic development stalled and oil exports were disrupted. Iran, having used
bloodier but economically cheaper tactics during the war, only incurred a small
debt, in contrast to the large ones incurred by Iraq. Iraq had accrued more
than $130 billion of international debt, excluding interest, and was also
weighed down by a slowed GDP growth. Iraq's debt to Paris Club amounted to $21
billion, 85% of which had originated from the combined inputs of Japan, the
USSR, France, Germany, the United States, Italy and the United Kingdom. The
largest portion of Iraq's debt, amounting to $130 billion, was to its former
Arab backers, with $67 billion loaned by Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, UAE, and
Jordan.[154] After the war, Iraq accused Kuwait of slant drilling and stealing
oil, inciting its invasion of Kuwait, which in turn worsened Iraq's financial
situation: the United Nations Compensation Commission mandated Iraq to pay
reparations of more than $200 billion to victims of the invasion, including
Kuwait and the United States. To enforce payment Iraq was put under a complete
international embargo, which put further strain on the Iraqi economy and pushed
its external debt and international liabilities to private and public sectors
to more than $500 billion by the end of Saddam's rule. Combined with Iraq's
negative economic growth after prolonged international sanctions, this produced
a debt-to-GDP ratio of more than 1,000%, making Iraq the most indebted
developing country in the world. The unsustainable economic situation compelled
the new Iraqi government to request that a considerable portion of debt
incurred during the Iran–Iraq war be written off.[155][156][157][158]
Consequently the effects of the Iran–Iraq War led to the Iraqi invasion of
Kuwait and the subsequent Persian Gulf War two years later.[101]
Much of the oil industry in both countries was damaged in
air raids. 10 million shells had landed in Iraq's oil fields at Basra,
seriously damaging their oil production. Iran's production capacity has
yet[timeframe?] to fully recover from the damages of the war.[44]
Science and technology[edit]
The war had a marked effect on the scientific and
technological advancement of the involved countries: Iraq's productivity in the
field collapsed and has not yet recovered,[timeframe?] and Kuwait's scientific
output was initially slowed and later became stagnant.[citation needed]
The war had its impact on medical science: a surgical
intervention for comatose patients with penetrating brain injuries was created
by Iranian physicians treating wounded soldiers, later establishing
neurosurgery guidelines to treat civilians who had suffered blunt or
penetrating skull injuries.[citation needed] Iranian physicians' experience in
the war reportedly helped U.S. congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords recover after
the 2011 Tucson shooting.[159]
In addition to helping trigger the Persian Gulf War, the
Iran–Iraq War also contributed to Iraq's defeat in the Persian Gulf War. Iraq's
military was accustomed to fighting the slow moving Iranian infantry formations
with artillery and static defenses, while using mostly unsophisticated tanks to
gun down and shell the infantry and overwhelm the smaller Iranian tank force;
in addition to being dependent on weapons of mass destruction to help secure
victories. Therefore, they were rapidly overwhelmed by the high-tech,
quick-maneuvering US forces using modern doctrines such as AirLand Battle.[101]
Home front[edit]
Iraq[edit]
At first, Saddam attempted to ensure that the Iraqi
population suffered from the war as little as possible. There was rationing,
but civilian projects begun before the war continued.[44] At the same time, the
already extensive personality cult around Saddam reached new heights of
adulation while the regime tightened its control over the military.[44]
After the Iranian victories of the spring of 1982 and the
Syrian closure of Iraq's main pipeline, Saddam did a volte-face on his policy
towards the home front: a policy of austerity and total war was introduced,
with the entire population being mobilised for the war effort.[44] All Iraqis
were ordered to donate blood and around 100,000 Iraqi civilians were ordered to
clear the reeds in the southern marshes. Mass demonstrations of loyalty towards
Saddam became more common.[44] Saddam also began implementing a policy of
discrimination against Iraqis of Iranian origin.[36]
In the summer of 1982, Saddam began a campaign of terror.
More than 300 Iraqi Army officers were executed for their failures on the
battlefield.[44] In 1983, a major crackdown was launched on the leadership of
the Shia community. Ninety members of the al-Hakim family, an influential
family of Shia clerics whose leading members were the émigrés Mohammad Baqir
al-Hakim and Abdul Aziz al-Hakim, were arrested, and 6 were hanged.[44] The
crackdown on Kurds saw 8,000 members of the Barzani clan, whose leader (Massoud
Barzani) also led the Kurdistan Democratic Party, summarily executed.[44] From
1983 onwards, a campaign of increasingly brutal repression was started against
the Iraqi Kurds, characterised by Israeli historian Efraim Karsh as having
"assumed genocidal proportions" by 1988.[44] The al-Anfal Campaign
was intended to "pacify" Iraqi Kurdistan permanently.[44]
Gaining civilian support[edit]
To secure the loyalty of the Shia population, Saddam
allowed more Shias into the Ba'ath Party and the government, and improved Shia
living standards, which had been lower than those of the Iraqi Sunnis.[44]
Saddam had the state pay for restoring Imam Ali's tomb with white marble
imported from Italy.[44] The Baathists also increased their policies of
repression against the Shia. The most infamous event was the massacre of 148
civilians of the Shia town of Dujail.[160]
Despite the costs of the war, the Iraqi regime made
generous contributions to Shia waqf (religious endowments) as part of the price
of buying Iraqi Shia support.[45]:75–76 The importance of winning Shia support
was such that welfare services in Shia areas were expanded during a time in
which the Iraqi regime was pursuing austerity in all other non-military
fields.[45]:76 During the first years of the war in the early 1980s, the Iraqi
government tried to accommodate the Kurds in order to focus on the war against
Iran. In 1983, the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan agreed to cooperate with
Baghdad, but the Kurdish Democratic Party (KDP) remained opposed.[161] In 1983,
Saddam signed an autonomy agreement with Jalal Talabani of the Patriotic Union
of Kurdistan (PUK), though Saddam later reneged on the agreement.[44] By 1985,
the PUK and KDP had joined forces, and Iraqi Kurdistan saw widespread guerrilla
warfare up to the end of the war.[44]
Iran[edit]
The Iranian government saw the outbreak of war as chance
to strengthen its position and consolidate the Islamic revolution: the war was
presented to the Iranian people as a glorious jihad and a test of Iranian
national character.[44] The Iranian regime followed a policy of total war from
the beginning, and attempted to mobilise the nation as a whole.[44] They
established a group known as the Reconstruction Campaign, whose members were
exempted from conscription and were instead sent into the countryside to work
on farms to replace the men serving at the front.[44]
Iranian workers had a day's pay deducted from their pay
cheques every month to help finance the war, and mass campaigns were launched to
encourage the public to donate food, money, and blood for the soldiers.[44] To
further help finance the war, the Iranian government banned the import of all
non-essential items, and launched a major effort to rebuild the damaged oil
plants.[44]
Civil unrest[edit]
In June 1981, street battles broke out between the
Revolutionary Guard and the left-wing Mujaheddin e-Khalq (MEK), continuing for
several days and killing hundreds on both sides.[45]:250 In September, more
unrest broke out on the streets of Iran as the MEK attempted to seize
power.[44] Thousands of left-wing Iranians (many of whom were not associated
with the MEK) were shot and hanged by the government in the aftermath.[49]:251
The MEK began an assassination campaign that killed hundreds of regime
officials by the fall of 1981.[45]:251 On 28 June 1981, they assassinated the
secretary-general of the Islamic Republican Party, Mohammad Beheshti and on 30
August, killed Iran's president, Mohammad-Ali Rajai.[45]:251 The government
responded with mass executions of suspected MEK members, a practice that lasted
until 1985.[44]
In addition to the open civil conflict with the MEK, the
Iranian government was faced with Iraqi-supported rebellions in Iranian
Kurdistan, which were gradually put down through a campaign of systematic
repression.[44] 1985 also saw student anti-war demonstrations, which were
crushed by government activists.[44]
Economy[edit]
The war furthered the decline of the Iranian economy that
had begun with the revolution in 1978–79.[44] Between 1979 and 1981, foreign
exchange reserves fell from US$14.6 billion to $1 billion.[44] As a result of
the war, living standards dropped dramatically,[44][49]:252 and Iran was
described by British journalists John Bulloch and Harvey Morris as "a dour
and joyless place" ruled by a harsh regime that "seemed to have
nothing to offer but endless war."[45]:239 Though Iran was becoming
bankrupt, Khomeini interpreted Islam's prohibition of usury to mean they could
not borrow against future oil revenues to meet war expenses. As a result, Iran
funded the war by the income from oil exports after cash had run out. The
revenue from oil dropped from $20 billion in 1982 to $5 billion in
1988.[49]:252
In January 1985, former prime minister and anti-war
Islamic Liberation Movement Mehdi Bazargan criticised the war in a telegram to
the United Nations, calling it un-Islamic and illegitimate and arguing that
Khomeini should have accepted Saddam's truce offer in 1982 instead of
attempting to overthrow the Ba'ath.[44] He added, "Since 1986, you have
not stopped proclaiming victory, and now you are calling upon population to
resist until victory. Is that not an admission of failure on your
part?"[49]:252 Khomeini was annoyed by Bazargan's telegram, and issued a
lengthy public rebuttal in which he defended the war as both Islamic and
just.[44]
By 1987, Iranian morale had begun to crumble, reflected
in the failure of government campaigns to recruit "martyrs" for the
front.[44] Israeli historian Efraim Karsh points to the decline in morale in
1987–88 as being a major factor in Iran's decision to accept the ceasefire of
1988.[44]
Not all saw the war in negative terms. The Islamic
Revolution of Iran was strengthened and radicalised.[162] The Iranian
government-owned Etelaat newspaper wrote, "There is not a single school or
town that is excluded from the happiness of 'holy defence' of the nation, from
drinking the exquisite elixir of martyrdom, or from the sweet death of the
martyr, who dies in order to live forever in paradise."[163]
Comparison of Iraqi and Iranian military strength[edit]
See also: Order of battle during the Iran–Iraq War
At the beginning of the war, Iraq held a clear advantage
in armour, while both nations were roughly equal in terms of artillery. The gap
only widened as the war went on. Iran started with a stronger air force, but
over time, the balance of power reversed in Iraq's favour. Estimates for 1980
and 1987 were:[164]
Imbalance of Power (1980–1987) Iraq Iran
Tanks in 1980 2700 1740
Tanks in 1987 4500+ 1000
Fighter aircraft in 1980 332 445
Fighter aircraft in 1987 500+ 65 (serviceable)
Helicopters in 1980 40 500
Helicopters in 1987 150 60
Artillery in 1980 1000 1000+
Artillery in 1987 4000+ 1000+
Foreign support to Iraq and Iran[edit]
Main articles: International aid to combatants in the
Iran–Iraq War and United States support for Iraq during the Iran–Iraq war
File:Shakinghands high.OGG
Donald Rumsfeld as the American special envoy to the Middle
East meets Saddam in December 1983. Rumsfeld would later become U.S. Defense
Secretary during the 2003 Iraq War, which saw Saddam ousted from power and
ultimately executed.
During the war, Iraq was regarded by the West and the
Soviet Union as a counterbalance to post-revolutionary Iran.[45]:119 The Soviet
Union, Iraq's main arms supplier during the war, did not wish for the end of
its alliance with Iraq, and was alarmed by Saddam's threats to find new arms
suppliers in the West and China if the Kremlin did not provide him with the
weapons he wanted.[45]:119, 198–199 The Soviet Union hoped to use the threat of
reducing arms supplies to Iraq as leverage for forming a Soviet-Iranian
alliance.[45]:197
During the early years of the war, the United States lacked
meaningful relations with either Iran or Iraq, the former due to the Iranian
Revolution and the Iran hostage crisis and the latter because of Iraq's
alliance with the Soviet Union and hostility towards Israel. Following Iran's
success of repelling the Iraqi invasion and Khomeini's refusal to end the war
in 1982, the U.S. made an outreach to Iraq, beginning with the restoration of
diplomatic relations in 1984. The United States wished to both keep Iran away
from Soviet influence and protect other Gulf states from any threat of Iranian
expansion. As a result, it began to provide limited support to
Iraq.[45]:142–143 In 1982, Henry Kissinger, former Secretary of State, outlined
U.S. policy towards Iran:
The focus of Iranian pressure at this moment is Iraq. There
are few governments in the world less deserving of our support and less capable
of using it. Had Iraq won the war, the fear in the Gulf and the threat to our
interest would be scarcely less than it is today. Still, given the importance
of the balance of power in the area, it is in our interests to promote a
ceasefire in that conflict; through not a cost that will preclude an eventual
rapprochement with Iran either if a more moderate regime replaces Khomenini's
or if the present rulers wake up to geopolitical reality that the historic
threat to Iran's independence has always come from the country with which it
shares a border of 1,500 miles [2,400 km]: the Soviet Union. A rapprochement
with Iran, of course, must await at a minimum Iran's abandonment of hegemonic
aspirations in the Gulf.[45]:142–143
Richard Murphy, Assistant Secretary of State during the
war, testified to Congress in 1984 that the Reagan administration believed a
victory for either Iran or Iraq was "neither militarily feasible nor
strategically desirable."[45]:178
Support to Iraq was given via technological aid,
intelligence, the sale of chemical and biological warfare technology and
military equipment, and satellite intelligence. While there was direct combat
between Iran and the United States, it is not universally agreed that the fighting
between the U.S. and Iran was specifically to benefit Iraq, or for separate
issues between the U.S. and Iran. American official ambiguity towards which
side to support was summed up by Henry Kissinger when he remarked, "It's a
pity they both can't lose."[165] The Americans and the British also either
blocked or watered down UN resolutions that condemned Iraq for using chemical
weapons against the Iranians and their own Kurdish citizens.
More than 30 countries provided support to Iraq, Iran, or
both; most of the aid went to Iraq. Iran had a complex clandestine procurement
network to obtain munitions and critical materials. Iraq had an even larger
clandestine purchasing network, involving 10–12 allied countries, to maintain
ambiguity over their arms purchases and to circumvent "official
restrictions". Arab mercenaries and volunteers from Egypt[166] and Jordan
formed the Yarmouk Brigade[167] and participated in the war alongside Iraqis.
Iraq[edit]
Saddam Hussein in 1982
According to the Stockholm International Peace Institute,
the Soviet Union, France, and China together accounted for over 90% of the
value of Iraq's arms imports between 1980 and 1988.[168]
The United States pursued policies in favour of Iraq by
reopening diplomatic channels, lifting restrictions on the export of dual-use
technology, overseeing the transfer of third-party military hardware, and
providing operational intelligence on the battlefield. France, which from the
1970s onward had been one of Iraq's closest allies, was a major supplier of
military hardware to Iraq.[45]:184–185 The French sold weapons equal to the sum
of US$5 billion, which comprised well over a quarter of Iraq's total arms
stockpile.[45]:184–185 China, which had no direct stake in the victory of
either side and whose interests in the war were entirely commercial, freely
sold arms to both sides.[45]:185, 187, 188, 192–193
Iraq also made extensive use of front companies,
middlemen, secret ownership of all or part of companies all over the world,
forged end-user certificates, and other methods to hide what it was acquiring.
Some transactions may have involved people, shipping, and manufacturing in as
many as 10 countries.[169] Support from Great Britain exemplified the methods
by which Iraq would circumvent export controls. Iraq bought at least one
British company with operations in the United Kingdom and the United States,
and had a complex relationship with France and the Soviet Union, its major
suppliers of actual weapons.
The United Nations Security Council initially called for
a cease-fire after a week of fighting while Iraq was occupying Iranian
territory, and renewed the call on later occasions. However, the UN did not
come to Iran's aid to repel the Iraqi invasion, and the Iranians thus
interpreted the UN as subtly biased in favour of Iraq.[153]
Financial support[edit]
Iraq's main financial backers were the oil-rich Persian
Gulf states, most notably Saudi Arabia ($30.9 billion), Kuwait ($8.2 billion),
and the United Arab Emirates ($8 billion).[154] In all, Iraq received $35
billion in loans from the West and between $30 and $40 billion from the Persian
Gulf states during the 1980s.[170]
The Iraqgate scandal revealed that a branch of Italy's
largest bank, Banca Nazionale del Lavoro (BNL), in Atlanta, Georgia, US relied
partially on U.S. taxpayer-guaranteed loans to funnel $5 billion to Iraq from
1985 to 1989. In August 1989, when FBI agents raided the Atlanta branch of BNL,
branch manager Christopher Drogoul was charged with making unauthorised,
clandestine, and illegal loans to Iraq – some of which, according to his
indictment, were used to purchase arms and weapons technology.[171]
According to the Financial Times, the companies involved
in the scandal by shipping militarily useful technology to Iraq were Hewlett-Packard,
Tektronix and Matrix Churchill's branch in Ohio, US.[172]
Iran[edit]
While the United States directly fought Iran, citing
freedom of navigation as a major casus belli, it also indirectly supplied some
weapons to Iran as part of a complex and illegal programme that became known as
the Iran-Contra affair. These secret sales were partly to help secure the
release of hostages held in Lebanon, and partly to make money to help the
Contras rebel group in Nicaragua. This arms for hostages agreement turned into
a major scandal.
North Korea was a major arms supplier to Iran, often
acting as a third party in arms deals between Iran and the Communist bloc.
Support included domestically manufactured arms and Eastern-Bloc weapons, for
which the major powers wanted deniability. Other arms suppliers and supporters
of Iran included Libya and China.
Both countries[edit]
Besides the United States and the Soviet Union,
Yugoslavia also sold weapons to both countries for the entire duration of the
conflict. Likewise, Portugal helped both countries;[130]:8 it was not unusual
to see Iranian and Iraqi flagged ships moored side-by-side at the Port of
Sines.
From 1980 to 1987 Spain sold €458 million in weapons to
Iran and €172 million[clarification needed] in weapons to Iraq. Weapons sold to
Iraq included 4x4 vehicles, BO-105 helicopters, explosives, and ammunition. A
research party later discovered that an unexploded chemical Iraqi warhead in
Iran was manufactured in Spain.[130]:8[173]
Although neither side acquired any weapons from Turkey,
both sides enjoyed Turkish civilian trade during the conflict, although the
Turkish government remained neutral and refused to support the trade embargo
imposed by the U.S. on Iran. Turkey's export market jumped from $220 million in
1981 to $2 billion in 1985, making up 25% of Turkey's overall exports. Turkish
construction projects in Iraq totaled $2.5 billion between 1974 and 1990.
Trading with both countries helped Turkey to offset its ongoing economic
crisis, though the benefits decreased as the war neared its end and accordingly
disappeared entirely with Iraq's invasion of Kuwait and the resulting Iraq
sanctions Turkey imposed in response.[174]
U.S. involvement[edit]
U.S. Embargo[edit]
A key element of US political–military and
energy–economic planning occurred in early 1983. The Iran–Iraq war had been
going on for five years and there were significant casualties on both sides,
reading hundreds of thousands. Within the Reagan National Security Council
concern was growing that the war could spread beyond the boundaries of the two
belligerents. A National Security Planning Group meeting was called chaired by
Vice President George Bush to review US options. It was determined that there
was a high likelihood that the conflict would spread into Saudi Arabia and
other Gulf states, but that the US had little capability to defend the region.
Furthermore it was determined that a prolonged war in the region would induce
much higher oil prices and threaten the fragile world recovery which was just
beginning to gain momentum. On 22 May 1984, President Reagan was briefed on the
project conclusions in the Oval Office by William Flynn Martin who had served
as the head of the NSC staff that organized the study. The full declassified
presentation can be seen here.[175] The conclusions were threefold: first oil
stocks needed to be increased among members of the International Energy Agency
and, if necessary, released early in the event of oil market disruption; second
the United States needed to beef up the security of friendly Arab states in the
region and thirdly an embargo should be placed on sales of military equipment
to Iran and Iraq. The Plan was approved by the President and later affirmed by
the G-7 leaders headed by Margaret Thatcher in the London Summit of 1984.
Iraqi attack on U.S. warship[edit]
Main article: USS Stark incident
Stark listing following two hits by Exocet missiles.
A missile departs the forward launcher of Vincennes
during a 1987 exercise. This ship later shot down civilian airliner Iran Air
655.
On 17 May 1987, an Iraqi Mirage F1 attack aircraft
launched two Exocet missiles at the USS Stark, a Perry class frigate. The first
struck the port side of the ship and failed to explode, though it left burning
propellant in its wake; the second struck moments later in approximately the
same place and penetrated through to crew quarters, where it exploded, killing
37 crew members and leaving 21 injured. Whether or not Iraqi leadership
authorised the attack is still unknown. Initial claims by the Iraqi government
(that Stark was inside the Iran–Iraq War zone) were shown to be false, and the
motives and orders of the pilot remain unanswered. Though American officials
claimed that the pilot who attacked Stark had been executed, an ex-Iraqi Air
Force commander since stated he had not been punished, and was still alive at
the time.[42] The attack remains the only successful anti-ship missile strike
on an American warship.[176][177] Due to the extensive political and military
cooperation between the Iraqis and Americans by 1987, the attack had little
effect on relations between the two countries.
U.S. military actions toward Iran[edit]
U.S. attention was focused on isolating Iran as well as
maintaining freedom of navigation. It criticised Iran's mining of international
waters, and sponsored UN Security Council Resolution 598, which passed
unanimously on 20 July, under which the U.S. and Iranian forces skirmished
during Operation Earnest Will. During Operation Nimble Archer in October 1987,
the U.S. attacked Iranian oil platforms in retaliation for an Iranian attack on
the U.S.-flagged Kuwaiti tanker Sea Isle City.[115]
On 14 April 1988, the frigate USS Samuel B. Roberts was
badly damaged by an Iranian mine, and 10 sailors were wounded. U.S. forces
responded with Operation Praying Mantis on 18 April, the U.S. Navy's largest
engagement of surface warships since World War II. Two Iranian oil platforms
were damaged, and five Iranian warships and gunboats were sunk. An American
helicopter also crashed.[115] This fighting manifested in the International
Court of Justice as Oil Platforms case (Islamic Republic of Iran v. United
States of America), which was eventually dismissed in 2003.
U.S. shoots down civilian airliner[edit]
Main article: Iran Air Flight 655
In the course of escorts by the U.S. Navy, the cruiser
USS Vincennes shot down Iran Air Flight 655 on 3 July 1988, killing all 290
passengers and crew on board. The American government claimed that the
Vincennes was in international waters at the time (which was later proven to be
untrue), that the civilian airliner had been mistaken for an Iranian F-14 Tomcat,
and the Vincennes feared that it was under attack.[42]:260–273[176] The
Iranians maintain that the Vincennes was in their own waters, and that the
passenger jet was turning away and increasing altitude after take-off. U.S.
Admiral William J. Crowe later admitted on Nightline that the Vincennes was in
Iranian territorial waters when it launched the missiles. At the time of the
attack, Admiral Crowe claimed that the Iranian plane did not identify itself
and sent no response to warning signals he had sent.
According to an investigation conducted by Nightline,
decoys were sent by the U.S. Navy into the Persian Gulf during the war to lure
out the Iranian gunboats and destroy them, and that the Vincennes was
performing such an operation when she shot down the Iranian airliner.
In 1996, the U.S. expressed regret for the event and the
civilian deaths it caused.[46][176]
Use of chemical weapons by Iraq[edit]
See also: Halabja chemical attack, Iraqi chemical weapons
programme and Second Battle of al-Faw
Iranian solit had to use full PPE in front line of
Iran–Iraq War
In a declassified 1991 report, the CIA estimated that
Iran had suffered more than 50,000 casualties from Iraq's use of several
chemical weapons,[178] though current estimates are more than 100,000 as the
long-term effects continue to cause casualties.[46][179] The official CIA
estimate did not include the civilian population contaminated in bordering
towns or the children and relatives of veterans, many of whom have developed
blood, lung and skin complications, according to the Organization for Veterans
of Iran. According to a 2002 article in the Star-Ledger, 20,000 Iranian
soldiers were killed on the spot by nerve gas. As of 2002, 5,000 of the 90,000
survivors continue to seek regular medical treatment, while 1,000 are hospital
inpatients.[180][181]
Victims of the 1987 chemical attack on Sardasht, Iran
According to Iraqi documents, assistance in developing
chemical weapons was obtained from firms in many countries, including the
United States, West Germany, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, and France. A
report stated that Dutch, Australian, Italian, French and both West and East
German companies were involved in the export of raw materials to Iraqi chemical
weapons factories.[182] Declassified CIA documents show that the United States
was providing reconnaissance intelligence to Iraq around 1987–88 which was then
used to launch chemical weapon attacks on Iranian troops and that CIA fully
knew that chemical weapons would be deployed and sarin attacks followed.[183]
On 21 March 1986, the United Nations Security Council
made a declaration stating that "members are profoundly concerned by the
unanimous conclusion of the specialists that chemical weapons on many occasions
have been used by Iraqi forces against Iranian troops, and the members of the
Council strongly condemn this continued use of chemical weapons in clear
violation of the Geneva Protocol of 1925, which prohibits the use in war of
chemical weapons." The United States was the only member who voted against
the issuance of this statement.[184][note 4] A mission to the region in 1988
found evidence of the use of chemical weapons, and was condemned in Security
Council Resolution 612.
Halabja poison gas attack in 1988
According Walter Lang, senior defence intelligence
officer for the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency at the time, "the use of
gas on the battlefield by the Iraqis was not a matter of deep strategic
concern" to Reagan and his aides, because they "were desperate to
make sure that Iraq did not lose." He claimed that the Defense
Intelligence Agency "would have never accepted the use of chemical weapons
against civilians, but the use against military objectives was seen as
inevitable in the Iraqi struggle for survival".[135] The Reagan
administration did not stop aiding Iraq after receiving reports of the use of
poison gas on Kurdish civilians.[185][186]
The U.S. has accused Iran of using chemical weapons as
well,[42]:214 though the allegations have been disputed. Joost Hiltermann, the
principal researcher for Human Rights Watch between 1992 and 1994, conducted a
two-year study that included a field investigation in Iraq, and obtained Iraqi
government documents in the process. According to Hiltermann, the literature on
the Iran–Iraq War reflects allegations of chemical weapons used by Iran, but
they are "marred by a lack of specificity as to time and place, and the
failure to provide any sort of evidence".[187]:153
Analysts Gary Sick and Lawrence Potter have called the
allegations against Iran "mere assertions" and stated, "No
persuasive evidence of the claim that Iran was the primary culprit [of using
chemical weapons] was ever presented."[187]:156 Policy consultant and
author Joseph Tragert stated, "Iran did not retaliate with chemical
weapons, probably because it did not possess any at the time".[188]
At his trial in December 2006, Saddam said he would take
responsibility "with honour" for any attacks on Iran using
conventional or chemical weapons during the 1980–1988 war, but he took issue
with charges he ordered attacks on Iraqis.[189] A medical analysis of the
effects of Iraqi mustard gas is described in a U.S. military textbook and
contrasted effects of World War I gas.[190]
Dissimilarities from other conflicts[edit]
Iran's attack on the Osirak nuclear reactor in September
1980 was the first attack on a nuclear reactor and one of only six military
attacks on nuclear facilities in history. It was also the first instance of a
pre-emptive attack on a nuclear reactor to forestall the development of a
nuclear weapon, though it did not achieve its objective, as France repaired the
reactor after the attack.[191] It took a second pre-emptive strike by the
Israeli Air Force to disable the reactor, killing a French engineer in the
process and causing France to pull out of Osirak. The decommissioning of Osirak
has been cited as causing a substantial delay to Iraqi acquisition of nuclear
weapons.[192][193][194][195][196]
The Iran–Iraq War was also the first and only conflict in
the history of warfare in which both forces used ballistic missiles against
each other.[192] The war also saw the only confirmed air-to-air helicopter
battles in the history of warfare, with Iraqi Mi-25s flying against Iranian
AH-1J SeaCobras on numerous occasions. The first instance of these helicopter
"dogfights" was on the starting day of the war (22 September 1980):
two Iranian SeaCobras crept up on two Mi-25s and hit them with TOW, wire-guided
anti-tank missiles. One Mi-25 went down immediately, the other was badly
damaged and crashed before reaching base. The Iranians won a similar air battle
on 24 April 1981, destroying two Mi-25s without incurring losses to themselves.
According to unclassified documents, Iranian pilots achieved a 10 to 1 kill
ratio over the Iraqi helicopter pilots during these engagements and even
engaged Iraqi, fixed wing aircraft.[95] Both sides also carried out air and
missile attack against population centers, especially Iraq.
In October 1986, Iraqi aircraft began to attack civilian
passenger trains and aircraft on Iranian soil, including an Iran Air Boeing 737
unloading passengers at Shiraz International Airport.[181] In retaliation for
the Iranian Operation Karbala 5, Iraq attacked 65 cities in 226 sorties over 42
days, bombing civilian neighbourhoods. Eight Iranian cities came under attack
from Iraqi missiles. The bombings killed 65 children in an elementary school in
Borujerd. The Iranians also responded with Scud missile attacks on Baghdad and
struck a primary school there. These events became known as the "war of
the cities".[46]
Despite both sides fighting a war with each other, Iran
and Iraq maintained diplomatic relations and embassies in each other's
countries until mid-1987.[86] Iran's government used human waves to attack
enemy troops or even in some cases to clear minefields. Children also
volunteered as well. Some reports have the Basijis marching into battle marking
their expected entry to heaven by wearing "plastic keys to paradise"
around their necks, although other analysts consider it to be a hoax, having
been misinterpreted with a prayer book called "The Keys to
Paradise"(Mafatih al-Janan) by Sheikh Abbas Qumi given to all
volunteers.[87]
According to journalist Robin Wright,
During the Fateh offensive [in February 1987], I toured
the southwest front on the Iranian side and saw scores of boys, aged anywhere
from nine to sixteen, who said with staggering and seemingly genuine enthusiasm
that they had volunteered to become martyrs. Regular army troops, the
paramilitary Revolutionary Guards and mullahs all lauded these youths, known as
baseeji [Basij], for having played the most dangerous role in breaking through
Iraqi lines. They had led the way, running over fields of mines to clear the
ground for the Iranian ground assault. Wearing white headbands to signify the
embracing of death, and shouting "Shaheed, shaheed" (Martyr, martyr)
they literally blew their way into heaven. Their numbers were never disclosed.
But a walk through the residential suburbs of Iranian cities provided a clue.
Window after window, block after block, displayed black-bordered photographs of
teenage or preteen youths.[197] (Continue)
Hello Everybody,
ReplyDeleteMy name is Mrs Sharon Sim. I live in Singapore and i am a happy woman today? and i told my self that any lender that rescue my family from our poor situation, i will refer any person that is looking for loan to him, he gave me happiness to me and my family, i was in need of a loan of S$250,000.00 to start my life all over as i am a single mother with 3 kids I met this honest and GOD fearing man loan lender that help me with a loan of S$250,000.00 SG. Dollar, he is a GOD fearing man, if you are in need of loan and you will pay back the loan please contact him tell him that is Mrs Sharon, that refer you to him. contact Dr Purva Pius,via email:(urgentloan22@gmail.com) Thank you.
BORROWERS APPLICATION DETAILS
1. Name Of Applicant in Full:……..
2. Telephone Numbers:……….
3. Address and Location:…….
4. Amount in request………..
5. Repayment Period:………..
6. Purpose Of Loan………….
7. country…………………
8. phone…………………..
9. occupation………………
10.age/sex…………………
11.Monthly Income…………..
12.Email……………..
Regards.
Managements
Email Kindly Contact: urgentloan22@gmail.com