Operation Dawn 5

Operation Dawn V
Part of Iran–Iraq War
Date16–20 February 1984[1]
(5 days)
Location
Basra, Southeast Iraq
Result

Iraqi victory

  • Minor tactical Iranian success (Iran fails their objective but makes small gains over useless land)
  • Defensive Iraqi success (Iraq holds on to the city of Basra)
Territorial
changes
Iraq holds on to the city of Basra
Belligerents
 Iraq  Iran
Strength
2 Army Corps (approx; 90,000–100,000 soldiers) 100,000-150,000 Pasdaran and Basij
Casualties and losses
25,000 50,000
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Pre-war incidents

Iraqi invasion of Iran (1980)

  • Iraqi airstrike
  • Revenge
  • Kaman 99
  • 1st Khorramshahr
  • Scorch Sword
  • Dezful
  • Sultan 10
  • Abadan
  • Morvarid

Stalemate (1981)

  • Nasr
  • H-3
  • Opera

Iranian offensives to free Iranian territory (1981–82)

  • Samen-ol-A'emeh
  • Tariq-ol-Qods
  • Fath-ol-Mobin
  • Beit-ol-Moqaddas (2nd Khorramshahr)

Iranian offensives in Iraq (1982–84)

  • Ramadan (1st Basra)
  • Moslem Ibn Aqil
  • Muharram ol-Harram
  • Before the Dawn
  • Dawn 1
  • Dawn 2
  • Dawn 3
  • Dawn 4
  • Dawn 5 (2nd Basra)
  • Kheibar (3rd Basra)
  • Kurdish rebellion (1983)
  • Dawn 6
  • Dawn 7
  • Marshes

Iranian offensives in Iraq (1985–87)

  • Badr (4th Basra)
  • Dawn 8 (1st al-Faw)
  • Dawn 9
  • Karbala 1 (Mehran)
  • Karbala 2
  • Karbala 3
  • Fath 1
  • Karbala 4 (5th Basra)
  • Karbala 5 (6th Basra)
  • Karbala 6
  • Karbala 7
  • Karbala 8 (7th Basra)
  • Karbala 9
  • Karbala 10
  • Nasr 4

Final stages (1988)

Tanker War

  • June 5 1984 Skirmish
  • Earnest Will
  • Bridgeton incident
  • Prime Chance
  • Eager Glacier
  • Nimble Archer
  • Praying Mantis

International incidents

As 1984 began, Iran launched the largest offensive up to that date Operation Dawn V, also known as Operation Dawn 5 or Operation Valfajr-5 (Persian). The goal of the offensive was to split the Iraqi 4th Army Corps and 6th Army Corps between Basra and Qurna, and if successful, move on the suburbs or even the city of Basra itself. It was fought between the Pasdaran, Basij and the Iraqi Army. In the early phase, a force of an estimated 100,000-150,000 Pasdaran and Basij, using small motorboats and then on foot moved towards the objective, then attacked using human wave tactics and in places came within a few kilometers of the strategic Basra–Baghdad highway. However the Iranians lacked artillery, air support and armored protection, while the Iraqis were well equipped and entrenched in strong fortified positions.[2] The armies inflicted severe casualties on each other and the Iranians failed to achieve their objective. This operation was the biggest of the Dawn operations.

The Battles

References

  1. ^ Razoux, Pierre (2015). The Iran-Iraq War. Harvard University Press, 2015. p. 262. ISBN 978-0674915718.
  2. ^ "iranian.ws - Iranian Resources and Information". Archived from the original on 2014-12-17. Retrieved 2009-08-02.

External links

  • Iran Chamber Society on Operation Dawn V
  • Detailed look at the operation on Operation Dawn V


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