List of wars involving Iraq

(Redirected from War in Iraq)

This is a list of wars involving the Republic of Iraq and its predecessor states.

ConflictCombatant 1Combatant 2ResultsIraqi lossesHead of StatePrime Minister
MilitaryCivilians
Mesopotamian Campaign
(1914–1918 WWI)
Ottoman Empire United KingdomDefeat~89,500~35,500 Mehmed VI (Ottoman rule) Ahmet Tevfik Pasha (Ottoman rule)
Mahmud Barzanji Revolts (1919–1924) United Kingdom Kingdom of Kurdistan

Kurdish Tribesmen

Government victory??Before 1920: Sir Percy Cox

(British High Commissioner)

After 1920: King Faisal I

Before 1920: Sir Percy Cox

(British High Commissioner)

After 1920: Abd Al-Rahman Al-Gillani

Great Iraqi Revolution
(1920)
Iraqi Rebels United KingdomDefeat6,000–10,0002,050–4,000None
Ikhwan revolt (1927-1930) United Kingdom IkhwanCoalition Victory2,000 killed in totalFaisal I of IraqFaisal bin Sultan
Yazidi Revolt (1935) Kingdom of Iraq Yazidi TribesmenGovernment victory
  • Uprising Quelled
??Ghazi of IraqAli Jawdat al-Aiyubi
Iraqi Shia Revolts
(1935–1936)
Kingdom of Iraq Shia TribesmenGovernment victory
  • Uprising Quelled
~500
Iraqi Coup D'état
(1941)
Kingdom of Iraq Golden Square RebelsGovernment defeat?Faisal II of IraqTaha al-Hashimi
Anglo-Iraqi War
(1941 WWII)
Kingdom of Iraq (Golden Square)
 Germany
 Italy
 United Kingdom
 India
Iraq Levies
Royalists
Transjordan
 Australia
 New Zealand
 Greece
Defeat
  • Re-installation of Hashemite royal dynasty and pro-British government
~500?Sherif SharafRashid Ali al-Gaylani
Barzani Revolt
(1943–1945)
Kingdom of Iraq Barzani KurdsGovernment victory
  • Uprising quelled
?Faisal II of IraqNuri al-Said
Al-Wathbah Uprising (1948) Kingdom of Iraq CommunistsGovernment victory
  • Uprising quelled
300–400Mohammad Hassan al-Sadr
First Arab–Israeli War
(1948–1949)
Egypt
Kingdom of Iraq
Transjordan
Syria
 Lebanon
Saudi Arabia
 Yemen
HWA
ALA
 IsraelDefeat?NoneMuzahim al-Pachachi
14 July Revolution
(1958)
Hashemite Arab Federation

Support:

Hashemite Arab Federation

Free OfficersDefeat~100Nuri al-Said
Mosul Uprising
(1959)
Iraqi Republic Arab NationalistsGovernment victory2,426Muhammad Najib ar-Ruba'iAbd al-Karim Qasim
First Iraqi–Kurdish War
(1961–1970)
Iraqi Republic
Syria Syria
KDPStalemate~10,000?
Ramadan Revolution
(1963)
Iraqi Republic Arab NationalistsGovernment defeat100
Ar-Rashid Revolt (1963) Iraqi Republic CommunistsGovernment victory
  • Revolt suppressed
1+Abdul Salam ArifAhmed Hassan al-Bakr
November coup d'état (1963) Iraqi Republic NasseristsNasserist victory250
Six-Day War
(1967)
United Arab Republic
 Syria
 Jordan
Iraqi Republic
 Lebanon
 IsraelDefeat10NoneAbdul Rahman ArifAbdul Rahman Arif
October War
(1973)
 Egypt
 Syria
Ba'athist Iraq
 Jordan
 Algeria
Morocco
 Saudi Arabia
 Cuba
 IsraelDefeat[1]278NoneAhmed Hassan al-BakrAhmed Hassan al-Bakr
Second Iraqi–Kurdish War
(1974–1975)
Ba'athist Iraq KDP
 Iran
Government victory[3]
  • Iraq re-established control over Kurdistan
7,000?
Arvand Conflict
(1974–1975)
Iraq IranDefeatSaddam HusseinSaddam Hussein
Iran–Iraq War
(1980–1988)
 Iraq
MEK
DRFLA
 Sudan
 Iran
KDP
PUK
Badr Brigades
Stalemate105,000
375,000
~100,000
Invasion of Kuwait (1990) Iraq KuwaitVictory295+None
Gulf War
(1990–1991)
 Iraq Kuwait
 United States
 United Kingdom
 Saudi Arabia
 France
 Canada
 Egypt
 Syria
 Oman
 United Arab Emirates
 Qatar
 Italy
 Australia
Defeat
  • Iraqi withdrawal from Kuwait; Emir Jaber Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah restored
  • Heavy casualties and destruction of Iraqi and Kuwaiti infrastructure
20,000–35,0003,664
1991 Iraqi uprisings
(1991)
 Iraq
Badr Brigades
Dawa
Government victory (Southern front)
  • Uprising suppressed
~5,00080,000–230,000
KDP
PUK
Government defeat (Northern front)
Iraqi Kurdish Civil War
(1995–1996)
KDP
 Iraq
KDPI
PUK
United States
Stalemate?
Bombing of Iraq
(1998)
 Iraq United States
 United Kingdom
Defeat
  • Much Iraqi military infrastructure destroyed
1,400[4](KIA or WIA)?
Second Sadr Uprising
(1999)
 Iraq Badr Brigades
Dawa
Government victory
  • Uprising suppressed
40+200+[5]
Iraq War
(2003–2011)
 Iraq United States
 United Kingdom
 Australia
 Poland
Peshmerga
Defeat (Phase 1)7,600–10,800151,000–1,033,000+
 Iraq
Peshmerga
MNF–I
SCJL
Naqshbandi Army
Free Iraqi Army
al-Qaeda
ISI
Ansar al-Islam
IAI
Mahdi Army
Badr Brigades
Kata'ib Hezbollah
Government victory (Phase 2)17,690Jalal TalabaniNouri al-Maliki
War in Iraq
(2013–2017)
 Iraq
Peshmerga
Sinjar Alliance
CJTF–OIR

 Iran
Hezbollah

ISIL
Ansar al-Islam
SCJL
Naqshbandi Army
Mujahideen Army
Government victory
  • Iraqi territorial integrity preserved
  • ISIL expelled from all strongholds in Iraq[6]
  • ISIL genocides against Yazidis, Shias, and Christians in 2014
25,000+67,000+Fuad MasumHaider al-Abadi
2017 Iraqi–Kurdish conflict
(2017)
 Iraq PeshmergaVictory
  • Iraq retakes disputed territories
NoneNone
Iraqi Insurgency
(2017–present)
 Iraq Naqshbandi Army
ISIL
Ongoing2,254+None
Syrian civil war
(2017–2019)
ISILVictory
  • ISIL loses remaining territory in Syria
NoneNoneBarham SalihAdil Abdul-Mahdi

Other armed conflicts involving Iraq edit

References edit

  1. ^ References:
    • Herzog, The War of Atonement, Little, Brown and Company, 1975. Forward
    • Insight Team of the London Sunday Times, Yom Kippur War, Doubleday and Company, 1974, page 450
    • Luttwak and Horowitz, The Israeli Army. Cambridge, Massachusetts, Abt Books, 1983
    • Rabinovich, The Yom Kippur War, Schocken Books, 2004. Page 498
    • Revisiting The Yom Kippur War, P. R. Kumaraswamy, pages 1–2
    • Johnson and Tierney, Failing To Win, Perception of Victory and Defeat in International Politics. Page 177
    • Charles Liebman, "The Myth of Defeat: The Memory of the Yom Kippur war in Israeli Society"[permanent dead link] Middle Eastern Studies, Vol 29, No. 3, July 1993. Published by Frank Cass, London. Page 411.
  2. ^ Loyola, Mario (7 October 2013). "How We Used to Do It – American diplomacy in the". National Review. p. 1. Retrieved 2 December 2013.
  3. ^ J. Schofield, Militarization and War, p. 122
  4. ^ Rossiter, Mike, Target Basra, Corgi, 2009 ISBN 0552157007 ISBN 978-0552157001, p. 210
  5. ^ Dan Murphy (27 April 2004). "Sadr the agitator: like father, like son". The Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved 1 February 2013.
  6. ^ "With Iraqi-Kurdish Talks Stalled, Phone Diplomacy Averts New Clashes". New York Times.