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Recommended: Iran and Iraq conflict
In the fall of 1980, one of the largest and most destructive conflicts to occur from the end of the second world war started between Iran and Iraq. Lasting eight years, the war left approximately 1.5 million dead and around a million casualties with thousands of refugees fleeing both nations. This conflict's roots can be traced backed to conflicts that raged between the powers which controlled the Persian Iran and Arab Iraq regions (Bahadori, 2005). For centuries, the Persians and Arabs have been at war under the banners of opposing empires.. (Karsh, Geopolitical Determinism: The Origins of the Iran-Iraq War, 1990)
According to the Iraqis, the conflict started on the 4th of September when Iranian troops shelled Iraqi towns and villages along the middle border region that separated the two countries. According to Iran and most observers, on the 22nd of September, Iraq launched a full scale invasion of Iran along three fronts; the central, northern and southern border regions (Swearingen, 1988). In the preceding year, deteriorating conditions between the countries lead to numerous small border violations with Iran claimed from March 1979 to September 1980, 363 airspace violations and 434 attacks by Iraqi artillery, infantry and armored forces whilst Iraq claimed 544 similar violations during this time. At outbreak, Iran held the lead in terms of people fit for military service (6.2 million against 2.03 million) but sorely lacked in terms of operational military equipment such as tanks (1,040 to 4,000), armoured fighting vehicles (750 to 3,000), and combat aircraft (70 to 632) (Segal, 1988, pp. 950-951).
The War proceeded in 5 distinct phases:
i. (22 September 1980 - March 1981) - Iraqi Offensive ii. (March 1981 - March 1982) ...
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...he Iran-Iraq War. Research Paper, University of California, Berkeley, Department of History, Berkeley.
Karsh, E. (1987-1988). Military Power and Foreign policy Goals: The Iran and Iraq War Revisited. International Affairs, 64(1), 83-95.
Karsh, E. (1990). Geopolitical Determinism: The Origins of the Iran-Iraq War. Middle East Journal, 44(2), 256-268.
MERIP Reports. (1984). The Strange War in the Gulf . Middle East Research and information Project (MERIP) . Middle East Research and information Project (MERIP) .
Parasiliti, A. T. (2003, January). The Causes and Timing of Iraq's Wars: A Power Cycle Assessment . International Political Science Review , 24(1), 161-165.
Segal, D. (1988). The Iran-Iraq War: A Military Analysis. Foreign Affairs, 66(5), 946-963.
Swearingen, W. D. (1988, October). Geopolitical Origins of the Iran-Iraq War . Geographical Review, 78(4), 405-416.
Dodds, Joana and Ben Wilson. "THE IRAN-IRAQ WAR: UNATTAINABLE OBJECTIVES1." Middle East Review of International Affairs (Online) 13, no. 2 (06, 2009): 72-94. http://search.proquest.com/docview/220899524?accountid=8289.
Most of the people killed were Iranian, however, some Kurdish people were also killed. Iraq started using chemical weapons from the beginning of the war though they started excessively using them near the end of the war, even on their own people.
In September 1980, a very destructive war with Iran was started by Saddam Hussein. This was a result of an invasion in Iran. This invasion spurred an eight year war. Saddam used c...
However, failure to procure any putative weapons of mass destruction in Iraq forced Realist apologists to invoke the concept of “offensive Realism” to explain the Iraq war of 2003. They argued that Iraq’s acquisition of uranium and aluminum tubes posed a “Security Dilemma” to the U.S. and her allies. According to Wheeler and Booth, security Dilemmas...
Yapp, Malcolm. The Near East since the First World War: A History to 1995. London: Longman, 1996. Print.
Woods, Kevin M., Stout Mark E. 2010. “Saddam’s Perceptions and Misperceptions: The Case of ‘Desert Storm’.” The Journal of Strategic Studies (February): 5-41.
Maghen, Z. (2009, January). Eradicating the "Little Satan": Why Iran Should Be Taken at Its
Iraq’s history is one of both prosperity and violence, and dates back to the ancient civilizations of Mesopotamia. While dominated by a variety of civilizations, the region enjoyed a relatively stable society. Since the birth of Islam, the religion has been the dominant cultural belief of the region, and has made its way into the laws and ruling of the region. (InDepth Info, 2010)
Leenders, Reinoud. "Regional Conflict Formations': Is the Middle East Next? ." Third World Quarterly 28.5 (2007): 959-982. JSTOR. Web. 5 June 2011.
Griffith, William E. “The Revial of Islamic Fundamentalism: the Case of Iran.” International Security. Volume 4, Issue 1, 1979, 132-138.
Gerner, Deborah J., and Philip A. Schrodt. "Middle Eastern Politics." Understanding the contemporary Middle East. 3rd ed. Boulder, Colo.: Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2008. 85 -136. Print.
The abrupt end of decade long dominating regime in three weeks had created a political vacuum, that is evident in shifting coalitions and divisions among religious groups, ethnic groups, regional groups and even classes (Barnett et al. 2003, 25). US did not realize, moreover, the depth of the hostility between Kurds and Arabs, Sunnis and Shiites, and the members of different tribes and local religious groups. Furthermore, to deal with destruction in Iraq new plan was decided by the US. The plan was to pull out all troops and hand over the responsi...
The loss of motivation to keep fighting was the main reason Iran accepted the United Nations Security Resolution 598 in 1988 that ended the war between Iran and Iraq. The combination of allegations of terrorism from countries, the lack of support from other nations, and the death toll of the Iranian people were the factors that support Iran’s loss of motivation to keep fighting in the
Weber, Smith, Allan, Collins, Morgan and Entshami.2002. Foreign Policy in a transformed world. United Kingdom: Pearson Education Limited.
...nd Politics." Encyclopedia of the Modern Middle East and North Africa. Ed. Philip Mattar. 2nd ed. Vol. 2. New York: Macmillan Reference USA, 2004. 890-895. Gale Virtual Reference Library. Web. 24 Jan. 2012.