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Iran-Iraq War
(redirected from Iraq-Iran War)

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Iran-Iraq War

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War between Iran and Iraq (1980-88), claimed by the former to have begun with the Iraqi offensive on 21 September 1980, and by the latter with the Iranian shelling of border posts on 4 September 1980. Occasioned by a boundary dispute over the Shatt-al-Arab waterway, it fundamentally arose because of Saddam Hussein's fear of a weakening of his absolute power base in Iraq by Iran's encouragement of the Shiite majority in Iraq to rise against the Sunni government. An estimated 1 million people died in the war.

The war's course was marked by offensive and counter-offensive, interspersed with extended periods of stalemate. Chemical weapons were used, cities and the important oil installations of the area were the target for bombing raids and rocket attacks, and international shipping came under fire in the Gulf (including in 1987 the US frigate Stark, which was attacked by the Iraqi airforce). Among Arab states, Iran was supported by Libya and Syria, the remainder supporting Iraq. Iran also benefited from secret US arms shipments, the disclosure of which in 1986 led to considerable scandal in the USA, Irangate. The intervention of the USA 1987, ostensibly to keep the sea lanes open, but seen by Iran as support for Iraq, heightened, rather than reduced, tension in the Gulf, and United Nations attempts to obtain a ceasefire failed. The war ended in August 1988 after ceasefire talks in Geneva.

At the peak of the war, Iran and Iraq were spending $10 billion a year on weapons, and 27 countries were supplying both sides. During the war, 414 ships were hit by missiles, causing 250 deaths. 90,000 of the soldiers that were killed were under 15. Iraq and Iran in early April 1998 finished repatriating more than 5,500 prisoners from their 1980-88 war, according to the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), which supervised the exchange. Most of the prisoners had been in captivity for over 15 years and the exchange was the biggest repatriation of Iranian and Iraqi POWs since 1990.


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Iran has reacted more properly in the aftermath to the eight-year-long Iraq-Iran War (which Iraq launched) than Israel reacted to the 1967 war (which the Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza did not launch).
troops will find some evidence of an Iraqi WMD program -- such as residues from, or precursors to, chemical weapons, or material left over from the 1980s-era Iraq-Iran war -- it can reasonably be said that the Bush administration grossly overstated the Iraqi threat, thereby leading our nation into an aggressive war on a pretext.
encouraged Iraq-Iran war, occupied Kuwait, figuring that if he confronts the world with a fait accompli, they'll have to go along.
 
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