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Tuesday, September 22, 2020

Documenting Those Who Served in the Iran-Iraq War (1980-1988) - Part 4

 A Strange Accident in The Summer of 1982

By Osama AttarBashi

Translated to English by Wefa M. S.



In an area near the Iranian city of "Gilan West", about 80 km from the Iraqi city of Khanaqin, our regiment settled to control a section of the combat zone. The region consisted of two mountain ranges, and in between them was a valley extending for a distance of 15-20 km. In the middle of the valley, there was a paved road extending from the Iraqi-Iranian borders into Iranian lands, and there were many deserted villages on the edge of the mountain and in the valley.

Some battles took place in this region before we arrived, and when our regiment reached there, the Iranian forces were stationed at the top of the mountain range, while the Iraqi forces were stationed on the lower edges of the mountain range. Some soldiers were present in protective shelters on the edge of the motorway in the middle of the valley. As a result of this positioning, movement was very limited during the day, so we stayed awake all night and fell asleep after the sun rise. Our day began in the afternoon or before sunset: We had breakfast between 2 and 4 pm, and our lunch usually took place after sunset, and so the days were going routinely quiet.

No confrontations or battles were expected in that area because the situation was calm, and our regiment headquarters was at the beginning of the mountain range on the left of the road, and it consisted of a group of small houses in an abandoned village.

Captain Ibrahim was a close friend with a cheerful and life-loving personality, and he always lamented the absurdity of this war and how it eats the men of Iraq. We spent most of our time together accompanied by the Commander of the Regiment, Major Abdul-Jabbar.

For several days, Captain Ibrahim kept asking me to go to the barber, but I was not eager to go with him. Also there was no barber in our regiment at the time, which means that we have to go to another regiment, which was located about 10-15 minutes away by car.

One day Ibrahim said we should go to the barber and he wanted me to go with him, so we agreed to go the next day after dark. The next morning, at the breakfast table, he told me that today we would go to the barber at night, and I confirmed that. When darkness fell, Ibrahim came to my room door and said that he was waiting for me in the Waz car (a small Russian military car that seats four people), so I told him that I would go to the room to put on my boot and follow him.

I entered my room and sat on my bed for some time, and I do not know the reason that prompted me to do that. Then I went out to tell Ibrahim while he was in the car that I would not go with him today, so he got angry and said then he would go alone. He ordered the driver to move and with him was one of the soldiers.

I sat waiting for Ibrahim. I expected that he would come back within an hour, but he was late. After about two hours, the news came from one of the soldiers on the main road indicating that one of the cars on the road was parked and broken, so I got into the car with the commander and went to find out about the matter. When arrived, we found Captain Ibrahim had been shot in right side of the abdomen near the liver, and there was no sign of the driver and the accompanying soldier!

Shortly later, the commander of the brigade (the late Sultan Hashem Ahmed, later Minister of Defense) arrived in the region and explored the location of the accident, as it was strange that the Iranian group could reach this area near the main road in the middle of the valley without being discovered by our forces, which means that an Iranian group slipped into the Iraqi forces, which were deployed at the edges of the mountain. I was unable to explain this incident for a long time.

The brigade commander requested a group of commandos, in addition to other forces, to patrol the mountainside in an attempt to catch up with the infiltrating force and return the captured soldiers. The search for them continued till dawn, but without result.

That is how comrade and friend Ibrahim Al Wasiti was martyred.

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Osama Attar Bashi, a graduate of the College of Medicine / University of Baghdad.  He started his reserve military service in the Iraqi army as a lieutenant officer from September 1981 to September 1985 and served in the Iraqi army as a military doctor.  He participated in the Iran-Iraq war from January 1982 until the end of his military service in 1985.  He was an assistant professor at the College of Medicine / University of Sharjah 2008-2014.  Currently working as a consultant physician in pediatrics and neonatology in the United Arab Emirates.

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Note by the Iraq History Group:  The Iran-Iraq war began on September 4, 1980, when Iran bombed some Iraqi cities near the Iranian border. Click on this short summary for more information.