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The credit
for the IIAF site goes to:
Generous support of Mr. Bahram Akradi Honoring our beloved war hero Davood Akradi
and :
Maj.
General Mehdi Rohani (USA)
Maj. General Mehdi Mirtolooi
(USA)
CDR. Bahram Minovi (USA)
Col. Javad Hosseini (USA)
Col. Manoochehr Khalili
(UK)
Col. Afshar (USA)
Capt. Mostafa Babaian (USA)
Maj. Shahin Nassirkhani M.D. (USA)
Dr. Suzanne Scott
(USA)
Miss. Cherry Khalili Zadeh
(UK)
Mr. Simon Ayriss (USA)
Mr.
Fariborz Shammas
(USA)
Col. Hossein Loghman R.I.P.
Mr.
Jason Bordeaux (USA)
Mr.
Shahram Javid Pour R.I.P.
Mr.
Cyrus Kadivar (UK)
Mr. Farshid Mousavi (USA)
Mr.
Keyhan Esfandiari ex-Electronics Engineer at DCS-CEM, IIAF
(USA)
Thanks to the following
individuals for sharing their photo album or article with us:
Lt.
General Mohammad H.Mehrmand
(USA)
B.Gen. Habib Bijan (USA)
Col. Iraj Ghafari (USA)
Col.
Jahanvar Kamran R.I.P.
Col. Daryoush Hamzavi (USA)
Maj.
Abbas Barekat R.I.P.
Maj.
Saeed Fereidouni (Germany)
Capt.
Parviz Gahvarei (UK)
Capt. Bijan Tavakoli (USA)
Mr. Farhad Marandi (USA)
Mr. Michael A. Fox
(USA)
Mr.
Behnam Compani (USA)
Mr.
Tom Muffin (Austria)
Mr.
Adrian Balch (UK)
Mr.
Lennart Andersson ( Sweden)
To
all brave men & women In Iran and around the world who dare
to
send us the
Insignias, Patches, Photos, Stories, and ...
Related
Articles
Battle of Persia
By An Iranian
July 24, 2003
The Iranian
”Never in the field
of human conflict has so much been owed by so many to so few.”
-Winston Churchill, August 20, 1940
Sixty
three years ago at this time, the British Royal
Air Force was engaged in a life and death struggle against Nazi
Germany's air force, the Luftwaffe. Hitler had taken all of continental
Europe in the lightning war campaign, known as the "Blitzkrieg".
The Royal Air Force was badly outnumbered by a factor of 3 to 1,
and the US and the USSR would not enter the war until a year later.
The Nazis saw it as essential and very manageable to defeat the
Royal Air Force in order to capture the last remaining country in
Europe.
The fate of Britain and the non-Nazi world
lie in the hands of the pilots and ground crew of the RAF Fighter
Command. These airmen proved the Nazi war planners wrong, and in
the period of July to September of 1940, fought bravely and successfully
against the Luftwaffe, resulting in Hitler's decision to abandon
the invasion of Britain, and his first defeat.
"The Few", as they became known, consisted of 2927 pilots,
almost half of them lost their lives. To this day, the Battle of
Britain is commemorated every year very solemnly by the British
people, and is considered one of the major events of British and
world history.
Forty years later, Saddam's
Iraq invaded Iran, which was in the midst of revolutionary turmoil
and a hostage crisis. I remember the day that the Iraqi Air Force
bombed and terrorized most of the major cities in Iran, and Saddam's
army crossed the border virtually unopposed and captured dozens
of cities thousands of square kilometers of Iran's territory. The
atrocities and looting committed by his troops have yet to be punished
or even apologized for.
While many brave Iranians resisted fiercely on the ground, there
was virtually no army or heavy weapons at that time standing in
Saddam's way as his tanks rolled in and tried to annex Khuzestan
and rename it "Arabistan". Like Hitler, Saddam needed
a defeat of his enemy's air force to secure victory. Like Hitler,
Saddam vastly underestimated his enemy. The air battle that followed
was highly significant, and vastly underreported. This air battle
is what halted the Iraqi invasion in its tracks, and spelled the
beginning of defeat for Saddam's schemes.
The true and amazing story of this battle as well as the rest of
the air war is described in a new book by Tom Cooper and Farzad
Bishop: Iran-Iraq War in the Air 1980-1988, published by Schiffer
Books. This book is the result of 15 years of research and many
interviews with participants of this battle on both sides.
We have heard very little about the Iranian Air Force and its role
in the defense of our country, and for good reason. The Iranian
government always wanted to downplay the role of this "American"
and "Imperial" and "Taghooti" infested force.
The US never wanted to admit the notion that a "third world
terrorist" country (or the "ayatollah's air force")
could so effectively operate its most sophisticated weaponry at
the time despite lack of US support.
The French and Russians never
wanted to admit that an "inoperable" and "kaput"
air arm could shoot down so many of their most sophisticated aircraft,
it would just be bad marketing. Most of the history written about
this aspect of the war claims that most of Iran's air force was
grounded due to the lack of spare parts, desertion and execution
of pilots and other personnel, and departure of US technicians.
The truth however, was quite different. While clearly, Iran suffered
from a lack of a constant supply of spare parts and ammunition,
as well as purging and politicizing of the armed forces, the Persian
Air Force put politics aside and fought bravely for its country.
There
were cases of imprisoned Iranian pilots begging to be let out to
fly missions, and after flying 2 or 3 extremely dangerous missions,
would be shot down and killed. This was one of the greatest and
most dedicated team efforts in our history, where the aircrews and
ground crews and other Air Force personnel worked and fought day
and night and went far beyond their call of duty to save our country.
While
both sides lost many aircraft, most of Iran's losses were due to
flying extremely dangerous (virtually suicidal) precision strike
missions over heavily defended sites deep inside Iraq and above
the front lines at extremely low altitude to avoid detection by
Iraq's increasing radar coverage provided by the Europeans and Russians,
as well as US and Saudi AWACS support. This was necessary to slow
and ultimately stop the advance of the Iraqi army, and allow precious
time for Iran to regroup and reform its own ground forces with new
command structure to more directly confront the invaders.
The use of expensive fighter jets against tanks and other army equipment
is not a good use of military resources, but there was no choice
at the time. Meanwhile Iraq's missions were primarily low precision
cowardly attacks against population centers to intimidate Iran into
accepting defeat.
A few more interesting highlights about this part of the war:
- In air-to-air engagements, Iran's kill ratio was roughly 5:1,
which is only surpassed by the Israelis against Syria in 1982 and
the US in the Gulf war in 1991. Very often, air engagements consisted
of 1-2 Iranian fighters engaging 4, or even 8 Iraqi fighters and
winning. It got to the point where Iraq ordered its pilots to avoid
air to air engagements (especially with the F-14), and actually
had to import mercenary pilots from Egypt, and even places like
Belgium, South Africa, and East Germany to fly the critical missions!
In 1982, Iran launched a
brilliantly planned and daring air strike on the H-3 airfield near
the Jordanian border where the Iraqis thought their aircraft were
safe. They would find that they were wrong when 8 F-4s destroyed
48 Iraqi aircraft on the ground with complete surprise, and all
returned safely to Iran.
This mission was the largest destruction of enemy aircraft on the
ground after the 1967 Arab Israeli 6 day war, was one of the most
brilliant air assaults in history, and involved aerial refueling
at an altitude of less than 100 meters, violating about every safety
rule there is.
The flight from Iran to H-3 was longer and more risky than the flight
from Israel to Baghdad's Osirak reactor in 1981. 2
of the 8 Iranian fighter pilots in this raid were subsequently executed
in a purge a few years later by the Iranian government. Some of
the remaining pilots eventually left the country.
Col. Abbas Doran personally
flew hundreds of missions over Iraq, and was so dreaded that Saddam
issued a bounty specifically for his head! When he was finally shot
down over a heavily defended Baghdad in 1982, he stayed with his
F-4 all the way down rather than become captured.
The most accomplished F-14 aces in the world are Iranian, some of
which have 9 kills to their name, most of which were the most advanced
Soviet and French aircraft.
And
unlike the RAF "Few", our "Few" had to do all
this in the face of a mistrusting government who could (and did)
execute them and/or their comrades, and in the face of shortages
and embargoes, while Iraq was fully supported and re supplied with
the latest and greatest (sometimes so new that it was yet to be
tested) weaponry. Sadly, their sacrifice has been mostly untold
and unrecognized except by the few who know the stories. That is
why the original title of this book was "Forgotten Warriors".
This was a painful chapter
in our history, and since then, many of us Iranians have moved on
in our lives in a million different directions. While I have described
a small piece of the air war here, this shouldn't detract in the
least from the great sacrifices made on the ground and at sea. I
just thought that this story has been less told. I feel that the
Iran-Iraq War should be renamed the Arab-Iranian War, since that
is what it really was.
I also feel the air war should
be called the "Battle
of Persia". When I read Churchill's quote,
I cannot help but think of the Persian Air Force. I don't know what
your political leanings or your social opinions or your visions
of the future are, it doesn't matter. But I think a
nation is judged by many things, one of the most important of which
is how it honors its fallen and its great men and women throughout
its history.
I hope you will join me today
in taking a moment to honor the often forgotten Persian "Few",
too many of whom never came home so that we could. In my heart and
in my mind, they are the modern day Ferdowsi, who saved us from
a second Qadesiyeh.
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