Operation Karbala-7
Operation Karbala-7 | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Part of the Iran–Iraq War | |||||||||
| |||||||||
Belligerents | |||||||||
Iraq | Iran |
- v
- t
- e
- 1975 Algiers Agreement
- Iranian Revolution
- 1979 Kurdish rebellion in Iran
- 1979 Khuzestan insurgency
- Iranian Embassy siege
Iraqi invasion of Iran (1980)
- Iraqi airstrike
- Revenge
- Kaman 99
- 1st Khorramshahr
- Scorch Sword
- Dezful
- Sultan 10
- Abadan
- Morvarid
Stalemate (1981)
- Nasr
- H-3
- Opera
Iranian offensives to free Iranian territory (1981–82)
- Samen-ol-A'emeh
- Tariq-ol-Qods
- Fath-ol-Mobin
- Beit-ol-Moqaddas (2nd Khorramshahr)
Iranian offensives in Iraq (1982–84)
- Ramadan (1st Basra)
- Moslem Ibn Aqil
- Muharram ol-Harram
- Before the Dawn
- Dawn 1
- Dawn 2
- Dawn 3
- Dawn 4
- Dawn 5 (2nd Basra)
- Kheibar (3rd Basra)
- Kurdish rebellion (1983)
- Dawn 6
- Dawn 7
- Marshes
Iranian offensives in Iraq (1985–87)
- Badr (4th Basra)
- Dawn 8 (1st al-Faw)
- Dawn 9
- Karbala 1 (Mehran)
- Karbala 2
- Karbala 3
- Fath 1
- Karbala 4 (5th Basra)
- Karbala 5 (6th Basra)
- Karbala 6
- Karbala 7
- Karbala 8 (7th Basra)
- Karbala 9
- Karbala 10
- Nasr 4
Final stages (1988)
- Beit-ol-Moqaddas 2
- Anfal campaign
- Beit-ol-Moqaddas 3
- Dawn 10
- Halabja massacre
- Beit-ol-Moqaddas 4
- Zafar 7
- Tawakalna ala Allah (2nd al-Faw)
- Forty Stars
- Eternal Light
- Mersad
- June 5 1984 Skirmish
- Earnest Will
- Bridgeton incident
- Prime Chance
- Eager Glacier
- Nimble Archer
- Praying Mantis
International incidents
- 1981 Iraqi embassy bombing in Beirut
- USS Stark incident
- Iran Air Flight 655
Operation Karbala-7 (Arabic: عملیات كربلاء ۷, Persian: عملیات کربلای ۷) was an Iranian offensive in Haj Omran during the Iran–Iraq War to prevent Iraq from rapidly transferring units to its defense lines at Basra after Iran had launched the failed Operation Karbala-5 to capture the city of Basra.[1][2] This was a failed Iranian attempt to reoccupy the summit of Kurda Mand Mountain.[3] There was an additional Iranian attack after this with the size of an infantry brigade on the night of 11–12 March, but this failed and suffered heavy losses.[3]