Iranian Air Force in Iran–Iraq war

Iranian Air Force in Iran–Iraq war

On September 21 1980, the day before the Iraqi invasion, the Iranian Air force had 447 combat aircraft stationed at 10 air bases throughout the country. There were 79 modern F-14s, 209 F-4 Phantom IIs, and 167 F-5s. In theory, Iran’s Air force was more than a match for the Iraqi one. On paper, Iraq only possessed 332 combat aircraft, consisting mainly of MiG-17s, MiG-21s, and MiG-23s. Since the Iranian pilots had adhered to NATO requirements for flying time (training time in the aircraft), whereas at the outbreak of war Iraqi pilots had “limited hours of flying time”, it would have been surprising if the Iranian Air Force had not proved dramatically superior. Lack of spare parts and poor maintenance as results of sanctions were the most probable reasons for lack of dramatic superiority. Or|date=May 2008 Saddam Hussein thought a surprise air and armored attack on Iranian airfields would guarantee an Iraqi victory, although proven incorrect by the end of the war.Fact|date=May 2008

Iran–Iraq War

The Iraqi plan to catch Iran’s Air Force on the ground succeeded, in the sense that Iran appeared to be completely surprised and its Air Force made few attempts to intercept the attack. The Iraqi air assault on September 22nd hit six Iranian Air bases, and 4 Iranian Army bases. However, having learned from the Six Day War, Iran had built concrete bunkers where most of its combat aircraft were stored, thus the Iraqis succeed mainly in cratering a few Iranian runways, without causing any significant damage to Iran’s Air Force.Fact|date=May 2008

The Iranian Air Force, despite low morale and declining maintenance standards, responded quickly in Operation Kaman 99, bombing a series of Iraqi installations on September 23. By the night of the 23rd more than 140 Iranian Aircraft had completed sorties into Iraqi airspace.Fact|date=May 2008 The Iraqis, anticipating such a counter-strike, had evacuated most of their aircraft to other Arab states, such as Saudi Arabia.Fact|date=May 2008 The Iranian counterattack is evidence that, despite shake-ups in its command structure, pre-revolution plans for countering an Iraqi attack had been left intact and the pilots were able to execute these plans efficiently. The best evidence for this is that despite the Iranian Air Force's initial ability to maintain an “aerial siege” of Iraq in the first weeks of the war, the number of sorties and mission targets of subsequently fell dramatically.Fact|date=May 2008

The reasons for the steep drop-off in the capabilities of the Iranian Air Force had little to do with the Iraqi ability to combat the Iranians, and more to do with the nature of the Iranian Air Force’s hardware, which consisted of American-made items that were no longer available. Iran also lacked plans for an extended war with Iraq. In addition, we can see that the revolutionary regime's purges had a great impact. The destruction of the higher echelons of the air force left a planning vacuum that could not be filled. The pilots who reacted in September 23 did so out of loyalty to their nation and with practiced plans, but as time progressed no more concrete ideas would be forthcoming.Fact|date=May 2008

By the end of 1980 the Iranian Air Force had lost 34 airplanes in air-to-air combat.Fact|date=May 2008 In contrast , it lost only 13 planes in air-to-air combat in 1981, and only 9 in 1982.Fact|date=May 2008

The best way to understand this is to take the case of Iran’s 79 F-14s based in Shiraz and Isfahan. In the first three years of the war Iran is estimated to have only lost 3 of these planes.Fact|date=May 2008 Yet by February 11, 1985 when the entire F-14 squadron did a flyover of Tehran (to prove that Iran still had an Air Force) it consisted of only 25 planes. The fate of these planes is connected with a policy that Iran enacted soon after the war began, the directive of "vulturisation" of the planes with mechanical problems to help keep the best planes flying. Iran, cut off from U.S sources, was reduced to “scavenging the world’s arms bazaars for spares”.

Estimating the number of Iranian aircraft that were either airworthy or flying at any given time is difficult due to a lack of information. The biggest problem plaguing the aircraft was not the Iraqis but a lack of spare parts. The "vulturisation" process reduced the Iranian air force to about 100 planes by the end of 1981. Combat losses can be said to roughly equal those due to the cannibalizing of aircraft if we accept the figure of 90 Iranian planes lost by the end of October 1980.Or|date=May 2008 It is estimated that by the spring of 1981, the Iranian Air Force had as few as 25 airworthy F-14s. This number would increase to about 60 as the years passed, as the Iranian government obtained spare parts from clandestine American and Israeli sources, and other countries, including South Korea and Libya.Fact|date=May 2008

The virtual grounding of the Iranian Air Force in late 1980 and early 1981 due to technical problems helps to explain a second dimension of the conduct of the war within Iran’s armed forces. At the outbreak of the Iran–Iraq War, many Iranian veterans volunteered their services and many of those who had deserted their units the previous spring returned, swept up in a wave of national fervor to expel the Arab invader. The President of Iran, Bani-Sadr persuaded Khomeini to release many of the imprisoned Air Force personnel, mostly urgently needed pilots and technicians. Former senior officers were even recalled as "consultants". At this time, even Iranians who had left the country began to return in the hopes of helping their country during the conflict. The amnesty of a number of needed pilots, and the return of other pilots, helped the Iranian Air Force in the opening days of the war and was instrumental in slowing the Iraqi advance and spreading fear in Baghdad itself.Or|date=May 2008

The increased efficacy of the Iranian Air Force can be seen in some of the more daring raids it engaged in during the last months of 1980 and in the spring of 1981. On the September 30, 1980 Iran bombed, but failed to destroy, the Iraqi Osirak nuclear reactor (later destroyed by Israel).Fact|date=May 2008 On April 4, 1981 it embarked on an 810 kilometer raid deep into Iraq, bombing a series of Iraqi Air fields.Fact|date=May 2008 In 1980 alone, 70 Iraqi planes were defeated in air -to-air combat.Fact|date=May 2008 The number of Iraqi aircraft destroyed in the same manner in 1981 was reduced to 24, still a significant number for an Air Force able to put only a few dozen planes in the air at any time.Fact|date=May 2008

The return of the exiled and imprisoned pilots gave the Iranian Air Force a burst of manpower and fresh crews, but it also led to heightened suspicions by the Islamic authorities. Fears of fresh purges were realized over the years as four Colonels and four Majors who had returned to Iran were later imprisoned and shot by the government in renewed witch-hunts of those accused of disloyalty. Indeed, the government was not altogether wrong in suspecting that the Air Force was more loyal to the nation then it was to the new regime.Or|date=May 2008

The decline in the capabilities of the Air Force also corresponds to a renewed crackdown and purge of the Air Force in the spring and summer of 1981. The year before, Air Force officers had been involved with the Nojeh Coup against Khomeini and president Bani-Sadr, and in August 1981 the Air Force helped Bani-Sadr to flee the country. The pilot who flew Bani-Sadr into exile was one of those whom he had helped obtain the release to fight in the war. The Air Force was grounded following the incident, and 200 pilots and their crews were imprisoned.Fact|date=May 2008 The Islamic regime now realized the Air Force had to be brought totally under its control, and a tribunal of "Mullahs" was put in place to authorize every flight. The Islamic authorities had apparently learned this idea from the Soviets who likewise kept political officers within the ranks to sniff out disloyalty.Or|date=May 2008

When pilots were given authorization to fly, they were given “the minimum amount of fuel required for the mission. In addition to low morale, Iranian pilots lacked sufficient flying time and experience due to their being grounded so often and for so long. For this reason, not one of the 81 or more Iranian pilots killed in the Iran–Iraq War was brought down in the summer of 1981.Fact|date=May 2008 Likewise, not one Iraqi plane was destroyed in air-to-air combat between May 16 and September 1 1981.Fact|date=May 2008 To be an Iranian Air Force officer at that time meant facing greater risks from imprisonment or execution on the ground than from Iraqi missiles and anti-aircraft fire in the air. The Iranian Air Force essentially ceased to function.Or|date=May 2008

Iran’s premier aircraft, the F-14, disappeared from the skies during this time. The Mullahs did everything they could, short of disbanding the Air Force, to ensure that it fell into line and could no longer participate in anti-Khomeini acts.Fact|date=May 2008 Nevertheless, increased purges and a heightened state of government surveillance pushed pilots to start defecting by 1983, flying their aircraft to Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Iraq.Fact|date=May 2008

Most Iranian defections during the middle and final stages of the Iran–Iraq War were the result of a joint operation (code-named “Night Harvest”) by the CIA and the Foreign Technology Division of the DoD. Its principal objective was to acquire several US-built Iranian fighter aircraft to find out how the Iranians were maintaining their F-4s, F-5s, and F-14s. Notable Iranian defections included:

*In 1983, Iranian defectors flew an F-4E Phantom to Turkey.Fact|date=May 2008
*In 1984, Iranian defectors flew an F-4E Phantom to Saudi Arabia.Fact|date=May 2008

Conclusions

The outbreak of the Iran–Iraq War was most likely looked upon as a good testing ground for new Soviet equipmentOr|date=May 2008, and by 1982 the Soviets had returned as technicians to Iraq, after withdrawing personnel at the outbreak of war. The Americans, though hostile to the Iranian regime, were also interested in seeing how their F-4, and especially their F-14s, would hold up against Soviet SAM systems and MiG fighters.Fact|date=May 2008 December 1, 1981 brought the first downing of a French-made Mirage F1 and December 1982 saw the first downing of a MiG-25.Fact|date=May 2008 During the course of the war, more than 100 Iraqi fighters would be brought down in air-to-air combat.Fact|date=May 2008 The American military may have been more impressed with the Iranian victory over the Iraqi Air Force than the Israel aerial victory over Syria during the same period, since Iraqi air force pilots were believed to be better trained.Or|date=May 2008

The two superpowers were also certainly monitoring the performance of anti-aircraft systems that each had supplied to the opposing nations.Fact|date=May 2008 In his military analysis of the Iran–Iraq War, Efraim Karsh writes: “Both Iraq and Iran began the war with impressive air defense systems… despite the large inventories, the air defense systems have been most disappointing in action… Iraq and Iran failed totally to integrate their air defense elements into an overall system.” In the case of Iraq, it is not clear why this was the case, but in the case of Iran, these disappointments rest squarely on the shoulders of the revolutionary regime and its draconian policies against the Air Force.Or|date=May 2008

ee also

*History of the Iranian Air Force
*Iran–Iraq War "(main article)"
*Military of Iran
*Military history of Iran
*History of Iran
*History of Iraq
*Military aircraft
*United States-Iran relations
*Abbas Doran

References

External links

* [http://www.military.ir/ First Persian Military Web Site]
* [http://www.iiaf.net/ IIAF Imperial Iranian Air Force]
* [http://www.acig.org/artman/publish/article_212.shtml Persian 'Cats]
* [http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/iran/airforce.htm GlobalSecurity.org - Iran Air Force]


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