1979 Kurdish rebellion in Iran

The 1979 Kurdish rebellion in Iran was one of the largest nationwide uprisings in the country against the new state following the Iranian Revolution. The Kurdish rebellion began in mid-March, just two months after the Revolution ended, and was one of the most intense Kurdish rebellions in modern Iran.

1979 Kurdish rebellion in Iran
Part of Consolidation of the Iranian Revolution, Iran-Iraq War, and Kurdish separatism in Iran

The epicenter of insurrection
DateMarch 1979–1983/1984-1989 1989-1996
Location
Result

Iranian victory

  • Iranian forces mostly diverted to the Iran–Iraq War front since late 1980
  • Pockets of KDPI resistance remained until 1996
Belligerents

Interim Government and Council of the Islamic Revolution (1979−80)


Islamic Republic of Iran (1980−83)

KDP-I
Komala
IPFG
OIPFG (Minority)
Sipay Rizgari


Supported by:

Iraq
Commanders and leaders

Ruhollah Khomeini
Mehdi Bazargan
Abulhassan Banisadr
Mohammad-Ali Rajai
Mohammad-Javad Bahonar
Mostafa Chamran
Mohammad-Reza Mahdavi Kani
Ali Khamenei
Mir-Hossein Mousavi

Army
  • Vali Gharani
  • Nasser Farbod
  • Hossein Shaker
  • Hadi Shadmehr
  • Valiollah Fallahi
  • Qasem-Ali Zahirnejad
  • Ali Sayad Shirazi
IRGC

Abdul Rahman Ghassemlou
Foad Mostafa Soltani 
Abdullah Mohtadi
Sedigh Kamangar
Jafar Shafiyi

Ashraf Dehghani
Muhammad Uthman Siraj al-Din
Units involved

IRI Army

Revolutionary Guards
Peshmerga
Strength
5,000 Revolutionary Guards in Kurdistan province (August 23, 1979); 200,000 by 1982 100,000 armed Kurdish Peshmerga (August 1979), including 2,000 in Paveh, 2,000 in Saqqiz, 20,000 in Mahabad, 10,000 near Sardasht, and 5,000 Kurds of Turkey.
Artillery included a few captured tanks, light artillery pieces, recoilless guns, and machine guns.
Casualties and losses
3,960 Kurdish democrat rebels killed (shehid.com claim) 1980-1984 25,000 civilians have died including 2,500 Kurdish rebels 5,000 killed (Iranian Government claim)

45,000 total casualties
12 Iranian officers executed for refusing to fight

Total: 10,000-45,000 killed

Kurdish groups initially tried to align with Iran's new government in an attempt to emphasize their own Muslim identity and to seek common ground with other Iranians. The Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan (KDPI), who strongly campaigned for political autonomy, briefly identified as a non-separatist organization, even criticizing those calling for independence from the state. However, following a number of attacks on Iranian army barracks in the Kurdistan province by militant groups, relations quickly deteriorated. Though Shīʿa Kurds and some Sunni tribal leaders approved of the Shīʿa Islamic State, most Sunni Kurdish leftists and communists continued to push for the independence of Kurdistan. A portion of the Naqshbandi order also opposed the new state, aligning with the Iraqi army and forming the Sipay Rizgari militant group, under the guidance of Sheikh Muhammad Uthman Siraj al-Din.

Kurdish militants, primarily from the KDPI, initially made territorial gains in Mahabad and temporarily ousted Iranian troops from the region, but a large-scale offensive in spring 1980 by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps reversed the course of the conflict. The start of the Iran–Iraq War in September 1980 saw the Iranian government increasing efforts to snuff the Kurdish rebellion, the only 1979 uprising that remained, in part due to the province's proximity to the Iraqi border. By 1981, the Iranian police and the Revolutionary Guard had ousted the Kurdish militants from their strongholds, but small groups continued to execute sporadic attacks against Iranian militia. Clashes in the area continued until 1983.

About 10,000 people were killed over the course of the rebellion, including 1,200 Kurdish political prisoners executed by the Iranian government. There was a resurgence in conflict in 1989 following the assassination of KDPI leader Abdul Rahman Ghassemlou.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.