Battle of Basra (1991)

The Battle of Basra was fought in the beginning of the 1991 Iraqi uprisings following the Gulf War. The battle started after demoralized troops throughout Iraq began to rebel against Saddam Hussein's Ba'athist regime, in particular after a tank driver in Basra fired at a public portrait of Saddam Hussein. Basra became a chaotic battlefield between military defectors and Republican Guard, with most of the fighting taking place at close quarters. Most of Basra had been retaken by mid March, but rebels in parts such as Tanuma managed to hold out until mid April. After Ba'athist forces had regained control, they engaged in a crackdown against civilians and suspected supporters of the uprising.

Battle of Basra (1991)
Part of 1991 uprisings in Iraq
Basra
Date1 March - 15 April 1991
Location
Result Iraqi government victory
Territorial
changes
Parts of Basra captured by rebels, then recaptured by the Iraqi military.
Belligerents

 Iraqi government

Iraqi army deserters
Commanders and leaders
Saddam Hussein Abu Iman (POW)
Strength
6000+ 5000 army deserters, unknown number of rebels associated with Shia opposition
Casualties and losses
Unknown

400+ executed

50 captured
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