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Battles:
Battle of Khanaqin, 1916
Updated - Wednesday, 13 March, 2002
The sole engagement fought by
the Russian Army on the Mesopotamian Front, the Battle of Khanaqin saw a
division under the command of Russian General Baratov cross the Mesopotamian
border from western Persia to attack Turkish forces stationed at the border town
of Khanaqin.
Baratov's force had been
involved in a lengthy campaign working west of Tehran since the close of 1915.
Until the arrival of Ali Ishan Bey's XIII Corps into the region in mid-1916
Baratov's division (of 15,000 infantry troops and 7,500 cavalry) had
demonstrated steady success - albeit slowly gained - in driving rebel Persian
and Arab forces towards the Mesopotamian border.
Early 1916 brought Baratov more
rapid progress however. On 26 February he secured control of Kermanshah
(in spite of newly-arrived Turkish reserves), and had reached Kharind some two
weeks later, 200km from Baghdad.
Given Baratov's progress the
then-British regional Commander-in-Chief,
Sir John Nixon,
expressed hopes that the Russian force could conceivably aid
Sir Charles
Townshend's
besieged
forces at Kut-al-Amara: in the event a forlorn hope, since Baratov elected
to remain at Kharind for a further three months before, in June, unsuccessfully
storming Turkish positions across the border at Khanaqin (on the Diyala River).
Baghdad commander
Khalil Pasha's
response was to despatch Ishan's XIII Corps to meet and drive the Russian force
back from Khanaqin preparatory to a proposed Turkish sweep through Persia en
route to attacking British rear positions.
Ishan did succeed in pushing
back Baratov's division, although there were no spectacular successes.
Instead, Turkish progress was slow but sure, until Ishan was abruptly recalled
to Baghdad in February 1917 to
aid in its defence
against a renewed British offensive led by new Commander-in-Chief
Sir Frederick
Stanley Maude.
As it transpired Baghdad had
actually fallen to the British by the time Ishan's forces were underway,
although he subsequently placed them to effective use in harrying Maude's forces
during the subsequent British advance further north.
As for Baratov, his force
occupied Khanaqin once Ishan had left, finally retiring to Kermanshah in June
1917 and serving no further useful wartime role.
Click here to view a map
charting operations in Mesopotamia through to 1917.
Photograph courtesy of
Photos of the Great War website.
Search for more
information on HighBeam Research for
khanaqin.
The British manipulated the Kurds during the
Lausanne Peace Conference between 1922 and 1923
to gain cooperation from Turkey in the isolation
of Bolshevik Russia. This position vacated
earlier British support for an independent
Kurdistan in the Aug 1920 Treaty of Sevres. The
British responded with force when the Kurds in
Iraq revolted. Both Turkey and Britain used,
often false, statements about the Kurds to
support their decisions regarding a frontier
dispute between Turkey and Iraq involving lands
mostly populated by Kurds.
After the First World War, the Kurds, like
other nationalities...
Search for more
information on HighBeam
Research for
khanaqin.
Dateline: SOZ
BLAKH, Iraq [image
omitted]
American forces
supporting Kurdish
fighters against
President Saddam
Hussein's army
took up positions in
the
no-man's-land
south of the Kurdish
autonomous region
and in the north,
where U.S. warplanes
hit Iraqi positions
near the commercial
center of Mosul.
The combination
of American air
strikes and Kurdish
ground attacks in
the north has driven
Iraqi government
forces back from the
Kurdish frontiers
toward the two main
northern districts
in Baghdad hands:
Mosul and the
important oil center
around Kirkuk. The
Kurds are now less
th...
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