T-72 tanks in Iraqi service
During the early stages of the Iran-Iraq War, Iraq under the rule of Saddam Hussein imported a number of T-72 tanks from the Soviet Union and Poland. The tanks saw service in both the Gulf War and the Iraq War. In the late 1970s, Iraq also established a factory to retrofit and repair T-72s, and started the Lion of Babylon project (named after the Babylonian historical symbol of the same name) with the intent to assemble T-72s locally.
HistoryEdit
In the 1970s and 80s, Iraq purchased a hundred T-72 from the Soviet Union. Iraq utilized these tanks during the Iran-Iraq War, which temporarily put T-72 exports to Iraq to a halt. However, Poland started delivering T-72s in January of 1982, and in September of the same year, Soviet exports resumed as well. Overall, Iraq received about 1,038 T-72 tanks, primarily produced in Poland. Some of these were destroyed during the Iran–Iraq War, or captured by the Iranians.<ref name="Rus" /> As of 1996, Iraq had 776 T-72 tanks in service.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Two years after the fall of Saddam Hussein, the new Iraqi Government acquired dozens of refitted T-72M1s from Hungary, in order to equip an armored brigade. The headquarters of this new Iraqi Army unit is located in Taji, where Iraq had attempted to assemble T-72s locally in the late 1980s. Some surviving T-72s are used for training, and the experience of Iraqi Army officers and crews with the T-72 was one of the reasons behind the choice of Hungarian T-72M1s.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="Shephard 2022 u861">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Combat history and performanceEdit
T-72 tanks saw service in the 1991 Persian Gulf War as well as the 2003 invasion of Iraq. Like other tanks in the Iraqi inventory, T-72s were mainly employed as armored self-propelled artillery, rather than in maneuver warfare roles. In operations, it fared poorly against American main battle tanks and armored fighting vehicles. For example, a 120 mm depleted uranium (DU) APFSDS round from an M1 Abrams could knock out a T-72 tank well beyond 3,000 m,Template:Sfn while the effective range of the APFSDS 125 mm shell used by Iraq was 1,800 m.Template:Sfn The Iraqi T-72s used 3BM9 APFSDS shells (removed from Soviet service in 1973),<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> with a penetration only 245 mm at a distance of up to Template:Convert.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Poor maintenance also played a part against the T-72: most of the Iraq fleet saw service in the Iran-Iraq War, but they weren't kept in pristine condition; Barrel erosion on the main guns was a significant issue, decreasing their accuracy.Template:Sfn
The Iraqi T-72s, like most T-72 export versions, lacked then-modern night vision systems, though they did have some night fighting tanks with older active infrared systems or floodlights - just not the latest starlight scopes and passive infrared scopes as on the Abrams.<ref>Early performance assessment of Bradleys and Abrams, p. 24.</ref>
Within closer ranges, the T-72 was more effective, especially while within prepared positions.Template:Sfn However, even in such conditions, the T-72 did not fare well against M1s − as proven in the Battle of Norfolk during Desert Storm, where the Iraqi tank shells fell short of their targets while the M1A1s began destroying their targets without suffering any casualties,Template:SfnTemplate:Efn although the tank also participated in the Battle of Phase Line Bullet, where Bradley IFVs from the 4th squadron of the 7th Cavalry Regiment were driven back by dug-in Iraqi armoured vehicles at heavy cost.Template:Sfn
While the T-72M1 armor was effective against all 105 mm threats during the 1980s, including Israeli tungsten carbide APFSDS rounds and older versions of the M1 Abrams armed with a 105 mm main gun; it was inadequate against the 120 mm gun of the M1A1 at normal combat ranges.Template:Sfn Some T-72s were fitted with jamming pods to spoof anti-tank guided missiles such as the TOW and MILAN, but it proved to be ineffective. According to Zaloga, the United States modified the TOW guidance system before to the war to counter them,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn though according to an account from Atkinson, "one TOW appeared to skip across the hull of a T-72, hitting another one in the turret."Template:Sfn The US also developed a tandem-charge version in order to counter up-armoured Soviet tanks.Template:Sfn There is evidence of at least one T-72 surviving a direct hit from an Abrams main gun in Mahmoudiyah in 2003. A 120 mm HEAT round from an Abrams impacted on the front of an Asad Babil turret at point blank range without producing a catastrophic kill.<ref>Conroy & Martz, p. 9</ref> Some T-72 tanks may have featured explosive reactive armor, possibly obtained from Polish T-72M1 spare parts.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Another improvised armor upgrade may have also been added at the Taji complex.<ref name="Rus">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> An additional 30 mm armor plate was welded on the front areas of the hull and turret, leaving an air gap matching the size of the armor, so that the power of a HEAT jet could be dissipated in the hollow space. This technique follows the principle of spaced armor. The Iraqi engineers tested this reinforcement against captured Iranian 120 mm Chieftain tank guns in 1989, apparently with some success.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Iran-Iraq WarEdit
Iraq deployed Soviet-built T-72B and Czechoslovak and Polish built T-72Gs against Iranian forces during the Iran–Iraq War.Template:Sfn The T-72s had success against Iranian 105mm M68 tank guns and TOW missiles, both of which were ineffective against the tank's front armor.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Overall, Iraq lost 60 T-72s during the war.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Ra'ad Al-Hamdani, a general in the Iraqi Republican Guard, noted that the 10th Iraqi Armoured Brigade, which was equipped with T-72s, was able to destroy the 16th Iranian Armoured Division within twelve hours, despite Iran's numerical superiority.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The division included Chieftain tanks against which the T-72 proved effective; Iran started the war with 894 Chieftains, of which only about 200 were left by the end of it.<ref>Andrew T. H. Tan (2014). The Global Arms Trade: A Handbook. Routledge. p. 126</ref> The 3BM9 APFSDS round was capable of penetrating the frontal armor of the Chieftain tank. Western observers, taking into account potential improvements on Soviet ammunition, concluded that the equivalent of Template:Cvt of rolled homogeneous armour (RHA) would be necessary to prevent frontal penetration from the T-72 main gun.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn According to both sides, the T-72 was the most feared tank of the war.<ref>Interview – Iranian Tank Commander, McCaul ED, Apr-2004, Military History, Vol. 21 No. 1; "Saddam's Generals: Perspectives of the Iran-Iraq War", Youssef Aboul-Enein</ref>
Invasion of KuwaitEdit
Prior to the Invasion of Kuwait, the Iraqis massed 100,000 troops and hundreds of T-54, T-55, and T-72 tanks alongside the border in an apparent act of harmless saber rattling. Once they managed to deceive Western intelligence agencies and the Kuwaitis, 350 tanks crossed the border with no resistance until they reached the outskirts of Kuwait City itself. While the initial resistance came from a pair of FV101 Scorpion light tanks, which were quickly destroyed by T-72s, the Iraqi advance was slowed down by the lack of ammunition: in order to keep the deception, only 24 T-72s of the Republican Guard carried full ammunition loads.Template:Sfn Kuwaiti tanks, which also included a small number of Yugoslav-made M-84s (based on the T-72) engaged Iraqi tanks at the Mutla Pass on August 2, 1990. They knocked out one T-72 during the fighting, but lost the overall battle.<ref>Kevin M. Woods (2008). "Iraqi Perspectives Project Phase II". Um Al-Ma'arik (The Mother of All Battles): Operational and Strategic Insights from an Iraqi Perspective, Volume 1 (revised May 2008). Institute for Defense Analyses. pp. 117–118</ref>
Gulf WarEdit
The bulk of Iraqi armoured units were mostly equipped with the Type 69 and only Republican Guard divisions were equipped with Iraqi-modified T-72s, with exception of the regular army's armored Saladin division.Template:Sfn Thus, engagements between T-72s and Coalition tanks were limited to conflicts involving such Iraqi units.
During Desert Storm, Iraqi T-72s were technologically 20 years out of date. Only one M1 Abrams was officially documented during the Persian Gulf War as having received enough damage to be towed and receive maintenance after being struck three times on the turret by a T-72.<ref>AMCCT test</ref> Another six M1A1s were allegedly hit by Iraqi T-72 tank fire in the Gulf War official report, but the impacts were largely ineffectual.<ref>Fahey, Dan: Collateral Damage...During the ground war, only seven M1A1's were hit by rounds fired from the Iraqi's T-72 tanks, with none being seriously damaged. See also: George F. Hofmann & Donn A. Starry, pag.9</ref> According to Atkinson and Scales, T-72s accounted for at least two M2 Bradley kills during Desert Storm and left several damaged, all on February 26, 1991.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Overall, the T-72 offered little challenge to Abrams and Challenger tanks, both of which could hit a T-72 from outside the range of T-72's main gun.<ref name="Lockwood 2022 y994">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In addition to lack of range, exploding munitions facilitated by the design of the tanks' ammunition loading system were also an issue for Iraqi T-72s.Template:Sfn
2003 Iraq WarEdit
During the 2003 invasion of Iraq, the Republican Guard's T-72s, most from the Medina Division, were deployed around Baghdad to attempt a last-ditch defense of the Baath regime.<ref>Zucchino, page 3</ref> In April 2003, U.S. tanks engaged their counterparts from just 50 yards, killing seven Iraqi T-72s without any losses.<ref>Conroy & Mars, p. 158</ref> Such encounters exposed the poor marksmanship of Iraqi gunners, in part due to the shortage of modern night-vision and range-finder assets.Template:Sfn The T-72s were even more technologically lacking at this time, and it is not known if any improvements to the tanks were made between the Persian Gulf War and this conflict. Nonetheless, one Bradley was largely disabled by a 125 mm round from an Asad Babil tank when Iraqi armoured troops attempted to attack their American opponents near Baghdad airport.<ref>Fontenot, Degen and Thon, p. 306</ref>
The last operational T-72s acquired from the USSR and Poland were destroyed by the successive waves of American armored incursions on the Iraqi capital or abandoned by their crews after the fall of Baghdad, several of them without firing a single shot. The derelict tanks were later scrapped by U.S. Army disposal teams or shipped to the United States for target practice.Template:Citation needed
War against the Islamic StateEdit
In April of 2017, the pro-government Hashed al-Shaabi militia used Iraqi-modified T-72Ms against forces of the Islamic State in clashes around the ancient city of Hatra.<ref name="Al-Rubaye 2017 z016">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="Taylor 2017 g349">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In the same year, the Iraqi army also used T-72s during the Battle of Mossul.<ref name="FranceSoir 2017 a819">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Lion of Babylon projectEdit
In 1989, Iraq stated it was locally assembling T-72M1 tanks locally, under the designation "Lion of Babylon" (Template:Langx) with local industry already producing some of the components and the ammunition.Template:Sfn While the Iraqis did manage to produce the 125 mm gun barrels locally, there's little evidence that substantial numbers of T-72M1s were built beyond prototypes.Template:Sfn Regardless of their origin, T-72M1 tanks in Iraqi service were commonly known as the Lion of Babylon.Template:Sfn
In 1986 a West German company built a factory in Taji to manufacture steel for several military uses. It was enlisted to retrofit and rebuild tanks already on duty in the Iraqi Army, such as T-54/55s, T-62s, and several hundred of Soviet and Polish T-72s,<ref name="timmerman" /> imported during early stages of the war with Iran.<ref name="Rus" /> In the late 1980s, plans were made to produce new T-72M1 tanks at that facility. These tanks were to be assembled from knockdown kits delivered by the Polish state-owned company Bumar-Łabędy.Template:Sfn The local assembly of the T-72 was to start early 1989, as suggested by Iraqi officials.<ref name="timmerman">Template:Citation</ref> A number of Iraqi officials such as Lt. General Amer Rashid, however, did not like the idea of being dependent on knockdown kits supplied by another country and pushed for the complete production of the T-72M1 tank instead.<ref name="timmerman" />Template:Sfn In 1991, the Taji plant was destroyed by an airstrike while being upgraded by Bumar-Łabędy.Template:Sfn
The United Nations imposed an arms embargo following the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in August 1990, which reduced the complete assembly of tanks to simple spare parts for T-72s and other tanks in the Iraqi arsenal.<ref name="timmerman" /> According to Polish officials, not a single T-72M1 had been assembled at the facility, even though in 1988, a supposedly locally produced T-72M was on display during an Iraqi arms show.Template:Sfn
SpecificationsEdit
In most aspects, the Lion of Babylon as proposed was physically identical to the T-72M1 it is based on. The gun barrels produced by the Iraqis had a service life of only 120 shots, after which accuracy drops significantly.Template:Efn The barrel wear problem was exacerbated by the fact that the Iraqis frequently used their tanks in the indirect fire role.Template:Sfn The T-72M1, like the older T-72B and T-72G models, used a composite armoured glacis plate, about Template:Cvt thick, composed of a layer of fiberglass or ceramic material sandwiched between steel plates, but with additional composite armor on both sides of the turret. A Template:Cvt thick steel plate was also mounted on the front slope of the T-72M1 for increased protection.Template:Sfn According to official Russian sources the T-72M1 hull provided the equivalent of Template:Cvt of RHA protection against Armour-piercing fin-stabilized discarding sabot (APFSDS) rounds and Template:Cvt against High-explosive anti-tank (HEAT) rounds, while the turret provided Template:Cvt of protection against APFSDS and Template:Cvt against HEAT.Template:Sfn
American military intelligence believed some were equipped with Belgian-made thermal sights.Template:Sfn These same sources claim the tank was also supposed to be provided with a better track protection against sand and mud than the Soviet T-72, by reducing the original number of shock absorbers.<ref name="jed">JED website Template:Webarchive (available by free subscription)Template:Self-published source</ref>Template:Self-published inline Some tanks also were fitted with a type of electro-optical interference pod of Chinese origin.Template:Sfn<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> As secondary armament, the tank was to feature either the NSV or the DShK 12.7 mm machine gun and the coaxial 7.62 mm PKT common to all T-72 models.Template:Citation needed
NotesEdit
ReferencesEdit
BibliographyEdit
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- Bohannon, Second Lieutenant Richard M. "Dragon's Roar: 1-37 Armor in the Battle of 73 Easting."Template:Dead linkTemplate:Cbignore Armor, May–June 1992, VOL CI, #3.
- Conroy, Jason & Martz, Ron. Heavy Metal: A Tank Company's Battle To Baghdad Potomac Books, 2005. Template:ISBN
- Fahey, Dan. "Collateral Damage: How U.S. Troops Were Exposed To Depleted Uranium During the Persian Gulf War", in Metal of Dishonor: Depleted Uranium: How the Pentagon Radiates Soldiers and Civilians with DU Weapons, International Action Center, 1997. Template:ISBN
- Fontenot, Gregory, Degen, E. J. & Thon, David (2004). On Point: The United States Army in Operation Iraqi Freedom. Naval Institute Press. Template:ISBN
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- Hinton, Henry L. & others: Operation Desert Storm: Bradley Fighting Vehicle, Abrams Tank, Apache Helicopter, Patriot Missile System and Foreign Government and Individual Contributions. DIANE Publishing, 2001. Template:ISBN
- Hofmann, George F. and Starry, Donn A. Editors. Camp Colt to Desert Storm : the history of U.S. armored forces, University Press of Kentucky, 1999. Template:ISBN
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- Morris, David. Storm on the Horizon. Presidio Press, 2004. Template:ISBN
- Ricks, Thomas E. Fiasco: The American Military Adventure in Iraq. Penguin books, 2006. Template:ISBN
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- Rostker, Bernard. Environmental Exposure Report:Depleted Uranium in the Gulf Template:Webarchive, DoD Publication, 1998. Template:OCLC
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- Scarborough, Rowan. Apache Operation a lesson in defeat The Washington Times, April 22, 2003.
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- West, Francis J. Bing. No true glory. A frontline account of the battle for Fallujah. Bantam, 2005. Template:ISBN
- Zaloga Steven J., & Sarson, Peter. M1 Abrams Main Battle Tank 1982-1992. Osprey Military, New Vanguard. Reed International Books Ltd., 1993. Template:ISBN
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- Zucchino, David. Thunder Run: The armored strike to capture Baghdad. Grove Press, 2004. Template:ISBN
Further readingEdit
- The Death Lobby: How the West armed Iraq by Ken Timmerman
- Yazīd Ṣāyigh, Markaz Dirāsāt al-Waḥdah al-ʻArabīyah: Arab military industry: capability, performance, and impact. Brassey's, 1992. Template:ISBN