7th Division (Iraq)

7th Iraqi Army Division

An Iraqi soldier fires the RPK light machine gun. The Iraqi soldiers, including those of the 7th Division are trained in infantry school of Al Asad.
Active c.1960s - 2003
2004-
Country  Iraq
Allegiance United States Forces – Iraq
Branch Army
Type Division
Role Infantry
Size 9000+
Part of Iraqi Ground Forces Command
Garrison/HQ Ramadi
Engagements

Iran-Iraq War

  • Second Battle of Al Faw

Iraq War

Commanders
Current
commander
Maj. Gen. Murthi Mishin Rafa Farahan
Insignia
Division Flag

The 7th Division is a division of the Iraqi Army. First formed in the 1960s or 1970s, it was disbanded in 2003. It was reformed after 2004. It is now headquartered at Al Asad. This division was trained by the United States Marine Corps. It played a part in the defeat of Al Qaeda in Iraq (AQI) in Anbar province in 2007. It was transferred to the Iraqi Ground Forces Command (IGFC) on November 1, 2007.[1]

Division Units:

In accordance with the standards of training Iraqi forces the division's brigades or battalions will be committed at all times in other units. This was tested by detaching units of the 7th Division south of Baghdad in early of 2008. The 29th is the last brigade formed in the desert of western Iraq, is based in Rutbah, it may be in line to be equipped with wheeled armour like the 37th or 17th Brigades.

In May 2008, the 26th Brigade participated in operations in Basra.

On 21 December 2013, Maj Gen Mohammed al-Karawi, the Commander of the division, was killed during a security operation in Rutbah against al-Qaeda training camps. In the incident, several suicide bombs had gone off as Karawi was entering a deserted building, killing Karawi alongside several officers, and wounding up to 32 soldiers. More than 60 militants had been in the area at the time.[2]

Notes

  1. ""7th Iraqi Army Division now Controlled by Iraqi Government", MNF-I Press Release November 03 2007". Retrieved 11 October 2014.
  2. "Bomb attack kills officers in Iraq's Anbar province". BBC News. Retrieved 11 October 2014.

External links