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Al-Suwaira attack
Part of the Iraq War
DateJanuary 9, 2005
LocationAl-Suwaira, Wasit Governorate, Iraq
Result Attack successful
Belligerents

Multinational Division Central-South

  • Flag of Poland Poland
  • Flag of Ukraine Ukraine
  • Flag of Kazakhstan Kazakhstan
File:IAILogo.png Islamic Army of Iraq[1][2]
Units involved
Ukraine 72nd Mechanized Brigade
Kazakhstan Kazbat Battalion
?
Casualties and losses
Ukraine 8 killed, 6 wounded[1]
Kazakhstan 1 killed, 4 wounded[1]
?


On January 9, 2005, a 27-man team of Kazakh sappers from the Kazbat engineer battalion collected 35 aerial bombs that Iraqi police had found stashed near the central military base of Al-Suwaira, located 6 miles south of Baghdad. The bombs were loaded onto transport trucks from where they would be defused at the Al-Suwaira Multinational Division Central-South army base.[3]

At 12:05 a.m, the trucks reached the base and a Ukrainian back-up team from the 7th separate mechanised brigade assisted the sappers in unloading the explosives from the transport vehicles. While this was happening an explosive rigged between two of the aerial bombs detonated itself, caused a mass explosion that killed 8 Ukrainian troops and a Kazakh sapper, while also wounding 10 others of varying degrees, including 6 Ukrainians and 4 Kazakhs. Among the dead was a 52nd Battalion Ukrainian lieutenant colonel.[1][2][4][5]

Following the incident, the Islamic Army in Iraq claimed responsibility for the explosion.[6] According to the Ukrainian contingent commander in Iraq, Major General Serhiy Popko, there were reports of men sitting in a car and surveying the troops unload the charges before the blast, and then quickly speeding away afterwards. This caused speculation as to whether the IED was triggered remotely.[7]

In reaction to the deaths, Ukrainian president Leonid Kuchma called for the withdrawal of troops from Iraq. This was the primary cause that led to the direct pullout of 1,650 Ukrainian troops in December 2005. The Kazakh mission pulled out in 2008, suffering its sole fatality.

References[]

All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at Al-Suwaira fuel dump explosion and the edit history here.
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