8th Najaf Ashraf Division

(Redirected from 8th Najaf Division)

8th Najaf Ashraf Armored Division (Persian: لشکر 8 نجف اشرف) is a division of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

8th Najaf Ashraf Division
لشکر 8 نجف اشرف
Active1981–present
Country Iran
Branch Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps
TypeInfantry, armored
SizeDivision
Garrison/HQIsfahan Province, Najafabad county
Nickname(s)"Najaf Ashraf" (نجف اشرف)
Engagements
Commanders
Current commanderGen. Seif-o-allah Rashidzade
Notable
commanders
Ahmad Kazemi
Mehdi Bakeri (deputy)
Hamid Bakeri
Mohammad Pakpour
Mohammad Taghi Amini

It was first officially organized as the 8th Najaf Ashraf Brigade (Persian: تیپ 8 نجف اشرف) during Iran–Iraq War, just after Operation Samen-ol-A'emeh. Initially, the soldiers of the division were mostly from the Najafabad County, Isfahan Province. The division was organized and nicknamed "Najaf Ashraf" by Ahmad Kazemi, which was appointed as its commander by Gholam Ali Rashid. Kazemi asked Mehdi Bakeri to become his deputy, after which units from Azarbaijan Province and Zanjan Province also joined the unit. When Bakeri became the commander of the 31st Ashura Division, these brigades joined the latter. Later, the brigades from Yazd Province also established their own unit, the 18th Al-Ghadir Brigade, and split from the Najaf Division. With the establishment of the 44th Qamar-e Bani-Hashem Brigade, forces from Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad Province and Isfahan Province also left the Najaf Division.[1][2]

In Operation Beit-ol-Moqaddas, the Najaf Ashraf Division was the unit which first broke into Khorramshahr, capturing thousands of Iraqi soldiers.

It was reportedly the first IRGC division to establish an armored unit, using captured Iraqi armor.[1] The division is also called 8th Najaf Ashraf Armored Division.

Notable commanders

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ a b "Division 8 Najaf : How was formed". Sahebnews.ir. 2016-10-16. Retrieved 2016-11-16.
  2. ^ چاپلینک ثابتسطح یگان; یگان مستقل. "لشکر 8 نجف | دفاع‌مقدس". Defamoghaddas.ir (in Persian). Archived from the original on 2016-11-05. Retrieved 2016-11-16.