Operation Steel Curtain | |||||||
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Part of the Iraq War | |||||||
A U.S. Marine and Iraqi Army soldiers watch over the surrounding streets from a rooftop in Karabilah, Iraq, during Operation Steel Curtain on 11 November 2005. | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
United States New Iraqi Army | Iraqi insurgents | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Col. J.D. Alford (3/6) Col. S.W. Davis (RCT-2) |
Mahmoud Latif (1920 Revolution Brigades commander) Hatim Muslim (Ansar al-Sunnah commander) Muhannad Ulayyan (Islamic Army in Iraq commander) Farhan Khalifawi (Islamic Army in Iraq commander) Khaled Mahal (Al-Qaeda in Iraq commander) Haqqi Shourtani (Mujahideen Army in Iraq commander) | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
10 killed, 30 injured[1] Unknown |
139 killed 256 captured | ||||||
97+ civilians killed[2] |
Operation Steel Curtain (Arabic: الحجاب الفولاذي Al Hejab Elfulathi) was a military operation executed by coalition forces in early November 2005 to reduce the flow of foreign insurgents crossing the border and joining the Iraqi insurgency. The operation was important in that it was the first large scale deployment of the New Iraqi Army. This offensive was part of the larger Operation Sayeed (Hunter), designed to prevent al Qaeda in Iraq from operating in the Euphrates River Valley and throughout Al Anbar and to establish a permanent Iraqi Army presence in the Al Qa’im region.
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