List of wars involving Iran explained

This is a list of wars involving the Islamic Republic of Iran and its predecessor states. It is an unfinished historical overview.

ConflictIran (and allies)OpponentsResultsNotes
Median Empire
(678–549 BC)
Assyrian invasions of Media (10th – late 7th centuries BC)MedesAssyrian EmpireDefeatKingdoms and city-states of western Iran became Assyrian vassals
Median invasion of Assyria (the late 7th century BC)MedesScythians

Other Iranian peoples

Assyrian EmpireVictoryInvasion of the Assyrian Empire by a coalition of Iranian peoples, led by Kashtariti of Media
  • End of Assyrian rule in Media
  • Formation of an independent Median kingdom
  • Median invasion of Assyria repelled
Medo-Babylonian invasion Assyria
(626–609 BC)
Median Kingdom
BabyloniaPersians
Assyrian EmpireVictoryAlliance between various people of the region against the Assyrian Empire, led by the Median Kingdom and Babylonia
Scythian invasion of Media (624–597 BC)Median KingdomScythiansVictoryWar between two groups of Iranian peoples
  • Conquest of Media by Scythians
  • End of Scythian rule in Media in 597 BC, during reign of Cyaxares
Siege of Harran
(609 BC)
Medes
Babylonia
AssyriaEgyptVictoryThe Assyrian insurgency
Battle of Eclipse
(585 BC)
MedesKingdom of LydiaUndecidedThe battle ended due to an eclipse.
Achaemenid Empire
(550–330 BC)
Battle of Hyrba
(552 BC)
PersiansMedes EmpireVictory
Persian Revolt
(552–549 BC)
PersiansMedian EmpireVictoryBy conquering Media, Iran became an empire.
Battle of the Persian border
(551 BC)
PersiansMedes EmpireVictoryPersian retreat to Pasargadae
Conquest of Lydia
(547 BC)
Persian EmpireLydian EmpireVictoryLydia annexed by Iran
Cyrus' first eastern campaign (545–540 BC) Persian EmpireGedrosiaVictoryPersian conquest of Bactria, Arachosia, Sogdia, Saka, Chorasmia, Margiana and other provinces in the east after initial defeat
Conquest of Babylonia
(540–539 BC)
Persian EmpireNeo-Babylonian EmpireVictoryNeo-Babylonian Empire annexed by Iran
Cyrus' second eastern Campaign (533 BC) Persian EmpireGedrosiaVictoryCyrus the Great crossed the Hindu Kush mountains and collected tribute from the Indus vassalage cities.
Cyrus' Campaign against Massagetae (530/529 BC) Persian EmpireAmyrgiansScythians DefeatDeath of Cyrus the Great
Conquest of Egypt
(525 BC)
Persian EmpireKingdom of EgyptVictoryEgypt annexed by Iran
Conquest of India (Indus Valley)(518 BC) Persian EmpireMahajanapadas VictoryAchaemenid military occupation of northwestern regions of India for about two centuries
European Scythian campaign
(513 BC)
Persian EmpireScythians in European ScythiaVictoryAchaemenid domination of the European Black Sea regions
Greek Revolt(499 BC–493 BC) Persian EmpireGreeksVictoryPersia re-establishes control over Greek regions in Asia Minor and Cyprus
Greco-Persian War (First)(492–490 BC) Persian EmpireGreeksUndecidedPersia conquers Macedonia and the Cycladic Islands, re-subjugates Thrace,but fails in an attempt to subjugate Athens and Sparta
Greco-Persian War (Second)(480–479 BC) Persian EmpireGreeksDefeatMacedonia, Thrace and Ionia regain independence from Persia
Peloponnesian War
(431–404 BC)
Peloponnesian League (led by Sparta) Supported by:
Achaemenid Empire
Delian League (led by Athens)VictoryDissolution of the Delian League; Spartan hegemony over Athens and its allies
Battle of Cunaxa
(401 BC)
Persian EmpireCyrus the YoungerVictoryArtaxerxes II still in full control of the kingdom
Corinthian War
(395–387 BC)
Athens
Argos
Corinth
Thebes
Persian Empire
Other allies
Sparta
Peloponnesian League
Victory(Peace of Antalcidas

dictated by Iran)

Ionia ceded back to Achaemenid Iran; Boeotian league dissolved; Union of Argos and Corinth dissolved.
Artaxerxes' II Cadusian Campaign
(385 BC)
Persian EmpireCadusiiVictoryNegotiated peace with rival chiefs
Revolt of the Satraps
(372–362 BC)
Persian EmpireRebel satrapiesVictoryRebellions crushed
Second conquest of Egypt
(c. 340 BC)
Persian EmpireEgyptVictoryEgypt is conquered for a second time by Iran
Macedonian invasion of Iran
(355–328 BC)
Persian Empire MacedoniaDefeatIran conquered by the army of Alexander the Great
Macedonian Empire (330–312 BC)
Indian campaign of Alexander the Great (327–325 BC) Macedonia Ancient India VictoryHellenic conquest of great part of the Indus Valley.Iranic confrontation with the Nanda Empire of Magadha.
Wars of the Diadochi(322–281 BC)First War:

Second War:

Third War:

First War:

Second War:

Third War:

DefeatDeath of Perdiccas.Seleucus established himself in Babylon in 312 BC, then conquest Persia.
Seleucid Empire (312-129 BC)
Babylonian War (311–309 BCE)Seleucid EmpireAntigonid dynastyVictorySeleucid control of Babylonia, Media, and Elam
Seleucid–Mauryan war (305–303 BCE)Seleucid EmpireMaurya EmpireDefeatTreaty of the Indus
  • Seleucid Empire's eastern Persian satrapies ceded to Mauryan Empire.
  • Seleucus gives the hand of his daughter to Chandragupta, founding a dynastic alliance.
Syrian Wars(274–168 BC)[1] Seleucid EmpirePtolemaic EgyptVictory
  • Seleucid annexation of Ptolemeic holdings in Asia Minor, Coele-Syria, Cyprus, and other Ptolemeic holdings outside of Egypt.
  • Roman intervention against Seleucids and Macedonia during the Sixth Syrian War.
Antiouchus' Bactrian Campaign(209–206/5 BC) Seleucid EmpireGreco-Bactrian KingdomVictoryAntiochus III recognizes Euthydemus's reign
Roman–Seleucid War (192–188 BC)[2] Seleucid Empire Roman RepublicDefeatPeace of Apamea
Campaigns of Artaxias I(189–165 BCE)Seleucid EmpireAtropatene
Kingdom of Cataonia
Kingdom of Pontus

Lesser Armenia

Kingdom of Iberia

Kingdom of ArmeniaKingdom of SopheneDefeatThe regions of Caspiana, Faunitida, Basolropeda, Tmorik, Karenitis, Derksen, Akilisene and Antitaurus are annexed to Armenia.
Parthian Empire
(247 BC–224 AD)
Seleucid–Parthian Wars
(238 BC–129 BC)
Parthian EmpireSeleucid EmpireVictory• Expulsion of the Seleucids from Iran
Parni Conquest Parthia(238 BC)Parthian EmpireSeleucid EmpireVictory• Rise of the Parthian Empire• The beginning of the Seleucid–Parthian Wars
Parthian–Bactrian War (150 BC)Parthian EmpireGreco-Bactrian KingdomVictoryWestern Bactria annexed to the Parthian Empire
Second Parthian-Kushan War(between c. 130 CE to c. 140 CE)Parthian EmpireKushan EmpireDefeatKanishka I repels the invasion
Battle of Ecbatana(129 BC)Parthian EmpireSeleucid EmpireVictoryEnd of Hellenistic rule in Iran
Nomad invasion of Drangiana[3] [4] (128-115 BC)Parthian EmpireIndo-Scythians

Yuezhi

VictoryThe House of Suren gets the Indo-Parthian territories.
Parthian invasion of Armenia(120–100 BCE?) Parthian Empire Atropatene Kingdom of ArmeniaVictoryParthians add territories
Armenian–Parthian War
(87–85 BC)
Parthian Empire Kingdom of ArmeniaDefeatOsroene and Atrpatakan loyalty to Tigranes the Great
Battle of Carrahe(53 BC)Parthian Empire Roman RepublicVictory• Repelling the danger of the Romans• Crassus killed

• Roman desire to retaliate for Julius Caesar's planned invasion of the Parthian Empire

Liberators' civil war(43–42 BC) Liberatores

Supported by:

Parthian Empire[5]

Second Triumvirate

Supported by:

Ptolemaic Egypt

DefeatThe Second Triumvirate wins the Roman Civil War, then reinstates control over the eastern provinces.
Pompeian–Parthian invasion of 40 BC(40–38 BC)Parthian Empire Roman RepublicDefeatStatus quo ante bellum
Antony's Parthian War(36–20 BC)Parthian EmpireAtropatene

Hasmonean Kingdom

Roman Republic Kingdom of Armenia

Galatia

Cappadocia

Pontus

Herodian Kingdom of Judea

Victory• Antony's was unsuccessful in campaign against Iran• Ended by formal peace in 20 BC
Gondophares conquest on the East(20–10 BC)Indo-Parthian KingdomIndo-ScythiansIndo-Greek KingdomVictoryGondophares conquers Arachosia, Seistan, Sindh, Punjab, and the Kabul valley.
Pharasmanes I of Iberia invasion of Armenia(35 AD)Parthian Empire Kingdom of Armenia Kingdom of IberiaDefeatOrodes of Armenia is deposed
Kushan invasion of Indo-Parthia(50s AD)Indo-Parthian KingdomKushan EmpireDefeatKushans conquer Indo-Parthian territories in northern India.
Iberian–Armenian War(50–51 AD/51–53 AD) Kingdom of Armenia

Roman Empire (until 51)---- Kingdom of Armenia

Parthian Empire

Kingdom of Iberia---- Kingdom of Iberia

Roman Empire

VictoryThe Roman–Parthian War of 58–63 start
Roman–Parthian War of 58–63(58–63 AD)Parthian Empire Kingdom of Armenia Roman EmpireRoman clients

Sophene

Lesser Armenia

Iberia

Commagene

Pontus

StalemateTreaty of Rhandeia
Roman–Parthian Wars
(66 AD–216)
Parthian Empire
Kingdom of Armenia
Roman Empire
Pontus
Status quo ante bellumBorders changed several times.
Trajan's Parthian campaign(115–117)Parthian Empireco-belligerantJewish/Judean zealots

Babylonians rebelsArmenian rebels

Roman EmpireClient Parthian stateStalemate
Roman–Parthian War of 161–166(161–166)Parthian EmpirePro-Parthian Edessans Roman EmpirePro-Roman EdessansDefeatMinor Roman territorial gains and Armenia consolidated as a Roman client
Battle of Ctesiphon (198)Parthian Empire Roman EmpireDefeatRoman sacks Persian capital
Parthian War of Caracalla(216–217)Parthian Empire Roman EmpireVictory
  • Rome is forced to pay tribute to Parthia
Sassanid Empire
(224–651)
Battle of Hormozdgan(224) SassanidsParthian EmpireVictory• Fall of the Parthian Empire• Rise of the Sasanian Empire
Sasanid conquest of Sakastan(225–226)[6] SassanidsIndo-Parthian KingdomVictoryConsolidation of the Sasanian Empire on eastern Persia
Ardashir I invasion of Armenia(226–238) Sasanian Empire Kingdom of ArmeniaDefeatSassanid withdrawal
Mesopotamian campaigns of Ardashir I(229-241) Sasanian Empire Roman EmpireKingdom of HatraVictoryBoth sides get territorial gains.
Shapur I campaign on the East(241–242) Sasanian Empire VictoryPersia annex territories as far as "Purushapura" (Peshawar) and the Hindu-Kush or even south of it.Those includying Sogdiana, Bactria, and Gandhara.Kushans are deposed and replaced by the Kushanshah
Battle of Resaena(243) Sasanian Empire Roman EmpireDefeatRoman recovers Nisibis and Singara
Battle of Misiche(244) Sasanian Empire Roman EmpireGoths

Germans

VictoryRoman cedes Armenia and Mesopotamia
Roman-Sassanid Wars
(232–440)
Sasanian Empire Roman EmpireStatus quo ante bellumBorders changed several times.
Siege of Nisibis(252) Sasanian Empire Roman EmpireVictoryPersian capture of Nisibis
Battle Of Barbalissos(253) Sasanian Empire Roman EmpireVictoryShapur's army won against Valerian's army
Siege of Antioch (253) Sasanian Empire Roman EmpireVictory
Siege of Dura-Europos (256) Sasanian Empire Roman EmpireVictory
Battle of Edessa(260) Sasanian Empire Roman EmpireVictoryValerian was captured
Sasanian revolts against Barham II(274-293) Sasanian Empire VictoryRevolts suppressed
Shapur ll's Arab Campaign(325) Sasanian EmpireArabs Victory
  • The Sasanian Empire establishes suzerainty over all of the Persian Gulf and numerous factions in Arabia
  • Wall of the Arabs was constructed to prevent raids by the Arabs
Perso-Roman wars of 337–361(337–361) Sasanian Empire Roman EmpireIndecisiveStatus quo ante bellum
Wars of Shapur II with the Chionites and Kushans[7] (350–358) Sasanian Empire XionitesKushan EmpireVictoryExpansion of Sasanian control beyond the Indus River
Shapur II's 1st Armenian campaign (359-361) Sasanian Empire Kingdom of Armenia Roman EmpireVictoryDeath of Arshak II
Kidarites invasions of Bactria(360s) Sasanian Empire KidaritesDefeatKidara I conquers Bactria and get the title of Kushanshah
Julian's Persian expedition(363) Sasanian EmpireArab allies Roman Empire Kingdom of ArmeniaVictorySasanian annexation of five regions & fifteen major fortresses from the Roman Empire in addition to the consequent annexation of Armenia
Shapur II's 2nd Armenian campaign (367-371) Sasanian Empire Caucasian Albania Roman Empire Kingdom of ArmeniaDefeatPersians depose Arshak II of Armenia. ThenArmenia is under Roman suzerainty through Pap of Armenia entronization.
Shapur III's Armenian Campaign (378-386) Sasanian Empire Kingdom of Armenia Eastern Roman EmpireVictoryPeace of Acilisene
Hunnic invasion of the Sasanian Empire(395) Sasanian Empireco-belligerant
Roman Empire
Hunnic EmpireVictoryHuns quit
Roman–Sasanian War of 421–422(421–422) Sasanian EmpireLakhmid Arabs Eastern Roman EmpireStalemateStatus quo ante bellum
Byzantine–Sasanian War of 440(440) Sasanian Empire Eastern Roman EmpireIndecisiveStatus quo ante bellum
  • Both empires agreed to battle northern nomads (Scythians).
Battle of Avarayr(451) Sasanian EmpireChristian ArmeniansVictory(Pyrrhic Win)Following Persian the victory, Yazdegerd jailed some Armenian priests and nobles and appointed a new governor for Armenia but, the Armenians gained religious freedom for their Christian faith.
Kidarite-Sassanid War (464-466)[8] [9] Sasanian EmpireAlchon HunsKidaritesVictoryEnd of Kidarite menace to Persia in Bactria
Hephthalite–Sasanian Wars(484-565) Sasanian Empire

First Turkic Khaganate

Hephthalite EmpireVictory
  • The Hephthalite Empire breaks into minor kingdoms.
  • Sasanians and Turks established a frontier for their zones of influence along the Oxus river
Byzantine–Sassanid Wars
(502–628)
Sasanian Empire Byzantine EmpireStatus quo ante bellumBorders changed several times.
Anastasian War(502–506) Sasanian Empire Byzantine EmpireDrawStatus quo ante bellum[10] •Byzantium pays a small amount of money[11]
Aksumite invasion of Himyar(518–525)Himyarite Kingdom
  • Jewish Himyarites

Supported by:
Sasanian Empire

Kingdom of Aksum

Supported by:
Byzantine Empire

Defeat
  • Aksumite victory and conquest of Yemen
  • End of persecution of Christians by Jewish Himyarites
  • Byzantines success in establishing an anti-Sasanid bloc in Arabia Felix
Iberian War(526–532) Sasanian Empire Byzantine EmpireVictory

Byzantines retained Lazica

Byzantines paid tribute of 11,000 lbs (5,000 kg) gold

Lazic War(541–562) Sasanian Empire Byzantine EmpireVictoryFifty-Year Peace Treaty
Ethiopian–Persian Wars
(570–578)
Sasanian Empire

Supported by:

Jewish Himyarites

Kingdom of Aksum
  • Aksum Yemen

Supported by:
Byzantine Empire

South Arabian Christians

VictoryEthiopians expelled from the Himyarite Kingdom. (Yemen is annexed by the Sasanian Empire)
War for the Caucasus(572–591) Sasanian Empire Byzantine EmpireDefeatKhosrow II is restored to the Sasanian throne.• Khosrow II gives the Byzantine Empire most of Persian Armenia and western half of Iberia after the Sasanian civil war of 589–591

• Byzantium stops paying tribute to Sasanian empire[12]

First Perso-Turkic War
(588–589)
Sasanian EmpireHephthalite Empire
Göktürks
VictoryThe Sassanids captured Balkh.
Sasanian civil war of 589–591 Sasanian EmpireSupporters of Bahram Chobin----Dissatisfied Sasanian noblessupported by:
Byzantine Empire
DefeatKhosrow II faction's victory
Vistahm Rebellion(590–596) Sasanian EmpireParthians led by VistahmVictoryRevolt suppressed
Byzantine–Sassanid War(602–628) Sasanian Empire

Avars (and Slavic allies)

Byzantine Empire

Western Turkic Khaganate

Status quo ante bellum
Second Perso-Turkic War
(606–608)
Sasanian EmpireWestern Turkic Khaganate
Hephthalite Empire
VictoryTurkic invasion of Iran repelled
Jewish revolt against Heraclius (614–617/625)Jewish rebels
Sasanian Empire
Byzantine EmpireStatus quo ante bellumJewish surrender and expulsion after a brief rule by Persians and Jews over parts of the Byzantine Diocese of the East.
Third Perso-Turkic War
(627–629)
Sasanian Empire

Supported by:

Eastern Turkic Khaganate

Western Turkic Khaganate
Supported by:Byzantine Empire

Tang China

DefeatByzantine control of Georgia
Sasanian civil war of 628–632The Parsig factionThe Nimruzi factionThe Pahlav (Parthian) faction----Shahrbaraz's armyStalemate
Muslim conquest of Persia
(633–654)
Sasanian Empire

Supported by:

Rashidun CaliphateKanarangDefeat
Sasanids attempts to recuperate the Persian throne (657–679) Tang China

Sassanids in exile

Rashidun Caliphate (until 661) Umayyad Caliphate (from 661)

Western Turkic Khaganate

StalemateThe Tang campaigns against the Western Turks (by Pei Xingjian) success and the Chinese established a "Persian military commandery" (波斯都督府) in the city of Zābol (疾陵城 Jilicheng) in Tokharistan, and Peroz was appointed as Military Commander (都督 Dudu). Then this government, with the capital at Zirang, fell in 673/674.After that, Narsieh went west with his troops to liberate Iranshahr in 679 and fought against the Arabs in Takharistan for almost thirty years.
Iranian Intermezzo (821–1090)
Muslim conquest of Transoxiana(673–751) Abbasid Caliphate

Tibetan EmpireKarluk mercenaries

Principalities of Tokharistan

Sogdian principalities

Khwarazm

Fergana

Türgesh Kaghanate

Second Turkic Khaganate
Tang China

Victory
Second Fitna (Muslim civil war of 680–692)Zubayrid Caliphate----Alids----KharijitesUmayyad CaliphateDefeatKharijite faction, the Azariqa, captures Fars and Kirman from the Zubayrids. Ex-Zubayrid loyalists help Umayyad to secured Iraq, and consequently most of its dependencies in Persia. Then, Umayyad victory after Siege of Mecca.
Umayyad campaigns in India(712–740) Umayyad CaliphateGurjara-PratiharaGuhila dynasty

Maitraka dynasty

Chalukya dynasty

Karkota Empire

Defeat
  • Arab, and later Turco-Persian Muslim invasions to India, stop for the next 250 years.
  • Islamization of modern Pakistan.
Third Fitna(744–750) Abbasid CaliphateSupported by:

----Kharijites

Umayyad CaliphateSupported by: Victory
  • Abbasid appropriation of most former Umayyad territory
  • Eventual establishment of the Emirate of Córdoba
  • End of privileged status for Arabs
  • End of official discrimination against non-Arabs
Tabaristan uprising(784–804) Karenids

Bavandids

Baduspanids

Zarmihrids

Abbasid Caliphate

Supported:

Barmakids

StalemateArabs finally conquer Tabaristan, but the locals obtain more authonomy after revolt.
Abbasid expeditions to East Africa(804, 827/837)1st phase Abbasid Caliphate2nd phase
Persians wālīs of Zanj
1st phaseAfricans from Zanj

2nd phase
Abbasid Caliphate

VictoryThe Kharaj is imposed on the Africans.Persian rebels against Mihna get a compromise.
Fourth Fitna (Abbasid civil war of 811–813/819)Al-Ma'mun (supported mostly by Persian forces) Al-Amin (supported mostly by Arab forces) VictoryDefeat and death of al-Amin; al-Ma'mun is recognized as Caliph on 27 September 813. Tahir ibn Husayn rewarded as governor of Khorasan, which marked the beginning of the Tahirids.
Hamza ibn Azarak's Kharijites rebellion in Sistan(823–828)Tahirid dynasty KharijitesInconclusiveHamza's death in 828 and the death of Talha shortly after put an end to this series of conflicts.
Mazyar uprising(839)Tahirid dynasty Spahbed Mazyar andKhaydhar ibn Kawus al-Afshin's forcesVictoryMutasim Maziar was arrested and sent to Baghdad. Tahirid control over Tabaristan was therefore secured.
Zaydid revolt of 864Tahirid dynastyHasan ibn Zayd's forcesDefeat Hasan, who assumed the regnal name al-Da‘ī ila’l-ḥaqq ("He who summons to the Truth"), was recognized as emir of Tabaristan.
Caspian expeditions of the Rus'(864–1041) Abbasid Caliphate

Khazars (from 965)

Alans

Byzantine Empire (941)

Sarir

Volga Bulgaria

Oghuz Turks

Khazars (until 943)

Stalemate
  • Occupation of several areas on the outskirts of the Volga and the Dnieper by the Russians. Start of Russian expansionism on the Caucasus.
  • The disintegration of the Khazar Empire
  • Sack of different areas by the Russians in Iranian territories near Caspian Sea
  • The local Muslims defeated the Russians in their attempts to conquest Persian territories.
Samanid conquest of northern Iran(900–901) Samanid Empire ZaydidsVictorySamanids took over the province of Tabaristan, Ismail then appointed his cousin Abu'l-Abbas Abdullah as the governor of Tabaristan.
Sajid invasion of Georgia(914)Sajid dynasty Tao-KlarjetiKingdom of Kakheti
Kingdom of Abkhazia
StalemateDespite military victories, sajid withdraw from Georgia
Qarmatian invasion of Iraq (927–928) Abbasid CaliphateSajid dynastyQarmatians of BahraynBaqliyya rebelsStalemateEnd of Qarmatian expansionismCollapse of the Abbasid Empire
Battle of Iskhabad(940)
  • Part of the Samanid–Ziyarid Wars
Ziyarid dynastyFiruzanidsSamanid EmpireDefeatSamanid conquest of the territory
Saffarid dynasty
(861–1003)
Yaqub's campaigns to the east (861–870) Saffarid dynasty ZunbilsKharijites

Medieval India

VictoryYa'qub ibn al-Layth al-Saffar marched through Bost, Kandahar, Ghazni, Kabul, Bamyan, Balkh and Herat, conquering them in the name of Islam.
Saffarid-Abbasid War (873–876) Saffarid dynastyAyyars Abbasid Caliphate Stalemate
Battle of Mecca (883)
  • Part of Abbasid decline (861–940)
Saffarid dynasty Abbasid CaliphateTulunidsVictory
Battle of Balkh(900)Saffarid AmirateSamanid EmpireDefeatThe Saffarids lose much territory to the Samanids in Khorasan, and were left with the control of Fars, Kerman and Sistan, but they also lost these provinces after a civil war.
Saffarid Campaign in the Fars province(900–904)Saffarid Amirate Abbasid CaliphateVictoryTemporarily regained Fars, but the Saffarids withdrew soon afterwards.
Military expedition against Makran(907 or 908)Saffarid AmirateMa'danidsVictorySaffarids able to compel the Ma'danid to give three years of tribute.
Civil war between Tahir and the pretender Al-Layth (909–912)Tahir ibn Muhammad ibn AmrAl-LaythStalemateSebük-eri, who had managed to win over Tahir's commanders, won an easy victory and captured the brothers. They were sent to the Caliph and imprisoned in Baghdad, though they were treated well for the remainder of their lives.
Buyid-Saffarid War (967–968)Saffarid dynastyBuyid dynastyDefeatAdud al-Dawla negotiated peace with the Saffarid ruler Khalaf ibn Ahmad, who agreed to recognize Buyid authority.
Ghaznavid dynasty
(962–1186)
March of Sultan Mahmud of Ghazni to India (1001–1027) Ghaznavid EmpireMedieval India VictoryThe northern parts of India were annexed by Iran. Somnath temple was destroyed and its treasures looted.
Ghaznavid campaigns in India(10th and 11th centuries) Ghaznavid EmpireMedieval India Victory
  • The northern parts of India were annexed by Iran.
  • Somnath temple was destroyed and its treasures looted.
  • Later Islamic empires would appear on the subcontinent.
Seljuq Empire
(1037–1194)
Seljuk-Ghaznavid Wars Seljuk EmpireGhaznavid EmpireVictory• Fall of the Ghaznavid Empire• Rise of the Seljuk Empire
Siege of Hamadan (1047) Seljuk EmpireKakuyidsAnnazids

Buyids

VictoryHamedan and Isfahan are conquered by Seljuk empire.
Georgian–Seljuk wars(1048–1213) Seljuk Empire Kingdom of Georgia DefeatInitial victory on the Great Turkish Invasion. Then Georgia liberates from being tributary of Seljuk and even invades Iran.
Byzantine–Seljuq wars
(1048–1308)
Seljuk Empire Byzantine Empire

Empire of Trebizond
Crusader states

VictoryMost of Anatolia conquered by the Seljuks
Overthrow of the Qarmatians(1058–1077) Seljuk EmpireUyunid Emirate
Abbasid Caliphate
QarmatiansVictoryEnd of Qarmatian rule in eastern Arabia
Seljuk war of succession(1063) Alp Arslan forcesQutalmish forcesVictoryAlp Arslan obtains the throne.
Battle of Manzikert
(1071)
Seljuk EmpireVictorySeljuks enter Anatolia.
Seljuk Civil War Seljuk Empire Kerman Seljuk Sultanate VictoryMalik Shah maintains the throne
Battle of Ain Salm(1086) Seljuk EmpireSultanate of RûmVictorydeath of Suleiman ibn Qutalmish
Nizari–Seljuk conflicts(1090–1194) (Nizari) Ismailis of Persia and SyriaStalemateNizaris consolidate a state in Daylam, Quhistan, and Jabal Bahra', then controls other scattered areas in Alborz mountains, Zagros mountains, and Khurasan.
First Crusade(1095–1099)
Defeat
Siege of Mosul (1096) Seljuk EmpireUqaylid dynastyVictorySeljuks conquers the territory of the Uqaylid State
Battle of Ghazni (1117) Seljuk EmpireGhaznavid EmpireVictoryBahram of Ghazna succeeded to the throne as the Seljuk's vassal
First Siege of Baghdad (1136) Seljuk EmpireAbbasid CaliphateVictoryal-Rashid fled the city for Mosul, where he abdicated the caliphate. His uncle, al-Muqtafi, was raised to the throne instead by Mas'ud, who then retired to the east.
Battle of Qatwan(1141) Seljuk EmpireKara-Khanids

Kakuyids

Qara Khitai (Western Liao)KarluksDefeatKhwarazm became a vassal state of the Kara-Khitan.
Second Crusade(1147–1150)

----Western front (Reconquista)

----Wendish Crusade

Victory
Second Siege of Baghdad (1157) Seljuk Empire Abbasid CaliphateDefeatCaliph al-Muqtafi successfully defended his capital against the coalition armies of Seljuq Sultan Muhammad of Hamadan and Qutb ad-Din of Mosul.
Ghurid dynasty
(879–1215)
Battle of Ghazni (1148)Ghurid dynastyGhaznavidsVictoryThe Ghurid ruler defeated Bahram-Shah and took the city while Bahram-Shah fled to India.
Battle of Ghazni (1151)Ghurid dynastyGhaznavidsVictoryThe Ghurid ruler defeated Bahram-Shah, captured the city, and destroyed it as revenge for the execution of his brother Quṭb ud-Dīn in 1149.
Indian campaigns of Muhammad of Ghor(1175–1206) Ghurid dynastyRajput confederacy

Sena dynasty

Soomra dynasty

Ghaznavids

Qarmatians

Tibetan tribes

Victory
Battle of Andkhud(1204)Ghurid dynastyKhwarazmian EmpireQara Khitai

Kara-Khanid Khanate

DefeatGhurids lost suzerainty of Khurasan to the Khwarezmian Empire
Ghurid invasion of Tibet(1206)Ghurid dynastyTibetan people (Era of Fragmentation)Defeat
Khwarazmian dynasty
(1077–1231)
Mongol invasion of Persia (1218–1256) Khwarazmian dynasty Nizari Ismaili state
Abbasid Caliphate
Mongol EmpireDefeat
Georgian-Khwarazmid war (1225–1228) Khwarazmian dynasty VictoryKhwarezmian last domains added the Georgian domains
Seljuk-Khwarazmid war(1230) Khwarezm Shahs

Seljuk rebels

Empire of Trebizond

Seljuk Sultanate of Rûm

Ayyubid Sultanate

DefeatKhwarezmian last domains partitioned between Seljuks and Mongols
Siege of Jerusalem (1244) Ayyubid Sultanate

Khwarazmians

Kingdom of JerusalemVictoryMuslim capture of Jerusalen
Ilkhanid dynasty(1256–1335)
Mongol invasions of Anatolia (1241–1335)
  • Part of Mongol invasion of West Asia
Mongol Empire

Principality of Khachen

Sultanate of Rum----Anatolian BeyliksVictoryMongols adds the Anatolian domains to Persian-centered Ilkhanate.
Siege of Baghdad (1258) Mongol Empire

Principality of Antioch

Abbasid CaliphateVictory
Toluid Civil War(1260–1264)Kublai Khan and his alliesAriq Böke and his alliesVictoryFragmentation of the Mongol Empire
Berke–Hulagu war(1262) IlkhanateSupported by:
Golden HordeSupported by:
Egyptian Mamluk Sultanate
InconclusiveFragmentation of the Mongol Empire
Kaidu–Kublai war(1268–1301)Yuan dynasty

Ilkhanate (ally of Kublai)

Chagatai Khanate

House of Ögedei

Golden Horde (ally of Kaidu until 1284)

InconclusiveFragmentation of the Mongol Empire
Mongol invasions of the Levant (1260–1323) Ilkhanate of the Mongol Empire Egyptian Mamluk Sultanate

Ayyubid remnants

Nizari Ismailis of Syria

Karamanid rebels

Abbasids

DefeatMongols fail to conquer Egypt or get a formal Franco-Mongol alliance.
Esen Buqa–Ayurbarwada war(1314–1318)Yuan dynasty Ilkhanate Chagatai KhanateVictoryFragmentation of the Mongol Empire
Timurid dynasty
(1370–1507)
Campaigns of Timur
(1380–1402)
Timurid dynastyMuzaffarids
Jalayirid Sultanate
Tughlaq dynasty Golden Horde

Delhi Sultanate
Ottoman Empire
Victory
Battle of Algami Canal(1402)
  • Part of Timurid Invasion of Iraq
Timurid dynasty Qara QoyunluVictorySultan Ahmed Jalayir and Qara Yusuf both escaped Iraq again and fled towards Egypt
Timurid Civil Wars
(1405–~1501)
Various factions Various factionsCollapse of the dynastyRise of the Shi'ite Safavid dynasty
Battle of Nakhchivan (1406)
  • Part of Timurid Invasion of Azerbaijan
Timurid dynasty Qara QoyunluDefeatInvasion repelled
Safavid dynasty
(1501–1736)
Persian-Uzbek Wars
(1502–1510)
Safavid EmpireUzbeksVictoryFall of the Shaybanid Empire
Turkoman invasions of Georgia Kingdom of Georgia Shirvanshah
Safavid Empire (1502)
Kara Koyunlu (1407–1468) Aq Qoyunlu (1468–1502)VictoryEnd of invasions against Georgia and consolidation of Safavids in Persia
Kurdish-Yazidi uprising against the Safavids
(1506–1510)
Safavid Empire YazidisVictoryUprising suppressed when the Yazidi leader, Shir Sarim, was defeated in the battle
Portuguese–Safavid wars (1507–1625) Safavid Empire Imamate of Oman
Supported by:

British East India Company

Portuguese Empire

Supported by:

Spanish Empire (since 1580)

VictoryThe Iranian military sought to punish the Portuguese in the Persian Gulf for the Iranians' grievances of Gambron, not only liberating the island of Hormuz but also forcing the Portuguese to withdraw to Mombasa in Kenya.Britain recognized Iran's sovereignty over the entire Persian Gulf.
Battle of Chaldiran
(1514)
Safavid Empire Ottoman EmpireDefeatEnd of Shia uprisings in the Ottoman Empire
Ismail I invasion of Georgia(1516–1522)
  • Battle of Teleti
Safavid EmpireSamtskhe-Saatabago rebels Kingdom of Georgia StalemateInitial Persian victories, putting vassal governors in Georgia. Then withdrawal after Ottoman intervention
Battle of Jam (1528) Safavid EmpireUzbeksVictorySafavids Empire defeated Uzbeks and reconquered Herat.
Ottoman–Safavid War of 1523
(1532–1555),
Safavid EmpireSupported by:Habsburg monarchy Ottoman EmpireSupported by:FranceDefeatOttomans captured Lower Mesopotamia and Baghdad. First partition of the Caucasus between the Ottomans and Persians. Western Armenia and western Georgia falls in Ottoman hands, Eastern Armenia, eastern Georgia, Dagestan and the contemporary Republic of Azerbaijan remain in Persian hands
Georgian-Safavid wars(1556–1659) Safavid Empire Kingdom of Kartli Kingdom of KakhetiStalematePersians subdue Georgian kingdoms as vassals of Safavids, but Georgians got restoration of its autonomy
Uzbek invasion of Khorasan (1578) Safavid EmpireShaybanidsVictoryUzbeks withdrew from northeastern Iran and Persians refused to pay them tribute.
Ottoman–Safavid War of 1578
(1578–1590)
Safavid Empire Ottoman Empire DefeatTreaty of Constantinople (1590)
Battle of Herat(1598) Safavid Empire ShaybanidsVictoryKhorasan returned to Persians
Ottoman–Safavid War of 1603 (First Stage)
(1603–1612)
Safavid Empire Ottoman EmpireVictoryTreaty of Nasuh Pasha (1612)
Siege of Dimdim
(1609–1610)
Safavid Empire Emirate of BradostVictoryUprising suppressed
Ottoman–Safavid War of 1603 (Second Stage)(1612–1618) Safavid Empire Ottoman EmpireVictoryTreaty of Serav (1618)
Capture of Ormuz(1622) Safavid Empire British East India Company Iberian Union VictoryOrmuz annexed to Persia
Mughal–Safavid War of 1622
(1622–1623)
Safavid Empire Mughal EmpireVictoryKandahar falls to Persia
Ottoman–Safavid War of 1623
(1623–1639)
Safavid Empire Ottoman EmpireDefeatPermanent partition of the Caucasus; western Georgia and Western Armenia go to the Ottomans, while Eastern Armenia, Dagestan, eastern and southern Georgia, and Azerbaijan remain under Persian rule. Ottomans decisively gain control of Mesopotamia.
Battle off Hormuz(1625) English East India Company

Supported by:

Safavid Persia

Portuguese Empire
  • Estado da Índia
DrawEnd of Portuguese influence on the Persian Gulf
Capture of Julfar(1633)
  • part of the Omani–Portuguese conflicts
Safavid Empire Portuguese Empire Omani EmpireDefeatOmanis captured the two forts on Ras Al Khaimah.
Mughal–Safavid war of 1649
(1649–1653)
Safavid EmpireKhanate of Bukhara Mughal Empire Jaipur StateVictoryPersia recaptured Kandahar
Russo-Persian War of 1651
(1651–1653)
Safavid EmpireVictoryRussian fortress on the Iranian side of the Terek River destroyed, and its garrison expelled
Bakhtrioni uprising(1659) Safavid EmpireTurcoman tribes Kingdom of Kakheti aided by Tushetians, Pshavs, KhevsursInconclusiveKakheti remained under Persian rule
1717 Omani invasion of Bahrain(1717) Safavid Empire Omani Empire DefeatPersian loss of Bahrain
Sack of Shamakhi(1721) Safavid EmpireRebellious Sunni LezginsDefeatThe Shia population is massacred and the city, ransacked
Russo-Persian War of 1722
(1722–1723)
Safavid Empire
Cossack Hetmanate
Kingdom of Kartli
Melikdoms of Karabakh and Armenian rebels
DefeatRussians capture Derbent, Baku, and the provinces of Shirvan, Gilan, Mazandaran, and Astrabad for about a decade.Partition of Iran with the Ottomans in Treaty of Constantinople (1724).
Siege of Isfahan
(1722)
Safavid Empire Hotaki dynastyDefeat(Regime change)Afghan control of most of Iran
Hotaki dynasty (1722–1729)
Ottoman–Hotaki War 1724–1727 Hotaki dynasty Ottoman EmpireVictoryTreaty of Hamedan
Return of Safavids(Nader)
(1726–1729)
Hotaki dynastySadozai Sultanate of Herat

Supported by:

Ottoman Empire

Safavid DynastyDefeat(Regime change)End of the Hotaki dynasty
Battle of Zarghan
(1730)
Safavid Empire Hotaki dynastyVictoryAfghans expelled from Iran (Persia)
Herat campaign of 1731(1731) Safavid EmpireAfghan loyalistsSadozai Sultanate of Herat Hotaki dynastyVictoryFall of Sadozai Sultanate of Herat
Ottoman-Safavid war of 1730 (Nader) (1730–1735) Safavid Empire

Erivan Khanate

Ottoman EmpireCrimean Khanate

Lezgins

VictoryPersian (Nader) reconquest of the entire CaucasusTreaty of Constantinople
Afsharid dynasty
(1736–1796)
Nader Siege of Kandahar (1737–1738) Afsharid dynasty Hotaki dynastyVictoryEnd of the Hotaki dynasty
Nader conquest of the Persian Gulf (1738–1747) Afsharid dynastyOmani Empire

Pirates

VictoryThe Persian empire becomes the arbiter of the Persian Gulf until the collapse of the empire.
Nader invasion of India
(1738–1739)
Afsharid dynasty Mughal EmpireVictoryPersian plundering of India
Nader Conquest of Central Asia (1738–1740) Afsharid dynastyKhanate of BukharaKhanate of KhivaVictoryConquest of the Central Asian khanates
Nader invasion of Daghestan(1741–1745) Afsharid dynastyVictoryThe Persian Empire annexes almost all of Dagestan.
Afsharid–Ottoman War War of 1743
(1743–1746)
Afsharid dynastyStalemateTreaty of Kerden, Status quo ante bellum
Civil War between Afsharid and Qajar
(1747–1796)
Afsharid dynasty Qajar dynastyRegime changeMohammad Khan Qajar became the Shah of Iran.
Durrani Campaign to Khorasan (1754–55) Afsharids

Qara Bayat Amirdom

Qajar dynasty

Khozeimeh Amirdom

Durrani Empire

Khanate of Kalat

DefeatAfghan dominance in the region
Zand dynasty
(1751–1779)
Campaign against Azad Khan
(1754–1762)
Zand dynasty Azad Khan AfghanVictoryAzad Khan's surrender
Bajalan uprising
(1755)
Zand dynastyBajalan Tribe (Kurds)[14] Bajalan Tribe[15])VictoryUprising uppressed
Ottoman-Persian War of 1775
(1755–1776)
Zand dynasty Ottoman EmpireVictoryPersia captures Basra.
Persian-Dutch War (1765) Zand dynasty Dutch colonial empire VictoryKharg Island reconquered by Persia and destruction of Fort Mosselstein
Bani Utbah invasion of Bahrain(1782–1783) Persia Sheikhdom of Kuwait ZubarahDefeatAl Khalifa annexes Bahrain into its sheikhdom.
Siege of Kerman
(1794)
Zand dynasty Qajar DynastyDefeatQajars conquer and sack Kerman.
Qajar dynasty
(1785–1925)
Battle of Krtsanisi
(1795)
Qajar Iran Kartli-Kakheti
Imereti
VictoryTbilisi captured and sacked by Iranians. Persian reconquest of the Caucasus and Georgia.
Persian Expedition
(1796)
Qajar IranVictory
  • Tactical Russian victory
  • Strategic Persian victory
  • Russian withdrawal after the death of Catherine II
Russo-Persian War of 1804
(1804–1813),
Qajar IranSupported by: Supported by:DefeatTreaty of Gulistan. Iran irrevocably cedes most of its Caucasus territories (Dagestan, Georgia, and most of the Azerbaijan Republic) to Russia.
Battle of Kafir Qala(1818)
  • Part of Herati-Qajar Wars
Qajar IranDurrani EmpireInconclusiveBoth armies retreated
Ottoman–Persian War of 1821
(1821–1823)
Qajar IranVictoryTreaty of Erzurum, status quo ante bellum
Russo-Persian War of 1826
(1826–1828)
Qajar IranDefeatTreaty of Turkmenchay. Iran irrevocably cedes its last Caucasus territories comprising parts of the contemporary nation of Azerbaijan that were not ceded in 1813, as well as all of what is the current Republic of Armenia.
Siege of Herat
(1837–1838)
Qajar IranSupported by:

Principality of Qandahar

Emirate of Herat East India Company

Supported by:

Aimaq tribesmen

Maimana Khanate

Andkhui Khanate

Sheberghan Khanate

Sar-i Pul Khanate

Bukhara Emirate

Khiva Khanate[16]

DefeatSuccessful Persian siege at Herat; breach eventually repelled; temporary British occupation of Kharg Island; Persian withdrawal from Herat
Battle of Fort Tabarsi(1848–1849) Qajar IranBábísVictorySuccessful repression
Siege of Herat(1856) Qajar Iran Emirate of HeratSupported by:

United Kingdom

Afghanistan

VictorySuccessful siege of Herat; continued occupation until Persia's compliance with the Treaty of Paris; installment of Sultan Ahmad Khan as puppet ruler of Herat
Anglo-Persian War
(1856–1857)
Qajar Iran United Kingdom

Afghanistan

DefeatPersian force occupies and later withdraws from Herat.
Uprising of Sheikh Ubeydullah(1879–1880) Qajar Iran

Supported by:

Kurdish tribesVictorySuccessful repression
Persian Constitutional Revolution (1905–1911) Qajar Iran

Supported by:

Iranian constitutionalists

Supported by:

Armenian Revolutionary Federation in Iran

Stalemate
Revolt of Salar-al-Daulah(1911–1913) Qajar IranForces of Salar-al-DaulahVictoryRebellion suppressed
Swedish intervention in Persia(1911–1916) Qajar Iran Sweden[17] Anti-Qajar insurgentsVictory
  • Anti-Qajar rebellions are suppressed.
  • The Swedish government quits in 1916 due to its neutrality on World War I. However, Swedes volunteers continued to serve in the Persian Gendarmerie until 1921.
Persian Campaign
(1914–1918)
Qajar Iran

----Jungle Movement

Assyrian volunteers----

Stalemate
Jungle Movement insurrection on Gilan (1915–1921) Qajar Iran

---- (1915–1917)

Jungle revolutionaries

Supported by:
Soviet Russia (since 1920)

  • Soviet Caspian Flotilla
Victory
Simko Shikak revolt (1918–1922) Qajar and Pahlavi IranIrregular Kurdish militiasVictoryRevolt suppressed
Mohammad Khiabani's uprising (1920) Qajar Iran Mohammad Khiabani's forcesAzerbaijan rebelsVictoryRevolt suppressed
Pessian's revolt (1921) Qajar Iran Autonomous Government of Khorasan VictoryRevolt suppressed after the death of Mohammad Taqi Pessian
1921 Persian coup d'état (1921) Qajar IranPersian Cossack Brigade
Supported by: United Kingdom
Defeat
Sheikh Khazal rebellion (1924) Qajar and Pahlavi Iran Sheikhdom of MohammerahBakhtiari tribesmen

Arab separatists

Supported by:

United Kingdom

Victory
Pahlavi dynasty
(1925–1979)
Simko Shikak revolt (1926) Iran Assyrian volunteers
Assyrian levies
Irregular Kurdish militiasVictoryRevolt suppressed; Simko Shikak fled to Mandatory Iraq
Jafar Sultan revolt (1931) IranJafar Sultan's Kurdish rebelsVictoryRevolt suppressed
Anglo-Soviet invasion of Iran
(1941)
Iran
United Kingdom
DefeatAbdication of Rezā Shāh, Allied occupation of Iran
Hama Rashid revolt (1941–1944) IranKurdish tribesmenVictoryHama Rashid driven into Iraq
Iran Crisis of 1946
(1945–1946)
Iran Mahabad
Azerbaijan
Supported by:
VictoryDissolution of Mahabad and Azerbaijan
First Iraqi–Kurdish War(1961–1970) KDP

Supported by:

Iran

Israel[18]

United States (alleged)[19]

Before 1968:

Republic of Iraq

Syria (1963)[20] ----After 1968:

Ba'athist Iraq

Stalemate
Dhofar Rebellion
(1963–1976)[21]
Iran
Oman
PFLOAG
PFLO
VictoryDefeat of insurgents, modernization of Oman
1967 Kurdish revolt in Iran (1967) IranRevolutionary Committee leadership: VictoryKurdish revolt suppressed:
Insurgency in Balochistan (1973–present) IranBaloch separatist groupsTaliban-aligned groups

Supported by:

OngoingInsurgency mostly repressed
Second Iraqi–Kurdish War(1974–1975) KDP

Iran

[22]

Supported by:

Israel[23]

United States[24]

IraqDefeat
  • Peshmerga fighting ability destroyed
  • Iran withdrew its support for KDP
Arvand Conflict
(1974–1975)
Iran IraqVictory
Islamic Republic of Iran
(since 1979)
Iranian Revolution and Consolidation
(1979–1983)
Imperial StateIslamic Republic victoryRival political factions and separatist movements crushedTens of thousands of political executions in the aftermath (7,900 from 1981 to 1985, 3,800 to 33,000 in 1988, unknown in 1986–1987 or 1979–1980)
1979 Kurdish rebellion in Iran (1979) KDP-I Komala

IPFG

Supported by:

Iraq

VictoryIranian victory, but pockets of KDPI resistance remained until 1996.
1979 Khuzestan insurgency (1979) DRFLA APCO

PFLA

AFLA
Supported by:
Iraq

Victory
Qatif conflict (1979–present) Shia militants OngoingMostly repressed from 1983 to 2011 by Saudi government. Sunni government executes many Shia rebels.
Iran–Iraq War
(1980–1988)

KDP
PUK
Badr Brigades
Iraq
MEK
PDKI
StalemateBoth Iraq and Iran accepted UNSC Resolution 598.Return to status quo, observed by UNIIMOG
Multinational Force in Lebanon
(1982–1984)
United Kingdom
France
United States
Italy
StalemateSyrian Allied victory[25]
Tanker War(1984−1988)
Supported by: Pakistan[27] [28]
Iraq

Supported by:

United States

Saudi Arabia

Kuwait

CeasefireUNSC Resolution 598
KDPI–Komala conflict(1984−1991) KDP-I---- KomalaVictoryBoth armed forces debilitate and Iran maintain control of Iranian Kurdistan.
Iran–Israel proxy conflict (1985−present)
Supported by:
Israel
Supported by:
OngoingIran-Israel conflicts continues
  • Tactical victories from Israel
  • Strategic stalemate
KDPI insurgency (1989–1996) KDP-IVictoryKDPI announces unilateral cease-fire in 1996.
Arab civil unrest and insurgency on Khuzestan(1999−2020)

Supported by:

  • (until 2003)
VictoryRevolts suppressed
2000–2006 Shebaa Farms conflict(2000–2006) HezbollahSupported by:

Syria
IsraelDefeatIsrael maintains the territories
War in Afghanistan (2001–2021) United States United Kingdom

Northern Alliance
Canada
Italy
Germany
Australia
New Zealand
(until 2002)


Al-Qaeda Foreign fighters

Victory
  • Fall of the Taliban government in Afghanistan
  • Then Iran quits the coallition and form the Axis of Resistance after Axis of evil speachment, ending his collaboration with the US coallition.
Iraqi insurgency(2003–2011) New Iraqi government

Supported by:

Iran[31] [32]

Israel[33] [34]

United States

United Kingdom

MNF–I (2003–09)---- Shia insurgents

Ba'ath loyalists

---- Sunni insurgents

Inconclusive
Sistan and Baluchestan insurgency
(2004–present)
Jundallah (Iran) (2004–2011)
Jaish ul-Adl (2013–present)
Ansar Al-Furqan (2013–present)
OngoingCapture of Abdolmalek RigiDissolution of Jundallah
Iran–PJAK Conflict
(2004–present)

PJAKOngoingPJAK withdraws from Iranian territory
2006 Lebanon War
(2006)

Hezbollah
IsraelStalemate
Afghanistan–Iran border skirmishes(2007–2023) AfghanistanStalemateStatus quo ante bellum
Gaza War (2008–2009) Gaza StripSupported by:
IsraelDefeatIsrael tactical victory
Syrian Civil War
(2011–present)
Syria
Hezbollah

Free Syrian Army

---- Islamic Front
al-Nusra Front
Islamic State----

Ongoing
  • Rebel and Islamist uprisings quelled in much of Syria
  • Most of Syria now controlled by Syrian Government, which is supported by Iran Islamic State in Syria defeated near the end of 2017
Insurgency in Bahrain (2011–present)

Supported by:


Supported by:
OngoingOngoing insurgency by militant groups, supported by Iran, to topple government of Bahrain
War in Iraq
(2014–2017)
Iraq
Peshmerga

Asa'ib Ahl al-Haq
Badr Organization
Hezbollah
Kata'ib Hezbollah Kataib Rouh Allah Issa Ibn Miriam

United States

Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant---- Naqshbandi ArmyVictoryIraqi government and allied victory against ISILUS played a significant role in this victory.End of ISIL territorial control in Iraq; ongoing ISIL insurgency
2014 Gaza War(2014) Gaza StripSupported by:
IsraelInconclusiveBoth sides claim victory.[44]
Yemeni Civil War
(2014–present)
Supreme Political Council Cabinet of Yemen
Saudi-led coalition

---- Al-Qaeda

Ongoing
Islamic State–Taliban conflict(2015–present) Afghanistan

Al-Qaeda[46]

Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (pro-Taliban & anti-IS factions)[47] ----Supported by:

United States (limited)[48] [49] [50] [51]

(alleged)[52] [53]

(alleged)[54]

Pakistan (alleged)

Mullah Dadullah Front (until 2016)

Fidai Mahaz[55] ----Supported by:

High Council of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan (HCIEA)[56] (until 2021)[57] [58]

OngoingContinued IS-KP guerilla warfare and insurgent attacks
Western Iran clashes (2016–present) PDKI PJAK

Komala

PAK

Khebat

Supported by:

OngoingRestart of armed resistance against the Islamic Republic of Iran. However, eastern Kurdistan has not yet become a Kurdish state.
2017 Iraqi–Kurdish conflict(2017) Iraq

Supported by:

[59]

Kurdistan Regional Government----
PDKI[60] ---- White Flags (alleged)[61]
VictoryIraqi Government captures 20% of the territory controlled by the Kurdistan Region including the city of Kirkuk, along with the surrounding oil fields and border crossings
Islamic State insurgency in Iraq(2017–present) Iraq
  • Pro-Government Tribes (ar)[62]

Rojava (cross-border cooperation since May 2018)[63]

Supported by:

CJTF-OIR (until 2021)

----[64]

----

Supported by:

Netherlands[65]

Islamic State White FlagsOngoing
2023 Israel–Lebanon shellings(2023)
PIJSupported by:
Hezbollah
IsraelCeasefireInconclusive
Israel–Hamas war(2023–present)
Supported by:
Israel
Supported by:
OngoingIranian proxy groups initiate offensives against US military bases.
2024 Iran–Israel conflict (2024)
Supported by:
Israel
Supported by:
Status quo ante bellumStatus quo ante bellum

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Potts, D. T. . Nomadism in Iran: From Antiquity to the Modern Era . 2014-04-01 . Oxford University Press . 978-0-19-933079-9 . 10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199330799.003.0003.
  2. Web site: Foundation . Encyclopaedia Iranica . SELEUCID EMPIRE . 2023-06-23 . iranicaonline.org . en-US.
  3. Book: Frye, Richard Nelson . The history of ancient Iran . 1984 . München : C.H. Beck . Internet Archive . 978-3-406-09397-5.
  4. Bosworth, Clifford Edmund (1997). "Sīstān". In Bosworth, C. E.; van Donzel, E.; Heinrichs, W. P. & Lecomte, G. (eds.). Encyclopaedia of Islam. Volume IX: San–Sze (2nd ed.). Leiden: E. J. Brill. pp. 681–685.
  5. Book: Dahlheim, Werner . Augustus: Aufrührer, Herrscher, Heiland. Eine Biographie . 2010 . C.H. Beck . 9783406605932 . 111 . German.
  6. Olbrycht, Marek Jan (2016). "Dynastic Connections in the Arsacid Empire and the Origins of the House of Sāsān". In Curtis, Vesta Sarkhosh; Pendleton, Elizabeth J.; Alram, Michael; Daryaee, Touraj (eds.). The Parthian and Early Sasanian Empires: Adaptation and Expansion. Oxbow Books.
  7. Ghosh, Amalananda (1965). Taxila. CUP Archive. pp. 790–791.
  8. Book: Empires and Exchanges in Eurasian Late Antiquity: Rome, China, Iran, and the Steppe, ca. 250–750 . 2018 . Cambridge University Press . 978-1-107-09434-5 . Di Cosmo . Nicola . Cambridge . 10.1017/9781316146040 . Maas . Michael.
  9. Payne, Richard (2015). "The Reinvention of Iran: The Sasanian Empire and the Huns". In Maas, Michael (ed.). The Cambridge Companion to the Age of Attila. Cambridge University Press. pp. 282–299.
  10. Book: Heather, Peter J.. Rome resurgent: war and empire in the age of Justinian. Oxford University Press. 2018. 9780199362745. New York, NY. 1007044617.
  11. Procopius. History of the Wars, I.9.24; Book: Greatrex . Geoffrey . Lieu . Samuel N. C. . The Roman Eastern Frontier and the Persian Wars (Part II, 363–630 AD) . 2002 . New York and London . Routledge . 978-0-415-14687-6 . 62–81 . The Anastasian War and its aftermath (502–525).
  12. Book: Howard-Johnston, James . Witness to a World Crisis: Historians and Histories of the Middle East in the Seventh Century. . James Howard-Johnston . 2010 . Oxford University Press . Oxford . 978-0199208593 .
  13. Demurger, 80–81; Demurger 284
  14. Web site: Encyclopedia Iranica . https://web.archive.org/web/20190206051845/http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/bajalan-kurdish-tribe . 2019-02-06 .
  15. Web site: Ali Mohammad . Saki . Encyclopedia of the World of Islam .
  16. Book: L.Lee . Johnathan . The 'Ancient Supremacy': Bukhara, Afghanistan & the Battle for Balkh, 1731–1901 . 1996 . . 978-90-04-10399-3 . 150 . 0929-2403.
  17. Ericson Wolke . Lars . 4 June 2021 . Svenskar stred i persiska gendarmeriet . Swedes fought in the Persian gendarmerie . Populär historia . sv . Lund . Historiska media . . 2.
  18. Michael G. Lortz. (Chapter 1, Introduction). The Kurdish Warrior Tradition and the Importance of the Peshmerga. pp.39-42. Web site: Archived copy . 2014-10-16 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20131029191132/http://etd.lib.fsu.edu/theses/available/etd-11142005-144616/unrestricted/003Manuscript.pdf . 2013-10-29 .
  19. Book: Wolfe-Hunnicutt, Brandon . The Paranoid Style in American Diplomacy: Oil and Arab Nationalism in Iraq . Stanford University Press . 2021 . 978-1-5036-1382-9 . 102 . Available documentation does not prove conclusively that the United States provided covert assistance to the Kurds in the fall of 1962, but the documents that have been declassified are certainly suggestive—especially in light of the general US policy orientation toward Iraq during this period..
  20. Book: Vanly, I. C. . The Kurds in Syria and Lebanon . The Kurds: A Contemporary Overview . P. G. . Kreyenbroek . S. . Sperl . Routledge . 1992 . 0-415-07265-4 . 151–2 . registration . https://archive.org/details/kurds00pkre/page/151 .
  21. The rebellion started already in 1962, but Iran did not intervene before 1973.
  22. Web site: 18. Iraq/Kurds (1932-present) .
  23. Web site: 18. Iraq/Kurds (1932-present) .
  24. Book: Tripp, Charles . A History of Iraq . . 2007 . 9780521702478 . xii.
  25. News: Friedman. Thomas L.. America's Failure in Lebanon. 1984-04-08. The New York Times. 2020-03-08. en-US. 0362-4331.
  26. News: March 11, 1984. The Collapse of Lebanon's Army: U.S. Said to Ignore Factionalism. The New York Times. Brinkley. Joel.
  27. Allam . Shah . October–December 2004 . Iran-Pakistan Relations: Political and Strategic Dimensions . Strategic Analysis . The Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses . 28 . 4 . 526 . 10.1080/09700160408450157 . 154492122 . 20 October 2013.
  28. Book: Mir, Furrukh . Half Truth . iUniverse . 2011 . 978-1450286459 . [u.s.].
  29. News: Liberation of Ahwaz Movement Leader: The Deceive Storm restored faith to our hearts . . dead . 20 March 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160330235942/http://english.aawsat.com/2016/03/article55348720/liberation-of-ahwaz-movement-leader-the-deceive-strom-restored-faith-to-our-hearts . 30 March 2016 . dmy-all.
  30. News: Weiss . Caleb . December 30, 2017 . Iran-based jihadist group claims attack on oil pipeline . . live . December 31, 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180612140847/https://www.longwarjournal.org/archives/2017/12/iran-based-jihadist-group-claims-attack-on-oil-pipeline.php . 12 June 2018 . Ansar al Furqan states that “a major oil pipeline was blown up in Omidiyeh region of occupied Ahvaz, Iran.” The group added that it had established a new unit, the Ahwaz Martyrs Brigade. The area of Ahvaz has historically had a large Arab population. . dmy-all.
  31. Elaheh Rostami-Povey, Iran's Influence: A Religious-Political State and Society in Its Region, pp. 130–154, Zed Books Ltd, 2010.
  32. Web site: Iranian Strategy in Iraq Politics and "Other Means" . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20160305151457/http://cisac.fsi.stanford.edu/sites/default/files/Felter_Iranian_Strategy_in_Iraq.pdf . 5 March 2016 . 12 January 2016.
  33. Web site: December 13, 2003 . U.S. employs Israeli tactics in Iraq . 2023-06-12 . NBC News.
  34. Hersh . Seymour M. . 21 June 2004 . As June 30th approaches, Israel looks to the Kurds. . . 12 June 2023.
  35. President Barack Obama Speaks With VICE News . 16 March 2015 . YouTube . https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211221/2a01Rg2g2Z8 . 2021-12-21 . live.
  36. Web site: South . Todd . January 20, 2019 . Army's long-awaited Iraq war study finds Iran was the only winner in a conflict that holds many lessons for future wars . January 20, 2019 . Army Times . en-US.
  37. Book: Galbraith, Peter W. . The End of Iraq: How American Incompetence Created a War Without End . Simon & Schuster . 2007 . 978-0-7432-9424-9 . 74.
  38. News: March 23, 2015 . Iran expands regional 'empire' ahead of nuclear deal . Reuters.
  39. Web site: April 10, 2015 . How to Stop Iran's Growing Hegemony . National Review Online.
  40. https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/2016-07-12/ty-article-magazine/.premium/israels-second-lebanon-war-remains-a-resounding-failure/0000017f-db21-df62-a9ff-dff7922a0000 Israel's Second Lebanon War Remains a Resounding Failure
  41. https://www.france24.com/en/20080130-winograd-report-lebanon-war-serious-failure-israel-lebanon Winograd report: Lebanon war "serious" failure
  42. https://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3500764,00.html Winograd: Political, military leadership failed during war
  43. https://www.rand.org/news/press/2011/05/23.html Flawed Strategy, Not a 'Failure of Air Power,' Led to Israel's Disappointing Performance in 2006 Lebanon War
  44. Prusher, Ilene (26 August 2014). "Israel and Palestinians Reach Open-Ended Cease-Fire Deal". Time. Archived from the original on 17 November 2020. Retrieved 5 September 2014.
  45. Web site: 8 May 2016 . Afghanistan Faces Tough Battle as Haqqanis Unify the Taliban . https://web.archive.org/web/20160508085857/https://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/afghanistan-faces-tough-battle-haqqanis-unify-taliban-38948820 . 8 May 2016 . ABC News.
  46. News: Roggio . Bill . 12 July 2021 . Taliban advances as U.S. completes withdrawal . . live . 16 July 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210724142322/https://www.longwarjournal.org/archives/2021/07/taliban-advances-as-u-s-completes-withdrawal.php . 24 July 2021.
  47. News: Roggio . Bill . Weiss . Caleb . 14 June 2016 . Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan faction emerges after group's collapse . Long War Journal . 6 August 2017.
  48. News: 10 March 2020 . Taliban fought IS with 'limited' US military support, US general reveals . France 24 .
  49. News: Sisk . Richard . 11 March 2020 . US Has Given 'Limited Support' to Taliban in ISIS Fight, General Says . Military.com .
  50. Web site: Clark . Dartunorro . Da Silva . Chantal . Chantal Da Silva . Kube . Courtney . 28 August 2021 . 2 High Profile ISIS Targets Killed in US Drone Strike in Afghanistan, Pentagon Says . 30 August 2021 . NBC News.
  51. Web site: Liebermann . Oren . Sidhu . Sandi . Smith-Spark . Laura . Vandoorne . Saskya . Walsh . Nick Paton . 30 August 2021 . Ten Family Members, Including Children, Killed in US Strike in Kabul Targeting Suspected IS-K Suicide Bomber, Relative Says . 30 August 2021 . CNN.
  52. Web site: The Odd Couple: Why Iran Is Backing the Taliban . Stratfor.
  53. Web site: Dreazen . Yochi . 26 May 2016 . Exclusive: Iran Teams With Taliban to Fight Islamic State in Afghanistan .
  54. News: Noorzai . Roshan . Sahinkaya . Ezel . Gul Sarwan . Rahim . 3 July 2020 . Afghan Lawmakers: Russian Support to Taliban No Secret . Voice of America .
  55. Web site: 10 September 2015 . Taliban leader Dadullah joins Afghanistan's ISIL Pakistan Today . archive.pakistantoday.com.pk.
  56. Web site: Qazi . Shereena . 9 November 2015 . Deadly Taliban infighting erupts in Afghanistan . www.aljazeera.com . en.
  57. Web site: پسر ملامنان نیازی به طالبان پیوست . The son of Mullah Manan Niazi joined the Taliban . 2022-05-12 . farsnews.
  58. Web site: 2021-09-09 . تاجیک‌ها به تاجیکستان، ازبک‌ها به ازبکستان و هزاره‌ها به گورستان بروند! - بهار نیوز . Tajiks to Tajikistan, Uzbeks to Uzbekistan and Hazaras to the grave! . 2022-05-12 . پایگاه خبری بهار نیوز . fa . حافظ خالد نیاز پسر ملا عبدالمنان نیازی (معروف به قصاب شیعیان افغانستان) با انتشار ویدئیی، با امارت اسلامی طالبان اعلام بیعت كرد. [Hafiz Khalid Niazi, son of Mullah Abdul Manan Niazi (known as the Shiite butcher of Afghanistan) released a video declaring his allegiance to the Islamic Emirate.].
  59. Web site: 18 October 2017 . Iranian General Helped Iraqis Seize Kirkuk From U.S. Allies . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20171020090044/https://www.nbcnews.com/news/mideast/iranian-general-helped-iraqis-seize-kirkuk-u-s-allies-n811026 . 20 October 2017 . 20 October 2017 . NBC News.
  60. News: مليشيات الحشد تتقدم نحو بلدة شمال كركوك تضم مقرات احزاب كوردية ايرانية معارضة – باسنیوز. 22 October 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20171023010949/http://www.basnews.com/index.php/ar/news/kurdistan/387081. 23 October 2017. live.
  61. Web site: Middle-east Arab News Opinion. Asharq. Al-awsat. aawsat.com. 4 January 2019. 23 October 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20181023195949/https://aawsat.com/english/home/article/1219846/white-banners-movement-ignites-war-words-among-iraqi-factions. live.
  62. News: For this Iraqi tribe massacred by Isis, the fear never truly goes away . Independent . live . 2018-10-06 . https://web.archive.org/web/20181006121552/https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/iraq-tribe-isis-massacre-war-hit-albu-nimr-baghdad-sunni-a8431466.html . 2018-10-06.
  63. News: May 2018 . U.S.-backed Syrian forces resume battle against Islamic State . Reuters . live . 2018-10-08 . https://web.archive.org/web/20181202074424/https://www.reuters.com/article/us-mideast-crisis-syria-sdf/u-s-backed-syrian-forces-resume-battle-against-islamic-state-idUSKBN1I2390 . 2018-12-02.
  64. Web site: 2019-03-29 . Iraqi Militant Qayis Khazali Warned Us About Iran. We Ignored Him. . 2023-12-01 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190329074436/https://www.weeklystandard.com/bill-roggio/iraqi-militant-qayis-khazali-warned-us-about-iran-we-ignored-him . 2019-03-29 .
  65. Web site: Kurdistan24 . Dutch army to continue support for Kurdish Peshmerga forces . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20181006234842/http://www.kurdistan24.net/en/news/c67655a0-7f88-4aff-ae58-b0f58676a9b8 . 2018-10-06 . 2018-10-06.