Abdul Jabbar Shanshal

Colonel General
Abdul Jabbar Shanshal
عبد الجبار شنشل
Minister of Defense
In office
May 1989 – December 1990
Preceded byAdnan Khairallah
Succeeded bySaadi Toma Abbas
Chief of the General Staff of the Army and the Armed Forces
In office
1970–1984
Member of the Regional Command of the Iraqi Regional Branch
Personal details
Born
عبد الجبار خليل شنشل البكري
Abdul Jabbar Khalil Shanshal al-Bakri

1920
Mosul, Mandatory Iraq
Died20 September 2014(2014-09-20) (aged 93–94)
Amman, Jordan
Resting placeIraqi Army Martyrs Cemetery
Political partyIraqi Regional Branch of the Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party
ParentHassan Abd al-Majid
Nickname"Abu Muthanna"
Military service
Allegiance Iraq
Branch/service Iraqi Army
Years of service1940–2003
Rank
General officer
Battles/wars

General Abdul Jabbar Khalil Shanshal al-Bakri (Arabic: عبد الجبار خليل شنشل البكري) (1920 – 20 September 2014) was an Iraqi general officer and minister, he held also the position of minister of military affairs and chief of staff.

[1] He graduated from the Iraqi military college in Baghdad in 1940 (cycle 18).

In his early military life fought in 1941 against the British in the Anglo-Iraqi War and in 1948 against Israel as a junior officer.

He rose in the ranks to become Chief of Staff of Iraqi Armed Forces (1970-1984), supervised the expansion of the army from 6 to 60 divisions, led the 4th campaign against Kurdish insurgents in the 1970s, became minister of defense 1989 to 1991, served as military advisor until the 2003 US invasion of Iraq.

Family Background

His family descended from the Hanbali scholar of Baghdad Ibn al-Jawzi who in turn descended from Abu Bakr As-Siddiq's youngest son Muhammad ibn Abu Bakr.[2][3]

References

  1. ^ اوراق اللواء خليل جاسم الدباغ , د.م. غيث الدباغ , دار دجلة للطباعة والنشر, الاردن [The papers of Major General Khalil Jassim al-Dabbagh, d. Ghaith al-Dabbagh, Dar Dijla for printing and publishing, Jordan]
  2. ^ Some of the famous people of Abu Bakr Al-Siddiq in Iraq, Hazem Al-Bakri, Al-Quds Magazine 2014
  3. ^ Ibn Khalid, Ayman (2013). Seeds of Admonishment and Reform (1st ed.). Brimmingham: Dar As-Sunnah Publishers. pp. 17–18. ISBN 1904336396.