The Long March of the ‘500’ Peshmerga and Crossing the Araxes
This month marks the 70th anniversary of the crossing of the river Araxes (Aras) by the “500” Kurdish fighters led by Mullah Mustafa Barzani on June 17-18, after their long march from the failed Mahabad republic, to the safety of the Soviet Union.
After repeated skirmishes with the Iraqi authorities, on May 6, at the village of Argosh, Barzani and his fellow commanders, made the historic decision to head for the Soviet Union.
Everywhere they went the Barzanis were welcomed by the local people who, although poor themselves, gave them food and clothing. In the Shikak area Masoud Barzani describes “misty-eyed, the villagers lined up along the roadside, outside every village, welcoming the Barzanis and offering them water, yoghurt, and food.”
Throughout this march, guerrilla tactics proved to be effective against the Shah’s troops. However, sometimes the Peshmerga faced the Iranian forces head on, usually achieving notable victories. Such was the case at the battle of Mako on June 9 and at Mount Sousoz the following day, when Barzani’s force defeated much larger and better equipped Iranian forces. Taking advantage of this victory, and the disarray of the Iranian army, the Peshmerga captured the Mako Bridge thereby enabling them to cross the Zangi River.
Zrar Sulaiman Dargalaye one of the original “500” Peshmerga still living today, told me: “Once we reached the Araxes we asked the Russians for help. We asked for boats. No help was given though. So we had no option but to swim." Zrar adds however: “Before we could cross the river we came under heavy machine gun fire. We had no choice but to take the machine-gunners out. Mustafa Barzani was watching us with his binoculars. There were five heavy machine guns. We managed to capture four. As we advanced the Iranians ran away.”
Many Peshmerga, stated Zrar, “swam, with their equipment on their backs, through the fast flowing, icy water. Some, early in the morning, others at night.” ... “Some fighters,” continued Zrar, “used their cheet (the sash, waistbands each Kurdish man wore as part of his tradition garb) as a rope, tying themselves together and, carrying a full army pack, swam across the river.”
Four of the Long March 500 Peshmerga circa 1949 in Tashkent, Uzbekistan: (from right) Mohammad Amin Dargalayi; Soleyman Bag Dargalayi, sitting, third person (unknown), and the Zrar Solaiman Bag Dargalay.
Muhammad Biyayi, another survivor of that march, informed me how, as the “Russians refused to help, providing no boats, we made rafts from poplar trees growing nearby”. Others, he said, defied the strong currents of the river by “wading hand-by-hand through the freezing water."
Other survivors describe the scene. “Once on the other side," stated Kazim Mustafa Omar Shanedari, now living in Salahaddin city near Erbil, “the Russians came and asked us to leave our weapons. They brought us trucks to transport us”. “When I crossed the river," remarked Hamad Amin Hussan Dargalaye, now an old man living in Soran, “there were two or three people on the other side to pull me out of the water. I carried my rifle and ammunition on my back."
Although traditionally it is said that “500” crossed the Araxes River, the actual number was most probably less due to fatalities from the fighting (and the harsh weather) during the journey through the mountains. Mustafa Barzani later refers to 469 Kurds registered for Russian citizenship.
Although initially the Peshmerga were treated harshly, deliberately separated into different groups and most placed on collective farms, they later made Russia their home obtaining jobs, receiving university education and raising families. They returned to Iraq, as heroes, (many with Russian wives) shortly after the July 14th Revolution of 1958.
The historic march of the “500” and the crossing of the Araxes River into Russia, was a defining moment in Kurdish history. As Masoud Barzani states: “The name Araxes entered Kurdish culture, and to this day, Kurds name their boys Araxes after it.”
It also marks an important stage in the development of Peshmerga as a fighting force. While in the Soviet Union, Mustafa Barzani and his fighters received military training from the Russians, acquiring new skills and procedures, which would be used most effectively in the Ayloul Revolution, after their return to Iraq. As such, Peshmerga was, in a very real sense, an army in waiting.
But most importantly, as Masoud Barzani remarked: from 1947 “Peshmerga became the symbol of Kurdish freedom,” a model of courage and an inspiration to Peshmerga fighting Daesh today.