Battle of Dire Dawa

Summary

The Battle of Dire Dawa were a series of battles that took place since 17 July to 17 August 1977 between Ethiopian Armed Forces and Somali Armed Forces near the town of Dire Dawa, Ethiopia and adjacent to the airfield of the same name during the Ogaden War.

Battle of Dire Dawa
Part of Ogaden War

Ethio-Somali War Map 1977
DateJuly 1977 – August 1977
Location
Dire Dawa, Ethiopia
Result Ethiopian victory
Belligerents
Ethiopia Somalia
Strength
1 Militia Division
2 Infantry Battalions
1 Mechanized Company
2 tanks
3,000 soldiers[1]
32 T-54/55 tanks[1]
BM-13 launchers
Casualties and losses
150 soldiers killed[2]
1 F-5 destroyed[1]
8 Saab B 17 destroyed[3]
1 T-28 Trojan destroyed[3]
1 M-41 destroyed
At least 700 soldiers killed
(per Ethiopia)[2][4]
21 T-54/55 lost[2]
5 APCs lost[4]
3 BM-13 launchers lost[4]

Battle edit

The first attempt to storm Dire Dawa by the Somalis was made on July 17 at 04:30 with attacking forces totalling three mechanized battalions. The attack was repulsed at the cost of 79 Ethiopian soldiers dead; Ethiopians estimated the loss of Somalis twice as high. As a result of the attack, Somalis breached the Dire Dawa airfield destroying an F-5E aircraft of the Ethiopian 9th Air Force with an RPG.[1]

The second phase of the assault was launched on 17 August 1977, with Somalian forces totalling a Infantry battalion and 32 tanks. On the outskirts of the city, three Somali tanks were destroyed by mines. Somali tanks managed to pass the Ethiopian resistance and break through to the airfield near the city; during the assault the entire airfield was damaged, including the control tower.[4] Nine aircraft were destroyed[3] and at least one more damaged; one Ethiopian M-41 tank and a fuel storage facility were destroyed as well.[4] Ethiopia began an emergency transfer of reinforcements from Harar consisting in more militias, tanks and gun-mounted BRDMs, but only massive Ethiopian air raids were able to stop the Somali tanks, destroying 16 T-55s. At the end of the day the attackers ran out of steam and fled, leaving a trail of equipment that included tanks, armored cars, rocket launchers, artillery pieces, and hundreds of rifles and machine guns that were proudly put on display by the Ethiopians. Henceforth, the city was never seriously at risk of falling.[5]

Losses edit

During the assault on the airfield, ten Ethiopian aircraft were destroyed: one Northrop F-5E, eight Saab B 17s piston dive bombers,[3] and one T-28 Trojan.[3] A civilian Boeing 707 was also damaged.[1] An Ethiopian M41 light tank was also destroyed.

According to the Ethiopians, the Somalis lost during the battle 21 of the 32 T-55 tanks involved. As proof, the Ethiopians showed Western media journalists 11 wrecked Somali tanks, some of which were abandoned because they were stuck in the mud.[2] Other vehicles lost by attacking Somali forces were thirty military trucks, five armoured personnel carriers,[4] three BM-13 launchers[4] and a howitzer.[2]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Schaefer, Scoot. "Ethiopian Airpower:From Inception to Victory in the Ogaden War".
  2. ^ a b c d e Kauffman, Michael T. (15 September 1977). "Ethiopians Display Captured Somali War Equipment As Evidence of an Outside Role in Fighting in Ogaden". The New York Times. Retrieved 30 July 2021.
  3. ^ a b c d e Cooper 2015, p. 58.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Ottaway, David B. (15 September 1977). "Captured Arms Bare Somali Role in Ethiopia". The New York Times. Retrieved 30 July 2021.
  5. ^ Tareke 2000, p. 646.

References edit

  • Cooper, Tom (2015). Wings over Ogaden: The Ethiopian–Somali War, 1978–1979. England - South Africa: Helion & Company Limited. ISBN 978-1-909982-38-3.
  • Gebru Tareke (2000). "The Ethiopia-Somalia War of 1977 Revisited" (PDF). International Journal of African Historical Studies. 33 (3): 635–667. doi:10.2307/3097438. JSTOR 3097438.