22 Years After Karbala: How Bulgaria Continues to Honor Its Fallen Soldiers
Twenty-two years have passed since the deadly attack in the Iraqi city of Karbala that claimed the lives of five Bulgarian servicemen
Capt. Georgi Goranov, commander of the last Bulgarian contingent in Iraq, delivered his company's colors to the National Military History Museum. Photo by BGNES
The Colors of the 6th Company, which is the last Bulgarian contingent in Iraq, were sent Tuesday to the National Military History Museum.
Until now, the flag was kept in the barracks of the southern city of Yambol. It was delivered to the museum by the company’s commander, Capt. Georgi Goranov.
The last Bulgarian contingent of 155 rangers, including 9 women, returned from Iraq in December 2008, after guarding Camp Cropper, near Bagdad, known also as the place where former Iraqi Dictator, Saddam Hussein, was kept under arrest.
Bulgaria was in Iraq from 2003 to 2008 and participated with 11 contingents with a total of 3 367 rangers for the cost of BGN 155 M in tax money. Thirteen soldiers died during the five-year mission.
The worst incident happened on December 27, 2003, when five Bulgarians were killed during a terrorist attack on the base in Karbala, after one of four suicide bombers gained car entry to the Bulgarian camp, cutting through roadblocks and destroying a building where the headquarters of the unit was located.
Two more Bulgarian soldiers were killed in 2004.
Five Bulgarian rangers died in road accidents in 2005, and one was killed by "friendly" fire the same year.
A public procurement procedure aimed at repairing up to ten engines for Bulgaria’s MiG-29 fighter jets has been cancelled after no companies submitted applications to participate
Two Ukrainian nationals have been accused of espionage in Bulgaria after being detained earlier this year near a military facility, the Sofia City Court was informed during a hearing on the amendment of their detention measures.
Training flights involving Bulgaria’s F-16 fighter jets were carried out over Sofia yesterday, with several of the aircraft seen flying above the capital.
Engineer Stoyko Topalov, president of the International Association for Combating Drones, has warned that Bulgaria currently lacks anti-drone systems at its airports
Amid rising tensions in the Middle East, authorities have taken a closer look at Bulgaria’s bomb shelters, focusing on their availability and condition
Bulgarian F-16s carried out training flights over Sofia on Tuesday, March 10, as part of a planned exercise organized by the Ministry of Defense.
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