In his last mission, Major General Eghbali was the leader of a group of fighter jets when they were instructed to bombard a base in
Mosul on 23 October 1980. Having arrived at the first planned site, two
Northrop F-5 fighter jets were not able to find their first target and redirected their route to a base in the neighbourhood of Kirkuk Air Base. After bombardment of this base and en route back to Iran, Ali Eghbali's jet was shot down by a
SAM of the
Iraqi Air Force in the airspace east of
Mosul. He managed to eject before his plane crashed. Since this incident, there has been no confirmed report of his situation, but he was believed to have been captured by
Iraqi forces shortly after reaching the ground. There had also been no confirmed reports of his death since he went missing until his body parts were returned to Iran on 27 July 2002. It is assumed that he was killed or died while being a
prisoner of war in Iraq. His wife confirmed that the body parts belong to Ali Eghbali Dogahe, and they were buried in
Behesht-e Zahra. According to confirmed sources, he was severely tortured and beaten, only to be later dismembered between two jeeps on Iraqi President
Saddam Hussein's direct orders. Trying to hide this heinous war crime, the Iraqis buried half of his body in a cemetery in
Nineveh, and the other half was buried in a cemetery in Mosul. Based on the follow-up of the Prisoners and Missing War Veterans Searching Committee, belonging to the
International Red Crescent, and along with the bodies of several other pilots from the IRIAF, his remains were returned to Iran after 22 years of being away from the country. ==References==