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- <text id=91TT0267>
- <link 91TT0554>
- <link 91TT0530>
- <link 90TT2436>
- <title>
- Feb. 04, 1991: Stormin' Norman On Top
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991 Highlights
- The Persian Gulf War:Desert Storm
- </history>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Feb. 04, 1991 Stalking Saddam
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE GULF WAR, Page 28
- THE COMMANDER
- Stormin' Norman On Top
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Eight years ago, Schwarzkopf predicted war in the gulf; now the
- plans he made for fighting it are guiding allied strategy
- </p>
- <p>By JESSE BIRNBAUM -- Reported by A. Engler Anderson/Tampa, Dean
- Fischer/Riyadh and Bruce van Voorst/Washington
- </p>
- <p> "When I peruse the conquered fame of heroes and the
- victories of mighty generals, I do not envy the generals."
- </p>
- <p> -- Walt Whitman
- </p>
- <p> It may come to pass that when the story of the gulf war is
- sifted and studied, the achievements of four-star Army General
- H. (for nothing) Norman Schwarzkopf will rank with those of
- Montgomery and Eisenhower and Alexander the Great -- or George
- McClellan and William Westmoreland. It is too early to predict
- how well or badly the war may go. Many battles are yet to be
- fought; many men are yet to die; thousands of innocent people
- are yet to suffer; a sure peace is yet to be forged.
- </p>
- <p> What is known now is that the man who commands the vast
- military might of the allied coalition has prepared all his
- professional life for his role. Fortunately, he is by all
- accounts a passionately engaged leader of considerable talents
- and, what's more, possessed of a startling, prophetic mind.
- </p>
- <p> As long ago as 1983, Schwarzkopf foresaw the possibility
- that the U.S. might one day find itself at war in the Middle
- East if an unfriendly nation succeeded in taking over a
- neighbor. Two years ago, as boss of the U.S. Central Command
- (which covers some North African countries and areas farther
- east), Schwarzkopf set out on his own to design a contingency
- plan. "He always believed that the big eruption would come in
- the Middle East," says his sister Sally. "He took the job at
- Central Command with the idea that he might well have to fight."
- Five days before Saddam Hussein launched his invasion,
- Schwarzkopf and his staff happened to be running an exercise
- predicated on the possibility that Iraq might overrun Kuwait.
- All that was necessary after that was for Schwarzkopf to polish
- his plan. It became the model for Operation Desert Shield.
- </p>
- <p> Now that the shield has become a storm, Schwarzkopf is
- running the show as commander of the allied forces. Abraham
- Lincoln and Lyndon Johnson, fancying themselves cunning
- battlefield tacticians, liked to direct their generals hither
- and thither. George Bush, Dick Cheney and Colin Powell know
- better. Desert Storm, says Cheney, "is basically Norm's plan.
- It's fundamentally Norm's to execute."
- </p>
- <p> And so he does. After directing -- on perilously short
- notice -- the biggest buildup of U.S. forces since Vietnam,
- Schwarzkopf is orchestrating a complex war machine comprising
- forces from 28 allied nations totaling 675,000 troops, hundreds
- of ships, and thousands of airplanes and tanks, all fully
- equipped and operating, says the Pentagon, right on schedule.
- </p>
- <p> At the same time, Schwarzkopf has demonstrated the talents
- of a first-rate diplomat, achieving cohesion not only among the
- traditionally rivalrous U.S. military services but also among
- the Arab and Western allies with all their conflicting
- interests. He is especially careful in his dealings with the
- Saudis. Only last week King Fahd, worried about an attack on
- Riyadh, wanted reassurance from the top. Schwarzkopf went to
- the palace and advised Fahd that his main concern was the
- possibility that Saddam could fire Scud missiles with chemical
- warheads at the capital. That was not much in the way of
- reassurance, but at least the King got straight talk.
- </p>
- <p> Most of the straight talk takes place daily in Schwarzkopf's
- war room in his Riyadh compound. Having designed his battle
- plans with the help of top alliance commanders, the general
- delegates day-to-day operations to his flag officers. He is not
- a micromanager but a resolute overseer, who runs his campaign
- 18 hours a day. "I started out with what I thought was going
- to be a very orderly schedule," he says. "A 7 a.m. staff
- briefing, a 10 a.m. coalition briefing, then a 7 p.m. briefing
- with the component commanders. Boy, it looked like it was
- great. But I've got to tell you, more often than not the 7 a.m.
- meeting has not come off because everybody has been up so late
- at night."
- </p>
- <p> His colleagues find it easy to forgive him. "Initially,"
- says a British commander, "we were taken aback by his gung-ho
- appearance, but in a very short time we came to realize that
- here was a highly intelligent soldier -- a skilled planner,
- administrator and battlefield commander."
- </p>
- <p> That judgment comes as no surprise to Schwarzkopf's old
- friends, who regard him with unalloyed admiration if not
- outright idolatry. Retired Army General Ward LeHardy, who was
- Schwarzkopf's West Point roommate, insists that "Norm is this
- generation's Doug MacArthur. He's got the tactical brilliance
- of Patton, the strategic insight of Eisenhower and the modesty
- of Bradley."
- </p>
- <p> Many people might quarrel with the modesty part. Schwarzkopf
- can be charming, but he also possesses the ego -- and petulance
- -- of a field marshal. He has been known to pore over his press
- clippings, underlining criticisms or perceived slights and
- flogging memos about them to his subordinates. He has epic
- temper tantrums. When these erupt, says a senior Joint Chiefs
- of Staff officer, he starts "yelling and cursing and throwing
- things." What is most striking about Schwarzkopf, however, is
- his abiding certitude, a bristling self-assurance, the kind
- that many Army brats acquire with their first pair of long
- pants.
- </p>
- <p> Schwarzkopf's father H. Norman Sr. was also a West Pointer
- who became a general. At one stage in his career, Norm Sr. left
- the Army to enter civic life. As head of the New Jersey state
- police, he led the investigation of the sensational Lindbergh
- baby kidnapping. For a time, he was a radio star, narrating a
- shoot-'em-up crime series.
- </p>
- <p> At the outbreak of World War II, he rejoined the Army. From
- 1942 to '48, he led a mission to Iran, where he organized the
- nation's imperial police force. According to some historians,
- he returned to Tehran in 1953 to play a key role in the CIA
- operation that overthrew nationalist Prime Minister Mohammad
- Mossadegh and installed the Shah of Iran.
- </p>
- <p> Norm Jr., who was born in Trenton, began looking to his
- father's stars at an early age. When photos were taken for the
- yearbook at Bordentown Military Institute, near Trenton,
- 10-year-old cadet Norman posed for two pictures, one smiling,
- the other grim-faced. His mother preferred the smiling version,
- but little Norm hung tough. "Someday," he explained, "when I
- become a general, I want people to know that I'm serious." He
- wasn't kidding.
- </p>
- <p> His first overseas posting, at 12, was to Tehran with his
- father, and the exposure to the exotic ways of the Middle East
- was to have a lasting impact on his sensibilities. After a
- year, he was packed off to European schools, where he learned
- German and French and dreamed all the while of a military
- career.
- </p>
- <p> At West Point, the young plebe was known variously as Norm,
- Schwarzie, Bear and, in recognition of his notorious temper,
- Stormin' Norman. Nobody ever called him Herb; Norm's father,
- who detested the name Herbert, refused to inflict it on his son
- but gave him the H.
- </p>
- <p> Looking back on the West Point years, Norm's old friends
- still marvel at his single-minded ambition. "He saw himself as
- a successor to Alexander the Great, and we didn't laugh when
- he said it," recalls retired General Leroy Suddath, another
- former roommate. "Norm's favorite battle was Cannae," says
- Suddath, in which Hannibal in 216 crushed the forces of Rome.
- "It was the first real war of annihilation, the kind Norman
- wanted to fight." He desperately wanted to lead his country's
- forces into a major battle. "We'd talk about these things in
- the wee hours, and Norman would predict not only that he would
- lead a major American army into combat, but that it would be
- a battle decisive to the nation."
- </p>
- <p> Suddath claims that Schwarzkopf, with a reported I.Q. of
- 170, could easily have graduated first in his class of 480,
- instead of 43rd, "but he did a lot of other things except
- study." He wrestled and played a bit of tennis and football.
- He sang tenor and conducted the chapel choir and loved
- listening to what Suddath calls the "uplifting" martial music
- of Wagner and Tchaikovsky's cannonading 1812 Overture -- "the
- sort that makes you feel on top of the world."
- </p>
- <p> After graduating in 1956, Schwarzkopf took on various Army
- assignments and later served two tours in Vietnam, first as a
- paratrooper advising Vietnamese airborne troops, then as
- commander of an infantry battalion. Twice he was wounded in
- action; three times he won a Silver Star. On one occasion, he
- tiptoed into a minefield to rescue a wounded soldier; it scared
- him to death, he told a reporter later. Says his sister Sally:
- "He went off to Vietnam as the heroic captain. He came back
- having lost his youth."
- </p>
- <p> What he gained was the conviction that the Vietnam debacle
- resulted from a failure of public and political support for the
- military. Bitterly, he determined that the U.S. should never
- again engage in a limited war with ill-defined aims.
- </p>
- <p> He has no such reservations about the gulf war; he wants
- only to win it fast and suffer the fewest casualties possible.
- Apart from that, Schwarzkopf is concerned that his long hours
- in the Riyadh war room prevent him from visiting his troops as
- often as he would like. When he does venture out, he is always
- accompanied by four military bodyguards in civilian clothes and
- armed with AR-15 rifles. On a recent tour, Schwarzkopf gazed
- across the Saudi border into Kuwait and declared that it was
- the most peaceful moment he had had in weeks. Then it was the
- general speaking: surveying the vast expanse of desert, he
- pronounced it perfect for tank warfare.
- </p>
- <p> In the war room as in the field, noncoms and enlisted
- soldiers are as devoted to Schwarzkopf as his officers. None
- seem overly intimidated by his gruffness, his size (6 ft. 3
- in., 240 lbs.) or even his flare-ups. He is, after all, the
- Bear, whom some describe as only part grizzly and the rest
- Teddy. His wife Brenda and their three children know him as a
- pussycat: an outdoorsman, an amateur magician, a cookie
- muncher, a fellow who lulls himself to sleep listening to tapes
- of Pavarotti or the sounds of honking geese and mountain
- streams. So what if he likes Charles Bronson movies?
- </p>
- <p> The truth, says Schwarzkopf's executive officer, Colonel
- Burwell B. Bell, is that the general "has a full range of
- emotions. He can get very, very angry, but it's never personal.
- He's extremely tough on people when it's necessary to get them
- to do something, but the next minute he'll throw his arm around
- their shoulders and tell them what a great job they're doing."
- If it were at all physically possible, Norm Schwarzkopf's
- troops would probably do the same to him. The outcome of the
- gulf war will tell if history wraps him in a similar embrace.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-