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- <text id=90TT3004>
- <title>
- Nov. 12, 1990: They Don't Need To Fight
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Nov. 12, 1990 Ready For War
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 34
- They Don't Need to Fight
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The Islamic allies deployed in the Arabian desert have already
- done their job even if they never fire a single shot
- </p>
- <p> Billowing plumes of dust high into the air, a column of
- heavy tanks rumbles across the flat Arabian desert just south
- of the Kuwaiti frontier. The M-60s are American-made, but their
- crews are Egyptian. Five miles away, a cluster of British-built
- Chieftain tanks are poised with their guns pointed toward the
- border. This detachment is part of a Kuwaiti army brigade that
- managed to escape the Iraqi invaders. "Our mission," says
- Colonel Ibrahim Al-Wasmi, the unit's deputy commander, "is to
- return to Kuwait."
- </p>
- <p> The vast inland desert, empty until a few weeks ago, is
- filling with the troops and equipment of 11 Arab and Islamic
- armies committed to the liberation of Kuwait. On paper they make
- up a formidable military force: 60,000 Saudis, 10,000 men of the
- other gulf states, armored divisions from Egypt and Syria,
- infantry regiments from Bangladesh, Morocco and Pakistan. By
- joining publicly with the U.S. and its European allies, they
- have already made their most important contribution by proving
- that the confrontation with Iraq is not a neocolonial attack on
- the Arab nation. But if a war begins, the Islamic armies could
- vastly complicate problems of command.
- </p>
- <p> One key question is whether the Arabs would carry the fight
- across the border into Kuwait. The Saudi Defense Minister,
- Prince Sultan, said early in the crisis that his country could
- not be used as a launching pad for an attack on Iraq without
- King Fahd's approval. Commanders of the Egyptian and Syrian
- units have said their troops are deployed to defend Saudi Arabia
- and not for offensive operations. While a United Nations
- resolution authorizing force against Saddam Hussein might
- galvanize the Islamic forces, for some of them the thought of
- killing their "Arab brothers" is still a strong deterrent to
- their involvement in an offensive against Iraq.
- </p>
- <p> Since the Arab armies are positioned between the Kuwaiti
- border and the more than 200,000 American, British and French
- troops in Saudi Arabia, their commitment to an offensive would
- be no small matter. "The Arab forces complicate Saddam's
- problems if he chooses to go south," says retired U.S. Army
- Lieut. General William Odom, now an analyst with the Hudson
- Institute in Washington. "They complicate ours if we choose to
- go north."
- </p>
- <p> If the Islamic forces do enter the fray, there are doubts
- about how well they might fare. In a major battle, only those
- units equipped with large numbers of tanks could play a
- significant role: the Saudis, Egyptians and Syrians. While the
- Saudi air force is modern and well trained, the army is not.
- According to Anthony Cordesman, an expert on Middle East
- military issues, the Saudi army is at least 30% under strength.
- Most army units are commanded by members of the Saudi royal
- family selected for loyalty rather than military prowess.
- Exercises involving more than 6,000 men are rare. If it becomes
- necessary to move larger numbers, "considerable confusion at the
- front" is likely, says Cordesman.
- </p>
- <p> The Egyptian armored units have been slow to arrive, and
- only 300 tanks are on station in the desert so far. Those are
- mostly older M-60s, slower and packing less punch than the new
- M-1 Abrams. One big advantage: Egyptian forces have been
- training with the U.S. army for several years in biannual Bright
- Star maneuvers in Egypt.
- </p>
- <p> Syria has pledged an armored division--15,000 men, 300
- Soviet-made T-72 tanks--but they too are trickling in, with
- only 3,000 troops deployed so far in Saudi Arabia, though more
- were expected last weekend. Coordination between the Syrian and
- Western forces would face another serious obstacle: the Syrians
- are armed mostly with Soviet hardware. As a radical Arab state
- standing shoulder to shoulder with the conservative royalty of
- Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, Syria's greatest value is political.
- "If they never fire a shot," says Jeffrey Record, a Washington
- military analyst, "they are worth their weight in gold." But the
- idea of an alliance with the U.S. grates on many in Syria, and
- the official press is protesting increased American arms
- shipments to Israel.
- </p>
- <p> If fighting starts, the biggest problem of all will be
- command and control, forging the various forces into a cohesive
- military whole. The Islamic troops are officially under the
- command of the Saudi chief of staff, General Khalid bin Sultan.
- But the Saudis use American weapons and tactics, while the
- Syrians operate like the Soviet army. Even talking to one
- another is difficult. The Saudis and Moroccans speak different
- Arabic dialects, while the Arabs have to use English to
- communicate with the Pakistanis and Bangladeshis.
- </p>
- <p> U.S. contingency plans call for heavy use of air power
- against Iraqi targets. At some point, however, ground forces
- would surely be needed to drive Saddam's army out of Kuwait. The
- U.S. would mount this attack as a lightning strike at night--a style of warfare the Arab allies are not equipped or trained
- for. In that moment, American planners in Washington say, they
- hope the Islamic units can move aside and leave the way clear
- for a U.S. dash forward.
- </p>
- <p> There is even a political problem with that hope. If an
- invasion force composed solely of American and European troops
- moves against Iraq, the attack would be seen as a Western
- assault on the Arab nation. To prevent a ground swell of
- resentment from sweeping across the Islamic world, some of the
- blood shed by Saddam's foes will have to be that of Muslims.
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan. Reported by William Dowell at the
- Saudi-Kuwaiti border and Bruce van Voorst/Washington.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-