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- subject = U.S. History
- title = The Persian Gulf War
- papers = Please put your
- paper here.
- The Persian Gulf War-the Feat of the Western Countries
-
- On
- August 2nd, 1990 Iraqi military forces invaded and occupied the small Arab
- state of Kuwait. The order was given by Iraqi dictatorial president Saddam
- Hussein. His aim was apparently to take control KuwaitÆs oil reserves (despite
- its small size Kuwait is a huge oil producer; it has about 10 per cent of the
- worldÆs oil reserves ). Iraq accused Kuwait, and also the United Arab Emirates,
- of breaking agreements that limit oil production in the Middle East. According
- to Saddam Hussein, this brought down world oil prices severely and caused financial
- loss of billions of dollars in IraqÆs annual revenue.
- Saddam Hussein had
- the nearly hopeless task of justifying the invasion. He plead the fact that
- Kuwait had been part of the Ottoman province of Basra, a city in the south
- of Iraq. However, the Ottoman province collapsed after World War I and todayÆs
- Iraqi borders were not created until then. There was also a further and more
- obvious blunder in a bid to justify this illegal invasion. Baghdad, the capital
- of Iraq, had namely recognized Kuwaiti independence in 1963. Furthermore,
- Hussein claimed that Kuwait had illegally pumped oil from the Iraqi oil field
- of Rumaila and otherwise conspired to reduce IraqÆs essential oil income.
-
- By invading Kuwait, Iraq succeeded in surprising the entire world. The
- USA ended her policy of accommodating Saddam Hussein, which had existed since
- the Iran-Iraq war. Negative attitude toward Iraq was soon a worldwide phenomenon.
- The United Nations Security Council passed 12 resolutions condemning the invasion.
- The ultimate decision was to use military force if Iraq did not withdraw unconditionally
- by January 15, 1991. Then, when the deadline was set, it was time to start
- preparing for the worst-the war.
- President George Bush confronted little
- difficulty in winning AmericansÆ support for the potential war against Iraq.
- However, the government found it difficult to decide upon and state one overriding
- reason for going to war. Was it to oppose aggression or was it just to protect
- global oil supplies? Other powers were more directly concerned as consumers
- of Persian Gulf oil, but they were not as eager to commit military force, to
- risk their youth in battle and to pay for the costs of the war. Critics of
- President Bush continued to maintain that he was taking advantage of the issue
- of energy supplies in order to manipulate the U. S. public opinion in favor
- of war.
- After consulting with U. S. Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney in
- early August 1990, King Fahd of Saudi Arabia invited American troops onto Saudi
- soil. He had seen KuwaitÆs destiny; therefore, he wanted protection. It was
- also the interest of the USA to stop any further advantage of the Iraqi army.
- The deployment was called ôOperation Desert Shield.ö These troops were armed
- with light, defensive weaponry.
- On November 8, 1990 President Bush announced
- a military buildup to provide an offensive option, ôOperation Desert Storm,ö
- to force Iraq out of Kuwait. The preparation of the operation took two and
- a half months and it involved a massive air- and sea lift.
- Finally, in
- January 1991, the U. S. Congress voted to support Security Council resolution
- 660. It authorized using ôall necessary meansö if Iraq did not withdraw from
- Kuwait by January 15. Shrugging off this final warning, Saddam Hussein resolutely
- maintained the occupation of Kuwait.
- The United States established a broad-based
- international coalition to confront Iraq militarily and diplomatically. The
- military coalition consisted of Afghanistan, Argentina, Australia, Bahrain,
- Bangladesh, Belgium, Canada, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, Egypt, France, Germany,
- Greece, Hungary, Honduras, Italy, Kuwait, Morocco, the Netherlands, New Zealand,
- Niger, Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Poland, Portugal, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Senegal,
- South Korea, Spain, Syria, Turkey, the United Arab Emirates, the United Kingdom,
- and the United States. The war also was financed by countries which were unable
- to send in troops. Saudi Arabia and Kuwait were the main donors. More than
- $53 billion was pledged and received.
- Before the war, it appeared obvious
- that Iraq would have very little chance against the Coalition. The relative
- strength between the parties was extremely unequal. The most critical difference
- was that the Coalition had a total of 2600 aircraft, over three times more
- than IraqÆs 800 aircraft. Most Arab observers thought Hussein would not last
- more than six months. Lieutenant General Khalid bin Sultan, the commander
- of the Arab coalition forces, gave IraqÆs leader only 40 days, and repeated
- this prediction many times. IraqÆs prospect was dreary.
- President George
- Bush waited two days after the UN deadline for Iraqi withdrawal from Kuwait
- before ordering the Coalition to begin action against Iraq. The winds of Desert
- Storm began howling across Iraq on January 17, 1991, at 2.30 am Baghdad time.
- Bhagdad was bombed fiercely by the coalitionÆs fighter airplanes in the first
- night of the war. An interesting fact is that several weeks before this, US
- intelligence agents successfully inserted a computer virus into Iraq's military
- computers. It was designed to disable much of Baghdad's air-defense system.
-
-
- To minimize casualties, the coalition forces, under the command of U.
- S. General Norman Schwarzkopf, pursued a strategy beginning with five weeks
- of intensive air attacks and ending with a ground assault. Drawing on its
- 1,800 planes, land- and carrier-based, the United States flew the greatest
- number of sorties. The British, French, and Saudis made up most of the rest.
- Besides the tremendous air power, the coalition deployed technologically advanced
- weapon systems, such as the unmanned Tomahawk cruise missile, advanced infrared
- targeting that illuminated Iraqi tanks buried in the, sand and laser-guided
- bombs, ôsmart bombs.ö Its use of brand new aircraft that never before had
- been engaged in combat, such as British Tornados and U. S. F-117A Stealth
- fighters, gave the Coalition an accuracy and firepower that overwhelmed the
- Iraqi forces. The large-scale usage of air force and latest technology made
- the war short and saved great numbers of Coalition soldiersÆ lives.
- After
- establishing air superiority, coalition forces disabled IraqÆs command and
- control centers, especially in Baghdad and Al Bashrah. This caused the communication
- to fail between Baghdad and the troops in the field. The next stage was to
- attack relentlessly IraqÆs infantry, which was dug in along the Saudi-Kuwaiti
- border, and the elite 125,000 man Republican Guard in southeastern Iraq and
- northern Kuwait. Iraq retaliated by using mobile launchers to fire Scud missiles
- at Saudi Arabia and Israel, a noncombatant coalition. Overall, HusseinÆs forces
- launched 93 Scuds. The United States countered this threat with Patriot antimissile
- missiles, called also ôScudbusters,ö and commando attacks on Scud launchers.
- Patriot missiles gave an engagement rate of nearly 96 per cent.
- The coalitionÆs
- air raids on IraqÆs infantry lowered Iraqi soldiersÆ morale dramatically.
- It is easy to sense in the following quote from an Iraqi lieutenantÆs war diary
- the powerlessness and fear that the soldiers felt during air attacks by the
- Coalition:
- ô2 February 1991 I was awakened this morning by the noise of an
- enemy air raid. I ran and hid in the nearby trench. I had breakfast and afterwards
- something indescribable happened. Two enemy planes came toward us and began
- firing at us, in turn, with missiles, machine guns, and rockets. I was almost
- killed. Death was a yard away from me. The missiles, machine guns and rockets
- didn't let up. One of the rockets hit and pierced our shelter, which was penetrated
- by shrapnel. Over and over we said, "Allah, Allah, Allah." One tank burned
- and three other tanks belonging to 3rd Company, which we were with, were destroyed.
- That was a very bad experience. Time passed and we waited to die. The munitions
- dump of the 68th Tank Battalion exploded. A cannon shell fell on one of the
- soldiers' positions, but, thank God, no one was there. The soldiers were somewhere
- else. The attack lasted about 15 minutes, but it seemed like a year to me.
- I read chapters in the Qur'an. How hard it is to be killed by someone
- you
- don't know, you've never seen and, can't confront. He is in the sky and you're
- on the ground. Our ground resistance is magnificent. After the air raid,
- I gave great thanks to God and joined some soldiers to ask how each of them
- was. While I was doing that, another air attack began. 2 February at 2000
- hours.ö
- The ground war began at 8:00 p.m. on February 23 and lasted exactly
- 100 hours. This phase featured a massively successful outflanking movement
- of the Iraqi forces. Schwarzkopf used a deceptive maneuver by deploying a
- large number of forces as if to launch a large amphibious landing. The Iraqis
- apparently anticipated that they also would be attacked frontally and had heavily
- fortified those defensive positions. Schwarzkopf instead moved the bulk of
- his forces west and north in a major use of helicopters, attacking the Iraqis
- from their rear. The five weeks of intensive air attack had greatly demoralized
- the Iraqi front-line troops, causing wholesale desertions. Remaining front-line
- forces were quickly killed or taken prisoner with minimal coalition losses.
- Iraqi front-line commanders had already lost much of their ability to communicate
- with Baghdad, which made their situation even worse. On the final night of
- the war, within hours of the cease-fire, two U.S. Air force bombers dropped
- specially design
- ed 5,000-pound bombs on a command bunker fifteen miles northwest
- of Baghdad in a deliberate attempt to kill Saddam Hussein.
- President Bush's
- decision to terminate the ground war at midnight February 28, 1991 was criticized,
- because it allowed Baghdad to rescue a large amount of military equipment and
- personnel that were later used to suppress the postwar rebellions of its Shiite
- and Kurdish citizens. In his own defense, the president asserted that the
- war had accomplished its mandate. The mission, given by the Security Council,
- was to expel the Iraqi forces from Kuwait and reestablish Kuwaiti independence.
- BushÆs decision was probably influenced by his desire to maintain coalition
- unity. A particular reason was to keep on board the Arab members, who were
- increasingly unhappy at the devastation inflicted on Iraq's infrastructure
- and civilian population.
- Iraqi representatives accepted allied terms for
- a provisional truce on March 3 and a permanent cease-fire on April 6. Iraq
- agreed to pay reparations to Kuwait, reveal the location and extent of its
- stockpiles of chemical and biological weapons, and eliminate its weapons of
- mass destruction. Subsequently, however, UN inspectors complained that the
- Baghdad government was frustrating their attempts to monitor Iraqi compliance,
- and UN sanctions against Iraq were kept in place.
- The following chart shows
- total equipment and casualties of the Gulf War. In addition, 300,000 Iraqi
- soldiers were wounded, 150,000 were deserted, and 60,000 were taken prisoner
- (an estimate of U. S. Defense Intelligence Agency). The United States suffered
- 148 killed in action, 458 wounded, and 11 female combat deaths. 121 were killed
- in nonhostile actions; they were mostly victims of friendly fire.
-
-
- Table
- 01; Total Equipment and Casualties of Gulf War
- IRAQ
- COALITION
-
- LOST ON HAND LOST ON HAND
- TANKS 4000 4230 4 3360
- ARTILLERY 2140 3110 1 3633
- ARMORED
- PERSONNEL
- CARRIER 1856 2870 9 4050
- HELICOPTERS 7 160 17 1951
- AIRCRAFT 240 800 44 2600
-
- SOLDIERS 100
- 000 545 000 200 680 000
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