View
212
Download
0
Category
Preview:
Citation preview
Course, Practices and (some) Effects of the Gulf War
Operation Desert Shield/Desert Storm- Timeline 1990/1991 2nd August- Iraqi invasion of Kuwait
8th August- US begins troop build-up in Saudi Arabia
10 August- Arab League condemns the invasion of one Arab country by another. Kuwaiti liberation coalition begins to form.
12th August- Saddam proposes conditions for withdrawal (Israeli to withdraw from Palestinian occupied territories, Syria to withdraw from Lebanon and the US to withdraw from Saudi Arabia)
28th August- Kuwait officially declared 19th province of Iraq
29th November- UN Security Council resolution passed (opposed only by Cuba and Yemen) that authorized military action if Iraq did not withdraw from Kuwait by the 15th of January
15th January- Iraq failed to meet UN deadline
16th January- Operation Desert Storm commenced (first part was an air campaign)
24th February- Land operation began
27th February- Kuwait liberation, Gulf War finished
Why did the UN win?
Timing- Because the Cold War was coming to an end, the US still had a full-strength military that had yet to be downsized. Equally, the global mood in 1990 supported a united response.
US technological superiority
Saddam’s mistakes
UN coalition technological superiority
Stealth fighters - F-117A Nighthawk
Space Systems- GPS, Satellite imagery
Tanks- US M1A1 and UK Challenger Tanks
PGM (Precision-Guided Munitions)- Tomahawk Missiles and ‘Smart’ Bombs
Nightvision devices
These new technologies allowed around-the-clock bombing campaigns of Iraqi military and communications infrastructure that were far more efficient that during the war in Vietnam because of PGM and space systems. There was also a significant decrease in collateral damage.
Saddam’s mistakes Underestimated US/UN commitment to liberate Kuwait
Failed to seriously negotiate a diplomatic solution when given the opportunity
Failed to seize offensive initiative by not attack Saudi Arabia in the early stages of Operation Desert Shield
Committed Iraqi troops to defensive entrenchment in Kuwait, promising the ‘mother of all battles’
Similar to above, underestimated impact of US technology (a product of the 1980’s Cold War era) and believed he could force a war of attrition
Left some elite troops in Iraq to defend the regime
Only clear strategy were SCUD missile attacks on Israel which were designed to provoke Israeli retaliation and break up the Arab coalition
Effects
More UN coalition troops died from illness or accidents than at the hands of the Iraqi military
During their retreat from Kuwait, the Iraqi military set alight 600 oil wells and dumped 400 million gallons of crude oil into the Arabian Gulf to prevent an amphibious invasion of Iraq
Damage to Kuwait estimated at $30 billion Kuwaiti society became more conservative, despite the restoration of the Kuwaiti parliament
Impact on Islamism
Presence of US and Western troops fueled Islamic radical resentment
Al Qaeda founded in 1991
Car Bombing of World Trade Center in New York in 1993
Attack on the US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998
Attack on the USS Cole off the coast of Yemen in 2000
9/11 attacks on New York and Washington in 2001
Effects on the Middle East The Middle East remained extremely divided and there was not a move to
democracy as hoped
Palestinians, Yemenis and Sudanese evicted from Kuwait because of their governments’ support for Iraq
Yasser Arafat politically weakened and, together with the leading role the US was now playing in the region, the Palestinian peace process was given a significant boost, leading to the Oslo Peace Accords of 1993
Impact on Iraq
Iraqi infrastructure ‘relegated to a pre-industrial age’
Saddam survived Shi’a and Kurdish rebellions
US did not invade Iraq, partly because UN resolution did not give authorization, but also because they wanted Iraq to remain a counter-weight to Iran in the region
UN sanctions, including on Iraqi oil exports, were passed until he was completely transparent on his WMD programs
Iraqi people suffered the most as infant mortality trebled and life expectancy fell by 15-20 years
US and UK suspicions of Iraqi WMD programs led to 2003 invasion
Recommended