The Persian
Gulf War
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Introduction
Persian Gulf War, conflict beginning in August 1990,
when Iraqi forces invaded and occupied Kuwait. The conflict culminated in fighting in
January and February 1991 between Iraq and an international coalition of forces
led by the United States. By the end of the war, the coalition had driven the
Iraqis from Kuwait.
The Iraqi-Kuwaiti border had
been the focus of tension in the past. Kuwait was nominally part of the Ottoman
Empire from the 18th century until 1899 when it asked for, and received,
British protection in return for autonomy in local affairs. In 1961 Britain
granted Kuwait independence, and Iraq revived an old claim that Kuwait had been
governed as part of an Ottoman province in southern Iraq and was therefore
rightfully Iraq’s. Iraq’s claim had little historical basis, however, and after
intense global pressure Iraq recognized Kuwait in 1963. Nonetheless, there were
occasional clashes along the Iraqi-Kuwaiti border, and relations between the
two countries were sometimes tense.
Relations
between the two countries improved during the Iran-Iraq War (1980-1988), when
Kuwait assisted Iraq with loans and diplomatic backing. After the war ended in
1988, the Iraqi government launched a costly program of reconstruction. By 1990
Iraq had fallen $80 billion in debt and demanded that Kuwait forgive its share
of the debt and help with other payments. At the same time, Iraq claimed that
Kuwait was pumping oil from a field that straddled the Iraqi-Kuwaiti border and
was not sharing the revenue. Iraq also accused Kuwait of producing more oil than
allowed under quotas set by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries
(OPEC), thereby depressing the price of oil, Iraq’s main export.
Iraq’s
complaints against Kuwait grew increasingly harsh, but they were mostly about
money and did not suggest that Iraq was about to revive its land claim to
Kuwait. When Iraqi forces began to mobilize near the Kuwaiti border in the
summer of 1990, several Arab states tried to mediate the dispute. Kuwait,
seeking to avoid looking like a puppet of outside powers, did not call on the
United States or other non-Arab powers for support. For their part, the U.S.
and other Western governments generally expected that at worst Iraq would seize
some border area to intimidate Kuwait, so they avoided being pulled into the
dispute. Arab mediators convinced Iraq and Kuwait to negotiate their
differences in Jiddah, Saudi Arabia, on August 1,
1990, but that session resulted only in charges and countercharges. A second
session was scheduled to take place in Baghdād,
the Iraqi capital, but Iraq invaded Kuwait the next day, leading some observers
to suspect that Iraqi president Saddam Hussein had planned the invasion all
along.
Iraq Invades
The
Iraqi attack began shortly after midnight on August 2. About 150,000 Iraqi
troops, many of them veterans of the Iran-Iraq War, easily overwhelmed the
unprepared and inexperienced Kuwaiti forces, which numbered about 20,000. By
dawn Iraq had assumed control of Kuwait City, the capital, and was soon in
complete control of the country. Hussein’s political strategy was less clear
than his military strategy. The Iraqis initially posed as liberators, hoping to
appeal to Kuwaiti democrats who opposed the ruling Sabah monarchy. When this
claim attracted neither Kuwaiti nor international support, it was dropped. In
place of the Sabahs, most of whom
fled during the invasion, Iraq installed a puppet government.
The United
Nations Security Council and the Arab League immediately condemned the Iraqi
invasion. Four days later, the Security Council imposed an economic embargo on
Iraq that prohibited nearly all trade with Iraq. Iraq responded to the
sanctions by annexing Kuwait on August 8, prompting the exiled Sabah family to
call for a stronger international response. In October, Kuwait’s rulers met with
their democratic opponents in Jiddah, with the hope
of uniting during the occupation. The Sabah family promised the democrats that
if returned to Kuwait, they would restore constitutional rule and parliament
(both of which had been suspended in 1986). In return, the democrats pledged to
support the government in exile. The unified leadership proved useful in
winning international support for an eviction of Iraq. Fewer than half of all
Kuwaitis stayed in Kuwait through the occupation; of those who stayed, some
formed resistance organizations but with little effect.
Any armed
attempt to roll back the Iraqi invasion depended on Saudi Arabia, which shares
a border with both Iraq and Kuwait. Saudi Arabia had neither the power nor the
inclination to fight Iraq alone; if the Saudi government invited foreign troops
into the country to attack Iraq, however, it risked appearing to be under their
influence. Saudi rulers did eventually open the country to foreign forces, in
large part because they were alarmed by Iraq’s aggressive diplomacy and because
U.S. intelligence reports claimed that Iraqi forces were well positioned for a
strike against Saudi Arabia. Other Arab countries, such as Egypt, Syria, and
the smaller states along the Persian Gulf, feared that even if Iraq’s conquests
stopped at Kuwait, Iraq could still intimidate the rest of the region. Western
powers supported a rollback of Iraqi forces because they were afraid Iraq could
now dominate international oil supplies. Finally, other members of the United
Nations (UN) did not want to allow one UN member state to eliminate another.
Beginning a
week after the Iraqi takeover of Kuwait and continuing for several months, a
large international force gathered in Saudi Arabia. The United States sent more
than 400,000 troops, and more than 200,000 additional troops came from Saudi
Arabia, the United Kingdom, France, Kuwait, Egypt, Syria, Senegal, Niger,
Morocco, Bangladesh, Pakistan, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Oman, and
Bahrain. Other countries contributed ships, air forces, and medical units,
including Canada, Italy, Argentina, Australia, Belgium, Denmark, Greece,
Norway, Portugal, Spain, Czechoslovakia, New Zealand, the Netherlands, Poland,
and South Korea. Still other countries made other contributions: Turkey allowed
air bases on its territory to be used by coalition planes, and Japan and
Germany gave financial support. The initial goal of the force was to prevent
further Iraqi action, but most countries were aware the force might ultimately
be used to drive Iraq from Kuwait.
The Iraqis
tried to deter and split the growing international coalition through several
means. They made it clear that their adversaries would pay heavily if war broke
out, and they hinted they would use chemical weapons and missile attacks on
cities, as they had against Iran during the Iran-Iraq War. Iraq also detained
citizens of coalition countries who had been in Kuwait at the time of the
invasion and said they would be held in militarily sensitive areas—in effect
using them as human shields to deter coalition attacks. Iraq eventually
released the last of the foreigners in December 1990 under pressure from
several Arab nations. In an effort to weaken Arab support within the coalition,
Iraq tried to link its occupation of Kuwait to the larger Arab-Israeli conflict
in the region. The Iraqis argued that since the UN had not forced Israel to
leave Arab territories it occupied during and after the Six-Day War of 1967, it
should not force Iraq to leave Kuwait. The Iraqis further implied they might
leave Kuwait if Israel withdrew from the Occupied Territories. Several Arab
countries responded positively to Iraq’s statements; however, most of these
were states such as Jordan and Yemen, which were not part of the coalition.
Only in Morocco and Syria did government support for coalition involvement
weaken as a result of Iraq’s initiative.
The coalition’s
greatest military concern during the closing months of 1990 was that Iraqi
forces would attack before coalition forces were fully in place, but no such
attack took place. The coalition was also troubled that Iraq might partially
withdraw from Kuwait, which could split the coalition between nations eager to
avoid fighting and nations wanting to push for full withdrawal. The United
States in particular feared that signs of progress might lessen the resolve of
some coalition partners and so discouraged attempts to mediate the crisis.
Iraq’s uncompromising stand helped build support among coalition members for
the American hard line.
On November 29,
with coalition forces massing in Saudi Arabia and Iraq showing no signs of
retreat, the UN Security Council passed a resolution to allow member states to
“use all necessary means” to force Iraq from Kuwait if Iraq remained in the
country after January 15, 1991. The Iraqis rejected the ultimatum. Soon after
the vote, the United States agreed to a direct meeting between Secretary of
State James Baker and Iraq’s foreign minister. The two sides met on January 9. Neither offered to compromise. The United States underscored
the ultimatum, and the Iraqis refused to comply with it, even threatening to
attack Israel. For the United States, the meeting was its way of showing the
conflict could not be resolved through negotiation.
A large
minority of the U.S. population opposed military action. Opponents were
concerned that the armed forces would suffer large casualties and argued that
the only reason for the invasion was to guarantee a cheap supply of oil. Many
such opponents thought economic sanctions would eventually force Iraq to leave
Kuwait. President George Bush maintained that larger political principles were
involved and that economic sanctions would not work. He also argued that the UN
resolution gave him the authority to use military force. Other Americans
believed the president did not have the constitutional authority to order an
attack without a congressional declaration of war. On January 12, 1991, the
U.S. Congress narrowly passed a resolution authorizing the president to use
force, nullifying the domestic debate.
The
Coalition Attacks by Air
When
the UN deadline of January 15 passed without an Iraqi withdrawal, a vast
majority of coalition members joined in the decision to attack Iraq. A few
members, such as Morocco, elected not to take part in the military strikes. In
the early morning of January 17, 1991, coalition forces began a massive air
attack on Iraqi targets.
The air assault
had three goals: to attack Iraqi air defenses, to disrupt command and control,
and to weaken ground forces in and around Kuwait. The coalition made swift
progress against Iraq’s air defenses, giving the coalition almost uncontested
control of the skies over Iraq and Kuwait. The second task, disrupting command
and control, was larger and more difficult. It required attacks on the Iraqi
electrical system, communications centers, roads and bridges, and other
military and government targets. These targets were often located in civilian
areas and were typically used by both civilians and the military. Although the
coalition air forces often used very precise weapons, the attacks caused many
civilian casualties and completely disrupted Iraqi civilian life. The third
task, weakening Iraq’s ground forces, was larger still. The coalition used less
sophisticated weaponry to strike Iraqi defensive positions in both Iraq and
Kuwait, to destroy their equipment, and to undermine morale. After five and a
half weeks of intense bombing and more than 100,000 flights by coalition
planes, Iraq’s forces were severely damaged.
In an attempt
to pry the coalition apart, Iraq fired Scud missiles at both Saudi Arabia and
Israel, which especially disrupted Israeli civilian life. Iraq could thus
portray its Arab adversaries as fighting on the side of Israel. The strategy
failed to split the coalition, in part because the Israeli government did not
retaliate. Iraq also issued thinly veiled threats that it would use chemical
and biological weapons. The United States hinted in return that such an attack
might provoke a massive response, possibly including the use of nuclear
weapons. Iraqi ground forces also initiated a limited amount of ground
fighting, occupying the Saudi border town of Khafji
on January 30 before being driven back.
One month into
the air war, the Iraqis began negotiating with the Union of Soviet Socialist
Republics (USSR) over a plan to withdraw from Kuwait. Had this initiative come
before the start of the coalition’s attack, it might have split the coalition;
now it simply seemed a sign that the war was weighing heavily on Iraq. The war
made diplomacy difficult for Iraq: officials had to travel overland to Iran and
then fly to Moscow to ferry messages back and forth. Sensing victory, the
coalition united behind a demand for Iraq’s unconditional withdrawal from
Kuwait.
Land War
On February 24
the coalition launched its long-anticipated land offensive. The bulk of the
attack was in southwestern Iraq, where coalition forces first moved north, then
turned east toward the Iraqi port of Al Başrah.
This maneuver surrounded Kuwait, encircling the Iraqi forces there and in
southern Iraq, and allowed coalition forces (mainly Arab) to move up the coast
and take Kuwait city. Some Iraqi units resisted, but the coalition offensive
advanced more quickly than anticipated. Thousands of Iraqi troops surrendered.
Others deserted. Iraq then focused its efforts on withdrawing its elite units
and sabotaging Kuwaiti infrastructure and industry. Many oil wells were set on
fire, creating huge oil lakes, thick black smoke, and other environmental
damage. Two days after the ground war began, Iraq
announced it was leaving Kuwait.
On February 28,
with the collapse of Iraqi resistance and the recapture of Kuwait—thereby
fulfilling the coalition’s stated goals—the coalition declared a cease-fire.
The land war had lasted precisely 100 hours. The cease-fire came shortly before
coalition forces would have surrounded Iraqi forces. On March 2 the UN Security
Council issued a resolution laying down the conditions for the cease-fire,
which were accepted by Iraq in a meeting of military commanders on March 3.
More extensive aims, such as overthrowing the Iraqi government or destroying
Iraqi forces, did not have the support of all coalition members. Most Arab
members, for example, believed the war was fought to restore one Arab country
and not to destroy another. The United States also worried that extending the
goal would have involved them in endless fighting.
The Iraqis
achieved none of their initial goals. Rather than enhancing their economic,
military, and political position, they were economically devastated, militarily
defeated, and politically isolated. Yet because the government and many of the
military forces remained intact, the Iraqis could claim mere survival as a
victory. The surviving military forces were used a short time later to suppress
two postwar rebellions: one involving Shia Muslims in
southern Iraq and one involving Kurds in the north.
Almost all of
the casualties occurred on the Iraqi side. While estimates during the war had
ranged from 10,000 to 100,000 Iraqis killed, Western military experts now agree
that Iraq sustained between 20,000 and 35,000 casualties. The coalition losses
were extremely light by comparison: 240 were killed, 148 of whom were American.
The number of wounded totaled 776, of whom 458 were American.
Consequences
of the War
The
end of the fighting left some key issues unresolved, including UN sanctions
against Iraq, which did not end with the war. On April 2, 1991, the Security
Council laid out strict demands for ending the sanctions: Iraq would have to
accept liability for damages, destroy its chemical and biological weapons and
ballistic missiles, forego any nuclear weapons programs, and accept
international inspections to ensure these conditions were met. If Iraq complied
with these and other resolutions, the UN would discuss removing the sanctions.
Iraq resisted, claiming that its withdrawal from Kuwait was sufficient
compliance.
Many Western
observers believed the victory was hollow because Saddam Hussein was still in
power. At first, when Hussein was greatly weakened, Western powers believed a
rebellion might succeed in overthrowing him. Meanwhile, potential rebels within
Iraq believed they might receive international help if they rebelled. But when
the Shia population of southern Iraq rebelled shortly
after the cease-fire, they were greeted not with international help but with
Iraqi military forces returning from the southern front. It quickly became
clear that the rebels would receive no international help, although several
governments gave them verbal support. Under the terms of the cease-fire, which
established “no-fly zones” in the north and south, Iraqis could not attack the Shias with airplanes, but could use helicopters, which they
did to great effect. Spontaneous and loosely organized, the rebellion was
crushed almost as quickly as it arose.
The defeat of
the Shias made the debate over helping Iraqi rebels
even more urgent. Ultimately, however, most Western governments decided that if
Hussein collapsed, Iraq might disintegrate, ushering in a new round of regional
instability. A short while later, Kurds in the north of the country rebelled,
and they too received no help. The Kurds were able to withstand Hussein longer
than the Shias, in part because they had a history of
organized, armed resistance. In the end, though, the Kurds achieved only a very
modest success: a UN-guaranteed haven in the extreme
north of the country. No permanent solution—such as Kurdish self-rule—was
negotiated.
Elsewhere the
effects of the war were less severe. In Kuwait the prewar regime was restored,
and in 1992 the emir, Sheikh Jaber al-Ahmad al-Jaber al-Sabah, honored his pledge in exile to reconvene
the country’s parliament. Palestinians in Kuwait fared poorly after the war, in
large part because Yasir Arafat of the Palestine
Liberation Organization (PLO) and other prominent Palestinians had endorsed
Hussein and his anti-Israeli rhetoric. Blamed for collaborating with the
Iraqis, most of the Palestinian population (estimated at 400,000 before the
war) was expelled from Kuwait or forbidden to return.
Following the
war, thousands of American soldiers developed mild to debilitating health
problems, including abdominal pain, diarrhea, insomnia, short-term memory loss,
rashes, headaches, blurred vision, and aching joints. The symptoms became known
collectively as Gulf War syndrome but their cause was unknown. Speculation
about the cause centered on exposure to chemical and biological weapons;
experimental drugs given to troops to protect against chemical weapons;
vaccinations against illness and disease; insecticides sprayed over
troop-populated areas; and smoke from burning oil wells ignited by retreating
Iraqis. The U.S. Department of Defense originally stated it had no conclusive
evidence that troops had been exposed to chemical or biological weapons.
However, in 1996 the department acknowledged that more than 20,000 American
troops may have been exposed to sarin, a toxic nerve
gas. In 1997 the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) suggested the deadly
gas may have spread farther than previously thought, affecting perhaps hundreds
of thousands of troops.
The UN
continued to maintain most of the economic embargo on Iraq after the war, and
several coalition countries enforced other sanctions, such as the no-fly zones.
In 1995 the UN amended the sanctions to allow Iraq to sell limited amounts of
oil for food and medicine if it also designated some of the revenue to pay for
damages caused by the war; Iraq initially rejected this plan but then accepted
it in 1996.