PERSIAN GULF WARS

or Gulf Wars, two conflicts involving Iraq and U.S.-led coalitions in the late 20th and early 21st cent.

The First Persian Gulf War, Jan.–Feb., 1991, was an armed conflict between Iraq and a coalition of 32 nations including the United States, Britain, Egypt, France, and Saudi Arabia. It was a result of Iraq's invasion of Kuwait on Aug. 2, 1990; Iraq then annexed Kuwait, which it had long claimed. Iraqi president Saddam Hussein declared that the invasion was a response to overproduction of oil in Kuwait, which had cost Iraq over $14 million when oil prices fell. Hussein also accused Kuwait of illegally pumping oil from Iraq's Rumaila oil field.

The UN Security Council called for Iraq to withdraw and subsequently embargoed most trade with Iraq. On Aug. 7, U.S. troops moved into Saudi Arabia to protect Saudi oil fields. On Nov. 29, the United Nations set Jan. 15, 1991, as the deadline for a peaceful withdrawal of Iraqi troops from Kuwait. When Saddam Hussein refused to comply, Operation Desert Storm was launched on Jan. 18, 1991, under the leadership of U.S. Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf.

The U.S.-led coalition began a massive air war to destroy Iraq's forces and military and civil infrastructure. Iraq called for terrorist attacks against the coalition and launched Scud missiles at Israel (in an unsuccessful attempt to widen the war and break up the coalition) and at Saudi Arabia. The main coalition forces invaded Kuwait and S Iraq on Feb. 24 and, over the next four days, encircled and defeated the Iraqis and liberated Kuwait. When U.S. President George H. W. Bush declared a cease-fire on Feb. 28, most of the Iraqi forces in Kuwait had either surrendered or fled.

Although the war was a decisive military victory for the coalition, Kuwait and Iraq suffered enormous property damage, and Saddam Hussein was not removed from power. In fact, Hussein was free to turn his attention to suppressing internal Shiite and Kurd revolts, which the U.S.-led coalition did not support, in part because of concerns over the possible breakup of Iraq if the revolts were successful. Coalition peace terms were agreed to by Iraq, but every effort was made by the Iraqis to frustrate implementation of the terms, particularly UN weapons inspections.

In 1993 the United States, France, and Britain launched several air and cruise-missile strikes against Iraq in response to provocations, including an alleged Iraqi plan to assassinate former President George H. W. Bush. An Iraqi troop buildup near Kuwait in 1994 led the United States to send forces to Kuwait and nearby areas. Continued resistance to weapons inspections led to bombing raids against Iraq, and trade sanctions imposed on Iraq remained in place, albeit with an emphasis on military-related goods until the second Gulf conflict. See also Gulf War Syndrome.

The Second Persian Gulf War, also known as the Iraq War, Mar.–Apr., 2003, was a largely U.S.-British invasion of Iraq. In many ways the final, delayed campaign of the First Persian Gulf War, it arose in part because the Iraqi government failed to cooperate fully with UN weapons inspections in the years following the first conflict.

The election of George W. Bush to the U.S. presidency returned to government many officials from his father's administration who had favored removing Saddam Hussein from power in the first war. After the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on World Trade Center and Pentagon, the United States moved toward a doctrine of first-strike, pre-emptive war to eliminate threats to national security, and as early as Oct., 2001, U.S. Defense Secretary Rumsfeld publicly suggested that military action against Iraq was possible. In Jan., 2002, President Bush accused Iraq. along with North Korea and Iran, as being part of "an axis of evil," and with the Taliban forced from power in Afghanistan in early 2002, the administration's attention turned to Iraq.

Accusing Iraq of failing to abide by the terms of the 1991 cease-fire (by developing and possessing weapons of mass destruction and by refusing to cooperate with UN weapons inspections) and of supporting terrorism, the president and other officials suggested that the "war on terrorism" might be expanded to include Iraq and became more forceful in their denunciations of Iraq for resisting UN arms inspections, called for "regime change" in Iraq, and leaked news of military planning for war. President Bush also called on the United Nations to act forcefully against Iraq or risk becoming "irrelevant." As a result, Iraq announced in Sept., 2002, that UN inspectors could return, but Iraqi slowness to agree on inspection terms and U.S. insistence on stricter conditions for Iraqi compliance stalled the inspectors' return.

In October, Congress approved the use of force against Iraq, and in November the Security Council passed a resolution offering Iraq a "final opportunity" to cooperate on arms inspections. A strict inspections timetable was established, and active Iraqi compliance insisted on. Inspections resumed in late November. A December declaration by Iraq that it had no weapons of mass destruction was generally regarded as incomplete and uninformative, but by Jan., 2003, UN inspectors had found no evidence of forbidden weapons programs. However, they also indicated that Iraq was not actively cooperating with their efforts to determine if previously known or suspected weapons had been destroyed and weapons programs had been ended.

Despite much international opposition, including increasingly rancorous objections from France, Germany, and Russia, the United States and Britain continued their military buildup in areas near Iraq, insisting that Iraq was hiding weapons of mass destruction. Although Turkey, which the allies hoped to use as a base for a northern front in Iraq, refused to allow use of its territory, most Anglo-American forces were in place in Kuwait and other locations by March. After failing to win the explicit UN Security Council approval desired by Britain (because Britons were otherwise largely opposed to war), President Bush issued an ultimatum to Iraqi president Hussein on Mar. 17, and two days later the war began with an airstrike against Hussein and the Iraqi leadership. Ground forces (almost exclusively Anglo-American and significantly smaller than the large international force assembled in the first war) began invading the following day, surging primarily toward Baghdad, the southern oil fields, and port facilities; a northern front was opened by Kurdish and airborne Anglo-American forces late in March.

By mid-April, 2003, Hussein's army and government had collapsed, he himself had disappeared, and the allies were largely in control of the major Iraqi cities. The allies gradually turned their attention to the rebuilding of Iraq and the establishment of a new Iraqi government, but progress toward that end was hampered by lawlessness, especially in Baghdad, where widespread looting initially had been tolerated by U.S. forces. On May 1, President Bush declared victory in the war against Iraq. No weapons of mass destruction, however, were found, leading to charges that U.S. and British leaders had exaggerated the Iraqi biological and chemical threat in order to justify the war. Hussein was captured in Dec., 2003.

See study of the second conflict, The Iraq War: A Military History (2003), by W. Murray and R. H. Scales, Jr.

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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...S. decline in the Persian Gulf region smacks of dispassion. Wars, after all, are nasty...security in the Persian Gulf region? Why did wars in the Middle East...Iran-Iraq, and Persian Gulf 199 1 wars will continue to...
...at large. After all, the Persian Gulf was an area where two major wars were fought in the past 12 years. One of these two wars, the Iran-Iraq War, lasted...major military power, the Persian Gulf continues to be a region where...
...long chain of costly and recurring Gulf wars. NOTES 1. Mansour...Relations and Stability in the Persian Gulf," Washington Quarterly 7 Summer...Irans Islamic Revolution and the Persian Gulf," Current History January...
...Television broadcasting of news -- United States. 2. Persian Gulf War, 1991 -- Journalists. I. Title. II. Series. PN4888...over Israel , 164 Scud Wars in Saudi Arabia , 170...
...Infantry Division in the Persian Gulf War shortly after our...hauled across France." By wars end, the division had...plane descended with the Persian Gulf on the right, the coast...suburb where, during the Gulf War, kids from our high...
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...Vietnam veterans, the Persian Gulf War was a reminder of...the idea that subsequent wars can have a psychologically...the Korean or Vietnam wars. Whether this paucity...Vietnam veterans to the Persian Gulf War, it is important to...
...may always be wars. A comparison...specifically about the Persian Gulf War yielded...is bad" and "Wars are always wrong...influence of the Persian Gulf War and the...conventional wars. However, the...situations in the Persian Gulf War, and subjects...
...As a result of the Persian Gulf conflict, many military...that, unlike previous wars, there were significantly...called to serve in the Persian Gulf ("In Capitol," 1991...troop quotas for the Persian Gulf conflict. This study...
...5%) Reexamine whole Persian Gulf area 3 2...emotions during these wars ranged from hatred toward...up to and during the Persian Gulf conflict...as a result of the Persian Gulf War...
...Congress in authorizing war in the Persian Gulf was marginalized by our media sources...the case. For example, during the Persian Gulf conflict, officials in the Bush...The establishment phase of the Persian Gulf policy debate. In Taken by storm...
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...subject of the Persian Gulf Wars possible effect...Iraq during the Persian Gulf War demonstrate...conceptual framework, wars will continue to...war to end all wars." Adrienne Elizabeth...Ecowarfare in the Persian Gulf" in Ecofeminism...
...leading role. Instead of acting as the guarantor of Persian Gulf security, the U.S. should make clear to the southern Gulf...policy options instead of steering the U.S. into regional wars. Ms. Conry is a foreign policy analyst at the Cato Institute...
...naval display in the Persian Gulf is such a glaring...opposed to U.S. wars of intervention...activities in the Persian Gulf, "Weve increased...adventure in the Persian Gulf In October, the...Besides avoiding wars of intervention...
Kissingers Gulf Wars. by George Jonas On the fifth anniversary of George W. Bushs...Most Americans view the Bush presidencies that waged two victorious wars in the Gulf as failures. Triumph has brought disaster. After hanging Saddam for...
Persian Gulf--or Tonkin Gulf? Illegal "no-fly zones" could be wars trip wire by Robert Dreyfuss IN A PAIR OF EDITORIALS AFTER THE 1991 Gulf War, one of them titled "Dont Shoot Down Iraqi Aircraft...
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...that these men died in vain, like all soldiers in all wars die in vain. Hardly. They should never, ever be thought...when candlelight vigils, honoring those who died in the Persian Gulf War, are to be held throughout the United States. DuPage...
...that prosecuted the Persian Gulf war five years ago...Kuwait. "I think the wars primary legacy is...parochial view of the wars chief legacy...dominant force in the Gulf war, and where it...stagnation in the Persian Gulf since the U...
...Scarborough Nearly as puzzling as the cause of "Persian Gulf war syndrome" is why some nations who sent troops to the...Marine who handles Gulf issues for the Veterans of Foreign Wars. "The role of stress in a combat environment is significant...
...weapons of mass destruction as a condition of the 1991 Persian Gulf war cease-fire. "We should not forget the Gulf war ended...fighter) and precision-guided weapons. Subsequent air wars in Bosnia, Kosovo and Afghanistan have relied on the Gulf...
...small to fight two major wars at once. The situation...States moves forces to the Persian Gulf for an invasion to topple...preparing for war in the Persian Gulf, has 8,000 troops fighting...military buildup in the Persian Gulf for what could well be...
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PERSIAN GULF WARS or Gulf Wars, two conflicts involving Iraq and...20th and early 21st cent. The First Persian Gulf War, Jan. Feb., 1991, was an...Gulf War Syndrome . The Second Persian Gulf War, also known as the Iraq War...
...variety of ailments experienced by veterans after the Persian Gulf War . Symptoms reported include nausea, cramps, rashes...undiagnosable diseases have occurred after other wars, including World Wars I and II and the American Civil War...
...played a major role in the tensions and wars between Israel and the Arab states...Suez Canal between 1967 to 1975. The Gulf of Aqaba was blockaded by the Arabs...sanctions against Iraq and the ensuing Persian Gulf War (1991), the Gulf of Aqaba served...
IRAQ WAR see under Persian Gulf Wars . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...presidents inner circle, she has been an advocate of U.S. military power, a supporter of the Iraq invasion (see Persian Gulf Wars ), and a spokeswoman for the administrations assertive foreign policy. She served (2005 9) as secretary of state...
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