• 3 months ago
For educational purposes

On August 3rd 1990, Iraq, under its ferocious dictator Saddam Hussein, invaded Kuwait, its oil-rich neighbour.

Not long out of a war with Iran, Iraq badly under-estimated the reaction of the watching world to its unprovoked attack; in particular, they believed that the US would not dare to become involved.

A coalition against Iraq was formed and it struck back in January 1991. Iraq's air defence system and the country's infra-structure were taken apart by air attacks that utilised the very latest warfare technology - and it was technology as much as anything else that brought Iraq's armed forces to its knees.

Saddam had promised the 'mother of all battles' - words that came to haunt him and his army as they were caught in the open on the bloody road to Basra.

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00:00At 8 a.m. on the 28th of February 1991, silence descended over the battlefields of Kuwait
00:10and southern Iraq, after the coalition halted its stunningly successful 100-hour ground
00:15war to liberate Kuwait from Iraqi occupation, initiated almost seven months previously.
00:23Against the backdrop of arid desert and burning oil wells, the coalition had used its superior
00:28weapons and highly trained combat personnel to wreak havoc on what was then the fourth
00:34largest army in the world.
00:38The potent images of stealth fighters and pinpoint-accurate laser-guided missiles became
00:43the devastating symbols of the futility of resisting the coalition's awesome combat power.
01:13The
01:39event that triggered the hostilities of January and February 1991 occurred back on the 2nd
01:45of August 1990, when Kuwait's citizens awoke to the sounds of Iraqi T-72 tanks advancing
01:52down the streets of Kuwait City.
01:55Iraq, a state led by the brutal dictator Saddam Hussein, head of the Ba'ath Party, had committed
02:02an act of unprovoked aggression that shocked the world.
02:09Within a few hours that morning, Iraqi forces had occupied all of Kuwait, the tiny emirate
02:14of the Al-Sabah dynasty.
02:18Saddam Hussein said, Kuwait has been returned to the fold of her motherland, Iraq.
02:27By conquering Kuwait, Saddam sent a powerful message to discontented Arabs to overthrow
02:32the complacent pro-Western shakedoms that had been created by the imperialist whims
02:38that dominated Arabia's painful colonial past.
02:42The justification for invading Kuwait is, of course, that Kuwait was an artificial state
02:48created by Western imperialism, of course British imperialism, and that historically
02:53it had been part of the Ottoman province, which then became Iraq.
03:00Saddam had many good reasons for invading Kuwait, reasons which he gave to his brother
03:05Arabs.
03:06These were the noble, all-embracing reasons, the liberation from the West.
03:12What Saddam didn't mention, that of course the Wall Street Journal and the Financial
03:15Times are talking about at considerable length, was the fact that Iraq was $90 billion in
03:20debt after its war with Iran.
03:24Saddam had bankrupted Iraq fighting the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s.
03:30In early 1990s, Saddam was trying to find ways of easing the financial burden on his
03:35country.
03:36He looked to Kuwait for a moratorium on the debts that they owed from the war.
03:42He looked to use his oil revenues to decrease his debt.
03:47The problem there was that Kuwait allegedly, according to Saddam, was actually overproducing
03:53their oil, exceeding the OPEC oil quotas, and therefore flooding the oil market, lowering
04:00the global price of oil, and Saddam's economists reckon that every dollar off the price of
04:06oil reduced Iraq's export revenue by a billion dollars a year.
04:12So from a money point of view, Iraq wants to take Kuwait in order to be able to control
04:21Kuwait's oil production, to keep production levels lower, thus to keep the price of oil
04:27higher, and the higher the price of oil, the more money Saddam Hussein has coming in.
04:37During an emergency session, the United Nations Security Council's Resolution 660 promptly
04:42condemned the invasion and demanded an immediate Iraqi withdrawal.
04:48British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and US President George Bush then called for the
04:53establishment of an international military coalition to compel Saddam's withdrawal,
04:58while the UN instituted economic sanctions against Iraq.
05:03In response, Saddam annexed Kuwait, and appeared to concentrate his forces on Kuwait's border
05:09with Saudi Arabia.
05:11Saddam seems to have expected that the outside world would be unhappy with the invasion,
05:18but that the outside world would not react militarily to the invasion.
05:23He sees the United States hampered by the failings of Vietnam, and therefore unlikely
05:28to resort to force, and as a society, unwilling to take the risks of a resort to force.
05:35Western leaders concluded that Saddam intended to invade Saudi Arabia, and thus control its
05:40vast oil reserves.
05:42There was absolutely nothing between Saddam's very formidable divisions and the Saudi oil
05:49fields.
05:50It was simply a military promenade.
05:52It would be a matter of simply driving south a couple of hundred kilometers.
05:55All he needed to do was to maintain the vehicles, keep up the fuel, and he could get there.
06:00There was precious little that Saudi Arabian forces could actually do to stop him getting
06:05to the oil fields.
06:07If successful, this aggression would enable Saddam to hold the Western world to ransom
06:12by manipulating the price of oil.
06:16This fear of economic damage to America proved pivotal in persuading President Bush to intervene
06:22militarily in this Middle Eastern crisis, even though previous regional problems had
06:27not prompted such an American response.
06:33Bush reacted swiftly to this apparent threat by initiating Operation Desert Shield on the
06:398th of August, with the dispatch of the 82nd U.S. Airborne Division to northern Saudi Arabia
06:44to deter future Iraqi aggression.
06:48That same day, Britain and France announced their intention to send contingents to augment
06:53America's Desert Shield forces.
06:55There's a feeling of excitement buzzing around, which I'm sure you can feel.
06:59The boys in the sheds woke up this morning with a purpose, going to get the kit unloaded,
07:03and really looking forward to getting out into the desert and working alongside the
07:06American Marines.
07:07It's very exciting.
07:09In turn, Saddam sought to internationalize the conflict into a pan-Arab holy war.
07:15He called on the United Arab World to expel the infidel Western forces in the region.
07:20He linked any Iraqi withdrawal from Kuwait to the departure of Israeli forces from occupied
07:25Palestinian territory, and he threatened to unleash chemical weapons against Israel if
07:31the coalition attacked Iraq.
07:39During September, the military coalition continued to assemble in northern Saudi Arabia.
07:44The force came under the authority of the U.S. Central Command, or CENTCOM, then led
07:49by the mercurial commander, General Stormy Norman Schwarzkopf.
07:54There are a number of people that really disliked Schwarzkopf.
08:00His potential for arrogance, for flippancy, his very dry sense of humor, he often came
08:06across as brusque.
08:07There were others that really got on well with him because he spoke his mind.
08:11He was a very intelligent, professional military man.
08:17During September, it still seemed that sanctions and diplomacy might peacefully resolve the
08:22crisis.
08:23However, in late October, an increasingly impatient Bush resolved to use military force
08:29to liberate Kuwait.
08:32But Bush insisted that the U.S. forces deployed in the Gulf be doubled before the coalition
08:36commenced its operations.
08:40To achieve these force levels, the Americans subsequently redeployed the 7th U.S. Corps,
08:45then stationed in Germany, to Saudi Arabia.
08:52On the 29th of November, U.N. Resolution 678 approved Bush's decision to use force, by
08:59authorizing the coalition to employ all possible means to reverse Iraq's aggression.
09:06The resolution gave Saddam until the 15th of January, 1991, to withdraw from Kuwaiti
09:11soil, after which the coalition would employ military force to compel his withdrawal.
09:22During December and into January, 1991, Bush went an extra mile for peace through further
09:28diplomacy.
09:29But continuing Iraqi obstruction merely infuriated America's diplomats.
09:35Once Iraq invades Kuwait, Saddam is in an awkward position when he realizes that he
09:42is not going to be allowed to stay in Kuwait.
09:47Consequently he has to construct a situation in which he can be seen in some way the heroic
09:53victim or the fighter for Arab rights.
09:59Saddam himself required heroic defeat, rather than humiliating withdrawal, and Bush required
10:05something similar, but from the other perspective.
10:08Let's get into this war, I call upon all Arabs to start a holy war.
10:16Consequently the vital deadline of the 15th of January came and passed.
10:23That night, the world held its breath, awaiting news of the outbreak of war in the Middle
10:28East.
10:29Yet all remained quiet.
10:34Millions of people across the globe had only to wait a little longer, however, before hostilities
10:38commenced with a vengeance.
10:40For a 2.10am local time on the 17th of January, 1991, President Bush ordered Operation Desert
10:50Storm, the air campaign, to begin, with coalition warships launching 52 Tomahawk cruise missiles
10:58towards targets deep inside Iraq.
11:01Thundering across the darkened skies at 550 miles per hour, the deadly missiles navigated
11:07themselves towards their targets using the digitized mapping data their targeting software
11:12contained.
11:14Simultaneously, 700 coalition aircraft commenced strikes against targets across Iraq.
11:25In Baghdad, camera-laden western journalists endeavored to capture the startling sights
11:31and sounds of those first hours of the war.
11:36Darkness gradually extended through Baghdad as its electricity generation facilities succumbed
11:41to coalition strikes, but the hundreds of streams of tracer fired from the city's anti-aircraft
11:47guns nevertheless eerily eased the darkness.
11:51Intermittently violent eruptions illuminated the night as coalition missiles and bombs
11:56found their targets, with devastating effect.
12:03Many of those deadly strikes against Baghdad that night had been delivered by dozens of
12:07small angular black aircraft that had streaked their way largely unnoticed through the darkness.
12:14These black jets were American Nighthawk stealth aircraft, on their way to devastate key strategic
12:21targets located within the Iraqi capital.
12:25The F-117A Nighthawk was one of the most famous weapons of war used during the Gulf War.
12:32The stealth fighter, the fighter that was, in inverted commas, invisible to the enemy.
12:38And it was of course used in the initial air campaign to try and fly stealthily towards
12:46the enemy air defences, normally with a partner.
12:49And whilst one illuminated the target, the other one would then fly its laser-guided
12:54weapon system onto the target and destroy them.
13:01Saddam reacted to these airstrikes by stepping up his propaganda war.
13:07He believed that Western public opinion could not tolerate sustaining heavy casualties during
13:12the liberation of Kuwait, whereas his own people could bear such privations.
13:17Consequently, Saddam chillingly promised to turn the conflict into a bloodbath for coalition
13:23soldiers by making it the mother of all battles.
13:33On the 18th of January, Saddam fired al-Hussein's Scud missiles into Israel and Saudi Arabia.
13:40A modified Iraqi version of the relatively inaccurate Soviet Scud-B short-range ballistic
13:46missile, the al-Hussein could deliver a 550-pound warhead onto a town-sized target up to an
13:53impressive range of 400 miles away.
13:58The widespread assumption that these missiles carried the chemical warheads that Saddam
14:06previously had threatened to use created panic within Israel.
14:12Saddam calculated that if Israel entered the war against Iraq, the Arab contingents within
14:17the coalition would withdraw, as fighting alongside the hated Israelis would have been
14:22utterly unacceptable to any Arab leader.
14:27Such a development, Saddam reckoned, would destroy the notion that the coalition represented
14:32the consensus opinion of the international community, rather than the aims of a hawkish
14:37President Bush and his cronies, including the new British Prime Minister, John Major.
14:47In response, America rushed Patriot surface-to-air missile batteries to Israel to shoot down
14:52Saddam's incoming Scuds.
14:56Partly through this measure, the US hoped Israel would be persuaded not to retaliate
15:00against Iraq.
15:02Simultaneously, the coalition intensified the efforts already being undertaken by its
15:07special forces and aircraft to destroy Saddam's elusive mobile Scud missile launchers.
15:14During the rest of January, the Great Scud Hunt dominated coalition strategy.
15:19Initially, they relied on air power, but the problem for air power in negating the threat
15:26was that the Iraqis used shoot-and-scoot tactics.
15:30They set the missile launchers up, fired the missile, and then dashed off to some concealment,
15:35perhaps under a bridge or in a concealed bunker.
15:38By the time the coalition aircraft arrived, there was nothing to target, and so the coalition
15:43turned to their special forces, American special forces and the British SAS, dropped behind
15:49enemy lines to try and deal with the Scud threat.
15:53The special forces had to find those missiles in the moments between the commander stopping
16:01the vehicle and erecting the missile and launching the missile, or alternatively, stopping, not
16:08erecting and launching the missile, and driving on to somewhere else.
16:11They had to discriminate between dummy missiles and dummy transporters on the ground and the
16:16real thing.
16:18And they did a very good job, the special forces, but they didn't get all of the Scud
16:27missiles and their launchers.
16:29They couldn't realistically hope to get all of them.
16:32And as long as Saddam Hussein still had his modified Scud missiles, he could continue
16:39to attack the coalition forces and could continue to attack the Israelis in their effort to
16:45provoke the Israelis into entering the war.
16:49In those first days of the air war, the coalition concentrated on the strategic mission of gaining
16:55aerial superiority over the Kuwaiti theatre.
16:59The coalition achieved this by striking Saddam's strategic infrastructure for controlling the
17:04Iraqi war machine, particularly the national intercept centres of the Qari air defence
17:10system.
17:12These vital facilities acquired and distributed the essential battle management data that
17:17the Iraqi air force needed if it was to stand any chance of opposing coalition control of
17:22the skies.
17:26The first few hours of coalition air strikes left the Iraqi air force bereft of this battle
17:31management data.
17:32Consequently, an already beleaguered Iraqi air force found itself woefully outclassed,
17:38both technologically and in terms of the professional skills its pilots possessed.
17:43Very quickly, the Iraqi air force surrendered the skies to the coalition, either hiding
17:49timidly in its hardened bunkers or scuttling ignominiously off to the safety of internment
17:54in Iran, Iraq's neutral eastern neighbour.
18:00The origins of these strategic aspects of the coalition air campaign lay in Operation
18:06Instant Thunder, the plan drawn up by Colonel John Warden back in August 1990.
18:12This scheme envisaged a six-day strategic air effort that alone would destroy Iraq and
18:17force Saddam to withdraw.
18:20Warden believed firmly in the potency of strategic air power, that an independent air effort
18:26could win a war without ground action being necessary.
18:31Colonel Warden's Instant Thunder plan was based on his earlier Five Circles concept,
18:36which outlines his view on the nature of modern war.
18:40Warden saw the modern battle as a dartboard with five rings.
18:43In the inner ring was the enemy's strategic C4I capability, that's command, control, computers,
18:52communications and intelligence.
18:53They're strategic decision-making capabilities, and Instant Thunder was based on the assumption
18:59that a short strategic air campaign focused on the inner ring would smash Saddam's ability
19:06to control not just the Iraqi state, but the Iraqi war machine at the strategic level.
19:12And that would collapse the Iraqi state and allow for the liberation of Kuwait without
19:17any ground forces even being necessary.
19:22Even though Schwarzkopf remained unconvinced by these ambitious claims, Instant Thunder
19:27became the basis of the air plan finalized by mid-January 1991.
19:33The final air plan, however, was more extensive in duration and scope than Instant Thunder,
19:38and combined Warden's strategic aspects with extensive attritional efforts, primarily by
19:43B-52 bombers, to weaken the Iraqi forces deployed in the Kuwaiti theater.
19:49Indeed, Schwarzkopf stated that these attritional efforts had to degrade Iraqi ground strength
19:55by 50% before the coalition ground war could commence.
20:00In fact, the actual 43-day long coalition air war comprised of four very distinct elements.
20:08The four phases of the coalition air campaign started with, perhaps the most important,
20:13the gaining of air supremacy.
20:15The gaining of air supremacy allowed the Allies quite quickly to dominate the air flank, and
20:21therefore to be able to do with the air flank what they wished.
20:24To go on bombing raids, to transport airborne troops, to fly their helicopters, to resupply
20:30logistically for battlefield air interdiction and close air support.
20:34All the things that were going to follow.
20:38The second phase was the bombing of strategic targets, making it very difficult for the
20:43enemy to sustain violence against the coalition.
20:48Hitting bridges, oil refineries, ammunition dumps, even nuclear power stations, rendering
20:54it very difficult for them to project their force.
20:57The third phase became more important as the air war moved closer to the initiation of
21:02the ground offensive.
21:04This was the preparing the battlefield phase.
21:07This was the phase of attacking the Iraqi ground forces in the Kuwaiti theater.
21:13Once the ground war started, the air war moved into its fourth phase, operations to
21:18support the ongoing ground offensive.
21:21This would involve close air support, air support to the contact battle, and also air
21:28interdiction missions attacking enemy reserves and forces deep behind the front line.
21:41In late January 1991, as the aerial devastation of Iraq continued, the relative quiet of the
21:48coalition's ground positions in northern Saudi Arabia was rudely shattered.
21:54From the 29th to the 31st of January, Iraqi forces launched a successful surprise attack
22:00on the Saudi border town of al-Khafji.
22:02Simultaneously, American space satellites and JSTAR's intelligence aircraft detected
22:13additional Iraqi tank columns moving south toward al-Khafji to exploit the initial Iraqi
22:18success.
22:23Reacting quickly, coalition commanders employed tank-busting aircraft and assault helicopters,
22:29as well as ground firepower, to intercept and destroy these columns.
22:35Finally, Saddam realized just how devastating coalition military strength was.
22:45Saddam had got to the point where he realized that there was nothing going to stop some
22:49form of ground offensive, and Tariq Aziz, the acceptable face of the regime, I suppose,
22:56makes it clear that Iraq is willing to unconditionally and immediately withdraw from Kuwait.
23:01Because it doesn't fit into American and Western requirements, as it would enable Saddam to
23:09withdraw from Kuwait, retain his weapons of mass destruction, retain his armed forces
23:13intact and, to some extent, play the part of the injured party to the Arab world.
23:21As the relentless aerial strikes continued into mid-February, Bush rejected Saddam's
23:26proposed conditional withdrawal, and all thoughts turned to the now-imminent ground war.
23:34By now, the coalition believed its air campaign to have been so accurate that collateral civilian
23:39casualties had been minimized.
23:43Events like the bombing of the Amariya Shelter on the 13th of February, where 200 civilians
23:48died, remained rare exceptions.
23:55The air campaign was being sold to the media as a campaign in which civilians were not
24:02going to die, or at least they were not going to die unnecessarily.
24:06This was a high-technology campaign, where missiles were going to be guided through windows.
24:12This was where cruise missiles could fly up main streets and hit a target of a precision
24:17which was undreamed of, not 40 years earlier in the Second World War, but 10 years earlier.
24:25And unfortunately, sometimes it went wrong.
24:32By now, the coalition air campaign had proved devastatingly effective.
24:37It had smashed Saddam's ability to control his forces, had destroyed his army's logistical
24:42infrastructure and manoeuvre capabilities, and devastated Iraq's industrial base.
24:49Yet Iraq's battered military machine did not collapse as Warden had predicted.
24:54Indeed, it continued to function, albeit only after a fashion.
25:00Although the coalition aerial assault did a lot of damage to Iraqi command and control,
25:07landlines managed to survive most of the attack, and it was relatively easy to put out new
25:12landlines, with the result that although Iraqi communications were compromised, they were
25:19never actually destroyed, and it's quite clear from the movement of Iraqi troops during the
25:24ground war, in particular the Iraqi attempt to block 7th Corps in southern Iraq, that
25:30Iraq retained its ability to communicate with its military formations.
25:38Their power had not, after all, won the war by itself, and so the coalition readied itself
25:44for ground operations.
25:48Once the air forces had weakened the enemy, made them deaf, dumb and blind, it was up
25:54to the ground forces then to go in and to wrap up the situation, to destroy them, to
25:59take them out of Kuwait City and bring the war to an end, but undoubtedly the air campaign
26:05made that possible.
26:08In the following weeks, the American 7th and 18th Corps secretly redeployed behind the
26:13US Marines in the east, to assume new positions 200 miles farther west around Rafah.
26:19Schwarzkopf had switched the main effort of the coalition ground offensive way out west
26:24to outflank and envelop Saddam's frontier defense line.
26:32Schwarzkopf's final strategy for the ground war represented a well-orchestrated operational-level
26:38master plan, each of its various elements dovetailed together to produce a synchronized
26:43effort that would swiftly deliver decisive success.
26:48The first element of the plan involved attacks by US Marines and Arab forces in the east,
26:54striking directly towards Kuwait City.
26:57Simultaneously, Marine amphibious forces would maintain the deception of an impending
27:02amphibious assault on the Kuwaiti coast.
27:07In order to ensure that the Iraqi army held still for the operations that the coalition
27:14was going to conduct, they had to fix the Iraqi army in place, and the way that the
27:22coalition fixes the Iraqi army is by moving on Kuwait City. That focuses the Iraqi's attention
27:29on Kuwait. It ensures that they can't easily turn around to fight the coalition's more
27:37mobile armored forces in Iraq, because they are in the middle of fighting in and around
27:44Kuwait.
27:47Once these attacks had started, the main coalition thrust would commence out in the west, beyond
27:52the main Iraqi defense line. While French forces would advance to screen the coalition's
27:57left flank, Lieutenant General Frank's 7th US Corps would swing east in a great left
28:03hook to crush the Iraqi forces in the Kuwaiti theater, particularly the Republican Guard,
28:09against the sea. Simultaneously, the 1st UK Armored Division would advance to protect
28:15the inner flank of the 7th Corps' advance. On the northern or outer flank of Frank's
28:21advance, the 101st US Airborne Division was to initiate a series of air assaults deep
28:26into Iraq, to establish forward operating bases astride Highway 8, along the Euphrates
28:32Valley, thus blocking Iraqi reinforcements attempting to reach the Kuwaiti theater.
28:40The policy is, get the Iraqis out of Kuwait. And not an ounce of effort is expended in
28:49the Gulf War on anything else.
28:53Some analysts have expressed surprise that the coalition didn't pursue their advance
28:59beyond the Euphrates River, up towards Baghdad. The key reasons that the coalition stopped
29:04short of attacking Baghdad are mainly political. The mandate that they were pursuing, the UN
29:12resolutions, was to liberate Kuwait from Iraqi occupation. Whether that mandate actually
29:19allowed the coalition to operate on Iraqi territory at all was certainly subject to
29:24some debate.
29:25Logistically, they had no chance of mounting a very swift attack once they'd driven through
29:31Kuwait into Iraq and towards Baghdad. They needed time to refit and reorganize themselves.
29:37By which time, the Iraqis would have dug in, been perhaps much more passionate about defending
29:42their own ground, and a whole new Gulf War would have developed around that situation.
29:50Schwarzkopf's ground war plan supposedly implemented the new American maneuverist doctrine of air-land
29:56battle. Introduced in the early 1980s, this doctrine sought to restore decisiveness to
30:02warfare by using maneuver rather than traditional American attritional approaches. To do this,
30:09air-land battle targeted enemy centers of gravity, such as command and control, in order
30:14to destroy their cohesion. The doctrine also envisaged a joint campaign effort by air,
30:21naval, marine, and army forces that employed cutting-edge technology to see deep, far into
30:27enemy territory, and then to strike deep using aircraft, artillery, and missiles.
30:34Consequently, the modern air-land battlefield would be a complicated, non-linear one that
30:39would place significant demands on command and control. Air-land battle doctrine also
30:45advocates the development of fast-paced and synchronized joint military operations that
30:50reflect the principles of agility and depth.
30:53There were certain aspects of air-land battle in this campaign. Not the slightest doubt
31:00about that. But the reality was that the Americans engaged in an attritional battle. That divisions
31:08like the Tawakana, like the Medina, actually stood their ground, and in some cases fought
31:15extremely well. And it was only the fact that they were outgunned by massively superior
31:20technology that actually prevented them from, on occasions, inflicting very severe damage
31:26on American forces.
31:31By the 24th of February, 1991, the coalition believed that 500,000 Iraqi soldiers faced
31:37its forces in the Kuwaiti theater. But in reality, many Iraqi divisions had been under
31:43strength before they even arrived in Kuwait. Indeed, by the start of the ground war, the
31:49combination of coalition aerial strikes and mass desertion had further reduced this figure
31:54to about 250,000 troops.
32:00To resist the attempted coalition liberation of occupied Kuwait, Saddam adopted a static
32:05defensive strategy. He seems to have hoped that a ground war might never actually begin.
32:12If it did, Saddam expected the coalition merely to confine its operations to Kuwaiti
32:17soil rather than that of Iraq.
32:21Saddam thinks about military activity with a highly politicized pair of spectacles on.
32:27As a result, he believed that the West would find it politically very difficult to actually
32:35go into Iraq proper. In addition, Saddam looks at the United States as a country which is
32:41going to fear a sort of second Vietnam and going to fear the entanglement that an invasion
32:46of Iraq itself might actually produce.
32:50Should military action be required, this will not be another Vietnam. This will not be a
32:57protracted, drawn-out war.
33:01In the event of a ground war, the most Saddam could hope for was to force a face-saving
33:05compromise deal on the coalition by inflicting heavy casualties on them. Hence, his forces
33:11established defenses that aimed to channel attacking coalition forces into pre-surveyed
33:16killing zones, where concentrated artillery fire would inflict severe casualties.
33:25At worst, Saddam feared that he would be expelled from Kuwait, but without his iron grip on
33:30Iraq being threatened in the process. Losing Kuwait would have been a strategic setback,
33:37but not a disastrous one for Saddam, because his forces had already extensively looted
33:41the emirate and because he could portray this failure as the heroic defeat of a strong Arab
33:47leader who had dared to resist neo-imperialist Western intervention in the region.
33:54The real nightmare scenario for Saddam was a military campaign that not just liberated
34:00Kuwait from Iraqi occupation, but in the process undermined his control over the Iraqi state.
34:09What Saddam didn't fully appreciate is that no member of the coalition had the slightest
34:14intention of removing him from Iraq. They might have been delighted if Saddam had actually
34:22fallen or fallen to an assassin's bullet, but there was not the slightest intention
34:27that he should be removed from Iraq by force.
34:31At 4am on the 24th of February 1991, the ground war commenced, with coalition forces striking
34:39the Iraqi defences that faced the northern border of Saudi Arabia. By then, Saddam had
34:46positioned 24 regular army infantry divisions along this border as a first line of defence.
34:53In each of these positions, Saddam had concentrated his most effective ground formations in northwestern
34:58Kuwait or west of Kuwait's border with Iraq. This mobile reserve comprised eight regular
35:05army divisions, together with seven elite divisions of Saddam's politically reliable
35:10Republican Guard. The latter represented a key target that Schwarzkopf's ground plan
35:16intended to destroy.
35:19The Republican Guard was not just a better equipped, better trained, more motivated part
35:27of the Iraqi armed forces. The Republican Guard was a separate armed force which was
35:36especially politically reliable, that was especially responsible to the Iraqi regime.
35:44The deployment, therefore, of the Republican Guard might be seen in two ways. The first
35:49way, it might be seen as the sword that was actually behind the shield. Once the shield
35:54cracked open, the counter-attacking forces of the Republican Guard would be able to push
35:59the coalition back from whence they'd come, or in fact destroy them. Actually, they were
36:04deployed in the northern region of Kuwaiti theatre of operations, so that they could
36:09run away, so that they wouldn't be destroyed, if at all possible, by the rampaging coalition
36:14forces once they broke through. So they could get back to Baghdad and do their primary job
36:19in terms of political defence of the Ba'athist regime, and Saddam Hussein in particular.
36:26During the morning of the 24th of February, the first US Marine and Arab assaults into
36:31southeastern Kuwait overran the entrenched Iraqi defences more easily than the coalition
36:36had expected. This unanticipated success forced Schwarzkopf to initiate the 7th Corps' assault
36:43that same afternoon, earlier than planned. That evening, General Franks' divisions quickly
36:50breached the weak western end of Iraq's frontier defence line.
37:00During the following day, Franks' Corps, urged on by Schwarzkopf, conducted a depth battle,
37:06using aircraft, attack helicopters and long-range missiles to soften up targets behind the current
37:11front line, before then engaging them. By using these tactics, 7th Corps rapidly advanced
37:19north-east across the flat, featureless, sandy terrain, to overrun successive Iraqi positions.
37:26The thousands of coalition vehicles did not get lost, however, thanks to their use of
37:30the new global positioning system, GPS technology.
37:36Out in a flat, featureless desert, getting lost using conventional mapping would be very
37:42easy indeed. With GPS, military forces could know where they were in the middle of the
37:48night, in the middle of a sandstorm.
37:51Also absolutely crucial in going hand-in-hand with the global positioning systems at night
37:55was something called TOGs, Thermal Optical Gun Sights, which meant that with the ability
38:02to understand exactly where they were and exactly where the enemy were, they could actually
38:06engage the enemy at night. Using the thermals that the enemy's vehicles actually gave off,
38:12they could actually attack an enemy at a range of about 2,500 metres, which meant that before
38:17the enemy even knew that the coalition forces were there, and especially the Americans and
38:21the British, using these systems, they were dead.
38:26During the 24th and 25th of February, as Franks' army charged north-east in a great wheel,
38:32the 101st US Airborne Division launched a series of air assaults up to 110 miles deep
38:38into Iraqi territory, to isolate the Kuwaiti theatre from any Iraqi reinforcements.
38:44Meanwhile in the east, the gung-ho US Marines continued their frontal assault towards Kuwaiti
38:50City.
38:54The early successes achieved by every coalition assault during the first 24 hours of the ground
38:59war prompted Saddam to order a phased withdrawal north out of Kuwait on the 25th of February.
39:07This withdrawal, however, soon degenerated into a rout, characterised by mass surrenders.
39:13Some dispirited Iraqi soldiers even surrendered to an unmanned reconnaissance plane.
39:21Meanwhile, out in the west, during the 26th of February, General Franks' divisions continued
39:29to thunder rapidly east, past the Wadi al-Batin, in the process devastating the Tawakalna Republican
39:36Guard Division in the Battle of the 73rd Easting.
39:41That same day, coalition intelligence detected that some of Saddam's Republican Guard were
39:46preparing to withdraw north, and this prompted Schwarzkopf to demand that Franks speed up
39:51the advance of his forces.
39:55These repeated demands provoked a furious disagreement that day between the more cautious
39:59Franks and the CENTCOM commander, a rout subsequently fuelled by Franks' decision to halt some of
40:06his divisions that night.
40:09In the interest of not allowing one division to get too far ahead to expose its flanks,
40:19Franks has got to stop some of his formations to let others catch up.
40:25The main reason why Franks decided to halt his divisions at night on certain occasions
40:32was not fear of enemy action, but rather fear of blue-on-blue incidents, friendly fire incidents
40:39from his own forces in confused night-fighting operations.
40:46The sheer speed of advance achieved by coalition forces made it increasingly difficult to identify
40:52them from enemy ones on this now fluid battlefield.
40:56Unfortunately, several friendly fire incidents resulted.
41:01On the afternoon of the 26th of February, for example, an American A-10 Warthog plane
41:06destroyed two British Warrior armoured vehicles, killing nine soldiers.
41:12These sad incidents highlighted the fact that friendly fire now represented as great a threat
41:17to the coalition as the enemy.
41:20It was very difficult to actually recognise who was friendly and who was enemy on the
41:26battlefield.
41:27The technology at the time, which had very much developed as a result of the Vietnam
41:31War, was directed towards finding out what movement there was on the battlefield.
41:37But it didn't differentiate between friendly forces and enemy forces.
41:42And often when quick decisions are required on the battlefield, very chaotic, very high
41:48odds, mistakes were made.
41:52In the Gulf War, the level of casualties from enemy fire to the coalition forces was very
41:59very low.
42:01And that meant that deaths from friendly fire became a much larger proportion of those killed.
42:12If the enemy isn't killing your people, then the few who are killed by friendly fire become
42:21a larger proportion of the statistics.
42:25On the 27th of February, the 7th and 18th US Corps thrust into western Kuwait to converge
42:31on the coalition forces then advancing north beyond Kuwait City along the eastern seaboard.
42:38Late that day, however, shocking images began to flood the world's media, depicting the
42:43carnage that coalition air power had inflicted on the Iraqi forces who had attempted to escape
42:48from Kuwait north along the Basra Road.
43:00In what became known as the Basra Road Syndrome, these images quickly altered world opinion,
43:06creating the belief that the war had degenerated into the murderous rout of a beaten force
43:11by the awesomely powerful coalition.
43:19Fearing a powerful political backlash, consequently the coalition announced a ceasefire at 8 a.m.
43:27on the 28th of February, exactly 100 hours after the ground campaign had begun.
43:40Throughout this four-day ground campaign, coalition forces had encountered only modest
43:45Iraqi resistance. This fact goes a long way to explaining the unbelievably low casualty
43:50rate that the coalition suffered in the conflict, with a total of just 170 battle casualties.
43:57In fact, the Iraqis, despite their significant forces and modern equipment, performed unimpressively
44:03during the conflict, as evidenced by the capture of 48,000 Iraqi soldiers in just 100 hours
44:10of battle.
44:17There is a brilliant computer model, which in recent years has shown that if you model
44:24the battles of the Gulf War on a computer, and if on that computer you increase the level
44:32of Iraqi training, suddenly the war is much less one-sided than it was. It's not just
44:40so much that the Iraqi soldier was less motivated than the coalition soldier, although he was.
44:48The real difference in the Gulf War comes from the fact that the coalition soldiers
44:54were very much better trained than the Iraqi soldiers.
45:01On the day following the ceasefire, Iraq announced its compliance with all the UN resolutions
45:06concerning the invasion of Kuwait. Soon after, the Shiite and Kurdish minorities in southern
45:13and northern Iraq respectively rose up in rebellion against Saddam. However, the coalition,
45:19now anxious to disengage from the region, refused to intervene in what they described
45:24as an internal Iraqi affair. This disinterest encouraged Saddam, who dispatched his surviving
45:31Republican guards, to suppress these rebellions. Then, in the following months, UN weapons
45:37inspectors began the difficult job of locating and dismantling Saddam's facility for making
45:42nuclear, biological and chemical weapons.
45:47The defeat doesn't necessarily erode Saddam's control over Iraq. In many ways it reinforces
45:54it. Partly because it enables Saddam to square the circle that he'd been facing since the
46:02end of the Iran-Iraq war, in that he told the Iraqis they'd won a great victory, but
46:07their economy and their standard of living was severely damaged. Now he has a wonderful
46:15excuse for Iraq's problems in the form of the coalition and what it's done.
46:21Saddam remained in power. The subsequent attempts to dismantle his weapons of mass
46:28destruction, his chemical, biological and possibly nuclear capabilities met with some
46:33success, but faced constant bureaucratic obstruction and prevarication from within Iraq.
46:41At the strategic level, the Gulf War was an unqualified success. Saddam Hussein could
46:46not control the price of oil in the world. At an operational level, it did not achieve
46:54all of its aims, but it doesn't matter. As long as you achieve your strategic aims, then
47:01you can walk away and say that that was a victory.
47:05Today, Saddam Hussein still controls Iraq and still seems to pose a threat to the region.
47:13Through dogged obstructionism, Saddam eventually even managed to rid himself of the UN weapons
47:18inspectors. In their absence, Iraq has reportedly begun to rebuild its weapons of mass destruction.
47:42Thank you for watching.
48:12For more UN videos visit www.un.org

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