The Onset of the Iran-Iraq War
The tension between Iran and Iraq had deep roots. Long-standing major problems
included rivalries between the minority Sunni Muslims who dominated Iraq
and the majority Shiites, Kurdish aspirations to nationhood that challenged
both countries as well as Turkey and Syria, and disputes over borders that
confined Iraq to its narrow and tenuous access to the Persian Gulf by way
of the Shatt al Arab waterway. In 1969, when Britain announced its intent
to withdraw from the Gulf, Iran and Iraq already seemed poised for war.
Iran was concerned over its neighbor's Pan-Arab Ba'th ideology, zeal for
revolutionary socialism, and antiWestern orientation. Iraq feared the Shah's
aggressive stance, buttressed as it was by a large armament program and
support from the United States. That year did see a small confrontation
over the boundary along the Gulf, and disputes flared in the 1970s as well,
once when Iran occupied three Gulf islands in 1971 and several times later
over the border.38
Most of those differences appeared to have been put to rest by the Algiers
Treaty in 1975. This agreement settled the border dispute over the Shatt
al Arab waterway in Iran's favor and ended the Shah's support of Kurdish
insurgents in Iraq. At the same time, Iraq renounced a long-standing claim
to the southwestern portion of Iran, an area called Arabistan by Iraq and
Khuzestan by Iran, and recognized Iranian control of the disputed Gulf
islands.
Saddam Hussein, already a dominant force in the Ba'th party, took over
the presidency in 1979, the same year that the fundamentalist Shiite regime
came to power in Iran. The Iranian revolutionaries revived past disputes
and added a new one, Iranian incitement of Shiite discontent in Iraq. When
the Iranian monarchy was overthrown, Iraq
16
denounced the Algiers Treaty and demanded restoration of the eastern
bank of the Shatt al Arab as the border. After a period of mutual sporadic
border violations and skirmishes, Iraq attacked its neighbor in earnest
in the summer of 1980.39
The war, extremely ill conceived, resulted directly from President Saddam
Hussein's poor political judgment. The situation could have been contained,
as it had been in the past, and Iraqi interests could have been promoted
short of war. But Iran appeared weak and disorganized, and the Iraqi president
thought he could easily win. His miscalculation of his opponent and corresponding
overestimate of his own ability to impose a solution proved disastrous.
It was exactly the kind of error that a highly personalized leadership
lacking institutional checks and balances was inclined to make.40
The Reagan Approach
The Ronald W Reagan administration, which took office in 1981 when the
war between Iran and Iraq was only a few months old, built on the Carter
Doctrine. Reagan gave permanence and substance to the new approach and
expanded the doctrine beyond the original commitment to deal with threats
from outside the Gulf to cover any threat to Saudi Arabia. The United States
would not, he avowed at a news conference on 1 October 1981, "stand by
and see that taken by anyone that would shut off that oil." Moreover, he
indicated readiness to keep open the Strait of Hormuz in the event that
Iran tried to close the Persian Gulf to shipping.41
Reagan's military plans for Gulf security were more ambitious than those
of his predecessor. The Reagan administration regarded the lack of an actual
American military presence as a tacit invitation to Soviet intervention.
The refusal of the Persian Gulf States to accept American military forces
frustrated the Reagan government, so the new administration strengthened
the rapid deployment concept with significant expenditures for military
construction in the Middle East and nearby areas. In the first Reagan administration,
the United States spent nearly $1 billion on construction and support facilities,
in Morocco, at Lajes Field in the Azores, and on the Indian Ocean island
base of Diego Garcia. Reagan also made the first official assignment of
forces to the rapid deployment force on 24 April 1981 and gave it a prominent
place in the defense establishment.42
While the Carter administration had buried the rapid deployment force
within the U.S. Army Readiness Command, Reagan gave it visibility and prominence.
In October 1981 the connection to the Readiness Command ended, and the
task force became a separate command reporting directly to the secretary
of defense through the Joint Chiefs of Staff. One month later, Exercise
BRIGHT STAR 82 showed the growth of plans and forces, testing a broad range
of tactical and logistical capabilities. On 1 January 1983, the force became
one of six U.S. multiservice commands. Renamed United States Central Command,
its specified theater of
17
operations included Southwest Asia and northeast Africa. Its commander
was given charge of nearly all American military activity in that part
of the world, including planning for contingencies, coordinating joint
exercises involving American and other forces, and administering security
assistance. The command oversaw the airborne warning and control system
(AWACS), the tanker aircraft at Riyadh, and the Navy's five-ship Middle
East Force. Its total deployment potential stood at 300,000.43
Despite the increase in the size and capability of the deployable force,
there were limits to the American ability to move its forces overseas.
The United States still needed bases and facilities in the Persian Gulf,
and, although it alone in the West could contribute significantly to the
defense of the Gulf, it could not transfer a large combat force on short
notice. Throughout the 1980s, Central Command planners emphasized helping
friendly nations in the Middle East defend themselves through training,
arms sales, and military liaison as well as joint maneuvers. The force
reassured countries like Saudi Arabia, which rejected an overt American
presence but needed to know that support was available in an emergency.44
The success of a rapid transfer of U.S. troops to the Persian Gulf depended
on Saudi acceptance and support. Whether the threat came from the Soviet
Union or an aggressive neighbor such as Iran or Iraq, access to Dhahran
and King Khalid Military City were necessary for any major deployment.
Bases at Diego Garcia and elsewhere provided peripheral facilities but
were too remote to use as operational centers for the defense of the oil
facilities of the upper and central Persian Gulf.45
The Gulf Cooperation Council
While the rapid deployment force was an ingredient in the American recipe
for regional stability, the United States also wanted to foster the establishment
of a viable partnership among the Persian Gulf States. When war started
between Iran and Iraq in 1980, Saudi Arabia and the states along the southern
shore of the Gulf watched warily. Some, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and Bahrain
among them, had experienced Iranian threats even before the war started.
The Arab states around the Gulf generally backed Iraq. Saudi Arabia
and Kuwait were particularly outspoken in their support. Both contributed
substantially to the $40 to $50 billion that all the Gulf States provided
Iraq. In addition, both allowed Iraq to use their ports for arms shipments
and sold oil on behalf of Iraq. Saudi Arabia also allowed Iraq to build
and use a pipeline through its territory.46
Although Kuwait was among the most generous contributors to the Iraqi
cause, there were some things it would not do. Early in the war, Iraq renewed
a proposal it had made in 1975 for 99-year leases on the islands of Bubiyan
and Warbah. Kuwait refused. In 1984 Saddam Hussein scaled down his request
to a 20-year lease in exchange for an agreement to a definitive border.
Once more Kuwait declined.47
18
Despite their open support of Iraq during the early stages of the war,
Kuwait and Saudi Arabia understood that in the long run Iraq threatened
their security. With this threat in mind, they led the effort to create
the Gulf Cooperation Council, a regional defense alliance that was established
in May 1981. In addition to Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, members included Bahrain,
Oman, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates, a confederation made up of the
sheikhdoms of Abu Dhabi, Ajman, Dubai, Fujiera, Ra's al Khaymah, Sharjah,
and Umm al Qaywayn. Iraq, which in 1974 had proclaimed itself "the most
important and advanced Arab country in the area" and consequently protector
of the Gulf "against dangers and encroachments," sought, but was denied,
membership. The council tried to contain the war between its powerful neighbors
and ultimately bring both sides to the bargaining table.48
Militarily, the Saudi armed forces formed the key to the council's limited
defensive capabilities. The kingdom was by far the largest and most powerful
of the six members. With oil reserves and revenues that dwarfed those of
the others, it had the largest armed forces and good lines of communications.
However, its military prowess was only imposing in contrast to that of
the other members. A lack of manpower severely limited the capabilities
of the Saudis, although the military infrastructure built under Corps of
Engineers contracts compensated somewhat by enabling the Saudis to take
advantage of the most technically advanced weapons.49
While Iran and Iraq slugged it out, the Gulf Cooperation Council progressed
toward its goal of creating an effective regional security structure. Despite
the pointed rejection of the Iraqi application, the members continued to
view fundamentalist Iran as the more immediate threat. Saudi Arabia and
Kuwait continued in the forefront as providers of material aid to Iraq.50
The council expressed interest in cooperation with the United States
but still wanted to keep actual forces at arm's length. Member states did
not agree with the United States regarding the nature of the threat to
regional stability. The United States emphasized the Soviet peril, at least
until the middle of the decade, when American policy makers began to put
more stress on strengthening the Arab side of the Gulf against a potential
Iranian threat to the flow of oil. The council always worried more about
its powerful and quarrelsome neighbors and Israel than about the Soviet
Union.51
The United States and the Iran-Iraq War
During the 1980s confusion in American policy caused a crisis in relations
with the Gulf States. In 1984 the United States, concerned that Iran might
win the war and become a long-range menace to the supply of oil, reestablished
diplomatic relations with Iraq, after a seventeen-year break. At the same
time, some American officials embarked on the clandestine sale of arms
to Iran, in direct contradiction to the official effort to withhold them
from Tehran. They channeled the money from that venture to
19
F-16 fighters at a Saudi air base during DESERT SHIELD
the support of a Nicaraguan insurgency dear to the heart of President
Reagan, casting considerable doubt on American purpose and reliability.52
The
United States also sold AWACS to the Saudis and began joint planning for
modernization of the Saudi air force, which had started shortly after the
fall of the Shah of Iran.53
In 1988, when Kuwait responded to Iranian attacks on its shipping by
asking the superpowers for protection, it found the United States eager
to provide assistance and reassurance of its steadfast support. To restore
its position in the Gulf, the United States agreed to reflag and convoy
Kuwaiti ships. Protection of the flow of oil was in any case still a paramount
American interest, and President Reagan affirmed his commitment to safeguard
Gulf exports. Along with the reflagging went a major American naval deployment
to protect the tankers.54
The United States and Saudi Arabia maintained their close military relationship
throughout the Iran-lraq war. American diplomats continued to enjoy easy
access to the ruling family, although they never convinced the Saudis to
agree formally to American access to their bases or abandon their opposition
to the stationing of American soldiers in the kingdom. The official Saudi
position was that both superpowers should keep their forces out of the
Persian Gulf. The Saudis, however, never objected to the American naval
contingent in Bahrain and other period-
20
ic displays of American might in threatening situations. Limited American
deployments, among them minesweepers, operational aircraft, and the AWACS,
were acceptable.55
Reinforcement by U.S. forces in an emergency was always a basic component
of Saudi defense planning, albeit only in event of a clear and immediate
threat. In fact, to many observers, Saudi installations appeared plainly
overbuilt, as if actually intended only for other forces. Saudi bases,
with their modern infrastructure and service facilities, could accept an
American deployment on very short notice. Those bases, combined with the
large quantities of American supplies and equipment purchased ostensibly
for Saudi use, ultimately constituted the virtual equivalent of American
bases in Saudi Arabia, albeit without the American personnel needed to
translate their potential into actual combat power.
The Saudi military buildup was principally oriented on aviation facilities.
The Saudis had the largest and some of the most modern air bases in the
region, with American contractor employees servicing their equipment and
American-trained technicians among their own ground crews. Although rejecting
any combined maneuvers, they recognized the need for cooperation with a
Central Command deployment when necessary. Short of that necessity, however,
they insisted that cooperation remain based on Saudi military buildups
with American arms and technical assistance. 56
Saudi purchases from the United States did facilitate a possible deployment
of Central Command forces to Southwest Asia. Any expeditionary force would
gain an advantage if its weapons, ammunition, and parts were compatible
to the equipment used by a potential host nation. The United States achieved
a large measure of interchangeability through military assistance to the
Gulf States, despite occasional frustration at the hands of American supporters
of Israel, who saw the provision of any arms and equipment to an Arab nation
in a different light.57
From the Iran-Iraq War to the Invasion of Kuwait
The Iran-lraq war ended in August 1988 with both sides exhausted and Iraq
claiming victory but without Iraqi success in achieving control of the
Shatt al Arab. Thereafter, the United States and the Gulf States continued
to support Iraq, with American policy in the Persian Gulf trying to moderate
Iraqi behavior through closer economic ties. Despite human rights abuses
and the continuing development of chemical and nuclear weapons, Iraq's
secular leadership seemed less threatening than Iran's religious zealots.
Meanwhile, the continued financial contributions of Saudi Arabia and the
sheikhdoms of the Gulf Cooperation Council enabled Iraq to rebuild its
armed forces, which had been mauled by eight years of war.58
In spite of the continued support of Iraq, there was a growing perception
in the United States that the major near-term threats to the states of
the southern Persian Gulf and to Western oil supplies came not from the
Soviet Union but from the Gulf region itself. The Iran-lraq war had
21
shown that both combatants had the resources to sustain massive forces,
even in the face of sizable losses. Both now had the experience of a decade
of war to go with traditions of political instability. Meanwhile, the Iranian
revolution represented a constant danger not only to Iraq, but the southern
Gulf States and the industrial West as well.59
The end of the war left Iraq both remarkably strong and desperatelyweak.
By regional standards, the Iraqi armed forces appeared formidable, and
the war seemed to have forged a strong feeling of national cohesion. Iraq
believed that it had won the war and defended Arab interests against the
traditional Persian threat. Iraq also saw itself as a major oil power with
a dominant role in the region. At the same time, it had piled up a debt
estimated as high as $70 billion. The $5 to $6 billion in interest that
the government paid annually consumed nearly one-third of its oil revenues.60
The war crippled Iraq's economic development program and stifled the
social mobility that had attended it. The years of fighting left much of
the nation's industrial capacity weakened and its ability to export oil
severely impaired. Economically, the war also diminished Iraq's international
position and forced the regime into a position of dependence on its wealthy
neighbors. That reliance actually represented a continuation of the relationship
that had sustained Iraq through the war, although Iraq was convinced that
it had not received adequate support. Iraqi resentment focused largely
on wealthy Kuwait, which held territory that Iraq coveted and considered
its own.61
Although the states of the southern Gulf did not appreciate the depth
of Iraqi bitterness at their supposedly inadequate support, they were not
blind to the threat implicit in Iraq's postwar military strength and confidence.
The Saudis knew that the border with Iraq was ideal for armor operations
and that the entire Arabian Peninsula was vulnerable to attack from the
northeast. Major Saudi oil facilities were only 200 miles away. King Khalid
Military City, with its two armored brigades, provided only limited security,
and other Gulf Cooperation Council members had no military forces of consequence.
Any assault on Kuwait might easily become the first stage of a two-phase
attack on the rest of the peninsula.62
The United States shared Saudi Arabia's concerns. Kuwait, the door to
the entire oil-producing region, was very vulnerable. Threats to its stability,
either from external or internal pressures, would have wide ramifications,
endangering the flow of oil and the economic health of the industrial West.63
In the two years after the fighting between Iran and Iraq ended, Iraq
increased its pressure on Kuwait. The war had left the Shatt al Arab approach
to Al Basrah and the city itself a shambles. The opening of the waterway
to shipping remained in the distant future. Iraq again turned its attention
to the border that it shared with Kuwait. In addition to demands for compensation
for revenues allegedly lost due to Kuwaiti oil sales in excess of OPEC
quotas and for oil pumped from oil
22
Map 3 Iraq's Access to the
Gulf 1990
23
fields claimed by Iraq, Saddam Hussein's government renewed its interest
in Bubiyan and Warbah islands. He cleared the way for action by beginning
negotiations for a final settlement with Iran, massing troops on the Kuwaiti
border, and sounding out the American reaction to a possible military move
into Kuwait. Saddam appeared to ignore the restatement of the Carter Doctrine
by the administration of President George H. Bush in National Security
Directive 26 of October 1989, warning that the United States would defend
its vital interests by force if necessary.64
Meanwhile, Kuwait struggled to find a counterbalance to the increasing
Iraqi threat. It had a military agreement with Egypt that dated from the
last phase of the Iran-Iraq war and even made an overture toward Iran,
which might again serve as a potential counter to Iraq. But neither those
connections nor the Gulf Cooperation Council had the potential strength
to ward off a determined Iraqi attack. Kuwait needed protection, like that
provided by Great Britain at the turn of the century and by the United
States in 1987. Yet, like Saudi Arabia and other Arab states, Kuwait accepted
American construction support and air defense missiles but stopped short
of inviting an American presence in support of its own defense. That refusal,
grounded in strong feelings of national pride, race, and religion, reflected
an unrealistic assessment of its situation. As historian Theodore Draper
wrote during the year of the tanker war, in which Kuwaiti oil tankers began
to fly American flags, "Kuwait was too rich to be left alone and too weak
to defend itself."65
During the first seven months of 1990, Iraqi troop movements and presidential
bombast foreshadowed the impending crisis. But, like Saudi Arabia and Kuwait,
the United States did not recognize the imminence of the Iraqi threat until
it was too late.66 On 2 August 1990, when Iraqi tanks rolled
through Kuwait to the Saudi border and Saddam Hussein's government declared
that Kuwait no longer existed as an independent country, perceptions quickly
changed. President Bush quickly decided to uphold the Carter Doctrine and
commit the United States to direct military action.
With a large majority of the nations of the world opposed to the invasion
of Kuwait, President Bush built a broad-based coalition in support of intervention.
The United States, which took the lead in developing and coordinating opposition
to Iraq, achieved a diplomatic triumph of great magnitude and far-reaching
consequence. Urged forward by the United States, the United Nations General
Assembly imposed an embargo on Iraq, and the Security Council voted to
condemn the invasion. Almost immediately coalition forces moved toward
Southwest Asia. By far the largest contributor to the force, the United
States honored commitments to Saudi Arabia first made by President Truman.67
The result was Operation DESERT SHIELD, which before it was over became
the DESERT STORM.
Notes
1 Christine Moss Helms, Iraq: Eastern Flank of the Arab World (Washington,
D.C.: Brookings Institution, 1984), pp. 42, 44-45; Paul D. Wolfowitz, "Remarks
on the Conclusion of the Gulf War," American-Arab Affairs, no. 35
(Winter 1990-91): 6; Phebe Mart, The Modem History of Iraq (Boulder,
Colo.: Westview Press, 1985), p. 1.
2 David Fromkin, A Peace To End All Peace: Creating the Modern
Middle East 1914-1922 (New York: Henry Holt and Co., 1989), p. 560.
3 Daniel Yergin, The Prize: The Epic Questfor Oil, Money, and Power
(New York: Simon and Schuster, 1991), p. 201.
4 Ibid., pp. 160-64, 184-85.
5 Helms, Iraq, pp. 40-41; Yergin, The Prize, p. 185.
6 Marr, Modem History of Iraq, p. 5 1.
7 Yergin, The Prize, pp. 283, 292-94.
8 Ibid., pp. 291, 297, 300.
9 Francis Robinson, Atlas of the Islamic World Since 1500 (New
York: Facts on File, 1982), p. 158, Mart, Modern History of Iraq,
pp. 86-87,
10 Robert Lacey, The Kingdom: Arabia & the House of Saud
(New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 198 1), p. 261; William B. Quandt,
Saudi Arabia in the 1980s: Foreign Policy, Security, and Oil
(Washington, D.C.Brookings Institution, 1981), p. 47; Yergin, The
Prize, p. 393.
11 Robinson, Atlas of the Islamic World, p. 158; John E. Peterson,
Defending Arabia (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1986), p. 4.
12 Yergin, The Prize, pp. 463-64, 475, 477,783.
13 Ibid., pp. 498, 508; Robinson, Atlas of the Islamic World,
p. 159; Marr, Modem History of Iraq, p. 195; Helms,
Iraq, p. 1.
14 Marr, Modern History of Iraq, pp123, 125, 153~ Yergin, The
Prize, p. 509.
15 Yergin, The Prize, p. 523.
16 Mart, Modern History of Iraq, p. 29; William Jackson, Withdrawal
from Empire, A Military View (London: Batsford, Ltd., 1986), p. 125,
Yergin, The Prize, pp. 565-66, Fromkin, A Peace To End
All Peace, pp. 562-63.
17 Marr, Modern History of Iraq, pp. 123,162-64,175,180.
18 Richard F. Nyrop, ed., Iraq: A Country Study (Washington,
D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1979), p. 68; Yergin, The Prize, pp.
236-37.
19 Nyrop, ed., Iraq: A Country Study, p. 236.
20 Yergin, The Prize, p. 524; Trevor N. Dupuy, How To Defeat
Saddam Hussein (New York: Warner Books, 1991), p. 9; Marr, Modern
History of Iraq, pp. 180-81; Thomas L. McNaugher, "Arms and Allies
on the Arabian Peninsula," Orbis (Fall 1984): 519.
21 Marr, Modern History of Iraq, pp. 178-81.
22 ibid., pp. 183, 191, 205, 207-08, Helms, Iraq, pp. 138-39.
23 Mart, Modern History of Iraq, pp. 207-08, 211, 214-15, Frederick
W. Axelgard, A New Iraq? The Gulf War and Implicationsfor U.S. Policy,
The Washington Papers, no. 133 (New York: Praeger, 1988), p. 11.
24 David L. Price, Oil and Middle East Security, The Washington
Papers, vol. 4, no. 41 (Beverly Hills, Calif.: Sage Publications, for the
Center for Strategic and International Studies, Georgetown University,
1976), p. 60; Nyrop, ed., Iraq: A Country Study, p. 237.
25 Nadav Safran, Saudi Arabia: The Ceaseless Quest for Security
(Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 1985), p. 138.
26 David Holden and Richard Johns, The House of Saud: The Rise and
Rule of the Most Powerful Dynasty in the Arab World (New York: Holt,
Rinehart and Winston, 1981), p. 149; Robert W. Stookey, America & the
Arab States: An Uneasy Encounter (New York: John Wiley and Sons, 1975),
pp. xiii, 54-55.
27 Stookey, America & the Arab States, pp. 54-55, 263~ Michael Sterner,
"The Gulf Cooperation Council and Persian Gulf Security," in Thomas Nall,
ed., Gulf Security and the IranIraq War (Washington, D.C.: National
Defense University Press and Middle East Research Institute, 1985), pp.
5-6; Yergin, The Prize, p. 646.
28 Peterson, Defending Arabia, p. 56; Stookey, America &
the Arab States, p. 88; Quandt, Saudi Arabia in the 1980s, pp.
48-49, 52; Holden and Johns, The House of Saud, pp. 157-58; Anthony
H. Cordesman, The Gulf and the West: Strategic Relations and Military
Realities (Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1988), p. 206; Yergin, The
Prize, pp. 427-28.
29 Stookey, America & the Arab States, p. 88, MS, John T.
Greenwood, Diplomacy Through Construction: The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
in Saudi Arabia, Office of History, Headquarters, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
[19881, pp. 2-4, 6. All other unpublished documents are in U.S. Army Center
of Military History (CMH), Washington, D.C., files unless otherwise stated.
30 Safran, Saudi Arabia, pp. 172-73, 204; Quandt, Saudi Arabia
in the 1980s, pp. 51-52' Holden and Johns, The House of Saud, p.
359.
31 Safran, Saudi Arabia, pp. 208-09 McNaugher, "Arms and Allies
on the Arabian Peninsula," p. 507.
32 MS, Greenwood, Diplomacy Through Construction, pp. 9-10.
33 Quandt, Saudi Arabia in the 1980s, pp. 142, 156; Safran, Saudi
Arabia, pp. 151, 214; Cordesman, The Gulf and the West, p. 240,
Peterson, Defending Arabia, pp. 7, 118, 145.
34 Peterson, Defending Arabia, pp. 7, 146-47; Maxwell Orme Johnson,
The Military as an Instrument of U.S. Policy in Southwest Asia: The
Rapid Deploymentjoint Task Force, 1979-1982 (Boulder, Colo.: Westview
Press, 1983), pp. 9-10.
35 Quote from Yergin, The Prize, p, 702; Johnson, The Military
as an Instrument of U.S. Policy, p. 1.
36 Yergin, The Prize, p. 702; Johnson, The Military as an
Instrument of U.S. Policy, pp. 1, 8, 34; Peterson, Defending Arabia,
p. 6; Majid Khadduri, The Gulf War: The Origins & Implications
of the Iran-Iraq Conflict (New York: Oxford University Press, 1988),
pp. 143-44.
37 Johnson, The Military as an Instrument of U.S. Policy, pp.
98-99.
38 Khadduri, The Gulf War, p. 17; Mart, Modern History of
Iraq, pp. 211,229.
39 Marr, Modern History of Iraq, pp. 234, 245; Khadduri, The
Gulf War, pp. 83-85.
40 Marr, Modern History of Iraq, pp. 292, 295; Shahram
Chubin and Charles Tripp, Iran and Iraq at War (Boulder, Colo.:
Westview Press, 1988), p. 7.
41 Peterson, Defending Arabia, p. 7; Quote from Johnson, The
Military as an Instrument of U.S. Policy, p. 40; Harold H. Saunders,
"The Iran-Iraq War: Implications for US Policy," in Nall, ed., Gulf
Security and the Iran-Iraq War, p. 65.
42 Khadduri, The Gulf War, p. 144; Cordesman, The Gulf
and the West, p. 137; Johnson, The Military as an Instrument of
U.S. Policy, p. 95.
43 Peterson, Defending Arabia, p. 153; Johnson, The
Military as an Instrument of U.S. Policy, p. 99.
44 Cordesman, The Gulf and the West, pp. 2, 11, 137; Peterson,
Defending Arabia, pp. 238-39; Quandt, Saudi Arabia in
the 1980s, p. 56; Khadduri, The Gulf War, p. 144.
45 Cordesman, The Gulf and the West, p. 141.
46 Johnson, The Military as an Instrument of U.S. Policy, p.
114; Khadduri, The Gulf War, pp. 126-27; Axelgard,
A New Iraq?, pp. 73-74, Chubin and Tripp, Iran and Iraq at War,
p. 154.
47 Igard, A New Iraq?, p. 75.
48 Ibid., p. 73; Khadduri, The Gulf War, p. 151; Quote from Ba'th
Party, The 1968 Revolution in Iraq, Experience and Prospects, the
Political Report of the Arab Ba'th Socialist Party in Iraq, January 1974,
as cited in Efraim Karsh and Inari Rautsi, Saddam Hussein, A Political
Biography (New York: Free Press, 1991), p. 63.
49 Peterson, Defending Arabia, p. 200; Cordesman, The Gulf
and the West, pp.149,151,194,196; McNaugher, "Arms and Allies," pp.
513-18.
50 Axelgard, A New Iraq?, p. 74.
51 Cordesman, The Gulf and the West, p. 41 Peterson, Defending
Arabia, pp. 8-9, 242-43; Saunders, "The Iran-Iraq War," p. 70.
52 Axelgard, A New Iraq?, pp. 14-16; Cordesman, The Gulf and
the West, p. 313.
53 Sterner, "The Gulf Cooperation Council," p. 16; Quandt, Saudi
Arabia in the 1980s, p. 53; Cordesman, The Gulf and the West, p.
240.
54 Cordesman, The Gu1f and the West, pp. 2, 310, 327, Yergin,
The Prize, p. 765; Anthony H. Cordesman and Abraham R. Wagner, The
Lessons of Modern War, vol. II, The Iran-Iraq War (Boulder,
Colo.: Westview Press, 1990), pp. 289-90, 391-92.
55 Cordesman, The Gulf and the West, pp. 141-42; Quandt, Saudi
Arabia in the 1980s, pp. 2, 55.
56 Cordesman, The Gulf and the West, pp. 142-43; Quandt, Saudi
Arabia in the 1980s, p. 156, Peterson, Defending Arabia, pp.
148, 203; Khadduri, The Gulf War, p. 143.
57 Cordesman, The Gulf and the West, pp. 7, 13.
58 Helms, Iraq, pp. 163-64; Stephen C. Pelletiere, Douglas V.
Johnson II, and Leif R. Rosenberger, Iraqi Power and U.S. Security in
the Middle East (Carlisle Barracks, Pa.: Strategic Studies institute,
Army War College, 1990), pp. 42, 53; Judith Miller and Laurie Mylroie,
Saddarn Hussein and the Crisis in the Gulf (New York: Times Books,
1990), pp. 148-49, 189-90; New York Times, 10 Apr 91; Don Oberdorfer, "Mixed
Signals in the Middle East," Washington Post Magazine (17 March
1991): 20-21.
59 Cordesman, The Gulf and the West, p. 81.
60 Yergin, The Prize, p. 767; Pelletiere, Johnson, and Rosenberger,
Iraqi Power and U.S. Security, p. 53; Tom (Tsutomu) Kono, "Road
to the Invasion," American-Arab Affairs, no. 34 (Fall 1990): 29-30.
61 Marr, Modern History of Iraq, p. 245; Miller and Mylroie,
Saddam Hussein and the Crisis in the Gulf, pp. 8-9, 193-94; Kono,
"Road to the Invasion," p. 41.
62 Cordesman, The Gulf and the West, pp. 4, 93-94; Saftan, Saudi
Arabia, p 206; McNaugher, "Arms and Allies," p. 496; Karsh and Rautsi,
Saddam Hussein, A Political Biography, p. 63.
63 Cordesman, The Gulf and the West, pp. 4, 309; Peterson, Defending
Arabia, p. 246.
64 National Security Directive 26, U.S. Policy Toward the Persian
Gulf, 2 Oct 89; Kono, "Road to the Invasion," pp. 41-43; New York
Times, 21 Mar 91; Oberdorfer, "Mixed Signals," pp. 21,36.
65 Kono, "Road to the Invasion," p. 41; Cordesman, The Gulf and the
West, p. 108; Quote from Miller and Mylroie, Saddam Hussein and
the Crisis in the Gulf, p. 215.
66 Oberdorfer, "Mixed Signals," pp. 22-23,36-41.
67 Yergin, The Prize, p. 772, Dupuy, How To Defeat
Saddam Hussein, p. 19; Miller and Mylroie, Saddam, Hussein
and the Crisis in the Gulf, pp. 227-28.
page updated 7 June 2001
Source: The Whirlwind War: The United States Army in Operations DESERT SHIELD and DESERT STORM