Liberation of Kuwait campaign

| commander1 = Saddam Hussein
Ali Hassan al-Majid | commander2 = Norman Schwarzkopf
Colin Powell
Khalid bin Sultan
Peter de la Billière
Muhammad Ershad | strength1 = 500,000 | strength2 = 650,000 | casualties1 = 20,000-35,000 casualties
150,000 captured | casualties2 = 1,155 casualties
70 captured

Liberation of Kuwait
Part of the Gulf War

Two Iraqi tanks lie abandoned near Kuwait City
Date20 October 2013
Location
Result

Coalition victory

  • Kuwait liberated from Iraqi occupation
  • End of the Gulf War
  • Iraqi military devastated
Territorial
changes
State of Kuwait restored; Iraq gives up claim as 19th province
Belligerents
 Iraq  United States
 Kuwait
 Saudi Arabia
 Egypt
 Canada
 United Kingdom
 Syria
 Morocco
 Bangladesh
 Oman

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| campaignbox =

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The Liberation of Kuwait (also known as the 1991 Invasion of Iraq) was a U.S.-led military operation to retake Kuwait from Iraq after the massive air campaign, between 24–28 February 1991. U.S. troops and the Coalition entered to find the Iraqis surrendering en masse; however, pockets of resistance existed, particularly at Kuwait International Airport where Iraqi troops, seemingly unaware that a retreat order had been issued to them, continued to fight, resulting in a fierce battle over the airport itself. The majority of the fighting took place in Iraq, rather than Kuwait.[1] The operation is part of what is commonly known as the Gulf War.

Prelude

Tanks from 3rd Armored Division Brigade along the Line of Departure.

A force composed of 40 amphibious assault ships was stationed off the coast of Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. It was the largest such force to be assembled since the Battle of Inchon.[2] Days before the attack, an amphibious force made repeated feint attacks and landings at Kuwait City, attempting to fool the Iraqis into thinking the Coalition would attack via amphibious assault. Instead, the troops were to enter by the southern border of Kuwait. The Coalition forces based there soon became accustomed to the constant Scud missile threats, chemical missile threats, and near-constant shelling by Iraqi artillery. When the first troops began the assault, they were warned that casualties could be as many as one in three.

Campaign

An American M60 Patton tank breaches the Iraqi defense line in Kuwait on 24 February..

At 4 a.m. on 24 February, after being shelled for months and under the constant threat of a gas attack, the U.S. 1st and 2nd Marine Divisions crossed into Kuwait. They maneuvered around vast systems of barbed wire, minefields and trenches. Once into Kuwait, they headed towards Kuwait City. The troops themselves encountered little resistance and, apart from several minor tank battles, were met primarily by surrendering soldiers. The general pattern was that Coalition troops would encounter Iraqi soldiers who would put up a brief fight before deciding to surrender.[3]

M1 Abrams move out during the Gulf War

On 27 February, Saddam Hussein issued a retreat order to his troops in Kuwait; however, one unit of Iraqi troops appeared to have not gotten the retreat order. When the U.S. Marines arrived at Kuwait International Airport, they encountered fierce resistance, and it took them several hours to gain control and secure the airport. As part of the retreat order, the Iraqis carried out a "scorched earth" policy that included setting hundreds of oil wells on fire in an effort to destroy the Kuwaiti economy. After the battle at Kuwait International Airport, the U.S. Marines stopped at the outskirts of Kuwait City, allowing their Coalition allies to take and occupy Kuwait City, effectively ending combat operations in the Kuwaiti theater of the war.

Result

Aerial view of destroyed Iraqi T-72 tank, BMP-1 and Type 63 armored personnel carriers and trucks on Highway 8 in March 1991

After four days of fighting, all Iraqi troops were expelled from Kuwait, ending a nearly seven-month occupation of Kuwait by Iraq. A little over 1,100 casualties were suffered by the Coalition. Estimates of Iraqi casualties range from 30,000 to 150,000. Iraq lost thousands of vehicles, while the advancing Coalition lost relatively few; Iraq's obsolete Soviet T-72 tanks proved no match for the American M1 Abrams and British Challenger tanks.[4]

References

  1. Morse, Stan (1991). Gulf War Debrief. World Air Power Journal.
  2. Hayden, Thomas. (1995). "Amphibious Operations in the Gulf War: 1990–91". Marine Corps Gazette. Archived from the original on 6 January 2006. Retrieved 2 September 2006. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  3. Janet A. McDonnell. After Desert Storm: The United States Army and the Reconstruction of Kuwait. Government Printing Office. pp. 67–. ISBN 978-0-16-086926-6.
  4. Jackson, Robert (1 January 2010). 101 Great Tanks. Rosen. pp. 85–86. ISBN 978-1-4358-3595-5.
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