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July 17, 1990 In
televised speech, Saddam Hussein warns he will attack
Kuwait if his demands are not met regarding (1) old
border dispute, (2) decrease in Kuwaiti oil production,
(3) reduction in Kuwait's share of oil from Rumaila
oil field, which extends under Iraqi territory.
July 18 Kuwait places forces on alert. US Ambassador
to Iraq April Glaspie tells Iraqi Foreign Ministry
that US insists all disputes in Mideast be settled
peacefully.
July 19 Gen. Colin Powell, Chairman, Joint
Chiefs of Staff, telephones Gen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf,
commander in chief, US Central Command, to discuss
contingency planning for defense of Kuwait and Saudi
Arabia against attack by Iraq.
July 20 Iraqi newspapers report deployments
of Iraqi troops to border with Kuwait. CIA reports
30,000 Iraqi troops deployed.
Last two weeks of July At Eglin AFB, Fla.,
Lt. Gen. Charles Horner, commander, US Central Command
Air Forces, holds Internal Look, command post exercise
postulating invasion of Saudi Arabia by "a country
to the north." Considerable exercise time spent
determining where US reinforcements would be deployed
in Saudi Arabia in such contingency.
July 21 US installs mobile tactical air control
center at Abu Dhabi, capital of United Arab Emirates.
July 24 US, UAE announce joint exercise.
July 25 Ambassador Glaspie summoned to meet
with Saddam. He says he is dismayed at US support for
Kuwait. As separate matter, he states he will not resolve
dispute with Kuwait by force. Bush Administration officials
announce willingness to use military force to defend
the flow of oil through Strait of Hormuz.
July 26 Kuwait agrees to cut oil production
to levels demanded by Iraq.
July 30 CIA reports 100,000 Iraqi troops, 300
tanks massed on Kuwait border. Iraqi, Kuwaiti, Saudi
representatives meet in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, to reconcile
differences. Talks fail. Saddam reassures President
Hosni Mubarak of Egypt, Saudi King Fahd ibn Abdul Aziz
that he will not attack Kuwait.
Aug. 2 At 1 a.m., local time, Iraq invades
Kuwait, using land, air, naval forces. President George
Bush issues Executive Orders 12722 and 12723, declaring
national emergency; addressing threat to national security,
implications for foreign policy; freezing Kuwaiti,
Iraqi assets in US; freezing trade relations. Joint
Staff reviews options, including CENTCOM Operations
Plan 1002-90, top-secret contingency plan to move ground
troops and supporting air and naval forces to region
over three to four months. CENTCOM staff starts formulating
air campaign for defense of Saudi Arabia. UN Security
Council, in 140 vote with Yemen abstaining, passes
Resolution 660 calling for the unconditional withdrawal
of Iraqi troops from Kuwait.
Aug. 3 New US naval forces deploy. Powell confers
with service chiefs on options. Bush makes no decision
and chiefs defer any recommendation. Horner meets Schwarzkopf
at MacDill AFB, Fla. They finalize concept for CENTCOM
defensive air campaign for briefing to Bush.
Aug. 4 At Camp David, Schwarzkopf briefs Bush,
Powell, Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney on concept
for ground war. Also, Horner briefs concept for air
campaign. Eisenhower battle group dispatched from Mediterranean
to Red Sea. Independence battle group in Indian Ocean
heads for north Arabian Sea.
Aug. 5 Bush vows Iraq's invasion of Kuwait "will
not stand." He demands complete Iraqi withdrawal
from Kuwait.
Aug. 6 Cheney, Schwarzkopf, Horner (at Bush's
direction) go to Saudi Arabia to confer with King Fahd.
US proposes Operation Plan 1002-90, which would place
250,000 US troops in Gulf region within three months.
Fahd invites US, coalition forces into kingdom. Cheney,
Schwarzkopf return to Washington. Horner stays in Riyadh,
Saudi Arabia, as "CINCCENT Forward." Bush
sends to Gulf F-15 fighters from 1st Tactical Fighter
Wing (Langley AFB, Va.), troops of 82nd Airborne Division
(Ft. Bragg, N.C.), maritime pre-positioning ships anchored
at Diego Garcia and Guam.
Aug. 7 F-15s depart Langley for Saudi Arabia.
Independence battle group arrives in Gulf of Oman,
just south of Persian Gulf. US calls for other nations
to send ground forces to aid defense of Saudi Arabia.
Aug. 8 C-141 carrying airlift control element
lands in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, first USAF aircraft
in crisis zone. F-15s from 1st TFW, elements of 82nd
Airborne arrive in Saudi Arabia. US Airborne Warning
and Control System aircraft augment Saudi AWACS orbiting
over Saudi Arabia. Iraq annexes Kuwait. Headquarters
USAF activates contingency support staff. Schwarzkopf
asks Lt. Gen. Mike Loh, USAF vice chief of staff, for
help drawing up strategic air campaign. Checkmate,
Air Staff planning group under Col. John Warden in
Directorate of Plans, starts developing basic plan
for strategic air war. Britain agrees to send air and
naval forces to defend Saudi Arabia. West Germany,
Italy, Spain agree to give US transports use of airspace
and bases. Greece, Egypt authorize US airplanes to
use airspace but not bases. Japan, Soviet Union, European
Community express support for decision by US to dispatch
troops.
Aug. 9 UN Security Council votes 150 to
declare Iraq's annexation of Kuwait null and void (Resolution
662). Soviets state they will not participate in military
intervention in the Gulf, adding that they oppose force
and unilateral actions.
Aug. 10 DoD announces operation name, Desert
Shield. Warden, staff brief initial air concept plan
to Schwarzkopf at MacDill. He approves. USAF, Navy,
Army units start arriving in Gulf in large numbers,
stretching available facilities. F-16s from Shaw AFB,
S.C., C-130s from Pope AFB, N.C., arrive. Horner draws
up contingency plan for coalition forces to fall back
to Bahrain, Qatar, UAE if Iraq attacks Saudi Arabia
before sufficient defensive forces are in place. Saddam
calls for Arab holy war against US troops in Gulf and "corrupt" Arab
leaders who denounced his actions.
Aug. 11 Military Airlift Command adds capabilities
with GuardReserve volunteers and aircraft. Strategic
Air Command calls for GuardReserve volunteers
for KC-135 tankers. Warden briefs air concept plan
to Powell, who directs expanding it to ensure Iraqis
cannot escape Kuwait before their tank force is destroyed.
Powell suggests adding Navy, Marine aviators to Warden's
group.
Aug. 12 Thirty-two KC-135 tankers deploy to
Saudi Arabia as vanguard of tanker force soon to total
more than 300 KC-10s and KC-135s. MH-53J Pave Low helicopters
of 1st Special Operations Wing arrive in Dhahran. News
pool deploys to Saudi Arabia.
Aug. 14 Soviet Union joins US, coalition in
naval quarantine of Iraq. DoD announces presence of
E-3 AWACS, KC-10s, KC-135s, RC-135s in Gulf region.
Aug. 15 F-117 stealth fighters from Tonopah,
Nev., and F-4G Wild Weasels of George AFB, Calif.,
deploy.
Aug. 16 A-10 attack aircraft, Myrtle Beach
AFB, S.C., deploy.
Aug. 17 Iraqi forces in Kuwait, heavily reinforced,
build defensive positions along Saudi border. Warden
briefs revised concept plan to Schwarzkopf, CENTCOM
staff. Schwarzkopf directs Warden to take plan to Saudi
Arabia, brief it to Horner. Stage 1 of Civil Reserve
Air Fleet activates for first time in 38-year history
of CRAF, as 16 civilian carriers provide 18 Long-Range
International passenger aircraft and crews, 21 LRI
cargo aircraft, crews. Air Force Space Command establishes
DSCS satellite communications links for Desert Shield.
First afloat pre-positioned ships begin off-loading
in Saudi Arabia. Speaker of Iraqi parliament says citizens
of "aggressive" nations will be held until
crisis ends, threatens use of "human shields."
Aug. 18 John F. Kennedy battle group deploys
to Gulf.
Aug. 19 Additional F-117 fighters deploy from
Tonopah to Gulf.
Aug. 20 More US troops, including 82nd, 101st
Airborne Divisions, 24th Mechanized Infantry Division,
arrive. Horner concludes air, ground strength now sufficient
to defend Saudi Arabia against Iraqi invasion. Warden
and his group brief concept plan to Horner in Riyadh.
Aug. 21 USAF Gulf presence includes A-10s,
C-130s, E-3 AWACS, F-4Gs, F-15s, F-15Es, F-16s, F-117s,
KC-135s, KC-10s, RC-135s. Needing 6,000 Air Force reserve
volunteers, USAF gets 15,000 ready to go in 72 hours.
Cheney announces Saudi Arabia can now be successfully
defended against attack by Iraq.
Aug. 22 Bush issues Executive Order 12727,
invoking his authority to call to active duty up to
200,000 troops and units of Selected Reserve for duration
of 90 days. Second Executive Order, 12728, suspends
legal provisions relating to promotion, retirement,
separation of members of armed forces. Stop-Loss action
used to stabilize US military force for duration. Bush
announces mobilization of 40,000 reserve forces.
Aug. 23 Cheney issues memorandum implementing
call-up of reserves, setting maximum numbers: USAF,
14,500; Army, 25,000; Navy, 6,300; Marine Corps, 3,000.
Aug. 24 117th Tactical Reconnaissance Wing
(Birmingham, Ala.) deploys six RF-4C aircraft to Gulf,
joining RF-4Cs deployed by 67th TRW (Bergstrom AFB,
Tex.).
Aug. 25 USAF F-111 fighters from RAF Lakenheath,
UK, deploy.
Aug. 27 First sealift forces arrive in Saudi
Arabia.
Aug. 28 Iraq declares Kuwait to be its 19th
province. Bush, in meeting with 170 members of Congress,
defines US objectives in Gulf-"immediate, complete,
and unconditional withdrawal of all Iraqi forces from
Kuwait, the restoration of Kuwait's legitimate government,
security and stability of Saudi Arabia and the Persian
Gulf, and the protection of American citizens abroad."
Aug. 29 C-5 transport, flown by AFRES volunteers
and carrying active duty passengers and cargo to Gulf,
crashes after takeoff from Ramstein AB, Germany, killing
13 of 17.
Aug. 30 Bush urges nations around world to
help pay costs, contribute personnel, equipment for
Desert Shield. USAF F-16 fighters from Torrejon AB,
Spain, deploy to Qatar.
Sept. 45 Idea of "second front" in
Turkey briefed by Gen. Robert Oaks, USAFE commander,
to Army Gen. John Galvin, CINCEUR, who in turn discusses
it with Powell.
Sept. 5 Five ANG units begin deployment of
C-130H aircraft.
Sept. 8 First AC-130H gunships from 16th Special
Operations Squadron arrive in Gulf.
Sept. 11 Bush, in nationally televised address
to joint session of Congress, asks for continued support
for Gulf policy, repeats that Iraq's aggression "would
not stand."
Sept. 12 Iran's supreme religious leader, Ayatollah
Ali Khamenei, announces that Islamic "holy war" is
justified against US and US troops in Gulf. AC-130H
gunships from 16th Special Operations Squadron arrive
in Gulf.
Sept. 13 In Riyadh, Brig. Gen. Buster Glosson
(deputy commander, Joint Task Force Middle East) briefs
Schwarzkopf and Powell on now-complete operational
air war plan. Powell asks when USAF could execute plan.
Glosson says, "Within 24 hours."
Sept. 16 In dispatch from Saudi Arabia, Washington
Post quotes Gen. Michael Dugan, USAF Chief of Staff,
saying US planned to unleash major bombing campaign
against Iraq and that airpower would be effective.
Sept. 17 In response to Post article, Cheney
fires Dugan, claiming he "showed poor judgment
at a sensitive time."
Sept. 20 Guard, Reserve maintenance personnel
called from units and assigned to MAC to cover surge
to wartime sortie rates. Iraq's Revolutionary Command
Council declares there will be no retreat and says "mother
of all battles" is inevitable.
Sept. 23 Saddam threatens to destroy Middle
East oil fields if Iraq is "strangled" by
UN sanctions.
Sept. 28 Desert Shield sealift reaches peak
with 90 ships at sea-69 en route to Mideast, 21 on
way back for more cargo.
Sept. 29 Washington Post reports that US intelligence
sources say Iraq had stockpile of biological weapons.
Oct. 1 British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher
rejects any negotiations with Iraq.
Oct. 2 Independence enters Persian Gulf-first
carrier to sail in those confined waters since 1974.
Oct. 4 Independence exits Gulf.
Oct. 10 USAF fighter units arriving in area
of responsibility fly training sorties to prepare for
desert warfare. F-15C combat air patrol is now routine.
In US, small anti-war movement emerges. Relatives of
some troops deployed to Gulf participate in Capitol
Hill protest against Desert Shield.
Oct. 15 L'Express of Paris publishes article
describing four-stage US plan to attack Iraq: (1) US
Air Force destroys Iraqi air force; (2) US Air Force
destroys Iraq's military industries; (3) US Special
Forces cut out Iraqi communications lines; (4) US Army
and Marines invade Kuwait. According to L'Express,
operation would take four days and would cost 20,000
US casualties.
Oct. 18 Soviet envoy Yevgeni Primakov meets
with Secretary of State James Baker and National Security
Advisor Brent Scowcroft in Washington. On next day,
Primakov meets with Bush to discuss Persian Gulf crisis.
Oct. 30 MAC launches Desert Express, overnight
airlift to Gulf of critical items. Bush tells White
House meeting of 15 Congressional leaders that he is
growing impatient with absence of progress in Gulf
and with "barbarous" treatment of US and
other Western hostages in Iraq, factors that some interpret
as signal that President is considering military action
against Iraq.
Nov. 8 Bush announces US will deploy additional
armed forces to provide coalition in Persian Gulf with
offensive option. Press speculates total would be about
150,000 to 200,000 armed forces personnel, added to
230,000 already in Gulf region.
Nov. 9 DoD announces deployment of Theodore
Roosevelt, America, and Ranger battle groups to Gulf.
Several Republican Senators say Bush should call special
session of Congress to approve President's plans for
new military deployments in Gulf. Administration rejects
proposal.
Nov. 13 Bush issues Executive Order 12733,
extending by 90 days the active duty period of those
called up under 10 USC 673b. Congressional leaders
announce Congress will hold hearings on Persian Gulf
in December. Some believe Congress should call special
session to consider legislation giving Bush authority
to launch offensive actions against Iraq without declaration
of war.
Nov. 14 Hospitals at two bases in Britain and
one in Germany prepare to receive casualties. Cheney
authorizes activation of some 72,500 reservists that
might be needed in Saudi Arabia.
Nov. 15 Bush tells CNN that world remains united
against Saddam and Iraq's aggression against Kuwait.
President says he has not made decision to launch offensive
action against Iraq but maintains all options. President
says he would continue to consult with Congress but
dismisses need for special session of Congress to discuss
Persian Gulf problem.
Nov. 17 Air Force Space Command repositions
DSCS II satellite over Indian Ocean to improve communications
support for Desert Shield.
Nov. 20 Forty-five members of House of Representatives
file suit in US District Court in Washington to force
Bush to seek Congressional approval before launching
attack against Iraq.
Nov. 21 OA-10s from DavisMonthan AFB,
Ariz., deploy.
Nov. 22 Bush spends Thanksgiving in Gulf with
US troops. EC-130 psychological operations aircraft
broadcast Voice of America into Kuwait. Bush warns
that Iraq is developing nuclear weapons.
Nov. 26 House Foreign Affairs Committee, House
Armed Services Committee, Senate Foreign Relations
Committee, Senate Armed Services Committee begin hearings
on Gulf crisis.
Nov. 29 UN Security Council passes Resolution
678, authorizing use of force to expel Iraq from Kuwait.
Resolution allows grace period, giving Iraq "one
final opportunity" to comply with previous resolutions.
Nov. 30 Saddam rejects Bush's offer to send
Secretary of State Baker to Baghdad. Two former JCS
Chairmen, retired USAF Gen. David Jones and retired
Adm. William Crowe, tell Senate Armed Services Committee
that US should not rush into war with Iraq and should
wait for economic sanctions to take effect.
Dec. 1 DoD enacts Stop-Loss authority (contained
in Aug. 22 Executive Order) to prevent retirement or
separation of troops having critical skills. Advisor
to Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev says USSR will
not send troops to Persian Gulf.
Dec. 2 More F-117 stealth fighters deploy.
Dec. 3 Call-up alerts go to three ANG units:
169th Tactical Fighter Group (McEntire ANGB, S.C.);
174th TFW (SyracuseHancock IAP, N.Y.); and 152nd
Tactical Reconnaissance Group (Reno/Tahoe IAP, Nev.).
AFRES 926th TFG (New Orleans) also alerted.
Dec. 5 152nd TRG, with RF-4Cs, deploys to Saudi
Arabia to replace 117th TRW aircraft and personnel.
Dec. 6 Saddam announces he will release all
civilian hostages held since beginning of crisis.
Dec. 8 First European Desert Express mission
undertaken.
Dec. 19 Army Lt. Gen. Calvin Waller, CENTCOM
second in command, tells press US forces won't be combat-ready
by Jan. 15 deadline set in Resolution 678. Waller says
forces won't be ready until late January or midFebruary.
However, over next few days, Pentagon and White House
say US forces are ready and can respond to Iraqi attack
if one is launched.
Dec. 20 ANG KC-135E units alerted for call-up.
By end of year, SAC has 200 tankers in Gulf.
Dec. 21 USAF EF-111s deploy to Gulf.
Dec. 29 F-16equipped 169th TFG deploys
to Saudi Arabia, first ANG fighter unit to do so.
Jan. 2, 1991 ANG's 174th TFW deploys 18 F-16s
to Saudi Arabia and, along with 169th TFG, is incorporated
into 4th TFW (Provisional). CENTCOM announces US strength
in Gulf exceeds 325,000.
Jan. 8 DoD announces US troop strength in Gulf
is 360,000. Analysts estimate 540,000 Iraqi troops
in or near Kuwait. Bush sends letter to Congress asking
for resolution approving President's use of "all
necessary means" to remove Iraq from Kuwait.
Jan. 9 In Geneva, Baker meets with Iraqi Foreign
Minister Tariq Aziz, but talks fail.
Jan. 10 House and Senate begin debate on possible
war.
Jan. 12 Congress, after intense debate, clears
US forces for war against Iraq. House votes 250183
to authorize President to use military force to implement
UN Resolution 678 to force Iraq to withdraw from Kuwait.
Senate votes 5247 in favor of same authorization.
Jan. 13 UN Secretary General Javier Perez de
Cuellar meets with Saddam, concludes there is little
hope for peace.
Jan. 15 Deadline for Iraq's withdrawal from
Kuwait passes. DoD announces US has 415,000 troops
in Gulf, opposed by 545,000 Iraqi troops.
Jan. 16 CENTCOM announces 425,000 US troops
in theater, supported by ground forces of 19 nations
and naval efforts of 14 nations. First elements of
USAFE Joint Task Force Headquarters deploy from Ramstein
AB to Incirlik AB, Turkey, and prepare to establish
USAF's first wartime composite wing. Seven B-52Gs,
launching from Barksdale AFB, La., become first aircraft
to take off on Desert Storm combat mission; BUFFs of
596th Bomb Squadron, 2nd Bomb Wing, carry supersecret,
never-before-used AGM-86C Conventional Air Launched
Cruise Missiles.
Jan. 17 Coalition air forces launch Desert
Storm at about 3 a.m. local time (7 p.m. Eastern Standard
Time on Jan. 16). Barksdale B-52Gs arrive over Saudi
Arabia, launch 35 CALCMs against high-value Iraqi targets,
return to Barksdale, completing 14,000-mile, 35-hour
nonstop mission-longest strike mission in history of
aerial warfare. Coalition seeks to gain air superiority,
destroy Iraq's special weapons capability, disrupt
command and control. USAF Capt. Jon Kelk of 33rd TFW
(Eglin AFB) shoots down Iraqi MiG-29 at 3:10 a.m. in
first air-to-air victory. Coalition forces fly more
than 750 attack sorties from land bases during early
morning and day. US Navy launches 228 combat sorties
from six carriers in Red Sea and Arabian Gulf. Turkey
approves USAF use of Incirlik and Turkish airspace
to open northern front against Iraq. USAFE immediately
deploys aircraft to Turkey.
Jan. 18 Iraq launches Scud missiles against
Israel, Saudi Arabia. Cheney activates CRAF Stage 2,
raising total draw from airlines to 79 passenger aircraft
and 108 civilian cargo aircraft. Navy Lt. Jeffrey Zaun
captured after his A-6E is shot down.
Jan. 19 Two F-16Cs from 614th Tactical Fighter
Squadron (Torrejon AB) shot down by surface-to-air
missiles; pilots taken prisoner. Three more Scuds hit
Israel, injuring 10. Iraq parades seven coalition airmen
on television. US delivers to Israel two batteries
of Patriot anti-aircraft missiles and US Army personnel
to operate them. Bush signs Executive Order 12743,
allowing him to call to active duty Ready Reservists
and to extend tour of duty from six months up to two
years for 160,000 reservists already activated.
Jan. 20 First Purple Heart of war awarded to
Navy corpsman hit by shrapnel Jan. 17 while on Marine
patrol near Kuwaiti border. USAF fighterbombers
attack Iraqi nuclear facilities, air defense complexes,
Scud missile launchers. Iraqi TV broadcasts pictures
of three US, two British, one Italian, one Kuwaiti
airmen captured after their airplanes are hit by Iraqi
ground fire.
Jan. 21 USAF MH-53J helicopter rescues Navy
F-14 pilot more than 100 miles inside Iraq. Heavy bombing
of Republican Guard in southern Iraqi city of Basra.
Iraq fires 10 Scud missiles at Riyadh and Dhahran.
Jan. 22 After brief letup caused by bad weather,
heavy air attacks resume in and around Basra, supply
gateway to Kuwait, and against Republican Guard positions
along IraqiKuwaiti border. E-8A Joint STARS, orbiting
over Saudi Arabia, detects large convoy moving toward
Kuwait, vectors AC-130 gunship, two A-10s to attack.
They destroy 58 of 71 vehicles in convoy. Scud hits
Tel Aviv, destroying 20 buildings. Three killed, 96
injured. DoD reports US has lost nine aircraft, Britain
two, Italy and Kuwait one each. Coalition forces have
shot down 17 Iraqi aircraft.
Jan. 23 Only five Iraqi air bases remain functional
after week of bombing. Iraqi sorties down from 235
to 40 per day. Iraq begins dumping Kuwaiti oil into
Gulf, torching Kuwaiti oil wells, other facilities.
Jan. 24 Saudi pilot flying F-15C shoots down
two Iraqi F-1 Mirages attempting to attack coalition
ships with Exocet missiles. Coalition flies 2,570 attack
sorties, for total of 14,750 during first eight days
of war.
Jan. 25 Coalition destroys three Iraqi bombers
on ground. Major attacks on Iraqi hardened aircraft
shelters begin. USAF, using new I-2000 bomb, has spectacular
success. British airman captured. Intelligence agencies
report execution of commanders of Iraq's air force
and anti-aircraft defenses. Five Scuds hit Israel,
killing one, wounding 40. Iraq sabotages Kuwait's main
supertanker loading pier, dumping millions of gallons
of crude into Gulf.
Jan. 26 Air emphasis shifts to strikes against
Iraqi field army in Kuwait. Iraq sends aircraft to
Iran for sanctuary (by war's end, 122 had fled). Marines
fire 155 mm howitzers at Iraqi troops six miles inside
Kuwait. In Washington, marchers protest war in Persian
Gulf. Anti-war protesters march in Bonn, Berlin, Switzerland,
France. Demonstrations in support of war in several
US cities, among them Boston, Chicago.
Jan. 27 F-111s, using GBU-15 guided bombs,
destroy oil-pumping manifold at Kuwaiti terminal, drastically
reducing flow of oil into Gulf. Schwarzkopf announces
coalition has attained air supremacy. F-16 "Killer
Scout" operations begin.
Jan. 28 Baghdad radio announces at least one
captured coalition pilot killed and others hurt in
raids. Scud attack on Israel hits Arab villages on
West Bank.
Jan. 29 US and USSR announce cease-fire possible
if Iraq makes "unequivocal commitment" to
withdraw all troops from Kuwait and takes "concrete
steps" in that direction. In State of Union address,
Bush repeats US goal is to "drive Iraq out of
Kuwait, to restore Kuwait's legitimate government,
and to ensure the stability and security of this critical
region." Joint STARS detects 50 Iraqi tanks moving
toward Saudi Arabia. Using deception, 1,500 Iraqi troops
in three battalions attack Khafji in Saudi Arabia,
come under coalition air attack. For first time, coalition
ground forces counterattack. Elements of 1st Marine
Division engage with anti-tank and automatic weapons.
Jan. 30 Marines lose three armored vehicles
in battle for Khafji, while Iraqis lose 24 tanks, 13
armored vehicles. USAF fighterbombers destroy
oil pumping pipes and manifolds to stop one of biggest-ever
oil spills. Commanders report US has lost 12 aircraft,
UK five, Italy and Kuwait one each.
Jan. 31 AC-130H gunship, supporting Marines
around Khafji, is shot down by Iraqi infrared surface-to-air
missile, with 14 crew members killed. Two US soldiers
are captured by Iraqi soldiers at IraqiSaudi border.
Saudi troops, assisted by Qatari forces, US Marines,
heavy air support, recapture Khafji. Coalition aircraft
attack, rout two Iraqi divisions assembling north of
Khafji for attack.
Feb. 1 Iraqi force, estimated at 60,000, masses
for attack near Kuwaiti town of Al Wafra. Airstrikes
drive Iraqis into defensive positions. Bush tells military
families at Ft. Stewart, Ga., Iraq would not dictate
when ground offensive would begin, and ground war would
be launched only if needed.
Feb. 2 B-52 bomber goes down in Indian Ocean,
returning to Diego Garcia after mission over Kuwait.
Three crew members rescued, three lost.
Feb. 3 Iraq withdraws troops from Khafji area.
Feb. 4 Battleship Missouri uses 16-inch guns
to pound Iraqi concrete bunkers in Kuwait, part of
plan to deceive Iraqis into expecting Marine amphibious
invasion. USAF fighterbombers attack major targets
at Tikrit, Saddam's home village 90 miles north of
Baghdad. Coalition aircraft fly 2,566 sorties, bringing
to 43,566 the total for first 19 days of war.
Feb. 5 Iranian President Ali Akbar Hashemi
Rafsanjani offers to mediate between Iraq, US. USAF
fighterbombers attack Scud missiles, launchers.
B-52s hit Republican Guard positions. Missouri knocks
out two artillery emplacements, damages four others.
Missouri destroys radar site and surface-to air missile
position along Kuwait coast. At news conference, Bush
says he is skeptical that air war alone can achieve
desired result of removing Iraq from Kuwait.
Feb. 6 Capt. Robert Swain, 706th TFG (AFRES),
shoots down Iraqi helicopter over central Kuwait in
first-ever aerial victory by A-10. RAF knocks out key
bridge across Tigris in Baghdad. US reports coalition
aircraft have flown nearly 50,000 sorties, one-half
of them combat attacks against Iraqi targets. US lists
combat casualties as 12 killed, 11 wounded, 24 missing
in action (plus three missing from noncombat posts),
eight Prisoners of War. US troop strength reaches 503,000,
other coalition troop strength reaches 200,000.
Feb. 7 Cheney and Powell head to Gulf for meeting
with Schwarzkopf on air offensive and pending ground
offensive. Some 21 House members send letter to Bush,
urging President not to launch ground war because air
war is succeeding and ground war would increase coalition
casualties. US officials say 109 Iraqi fighter aircraft,
23 Iraqi transport aircraft have flown to Iran.
Feb. 8 As Iraqicaused oil slick drifts
down Gulf, Saudi desalination plant at Safaniya stops
operation as precautionary measure.
Feb. 9 Scud hits Israel, injuring 26. Cheney,
Powell meet for eight hours with Schwarzkopf. "Tank
plinking"-picking off individual tanks with smart
weapons-begins. Coalition sources tell press that 15
percent of Iraq's armor, about 600 tanks, and between
15 percent and 20 percent of overall fighting ability
destroyed thus far in air war.
Feb. 10 Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze
tells Baker that Moscow will not deploy troops with
the multinational effort in Saudi Arabia because of
opposition at home.
Feb. 11 Coalition aircraft fly 2,900 attack
sorties, bringing to 61,862 the total for 26 days of
air war.
Feb. 12 Air attack destroys three downtown
Baghdad bridges-Martyr's Bridge, Republic Bridge, and
July 14 Bridge. Soviet envoy Primakov stops in Tehran
en route to Baghdad, carrying Soviet peace plan. Saddam
tells Primakov that Iraq would cooperate with efforts
to arrange cease-fire in Gulf War.
Feb. 13 F-117 fighters bomb building in Baghdad
that coalition forces believe to be military command
bunker but which is being used as civilian air-raid
shelter, and 200400 civilians are killed. Iraqi
armored division, caught moving at night, is destroyed
by airpower.
Feb. 14 RAF Tornado is shot down by missile
over Baghdad. Two USAF crewmen killed when EF-111A
is lost in Saudi Arabia after mission over Iraq. Back
in US, anti-war demonstrators splash blood and oil
on Pentagon doorway.
Feb. 15 Saddam's five-man Revolutionary Command
Council announces that Iraq is ready "to deal" with
UN resolution requiring withdrawal from Kuwait. US
officials estimate three months of war against Iraq
will cost $56 billion, of which US would pay $15 billion
and other coalition members would pay $41 billion.
Feb. 16 Two Scuds hit southern Israel.
Feb. 17 Heavy bombing of Iraqi army in Kuwait
has, by this date, destroyed 1,300 of Iraq's 4,280
tanks and 1,100 of 3,110 artillery pieces, the Pentagon
reports. Iraq's foreign minister, Aziz, arrives in
Moscow for talks with Soviet President Gorbachev.
Feb. 18 Two US Navy vessels, amphibious assault
ship Tripoli and guided missile cruiser Princeton,
strike mines in Gulf, take significant damage. Aziz
returns to Baghdad with peace proposal from Gorbachev.
Soviet Union offers four-point peace plan: (1) unconditional
Iraqi withdrawal from Kuwait; (2) protection for Iraqi
territorial integrity; (3) no punishment of Saddam
or other Iraqi leaders; (4) talks about other Middle
Eastern problems, particularly Palestine problem.
Feb. 19 Bush declares Soviet peace proposal
inadequate. Mixed force of F-4Gs, F-16s from composite
wing in Turkey launch daylight attack on Baghdad from
north. Coalition flies record 3,000 attack sorties;
total for 34 days of air war rises to 83,000.
Feb. 20 US Army engages Iraqi reconnaissance
unit, destroying five tanks, 20 artillery pieces.
Feb. 21 Iraq fires three Scuds toward King
Khalid Military City in Saudi Arabia. US casualties
reach 20 killed in action, 27 wounded in action, 29
missing in action (plus two noncombat missing in action),
nine POWs. Coalition holds 2,500 Iraqi POWs. After
meetings in Moscow with Iraqi Foreign Minister Aziz,
Soviets announce that Iraq accepts Soviet peace proposal.
Feb. 22 US announces that F-15s of 33rd TFW
(Eglin) have downed 15 Iraqi aircraft. Bush gives Iraq
until 8 p.m. local time, Feb. 23, to begin withdrawing
troops from Kuwait. Iraqi forces set fire to some 150
oil wells and other oil installations in Kuwait. White
House estimates total cost of war would be $77 billion
and that other coalition members will pay about $54
billion.
Feb. 23 B-52s pound Iraqi positions. Iraqis
set 100 more Kuwaiti oil wells on fire. Total of coalition
attack sorties flown during air war reaches 94,000.
Schwarzkopf determines attrition of Iraqi combat effectiveness
is sufficient for successful ground offensive with
few casualties.
Feb. 24 G-Day. Coalition ground forces embark
on what turns out to be 100-hour campaign. Tanks fitted
with bulldozer blades punch holes in Iraqi defenses.
Air war enters final phase-support for coalition ground
forces. Schwarzkopf throws 100,000 troops into assault
on Iraqi forces, which surrender in large numbers.
Coalition attack sorties total 97,000.
Feb. 25 Scud hits Dhahran barracks used by
US Army Reservists, killing 28, wounding more than
100. Baghdad Radio airs Saddam order for Iraqi forces
to withdraw from Kuwait. At least 517 oil wells in
Kuwait on fire. US and French forces secure coalition
western flank inside Iraq. US Army 101st Division moves
north to An Nasiriyah on Euphrates River. US 24th Mechanized
Infantry Division turns east to cut off possible Iraqi
avenues of retreat north from Basra. US and British
armored units move eastward toward Iraqi Republican
Guards armored divisions along KuwaitIraq border.
Feb. 26 "Mother of all retreats" features
Iraqi soldiers attempting to escape envelopment of
Kuwait. Thousands of military, civilian vehicles, loaded
with looted goods, clog four-lane highway out of Kuwait
City. Repeated air attacks destroy much of panicked
army's equipment. Coalition forces engage Republican
Guards between KuwaitIraq border and Basra. Other
coalition forces seize Kuwait City and Al Jahrah.
Feb. 27 Coalition liberates Kuwait City, envelops
Iraqi forces. Coalition, Iraqi units fight largest
tank battle since World War II Battle of Kursk between
Germans and Soviets: Two Army divisions decimate two
Republican Guard divisions. Two specially made 4,700-pound
GBU-28 bombs destroy "impregnable" Iraqi
command bunker at Al Taji. Coalition attack sorties
reach one-day record of 3,500. Bush announces that
coalition forces would suspend offensive operations
the next day at 8 a.m. local time. Bush says Iraq must
end military action, free all POWs, third country nationals,
and Kuwaiti hostages, release remains of coalition
forces killed in action, agree to comply with all UN
resolutions, reveal location of land and sea mines.
Feb. 28 Fighting stops. Iraq agrees to observe
cease-fire, attend military-to-military talks on cessation
of hostilities. Coalition air forces fly 3,500 sorties,
for total of 110,000. Iraqi Foreign Minister Aziz notifies
UN Security Council that Iraq accepts 12 UN resolutions
dealing with invasion of Kuwait. DoD says coalition
forces destroyed or rendered ineffective 42 Iraqi divisions,
captured more than 50,000 Iraqi prisoners, destroyed
or captured 3,000 of 4,030 tanks in southern Iraq and
Kuwait, destroyed or captured
962 of 2,870 armored vehicles, 1,005 of 3,110 artillery
pieces, 103 of 639 aircraft (with another 100 or so
in quarantine in Iran). Coalition forces continue to
destroy captured and abandoned Iraqi armor and artillery.
Coalition airplanes flew 110,000 sorties over Iraq
and Kuwait, one-half of which were combat and one-half
support (reconnaissance, air refueling, search and
rescue, etc.) US casualties are reported as 79 killed
in action, 212 wounded in action, 45 missing in action,
nine POWs. (Casualties later revised to 613.)
March 2 Sporadic fighting erupts. Members of
Iraqi tank column, evidently confused, come in contact
with US troops, start shooting. Battle of Rumaila leaves
60 Iraqi tanks destroyed. Coalition forces occupy southeast
corner of Iraq. Coalition air forces maintain "air
occupation" of Iraq.
March 3 At Safwan in Iraq, Schwarzkopf and
Lt. Gen. Khalid ibn Sultan, Saudi commander of Joint
ArabIslamic Force, and their associates from other
coalition countries, meet eight Iraqi officers, led
by Lt. Gen. Sultan Hashim Ahmad, commander of Iraqi
III Corps in Iraq. Military leaders discuss cease-fire
arrangements, including POW and detainee exchange,
minefield locations, avoiding contact that could lead
to armed clashes, coalition withdrawal as soon as formal
cease-fire is signed. CENTCOM reports Iraqi equipment
destroyed or captured increased to 3,300 tanks, 2,100
armored vehicles, 2,200 artillery pieces, and number
of POWs increased to 80,000.
March 5 Iraq releases 35 POWs: nine Britons,
nine Saudis, one Italian, one Kuwaiti, 15 US military
personnel, including second woman POW, Army Maj. Rhonda
Cornum.
March 8 1st TFW returns in victory to Langley
AFB. Other early returning units include 42nd Bomb
Wing (Loring AFB, Maine) and 55th and 9th SOSs (Eglin
AFB).
March 10 Iraq releases 21 US POWs--including
eight members of USAF. Former POWs return to Andrews
AFB, Md., met by Cheney, Powell, several thousand spectators.
March 19 Redeployment of 545,000 US troops
stationed in Gulf officially begins.
April 11 Iraq accepts all terms of UN cease-fire
resolution. Gulf War officially ends April 11, 1991,
at 10 a.m. EST.
Sources include:
IraqKuwait Crisis: A Chronology of Events, July 17, 1990 Dec. 23,
1991, Congressional Research Service, April 6, 1992; Airpower in the Gulf,
James P. Coyne, 1992; Chronology of Significant Events, US Central Command,
1991; Conduct of Persian Gulf Conflict: an Interim Report to Congress, Department
of Defense; Military Airlift Command; Strategic Air Command; Air Force Special
Operations Command; Air Force Space Command; Pacific Air Forces; Tactical Air
Command; US Air Forces in Europe; USAF white papers, April 1991 and September
1991; Gen. Merrill A. McPeak, DoD press conference, March 15, 1991; Pentagon
Working Document, United States Aircraft Losses, June 7, 1991; Gen. Charles
A. Horner, USAF; Lt. Gen. Buster C. Glosson, USAF; Maj. Gen. John A. Corder,
USAF; Col. John Warden, USAF.
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