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| Iraqi armed forces parade through
Victory Square, Baghdad, in December 2000. |
It was on Feb. 28, 1991, at exactly 8 a.m. local time,
that the Gulf War was brought to an abrupt end. Army
Gen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf had led a masterful 43-day
air campaign. With Iraqi forces badly battered by airpower,
coalition land forces needed only 100 hours to push
the occupiers out of Kuwait and take thousands of prisoners.
The public thought the coalition had completed its
job. In reality, it had not yet neutralized Iraqs
Republican Guard, and, so, in Schwarzkopfs words, Our
job was only half done.
As things turned out, of course, coalition forces
never completed the job. Saddam Husseins Republican
Guard escaped the clutches of their adversaries, fled
to Baghdad, regrouped, and lived to fight another daysoon.
How did this happen? On the wars last full day,
Feb. 27, Schwarzkopf allowed his judgment to be clouded
by confusion about the position of his forces and the
nature of the Republican Guard escape plan. He announced the
gate is closed on the Guard, stoking pressure
for a cease-fire. President Bush acceded, the shooting
stopped, and the Iraqis slipped the noose.
Col. Douglas A. MacGregor, who fought with the US
Armys 2nd Armored Cavalry Regiment and wrote
an influential book, Breaking the Phalanx, compared
the result of the Gulf battle to that of the 1863 Confederate
maneuver victory at Chancellorsville. Both, he said, bore
no abiding fruits.
The land offensive began on Feb. 24. It was Phase
4 of Schwarzkopfs war plan. Phase 4 called for
two USled land corps to drive north through breached
Iraqi infantry positions, turn east, and trap the Republican
Guard.
The Republican Guard Forces Command fielded six full
divisions. There were three of armorthe Tawakalna,
Medina, and Hammurabiand three of motorized infantrythe
Nebuchadnezzar, al Faw, and Adnan. Three of the divisions
had spearheaded the invasion of Kuwait on Aug. 2, 1990,
but they had redeployed to interior positions and were
replaced at the front by infantry.
The replacement divisions, inferior in quality, had
been arrayed along the Saudi border with Kuwait and
Iraq.
In the wars first 38 days (the airpower-only
phase), coalition air attacks reduced Iraqi front-line
units to one-half of prewar strength. Air strikes had
also weakened the Republican Guard but not to the same
extent.
Coalition air forces focused first on hitting the
three armored divisions. By the time Schwarzkopf launched
the ground offensive, the Tawakalna was judged to be
at 58 percent of prewar strength, the Medina at 54
percent, and the Hammurabi at 77 percent. The Guard
motorized infantry divisions did not suffer such heavy
attacks. Coalition planners estimated the Nebuchadnezzar
at 88 percent of prewar strength, al Faw at 100 percent,
and Adnan at 83 percent.
The Nebuchadnezzar and al Faw divisions were positioned
along Highway 8, an eastwest artery running along
the Euphrates River. The Adnan was positioned east
of the junction of that road and Highway 6, another
artery running northsouth between Kuwait and
Basra.
Against this Iraqi force, the coalition deployed two
corps, each well-suited to its task.
In the east, VII Corps, commanded by Lt. Gen. Frederick
M. Franks Jr., was formed of heavy forces. Its powerful
spearhead comprised the 1st Armored Division, 3rd Armored
Division, and 2nd Armored Cavalry Regiment. Plans called
for it to charge north and destroy the three Republican
Guard armored divisions.
| Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf met on
March 3, 1991, with Iraqi Lt. Gen. Khalid Sultan
Ahmed (second from right) to set conditions for
ending the war. By that time, many Republican
Guard forces were streaming back to Baghdad. |
In the west, XVIII Airborne Corps, commanded by Lt.
Gen. Gary E. Luck, blended medium and heavy forces,
giving it speed and agility. The spearhead of its northward
charge would be the 24th Mechanized Infantry, 101st
Air Assault, and 82nd Airborne Divisions, working with
Frances 6th Light Armored Division. The XVIII
Airborne Corps was to drive north as fast as possible,
then wheel east along Highway 8 and capture Basra.
By doing this, it would cut off the retreat of the
three Guard infantry divisions.
With VII Corps and XVIII Airborne Corps closing with
the enemy, US Marines and other forces would move to
liberate Kuwait.
As planned, the ground operation opened on Feb. 24,
at precisely 4 a.m. The breaching operations went so
well that the main attack began several hours ahead
of schedule. The battered Iraqi front-line divisions
collapsed soon after the coalition attack had pierced
the defensive line.
Fighting swirled during the period Feb. 2426.
The two coalition corps surged forward and met resistance,
which led to some tactical victories such as the Battle
of 73 Easting (against Tawakalna units) and Battle
of Medina Ridge (against Medina units).
The Republican Guard in contact with coalition forces
werent fighting to hold ground but merely to
buy time and cover a withdrawal. The Guard heavy forces
were no match for US forces. The skirmishes pitted
brigade-size Guard units against American divisions
with far superior soldiers, training, and weapons.
In these skirmishes, however, VII Corps won only tactical
successes. It had not yet closed the road leading north,
which thus remained open to the Guard. Coalition tank
battles with Tawakalna forces served as a screen for
the withdrawing Medina and Hammurabi. These brigade-sized
actions allowed Iraq to organize a classic battlefield
retreat, Schwarzkopf later acknowledged.
According to a declassified CIA study, Iraqi forces
had as early as Feb. 25 detected that coalition movements
were far more rapid than anticipated. While coalition
dominance of the air and the stranglehold on communications
obscured much of the offensives intent, the collapse
of the Iraqi front line was clear enough.
High-flying U-2s detected that Iraq had built a defensive
line south of the Hawr al Hammar causeway that crossed
the Euphrates River marshlands. From this position
29 miles east of Basra, the Nebuchadnezzar, Adnan,
and al Faw divisions had a chance to protect Highway
8 and the causeway escape route.
In the XVIII Airborne Corps operating area to the
west, Iraqi moves also were well-staged. Apparently
calculating that the coalition planned to cut Highway
8 and drive toward Al-Basra, the CIA report noted, the
Iraqis began a major redeployment of Guard forces to
block the coalitions advance.
On Feb. 26, the 24th Mechanized Infantry took Talil
Airfield and seized Al Jalibah Air Base. Meanwhile,
elements of Republican Guard infantry moved west, toward
a defensive line crossing XVIII Airborne Corps advance.
Whats more, two Guard armored brigades moved
up in support.
The coalition leaders knew that a screening operation
was under way. However, at this critical point, they
lost track of the extent to which the Guard and other
Iraqi forces were jammed up south of Basra.
Coalition leaders thought the Guard had redeployed
north of the Euphrates. They had not. They were, in
fact, herded together in a 1,700-square-mile area south
of the river. Five Republican Guard divisions were
hemmed in, with river crossings to their north and
east and coalition forces advancing from the west.
Theyd set themselves up to be destroyed in detail
by either air or ground forces.
Frankss spearhead had achieved 109 miles of
advance just before midnight on Feb. 26. Lucks
forces had plunged northward and wheeled to the east
in a giant enveloping move. To the south, Marines and
other forces had taken major objectives around Kuwait
City.
Speedy success caused two twists in the tactical situation.
First, very early on Feb. 27 (1:35 a.m.), a Radio
Baghdad broadcast ordered Iraqi forces to withdraw
from Kuwait. They fled along Highway 6, bringing more
Iraqis into the congested area south of the city of
Basra. Second, the two USled corps began to outrun
their supply lines and wear out their troops, who had
been in action 48 hours. Soon, they would need to pause.
The first hours of Feb. 27 saw a resumption of rapid
combat operations. In the west, XVIII Airborne Corps
launched a fresh series of attacks and pushed within
62 miles of Basra and Highway 6. In the east, VII Corps
pressed northward until early evening.
No one knew it at the time, but Feb. 27 was a day
in which the coalition missed a golden opportunity
to destroy the Guard.
At 1 a.m. that day, Franks and Luck each activated
a Fire Support Coordination Line that effectively gave
the Iraqi forces a sanctuary from air interdiction
and blocked coalition air from bringing its full weight
to bear.
The FSCL was a vital safety measure marking off a
special protected area (inside the FSCL, where Close
Air Support strikes were to be carried out under the
control of forward observers) from regular areas (beyond
the FSCL, where interdiction could take place).
The Joint Force Air Component Commander, USAF Lt.
Gen. Charles A. Horner, allocated 1,200 sorties a day
for what he called push CAS, in which two-ship
and four-ship formations would cross the battlefield
every few minutes. Strikes inside the FSCL had to be
controlled by a Forward Air Controller.
However, if the flight got no immediate tasking from
a FAC, it could fly beyond the FSCL and strike targets
under direction of an F-16 or A-10 Killer Scout. If
the Killer Scout had no targets, the flight continued
to predesignated bomb dump sites.
The effect was to increase the number of strikes beyond
the FSCL, and, so, those targets were the ones where
airpower had its best shot at the Republican Guard
forces.
In the early phase of the land offensivethat
is, in the period Feb. 2426the air and
ground components placed FSCLs in locations that had
been worked out before the war.
Then, on Feb. 27, things changed. The leaders of VII
Corps and XVIII Airborne Corps, perhaps anticipating
rapid and dramatic maneuvering on that day, set the
FSCLs in their corps areas well beyond the actual lines
of advance achieved that day.
Poor placement of the FSCLs carried a high cost. Two
Guard divisions, the Nebuchadnezzar and Adnan, were
completely inside the XVIII Airborne Corps FSCL. Likewise,
the VII Corps FSCL sheltered the Medina and the main
body of the Hammurabi. Only the al Faw division was
completely outside any FSCL on Feb. 27.
The overextended FSCL boundaries meant airpower could
only attack under the guidance of a Forward Air Controller.
The catch was that FACs operating with Army units were
not in contact with the main body of the escaping Republican
Guard units. The ground forces were moving fast but
still not fast enough to cover all of the ground theyd
staked out.
When XVIII Airborne Corps began its Feb. 27 operations,
its FSCL for that day was 54 miles to the east. At
the end of the day, it was still 30 miles from its
fire-control line.
Late in the day, Horner got the Army commanders to
move back the FSCLs. Still, the new Horner line only
opened up the area north of the Euphrates, an area
known to be target-poor.
Data from the postwar Gulf War Air Power Survey showed
how the FSCL problem affected the volume of daily air
strikes. Five kill boxes (AE7, AF7, AF8, AG7, and AG8)
contained most of the Republican Guard units. On Feb.
25, while these kill boxes were outside the FSCL, the
coalition flew 161 strike sorties. The FSCL moved east
on Feb. 26, but still 111 strike sorties were flown
in those kill boxes. But on Feb. 27, when the ground
advance and their own maneuver scheme had boxed in
the Republican Guard, the overextended FSCL kept coalition
air from striking with its full force. The tally for
the five prime kill boxes was just 54 strike sorties,
and 28 of those were flown in AG7, much of which was
beyond the FSCL that day.
Clearly, the mishandling of airground coordination
cost the coalition a chance to destroy the Guard from
the air.
In any event, the two corps commanders, Luck and Franks,
at the end of Feb. 27, paused to regroup for what they
envisioned as the final, concerted land attack on the
Republican Guard.
The days events had left coalition forces poised
for total victory. Under orders from Franks, US commanders
stopped their forces at 6 p.m., fixed positions, and
prepared for resumption of the offensive. Lucks
XVIII Airborne Corps was set to roll through the rest
of the Nebuchadnezzar and Adnans western defenses
and cut them off. He moved his command post forward,
gave the 24th extra artillery, and approved an air
assault to seal off Basra.
Schwarzkopf spoke on the telephone with Gen. Colin
Powell, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. I
want to continue the ground attack tomorrow, drive
to the sea, and totally destroy everything in our path, said
the commander.
This war-winning attack was to begin within hoursthat
is, early on Feb. 28. It was not to be.
Instead of a final, climactic battle on 28 February, wrote
Army historian Richard Swain, offensive military
operations came unraveled in the early morning hours.
What happened? The plans of Franks and Luck were done
in by Schwarzkopf himself at an unusual press briefing
in Riyadh.
| F-16s and A-10s served as Killer
Scouts. If a two- or four-ship flight got
no tasking from a Forward Air Controller, the
Killer Scouts could direct them to targets outside
the Fire Support Coordination Line. |
It was 9 p.m., local time, when Schwarzkopf opened
his briefing. It was televised live in Washington,
D.C., where it was 1 p.m. Weve accomplished
our mission, Schwarzkopf said. He assured listeners
that his forces had slammed shut all routes out of
southern Iraq. He suggested that, while scattered units
might be getting away, the bulk of the Republican Guard
was trapped.
Powell, watching the performance in Washington, seized
the opportunity to tell Bush the coalition was within
the window of success and that he should stop
the attack, which now would be perceived as killing
for the sake of killing.
Evidently, Bush agreed. He soon announced that a cease-fire
would take effect at 5 a.m. local time on Feb. 28.
Informed of this move, Schwarzkopf said, I dont
have any problem with it.
It was now 11 p.m., local time. With the cease-fire
six hours away, US commanders concentrated on disengaging
their troops from the enemy. However, around midnight,
Schwarzkopf appeared to waver and took a last stab
at the Republican Guard. The cease-fire slipped to
8 a.m. With the time left, Schwarzkopf said, Luck and
Franks should destroy as much of the enemy as possible.
At 6 a.m., Franks launched a last-gasp VII Corps attack.
The 1st Armored Division destroyed 100 tanks and armored
personnel carriers, according to Army historians. Meanwhile,
XVIII Airborne Corps wasnt able to engage before
the cease-fire took effect.
At 8 a.m., the coalition halted offensive operations.
The cease-fire didnt affect the Republican Guard at all. They kept going
north. On March 1, Guard armored and mechanized forces were 60 miles north
of Basra. On March 2, some were 124 miles north. On that day, the 24th Mechanized
Infantry Division spotted Iraqi tanks and vehicles moving north. It attacked
and destroyed 185 of them, but it was too late.
Most of the Republican Guard units made it back safely
to Baghdad. Within weeks, these forces had brutally
suppressed Kurd and Shiite rebellions against Saddam.
They continue to support his grip on power today.
Such was the price of the rush decision to halt the
Gulf War offensives.
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