Ill tell you up
front that our sensors show that the preponderance
of the Republican Guard divisions that were outside
of Baghdad are now dead. That announcement, made
on April 5 by Lt. Gen. T. Michael Moseley, the head
of air operations for Operation Iraqi Freedom, was
a significant moment.
 |
| Boss Hogs. USAF A-10s,
such as these lined up at Tallil Air Base in
Iraq, were
key to the coalition
air strikes that shredded Saddams Republican
Guard units. |
It was barely two weeks into Gulf War II and airpower
already had effectively neutralized Saddam Husseins
Republican Guard forcesthe cream of the crop
of Iraqs Army and the main military obstacle
to the capture of Baghdad.
Guard forces outnumbered coalition forces at the start
of the war. These elite, experienced, professional
soldiers were willing and able to put up an organized
fight. They had helped to keep Saddam in power for
two decades. Destroying them signaled that Saddams
control over Iraq was about to collapse for good.
Early in their existence, Republican Guard units
accepted only men from Saddams hometown area
of Tikrit and did not demand special military experience.
That
changed with the 1980-88 IranIraq War, which
was also the event that established Iraq as a menacing
regional military power. The enemy was led by Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini, Irans supreme Islamic authority.
In 1986, Iraqi forces captured the Iranian town of
Mehran only to lose it again in a humiliating defeat.
That prompted Saddam to replace the political hacks
from Tikrit that infested his Republican Guard. In
their place, he put battle-experienced commanders.
The people at the top were military professionals, albeit with loyalty
to Saddam, said Col. Charles M. Westenhoff, chief of the Air Staffs
Checkmate operational assessment office. Soon, the most capable of Iraqs
military forces were installed in the Republican Guards. This accelerated
Darwinian process, as Westenhoff called it, quickly delivered results in
battle. Newly formed Republican Guard units sent to meet Iranian attacks in 1987
and early 1988 turned the tide.
In a series of four major battles in 1988, the Iraqis took the offensive, said
Westenhoff, and Khomeini threw in the towel.
The success of the revitalized Republican Guard gave
it considerable stature in Iraq. Its soldiers were
volunteers who got better military training and
pay than the rest of the Iraqi Army. The elite force also got Soviet military
assistance,
including thousands of tanks, armored personnel carriers, and artillery pieces.
All that made the Republican Guard, in 1990, the
leading force in Saddams
invasion of Kuwait. And the first tip-off of the impending invasion came
in mid-July 1990 when a brigade of the Republican Guards
Hammurabi division marched south.
When Iraq invaded Kuwait on Aug. 2, 1990, Republican
Guard forces spearheaded the main offensive. The
Hammurabi and Nebuchadnezzar divisions attacked from
the north. The Medina and Tawakalna divisions struck from the west. Once
Kuwait fell, regular Iraqi Army divisions stocked with conscript troops moved
forward
to the Saudi border, while the Republican Guard divisions pulled back to
consolidate a strategic line of defense farther north.
As the US and its coalition partners drew up plans
to free Kuwait and reduce Iraqs offensive military
power, the effectiveness of Saddams key
force was a prime concern.
Operation Desert Storm in 1991 called for intense
air strikes on the Republican Guard. The Tawakalna
division
was hit hardest, and it quickly fell to the
advancing US Army VII Corps.
However, elements of the Medina and Hammurabi divisions
used short, sharp engagements with coalition ground
forces to screen the retreat of the main
body. Losses
of high-quality T-72 tanks and other equipment were great, but significant
elements
of the Republican Guard made it safely back to Iraq.
 |
| On Target. Joint Direct Attack Munitions, such
as this one being prepped for a B-1B bomber, provided
the precision needed for B-1s and B-52s to fly
close air support missions in Gulf War II. |
After the Storm
Military analyst Anthony H. Cordesman, in a 1998 Center
for Strategic and International Studies report, said
the Republican Guard after Gulf War I
had as many as 600
T-72s and 300 T-62s, for a total of about 900 top-of-the line tanks. Soviet
T-55s also remained in the arsenal. There was no doubt the Republican Guard
remained
a cohesive and comparatively well-equipped fighting force.
In fact, Westenhoff said before the start of Operation
Iraqi Freedom that the Guard had more than twice
as many tanks as coalition forces and probably
about
twice as many artillery pieces in the theater.
Military planners knew that Saddams ability
to preserve his regime rested with the Republican Guard.
They alone had the means to organize and conduct counterattacks
against coalition forces.
Lt. Gen. Daniel P. Leafthe Air Force point
man who worked directly with Army Lt. Gen. David D.
McKiernan, the coalition forces land component commandersaid
that did not mean the coalition could dismiss the other Iraqi forces. However,
Leaf explained, It was clear that the main effort was going to be the
defeat of the Republican Guard.
Before the coalition launched OIF, Republican Guard
forces left their garrisons and took up positions
roughly 30 miles outside the city of Baghdad. They
were put in blocking positions around Baghdad, essentially to the north,
south, and west, said Westenhoff. All the Republican
Guard units were combat ready. The strength of these
divisions was at least 80 percent in all cases and
as high
as 90 percent in some units.
The coalition battle plan called for swift ground
force advances toward Baghdad, from the north and south.
Turkeys last-minute decision to prohibit ground
operations from its soil left only a southern thrust, greatly simplifying
the Republican Guards job. And, while speed
and lethality were bred-in-the-bone advantages for
US and allied forces, the strategy of moving ahead
fast with relatively
few forces carried some risknamely that the ground forces would move
beyond their supply lines and expose their flanks. The Republican Guard might
easily
exploit such a vulnerability.
The Republican Guard had the capability to
counterattack, which I would not have credited to the
other Iraqi forces, said Westenhoff. One
of the things I observed was that our forces, as they went into Iraq, were
equipped for offense. They werent as well-equipped
for defense.
The US and its allies had a ground force smaller than
that assembled for Desert Storm. In Gulf War II,
US Armys V Corps and 1st Marine Expeditionary
Force, along with British forces, were to lead ground
operations. In Gulf War I, there
were two Army corps, an MEF, and another corps of multinational Arab forces
under Saudi and Egyptian leadership.
At the start of Gulf War II ground operations, V
Corps was at less than full strength. The full V Corps
would have had four artillery brigades; instead,
said Westenhoff, We had one and a bit of those artillery brigades. If
V Corps had possessed its four artillery brigades, he said, they, along with
available attack helicopters, would have been able to fight off a Guard assault.
To counter that shortfall, coalition air attacks on
Republican Guard units began on the first night of
the war. On March 19 (Baghdad time), two USAF
F-117 stealth
fighters struck a Baghdad site where Saddam Hussein was thought to be hiding;
at the same time, 40 carrier-launched Tomahawk Land Attack Missiles struck
a Republican Guard facility and an intelligence headquarters in another part
of
Baghdad. The next night, 10 TLAMs hit several Republican Guard targets in
Kirkuk.
Soon, hundreds of sorties were being flown daily against
Republican Guard positions throughout Iraq. The
first area of concern was the Medina division because
of their deployment south of Baghdad on a major avenue of approach for
V Corps, said Leaf. The Hammurabi division was tucked in behind Medina, he
noted.
Some Republican Guard forces also were moving southcautiously,
and in small formationsostensibly to meet the
coalition advance. Leaf said that some
significant pieces of the southern-deployed Republican Guard units
were part of the initial element that met coalition forces around An Nasiriyah
and
Basra early in the war. At the land component headquarters, Leaf said, he
also saw signs that some of the Republican Guard forces were moving into
new positions
to reinforce the defense of Baghdad.
Although air strikes had taken a toll, said Leaf,
it was clear that the Republican Guard was still functioning.
 |
| No Time to Hide. USAF F-16s, such as these deployed
from Spangdahlem AB, Germany, flew hundreds of
strike sorties that helped destroy the unit cohesion
of Republican Guard divisions. |
Costly Mistake
It was at this point that the Army blundered. It decided
to use some 30 of its AH-64 Apache helicopters to attack
the Republican Guard. It didnt work.
Instead, the Apaches came under intense enemy fire, said Lt.
Gen. William S. Wallace, V Corps commander, and had to retreat. Many of the
aircraft
were severely damaged.
The helicopter attack also had a limiting effect on
other airpower operations. Sorties by fixed-wing
aircraft were reduced to make way for the Apache
action,
and the fire support coordination line in the sector was moved dozens of
miles farther out in front of coalition forces.
The decision to move the FSCL cost us, basically,
a full night of fixed-target strikes inside the FSCL, said
Leaf. Wethe entire coalition
teamhad not hit our stride in achieving the command and control required
to operate in volume effectively inside the fire support coordination line.
It became clear that fixed-wing attack aircraftUSAF
bombers and Air Force, Navy, Marine Corps, and allied
fighterswere the weapon of choice for destroying
the Republican Guard. Leaf noted, too, that FSCL placement became somewhat
less of an issue, because the air-ground team got better at coordinating
actions within the various kill boxes.
The weight of the airpower effort was such that it
became hard to tell which Republican Guard units
were taking the brunt of the coalitions attacks.
Joint Chiefs of Staff spokesman Army Maj. Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal said
on March 31 that coalition air had flown 1,000 sorties
over Iraq that daya
typical day.
Fixed-wing air strikes simply shredded Republican
Guard unit cohesion. And that became a problem in itself,
according to Leaf.
I think that one of the real challenges in doing our targeting of [Guard] units
was their loss of unit identity, said Leaf. We had a hodge-podge. He
went on, We couldnt really tell you we were attacking the Medina
division; we could say we were attacking forces which were in traditional Medina
division deployment locations, and in the vicinity, and therefore presumed to
be dispersal or tactical sites, for the Medina division.
However, Pentagon officials noted that Republican
Guard divisions were not sitting ducks. In an ABC TV
interview
on March 30, Secretary of Defense
Donald
H. Rumsfeld
warned that, as coalition ground forces moved forward to deal with the
Republican Guard, that very likely will be the most difficult fighting
days that the coalition will face.
As in Gulf War I, the Republican Guard always had
a plan. Guard divisions were adept at small-unit defensive
fights and demonstrated their prowess
near Najaf,
where they engaged US Army troops. Leaf noted that one American unit, C
Troop of the 7th Cavalrys 3rd Squadron, suddenly found itself surrounded
and taking fire from three sides. So close was the fighting that
Iraqi soldiers were being killed by ricochets of their own rocket-propelled
grenades.
Some US soldiers ran out of ammunition and left their vehicles to pick-up
AK-47s from dead Iraqi soldiers so they had something to shoot back, said
Leaf.
At the time, he continued, I think it would
have been reasonable for some Iraqi tactical leaders
to think they were seizing an opportunity to
turn around the war.
 |
| The Remains. A field near
Najafthe site
of a three-day battleis littered with the
carcasses of Iraqi T-55 tanks. Coalition fixed-wing
aircraft decimated Iraqi forces. |
Bombers Fly CAS
The action around Najaf continued for three days,
during which two USAF bombers played a key role in
turning
the battle into a coalition victory.
Leaf argued
that one B-1B and one B-52 ensured the Iraqi attacks were defeated
in detail.
The air controller with C Troop called for assistance
and relayed coordinates to the bombers, which were
already airborne and on call to provide close
air support. The B-1B crew targeted the Republican Guard forces with precision
guided munitions, which were devastating in their effect. Then, a Joint
STARS battle
management aircraft picked up a second element of Iraqi forces moving down
the highway from Al Hillah. They were engaged by the B-52 and summarily
destroyed, said
Leaf.
The weight of the continuous air strikes was having
a clear effect.
At the land component headquarters, Leaf and his
staff officers were able to review and update Republican
Guard targets using data collected by Joint
STARS
and Global Hawk unmanned aerial vehicle sensors. Leafs staff displayed,
on a three-dimensional map of the battlefield, the coordinates of each
air weapon dropped.
It wasnt full-blown [battle damage assessment], Leaf said, but, within
24 hours, he could display for McKiernans staff an operational-level
portrayal of the effects of the air strikes. The rough BDA helped
show the cumulative impact of the air strikes and demonstrated how responsive
airpower
had been against priority targets for the ground forces.
The Republican Guard has been taking a pounding for some days now, Rumsfeld
said in an April 1 press briefing, and some of the Republican Guard units
from up north have been brought down south to try and reinforce Republican Guard
units in the south that have been badly weakened. That process goes on. Theyre
being attacked from the air. Theyre being pressured from the ground. And,
in good time, they wont be there.
On April 2, McChrystal announced, I would say
that the Medina and Baghdad divisions are no longer
credible forces.
Leafs reviews of aircrew mission reports confirmed
those statements. They
[coalition crews] were finding so much to kill that there
was a sense of both opportunity and effect coming across the wires. Leaf
believed that most of the Republican Guards forces were being ...
decimated, to the point that the land advance could accelerate to Baghdad. He
added, And
then it did.
Coalition ground forces picked up their pace and,
by the evening of April 2, were within about 30 miles
of Baghdad. Three days later, on April
5, the 3rd
Infantry Division made its show-of-force thunder run into
Baghdad.
 |
| BUFF on Call. One B-52,
working with information supplied by an E-8
Joint STARS, summarily
destroyed Iraqi forces attempting to flank
a US Army unit during the action around Najaf. |
Were Killing Them
Moseley, the air component commander, said of the
airpower contribution: I
find it interesting when folks say were softening them up. Were
not softening them up. Were killing them.
Moseley went on, I would not tell you the Republican
Guard is 100 percent gone. I believe they are gone
in organized division strength, corps strength,
brigade strength, but I believe there are still some survivors out
there that are still willing to fight. He added
that the dispersed survivors would continue
to cause a problem for us.
His comments, however, left no doubt that the Republican
Guard had come to the end of the road as an organized
fighting force. No longer
would
Saddams
regime enjoy their protection. Small units might still resist, but
the road to Baghdad was open, and coalition forces took control of
the city
on April 9.
Air commanders, in particular, were quick to credit
all forces for the smashing coalition victory. Unlike
in the 1991 war, Republican
Guard
forces did not
escape destruction because of poor coordination between air and land
forces. No such
problem occurred this time.
Leaf pointed out that the effect of closely integrated
airpower and land power was, at times, absolutely
devastating. He emphasized, though, that
it was airpower that removed from the Republican Guard the ability
to choose the time and place of engagement. So
the engagement came on our terms.
Airpower, because it was precise and persistent, wreaked
maximum destruction on the Republican Guard units,
breaking their military cohesion, and,
ultimately, dissolving the divisions into knots of abandoned equipment. In
essence, in the last week of March and first week of April, the Republican
Guard was neutralized, said
Westenhoff.
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