¶ … Persian Gulf War
During the last eighteen months of the Cold War, the United States and members of a United Nations coalition were engaged in a large-scale war. The United States deployed over 500,000 soldiers, sailors, and air force personnel - the largest such deployment since the Vietnam War, but the war it found itself in was not of global scale, but regional; and the enemy was not the U.S.S.R. But Iraq, who, in the summer of 1990, possessed the fourth largest military in the world. On August 2, 1990, the combined armed forces of Iraq, under the direct leadership of Saddem Hussein - some 140,000 soldiers - invaded the neighboring oil rich kingdom of Kuwait. Many Western countries feared the Iraqi dictator would push his forces further south into the kingdom of Saudi Arabia with its vast oil riches that supplies. On August 3, 1990, President George Bush and his administration were prepared to respond to this invasion through economic, diplomatic, and military measures. Iraq's invasion meant that Hussein would control 20% of the worlds oil supply. This was found to be unacceptable, especially if he could take his armies into Saudi Arabia and capture the capital within three days.
President Bush was resolved early in this crisis to defend Saudi Arabia and thwart any further advances by the Iraqi armed forces. U.S. Army General Norman Schwarzkopf, the commander in chief of Central Command, which oversees U.S. military operations in Central Asia, said "two tiers of responses were possible....the first...could be single retaliatory strikes...carried out by U.S. naval aircraft based on carriers in the region. Possible targets included the Iraqi Army in Kuwait...targets in Iraq itself....Such attacks could not be sustained very long and probably would not accomplish much....Tier Two...was the execution of Operations Plan 90-1002 for the defense of the Saudi Peninsula. That would take months and involve 100,000 to 200,000 military personnel from all the services" (Woodward, 228). Tier Two would include the deployment four divisions from the Army and Marine Corps - including heavy armor units - three aircraft carriers - each with seventy-five attack and support planes - plus air force transports, bombers, all support personnel from all services. Traditionally, the U.S. would have first opted with the Tier One choice: limited number of hardware and personnel deployed for a short-sustained mission that the U.S. gambled the other side would blink and retreat. But analysis of the Iraqi culture and military showed that they had a formidable opponent in Kuwait who threatens U.S. interests. Two days after the invasion, the U.S. opted with the Tier Two choice: defend Saudi Arabia. Full deployment would take seventeen weeks. Secretary of Defense Dick Chaney explored the idea with Powell and Schwarzkopf about the size of force needed to remove Iraqi forces from Kuwait. This was the third option on the table now. Schwarzkopf stated that "it would take 8 to 12 months to put in place the U.S. force needed to kick Saddam out of Kuwait" (Ibid, 248). The Iraqi army at the time of the invasion was impressive with 900,000 men consisting of sixty-three divisions, "including the eight elite Republican Guard forces....[the] arsenal included...Soviet T-72 tanks, South African 155-mm heavy artillery...multiple rocket launchers...anti-ship missiles...fighters...and fighter-bombers....[Iraq's] weaknesses...primarily feeble logistics and a centralized system of command and control in which important decisions...could be made only by Saddam personally" (Schwarzkopf, 300).
With the Saudi Royal Family's permission, elements of the United States armed forces were deployed to that Kingdom on August 7, 1990. En route were two naval carrier battle groups, units of the Army's 82nd Airborne Division, and elements of the Air Force's tactical wings. Schwarzkopf noted that the "President had already been warned that deploying troops was not an instant solution....the...crisis only three days old, three months seemed almost an eternity....I wanted to make absolutely certain...how powerful an enemy we would face" (Ibid, 301). On August 8, 1990, President Bush addressed...
Others say Omar "was chosen by God," Rashid writes. When interviewed by a journalist from Pakistan (Rahimullah Yousufzai) after taking control of Kabul, according to Rashid's book, Omar stated, "We had complete faith in God Almighty. We never forgot that. He can bless us with victory or plunge us into defeat." Omar was born around 1959 (albeit much of his life is carefully guarded in secrecy), he has only one eye,
While on one hand, the Nile gets the highest discharge from rainfall on the highlands of Ethiopia and upland plateau of East Africa, located well outside the Middle East region; on the other hand, discharge points of the other two rivers, Euphrates and Tigris, are positioned well within the Middle East region, prevailing mostly in Turkey, Syria along with Iraq. In other areas, recurrent river systems are restricted to
Interview With an Immigrant Profile of the Interviewee The immigrant who was interviewed for this paper is John Smith (not his real name). He is a twenty-nine-year-old male immigrant of Pakistani origin who lives in New York. Both his parents are from Pakistan but settled in the United Arab Emirates after their marriage. Smith has also spent all his childhood in the United Arab Emirates where he was born and has only
Muhammad Ali in Egypt and the Influence of Napoleon Services and Mission of Muhammad Ali Pasha Reforms under the Regime of Muhammad Ali Pasha Societal Reforms Education Reforms Westernization Economic Reforms Agricultural Reforms Political Reforms Political Reforms Economic Strengthening Activities to Make Egypt Self Sufficient Muhammad Ali the Father of Modern Egypt AFU Armed Forces Union CGS Chief of the General Staff CUP the Committee of Union and Progress Dev-Sol Revolutionary Left Dev-Yol Revolutionary Way D-SK Confederation of Unions of Revolutionary Workers DP Democrat Party EEC or EC European
AFRICA'S PETROLEUM AND CHINA'S ECONOMIC GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT How Africa's Petroleum Supply Is Important to China's Economic Growth and Development While China continues to grow, its oil demand is poised to grow rapidly. For China to ensure its oil security, it must obtain oil from the global world because it lacks adequate domestic resources to quench the thirsty appetite of the country's rapid economic development. Any approach for growth that the country
By contrast, this was not found to be true for the Colombian couples. Instead, their level of relationship satisfaction was predicted by having a similar level of expressiveness between spouses, irrespective of whether the level was high, medium, or low (Ingoldsby, 1980). Likewise, Colombian women and men were determined to be are equally likely to say what they feel and to express themselves at the same level as North American
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