Desert Shield/Desert Storm 25th Anniversary
Twenty-five years ago today, I was driving back from Fort Bragg after another ROTC Advanced Camp to the University of Vermont where I was the operations NCO of our instructor detachment. The fact that Saddam Hussein had invaded Kuwait was just another news item on the radio.
Two months later, I was leaving the ROTC detachment and heading to a new assignment with the 1st Battalion, 41st Infantry, 3rd Brigade of the 2d Armored Division (Forward) at Garlstedt, Germany and few weeks after my arrival, we were ordered to Saudi Arabia to participate in Desert Storm.
Richard Haas writes in the Wall Street Journal how the first war against Saddam Hussein was the “Classic War”, yeah, it probably was;
It is a stretch to tie the events of 1990-91 to the mayhem that is the Middle East today. The pathologies of the region—along with the 2003 Iraq war and the mishandling of its aftermath, the subsequent pullout of U.S. troops from Iraq, the 2011 Libya intervention and the continuing U.S. failure to act in Syria—all do more to explain the mess.
The Gulf War was a signal success of American foreign policy. It avoided what clearly would have been a terrible outcome—letting Saddam get away with a blatant act of territorial acquisition and perhaps come to dominate much of the Middle East. But it was a short-lived triumph, and it could neither usher in a “new world order,” as President Bush hoped, nor save the Middle East from itself.
In my considered opinion, it’s not a stretch to connect events today to that war. After the war, we drove to the gates of Baghdad unopposed to shield the Shi’ites from the wrath of Hussein. We could have booted the tyrant easily, relatively speaking. His armies’ tails were clearly tucked and on the run. Iraq had suffered about 100,000 wounded and killed, another 300,000 were POWs. On our drive into Iraq after the war had ended, we encountered countless Iraqi stragglers who were walking back home.
If we had been allowed to wrest the government from Saddam Hussein and his minions, who would have been there to stop us? We who were there, knew that someday we’d have to go back, that the war wasn’t over at 8AM on February 28th when we were told to disengage from a firefight with dug-in Iraqi troops, just because the politicians decided that the war was over.
In the years between the end of the 1st and the start of the second war against Hussein, the Iraqis made several feints against Kuwait, triggering several deployments of US troops to man the pre-positioned equipment left in Kuwait for that purpose. Hussein’s air defenses took pot shots at US and UK pilots who were flying the UN-mandated “no fly zones” over northern and southern Iraq.
When the 2003 invasion was inevitable, Hussein handed out copies of “Blackhawk Down”, about the 1993 operations in Somalia, to his generals as an instructional video to defeat American troops and to sap the political will of the American people to engage in a costly war.
In 1991, we had sufficient troops available, and the logistical tail to support them, to take Baghdad, but, as is usually the case, the politicians lacked the guts to do what needed to be done. In the short term, the Gulf War was a success, but in the long view, and my impeccable 20/20 hindsight, it really accomplished nothing except the delay of the inevitable. Invading in 1991 would have predated the rise of al Qaeda and bin Laden…and Bill Clinton’s cruise missile war against terrorism.
But, despite what critics might say, the reason that the Gulf War was so brief and so successful in the short term is because we had trained for exactly that war for more than a decade – when we crossed the Saudi border into Iraq and and on to Kuwait, it was exactly like a two-hundred-mile Table XII (Platoon live fire exercise) run in Grafenwoher. It was our training that won the day. Skimping on training will cost lives in the future.
Category: Terror War
To all of you here who are Desert Shield/Desert Storm vets, thank you. You and your service are never forgotten by older vets like me. Well done all. Damned well done!
Ty for yr servive as well……24. I.D DESERT SHEILD/Desert Storm,then again 2004 O.I.F
I remember watching the news reports on tv that day. Just a nineteen year old kid who had been onboard USS Horne for 6 months. We were scheduled for a west pac in October, watching the news reports I knew where we’d be going.
There is no substitute for solid realistic training.
Final disjointed thought…
We really should have finished the job first go round.
yep “Daddy” Bush let us down…so did junior Bush, so remember than now that they want to push off another “Bush” on us come election time!!
I was on theUSS Saratoga and we were scheduled to deploy to the Mediterranean either August 4th or 6th I cant remember of the top of my head. So much for our liberty port schedule. That was long cruise, still have contact with a few of my shipmates. Love this website,
The end of the first Gulf War was what happens when the diplomats and soldier/diplomats decide that winning a war decisively isn’t “fair” and “doesn’t look good”. The shitty decisions follow.
‘Skimping on training will cost lives in the future.’ – Wiser words are not spoken by the current admin.
When the news about the War started, I was on the back porch of my apartment. I had the radio on. The hourly news report came on, announcing it. I said ‘What!?!?’ and turned on the TV. It made me into a news junkie, because C-SPAN carried the live stuff 24 hours a day. The War was brought up on an episode of ‘Major Dad’.
It was strange to see this happening, but it was quick and I didn’t understand why no one in WDC wanted to finish the job properly. Why didn’t they want to go after Saddam Hussein? I thought it was a mistake then, and it was. When the stragglers got home, Saddam Hussein had them shot.
…I remember looking at my wife and telling her, “Saddam’s just tried to pull off the greatest robbery in history… we’re gonna have to stop him.”
Mike
I was a young PFC with just under a year of service when I heard the news on the radio before PT that morning. Didn’t think much about it. Eight days later, we had a noon recall formation which the CO started with, “Guys…we’re working this weekend…” then talked about the “Prepare to Deploy” orders we had…three guys from my unit were in the middle of outprocessing and got “involuntarily extended”
I was the Brigade S-4 NCO for the 1st Brigade (Infantry Heavy) 4th Infantry Division at Fort Carson when the news broke.
We were ready,willing and able to go.
They never deployed us.
Life went on.
Since other people are mentioning their years of service at that point, so will I.
I had put in exactly 19 years and six months of active duty by 2 Aug 90.
Can anybody say “Stop Loss?”
Due to my advancing age, details get scrambled inside my brain.
Data is not deleted, just thoroughly blended into confused memories.
Anyway, I remember being in my apartment in downtown Salt Lake City, and across town at the National Guard armory, and seeing the lights on in the office windows all night long.
That is (or was) headquarters for the 19th Special Forces Group (Airborne).
That’s how I knew that something very serious was going on.
I meant to type:
“Anyway, I remember being in my apartment in downtown Salt Lake City, and looking across town at the National Guard armory, and seeing the lights on in the office windows all night long.”
In Germany at the time, deactivating 4/14 FA (8 inch) in Bamberg.
Being an NBC NCO was suddenly popular as everyone just knew Saddam was going to repel the invaders with chemical weapons. Everyone wanted me and the NBC equipment we were “dispositioning” of, regardless of condition.
Oh, the good old days….
As I recall, the Germans helped out with some chemical detection vehicles (Fuchs/Fox). Never saw any of those, but we did get an East German mobile decontamination unit that we used as a shower. The augmentation chemical NCO we got from the IRR operated it for us. Sitting in Log Base Echo, he didn’t have a whole lot more to do.
I was in Bamberg at that time. We got a bunch of 13Bravos from 4/14th FA.
Heard the news in the international terminal in Miami. Checked in and was told to go ahead with my planned additional week of vacation and to enjoy it because there was no telling when I’d see another day off. Sure enough, spent the next weeks working my civilian job AND pretty much full time for USAF until finally leaving myself.
Seems like it was about three weeks after the invasion that the first wave of our aircraft and personnel were in place. It took about 5 more weeks for everything to get there, but operational missions were already going on.
Funny story. Nobody knew where we were or ever heard of it, so mail delivery was an issue. Our aircrews delivered mail, among other things, in theatre so was well aware where they should be picking up ours. They finally went looking for ours and found it stuffed in the back of a yard somewhere. They just took what they could fit in their aircraft that day. One aircrew is rumored to have threatened not to bring any more mail in until they released ours to us. Or something.
Mail delivery didn’t seem to be much of a priority for awhile in country until there was so much of it that it clogged up the air heads. One of our TC units ended up having to dedicate 14 40 footers a day until it finally got under control.
I was in High School during the Gulf War watching it on TV. I had already decided that I wanted to join the Army at that point. I went to Basic a year later between my Junior and Senior year of High School.
I was commanding an ‘Alpha’- tiered Signal unit at the time. We were put on stand-by from day one, and told to get equipment ready, keep everyone close, and be prepared for deployment orders at any time. It was over practically before I could complete inventory (ever inventory signal stuff? It takes forever.)
Interesting times… we ALL knew we’d go backsomeday.
Funny thing was, Wolf Blitzer was actually believable back then.
I was supposed to PCS to Korea, but was told that the 24th ID was going to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and that I was joining them.
Signal leads the way. 🙂
Oh yeah…. Stop Loss
My P-3 squadron deployed to Sigonella, Sicily, and immediately set up detachment ops in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, where we flew Red Sea surveillance flights. We had it pretty cushy staying in furnished and air-conditioned double wide trailers. Any time I heard someone bitch I’d remind them about the Marines out in the desert staying in tents, and mentioned I’d happily arrange some cross-decking with them.
This changed the subject rather quickly.
25 years ago, just damn.
54th Engr Bn
1st AD
We didn’t have enough fuel or water to make a blitzkrieg into Bagdad.
imho
We had just got back to Pendleton from Panama that day. 10 days later we were in Saudi Arabia. Several years later when I was flying into Kuwait for Gulf War 2 I mentioned that it looked much different than my previous visit. When asked what was different I said “Last time it was on fire.” ?
Thanks for reminding me how old I am……
I was also at Bragg, Thai language school, on my way to 1st Group. Got a call from the SF CSM and asked if I had this school, that school etc. When I answered “yes” CSM asked me if I wanted to go to fight, “Hell yeah CSM!” He just laughed and said I’d be going with him….. we left a few days later.