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Great Battles

During Operation Desert Storm, elements of the US 2nd Armored Cavalry Regiment annihilated Iraqi tanks and fighting vehicles in a decisive battle

An Iraqi tank stands abandoned as burning oil wells fill the sky with smoke
Images: Alamy, Getty

On 2 August 1990, Saddam Hussein ordered his army to invade neighbouring Kuwait.

The unprovoked attack and brutal Iraqi occupation sparked outrage, international condemnation and a demand from the United Nations that Iraq withdraw immediately. Three days after the invasion, US President George HW Bush declared: “This will not stand, this Iraqi aggression against Kuwait.”

During the subsequent Operation Desert Shield, the United States led a coalition of 35 nations in a build-up of over whelming militar y capability on land, sea and air in preparation for the forcible ejection of the Iraqi Army from Kuwait. Within five months, the coalition had assembled more than 950,000 troops, 3,000 tanks, 1,800 aircraft and 2,200 artillery pieces – along with considerable naval fire suppor t capability – to oppose the Iraqi forces, which numbered over one million troops, 5,500 tanks and 700 aircraft. On 17 Januar y 1991, the coalition unleashed a torrent of cruise missiles launched from submarines and warships, along with a sustained aerial bombing campaign designed to degrade the Iraqi combat effectiveness prior to the initiation of ground operations.

Thirty-eight days later, on 24 February 1991, coalition ground forces commenced operations against the Iraqi militar y in earnest, intent on driving the aggressors from Kuwait and destroying their fighting capability, par ticularly that of the elite Republican Guard divisions – well-trained and equipped troops, some of whom were veterans of the Iran-Iraq War of 1980 -88.

An Abrams tank next to a picture of Saddam Hussein on the outskirts of Kuwait City, March 1991

US General Norman Schwarzkopf, commander of coalition forces, devised a plan to accomplish the mission at hand. Utilising overwhelming air power to erode Iraqi command and control and reduce enemy combat capability, he also employed a spectacularly successful campaign of deception. While largescale amphibious manoeuvres complemented by covert operations and phoney radio traffic created the impression that the coalition intended to invade Kuwait from the south and into the most formidable Iraqi defences, Schwarzkopf directed a massive force of several combat divisions to sweep westward in a wide arc, taking up positions to attack to the north and then nor theast into Iraq in a wide envelopment.

Air bombardment had succeeded in effectively blinding the Iraqi high command, maximising the effectiveness of the southern deception such tha