Liberating Kuwait

Page 161

The Final Preparations Q: How many of your soldiers were killed by the air war? A: To be honest, for the amount of ordinance that was dropped, not very many. Only one soldier was killed and two were wounded. The soldier that was killed did not die as a result of a direct hit but because the vibrations of the bomb caused a bunker to cave in on top of him. Q: So, then you feel that the aerial bombardment was ineffective? A: Oh no, just the opposite, it was extremely effective. The planes hit only vehicles and equipment. Even my personal vehicle, a “Waz,” was hit. They hit everything. I explained to my soldiers they should not fear the Americans. If the Americans wanted to kill us, I said, we would already be dead. The Americans just wanted to take away our ability to fight.44 When considering prisoner interrogations, the reader must keep in mind that the prisoner of war

149

has great incentive to tell the questioner what they think he or she wishes to hear, even when the interrogation is conducted in a friendly manner without any overt or subjective coercion. But this artillery officer’s view was matched by numerous Iraqi reports of the air campaign in internal discussions conducted after the war and captured following Operation Iraqi Freedom in 2003. To provide one specific example, an officer of the IV Corps recalled that “the enemy never stopped bothering us day and night by all types of aircraft . . . high speed jets, slow flying jets, precision bombers, and [other] combat jets. The weapons that really frustrated us and harmed us were the slow-flying aircraft and the Marine types. Sometimes they spent the whole day suspended over our heads to the extent that our ears had gotten used to their buzzing sounds.”45

Harriers Afloat On 20 February 1991, the amphibious assault ship USS Nassau launched four AV-8B Harriers of Marine Attack Squadron 331, call sign “Magic,” just before dawn. This flight was the first combat strike by

Air Boss by Col H. Avery Chenoweth. This painting captures the drama of flight operations on board the USS Nassau. The Navy “air boss” looks on as a Marine air controller talks an AV-8B Harrier onto the flight deck. The “Bumblebees” of Marine Attack Squadron 331 launched the first ever fixed-wing combat strikes from the deck of an amphibious assault ship on 20 February 1991. Marine Corps Art Collection


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Articles inside

Index

1hr
pages 307-336

Appendix H Brief on Iraqi Forces

47min
pages 293-304

Appendix I List of Reviewers

0
pages 305-306

Desert Storm

7min
pages 263-268

Appendix F Marine Corps Uniforms in the Gulf War

15min
pages 283-290

Appendix C Chronology of Significant Events

13min
pages 269-276

Notes

49min
pages 237-252

Leaving the Desert

11min
pages 225-229

A Triumphant Return Postwar Iraq: Operations Provide Comfort, Northern Watch,

2min
page 230

and Southern Watch

4min
pages 231-232

Reflections

8min
pages 233-236

Al-Wafrah Forest and Faylakah Island

4min
pages 223-224

27 February

18min
pages 212-220

25 February

25min
pages 190-200

The Battles of 19–23 February

18min
pages 166-174

Artillery Raids, Skirmishes, and Patrols

6min
pages 153-154

The “Miracle Well” of Khanjar

4min
pages 151-152

Harriers Afloat

2min
page 161

Marine Air Prepares the Battlefield

15min
pages 155-160

Considerations

6min
pages 144-146

31 January

5min
pages 141-143

30 January

17min
pages 135-140

Operation Desert Sting

2min
page 122

Outposts

4min
pages 120-121

27 to 28 January

2min
page 117

Coalition Dispositions

6min
pages 114-116

Iraq’s al-Khafji Plan

11min
pages 108-112

Artillery Raids and Reconnaissance Patrols

2min
page 107

Marines and the Air Tasking Order

6min
pages 99-100

28 to 31 January

8min
pages 101-104

19 to 27 January

8min
pages 95-98

18 January: The Scuds

4min
page 94

Trading Desert Rats for Tigers

10min
pages 84-88

Planning a Storm

7min
pages 80-83

Iraq’s Defenses

12min
pages 76-79

A Line in the Sand: Planning to Defend Saudi Arabia

8min
pages 57-59

Happy Holidays from Saudi Arabia

5min
pages 70-71

Marines Afloat

13min
pages 52-56

Meeting of Cultures: Marines and Saudis

14min
pages 60-66

7th Marine Expeditionary Brigade

8min
pages 49-51

Marines and Maritime Prepositioning

2min
page 48

Chapter 3 Desert Shield

2min
page 47

The Plan to Invade Kuwait

6min
pages 33-35

The Iran-Iraq War

10min
pages 22-25

The American Military Response

8min
pages 43-46

The Invasion of Kuwait

4min
page 36

The World’s Response

7min
pages 41-42

Marines in the Iraqi and Kuwaiti Embassies

10min
pages 37-40

The Tanker War

9min
pages 26-30
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