| Gulf War |
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| Date | 2 August, 1990 – 28 February, 1991 |
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| Location | |
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| Result |
Coalition victory |
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Territorial changes |
State of Kuwait resumes self-governance over all Kuwaiti sovereign territory
- Establishment of a demilitarized zone and construction of a separation barrier along the Iraq–Kuwait border
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| Belligerents |
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Kuwait United States United Kingdom
Saudi Arabia Egypt
France
Diplomatic support:
Iran
Soviet Union |
Iraq |
| Commanders and leaders |
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| Strength |
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956,600, including 700,000 US troops[2][3] |
650,000 soldiers |
| Casualties and losses |
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- Military dead:
- 1,000–2,000
- Civilian dead:
- 500–1,000
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- Military dead:
- 80,000–100,000
- Civilian dead:
- 5,000–7,000
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The Gulf War was a conflict between Iraq and 42 other countries, led by the United States. It started with the invasion of Kuwait by Iraq on 2 August, 1990. Iraq had occupied Kuwait as part of its territory. Iraq is said to have suffered around 80,000–100,000 soldier losses.[4]
There were two military operations.
Operation Desert Shield brought Western troops to protect Dhahran, Saudi Arabia and the Arab Gulf states that Iraq had not attacked.
Operation Desert Storm attacked Iraq's forces both in Kuwait and in southern Iraq. It started on 17 January 1991 with an air strike on Baghdad. Ground operations started 24 February. Iraqi forces set fire to oil wells to slow the attack. The war ended on 28 February 1991 with a ceasefire.[5]
The long Iran–Iraq War had ended in August 1988. Iraq owed a great amount of money to Saudi Arabia and had difficulty paying it back. Saddam Hussein declared the neighboring country of Kuwait to be siphoning Iraqi crude oil from across the border, and on 2 August, 1990 the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait started. On 17 January, 1991 the US began the Persian Gulf War with a massive US led air offensive known as Operation Desert Storm.[6]
The attacks were assisted by newly developed weapons, including stealth aircraft, cruise missiles and smart bombs.
After 42 days of fighting U.S. President Bush declared a ceasefire on 28 February. By that time most Iraqi forces in Kuwait had either surrendered or fled.
Operation Desert storm included a bombing campaign that targeted Iraqi aircraft, anti-aircraft systems, oil refineries, weapon factories, bridges, and roads. President George Bush decided not to depose Saddam Hussein.
Political issues after Operation Desert Storm lead to the second Persian Gulf War in 2003.
Related pages
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to
Gulf War.
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Beginning of the Iraqi conflict |
Prelude |
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| Background | |
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| Rationale |
- WMD claims
- Yellowcake uranium
- Aluminum tubes
- Biological weapons
- Chemical weapons
- "Curveball"
- Mobile weapon labs
- Saddam–al-Qaeda conspiracy theory
- Oil as a possible rationale
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| Issues |
- American imperialism
- Colin Powell's UN presentation
- Disarmament crisis
- Failed peace initiatives
- Iraq resolution / UK parliament's support for invasion
- Iraqi–Kurdish conflict
- Legality
- Legitimacy of the invasion
- Media coverage
- Military analyst program
- Rapid response operation
- Saddam's alleged shredder
- Preemptive war
- Saddam Hussein and human rights
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Dossiers and memos |
- Habbush letter
- Downing Street memo
- September Dossier
- Vilnius letter
- Letter of the eight
- Bush–Blair 2003 memo
- February Dossier
- Bush–Aznar memo
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Overview |
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| Key events | |
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Invasion (2003) |
- Timeline
- Preparations for invasion
- Multi-National Force
- Battle of Nasiriyah
- Fall of Baghdad
- Battle of Debecka Pass
- Firdos Square statue
- Mission Accomplished speech
- US public opinion
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Occupation (2003–2011) |
- Occupation of Ramadi
- De-Ba'athification
- 100 Orders
- CPA Order 2
- CPA Order 17
- U.S. military bases
- Blackwater
- Reconstruction
- Economic reform
- UNAMI
- Al Qa'qaa high explosives
- U.S. kill or capture strategy
Replacement governments |
- Coalition Provisional Authority
- Interim Government
- 2005 parliamentary elections
- Transitional Government
- Constitution
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Participants |
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| Countries |
- Australia
- Ba'athist Iraq
- Denmark
- Georgia
- Iran
- Italy
- Japan
- Poland
- South Korea
- Thailand
- Ukraine
- United Kingdom
- United States
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Insurgent groups | Sunni groups | |
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Shia groups |
- Mahdi Army
- Abu Deraa's militia
- Badr Organization
- Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq
- Sheibani Network
- Soldiers of Heaven
- Asa'ib Ahl al-Haq
- Promised Day Brigade
- Kata'ib Hezbollah
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Ba'ath loyalists |
- Fedayeen Saddam
- Al-Awda
- Popular Army
- Al-Abud Network
- Army of the Men of the Naqshbandi Order
- Supreme Command for Jihad and Liberation
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Impact |
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| General |
- Casualties
- Iraq Body Count
- Iraq Family Health Survey
- Lancet surveys
- ORB survey
- Damage to Baghdad
- Al-Aimmah Bridge disaster
- Human rights
- Humanitarian crisis
- Financial cost
- Refugees
- Iraqi Christians
- Mandaeans
- Violence against Iraqi academics
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Political controversies |
- Post-invasion WMD conjecture
- Iraq scandal in Finland
- Dixie Chicks comments
- Plame affair
- Hood event
- Death of David Kelly
- Kidnapping of Angelo dela Cruz
- 2004 document leak
- Al Jazeera bombing memo
- Scott Thomas Beauchamp controversy
- MoveOn.org ad controversy
- Six Days in Fallujah
- Role of Canada
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| Reactions | | Pre-war |
- Pre-war international reactions
- Khuy Voyne!
- Saddam Hussein interview
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- Views on the invasion
- Opposition
- Criticism
- United Nations
- Oprah's Anti-war series
- Iraqi map pendant
- Winter Soldier: Iraq & Afghanistan
- Photo Op
- A Responsible Plan to End the War in Iraq
- Bush shoeing incident
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| Protests |
Halloween 2002
February 15, 2003
March 20, 2003
Bring Them Home Now Tour
January 20, 2005
September 24, 2005
January 27, 2007
March 17, 2007
2007 Port of Tacoma
September 15, 2007
March 19, 2008
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| Aftermath in Iraq |
- The rise of ISIL
- Insurgency (2011–13)
- War in Iraq (2013–17)
- War against ISIL (2014–present)
- U.S.-led intervention in Iraq (2014–2021)
- Insurgency (2017–present)
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Miscellaneous |
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| Terminology | | Critical |
- Global arrogance
- Inverted totalitarianism
- "The wrong war, at the wrong place, at the wrong time"
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| Memorials |
- Afghan–Iraqi Freedom Memorial (Salem, Oregon)
- Al-Shaheed Monument
- Iraq and Afghanistan Memorial (London)
- Northwood Gratitude and Honor Memorial
- Old North Memorial Garden
- Saving Iraqi Culture
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| Lists |
- Assassinations
- Aviation shootdowns and accidents
- Bombings
- Coalition military operations
- Documentaries
- Iraqi security forces fatality reports
- Most-wanted Iraqi playing cards
- Private contractor deaths
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| Timeline |
- 2003
- 2004
- 2005
- 2006
- 2007
- 2008
- 2009
- 2010
- 2011
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List of modern conflicts in the Middle East |
|---|
| 1910s |
- Italo-Turkish War
- World War I
- Unification of Saudi Arabia
- Simko Shikak revolt
- 1919 Egyptian Revolution
- Turkish War of Independence
- Greco-Turkish War
- Turkish–Armenian War
- Franco-Turkish War
- Revolts
- Mahmud Barzanji revolts
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| 1920s |
- Franco-Syrian War
- Iraqi Revolt (1920)
- Intercommunal conflict in Mandatory Palestine
- Adwan Rebellion
- Arab separatism in Khuzestan
- Great Syrian Revolt
- Sheikh Said rebellion
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| 1930s |
- Ararat rebellion
- Ahmed Barzani revolt
- Simele massacre
- Saudi–Yemeni War (1934)
- Goharshad Mosque rebellion
- 1935–1936 Iraqi Shia revolts
- 1935 Yazidi revolt
- 1936–1939 Arab revolt in Palestine
- Dersim rebellion
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| 1940s |
- World War II
- Italian bombing of Palestine
- Allied invasion of Iraq
- Syria–Lebanon campaign
- Anglo-Soviet invasion of Iran
- 1943 Barzani revolt
- Alwaziri coup
- Al-Wathbah uprising
- Kurdish separatism in Iran
- Arab–Israeli conflict
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| 1950s | |
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| 1960s |
- Cyprus crisis of 1963–1964
- Iraqi–Kurdish conflict
- First Iraqi–Kurdish War
- Second Iraqi–Kurdish War
- Dhofar Rebellion
- North Yemen Civil War
- Feb. 1963 Iraqi coup
- Mar. 1963 Syrian coup
- Nov. 1963 Iraqi coup
- Aden Emergency
- 1964 Hama riot
- Israeli–Palestinian conflict
- 1966 Syrian coup d'état
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| 1970s |
- Black September in Jordan
- Yemenite War of 1972
- Turkish invasion of Cyprus
- Shatt al-Arab clashes
- Lebanese Civil War
- Political violence in Turkey
- Islamist uprising in Syria
- 1977 Shia uprising in Iraq
- NDF Rebellion
- Yemenite War of 1979
- Iranian Revolution
- Consolidation of the Iranian Revolution
- 1979 Qatif Uprising
- Grand Mosque seizure
- 1979–1980 Shia uprising in Iraq
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| 1980s |
- Iran–Iraq War
- 1980 Turkish coup d'état
- Kurdish–Turkish conflict
- South Yemen Civil War
- 1986 Egyptian conscripts riot
- 1986 Damascus bombings
- 1987 Sharjawi coup d'état attempt
- Mecca massacre
- Abu Nidal's executions
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| 1990s |
- Gulf War (1990–1991)
- 1991 Iraqi uprisings
- Terror campaign in Egypt (1990s)
- Yemeni Civil War (1994)
- Iraqi Kurdish Civil War
- Islamic insurgency in Saudi Arabia (2000–present)
- Operation Desert Fox
- al-Qaeda insurgency in Yemen
- 1999 Shia uprising in Iraq
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| 2000s |
- Iraq War
- Balochi insurgency in Iran
- 2004 Qamishli riots
- Houthi insurgency in Yemen
- Iran–Israel proxy conflict
- Fatah–Hamas conflict
- South Yemen insurgency
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| 2010s |
- 2011 Bahraini uprising
- Egyptian Crisis
- Sinai insurgency
- Insurgency in Egypt (2013–present)
- Syrian civil war
- Syrian War spillover in Lebanon
- Iraqi insurgency (2011–2013)
- War in Iraq (2013–2017)
- Islamic State insurgency in Iraq (2017–present)
- Yemeni crisis
- Yemeni civil war (2014–present)
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| 2020s | |
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This list includes World War I and later conflicts (after 1914) of at least 100 fatalities eachProlonged conflicts are listed in the decade when initiated; ongoing conflicts are marked italic, and conflicts with +100,000 killed with bold. |
Authority control databases |
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| National | |
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| Other | |
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