Desert Shield and Desert Storm, An Aviation Logistics History: 1990-1991

Abstract

The Iraqi invasion of Kuwait on August the 2nd, 1990, and the resultant decision by the President to deploy land, air, and naval forces to protect Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates led, since August the 8th, 1990, to a steady, measured commitment of soldiers, sailors, airmen and supporting equipment to Southwest Asia. That commitment, which began approaching its apparent apex by early November, suddenly broadened on the 8th of that month when the President expanded the original defensive objective to entail the liberation of Kuwait. His policy addendum called for doubling the 200,000 men in Southwest Asia to about 400,000, and he gave Iraq a January the 15th, 1991 deadline to quit Kuwait or face massive military force. Overall American policy in this matter could, therefore, be considered roughly three-phased: one, the original defensive deployment of 200,000 strong, August 8-November 8, 1990; two, the reinforcement to attack strength of about 400,000, November 8, 1990, to January 15, 1991; and three, January 16, 1991, to February 27, 1991- war.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Jun 01, 1991
Accession Number
ADA434080

Entities

People

  • Howard K. Butler

Organizations

  • United States Army Aviation and Missile Command

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Human Systems

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Abstracts
  • Arabia
  • Army Aviation
  • Asia
  • Deployment
  • Information Operations
  • Logistics
  • Saudi Arabia
  • Southwest Asia
  • United Arab Emirates

Readers

  • Maritime Combat Support and Expeditionary Logistics.
  • Mathematics or Statistics
  • Nuclear Non-Proliferation and International Security