Tuesday, September 17, 2019
The Persian Gulf War :: History Iraq Middle East Papers
The Persian Gulf War           War was inevitable in the Gulf and it was a war in which Iraq was  inevitability to lose. There were several reasons why this was and became a  reality. How, when, where did this process of self destruction begin? It  was quite evident that Saddam Hussein. the president of Iraq, was becoming  a military giant in the Middle East and therefore a threat to the stability  of the entire region. His war with Iran was proof of this. The U.S. and  other industrialized Western nations could not risk the loss of oil from  the area. Kuwait is the second largest source of petroleum in the Middle  East and so Iraqi invasion of Kuwait sent the world oil market into a  frenzy. Iraqi forces then gathered their forces on the border with Saudi  Arabia, the second largest supplier of oil in the world. This in turn  brought the military might of the United States into the conflict.         There are several reasons why Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait. "After  the 8 year war with Iran over territorial disputes and religious rivalries  between the Iranian Shiites and Iraqi Sunni factions, Iraq had a massive  debt to many Arab nations including Kuwait."2 The rulers of these nations  wanted some of their money back but Iraq thought they were ingrates and  were ungrateful for defending the Arab emirs from the Iranian Islamic  fundamentalism. The Arab emirs were afraid that the Islamic fundamentalists  would rise against the government and eventually take over the government  as they had Iran against the Shah. Kuwait was also afraid of this and so  they supported the Iraqi Arabs against the Iranian Persians.        2"Iraq",World Book (New York, World Book, 1990), Vol 10, p. 260       The funds that Gulf countries lent to Iraq were used to buy high tech  weapons, high tech weapons that made Iraq one of the largest armies in the  world and a force to contend with. "Ironically much of the money and  weapons came from the countries that united to fight against him."1 The  Gulf countries bankrolled him while the Western nations, who had many  defense contractors going out of business because of the end of the Cold  War, supplied him with the weapons to fight Iran and later Kuwait and the  Coalition. With a large army like his, it would be very easy to defeat the  far smaller Kuwaiti army compared to his.        1CNN The Gulf War (Video) (Atlanta, CNN News, 75 min.  					    
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