Goodness, I’m getting old.
The ground campaign of Desert Storm (aka Desert Saber) kicked off early on the 24th of February 24, 1991. My unit, A Company, 7/6 Infantry, part of the 1st Armored Division, was a part of VII Corps. We were initially scheduled to jump off early on the 25th as a part of the massive “left hook” planned by the CENTCOM CinC, General Norman Schwarzkopf. Instead, the early successes in the east with the frontal assault into Kuwait led to us jumping off at noon on the 24th. To our west, elements of XVIII Airborne Corps, the 82nd Airborne Division, the 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault) and the French 6th Light Armored Division screened the left flank of VII Corps. VII Corps was truly the fist of 3rd Army. Commanded by LTG Freddy Franks, the corps consisted of 1st Armored Division, 3rd Armored Division, 1st Infantry Division (Mech), the British 1st Armored Division, the 1st Cavalry Division, and the 2nd Cavalry Regiment, along with a host of supporting Artillery, Engineer, Military Police, Military Intelligence, Medical and various support brigades.
The first two days, for me, at least, would see only very minor skirmishing, as we passed through the border, and sought to move the massive corps to within reach of our objective, the divisions of the Iraqi Republican Guard Corps. On the third day, we would slam into them, smashing their formations with tank, TOW, cannon, Multiple Launch Rocket, artillery and helicopter gunship fires. I remember being in awe of the concentrated firepower of an entire armored brigade at night focused on the enemy formation. The glint, the sparkle of a 120mm depleted uranium sabot round impacting on an Iraqi T-72, followed almost instantly by an eruption of flames as the onboard ammunition ignited, and the turret was blown clean off the tank, to tumble a hundred feet high.
Every IRGC unit we came into contact with was swiftly destroyed.
The problem was, we hadn’t come into contact with all of them.
And GEN Colin Powell, seeing the images of the so called “Highway of Death” where Iraqi forces fleeing Kuwait were relentlessly attacked by airpower, feared that the US would be seen as a bully. And so he lobbied President Bush to unilaterally impose a cease fire before the actual defeat of the IRGC. That single decision was, I believe, the root cause of much of the foreign policy disaster in the Middle East in the ensuing 25 years.
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