Encyclopedia of Islam



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Gulf Wars

  

273  J




also invoked, with little success, the symbolism 

of the Shii Imams a

li

 

ibn



 a

bi

 t



alib

 (d. 661) and 

Husayn in order to maintain the loyalty of Iraq’s 

Shii majority. Iran and Iraq soon became locked in 

a long war of attrition, during which Iraq bombed 

Iranian towns and 

cities

 and used chemical weap-



ons to lethal effect in battle.

Iraq was supported by other Arab countries 

and received logistical support from Europe and 

the United States through secret third-party trans-

fers. The United States in particular followed a 

policy of containment (strategic isolation) first of 

Iran, then later of Iraq, in order to secure greater 

influence in the region and control the spread of 

revolutionary s

hiism


. The war came to an end in 

1988 with assistance from the United Nations, but 

without a formal peace treaty. Fervor for war was 

also reduced following Khomeini’s death in 1989, 

allowing Iran to take concrete steps toward mak-

ing peace with its neighbor. It was not until after 

Iraq had invaded Kuwait in 1990, when it needed 

to be on good terms with Iran, that Iraq withdrew 

from all occupied Iranian territory, conducted 

prisoner exchanges, and agreed to reopen the 

Shatt al-Arab to commercial traffic.

The war exacted a terrible price on both coun-

tries: A total of about 1 million lives were lost at 

the cost of billions of dollars to the infrastructure 

and economy of each country. Nevertheless, the 

war allowed Khomeini to eliminate domestic 

opponents of his Islamic revolution, and it gave 

the government an independent militia, the Basij, 

which still plays a leading role in helping the gov-

ernment maintain its power.

ThE GulF WAr OF 1990–1991  

(AlSO CAllED ThE FIrST GulF WAr)

This short war was precipitated when Iraq invaded 

Kuwait on August 2, 1990. Iraq had long claimed 

sovereignty over Kuwait, which was made a Brit-

ish protectorate in 1899. In the late 1980s, at the 

end of the Iran-Iraq war, Saddam Husayn came to 

resent the close relationship Kuwait had formed 

with the United States, which was impeding his 

ambitions to make his country the chief power in 

the Gulf region. At the same time, Iraq held a large 

national debt because of its war with Iran, and it 

resented the fact that the other major Arab oil-

producing countries were not willing to keep oil 

prices high so that it could pay off this debt. More-

over, Husayn complained that Kuwait had been 

illegally tapping into the Rumayla oil field that 

lies on the Iraqi-Kuwaiti border. When regional 

and international mediation efforts failed to sat-

isfy Iraqi demands, Iraq’s forces took the country 

by force. In the ensuing months, an international 

coalition of 34 countries, led by the United 

States, formed first to protect incursion into s

aUdi


a

rabia


, then to compel Iraq’s withdrawal from 

Kuwait. United Nations resolutions authorized 

these actions, in addition to several resolutions 

that imposed economic sanctions and condemned 

Iraq for human rights violations.

The world was deeply concerned that the 

looming conflict would affect oil supplies, and 

many observers worried that Iraq might resort to 

the use of chemical or biological weapons against 

the coalition. While serious diplomatic efforts 

were being made to resolve the crisis, the coalition 

assembled its forces in the Gulf region in what was 

called Operation Desert Shield, the first phase of 

the war. This was the defensive phase, but the sec-

ond phase involved attacking Iraq in order to force 

it to withdraw from Kuwait. The United Nations 

gave Iraq until January 15, 1991, to withdraw 

peacefully, but it resisted, hoping to rally the sup-

port of the Muslim world and find a diplomatic 

alternative. On January 17, 1991, the United 

States launched the offensive phase of the war, 

known as Operation Desert Storm, with a crip-

pling aerial bombing campaign. Iraq responded 

by launching missiles with conventional warheads 

at targets in i

srael


 and Saudi Arabia. The missiles 

inflicted minor damage, except for one that hit a 

U.S. military barracks in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, 

killing U.S. military personnel there. On February 

22–23, Iraq began to set fire to Kuwait’s oil fields, 

causing serious environmental damage.

K  274  


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