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Originally posted by sweatmonicaIdo
1) Would CENTCOM been able to stop them?
2) If not, what was the likelihood that tactical nuclear weapons would have been used to halt the assault?
3) If Iraq was successful, what would be the immediate and long-term consequences (where would we be today?)
Look forward to the responses.
MOSCOW - When George H. W. Bush ordered American forces to the Persian Gulf – to reverse Iraq's August 1990 invasion of Kuwait – part of the administration case was that an Iraqi juggernaut was also threatening to roll into Saudi Arabia.
Citing top-secret satellite images, Pentagon officials estimated in mid–September that up to 250,000 Iraqi troops and 1,500 tanks stood on the border, threatening the key US oil supplier.
But when the St. Petersburg Times in Florida acquired two commercial Soviet satellite images of the same area, taken at the same time, no Iraqi troops were visible near the Saudi border – just empty desert.
"It was a pretty serious fib," says Jean Heller, the Times journalist who broke the story.
"That [Iraqi buildup] was the whole justification for Bush sending troops in there, and it just didn't exist," Ms. Heller says. Three times Heller contacted the office of Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney (now vice president) for evidence refuting the Times photos or analysis – offering to hold the story if proven wrong.
Jean Heller, the Editor of The St. Petersburg Times hired a U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency in the Reagan Administration, and a former image specialist for the Defense Intelligence Agency, Peter Zimmerman, to analyze the satellite photographs, to no avail. There simply were no Iraqi troops poised to invade Saudi Arabia.
1)Would CENTCOM been able to stop them?
2) If not, what was the likelihood that tactical nuclear weapons would have been used to halt the assault?
3) If Iraq was successful, what would be the immediate and long-term consequences (where would we be today?)
Originally posted by pavil
1. I think the Iraqi attack would have been blunted. The overall leadership of the military in Iraq wasn't the greatest. They probably would have made some inroads into S.A. but the combined US and Saudi forces would have managed to hold together long enough for ground and air support to really pour in. Iraq's supply line would have been cut off by air strikes, leaving them unsupplied, far from home.
2. Probably one of the most likely times a tactical nuke would have ever been used would be in a sitiuation like this. Iraq's line of supply would have been stretched to the breaking point, and the risk to our oil supply would have made using a Tactical nuke very tempting.
3. Iraq would not have been able to conquer all of S.A. in time, therefore, US and Coalition forces would have poured in. The Defeat Iraq would have been inevittable once that happend. What would have been different is that probably about 50% of S.A. oil fields would have been a mess for a good 3-5 years afterwords and Saddam would have been toppled much earlier. The whole dynamic there would have been very different, hard to play what if with this part of it.
Originally posted by sweatmonicaIdo
Again, keep in mind that many experts have stated the initial force deployments would have been insufficient to stop the Iraqis. In the early days, there really was no coalition and Saudis were very much there for symbolic purposes rather than military ones. It was not even until mid-October that the coalition had sufficient forces to defend Saudi Arabia.
That's interesting because I read something through Wikipedia the other day that stated one of the U.S.' possible situations that would warrant a nuclear strike was an enemy supply convoy of 100+ vehicles. Very intriguing.
I'm not sure Iraq ever intended to capture all of Saudi Arabia, just the oil fields. Even if they didn't capture the whole country, deploying forces to an Iraqi-occupied country would have been very difficult.
Originally posted by pavil
Again it's what if. Sure if Iraq was intent on doing it, it probably could have, but our Air assets would have pummeled their armor and supply. It would have been hairy, no doubt. The tripwire effect of the initial troops prevented an invasion, for whatever reason.
I would almost have guaranteed that should Iraq have attempted to take over S.A. by military invasion and the U.S. didn't have enough assets in the area to stop them we would have made a "line in the sand" that was glassed over. We probably would have lobbed a couple tactical nukes in a remote area of Iraq as a very big warning followed by tacs dropped on Republican Guard units if Iraq didn't heed that warning. You don't mess with the U.S's oil supply line, we tend to overreact to it.
Originally posted by bg_socalif
1. Yes, we would've stopped them. We had vast air superiority, the Iraqi's had no air support whatsoever. If you have no air support in a conventional war, you're defeated. Plus there was a buildup of Coalition forces in Saudi as well as whatever US troops that were on the ground at the time.
2. Likelihood of tactical nukes? NIL. It would've been a conventional counter-attack.
3. If Iraq had been successful. Oil production would've been interrupted and prices would've skyrocketed. The Saudi royal's would've ran into exile. We would've counterattacked, slaughtered them, and drove them back to Iraq. Then the Saudi royals would return, and let us build bases there, like we have now. Basically like what Kuwait did. The Kuwaiti royals returned from Saudi and let us build the bases in Kuwait.
Originally posted by jpm1602
Just as a 'major environmental disaster' of oil spillage into the red sea was acknowledged by G1 himself as not true. I have problems with untruths. It allows people to do things under the guise of 'untruths'. I'm not down with that.
In 1972 the first of 114 Northrop F-5s were delivered to the RSAF and, as of 1992, the air force still used three squadrons of later versions of the F-5 in the fighter-ground attack role, one squadron for reconnaissance, and a number of aircraft as advanced jet trainers. In 1984 first deliveries were taken of the more advanced F-15s. By 1992 the SAF had seventy-eight F-15s, including fighter conversion trainers.
www.globalsecurity.org...
Originally posted by bodrul
seeing as its home to Islams holiest Site
and Iraq being sunni run
very far fetched