Battle of Khafji

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Battle of Khafji
Part of the Gulf War

Date January 29 to February 1, 1991
Location Khafji, Saudi Arabia
Result Decisive Coalition victory.
Combatants
Saudi Arabian Army,
SA National Guard,
United States,
Qatar [1]
Flag of Iraq Iraq
Casualties
36 dead,
32 wounded,
2 POW
2000+,
400 POW[1]
Gulf War
Kuwait - Khafji - 73 EastingAl BusayyahPhase Line BulletMedina RidgeWadi Al-Batin – Norfolk
Saudi Tanks during the battle.
Saudi Tanks during the battle.

The Battle of Khafji was the first major ground engagement of the Gulf War. It took place in the Saudi Arabian city of Khafji, from January 29 to February 1, 1991.

The battle began when Iraqi troops unexpectedly invaded Khafji. Forces from Saudi Arabia and Qatar, backed by American artillery and air strikes, evicted Iraqi troops and tanks, and freed two trapped U.S. Marine reconnaissance teams.

Contents

[edit] Surprise advance into Saudi Arabia

The Iraqi advance caught the U.S.-led Coalition almost completely by surprise, and the initial hours of the battle were marked by confusion and disarray on the Coalition side. Numerous U.S. Marine and Special Forces positions along the Kuwait-Saudi Arabian border were overrun by the Iraqi forces, and the city of Khafji, which had been largely abandoned by the Coalition, fell with little resistance.

By taking Khafji, the Iraqis trapped (but did not capture) two U.S. Marine reconnaissance teams of the U.S. 3rd Marine Regiment inside the town. Corporal Lawrence Lentz led one team with Corporal Chuck Ingraham leading the other. The presence of the Marine teams complicated the recapture effort, although the two teams reported on Iraqi activities inside the town and directed numerous effective artillery and airstrikes on the occupying Iraqis. After an intense day-long counter-attack, the city was retaken by Saudi and Qatari troops, coordinated by U.S. Special Forces liaison teams.

The ill-fated Iraqi foray into Khafji is believed to have been ordered to forestall the coming Coalition attack on Iraqi positions in Kuwait and to test Coalition strength. Many observers saw the Iraqi Army, and especially its Republican Guard units, as the best military force in the Gulf region, after its performance in the Iran-Iraq War and the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait. Observers also had doubts about how the U.S. military would perform, after not having been seriously tested since the Vietnam War almost 20 years earlier.

The success of the Marines at Khafji was seen as proof that the Iraqi war machine had been vastly overrated, and it led Coalition commanders to change their offensive plans to allow for large-scale prisoner collection. As one U.S. veteran of the battle put it, "Get in the first shot at [an Iraqi soldier] and the rest will run away." (When the time for battle in Khafji actually came the Saudis were very unorganized, drowning every building they came to in a pool of lead(Bullets). In Saudi Arabia it is disgraceful to return from battle with any ammunition left. Therefore the Saudis wasted a lot of ammunition. They were even seen expelling rounds directly into the air at random times near the end and after the battle. The Marines that were trapped inside of Khafji feared that if they tried to leave they would be engaged by the Saudis. Lentz recalls, "Those damn Saudis shot at anything that moved. At least the Iraqis are predictable."

The battle was the deadliest and most intense firefight that U.S. forces had seen since the Vietnam War. Some Gulf War veterans point to Khafji as an engagement that refutes the commonly-held notion that the war was a push-button, video game-like enterprise. It was the largest military engagement on Saudi Arabian soil since that nation gained independence.

[edit] U.S. friendly fire

The battle of Khafji saw the worst cases of friendly fire between U.S. forces since Vietnam. A total of 11 U.S. Marines were killed in two separate incidents on January 31, 1991 at a position known as Observation Post 4, some thirty miles west of Khafji. Both involved Light armored vehicles, one was destroyed by friendly surface fire killing 4, the other by an errant AGM-65 Maverick missile launched by an A-10 killing 7. A 12th Marine was killed on February 2nd when an A-10 struck his vehicle.[1]

The battle was also notable for the capture of Melissa Rathbun-Nealy, the first female U.S. prisoner of war since the Second World War. She was captured in a manner virtually identical to Private Jessica Lynch twelve years later at An Nasiriyah, Iraq. Rathbun-Nealy was released on March 4, 1991 after spending over a month in a Baghdad prison.

[edit] Criticism of U.S. media policy

Some media critics (including Chris Hedges, then of the New York Times) complained that the battle of Khafji demonstrated the flawed U.S. press pooling policy of the time and that it prevented the full story of the battle from being widely reported upon. The only published photos of the battle were taken by two French journalists that defied U.S. press controls and entered the battlefield without official authorization.

[edit] Estimated battle losses

  • Iraq: more than 2,000 dead, more than 400 taken prisoner[1]
  • United States: 26 dead, two taken prisoner
  • Saudi Arabia and Qatar: 10 dead, 32 wounded

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c Titus, James. The Battle of Khafji: An Overview and Preliminary Analysis. 1996.

[edit] Sources