Operation Instant Thunder
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Operation Instant Thunder was the preliminary name given to a planned air strike by the United States during the Gulf War.[1] Designed by Colonel John A. Warden III, it was planned to be an overwhelming strike which would devastate the Iraqi military with a minimum loss of civilian as well as American life.[2][3] The planning of the operation made use of Warden's Five Rings intellectual model.[3] The name is a nod to Operation Rolling Thunder of the Vietnam War.[4]
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[edit] Phase one
The plan called for three separate phases. The shortest of these was the first phase, which would use "defense suppression" to establish control of the air space above Iraq and Kuwait. This was to be accomplished by eliminating enemy radar, cutting off runways used by the Iraqi military and neutralizing any surface-to-air missile batteries.
This first phase of the operation would also include the bombing of selected military command posts as well as suspected locations of chemical weapons. A total of 84 targets were initially identified but this number was later increased.[5]
[edit] Phase two
The second phase would attempt to incapacitate the Iraqi military, as well as the country's infrastructure. This would include the bombing of weapon depots, refineries and other locations critical to the success of the military. These strikes would cripple the Iraqi military by rendering Iraq unable to manufacture or repair weaponry.
Attention would then turn to disabling the civil infrastructure of Iraq, by destroying power plants, telephone lines and water treatment plants.
[edit] Phase three
Finally, the third phase would have seen the Americans engage the Iraqis in direct combat. Weakened by the initial stages, it was predicted that the Iraqi military would not be able to muster much resistance.
[edit] Implementation
Operation Instant Thunder planning started August 5, 1990. By the time fighting began on January 17, 1991, the three phases were consolidated into Operation Desert Storm, as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Colin Powell was reluctant to support any action which did not include a ground offensive.[2] The tactics used by the American military during the operation would serve as a model for future conflicts in which the United States was involved.[6]
[edit] References
- Luttwack, Edward N. Strategy: The Logic of War and Peace Harvard University Press (2001) ISBN 0674007034
[edit] Notes
- ^ Jaco, Charles (2002). The Complete Idiot's Guide to the Gulf War. Alpha Books, 106. ISBN 0028643240.
- ^ a b Arkin, William M. (1998), MASTERMINDING AN AIR WAR, Washington Post, <http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/inatl/longterm/fogofwar/wargoals.htm>. Retrieved on 29 November 2007
- ^ a b On target: organizing and executing the strategic air campaign against Iraq. DIANE Publishing, 75. ISBN 1428990240.
- ^ Klare, Michael T. (1995). Rogue States and Nuclear Outlaws: America's Search for a New Foreign Policy. Hill & Wang, 57. ISBN 0809015870.
- ^ McFarland, Stephen L. (1997). A Concise History of the U.S. Air Force. Ft. Belvoir: Defense Technical Information Center, 79. ISBN 0160492084.
- ^ Macgregor, Douglas A. (2003). Transformation Under Fire: Revolutionizing How America Fights. Greenwood Press, 101. ISBN 0275981924.