1991 Gulf War looms large over Bush’s Mideast legacy
AL-JAHRA, Kuwait: On the outskirts of Kuwait City, the love Kuwaitis 
have for former US President George H.W. Bush could be seen in 2016 on a
 billboard one Bedouin family put up to announce their son’s wedding.
That son being Bush Al-Widhan, born in the aftermath of the 1991 Gulf 
War that saw US-led forces expel the occupying Iraqi troops of dictator 
Saddam Hussein.
“He was a real man, a lion,” said Mubarak Al-Widhan, the father of the 
Kuwaiti Bush, of the American president. “He stood for our right for 
freedom, and he gave us back our country.”
With Bush’s death , his legacy across the Middle East takes root in that
 100-hour ground war that routed Iraqi forces. That war gave birth to 
the network of military bases America now operates across the Arabian 
Gulf supporting troops in Afghanistan and forces fighting against Daesh 
in Iraq and Syria.
 
However, Bush ultimately would leave the Shiite and Kurdish insurgents 
he urged to rise up against Saddam in 1991 to face the dictator’s wrath 
alone, leading to thousands of deaths. That mixed picture only extends 
to the presidency of his son, George W. Bush, who ordered the 2003 
US-led invasion of Iraq that overthrew Saddam, whom he once famously 
described as “the guy who tried to kill my dad one time.”
“I feel tension in the stomach and in the neck ... but I also feel a 
certain calmness when we talk about these matters,” the elder Bush once 
said about the 1991 Gulf War, according to biographer Jon Meacham. “I 
know I am doing the right thing.”
Iraq invaded Kuwait on Aug. 2, 1990, angry that the tiny neighbor and 
the United Arab Emirates had ignored OPEC quotas, which Saddam claimed 
cost his nation $14 billion. Saddam also accused Kuwait of stealing $2.4
 billion by pumping crude from a disputed oil field and demanded that 
Kuwait write off an estimated $15 billion of debt that Iraq had 
accumulated during its 1980s war with Iran.
A World War II fighter pilot shot down fighting against the Japanese, 
Bush came to view Saddam as similar to Adolf Hitler, a madman who seized
 neighboring Kuwait and could plunge the world into conflict if he 
continued into Saudi Arabia. With Vietnam still a potent memory, Bush 
rallied together a coalition of nations to back the US as it deployed 
troops to the region and began bombing runs. He talked Israel out of 
retaliating for Iraqi Scud missiles attacks for fear of alienating Arab 
allies.
“This will not stand. This will not stand, this aggression against Kuwait,” Bush famously warned.
And it didn’t.
On Feb. 24, 1991, US troops and their allies stormed into Kuwait. It 
ended 100 hours later. America suffered only 148 combat deaths during 
the whole campaign, while over 20,000 Iraqi soldiers were killed.
In the aftermath of the campaign, some called for Bush to continue into 
Iraq and topple Saddam. Bush in speeches encouraged Iraqis to rise up 
against the dictator, while privately hoping someone within his own 
military would depose him.
“To occupy Iraq would shatter our coalition, turning the whole Arab 
world against us, and make a broken tyrant into a latter-day Arab hero,”
 Bush later said. “It would have taken us way beyond the imprimatur of 
international law, ... assigning young soldiers to a fruitless hunt for a
 securely entrenched dictator and condemning them to fight in what would
 be an unwinnable urban guerrilla war.”
That hesitation allowed Saddam to regain the upper hand against 
insurgents and caused a refugee crisis in Iraq’s northern Kurdish 
region. The dictator tauntingly installed a tile mosaic of a scowling 
likeness of the president at the door of Baghdad’s Al-Rashid Hotel, 
which forced entering foreign dignitaries to often step on his face just
 above its “Bush is criminal” caption.
Even Iran, which hated Saddam for starting their 1980s war, remained 
suspicious of Bush despite his pledge of “good will begets good will.” 
Iran leaned on Lebanon’s Shiite militants to help win the release 
American hostages like Terry Anderson of The Associated Press, but 
relations went no further. One of Bush’s last acts as president, 
pardoning former Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger and others for 
their role in the Iran-Contra scandal, an offshoot of that hostage 
crisis.
Still, Bush’s decisions in the 1991 war and its aftermath echo even now.
 The Kurdish crisis gave birth to the US-imposed no-fly zone in northern
 Iraq that allowed the Kurds to flourish into the semi-autonomous region
 now demanding independence. Defense agreements with Gulf nations grew 
into a series of major military installations across the region.
His son would launch the 2003 invasion of Iraq after 9/11 and become so 
hated in the Arab world an Iraq journalist would even throw a shoe at 
him during a news conference. But the elder Bush remained beloved, 
perhaps nowhere more than Kuwait, where Americans even today can get 
hugged while walking down the street. A group of Kuwaiti officials 
including the country’s National Assembly speaker met with the former 
president in October 2017 to wish him well.
The former president’s Kuwaiti namesake Bush Al-Widhan ended up working 
in the country’s National Guard. His name fascinated others.
“I went with my father to Cleveland, Ohio ... and the passport control 
clerk asked me about the name,” Al-Widhan recounted. “I couldn’t tell 
him the story. My English is bad. I said: ‘George Bush, George Bush. 
Kuwait war.’ Everyone thought it was a great name.”
https://www.geezgo.com/sps/48481 
Join Geezgo for free. Use Geezgo's end-to-end encrypted Chat with your Closenets (friends, relatives, colleague etc) in personalized ways.>>
 
No comments