Desert Shield/Desert Storm
When the Iraqi army invaded Kuwait on 2 August 1990, the United States deployed a major joint force as part of a multination coalition to stop President Saddam Hussein’s brutal aggression. The U.S. Navy provided sea control and maritime superiority, which paved the way for the introduction of U.S. and allied air and ground forces.
At the time of the invasion, the Navy was already on station in the region. The ships of Joint Task Force Middle East were immediately placed on alert. Battle groups led by USS Independence (CV-62) and USS Dwight D. Eisenhower (CVN-69) sped from the Indian Ocean and eastern Mediterranean to take up positions in the Gulf of Oman and Red Sea, at the ready to commence sustained combat operations.
When President George H.W. Bush ordered the deployment of troops and equipment to defend Saudi Arabia, more than 240 ships carrying about 18.3 million pounds of equipment and supplies was facilitated. United Nations trade sanctions were immediately imposed against Iraq to sever the country’s economy. When U.S. Marines began arriving in Saudi Arabia, their supplies and equipment were in close proximity due to low-key military ties with friendly Arab states. More than 21,000 naval reservists were called to active duty in support of Desert Shield/Desert Storm.
Hussein's repeated rejection to abandon the invasion and leave Kuwait led to the commencement of combat operations on 18 January 1991. The subsequent bombardment by air assets and the effects of the economic embargo decimated Iraq's military infrastructure and morale, degraded communications and supplies, and devastated weapons arsenals. During the beginnings of the war, Navy ships launched salvos of Tomahawk cruise missiles against military targets in Iraq to “soften” the battlefield for ground troops.
After the 38-day air campaign, ground troops began sweeping through Kuwait in blitzkrieg fashion. In a mere 100 hours, the Iraqi army was crushed. Iraqi soldiers surrendered by the thousands. Kuwait was free again.
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Notable People
- President George H.W. Bush
- Secretary of the Navy H. Lawrence Garrett
- Admiral Frank B. Kelso
- General Norman Schwarzkopf
- Captain Michael Speicher
- Captain Rosemary Mariner
Notable Naval Vessels
- Independence (CV-62)
- Saratoga (CV-60)
- San Jacinto (CG-56)
- Bunker Hill (CG-52)
- Nicholas (FFG-47)
- Missouri (BB-63)
- John F. Kennedy (CVA-67)
- Louisville (SSN-724)
- Theodore Roosevelt (CVN-71)
- Samuel B. Roberts (FFG-58)
- Comfort (T-AH-20)
- Mercy (T-AH-19)
- Pittsburgh (SSN-720)
- Wisconsin (BB-64)
Articles/Blogs
- Desert Shield and Desert Storm Articles
- 25 Years Later, Desert Storm Vet Recalls First Coordinated Combat Tomahawk Strike
- Partnerships Born from Operation Desert Storm Remain Vital to Middle East Security
- Surface Force in Desert Storm: USS Nicholas Leads a Distributed, Lethal Attack on Enemy Troops
- Storm Season: War Clouds Form Over the Sands of Mina al-Ahmadi
- Where are the Shooters? A History of the Tomahawk in Combat
- Partnerships Matter Now and Mattered in 1991 during Operation Desert Shield
- 25 Years Later: Gulf War Vets Visit USS Arlington
- Speicher Hailed as Hero, Laid to Rest in Hometown
Art Exhibit
Related Operations
Additional Resources
- Seabee History: Operations Desert Shield/Desert Storm
- Women in the U.S. Military During Desert Shield/Desert Storm
- Operation Desert Shield/Storm Costs and Funding Requirements
- Military Resources: Gulf War/Desert Storm
- Research Aids: Desert Shield/Desert Storm
- U.S. Navy in Desert Shield/Desert Storm
- The United States Navy in Desert Shield/Desert Storm
- Military Sealift Command in Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm, 1990–1991
- Records of the Naval History Documentation Team Relating to Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm, 1990–1991
- Southwest Asia Service 1991–1995
- Short Guide to Iraq
- U.S. Periods of War and Dates of Recent Conflicts
- Needs and Opportunities in the Modern History of the U.S. Navy
- Anchor of Resolve: A History of U.S. Naval Forces Central Command/Fifth Fleet
- United States Navy and the Persian Gulf
- Cost of Major U.S. Wars
- Armed Forces Expeditionary Service 1958–
- Southwest Asia Service 1991–1995
- Records Relating to Hospital Ships and USNS Comfort during Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm, 1906–1991
- Desert Shield and Desert Storm Articles
- Naval Aviation: 1990–1999
Selected Imagery
USS Suribachi (AE-21) transiting the Suez Canal, enroute to the Persian Gulf to support Operation Desert Shield, 8 August 1990. Photographed by PH3 Frank A. Marquart. Note ferry crossing, with waiting vehicles, in the center background. Official U.S. Navy Photograph, from the collections of the Naval History and Heritage Command. Catalog #: NH 97249-KN.
A photograph snapped through USS Pittsburgh’s periscope captures the moment she fires a TLAM against the Iraqi forces, 19 January 1991. (Unattributed Department of Defense Photograph DN-SN-91-08885, Record Group 330 Records of the Office of the Secretary of Defense, 1921–2008, National Archives and Records Administration, College Park, MD)