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<text id=91TT0312>
<link 93TG0114>
<link 91TT0528>
<link 91TT0496>
<link 91TT0494>
<title>
Feb. 11, 1991: Combat In The Sand
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991 Highlights
The Persian Gulf War:Desert Storm
</history>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
Feb. 11, 1991 Saddam's Weird War
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
THE GULF WAR, Page 20
THE BATTLEFRONT
Combat In the Sand
</hdr><body>
<p>The allies repel Baghdad's attempt to start the ground war and
claim supremacy in the air
</p>
<p>By GEORGE J. CHURCH -- Reported by William Dowell/Dhahran, Dan
Goodgame/Washington and Dick Thompson/Northeast Saudi Arabia
</p>
<p> It was not supposed to start this way. The standard scenario
called for the long-awaited, and dreaded, ground war to begin
in mid-to-late February with an all-out U.S. and allied aerial,
artillery and missile barrage on the Iraqi army's
fortifications in Kuwait, followed quickly by a massive tank
and infantry assault. So how come the ground war began in the
last days of January with an Iraqi attack? On a penny-ante
scale, with about 1,500 men and 80-odd tanks and other armored
vehicles initially engaged? Aimed at a Saudi Arabian ghost
town?
</p>
<p> Allied forces recaptured that town, the sprawling beachside
community of Khafji, within a day, but victory came only after
bitter street fighting. Artillery duels along the Saudi-Kuwaiti
border and firefights between U.S. Marines and groups of Iraqi
troops crossing that border continued into the weekend.
</p>
<p> There were wildly confusing stories: of as many as 60,000
Iraqi troops massing around the town of Al Wafra, 37 miles from
Khafji; of a column of 800 to 1,000 tanks and armored vehicles
in that area -- or maybe it was a phantom -- moving south
toward the Saudi border or north, away from it, under massive
allied air attack or perhaps not. Late in the week allied
commanders said they saw no pattern in Iraqi movements that
would presage further raids.
</p>
<p> The biggest questions were how many more battles Saddam
Hussein might initiate and on what scale -- and why he had ever
gone on the attack at all. The Iraqi army fights most
effectively from behind barbed wire, minefields and trenches
like those it has dug in Kuwait. Why pull any troops and tanks
out of the bunkers and holes in the sand, in which they had
been fairly effectively hiding from air attack, and expose them
to the full fury of allied air and artillery bombardment?
</p>
<p> Riyadh, Washington and London buzzed with speculation about
Saddam's strategy. The most popular theories:
</p>
<p> -- Saddam was seeking a propaganda victory. He hoped to buck
up the morale of both his populace and his troops after two
weeks of unrelenting air bombardment by showing them, and the
world, that he could still put up a fight and even momentarily
take the initiative.
</p>
<p> -- Khafji was a probing attack, perhaps the precursor of
more. Saddam's forces have no spy satellites and have been
unable or unwilling even to send reconnaissance planes into
Saudi airspace. The only way Iraqi generals can find out how
many troops, artillery and tanks are massing at which spots
along the border is to send troops across to engage them.
</p>
<p> -- Iraq is trying to throw sand into the gears of the
allies' military preparations. Saddam might hope to delay or
disrupt a possible allied flanking attack around the western
tip of Kuwait by forcing American, British or Arab troops that
have been moving west to shift back to the east. Perhaps he
also tried to take some of the bombing pressure off his supply
lines and rear installations by forcing the U.S. to divert
planes into close support of ground forces along the border.
</p>
<p> -- Saddam is getting desperate to start what he calls the
"mother of battles." His plan has always been to inflict such
heavy casualties on attacking allied ground forces that
President Bush would seek some sort of compromise peace. But
the allies unobligingly intend to hold off until weeks of
bombing have killed more of the Iraqi troops, destroyed many
of their fortifications and weapons, and cut off their
supplies. Possibly the Iraqi leader hopes to goad his enemies
into launching the land campaign prematurely.
</p>
<p> If so, he is unlikely to succeed. Allied commanders vowed
to start the main offensive when they are good and ready. Nor
did they have to divert any air power. In fact, planes swarmed
to attack Iraqi armor in such numbers that they got in one
another's way. But enough U.S. and allied planes were still
available to carry out a full schedule of attacks throughout
Kuwait and Iraq. Militarily, said General Norman Schwarzkopf,
top allied commander in the gulf area, the Khafji battles were
about as significant "as a mosquito on an elephant."
</p>
<p> In terms of effect on the future course of the war, that
might be true. But as the first sizable ground battle, Khafji
merits study. After the shooting ended, U.S. and British
intelligence officers interrogated prisoners and pored over
battle reports, trying to fill holes in what was still an
incomplete picture.
</p>
<p> The basic elements are clear enough. On Tuesday, Wednesday
and Thursday last week, Iraqi troops, tanks and armored
vehicles crossed the Saudi border at several points between
Khafji and Umm Hujul, 50 miles to the west. On Wednesday night
they occupied Khafji, six miles south of the border; it had
been abandoned on Jan. 17 by residents fleeing out of the range
of Iraqi artillery. Saudis and troops from the Persian Gulf
sheikdom of Qatar, supported by Marine air attacks and artillery
fire, retook the town on Thursday, but only after
house-to-house fighting that raged from 2:30 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Sniper fire could still be heard on Friday. Marine planes and
artillery repulsed the attacks at Umm Hujul.
</p>
<p> Statistically, the Iraqis took a beating. By Friday
afternoon the Saudis and Qataris had captured 500 Iraqis in and
around Khafji, according to a U.S. briefing officer in Riyadh.
Allied officials said 30 Iraqis were killed and another 37 were
wounded. Saudi casualties were not much lighter: 18 dead, 29
wounded and four missing.
</p>
<p> Eleven Marines were killed in the fighting around Umm Hujul,
the first known American battle dead of the war (a number of
flyers have been listed as missing in action). An AC-130
gunship with a crew of 14 was shot down over Kuwait, and a male
and a female soldier on a "transport mission" near Khafji were
missing. The woman, Army Specialist Melissa Rathbun-Nealy,
might be the first female American soldier ever to become a POW
(though some nurses have been captured in previous wars).
</p>
<p> American A-10 attack planes and Cobra and Apache helicopters
and infantry weapons appeared to be quite as deadly as
advertised against Iraqi armor. General Schwarzkopf would
confirm only 24 Iraqi tanks definitely destroyed, but other
counts for the border battles as a whole ran as high as 80
vehicles. Correspondents who were allowed into Khafji Thursday
afternoon reported that the streets were littered with the
burning hulks of Soviet-made armored personnel carriers,
knocked out by American TOW missiles fired by Saudi and Qatari
infantrymen. U.S. Marines lost three light armored vehicles
(LAVs) in the fighting around Umm Hujul.
</p>
<p> The battle also had some unpleasant surprises for the U.S.
and its allies. Despite widespread reports of low morale among
Iraqi frontline troops, those in Khafji fought tenaciously,
prolonging the battle for hours after the Saudis announced they
had retaken the town. One column of tanks approached the Saudi
border with their guns pointing backward, which allied forces
took as a sign that the troops manning them wanted to defect;
instead the Iraqis swiveled their turrets around rapidly and
opened fire. There was a bitter possibility that the very first
Americans known to have died in combat in the gulf, the 11
Marines, were killed by misguided missiles from U.S. warplanes
rather than by Iraqi fire. An investigative team was trying
to determine exactly what kind of projectiles had struck their
LAVs. Friendly fire may also have been responsible for another
American death, on Saturday, when a Marine convoy was
apparently hit by cluster bombs.
</p>
<p> Perhaps the most prominent lesson of Khafji is also the
simplest: the Iraqis, in General Schwarzkopf's words,
"certainly have a lot of fight left in them." That is hardly
surprising. Early predictions of quick and low-cost victory
came mainly from U.S. politicians and Arab diplomats, while the
professional military has been cautious in warning against any
such assumptions. Nonetheless, the question arises as to
whether the air campaign has been quite as successful, and
proceeding as close to schedule, as is generally believed.
</p>
<p> Figuring out how the air strikes are faring is difficult for
two reasons: 1) the generals have never announced, even
inferentially, a schedule against which U.S. and allied efforts
can be measured -- if in fact they have one; 2) they may well
have difficulty themselves determining how much destruction the
bombs have wreaked. Damage assessment is a tricky art even in
the case of structures such as bridges. It is of course obvious
if one has been hit, but figuring how long it might be unusable
requires some uncertain judgments: How extensive are the
repairs required? How quickly are they likely to be done? The
judgments get more difficult when the focus shifts, as it is
doing now, to such an elusive target as enemy troops.
</p>
<p> At an allied air base in the gulf area, for example, a
specialized group of U.S. Air Force F-4G Wild Weasels
continually land with film taken by nose-mounted cameras. Less
than 10 minutes after a Weasel touches down, its film is rushed
into one of a cluster of van-size steel boxes, bolted together
at the edge of a runway, that serve as a photo intelligence
center. Specialists wearing white gloves bend over light tables
and peer through loupes to examine miles of black-and-white
film as it rolls by. Most of the film is a dead gray wash --
desert sand -- but occasionally a white speck or a cluster of
dark dots appears.
</p>
<p> In one picture that a reporter got a close look at, three
dark half-moons turned out to be revetments for mobile
artillery, but with no guns visible inside. Captain Barclay
Trehal claims that the 50 specialists he bosses can distinguish
live and dead aircraft, Scud missile launchers, vehicles and
entrenchments -- but not soldiers, who are too small to be
seen. Their presence has to be inferred from concentrations of
vehicles and equipment. Their numbers can only be guessed at.
How much damage they may suffer from bomb hits is a more
speculative judgment still.
</p>
<p> That could become crucial in the next few weeks. One of the
top-priority U.S. targets is the Republican Guards, Saddam's
crack troops, who form a mobile reserve to be thrown into the
eventual land battle for Kuwait at the most critical points.
A high British officer says the allies will not launch the
climactic ground offensive until at least 30%, and preferably
50%, of the Guards' fighting power is destroyed from the air.
But how will they know when that point is reached? Washington
officials admit they are having trouble gauging how much damage
bombing is doing to the widely dispersed and well-dug-in Guards.
</p>
<p> Bush lieutenants admit to two other mild disappointments.
Scud missile launchers in Iraq have taken a longer time to find
and destroy than expected. General Schwarzkopf reported that
35 Scuds were lobbed against Israel or Saudi Arabia in the
first seven days of the war, only 18 in the second seven days.
And in the first half of the war's third week only four
launchings were recorded: three warheads fell on or near the
Israeli-occupied West Bank, causing no reported casualties, and
another aimed at Riyadh was destroyed by a Patriot missile. But
1,500 sorties have been directed against Scuds, the most
against any single type of target, and that has delayed and
lessened the assault against such other vital targets as supply
lines and the Republican Guards. Also, Iraq has proved more
adept than expected at repairing runways, roads, radar and
certain communications lines, forcing allied planes to hit some
of those installations again and again.
</p>
<p> Schwarzkopf reeled off impressive figures last week: 33 of
36 bridges hit on the supply lines between Iraq and Kuwait;
truck traffic on the main Baghdad-to-Kuwait City road reduced
to 10% of normal. But one or two of his claims might raise a
skeptical eyebrow. The number of sorties flown against bridges
divided by the number of bridges hit works out to almost 24
sorties per damaged bridge, which seems to indicate that a lot
of "precision-guided" bombs and missiles are missing. Again,
Schwarzkopf's estimate that the quantity of supplies reaching
the Iraqi troops in Kuwait has dropped from 20,000 tons a day
to a mere 2,000 assumes that damage on secondary roads has been
as severe as on the main highway to Baghdad. Maybe, but no proof
has been given. In general, however, there is no reason to
doubt the picture of an awesome battering that eventually must
seriously weaken Saddam's ability to withstand a ground attack.
</p>
<p> What is more, Bush's advisers claim that the happy surprises
in the air war outweigh the disturbing ones. The most
heartening surprise is that losses have been so low. White
House officials had braced themselves for the destruction of
100 or more American planes in the first few days: the actual
figure lost in combat through the first 17 days was 15, plus
seven allied craft. The principal reason, according to
Schwarzkopf, is that the allies have so seriously crippled the
Iraqi air-defense system that Baghdad has given up all attempts
to exercise central control: every antiaircraft and missile
battery is on its own trying to track and intercept allied
raiders. Then there is the virtual disappearance of the Iraqi
air force: scores of its planes destroyed on the ground or in
the air; hundreds more hiding in shelters and rarely taking
off; another 100 or so of the best planes flown to Iran.
</p>
<p> What they are doing there is still a mystery. At one end of
the speculative spectrum is the theory that at least some fled
after the failure of an Iraqi air force coup to overthrow
Saddam; at the opposite end is the possibility that Saddam has
swung a deal to have Iran keep them safe for a while, then
return them to him later in the war. The prevailing idea is
that Saddam intends to stash them away for use by a postwar
Iraqi regime that he thinks he will still head. This is backed
up by repeated Iranian assurances that both planes and pilots
will be interned until the end of the war. That would be fine
with the U.S. As long as the planes are in Iran, they are of
no use to Saddam, and if he tries to bring them back, American
commanders are convinced they can shoot them down.
</p>
<p> Iran was at the center of another mystery last week. What
was Francois Scheer, general secretary of the French Foreign
Ministry, doing in Tehran at the same time as Saadoun Hammadi,
Iraq's Deputy Prime Minister, along with veteran would-be
peacemakers from Algeria and Yemen? Cooking up some sort of
compromise settlement, as the British suspected and his Iranian
hosts mischievously hinted? Certainly not, huffed a spokesman
in Paris; Scheer was only pursuing a variety of bilateral
French-Iranian matters.
</p>
<p> On the whole, the anti-Saddam coalition seemed to draw
closer together last week. French Defense Minister Jean-Pierre
Chevenement had put himself in an impossible position, managing
his government's participation in a war he stubbornly opposed;
he resigned and was succeeded by Pierre Joxe, a loyal follower
of President Francois Mitterrand. The U.S. won permission to
fly B-52 bombers out of bases in Britain and Spain on missions
to the gulf. That will allow it to attack the Republican Guards
with more of the giant planes than can be accommodated at bases
in Saudi Arabia and the Indian Ocean island of Diego Garcia.
The agreement was no surprise in the case of loyal ally Britain,
but a very considerable surprise on the part of the formerly
aloof government in Madrid. France agreed to allow the B-52s
to fly over its territory. Being France, however, it attached
conditions -- among them that the B-52s not carry nuclear
bombs.
</p>
<p> The biggest political threat to the coalition seemed to be
that the Soviet Union might throw its weight behind various
cease-fire proposals kicking around the United Nations. That
might be a way of delivering an implicit message to the U.S.:
If you make trouble for us in the Baltics, we'll make trouble
for you in the gulf.
</p>
<p> Secretary of State James Baker defused that threat, but at
some political cost. He and Soviet Foreign Minister Alexander
Bessmertnykh, visiting in Washington, agreed to a statement
recommitting the U.S.S.R. to the proposition that Iraq must get
out of Kuwait, period.
</p>
<p> But the statement also seemed to imply a new U.S.
willingness to go along with a cease-fire offer to Saddam,
albeit on tough terms, and a greater degree of linkage between
an end to the fighting and a postwar push for an Arab-Israeli
settlement. Baker apparently thought the language was so
innocuous that it would hardly be noticed. But peace advocates
were so delighted and hard-liners so incensed that the White
House felt obliged to state that there had been no change in
policy.
</p>
<p> On what terms the U.S. might end the fighting is a question
that will have to be faced sooner or later. But for the moment
it is academic. All the signals from Saddam indicate that his
troops will stay in Kuwait until they are blasted out. The
blasting so far is proceeding more or less as planned. But it
has some way to go, and Saddam may have more surprises to
spring before the war is over.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>