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Challenge to the Post-Cold War World
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18304 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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| Issue
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10 / 1990 |
2,840 Words |
| Author
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Adam M. Garfinkle Adam M. Garfinkle is adjunct professor of political science at
the University of Pennsylvania and research associate at the
Foreign Policy Research Institute in Philadelphia. He is also
a contributing editor of Orbis. |
Taking virtually the entire world by surprise, Iraqi armed forces invaded the small oil-rich sheikdom of Kuwait on August 1. Kuwait's small forces were no match for Iraq's huge army of up to a million men, equipped with 750 combat aircraft and more than 5,000 tanks. Within five hours, all major government buildings and most military installations were under Iraqi military control, and the ruling al-Sabah family had fled to refuge in neighboring Saudi Arabia.
According to the Iraqi government, a native revolution against the al-Sabah regime had taken place, and Iraqi forces were merely responding to a plea for aid to restore order. But the flimsiness of this pretext was plain to all: The nine-man ruling revolutionary provisional Kuwaiti government was made up entirely of Iraqi military men and led by a son-in-low of the Iraqi dictator, Saddam Hussein. Not a single Kuwaiti quisling could be found a tribute to any ruler, especially a monarch in the twentieth century.
The reaction to the invasion in most of the world was one of outrage and defiance. Iraq invaded Kuwait only hours after it broke off negotiations, held in Jedda, Saudi Arabia, to resolve outstanding differences, reminding Americans of the attack on Pearl Harbor even as Japanese diplomats were leaving U.S. soil. Saddam Hussein had not only promised the world publicly during the two weeks of precrisis tension that there would be no war, he also privately gave the same assurance to Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, Jordan's King Hussein and Saudi Arabian King Fahd ibn-Abdul Aziz.
The response to the aggression in the Arab world was mixed. Gulf Arabs were horrified, Egyptians
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