Books > History > Asian / Middle Eastern history > From 1900 > Postwar, from 1945
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Roots of Conflict - A Military Perspective on the Middle East and the Persian Gulf Crisis (Paperback)
Loot Price: R554
Discovery Miles 5 540
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Roots of Conflict - A Military Perspective on the Middle East and the Persian Gulf Crisis (Paperback)
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Loot Price R554
Discovery Miles 5 540
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Early on the morning of January 17, 1991, the Persian Gulf War
began. It consisted of massive allied air strikes on Iraq and Iraqi
targets in Kuwait. The United States Air Force spearheaded the air
offensive and furnished the bulk of the attacking aircraft. During
forty-two days of fighting, the U.S. Air Force simultaneously
conducted two closely coordinated air campaigns: one in support of
allied ground forced; the other, attacking strategic targets.
Planners of the strategic air campaign sought to isolate and
incapacitate Saddam Hussein's government; gain and maintain air
supremacy to permit unhindered air operations; destroy Iraq's
nuclear, biological, and chemical capabilities; and eliminate
Iraq's offensive military capability, which included its key
military production facilities, their infrastructure, and the
instruments it used to project its power - the Iraqi Air Force, the
Republican Guard, and short-range ballistic missiles. This study
develops background information to place the Persian Gulf War in
its proper historical and cultural contexts, unfamiliar to and not
easily understood by Americans. The first essay quickly summarizes
the relationship between Arab culture and Islam, the history of
Islam and the Arab conquests, and the creation of one of the flash
points in present-day Middle Eastern conflicts - the Arab-Jewish
dispute over Palestine. The second essay provides a military
analysis of the Arab-Israeli wars from 1948 to 1982. It describes
the performance of the engaged armed forces, the performance of
Western versus Soviet weapons systems, the development of the
respective forces' military professionalization, and the ability of
the warring parties to learn from their experiences. The final
three essays describe the recent history of the three regional
powers of the Persian Gulf - Saudi Arabia, Iran, and Iraq. In
addition to providing a detailed character analysis of Saddam
Hussein and a military analysis of the Iran-Iraq War, these final
sections examine the tension that arose in the three nations when
the desire for modernization confronted the demands of Islamic
conservatism.
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