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Operation Urgent Fury Grenada (Paperback)
Loot Price: R536
Discovery Miles 5 360
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Operation Urgent Fury Grenada (Paperback)
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Loot Price R536
Discovery Miles 5 360
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Early in the morning of 25 October 1983, Operation URGENT FURY
began with assaults on airstrips at Point Salines and Pearls on the
tiny island nation of Grenada. Over the next nine days US troops
would rescue American citizens, restore a popular native
government, and eliminate a perceived threat to the stability of
the Caribbean and American strategic interests there. Memories of
the Iranian hostage crisis and the aborted rescue attempt at Desert
One were fresh. Anxious to avoid a similar experience, policymakers
mounted URGENT FURY in haste in response to a threat to American
medical students on Grenada. The operation succeeded, but flaws in
its execution revealed weaknesses in joint operations. Together
with the bombing of the Marine Corps barracks in Beirut that same
month, the experience of Operation URGENT FURY added impetus to
efforts to reform the joint system which were already under way.
Since 1979, when Maurice Bishop took power in Grenada, concern in
the US State Department had grown as the country moved closer to
Cuba and the Soviet Union. In late 1983 events in Grenada led to
President Reagan's decision to conduct a military operation there.
Cuba had built a runway on Grenada suitable for aircraft capable of
interdicting US air and sea routes to Europe and the Middle East.
Bishop's overthrow in October by militantly anti-US Marxists
appeared to pose an immediate threat to the nearly six hundred
American students and four hundred other foreigners living in
Grenada. The success of Operation URGENT FURY was marred by the
consequences of inadequate time for planning, lack of tactical
intelligence, and problems with joint command and control. Despite
faults in execution, Operation URGENT FURY accomplished all of its
objectives. The eight thousand soldiers, sailors, airmen, and
Marines rescued nearly 600 Americans and 120 foreigners, restored
popular government to Grenada, and eliminated the potential
strategic threat to US lines of communication in the area. URGENT
FURY reinforced awareness of weaknesses in the joint system and
helped prod Congress to undertake the fundamental reforms embodied
in the Goldwater-Nichols DOD Reorganization Act of 1986. Written
several years after the end of Operation URGENT FURY, this study
focuses specifically on the involvement of the Chairman, the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, and the Joint Staff in planning and directing
operations in Grenada in 1983. The monograph begins with a
discussion of contingency planning for noncombatant evacuation
which started after the 12 October 1983 coup that removed Grenada's
Marxist leader, Maurice Bishop, and ends with the conclusion of the
combat phase of URGENT FURY on 2 November 1983. The author, Dr.
Ronald H. Cole, relied primarily on Joint Staff files and
interviews as sources of information.
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