fbpx
Wikipedia

Iraqi no-fly zones conflict

Iraqi no-fly zones
Part of the lead-up to the Iraq War

No-fly zone detail
Date1 March 1991 – 20 March 2003
(12 years, 2 weeks and 5 days)
Location
Result

US-led victory

  • Ended with the beginning of the Iraq War
Belligerents
 United States
 United Kingdom
 France (until 1998)
 Turkey[1][2]
 Saudi Arabia (Operation Southern Watch)
 Australia (Operation Habitat)
Operation Provide Comfort/Provide Comfort II:
Germany
 Netherlands
Italy
 Spain
 Portugal
Iraq
Commanders and leaders
George H. W. Bush (until 20 January 1993)
Bill Clinton (20 January 1993 – 20 January 2001)
George W. Bush (from 20 January 2001)
John Shalikashvili (until 1997)
Hugh Shelton (from 1997)
T. Michael Moseley
John Major
Tony Blair
François Mitterrand
Jacques Chirac
King Fahd
Prince Abdullah
Saddam Hussein
Strength
6,000 infantrymen
50 aircraft and 1,400 personnel at any one time
Unknown number of Iraqi Air Force personnel and Iraqi Police officers
Casualties and losses
2 UH-60 Blackhawk helicopters shot down (friendly fire, 26 killed)
19 USAF personnel deployed as part of the operation killed in the Khobar Towers Bombing
5 RQ-1 Predator unmanned aircraft shot down
Unknown number of soldiers killed
Unknown number of air defense systems destroyed
1 MiG-25 Foxbat shot down
1 MiG-23 Flogger shot down
2 Su-22 Fitters shot down
1,400 Iraqi civilians killed (Iraqi government claim)[3]

The Iraqi no-fly zones conflict was a low-level conflict in the two no-fly zones (NFZs) in Iraq that were proclaimed by the United States, United Kingdom, and France after the Gulf War of 1991. The United States stated that the NFZs were intended to protect the ethnic Kurdish minority in northern Iraq and Shiite Muslims in the south. Iraqi aircraft were forbidden from flying inside the zones. The policy was enforced by the United States and the United Kingdom until 2003, when it was rendered obsolete by the 2003 invasion of Iraq. French aircraft patrols also participated until France withdrew in 1996.[4]

The Iraqi government claimed 1,400 civilians were killed by Coalition bombing during the NFZ.[5] The Kurdish-dominated north gained effective autonomy and was protected from a feared repeat of the Anfal genocide in 1988 that killed tens of thousands of civilians. Over 280,000 sorties were flown in the first 9 years of the NFZs.[6]

This military action was not authorised by the United Nations.[7] The Secretary-General of the UN at the time the resolution was passed, Boutros Boutros-Ghali called the no-fly zones "illegal" in a later interview with John Pilger.[8][9]

Legality edit

The American, British and French governments justified the no-fly zones by invoking United Nations Security Council Resolution 688, though the resolution made no explicit reference to no-fly zones.[7]

Role in preparation for ground invasion edit

From March to December 2002 the number of bombs dropped increased by 300%.[10] This was recognised as "a clear indication that the no-fly zone is being used to destroy the country's air defence systems in anticipation of an all-out attack".[10] Whitehall officials privately admitted to the Guardian that the no-fly zones were being used to weaken Iraq's air defence systems instead of the stated aim of defending the Marsh Arabs and the Shia population of Iraq.[10]

The commander of the USS Abraham Lincoln's air wing said that the NFZ "makes any potential action infinitely easier ... to fly over the same territory you're going to attack is a real luxury".[11]

Civilian deaths edit

The United Nations reported that in 1999 alone 144 civilians were killed during Coalition bombing raids.[5] By 1999 over 1,800 bombs had been dropped on Iraq,[12] while Iraq stated that 1,400 civilians died due to bombing during the NFZ.[5]

The United States and coalition countries denied these allegations and cited popular Kurdish and Shia demands for no-fly zones, in order to protect against Saddam Hussein, who unhindered had committed numerous atrocities a few years earlier, such as the infamous 1988 Anfal genocide that killed 50,000 to 182,000[13] Kurdish civilians. The establishing of no-fly zones effectively cut off Saddam Hussein from much of the north and secured the Kurdish population, who gained effective autonomy directly following the intervention. This autonomy has continued to thrive and even avoided the chaos and bloodshed that characterized the rest of Iraq during the 2003 Iraq war.

History edit

From 1992 to the United States-led coalition invasion of Iraq in 2003, there were two NFZs in Iraq. The NFZ in the north of Iraq was established shortly after the Gulf War, extending from the 36th parallel northwards. In August 1992 the NFZ in the south to the 32nd parallel was established,[14] but in 1996 it was expanded to the 33rd parallel.[15] The northern NFZ was initially part of Operation Provide Comfort relief operations to a persecuted Kurdish minority in Iraq, and was followed on by Operation Northern Watch. The southern NFZ was maintained by Operation Southern Watch.

When Operation Desert Storm ended in 1991, the safety of Kurds who were fleeing during the uprising from Iraqi persecution became an issue, and Operation Provide Comfort began. This operation essentially created a Northern NFZ to Iraqi military aircraft. The operation provided the Kurdish population with humanitarian aid and reassurance of safe skies.

On 26 June 1993, the U.S. conducted a cruise missile attack on the Iraqi Intelligence Service's (IIS) principal command and control complex in Baghdad, publicly announced as retaliation for the assassination attempt by the IIS on former President George H. W. Bush while he was visiting Kuwait in April of that year to commemorate a coalition victory over Iraq in the Gulf War. Fourteen cruise missiles were launched from USS Peterson and nine of them launched from USS Chancellorsville. Sixteen hit the target, while three struck a residential area, killing nine civilians and wounding 12 others. Four missiles were unaccounted for.[16]

In October 1994, Baghdad once again began mobilizing around 64,000 Iraqi troops near the Kuwaiti border because of their expressed frustrations of economic sanctions imposed on Iraq by the United Nations Security Council (UNSC).[17][18] In response, the U.S. begins to deploy troops in the Persian Gulf to deter Iraqi aggression against Kuwait. Code-named Operation Vigilant Warrior, 1st Brigade of the Fort Stewart, Georgia-based 24th Infantry Division (Mechanized) deployed and drew pre-positioned equipment in Kuwait. The 23rd Wing's (Flying Tigers) 75th Fighter Squadron (Tigersharks) and its full complement of A-10s initially deployed from Pope AFB, North Carolina to Dhahran Air Base, Saudi Arabia, followed by the first forward deployment to Ahmad al-Jaber Air Base, Kuwait. This allowed better face-to-face coordination with tactical air control parties (TACP) assets further forward deployed at Camp Doha, Kuwait and points north. Iraq would later withdraw troops near the Kuwaiti border in response to a massive U.S. military build-up.

However, this was marred by a friendly-fire incident on 14 April 1994 when two United States Air Force F-15 Eagle fighter planes mistakenly shot down two United States Army Blackhawk helicopters, killing 26 Coalition military and civilian personnel.

In September 1996, the U.S. conducted Operation Desert Strike, and ships from the USS Carl Vinson Battle Group, including USS Laboon, and USS Shiloh, in conjunction with B-52 bombers escorted by F-14D Tomcats from USS Carl Vinson, launched 27 cruise missiles against Iraqi air defense targets in southern Iraq.[19] A second wave of 17 was launched later that day.[20] The missiles hit targets in and around Kut, Iskandariyah, Nasiriyah, and Tallil.[21] This was done in response to Saddam Hussein, the dictator of Iraq, attempting to launch an Iraqi military offensive campaign in the Kurdish town of Arbil in Iraqi Kurdistan.

Operation Provide Comfort officially ended on 31 December 1996. Following Operation Provide Comfort, the United States continued to watch over the northern skies with the launching of Operation Northern Watch on 1 January 1997. Operation Northern Watch continued to provide air security to the Kurdish population in the north. By 1999, the Department of Defense had flown over 200,000 sorties over Iraq.[22]

American and British aircraft continuously enforced the NFZ, receiving anti-aircraft fire from Iraqi forces almost daily.[23] The operation ran until its conclusion on 1 May 2003. In the south, Operation Southern Watch was underway to watch over the persecuted Shi'ite populations. This operation was launched on 27 August 1992 with the mission of preventing further human rights abuses against civilian populations. Iraq challenged the no-fly zone beginning in December 1992 when a USAF F-16 fighter plane shot down an Iraqi MiG-25 Foxbat fighter which had locked onto it in the Southern no-fly zone. The next month Coalition planes attacked Iraqi SAM sites in the South.[citation needed] Baghdad eventually halted firing on patrolling Coalition aircraft after August 1993.

In December 1998, Operation Desert Fox was conducted by the USAF and the Royal Air Force, which was a major four-day bombing campaign on Iraqi targets from 16 December to 19 December 1998. The contemporaneous justification for the strikes was Iraq's failure to comply with United Nations Security Council resolutions and its interference with United Nations Special Commission inspectors.

In the aftermath of Operation Desert Fox in December 1998, Iraq announced it would no longer respect the no-fly zones and resumed its efforts in shooting down Coalition aircraft. Saddam Hussein offered a $14,000 reward to anyone who could accomplish this task, but no manned aircraft were ever shot down by Iraq. Air strikes by British and American aircraft against Iraqi claimed anti-aircraft and military targets continued weekly over the next few years. In the early 2000s (decade), the U.S. developed a contingency plan, Operation Desert Badger for dealing with pilots shot down over Iraqi no-fly zones.[24]

 
Still photograph from a videotape of an Iraqi surface-to-air missile, believed to be an SA-3, launched at a Coalition aircraft in July 2001.

The operation continued until it transitioned to Operation Southern Focus in June 2002. They began to carry out offensive sorties, not only against targets that had fired on them, but upon installations that had demonstrated no hostile intent. The U.S. claimed that these increased attacks were the result of increasing Iraqi provocations, but later, in July 2005, the British Ministry of Defense released figures showing that the number of provocations had actually dropped dramatically prior to and just after the increase in allied attacks. Their records indicate that in the first seven months of 2001, there had been 370 provocations on the part of Iraq. In the seven months from October 2001 into May 2002, only 32 such provocations were recorded.[25] General Tommy Franks later acknowledged that the dramatic increase in offensive sorties was an attempt to destroy the Iraqi defenses in much the same way as the air strikes at the beginning of the Gulf War had.[26]

In purported retaliation for the Iraqis' now-daily air defense attacks on Coalition aircraft, the September attacks included a 5 September 100-aircraft attack on the main air defense site in western Iraq. According to an editorial by Michael Smith for the New Statesman, this was "Located at the furthest extreme of the southern no-fly zone, far away from the areas that needed to be patrolled to prevent attacks on the Shi'a; it was destroyed not because it was a threat to the patrols, but to allow allied special forces operating from Jordan to enter Iraq undetected."[27]

The NFZs effectively ceased to exist with the beginning of the Iraq War in March 2003, since air superiority over the country was quickly attained by the coalition. The NFZs were officially deactivated right after Saddam Hussein's overthrow.[citation needed]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ http://www.stripes.com/01/jun01/ed060401a.html[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ Defense.gov News Article: Patrolling Iraq's Northern Skies
  3. ^ Carrington, Anca. "Iraq: Issues, Historical Background, Bibliography." Page 18.
  4. ^ "BBC News | FORCES AND FIREPOWER | Containment: The Iraqi no-fly zones". news.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  5. ^ a b c Sponeck, Graf Hans-Christof; Sponeck, H. C. von; Amorim, Celso N. (October 2006). A Different Kind of War: The UN Sanctions Regime in Iraq. Berghahn Books. ISBN 9781845452223.
  6. ^ "Iraq Under Siege: Ten Years On". www.globalpolicy.org. Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  7. ^ a b "No-fly zones: The legal position". 19 February 2001. Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  8. ^ A People Betrayed 14 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine ZNet, 23 February 2003
  9. ^ ITV – John Pilger – "Labour claims its actions are lawful while it bombs Iraq, starves its people and sells arms to corrupt states"
  10. ^ a b c "Britain and US Step Up Bombing in Iraq". www.globalpolicy.org. Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  11. ^ "US Pilots Enforce Iraq No-Fly Zone". www.globalpolicy.org. Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  12. ^ Salvage, Jane (2002). "The health and environmental costs of war on Iraq" (PDF). MedAct.
  13. ^ Johns, Dave (24 January 2006). "The Crimes of Saddam Hussein: 1988 The Anfal Campaign". PBS Frontline. Retrieved 5 May 2020. Human Rights Watch estimates that between 50,000 and 100,000 people were killed during al-Anfal; Kurdish officials have put the number as high as 182,000. When presented with this figure, 'Chemical' Ali Hassan al-Majid took exception. 'It could not have been more than 100,000,' he said.
  14. ^ BBC News | FORCES AND FIREPOWER | Containment: The Iraqi no-fly zones
  15. ^ 2nd Cruise Missile Strikes in Iraq 9 February 2005 at the Wayback Machine
  16. ^ John Pike. "Air Strike 13 January 1993 – Operation Southern Watch". Globalsecurity.org. Retrieved 24 September 2009.
  17. ^ Saddam Hussein & the invasion of Kuwait
  18. ^ U.S., Iraq Move More Troops Toward Kuwait : Military: Baghdad mobilizes force of 64,000. Tension up as American ships, planes, 4,000 soldiers converge on Gulf
  19. ^ Operation Desert Strike at globalsecurity.org
  20. ^ . Archived from the original on 9 February 2005. Retrieved 1 September 2013.
  21. ^ U.S. launches missile strikes against Iraq – CNN.com
  22. ^ U.S. Counters Iraq's Increased Aggression, Department of Defense News Brief
  23. ^ Hitchens, Christopher (21 June 2004). "Unfairenheit 9/11: The lies of Michael Moore.". Slate.
  24. ^ Lambeth, Benjamin S. (2013). The unseen war : allied air power and the takedown of Saddam Hussein. Annapolis, Md. ISBN 978-1612513126.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  25. ^ Michael Smith, "RAF Bombing Raids Tried to Goad Saddam into War," Sunday Times, 29 May 2005
  26. ^ American Soldier [2004] p. 342
  27. ^ "The war before the war". News Statesman. 30 May 2005.

External links edit

    iraqi, zones, conflict, iraqi, zonespart, lead, iraq, warno, zone, detaildate1, march, 1991, march, 2003, years, weeks, days, locationiraqresultus, victory, ended, with, beginning, iraq, warbelligerents, united, states, united, kingdom, france, until, 1998, tu. Iraqi no fly zonesPart of the lead up to the Iraq WarNo fly zone detailDate1 March 1991 20 March 2003 12 years 2 weeks and 5 days LocationIraqResultUS led victory Ended with the beginning of the Iraq WarBelligerents United States United Kingdom France until 1998 Turkey 1 2 Saudi Arabia Operation Southern Watch Australia Operation Habitat Operation Provide Comfort Provide Comfort II Germany Netherlands Italy Spain PortugalIraqCommanders and leadersGeorge H W Bush until 20 January 1993 Bill Clinton 20 January 1993 20 January 2001 George W Bush from 20 January 2001 John Shalikashvili until 1997 Hugh Shelton from 1997 T Michael Moseley John Major Tony Blair Francois Mitterrand Jacques Chirac King Fahd Prince AbdullahSaddam HusseinStrength6 000 infantrymen 50 aircraft and 1 400 personnel at any one timeUnknown number of Iraqi Air Force personnel and Iraqi Police officersCasualties and losses2 UH 60 Blackhawk helicopters shot down friendly fire 26 killed 19 USAF personnel deployed as part of the operation killed in the Khobar Towers Bombing 5 RQ 1 Predator unmanned aircraft shot downUnknown number of soldiers killed Unknown number of air defense systems destroyed 1 MiG 25 Foxbat shot down 1 MiG 23 Flogger shot down 2 Su 22 Fitters shot down1 400 Iraqi civilians killed Iraqi government claim 3 The Iraqi no fly zones conflict was a low level conflict in the two no fly zones NFZs in Iraq that were proclaimed by the United States United Kingdom and France after the Gulf War of 1991 The United States stated that the NFZs were intended to protect the ethnic Kurdish minority in northern Iraq and Shiite Muslims in the south Iraqi aircraft were forbidden from flying inside the zones The policy was enforced by the United States and the United Kingdom until 2003 when it was rendered obsolete by the 2003 invasion of Iraq French aircraft patrols also participated until France withdrew in 1996 4 The Iraqi government claimed 1 400 civilians were killed by Coalition bombing during the NFZ 5 The Kurdish dominated north gained effective autonomy and was protected from a feared repeat of the Anfal genocide in 1988 that killed tens of thousands of civilians Over 280 000 sorties were flown in the first 9 years of the NFZs 6 This military action was not authorised by the United Nations 7 The Secretary General of the UN at the time the resolution was passed Boutros Boutros Ghali called the no fly zones illegal in a later interview with John Pilger 8 9 Contents 1 Legality 1 1 Role in preparation for ground invasion 2 Civilian deaths 3 History 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksLegality editThe American British and French governments justified the no fly zones by invoking United Nations Security Council Resolution 688 though the resolution made no explicit reference to no fly zones 7 Role in preparation for ground invasion edit From March to December 2002 the number of bombs dropped increased by 300 10 This was recognised as a clear indication that the no fly zone is being used to destroy the country s air defence systems in anticipation of an all out attack 10 Whitehall officials privately admitted to the Guardian that the no fly zones were being used to weaken Iraq s air defence systems instead of the stated aim of defending the Marsh Arabs and the Shia population of Iraq 10 The commander of the USS Abraham Lincoln s air wing said that the NFZ makes any potential action infinitely easier to fly over the same territory you re going to attack is a real luxury 11 Civilian deaths editThe United Nations reported that in 1999 alone 144 civilians were killed during Coalition bombing raids 5 By 1999 over 1 800 bombs had been dropped on Iraq 12 while Iraq stated that 1 400 civilians died due to bombing during the NFZ 5 The United States and coalition countries denied these allegations and cited popular Kurdish and Shia demands for no fly zones in order to protect against Saddam Hussein who unhindered had committed numerous atrocities a few years earlier such as the infamous 1988 Anfal genocide that killed 50 000 to 182 000 13 Kurdish civilians The establishing of no fly zones effectively cut off Saddam Hussein from much of the north and secured the Kurdish population who gained effective autonomy directly following the intervention This autonomy has continued to thrive and even avoided the chaos and bloodshed that characterized the rest of Iraq during the 2003 Iraq war History editFrom 1992 to the United States led coalition invasion of Iraq in 2003 there were two NFZs in Iraq The NFZ in the north of Iraq was established shortly after the Gulf War extending from the 36th parallel northwards In August 1992 the NFZ in the south to the 32nd parallel was established 14 but in 1996 it was expanded to the 33rd parallel 15 The northern NFZ was initially part of Operation Provide Comfort relief operations to a persecuted Kurdish minority in Iraq and was followed on by Operation Northern Watch The southern NFZ was maintained by Operation Southern Watch When Operation Desert Storm ended in 1991 the safety of Kurds who were fleeing during the uprising from Iraqi persecution became an issue and Operation Provide Comfort began This operation essentially created a Northern NFZ to Iraqi military aircraft The operation provided the Kurdish population with humanitarian aid and reassurance of safe skies On 26 June 1993 the U S conducted a cruise missile attack on the Iraqi Intelligence Service s IIS principal command and control complex in Baghdad publicly announced as retaliation for the assassination attempt by the IIS on former President George H W Bush while he was visiting Kuwait in April of that year to commemorate a coalition victory over Iraq in the Gulf War Fourteen cruise missiles were launched from USS Peterson and nine of them launched from USS Chancellorsville Sixteen hit the target while three struck a residential area killing nine civilians and wounding 12 others Four missiles were unaccounted for 16 In October 1994 Baghdad once again began mobilizing around 64 000 Iraqi troops near the Kuwaiti border because of their expressed frustrations of economic sanctions imposed on Iraq by the United Nations Security Council UNSC 17 18 In response the U S begins to deploy troops in the Persian Gulf to deter Iraqi aggression against Kuwait Code named Operation Vigilant Warrior 1st Brigade of the Fort Stewart Georgia based 24th Infantry Division Mechanized deployed and drew pre positioned equipment in Kuwait The 23rd Wing s Flying Tigers 75th Fighter Squadron Tigersharks and its full complement of A 10s initially deployed from Pope AFB North Carolina to Dhahran Air Base Saudi Arabia followed by the first forward deployment to Ahmad al Jaber Air Base Kuwait This allowed better face to face coordination with tactical air control parties TACP assets further forward deployed at Camp Doha Kuwait and points north Iraq would later withdraw troops near the Kuwaiti border in response to a massive U S military build up However this was marred by a friendly fire incident on 14 April 1994 when two United States Air Force F 15 Eagle fighter planes mistakenly shot down two United States Army Blackhawk helicopters killing 26 Coalition military and civilian personnel In September 1996 the U S conducted Operation Desert Strike and ships from the USS Carl Vinson Battle Group including USS Laboon and USS Shiloh in conjunction with B 52 bombers escorted by F 14D Tomcats from USS Carl Vinson launched 27 cruise missiles against Iraqi air defense targets in southern Iraq 19 A second wave of 17 was launched later that day 20 The missiles hit targets in and around Kut Iskandariyah Nasiriyah and Tallil 21 This was done in response to Saddam Hussein the dictator of Iraq attempting to launch an Iraqi military offensive campaign in the Kurdish town of Arbil in Iraqi Kurdistan Operation Provide Comfort officially ended on 31 December 1996 Following Operation Provide Comfort the United States continued to watch over the northern skies with the launching of Operation Northern Watch on 1 January 1997 Operation Northern Watch continued to provide air security to the Kurdish population in the north By 1999 the Department of Defense had flown over 200 000 sorties over Iraq 22 American and British aircraft continuously enforced the NFZ receiving anti aircraft fire from Iraqi forces almost daily 23 The operation ran until its conclusion on 1 May 2003 In the south Operation Southern Watch was underway to watch over the persecuted Shi ite populations This operation was launched on 27 August 1992 with the mission of preventing further human rights abuses against civilian populations Iraq challenged the no fly zone beginning in December 1992 when a USAF F 16 fighter plane shot down an Iraqi MiG 25 Foxbat fighter which had locked onto it in the Southern no fly zone The next month Coalition planes attacked Iraqi SAM sites in the South citation needed Baghdad eventually halted firing on patrolling Coalition aircraft after August 1993 In December 1998 Operation Desert Fox was conducted by the USAF and the Royal Air Force which was a major four day bombing campaign on Iraqi targets from 16 December to 19 December 1998 The contemporaneous justification for the strikes was Iraq s failure to comply with United Nations Security Council resolutions and its interference with United Nations Special Commission inspectors In the aftermath of Operation Desert Fox in December 1998 Iraq announced it would no longer respect the no fly zones and resumed its efforts in shooting down Coalition aircraft Saddam Hussein offered a 14 000 reward to anyone who could accomplish this task but no manned aircraft were ever shot down by Iraq Air strikes by British and American aircraft against Iraqi claimed anti aircraft and military targets continued weekly over the next few years In the early 2000s decade the U S developed a contingency plan Operation Desert Badger for dealing with pilots shot down over Iraqi no fly zones 24 nbsp Still photograph from a videotape of an Iraqi surface to air missile believed to be an SA 3 launched at a Coalition aircraft in July 2001 The operation continued until it transitioned to Operation Southern Focus in June 2002 They began to carry out offensive sorties not only against targets that had fired on them but upon installations that had demonstrated no hostile intent The U S claimed that these increased attacks were the result of increasing Iraqi provocations but later in July 2005 the British Ministry of Defense released figures showing that the number of provocations had actually dropped dramatically prior to and just after the increase in allied attacks Their records indicate that in the first seven months of 2001 there had been 370 provocations on the part of Iraq In the seven months from October 2001 into May 2002 only 32 such provocations were recorded 25 General Tommy Franks later acknowledged that the dramatic increase in offensive sorties was an attempt to destroy the Iraqi defenses in much the same way as the air strikes at the beginning of the Gulf War had 26 In purported retaliation for the Iraqis now daily air defense attacks on Coalition aircraft the September attacks included a 5 September 100 aircraft attack on the main air defense site in western Iraq According to an editorial by Michael Smith for the New Statesman this was Located at the furthest extreme of the southern no fly zone far away from the areas that needed to be patrolled to prevent attacks on the Shi a it was destroyed not because it was a threat to the patrols but to allow allied special forces operating from Jordan to enter Iraq undetected 27 The NFZs effectively ceased to exist with the beginning of the Iraq War in March 2003 since air superiority over the country was quickly attained by the coalition The NFZs were officially deactivated right after Saddam Hussein s overthrow citation needed See also edit nbsp Iraq portalIraqi Airways Iraq sanctions Post World War II air to air combat lossesReferences edit http www stripes com 01 jun01 ed060401a html permanent dead link Defense gov News Article Patrolling Iraq s Northern Skies Carrington Anca Iraq Issues Historical Background Bibliography Page 18 BBC News FORCES AND FIREPOWER Containment The Iraqi no fly zones news bbc co uk Retrieved 17 October 2019 a b c Sponeck Graf Hans Christof Sponeck H C von Amorim Celso N October 2006 A Different Kind of War The UN Sanctions Regime in Iraq Berghahn Books ISBN 9781845452223 Iraq Under Siege Ten Years On www globalpolicy org Retrieved 17 October 2019 a b No fly zones The legal position 19 February 2001 Retrieved 17 October 2019 A People Betrayed Archived 14 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine ZNet 23 February 2003 ITV John Pilger Labour claims its actions are lawful while it bombs Iraq starves its people and sells arms to corrupt states a b c Britain and US Step Up Bombing in Iraq www globalpolicy org Retrieved 17 October 2019 US Pilots Enforce Iraq No Fly Zone www globalpolicy org Retrieved 17 October 2019 Salvage Jane 2002 The health and environmental costs of war on Iraq PDF MedAct Johns Dave 24 January 2006 The Crimes of Saddam Hussein 1988 The Anfal Campaign PBS Frontline Retrieved 5 May 2020 Human Rights Watch estimates that between 50 000 and 100 000 people were killed during al Anfal Kurdish officials have put the number as high as 182 000 When presented with this figure Chemical Ali Hassan al Majid took exception It could not have been more than 100 000 he said BBC News FORCES AND FIREPOWER Containment The Iraqi no fly zones 2nd Cruise Missile Strikes in Iraq Archived 9 February 2005 at the Wayback Machine John Pike Air Strike 13 January 1993 Operation Southern Watch Globalsecurity org Retrieved 24 September 2009 Saddam Hussein amp the invasion of Kuwait U S Iraq Move More Troops Toward Kuwait Military Baghdad mobilizes force of 64 000 Tension up as American ships planes 4 000 soldiers converge on Gulf Operation Desert Strike at globalsecurity org 2nd Cruise Missile Strikes in Iraq Archived from the original on 9 February 2005 Retrieved 1 September 2013 U S launches missile strikes against Iraq CNN com U S Counters Iraq s Increased Aggression Department of Defense News Brief Hitchens Christopher 21 June 2004 Unfairenheit 9 11 The lies of Michael Moore Slate Lambeth Benjamin S 2013 The unseen war allied air power and the takedown of Saddam Hussein Annapolis Md ISBN 978 1612513126 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Michael Smith RAF Bombing Raids Tried to Goad Saddam into War Sunday Times 29 May 2005 American Soldier 2004 p 342 The war before the war News Statesman 30 May 2005 External links editFull text of Resolution 688 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Iraqi no fly zones conflict amp oldid 1192343153, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

    article

    , read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.