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| 1990 2 August: Iraqi troops invade Kuwait, taking the emirate in one day. The BBC's John Simpson says the Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein is "by far the strongest leader in the region". In his report he explains how the West inadvertently helped bring about the invasion 6 August: The United Nations Security Council demands an "immediate and unconditional" withdrawal of Iraqi troops and orders a trade boycott |
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| 25 August: The UN Security
Council authorizes the use of force to make the trade boycott work. 17 October: Western troops in the Gulf number 200,000 US troops, 15,000 UK troops and 11,000 French troops. 29 November: The UN Security Council says Iraq must voluntarily withdraw from Kuwait by 15 January 1991. It authorizes "all necessary means" to force Iraq out if it does not comply. Baghdad rejects the "ultimatum". In his report the BBC's Brian Hanrahan says: "President Bush is under pressure not to be hasty." 30 November: US President Bush invites Iraq to join direct talks. 6 December: Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein announces the release of 3,000 foreign nationals being held in Iraq and Kuwait. |
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| 1991 | ||||
| 15 January: Iraq ignores the
UN ultimatum. There are 580,000 allied troops in the Gulf, against 540,000
Iraqi troops. 17 January: Operation Desert Storm is launched, with air attacks on Iraq and Kuwait. The BBC's John Simpson is in Baghdad and witnesses the missile attacks. "The bombs and the missiles seem mainly to have landed with pin-point accuracy," he reports the next day. 18 January: The first of several Iraqi scud missiles attacks on Tel Aviv. The US warns Israel against retaliation saying it is an attempt to widen the war and break up the opposition. 20 January: Iraqi television broadcasts pictures of seven captured allied airmen. 24 January: Allied forces capture the small island of Qarawa. |
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