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They were fighting Saddam Hussein and his army.
The Iran-Iraq War started when Saddam Hussein ordered the Iraqi Army to march into Khuzestan, a southwestern Iranian province on September 22, 1980.
The ones I can think of are: Invasion of Panama (1989) -- to remove dictator Manuel NoriegaOperation Desert Shield/Storm (1990-91) -- to remove Saddam Hussein's army from KuwaitSomalia (1993) -- peacekeeping & humanitarian reliefHaiti (1994) -- peacekeepingBosnia (1996-present?) -- peacekeepingYugoslavia (1999) -- related to the war in BosniaAfghanistan (2001-present) -- because of 9/11Iraq (2003-present) -- to remove Saddam Hussein
It broke the US's 'Vietnam complex/syndrome' -where it was reluctant to use force against an enemy in their own territory for fear of embarrassing and unsustainable losses. It also shattered Saddam Hussein's ability to project his power around the middle east. By destryoing his army he was no longer able to threaten or influence his neighbours
Saddam Hussein's eastward intentions were denied. His ambition was directed toward Kuwait. Consequently, an American fleet controls the Persian Gulf and the Indian Ocean, which is why India recently laid down the keel for her first indigenous aircraft carrier, and an American army stands on top of most of the oil in the world. That army will be there as long as is necessary, despite what a Presidential candidate might promise from time to time.
No. Saddam Hussein was Sunni, which did not endear him to the Shiites in Iraq or to the Shiite leadership in Iran. However, there were a large number of Shiites in the Iraqi Army under Saddam Hussein who gave their lives in loyalty to their country (even against Iran).
No. Saddam Hussein was Sunni, which did not endear him to the Shiites in Iraq or to the Shiite leadership in Iran. However, there were a large number of Shiites in the Iraqi Army under Saddam Hussein who gave their lives in loyalty to their country (even against Iran).
They were fighting Saddam Hussein and his army.
The Country Saddam Hussein invaded was Kuwait for their resources and because Iraq thought that they would get more power , but the invasion just lead to another war .
The Iran-Iraq War started when Saddam Hussein ordered the Iraqi Army to march into Khuzestan, a southwestern Iranian province on September 22, 1980.
The mistake was invading Iran, period. Iran is a massive country with a large and sophisticated army and an incredibly mountainous and hilly terrain. It is difficult to advance across in peacetime, let alone in wartime.
Saddam Hussein was actually ideologically opposed to everything Al-Qaeda stood for. He never desired or cared for religion, let alone religious politics or Islamism. Saddam Hussein was an ardent Nationalist Secularist and opposed the Internationalist Islamist agenda of Al-Qaeda. Both are notably violent philosophies and both are in the Islamic World, but that is where the similarity ends. Both people/organizations had a fundamentally different view of the world and therefore were not aligned. He did not like the idea of having to give control to small cells that he could not control directly, and he did not like the idea of directly antagonizing the West. (Many of the things he did antagonized the West, but he did not do those things desiring confrontation.) Saddam Hussein's goal was regional supremacy and had no interest in the worldwide regime change advocated by Al-Qaeda. The only reason a relationship developed between Saddam Hussein and Al-Qaeda after the start of the war is that it quickly became clear that the Iraqi Army could not hold back the American Army and that a guerilla war would be the only viable resistance to foreign occupation. Since Al-Qaeda excels at that type of warfare, he extended an invitation for them to come in, but this occurred only AFTER the Iraq War began.
The ones I can think of are: Invasion of Panama (1989) -- to remove dictator Manuel NoriegaOperation Desert Shield/Storm (1990-91) -- to remove Saddam Hussein's army from KuwaitSomalia (1993) -- peacekeeping & humanitarian reliefHaiti (1994) -- peacekeepingBosnia (1996-present?) -- peacekeepingYugoslavia (1999) -- related to the war in BosniaAfghanistan (2001-present) -- because of 9/11Iraq (2003-present) -- to remove Saddam Hussein
Iraq has been majority Shi'a for over 500 years and many Iraqi Shi'a fought in the Iraqi Army against Iran. However, Saddam Hussein and the higher echelons of the Iraq government were Sunna.
OK to keep this semi short. Saddam Hussein invaded the oil rich kingdom of Kuwait and attacks neighboring Saudi Arabia. The U.S is low on oil and Saudi Arabia is an ally so Bush uses all the weaponry Reagan had designed and stockpiled so we kicked Saddam's army back were they came from using high tech stealth bombers, M1A Abrams and other high tech weapons. Yes i do think we achieved our goal of securing Saudi Arabia and Kuwait from Saddam Hussein.
One OpinionYes he did cooperate with them.Different OpinionSaddam Hussein was actually ideologically opposed to everything Al-Qaeda stood for. He never desired or cared for religion, let alone religious politics or Islamism. Saddam Hussein was an ardent Nationalist Secularist and opposed the Internationalist Islamist agenda of Al-Qaeda. Both are notably violent philosophies and both are in the Islamic World, but that is where the similarity ends. Both people/organizations had a fundamentally different view of the world and therefore were not aligned. He did not like the idea of having to give control to small cells that he could not control directly, and he did not like the idea of directly antagonizing the West. (Many of the things he did antagonized the West, but he did not do those things desiring confrontation.) Saddam Hussein's goal was regional supremacy and had no interest in the worldwide regime change advocated by Al-Qaeda.The only reason a relationship developed between Saddam Hussein and Al-Qaeda after the start of the war is that it quickly became clear that the Iraqi Army could not hold back the American Army and that a guerilla war would be the only viable resistance to foreign occupation. Since Al-Qaeda excels at that type of warfare, he extended an invitation for them to come in, but this occurred only AFTER the Iraq War began.
Brigadier General Abd al-Karim Qasim. It is commonly believed that King Faisal II was replaced with Saddam Hussein. This is not the case as King Faisal was ejected through a coup d'état and Saddam was not part of the Army. Brigadier General Abd al-Karim Qasim came to power as "President". He too was overthrown by a coup in 1963 by Colonel Abdul Salam Arif who ruled until 1966 when he died and his brother Rahman Arif became the Present. The Ba'aths under Ahmed Hasan Al-Bakir overthrew Rahman Arif in 1968 and his lieutenant, Saddam Hussein, would not come to power until 1979.