International security/ War-making
It was August 2, 1990, and Saddam Hussein, formerly
Washington’s man in Baghdad and its ally against fundamentalist Iran, had just
sent his troops across the border into oil-rich Kuwait. It would prove a
turning point in American Middle East policy. Six days later, a brigade of the
82nd Airborne Division was dispatched to Saudi Arabia as the vanguard of what
the U.S. Army termed
“the largest deployment of American troops since Vietnam.” The rest of the
division would soon follow as part of Operation Desert Storm, which was
supposed to drive Saddam’s troops from Kuwait and fell the Iraqi
autocrat. The division’s battle cry: "The road home... is through
Baghdad!”
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