Sustainable Rehabilitation of Water Infrastructures in Southern Iraq After theSecond Gulf War

Author(s):  
Andrea Micangeli ◽  
Simone Grego ◽  
Stefano Esposto
Keyword(s):  
Gulf War ◽  
Author(s):  
Gazzini Tarcisio

This chapter discusses the main legal issues related to the military operations carried out by the United States, the United Kingdom and France for the protection of the Kurds in Northern Iraq as well as the Shiites and Marsh Arabs in Southern Iraq between the conclusion of the Gulf War (1990-91) and the 2003 military intervention in Iraq. Particular attention is paid to the legal effects of the relevant Security Council resolutions as well as the claim to intervene on humanitarian grounds.


Author(s):  
Pesach Malovany ◽  
Amatzia Baram ◽  
Kevin M. Woods ◽  
Ronna Englesberg

This chapter deals with the second phase of the Gulf war—operation “Desert Storm” called by the Iraqis “The Mother of all Battles– The ground and sea campaign (24-28 February, 1991). It describes the Coalition’s ground attack against the Iraqi forces in Kuwait and southern Iraq—opened on 24 February at dawn, and lasted four days. It included three sub-phases: a. breaching the Iraqi line of defence in Kuwait and on the border between Iraq and Saudi Arabia; b. the Iraqi retreat from Kuwait and the Coalition’s forces flanking action inside Iraq; c. the battles against the Republican Guard in southern Iraq. It also describes The Iraqi Navy’s role in the campaign, especially the fighting on the island of Faylaka.


Author(s):  
Pesach Malovany ◽  
Amatzia Baram ◽  
Kevin M. Woods ◽  
Ronna Englesberg

This chapter deals with the first phase of the Gulf War—called by the Coalition forces Operation “Desert Storm”, and by the Iraqis “The Mother of all Battles”—The air campaign (16 January – 28 February, 1991) and the surface-to-surface missile campaign. It describes the wide and extensive coalition air attacks on the Iraqi forces deployed in Kuwait and southern Iraq and the aerial bombings of infrastructures and military targets in all parts of Iraq. It describes also the surface to surface missiles campaign the Iraqis launched in response to the Coalition air campaign, especially against Israel and Saudi Arabia, and the Coalition forces’ efforts to destroy the Iraqi missile launchers in western Iraq.


Iraq ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 70 ◽  
pp. 215-237 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Curtis ◽  
Qais Hussein Raheed ◽  
Hugo Clarke ◽  
Abdulamir M. Al Hamdani ◽  
Elizabeth Stone ◽  
...  

The proposal to develop an Iraqi-British project to protect and promote cultural heritage in Southern Iraq was first mooted at a lunch in the British Museum on 24 September 2007, involving Major-General Barney White-Spunner, Charles Moore, former editor of the Daily Telegraph, Neil MacGregor, Director of the British Museum, and John Curtis, Keeper of the Department of the Middle East at the British Museum. The lunch had been arranged to provide Major-General White-Spunner with recent information about the state of the Iraqi cultural heritage, as he was due to be deployed to Iraq in February 2008 as Commander-in-Chief of British troops and General Officer Commanding the Multi-National Division South-East. At the lunch, it was suggested that the greatest need would be to arrange for the inspection of archaeological sites and, if necessary, to arrange for the protection of them, and also to consider facilitating the reopening of some provincial museums. It is known that archaeological sites particularly in Southern Iraq suffered grievously from looting, particularly after the Second Gulf War, and most provincial museums were sacked following the First Gulf War in 1991 and again in 2003. Major-General White-Spunner immediately recognised the importance of these proposals and appointed a project manager, Major Hugo Clarke, to work up a scheme with John Curtis. The project has been made possible by a generous grant from the Department of Culture, Media and Sport, that has covered all costs except those incurred in Iraq, which have been met by the British Army.


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