The Eagle in the Desert: Looking Back on U.S. Involvement in the Persian Gulf War.

AuthorDamiras, Vassilios

Reviewed by Vassilios Damiras

In The Eagle in the Desert: Looking Back on U.S. Involvement in the Persian Gulf War, editors William Head and Earl H. Tilford, Jr. have compiled an anthology which addresses and examines the role of the United States in the Persian Gulf War. The book is organized into six parts: Part I: Politics, Alliances, and Regional Views; Part II: Bringing the Eagle to the Gulf Desert: Airlift, Supplies, and Logistics; Part III: The Air War: Planning and Combat; Part IV: The Ground War: The Army and the Marines; Part V: The Navy's Role in the Gulf War, and Part VI: Reexamining the Allied "Victory" in the Gulf War. Obviously, the editors have selected a majority of essays dealing with the American military campaign against Iraq during Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm from August 1990 to March 1991. According to Head, the purpose of this collection of essays is to explore the implications of the "history and scope of this conflict" (p. 9). Thus, the book progresses from background information, to military operations, and finally, to historical perspective.

The two essays which comprise Part I deal with the perspectives of the conflict. In "The Gulf War Coalition: The Politics and Economics of a Most Unusual Alliance," Daniel S. Papp examines President Bush's role in developing the coalition against Iraq. He also indicates how the Bush administration manipulated the international arena to create anti-Iraqi sentiment and to gain U.N. support for the American military campaign. In contrast, in "But Was It Jihad?: Islam and the Ethics of the Persian Gulf War," Sohail H. Hashmi analyzes how the sociopolitical, cultural, and religious aspects of the region influenced the reaction of the Arab leadership to the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait.

Parts II through V, consisting of nine essays, deal with the logistics and the execution of the American military machine. Part II which includes John W. Leland's "Air Mobility in Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm: An Assessment," and William Suit's "Sustaining the War Machine: U.S. Air Force Logistics Support during the Gulf War" deals with the effectiveness of the American-Western Coalition movement of troops, equipment, and supplies. Parts III through Part V deal with the effectiveness of the various aspects of the American-Western Coalition military machine including air, ground, and navy...

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