Operation Granby

Operation Granby
C Company, 1st Battalion The Staffordshire Regiment, in a live firing exercise, during Operation Granby, 6 January 1991.

Operation Granby was the name given to the British military operations during the Gulf War. 53,462 troops were deployed during the conflict[1]. The total cost of operations was £2.434 billion (1992) of which at least £2.049 billion was paid for by other nations such as Kuwait and Saudi Arabia; £200 million of equipment was lost or written off[2].

Operation Granby took its name from John Manners, Marquess of Granby a British commander in the Seven Years' War.

The Joint Commander Gulf Forces (based in the United Kingdom at RAF High Wycombe) was Air Chief Marshal Sir Patrick Hine 1 October 1990—31 March 1991, and Air Chief Marshal Sir Michael Graydon from 31 March 1991. His political adviser was Andrew Palmer. The Commander British Forces Middle East, the in-theatre commander (based in Riyadh), was initially Air Vice Marshal Andrew Wilson (September—October 1990), then Lieutenant-General Sir Peter de la Billiere 6 October 1990—March 1991, and Air Commodore Ian Macfadyen from March 1991.

The Air Commander British Forces Middle East (initially Arabian Peninsula) was Air Vice Marshal Andrew Wilson from August to 17 November 1990 then Air Vice Marshal William (Bill) Wratten from 17 November 1990.

The Senior British Naval Officer Middle East was Captain Anthony McEwen, Royal Navy until September 1990 (on HMS York), then Commodore Paul Haddocks September to December 1990. Finally Commodore Christopher Craig, on HMS Brave and HMS London, was in command from 3 December 1990 to March 1991.

Contents

Royal Air Force

A Tornado F3, an aircraft used by the RAF in the Gulf War

Within forty-eight hours of the invasion of Kuwait on August 2, 1990, 12 Tornado F3 interceptors had arrived in Saudi Arabia, alongside aircraft of the USAF. Soon after they were joined by Jaguar aircraft from RAF Coltishall and Tornado GR1s, redeployed from service in Germany. This action the effect of maintaining the confidence of friendly nations, and limiting the potential for further Iraqi expansion. When an economic embargo was placed on Iraq, these aircraft also helped maintain it. The force of F3s was expanded to 18 drawn from the three British bases then housing F3s (Leuchars, Leeming and Coningsby), with 27 air crew and 350 ground personnel. They were based at the Royal Saudi Air Force base at Dhahran, from where they ran patrols, inside the range Iraqi ground radar systems. Before the launch of the liberation of Kuwait, they ran over 2000 sorties. Hercules, VC10 and TriStar aircraft supplied both the air force and other military endevours; Nimrod MR.2P aircraft assisted naval operations. At bases in Tabuk, Dhahran and Muharraq, the RAF deployed Rapier missiles as part of surface-to-air defences. In total, around 6,000 RAF personnel were deployed to the Gulf.[3]

RAF commanders, along with the other partners in the coalition, deemed it necessary to prevent the Iraqi Air Force (IAF) operating to any significant degree. Believed to have around 700 combat aircraft, as well as Scud ballistic missiles and chemical weapons, they could not be left to help support Iraqi ground forces, now entrenched in positions on the border. Because of the level of supplies coming from Iraq to forces in Kuwait, it would have been impossible to separate targets merely in Kuwait from an offensive into Iraq. Coalition forces outnumbered the IAF 3-to-1.[3]

The first part of the Gulf War air campaign was directed against the IAF. Early on January 17, the RAF's Tornado GR1s flew into Iraq, with tanker support. The first targets were Iraqi airbases, which housed a variety of defence systems and aircraft. These attacks were co-ordinated in Riyadh by the Joint Allied Headquarters, with Wratten now leading the British command; aircraft were almost totally integrated into a single coalition force. Support aircraft in raids, therefore, could be from any coalition power. Within 24 hours, a hundred sorties had been run. After seven days, the RAF's focus, like the rest of coalition air forces, was moved to targets related to the support of Iraqi forces in Kuwait. These included oil refinery and strategic bridges over the River Euphrates. During operations, civilians were killed when the sophisticated guidance systems on the weaponry used failed, and buildings close to these bridges (many in populated areas) were hit instead. On the whole, many pilots were frustrated by the lack of combat.[3]

In every combat role, the RAF was second to USAF involvement, but ahead of other members of the coalition. Of the around 55 Allied aircraft lost, six were Tornadoes and one a Jaguar; these aircraft types running a total of 2,500 sorties. Five air crew were lost in operations, and three in preparations.[3]

British Army

Royal Navy

See also

References

  1. ^ "1990/1991 Gulf Conflict" retrieved 25 March 2011 "Ministry of Defence"
  2. ^ "Gulf war cost taxpayer 615m pounds" retrieved 25 March 2011 "The Independent"
  3. ^ a b c d Air Vice-Marshall R.A. Mason (1991). "The Royal Air Force". Britain's Gulf War: Operation Granby. London: Harrington Kilbride. pp. 35–43. 

External links


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