Operation Earnest Will: Difference between revisions

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This was removed "as it would include basically every deployable warship in service at that time." This is incorrect-this was the era of the 600 ship navy https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/600-ship_Navy#Build-Up_by_Year, and does disservice to the crews.
Rescuing 1 sources, flagging 0 as dead, and archiving 9 sources. #IABot
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Beside concerns about the intensified Tanker War, the superpowers feared that the possible fall of [[Basra]], which was now under threat, might lead to a pro-Iranian [[Islamic republic]] in largely [[Shia]]-populated southern Iraq. During the first four months of 1987, Kuwait turned to the superpowers, partly to protect oil exports but largely to seek an end to the war through superpower intervention.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://reference.allrefer.com/country-guide-study/iran/iran172.html|title=AllRefer.com - Iran - Gradual Superpower Involvement - Iranian Information Resource|work=allrefer.com}}</ref> In December 1986, Kuwait's government asked the [[Ronald Reagan|Reagan]] administration to send the U.S. Navy to protect Kuwaiti tankers against Iranian attacks.<ref>“Kuwaiti Call for Help Led to U.S. Role in Gulf,” Los Angeles Times, 4 July 1988.</ref> U.S. law forbade the use of navy ships to escort civilian vessels under a [[flag state|foreign flag]], so the Kuwaiti ships were re-registered under the U.S. flag.
Beside concerns about the intensified Tanker War, the superpowers feared that the possible fall of [[Basra]], which was now under threat, might lead to a pro-Iranian [[Islamic republic]] in largely [[Shia]]-populated southern Iraq. During the first four months of 1987, Kuwait turned to the superpowers, partly to protect oil exports but largely to seek an end to the war through superpower intervention.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://reference.allrefer.com/country-guide-study/iran/iran172.html|title=AllRefer.com - Iran - Gradual Superpower Involvement - Iranian Information Resource|work=allrefer.com}}</ref> In December 1986, Kuwait's government asked the [[Ronald Reagan|Reagan]] administration to send the U.S. Navy to protect Kuwaiti tankers against Iranian attacks.<ref>“Kuwaiti Call for Help Led to U.S. Role in Gulf,” Los Angeles Times, 4 July 1988.</ref> U.S. law forbade the use of navy ships to escort civilian vessels under a [[flag state|foreign flag]], so the Kuwaiti ships were re-registered under the U.S. flag.
Even before Earnest Will formally began, it became clear how dangerous [[Persian Gulf]] operations would be. On 17 May 1987, an Iraqi [[Dassault Mirage F1|F-1 Mirage]] fired two [[Exocet]] missiles at the [[Frigate#Guided missile role|guided missile frigate]]
Even before Earnest Will formally began, it became clear how dangerous [[Persian Gulf]] operations would be. On 17 May 1987, an Iraqi [[Dassault Mirage F1|F-1 Mirage]] fired two [[Exocet]] missiles at the [[Frigate#Guided missile role|guided missile frigate]]
[[USS Stark (FFG-31)|USS ''Stark'']], killing 37 sailors and injuring 21. Iraqi officials said that the targeting of the U.S. warship was accidental.<ref name=kelley-0706 /><ref>[http://www.jag.navy.mil/library/investigations/USS%20STARK%20BASIC.pdf Attack on the USS ''Stark'']</ref><ref>[http://books.google.fr/books?id=erVzmflT2MIC&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_navlinks_s#v=onepage&q=&f=false Desert Storm at sea: what the Navy really did by Marvin Pokrant], P 43.</ref><ref name="DoD_report">[http://www.dod.gov/pubs/foi/reading_room/65rev.pdf Formal Investigation into the Circumstances Surrounding the Attack of the USS ''Stark'' in 1987]{{dead link|date=December 2015}}</ref>
[[USS Stark (FFG-31)|USS ''Stark'']], killing 37 sailors and injuring 21. Iraqi officials said that the targeting of the U.S. warship was accidental.<ref name=kelley-0706 /><ref>[http://www.jag.navy.mil/library/investigations/USS%20STARK%20BASIC.pdf Attack on the USS ''Stark'']</ref><ref>[http://books.google.fr/books?id=erVzmflT2MIC&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_navlinks_s#v=onepage&q=&f=false Desert Storm at sea: what the Navy really did by Marvin Pokrant], P 43.</ref><ref name="DoD_report">[http://www.dod.gov/pubs/foi/reading_room/65rev.pdf Formal Investigation into the Circumstances Surrounding the Attack of the USS ''Stark'' in 1987] {{wayback|url=http://www.dod.gov/pubs/foi/reading_room/65rev.pdf |date=20100528100903 |df=y }}</ref>


Members of both the U.S. House and Senate opposed the reflagging policy.<ref name=Pelletiere>{{cite book|last1=Pelletiere|first1=Stephen C.|title=The Iran-Iraq War: Chaos in a Vacuum|date=1992|publisher=Praeger|location=New York|isbn=9780275938437|pages=125–130}}</ref>
Members of both the U.S. House and Senate opposed the reflagging policy.<ref name=Pelletiere>{{cite book|last1=Pelletiere|first1=Stephen C.|title=The Iran-Iraq War: Chaos in a Vacuum|date=1992|publisher=Praeger|location=New York|isbn=9780275938437|pages=125–130}}</ref>

Revision as of 05:08, 8 January 2016

Operation Earnest Will
Part of the Iran–Iraq War

Mess Management Specialist 2nd Class Williams Hendrickson scans for mines from the bow of the guided missile frigate USS Nicolas (FFG-47) during an Operation Earnest Will convoy mission, in which tankers are led through the waters of the Persian Gulf by U.S. warships, June 1, 1988
Date24 July 1987 – 26 September 1988
Location
Belligerents
United States United States Iran Iran

Operation Earnest Will (24 July 1987 – 26 September 1988) was the American military protection of Kuwaiti-owned tankers from Iranian attacks in 1987 and 1988, three years into the Tanker War phase of the Iran–Iraq War.[1] It was the largest naval convoy operation since World War II.

The U.S. Navy warships that escorted the tankers, part of U.S. Naval Forces Central Command, were the operations' most visible part, but U.S. Air Force AWACS radar planes provided surveillance and U.S. Army special operations helicopters hunted for possible attackers.

Other U.S. Navy vessels participated in Operation Earnest Will. They were then under the command of the U.S. Navy's Seventh Fleet which had primary responsibility for combat operations in the Persian Gulf region. The numerous ships used in Operation Earnest Will mostly consisted of Battleship Battle Groups, Carrier Battle Groups, Surface Action Groups and ships from the Pacific's Third and Seventh Fleets and the Mediterranean-based Sixth Fleet. They generally operated in and near the Gulf for parts of their normal six-month deployments.

This was the first tactical operation of the United States Special Operations Command (USSOCOM) that involved Navy SEALs, Special Boat Units, and 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment (Airborne) ("Nightstalkers") aviators all working together.

Background

The so-called "Tanker War" phase of the Iran-Iraq War started when Iraq, which had expanded its air force with new, Exocet-equipped French and Soviet aircraft, attacked the oil terminal and oil tankers at Iran's Kharg Island in early 1984.[2] Saddam's aim in attacking Iranian shipping was, among other things, to provoke the Iranians to retaliate with extreme measures, such as closing the Strait of Hormuz to all maritime traffic, thereby bringing American intervention.[2] Iran limited the retaliatory attacks to Iraqi shipping, leaving the strait open.[2]

Becoming landlocked after the Battle of al-Faw and due to the blockade of Iraqi oil pipelines to Mediterranean Sea by Iran's ally Syria, Iraq had to rely on its ally, Kuwait (and other Gulf Arab allies to a lesser extent) to transport its oil. After increasing attacks on Iran's main oil export facility in Kharg Island by Iraq, Iran started to attack Kuwaiti tankers carrying Iraqi oil from 13 May 1984 (and later attacking tankers from any Gulf state supporting Iraq). Attacks on ships of non-combatant nations in the Persian Gulf sharply increased thereafter, with both nations attacking oil tankers and merchant ships of neutral nations in an effort to deprive their opponent of trade.[2]

Beside concerns about the intensified Tanker War, the superpowers feared that the possible fall of Basra, which was now under threat, might lead to a pro-Iranian Islamic republic in largely Shia-populated southern Iraq. During the first four months of 1987, Kuwait turned to the superpowers, partly to protect oil exports but largely to seek an end to the war through superpower intervention.[3] In December 1986, Kuwait's government asked the Reagan administration to send the U.S. Navy to protect Kuwaiti tankers against Iranian attacks.[4] U.S. law forbade the use of navy ships to escort civilian vessels under a foreign flag, so the Kuwaiti ships were re-registered under the U.S. flag. Even before Earnest Will formally began, it became clear how dangerous Persian Gulf operations would be. On 17 May 1987, an Iraqi F-1 Mirage fired two Exocet missiles at the guided missile frigate USS Stark, killing 37 sailors and injuring 21. Iraqi officials said that the targeting of the U.S. warship was accidental.[1][5][6][7]

Members of both the U.S. House and Senate opposed the reflagging policy.[8]

Operations

Bridgeton incident

The U.S. Navy began Operation Earnest Will at 2:00 a.m. (EST) on 23 July 1987.[9] The USS Crommelin, USS Fox, and USS Kidd were the first U.S. Navy ships assigned to escort the Kuwaiti oil tankers.[10]

The Bridgeton's convoy route and the place it was hit

On that very first escort mission, on 24 July 1987, the Kuwaiti oil tanker al-Rekkah, re-flagged as the U.S. tanker MV Bridgeton, struck an Iranian underwater mine some 20 miles west of Farsi Island, damaging the ship, but causing no injuries. The Bridgeton proceeded under her own power to Kuwait, with the thin-skinned U.S. Navy escorts following behind to avoid mines. The mine was allegedly planted in the night before by Pasdaran units in the island,[1]

The operation was widely publicized, and American reporters aboard another ship in the convoy immediately issued reports about the incident, which ultimately "played into Iran's plan". Iran's Prime Minister Mir Hossein Mousavi called it an "irreparable blow to America's political and military prestige",[9] and said that it was the "invisible hands [of God]" that hit the US-flagged ship, and expressed hope that the U.S. Congress would put an immediate end to the Administration's plan. The Congress was critical of the re-flagging policy, but still didn't have a united position on the issue.[11]

It was an unforeseen development. The commander of the task force admitted that in spite of intelligence warnings, no one had thought it necessary to check the route for naval mines,[12] and it was soon brought out that not only did the U.S. not have any minesweepers in the Persian Gulf, it did not have any easily accessible minesweepers at all, so the escort operation was placed on hold until minesweepers would be available.[8] The Pentagon deployed eight minesweeping Sea Stallion helicopters, five oceangoing minesweepers, and six small coastal minesweepers—dramatically increasing U.S. presence in the Persian Gulf, and increasing the probability of an Iran–U.S. confrontation. U.S. Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger indirectly provoked Iran to retaliate.[9]

In the following 14 months, other U.S. warships took up escort duties, including USS "Semmes", USS Halyburton (FFG-40)[13]USS England, USS Klakring, USS Thach, USS Reuben James, USS Gallery, USS Copeland USS Tisdale(FFG27), USS Nicholas, USS Elrod, USS Carr, USS Midway, USS Forrestal, USS Ford, USS Missouri, USS William H. Standley, USS Ranger, USS Constellation, USS Iowa and USS Ticonderoga. The combined battle group/surface action group of the Ranger and the Missouri in 1987 included USNS Hassayampa, USS Leftwich, USS Hoel; USS Kansas City, USS Bunker Hill, USS Horne, USS Robert E. Peary; USS Long Beach, USS Wichita, USS Gridley, USS Curts; USS Shasta, USS John Young, USS Richmond K Turner, USS Francis Hammond, and USS Buchanan.[14]

Operation Prime Chance

MH-60 landing on Hercules

Earnest Will overlapped with Operation Prime Chance, a largely secret effort to stop Iranian forces from attacking Persian Gulf shipping. Despite the protection offered by U.S. Navy vessels, Iran used mines and small boats to harass the convoys steaming to and from Kuwait, at the time a principal ally of Iraq. In late July 1987, Rear Admiral Harold J. Bernsen, commander of the Middle East Force, requested Naval Special Warfare assets. Special Boat Teams deployed with six Mark III Patrol Boats and two Navy SEAL platoons in August.[15] The Middle East Force decided to convert two oil service barges, Hercules and Wimbrown VII, into mobile sea bases. These were moored in the northern Persian Gulf, allowing special operations forces to thwart clandestine Iranian mining and small boat attacks.

On 21 September, Night Stalkers flying MH-6 and AH-6 "Little Birds" took off from the frigate USS Jarrett to track an Iranian ship, the Iran Ajr. The Nightstalkers watched the Iran Ajr turn off its lights and begin laying mines. After receiving permission to attack, the helicopters fired guns and rockets, stopping the ship. The Iran Ajr’s crew continued to push mines over the side, and the aircraft resumed firing until the crew abandoned ship. At first light, a SEAL team, assisted by Special Boat Teams, boarded the vessel and discovered nine mines on the vessel’s deck, as well as a logbook revealing areas where previous mines had been laid. The USS Hawes towed the mine layer (a converted tank landing craft) to the Iran-Iraq war zone. Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) technicians from EOD Mobile Unit 5 scuttled the vessel the following day.[citation needed] The logbook implicated Iran in mining international waters.[15] Within a few days, the special operations forces had determined the Iranian pattern of activity: hide during the day near oil and gas platforms in Iranian waters and at night, head toward the Middle Shoals Buoy, a navigation aid for tankers. With this knowledge, the special operations forces launched three Little Bird aircraft and two patrol craft to the buoy. The aircraft arrived first and were fired upon by three Iranian boats anchored near the buoy. In a short but intense firefight, the aircraft sank all three boats.

Lessons from Earnest Will later led USSOCOM to acquire the patrol coastal ships and the Mark V Special Operations Craft.[15]

Operation Nimble Archer

Rostam, one of two Iranian oil platforms set ablaze after shelling by American destroyers.

On 15 October, the reflagged U.S. tanker Sea Isle City was struck by an Iranian Silkworm missile while at anchor near the oil terminal outside Kuwait City. Seventeen crewmen and the American captain were injured in the attack.[1][15] On 18 October, the U.S. Navy responded with Operation Nimble Archer. Four destroyers shelled two oil platforms in the Rostam oil field. After the shelling, the USS Thach landed a SEAL platoon and a demolition unit that planted explosives on one of the platforms to destroy it. The SEALs next boarded and searched a third platform two miles away. Documents and radios were taken for intelligence.

Operation Praying Mantis

On 14 April 1988, 65 miles east of Bahrain, the frigate USS Samuel B. Roberts hit a mine, blowing an immense hole in its hull.[16] 10 sailors were injured. The U.S. retaliated fiercely. On 18 April, U.S. forces launched Operation Praying Mantis, attacking the Iranian frigates Sabalan and Sahand and oil platforms in the Sirri and Sassan oil fields.[1][16] After U.S. warships bombarded the Sirri platform and set it ablaze, a UH-60 with a SEAL platoon flew toward the platform but was unable to get close enough because of the roaring fire. Secondary explosions soon wrecked the platform.[15]

Endgame

Thereafter, Iranian attacks on neutral ships dropped drastically. On 3 July 1988, the USS Vincennes shot down Iran Air Flight 655 over the Strait of Hormuz after mistaking it for an Iranian F-14. All 290 passengers and aircrew aboard the Airbus A300B2 died, including 66 children.

The two side effects of Earnest Will – Praying Mantis and the airliner's downing – helped convince Iran to agree to a ceasefire on 18 July and a permanent end to hostilities on 20 August 1988, ending its eight-year war with Iraq. On 26 September 1988, the USS Vandegrift escorted the operation's last tanker to Kuwait. The remaining SEALs, patrol boats, and helicopters then returned to the U.S.[15]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Stephen Andrew Kelley (June 2007). "Better Lucky Than Good: Operation Earnest Will as Gunboat Diplomacy" (Document). Naval Postgraduate School. {{cite document}}: Unknown parameter |accessdate= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |format= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |url= ignored (help)[dead link]
  2. ^ a b c d Karsh, Efraim (25 April 2002). The Iran–Iraq War: 1980–1988. Osprey Publishing. pp. 1–8, 12–16, 19–82. ISBN 978-1841763712.
  3. ^ "AllRefer.com - Iran - Gradual Superpower Involvement - Iranian Information Resource". allrefer.com.
  4. ^ “Kuwaiti Call for Help Led to U.S. Role in Gulf,” Los Angeles Times, 4 July 1988.
  5. ^ Attack on the USS Stark
  6. ^ Desert Storm at sea: what the Navy really did by Marvin Pokrant, P 43.
  7. ^ Formal Investigation into the Circumstances Surrounding the Attack of the USS Stark in 1987 Template:Wayback
  8. ^ a b Pelletiere, Stephen C. (1992). The Iran-Iraq War: Chaos in a Vacuum. New York: Praeger. pp. 125–130. ISBN 9780275938437.
  9. ^ a b c Gibson, Bryan R. (2010). Covert Relationship: American Foreign Policy, Intelligence, and the Iran-Iraq War, 1980-1988. Santa Barbara, Calif.: Praeger. p. 202. ISBN 9780313386107.
  10. ^ "Mine Blast Turns A Calm Gulf Cruise Chaotic". Chicago Tribune. 25 July 1987.
  11. ^ Tarock, Adam (1998). The Superpowers' Involvement in the Iran-Iraq War. Commack, NY: Nova Science Publishers. pp. 136–147. ISBN 9781560725930.
  12. ^ Murray, Williamson; Woods, Kevin (2014). The Iran-Iraq War: A Military and Strategic History. Cambridge University Press. p. 306. ISBN 9781107062290.
  13. ^ http://www.history.navy.mil/content/dam/nhhc/research/archives/command-operation-reports/ship-command-operation-reports/h/halyburton-ffg-40-i/pdf/1988.pdf
  14. ^ http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/agency/navy/batgru-nomenclature.htm
  15. ^ a b c d e f [1][dead link]
  16. ^ a b Peniston, Bradley (July 2006). No Higher Honor: Saving the USS Samuel B. Roberts in the Persian Gulf. United States Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-59114-661-5.

Further reading

External links