Operation Desert Fox

 Chronology of Events:  From Desert Storm to Desert Fox
1991 — Following the end of DESERT STORM in
March, Shiite Muslims in southern Iraq rebel, but are
defeated by Iraq’s elite Republican Guard. This is followed
by a Kurdish insurrection that is also defeated. The United
States, Great Britain and France create a safe haven for the
Kurds north of the 36th parallel and ban Iraqi planes from
the area.
1992 — In August, the United Nations establishes
a no-fly zone along the 32nd parallel after Iraq launches
renewed attacks against Shiite Muslims. The United States
and its allies begin patrolling the no-fly zone, operations
which continue today. In December, the U.S. planes intercept
and shoot down an Iraqi MIG-25 that violates the no-fly
zone.
1993 — In January, the United States accuses
Saddam Hussein of moving missiles into southern Iraq. Iraq
refuses to remove the missiles. Allied planes and ships
attack the missile sites and a nuclear facility near
Baghdad. In June, following the discovery of a plot to
assassinate former President George Bush, U.S. ships fire 24
cruise missiles at intelligence headquarters in Baghdad.
1994 — Saddam Hussein moves Iraqi troops to the
Kuwaiti border. The forces withdraw after the United States
deploys a carrier group, warplanes and 54,000 troops to the
Persian Gulf region.
1996 — In August, Saddam Hussein sends forces
into northern Iraq and captures city of Irbil, a key city
inside the Kurdish haven established above the 36th parallel
in 1991. The following month, U.S. ships and airplanes
attack military targets in Iraq to punish the Iraqi military
and President Clinton extends the southern no-fly zone to
just south of Baghdad.
1997 — In October, a protracted confrontation
with Saddam Hussein begins after Iraq accuses U.S. members
of the U.N. inspection teams of being spies and expels the
majority of U.S. participants. The U.N. Security Council
threatens renewed economic sanctions. The confrontation
continues into November as Iraq expels the remaining six
U.S. inspectors and the United Nations withdraws other
inspectors in protest. Inspectors are readmitted after the
United States and Great Britain again begin a military
build-up in the Gulf. However, later in November, Iraq
announces it will not allow inspectors access to sites
designated as “palaces and official residences.” U.N.
officials protest, having long suspected that such sites
were being used to conceal possible weapons of mass
destruction.
1998 — The tensions that began in October 1997
continue. In February, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan
works out an agreement with Iraq that resumes weapons
inspections. In turn, Iraq receives promises the United
Nations will consider removing its economic sanctions.
Inspections continue into August, when Iraq cuts ties with
weapons inspectors, claiming it has seen no U.N. move toward
lifting sanctions.
THE FINAL DAYS
October 31 — Iraq cuts off all work by U.N.
monitors. The United States and Great Britain warn of
possible military strikes to force compliance. A renewed
military build-up in the Persian Gulf begins.
November 5 — The U.N. Security Council condemns
Iraq for violating agreements signed after the end of the
1991 Persian Gulf War.
November 11 — The United Nations withdraws most
of its staff from Iraq.
November 14 — With B-52 bombers in the air and
within about 20 minutes of attack, Saddam Hussein agrees to
allow U.N. monitors back in. The bombers are recalled before
an attack occurs. Weapons inspectors return to Iraq a few
days later.
December 8 — Chief U.N. weapons inspector Richard
Butler reports that Iraq is still impeding inspections. U.N.
teams begin departing Iraq.
December 15 — A formal U.N. report accuses Iraq
of a repeated pattern of obstructing weapons inspections by
not allowing access to records and inspections sites, and by
moving equipment records and equipment from one to site
another.
December 16 — The United States and Great Britain
begin a massive air campaign against key military targets in
Iraq.

(Source:  Defense.gov archives)

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