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Retired Gen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf, Operation Desert Storm leader, dies at 78

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In the end, after weeks of pounding by American bombers and missiles, the ground war was over in just 100 hours, with U.S. allied casualties limited to 147 dead and 357 wounded.

On the decision of then-President Bush and Colin Powell, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Schwarzkopf agreed to end the war short of demolishing the Republican Guard and taking down Saddam — a decision that would dog him for the rest of his life, especially as Americans went to war once again against Iraq in 2003.

To the end, Schwarzkopf insisted he had accepted the decision as the right one, even if he had not embraced it with enthusiasm — continuing to inflict carnage on retreating Iraqi forces for another day would have done little to upset the balance of power in the region and might have risked more American casualties, he said.

Likewise, he rejected criticism that the U.S. retreat had pulled the carpet from underneath nascent rebellions by Iraqi Shiites in the south and Kurds in the north, leaving them vulnerable and exposed to slaughter once U.S. forces went home.

The Kurds had been battling the Iraqi regime for years, and would continue to do so, he said. “Yes, we are disappointed that that has happened. But it does not affect the accomplishment of our mission one way or another,” he said at a news conference after the war.

The 6-foot, 3-inch general came home to a hero’s welcome, appearing at a ticker-tape parade up Broadway, the Pegasus Parade at the Kentucky Derby in Louisville and an unusual joint session of Congress, where he received a standing ovation. Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II awarded him a knighthood.

“In the defeat of Saddam’s forces, he vanquished the scars on the American psyche over Vietnam,” said Frank Wuco, a retired Navy intelligence officer who was chief of intelligence operations at Command Central during Desert Storm. “He showed the Americans, primarily the American military, what victory felt like again.”

Schwarzkopf was born Aug. 24, 1934, in Trenton, N.J. By graduating from the West Point military academy in 1956, he followed in the footsteps of his father, a general who served in both World Wars and went on to found the New Jersey State Police, which successfully investigated the kidnapping of the infant son of famed aviator Charles Lindbergh.

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