President George H. W. Bush deserves to be remembered for one achievement in particular. He demonstrated how the United States' military might can be used most carefully and most effectively when it is needed. The first Gulf War, which lasted just 100 days in 1991, ought to studied as a model in statecraft.
Bush became President as the Cold War was ending. In his first year of office the Berlin Wall came down. Soon the Soviet Union collapsed and the nations of its former empire gave way to new states embracing capitalism and democracy. Old enmities were replaced by a new spirit, not confined to the nuclear superpowers. Northern Ireland's long civil war found a settlement. Apartheid gave way to majority rule in South Africa. Bush talked about a "new world order" and many looked forward to spending a "peace dividend" diverted from the arms race to social programmes.
Just when there seemed no limit to new spirit, Iraqi forces invaded Kuwait and annexed it. For a few days it seemed nothing might happen. The United Nations appeared helpless. Some argued Kuwait was not a state worth saving, or at least not at the expense of the peace now prevailing in the world.
Bush decided to demonstrate that national sovereignty matters. He issued an ultimatum to Iraq's dictator, Saddam Hussein, who stood firm and Operation Desert Storm went ahead. It is remembered as the first war covered around the clock on TV by a new channel dedicated to news, CNN, and reporters "embedded" with US units. But it ought to be memorable for its copybook planning, execution and, most of all, its ending.
Bush and his military strategists led by General Colin Powell gave Desert Storm a precise objective, to drive Iraqi forces from Kuwait, and once that was achieved they did what is perhaps the hardest thing for a successful military operation to do — they stopped. The mission had been easier that expected. Many thought the US ought to have pressed on to Baghdad and removed the trouble-maker Saddam.