WASHINGTON — Norman Schwarzkopf Jr., the hard-charging U.S. Army general whose forces smashed the Iraqi army in the 1991 Gulf War, has died at the age of 78, a U.S. official said on Thursday.

The highly decorated four-star general died at 2:22 p.m. at his home in Tampa, Fla., said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity. The cause of death was not immediately known.

Schwarzkopf, a burly Vietnam War veteran known as “Stormin’ Norman,” commanded more than 540,000 U.S. troops and 200,000 allied forces in a six-week war that routed Hussein’s army from Kuwait in 1991, capping his 34-year military career.

Former U.S. President George H.W. Bush, who built the international coalition against Iraq, said he and his wife “mourn the loss of a true American patriot and one of the great military leaders of his generation,” according to a statement released by Bush’s spokesman.

Bush has been hospitalized in Houston since late November.

Some experts hailed Schwarzkopf’s plan to trick and outflank Hussein’s forces with a sweeping armored movement as one of the great accomplishments in military history. The maneuver ended the ground war in only 100 hours.

Schwarzkopf was a familiar sight on international television during the war, clad in camouflage fatigues and a cap. He conducted fast-paced briefings and toured the lines with a purposeful stride and a physical presence of the sort that clears barrooms.

Little known before Iraqi forces invaded neighboring Kuwait, Schwarzkopf made a splash with quotable comments. At one briefing he addressed Saddam’s military reputation.

“As far as Saddam Hussein being a great military strategist,” he said, “he is neither a strategist, nor is he schooled in the operational arts, nor is he a tactician, nor is he a general, nor is he a soldier. Other than that, he’s a great military man, I want you to know that.”

Schwarzkopf returned from the war as a hero and there was talk of him running for public office. Instead he wrote an autobiography titled “It Doesn’t Take a Hero” and served as a military analyst.

He also acted as a spokesman for the fight against prostate cancer, which he was diagnosed with in 1993.

Served in Vietnam

Schwarzkopf was born August 22, 1934, in Trenton, N.J., the son of Colonel H. Norman Schwarzkopf Sr., the head of the New Jersey State Police. At the time, the older Schwarzkopf was leading the investigation of the kidnapping and murder of aviator Charles Lindbergh’s infant son, one of the most infamous crimes of the 20th century.

The younger Schwarzkopf graduated from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, New York, in 1956. He also earned a masters degree in guided-missile engineering from the University of Southern California and later taught engineering at West Point.

Schwarzkopf saw combat twice — in Vietnam and Grenada — in a career that included command of units from platoon to theater size, training as a paratrooper and stints at all the blue-ribbon Army staff colleges.

He led his men in firefights in two Vietnam tours and commanded all U.S. ground forces in the 1983 Grenada invasion. His chestful of medals included three Silver and three Bronze Stars for valor and two Purple Hearts for Vietnam wounds.

In Vietnam, he won a reputation as an officer who would put his life on the line to protect his troops. In one particularly deadly fight on the Batangan Peninsula, Schwarzkopf led his men through a minefield, in part by having the mines marked by shaving cream.

In 1988, Schwarzkopf was put in charge of the U.S. Central Command in Tampa, with responsibility for the Horn of Africa, the Middle East and South Asia. In that role, he prepared a plan to protect the Gulf’s oil fields from a hypothetical invasion by Iraq. Within months, the plan was in use.

A soldier’s soldier in an era of polished, politically conscious military technocrats, Schwarzkopf’s mouth sometimes got him in trouble. In one interview, he said he had recommended to Bush that allied forces destroy Iraq’s military instead of stopping the war after a clear victory.

Schwarzkopf later apologized after both Bush and Defense Secretary Dick Cheney fired back that there was no contradiction among military leaders to Bush’s decision to leave some of Saddam’s military intact.

After retirement, Schwarzkopf spoke his mind on military matters. In 2003, when the United States was on the verge of invading Iraq under President George W. Bush, Schwarzkopf said he was unsure if there was sufficient evidence that Iraq had nuclear weapons.

He also criticized Donald Rumsfeld, the secretary of defense at the time, telling the Washington Post that during war-time television appearances “he almost sometimes seems to be enjoying it.”

(Reporting by David Alexander and Ian Simpson; Writing by Bill Trott; Editing by Stacey Joyce and Paul Simao)

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52 Comments

  1. That’s really sad. I met him when I was a kid. I remember him talking about how rough the toilet paper was that the soldiers had to carry with them.

  2. Thanks for your service, and for your ability to hold off on a full-blown invasion. We could have used your mind and your world view in 2001, the year that America lost it’s mind;.

  3. Good riddance to a vile man who matched his father for brutality and guile. Such was his unprincipled ambition that he put those under his command in Vietnam repeatedly in unnecessary danger, Schwartzkopf was personally fortunate he wasn’t fragged by his own men. God only knows how many of them bitterly wished this to be his fate. He was a great showman in the first war against Iraq and that is all. Vastly superior air power won the day for that TV spectacle but for the people of the United States it was nothing to be really proud of. The Grenada adventure was even more ridiculous, the big score in that assault on a tiny Caribbean nation being a rocket attack on a home for feeble-minded people.

    And the apple didn’t fall far from the tree. His father personally set up and trained the infamous Savak secret police in Iran whose Gestapo-like techniques under the CIA-imposed puppet, the Shah, did much to bring about the revolution that brought the Ayotollah Komeini to power and all the additional cruelty and suffering that went with that. Earlier, as commander of the New Jersey State Police, an agency that for many years had a less than savory reputation, Schwartzkopf’s criminal father conducted a questionable investigation of the Lindbergh kidnapping that many investigators have since concluded railroaded an innocent man into the electric chair.

    1. The man gave nearly all of his life, to protect you and yours. He did what he was ordered to do, just as any soldier would have done in the civil war. Your political views and international opinions are simply that; your opinion. I would wager that you, in your own family tree, have someone who served in the military, if so, they would be ashamed of what you just posted. I know I am.

      1. I don’t know what “civil war” you’re referring to but most of the male members of my family including myself served honorably in the military, going back to the Revolution. (They also served honorably in our Civil War, and for the right side to free 3 million black people, not to keep them enslaved.) That doesn’t make me a knee-jerk worshipper of this man.

        Further, the wars he was involved in not only didn’t protect me and my family, as you assert, they contributed to an unstable world we stil have to deal with. His only contribution to me perhaps was to ensure for a time prices for petroleum products taken from the Middle East that were lower than they might otherwise have been. I’d gladly pay the difference to avoid all that unnecessary carnage that was required to keep the oil companies’ profit margins at unseemly high levels.

        As for the defense that Schwatzkopf was merely following orders — itself disputable given his bloody careerist tactics in Vietnam — that one failed at Nuremberg and if you were ever indoctrinated in the U.S. Code of Military Justice, as I was, you’d know that.

          1. Enjoy your masturbatory little day dreams. What you wrote would make you a good German during the Third Reich. It certainly has nothing to do with being a good American.

          1. I was kind of hoping against hope, Stevie boy, that just for once you would stay under your rock. You actually make morons like squealvan and Jed Clampet look by comparison as only mildly retarded.

      2. He carried out the corrupt policy of the Bush admin. that resulted in the murder of hundred of thousand innocent people. He is no hero, more like a war criminal.

        1. You are mistaken, George Sr.’s war was a reaction to Iraqi aggression and it’s intended occupation of Kuwait. Saddam is responsible for the murder of hundreds of thousands, not General S. I think you have your Bush’s mixed up, or are simply satisfied with being contentious.

    2. You and your vile comments are truly disgusting.
      Hopefully, sometime very soon, you will join the good general and make those comments to his face, which I doubt you have the courage to do.

        1. And that name is synonymous with steaming liquid horse manure. You are a credit to your reptilian parentage.

        2. Peter S Taber-Augusta?
          Peter S T Taber-Searsport?
          Peter S Taber-Belfast?
          If you’re so tough on the keyboard, fess up!

        3. Who really cares what your name is, your head is so big it wouldnt fit through a door. You are a dork, bottom line.

      1. Considering Jane Fonda dared to put her celebrity on the line in opposition to an illegal and immoral war, sir, I’m proud to be considered to be in her class.

      1. And am I to suppose you’re the anonymous tough guy (more likely an adolescent blowhard) wielding that ice pick? Thanks to the new BDN comments format, it seems nitwits or nuts like yourself are free to indulge in mindless threats on other people’s lives. Just in case you are the latter, a dangerous psychopath, be assured you will not be dealing with an unarmed pacifist. In fact, it’s better for your health that you continue to remain anonymous to me.

    1. Yeah because this article was about marriage licenses being offered Saturday for people to get married…….can you not read or are you just 12 ? I’m going with both.

      1. I think he was being sarcastic. Chill out now and put on your Fox News and pleasure yourself to Reagan photos.

        1. Ummm yeah sarcasm works both ways MattOT….not a Reagan fan and don’t watch Faux News but due try again LOL

  4. I remember what the good general said the day after 9/11. ” I know everybody wants revenge. But, you can’t just kill them folks, it doesn’t work. You have to kill them in a way that sets an example to the rest of them.” Eleven years later, we are still not listening and the body bags continue to pile up.

  5. More honestly headlined at The Rumford Meteor as: “General That Did Things Besides Boinking His Biographer Passes Away Quietly”

  6. This guy got the job done, war should not be run by politicians, bottom line, he didnt take no doo doo like these Generals today…

  7. The politicians
    told Mr. Bush just to free Kuwait, Just like in Vietnam troops were told not to
    shoot until fired upon,,,, he should of taken Saddam Hussein out when he had
    the chance then….. I see we have Super Petey below worshiping Saddam Hussein…
    What a Schmuck.

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