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Operation Northern Watch

Operation Northern Watch
Part of the Iraqi no-fly zones
Three British RAF Jaguars on a Northern Watch mission in September 2002
Three British RAF Jaguars on a Northern Watch mission in September 2002.
Date 1 January 1997 – 17 March 2003
Location Northern Iraq
Result Militarily inconclusive.
Successful maintenance of an autonomous Kurdish region in northern Iraq.
No-fly Zones ended after 2003 invasion of Iraq.
Belligerents
 United States
 United Kingdom
 Turkey
Iraq
Commanders and leaders
United States Bill Clinton
United States George W. Bush
Iraq Saddam Hussein
Strength
Around 50 aircraft and 1,400 personnel at any one time Various Iraqi air defense forces
Casualties and losses
One F-16 damaged

5–10 Killed, 30–40 wounded, 4

air defense systems destroyed

5–10 Killed, 30–40 wounded, 4

Operation Northern Watch (ONW), the successor to Operation Provide Comfort, was a Combined Task Force (CTF) charged with enforcing its own no-fly zone above the 36th parallel in Iraq. Its mission began on 1 January 1997.

The coalition partners of the United States, United Kingdom, and Turkey provided approximately 45 aircraft and more than 1,400 personnel to support Operation Northern Watch. The joint U.S. forces of some 1,100 U.S. personnel, included airmen, sailors, soldiers, and Marines, as well as aircraft from every arm of the United States Armed Forces.

The original mandate from the Turkish government allowed the operation to continue for six months. Turkey subsequently approved two 6-month extensions, but indicated that it would not become a permanent mission.

For the first year of the mission, northern Iraq was quiet, with no combat between Coalition aircraft and Iraqi forces.

Operation Northern Watch forces did not take part in Operation Desert Fox in December 1998. After Desert Fox, Iraq announced they would no longer recognize the no-fly zones and urged their troops to attack Coalition aircraft. On December 28, 1998 Iraq fired SA-3 surface to air missiles against coalition aircraft patrolling the northern no-fly zone. In response, U.S. Air Force (USAF) F-15Es, F-16CJs, and U.S. Marine Corps (USMC) EA-6Bs launched anti-radiation missiles and dropped precision guided munitions (PGMs) on the SA-3 ground-based missile site that fired on the ONW aircraft, and destroyed it. From December 1998 to March 1999, U.S. aircraft over northern Iraq came under almost daily fire from Iraqi surface-to-air missile sites and anti-aircraft guns. U.S. aircraft responded by bombing Iraqi air-defense sites, using laser-guided bombs as well as AGM-88 HARM missiles and AGM-130 long range air-to-surface missiles. The first combat use of the AGM-130 was conducted during ONW.

Coalition aircraft flew patrols on an average of 18 days per month, and were usually fired upon. The most common threat was from anti-aircraft guns. Despite Saddam Hussein offering a $14,000 reward for downing a Coalition aircraft, no warplanes were shot down.


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