Iraqi rocket attacks on Israel

On 17 January 1991, Iraq initiated a missile campaign against Israel. Over the course of the next month, approximately 42 Scud missiles were fired into Israeli territory, primarily at the cities of Tel Aviv and Haifa. The missile attacks began on the same day as the Gulf War aerial bombardment campaign, which was targeting military infrastructure within Iraqi-occupied Kuwait. As many Muslim-majority countries were actively contributing to the American-led military coalition, the Iraqi government had expected them to rescind their support if Israel responded to the missile campaign by attacking Iraq. However, the United States convinced Israel not to retaliate, and the coalition began a ground offensive against Iraq on 23 February 1991.

Iraqi rocket attacks on Israel
Part of the Gulf War and the Arab–Israeli conflict
American surface-to-air missiles (MIM-104 Patriot) launching to intercept incoming Iraqi ballistic missiles (al-Husayn) over the Israeli city of Tel Aviv, 12 February 1991
Location
Date17 January 1991 (1991-01-17) – 23 February 1991 (1991-02-23)
(1 month and 6 days)
OutcomeIraq fails to provoke Israeli retaliation
Casualties
  • 2 civilians killed directly
  • 11–74 civilians killed from incorrect use of gas masks, heart attacks, and incorrect use of atropine (for Iraqi chemical weapons)
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