Home / Full timeline / A New York Times/CBS survey suggests that half of the Black population opposed Operation Desert Storm, the war to free Kuwait from Iraq.
A New York Times/CBS survey suggests that half of the Black population opposed Operation Desert Storm, the war to free Kuwait from Iraq.
1991 (Jan 17)
A New York Times/CBS survey suggested that 50 percent of the Black population supported Operation Desert Storm, the war to free Kuwait from Iraq, compared to 80 percent of Whites. Critics charged that Blacks were being placed in front-line battle positions at a higher rate than their White counterparts. Several Black leaders, including representative Charles Rangell of New York, expressed concern over the high number of Blacks serving in the Persian Gulf. Rangell asked how President Bush could order Black Americans into battle after rejecting the civil rights bill, and similar comments were made by National Urban League president John Jacob and Atlanta mayor Maynard Jackson. About 104,000 of the 400,000 troops serving in the Persian Gulf were Black. According to the Department of Defense, Blacks accounted for 30 percent of the Army, 21 percent of the Navy, 17 percent of the Marines, and 14 percent of the Air Force personnel stationed in the Gulf. Black Americans accounted for 11 percent of all American citizens over sixteen years old. Critics contended that a high number of fatalities among Black soldiers would have grave implications for the Black community. A high death rate among Black soldiers would create many one-parent households, and some families would lose both parents. Many skilled positions in America's workforce that were held by Blacks who were called up from the reserves would be lost, further diluting Black representation in critical areas of the government and the private sector. Martin Binkin, a military analyst with the Brookings Institute in Washington, D.C., estimated that up to 35 percent of all qualified Black men between the ages of 19 and 24 have served in the military, compared to 17 percent of all qualified White men.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.