Persian Gulf War in AP US History

The Persian Gulf War (1990-1991) was a U.S.-led, UN-backed coalition war that expelled Iraq from Kuwait after Saddam Hussein's August 1990 invasion. In APUSH, it marks the first major military intervention of the post-Cold War era and fueled new debates over the use of American power (KC-9.3.I.C).

Verified for the 2027 AP US History examLast updated June 2026

What is the Persian Gulf War?

In August 1990, Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein invaded oil-rich Kuwait. President George H.W. Bush responded by building a massive international coalition, first defending Saudi Arabia (Operation Desert Shield), then launching a six-week air-and-ground campaign in early 1991 (Operation Desert Storm) that drove Iraqi forces out of Kuwait. The war was authorized by UN Security Council Resolutions, fought by coalition forces from dozens of nations, and over in about 100 hours of ground combat.

For APUSH, the war's significance is less about the battlefield and more about the moment. With the Soviet Union collapsing, the U.S. was suddenly the world's lone superpower. The Gulf War became the test case for what American military power would look like without a Cold War rival, including high-tech precision weapons, broad international cooperation, and a limited goal (liberate Kuwait, don't march to Baghdad). It opened a decade of debates over when and how the U.S. should intervene abroad.

Why the Persian Gulf War matters in APUSH

The Persian Gulf War lives in Topic 9.3 (The End of the Cold War) and supports learning objective APUSH 9.3.A, which asks you to explain the causes, effects, and legacy of the Cold War's end. The key essential knowledge is KC-9.3.I.C, which says the end of the Cold War led to new military and peacekeeping interventions and continued debates over the appropriate use of U.S. force. The Gulf War is the first and biggest example of that pattern, usually grouped with Somalia (1992-93) and the Balkan conflicts (1995, 1999). It also feeds Topic 9.7 (Causation in Period 9), where you weigh how the post-Cold War shift changed America's role in the world. Thematically, it connects to America in the World (WOR), the theme that tracks U.S. foreign policy across the whole course.

How the Persian Gulf War connects across the course

End of the Cold War (Unit 9)

The Gulf War only makes sense in its post-Cold War context. With the Soviet Union no longer a counterweight, the U.S. could assemble a huge coalition and intervene in the Middle East without fear of triggering a superpower showdown. The war is the textbook effect of the cause you study in Topic 9.3.

Operation Desert Shield (Unit 9)

Desert Shield was the defensive buildup phase that protected Saudi Arabia after Iraq invaded Kuwait; Desert Storm was the offensive phase that followed. Knowing the two phases helps you describe the war precisely instead of vaguely.

UN Security Council Resolutions and Coalition Forces (Unit 9)

Bush didn't go it alone. UN resolutions gave the war international legitimacy, and coalition forces from dozens of countries did the fighting. That multilateral model became the standard people pointed to in later debates over interventions like Iraq in 2003.

Vietnam War and debates over U.S. force (Unit 8)

The Gulf War was deliberately fought as the anti-Vietnam, with clear goals, overwhelming force, and a quick exit. A continuity-and-change question across Units 8 and 9 can ask how Vietnam reshaped the way America used military power, and the Gulf War is your best evidence of the change.

Is the Persian Gulf War on the APUSH exam?

On multiple-choice questions, the Persian Gulf War almost always shows up grouped with Somalia (1992-1993) and the Balkan conflicts (1995, 1999) as evidence of a single pattern, the new military and peacekeeping interventions that followed the Cold War's end. Stems typically ask what these interventions 'most directly illustrate' or what development 'enabled' them, and the answer points back to the Soviet collapse and America's emergence as the lone superpower. No released FRQ has used the term verbatim, but it is strong evidence for a Period 9 causation essay (Topic 9.7) on how the end of the Cold War changed U.S. foreign policy, or a continuity-and-change argument about debates over American military power from Vietnam through the 1990s. Don't memorize battle details; memorize the pattern the war represents.

The Persian Gulf War vs Iraq War (2003)

Same country, different war, different decade. The Persian Gulf War (1990-91) was a short, UN-authorized, broadly multilateral war under George H.W. Bush with one limited goal, pushing Iraq out of Kuwait. The Iraq War (2003) under George W. Bush came after 9/11, aimed at regime change, toppled Saddam Hussein, and lasted years. If a question mentions Kuwait, coalition forces, or the immediate post-Cold War moment, it's the Gulf War. If it mentions the War on Terror or weapons of mass destruction claims, it's 2003.

Key things to remember about the Persian Gulf War

  • The Persian Gulf War (1990-1991) began when Iraq invaded Kuwait, and a U.S.-led, UN-authorized coalition drove Iraqi forces out in early 1991.

  • It was the first major U.S. military intervention of the post-Cold War era, made possible by the Soviet Union's collapse and America's new status as the lone superpower.

  • APUSH groups it with Somalia and the Balkan conflicts as evidence for KC-9.3.I.C, the idea that the Cold War's end produced new interventions and ongoing debates over using American force.

  • The war's coalition-based, limited-goal approach was a deliberate contrast to Vietnam and became a model in later foreign policy debates.

  • Don't confuse it with the 2003 Iraq War; the Gulf War liberated Kuwait under George H.W. Bush, while the 2003 war pursued regime change under George W. Bush.

Frequently asked questions about the Persian Gulf War

What was the Persian Gulf War in APUSH?

It was the 1990-1991 conflict in which a U.S.-led, UN-backed coalition expelled Iraqi forces from Kuwait after Saddam Hussein's invasion. APUSH treats it as the first major military intervention of the post-Cold War era, covered in Topic 9.3.

Is the Persian Gulf War the same as the Iraq War?

No. The Persian Gulf War (1990-91) was a short coalition war to liberate Kuwait under George H.W. Bush. The Iraq War (2003) was a separate, much longer war under George W. Bush aimed at removing Saddam Hussein from power.

Did the United States fight the Persian Gulf War alone?

No. The U.S. led, but it acted under UN Security Council Resolutions with coalition forces from dozens of countries, including Arab states. That multilateral approach is part of why the war is significant in Unit 9.

Why does the Persian Gulf War matter for the AP exam?

It's the go-to example of KC-9.3.I.C, the essential knowledge that the end of the Cold War led to new U.S. military interventions and debates over American power. Exam questions usually group it with Somalia (1992-93) and the Balkans (1995, 1999).

What caused the Persian Gulf War?

Iraq invaded Kuwait in August 1990, threatening oil supplies and regional stability. With the Cold War ending and no Soviet rival to deter action, the U.S. organized a coalition that launched Operation Desert Storm in January 1991.