Everything about Operation Earnest Will totally explained
Operation Earnest Will (
24 July 1987 -
26 September 1988) was the
U.S. military protection of
Kuwaiti owned oil tankers from
Iranian attacks in 1987 and 1988, three years into the
Tanker War phase of the
Iran-Iraq War. U.S. law forbade the use of Navy ships to escort civilian vessels under
foreign flag, so the Kuwaiti ships were re-registered under U.S. flag.
Even before Earnest Will formally began, it became clear how dangerous
Persian Gulf operations would be. On
17 May, an Iraqi warplane fired two
Exocet missiles at the
guided missile frigate
USS Stark, killing 37 sailors and injuring 21. Iraqi officials said the targeting of the U.S. warship was accidental.
On the very first escort mission, on
24 July 1987, the Kuwaiti oil tanker
al-Rekkahre, re-flagged as the U.S. tanker
Bridgeton, struck an Iranian mine damaging the ship, but causing no injuries. The
Bridgeton proceeded under her own power to Kuwait, with the thin-skinned U.S. Navy escorts following behind to avoid mines.
On
15 October, the U.S. tanker
Sea Isle City was struck while at anchor by an Iranian
Silkworm missile, wounding 18. The U.S. Navy responded by destroying two Iranian oil platforms.
Earnest Will overlapped with
Operation Prime Chance, a largely secret effort to stop Iranian forces from attacking Gulf shipping. The most dramatic moment of Prime Chance was likely the
September 21,
1987, attack on the
Iran Ajr, an Iranian ship converted for use as a minelayer. Using night-vision devices, Army gunship crews watched the Iranian vessel lay several mines, then engaged with miniguns and rockets. A
SEAL team landed aboard the vessel and seized it. Several Iranian sailors were rescued from the waters of the
Persian Gulf after leaping overboard during the attack. The SEALs scuttled the vessel the following day.
On
14 April 1988, the American
frigate USS Copeland, while on patrol, encountered trouble with its primary missile launcher. The
Samuel B. Roberts, assuming
Copeland's patrol area, struck an Iranian
mine and was badly damaged. Four days later, U.S. forces retaliated with a one-day attack on Iranian
warships, armed
speedboats, and oil platforms used as naval bases. Dubbed
Operation Praying Mantis, it was the biggest engagement of surface
warships since World War II. Two Iranian ships were destroyed, and two American pilots died when their helicopter crashed.
On
3 July 1988,
USS Vincennes shot down
Iran Air Flight 655, an
Airbus A300B2, over the
Strait of Hormuz after mistaking it for an Iranian F-14. 290 people were killed.
These two side effects of Earnest Will — Praying Mantis and the downing of the airliner — helped convince Iran to agree to a ceasefire on
20 August 1988, ending its eight-year war with Iraq.
On
26 September 1988,
USS Vandegrift escorted the last tanker of the operation to Kuwait.
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