Gulf Medal
Gulf Medal | |
---|---|
Obverse and reverse of the medal | |
Type | Campaign medal |
Awarded for | Campaign service |
Description | Cupro-nickel disk, 36 mm diameter |
Presented by | United Kingdom |
Eligibility | British forces |
Campaign(s) | Kuwait and Saudi Arabia 1990–91 |
Clasps |
|
Established | 1992 |
Total | 61,000+ (including civilians) |
Ribbon bar: 32 mm wide Ribbon bar with rosette, denoting entitlement to clasp Ribbon bar with oak leaf for Mentioned in Dispatches | |
The Gulf War Medal was a campaign medal approved in 1992, for issue to officers and men of British forces who served in Kuwait and Saudi Arabia during Operation Granby (the Liberation of Kuwait) in 1990–91.
Medal
The Gulf Medal is cupro-nickel and 36 millimetres (1.4 in) in diameter, with the following design:[1]
- Obverse: the crowned effigy of Queen Elizabeth II facing right with the inscription ELIZABETH II DEI GRATIA REGINA FID. DEF.
- Reverse: an eagle in flight above an automatic rifle superimposed on an anchor, representing the three services, with THE GULF MEDAL above and 1990-91 below.
- Ribbon: 32 millimetres (1.3 in) wide, with a sand-coloured broad central stripe flanked by narrow stripes of dark blue, red and light blue, representing the three services, with the dark blue on both outer edges.
- Naming: The recipients details were impressed in capitals on the edge of the medal.
Qualification criteria
Two clasps were authorised for those who served in Kuwait during the Iraqi invasion, and for those who took part in operations to liberate Kuwait:[2][3]
- 2 Aug 1990
- Awarded to the members of the Kuwait Liaison Team who were in Kuwait on this date, and who were taken hostage by the invading Iraqi Army.
- 16 Jan-28 Feb 1991
- Awarded for seven days continuous service between these dates in the designated Theatre of Operations. This clasp signifies service during the actual war.
In undress uniform, a rosette is worn on the medal ribbon to denote the award of either clasp.
- Without clasp
- Awarded for thirty days continuous service in the Middle East (in a defined area of operations, including Cyprus) between 2 August 1990 and 7 March 1991.
There was no minimum qualifying period for those decorated for bravery (including a mention in dispatches and a Queen's Commendation), while the period could be reduced for those killed, wounded or taken prisoner.[4]
Numbers awarded
The breakdown of awards to the armed forces was as follows:[5]
Service | Medal only | Medal with clasp 2 Aug 1990 | Medal with clasp 16 Jan to 28 Feb 1991 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|
Royal Navy | 2,409 | Nil | 3,942 | 6,351 |
Royal Marines | 130 | Nil | 407 | 537 |
Army | 4,093 | 46 | 34,692 | 38,831 |
RAF | 5,673 | 20 | 8,275 | 13,968 |
Total | 12,305 | 66 | 47,316 | 59,687 |
About 1,500 civilians including American, Australian, British, Canadian and New Zealand members of British Aerospace working at Dhahran and Riyadh and Khamis Mushayt also received the medal with the clasp 16th Jan to 28th Feb.[1] Most were recently retired members of their respective country's armed forces.
Related medals
Recipients of the Gulf Medal were also entitled to the Kuwaiti Liberation Medal and the Saudi Liberation of Kuwait Medal, awarded to all allied personnel involved in the liberation of Kuwait. British service personnel were granted permission to accept these, but not to wear them in uniform.[6]
Service in the Middle East after the liberation of Kuwait was recognised by the General Service Medal (1962) with clasps Kuwait (service in Kuwait between 8 March – 30 September 1991) and N. Iraq & S. Turkey (service in Northern Iraq or Southern Turkey between 6 April – 17 July 1991).[7]
British personnel could also qualify for the United Nations Medal for UNIKOM (United Nations Iraq–Kuwait Observation Mission), for a minimum of ninety days service between 1 April 1991 – 6 October 2003.[8]
Qualifying service for the Gulf Medal does not count towards the period required to receive the Accumulated Campaign Service Medal.[9]
References
- ^ a b John W. Mussell, editor. (2015). Medal Yearbook 2015. Token Publishing Limited, Honiton, Devon. p. 204. ISBN 978-1-908-828-16-3.
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has generic name (help) - ^ "Honours and Awards in the Armed Forces (JSP 761) (V5.0 Oct 16). Table 8A.01, page 8A-1". MoD Joint Services Publication. Retrieved 21 May 2018.
- ^ Full details are laid out in Defence Council Instructions, General (DCI Gen) 185/91
- ^ "Honours and Awards in the Armed Forces (JSP 761) (V5.0 Oct 16). para 8.08, page 8-2". MoD Joint Services Publication. Retrieved 21 May 2018.
- ^ Hansard, 20 Jan 2004, 1122W – Written answer by Ivor Caplin, Defence Minister, to Mr Adrian Flook MP. (Online copy)
- ^ "Medals: campaigns, descriptions and eligibility". Ministry of Defence Medal Office. Retrieved 21 May 2018.
- ^ "Honours and Awards in the Armed Forces (JSP 761) (V5.0 Oct 16). Table 8A.03, page 8A-1". MoD Joint Services Publication. Retrieved 21 May 2018.
- ^ "Honours and Awards in the Armed Forces (JSP 761) (V5.0 Oct 16). Table 8A-05, page 8A-3". MoD Joint Services Publication. Retrieved 21 May 2018.
- ^ "Honours and Awards in the Armed Forces (JSP 761) (V5.0 Oct 16). Para 8B-05, page 8B-2". MoD Joint Services Publication. Retrieved 21 May 2018.
See also
- Gulf War Military Awards
- The British Gulf Medal 1990 – 91 – Detailed Images
- MoD: Medal eligibility
- MoD: Honours and Awards in the Armed Forces (JSP 761)
- v
- t
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- Naval General Service Medal (1793–1840)
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pre-First World War
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