Retired Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf, the no-nonsense commander of U.S.-led coalition forces in the first Persian Gulf War, died Thursday at his home in Tampa, Florida, a senior defense official told NBC News. “Stormin’ Norman” was 78.
Schwarzkopf, a decorated Vietnam War vet, was famed for leading the forces that ejected Saddam Hussein’s forces from Kuwait after they invaded the neighboring country in 1990. During “Desert Storm” he gave almost-daily TV briefings and his desert camouflage and gruff charm–like a general from Central Casting–made him a star.
In his 1992 autobiography, “It Doesn’t Take a Hero,” Schwarzkopf said he used those briefings to communicate to the enemy. “With those cameras grinding away, I knew I wasn’t talking just to friendly audiences, but that Saddam and his bully boys were watching me on CNN in their headquarters,” he wrote.
The decision to go to war to oust Saddam was the defining moment of the presidency of George H.W. Bush. In a statement from Houston, where he is being treated at Methodist Hospital, Bush called Schwarzkopf “one of the great military leaders of his generation.”
“More than that, he was a good and decent man,” Bush said.
Colin Powell, who was Schwarzkopf’s boss as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff during Desert Storm, remembered Schwarzkopf Friday as “a great patriot and a great soldier.”
“He was a good friend of mine, a close buddy,” Powell said in a statement.. ” I will miss him.”








