Once a United Nations deadline for Hussein’s withdrawal expired in mid-January 1991, U.S.-led coalition forces began an aerial bombardment of Iraqi targets. This, along with a 100-hour ground offensive, drove Hussein’s troops out of Kuwait, though not before they set fire to hundreds of oil wells. Fewer than 400 U.S. soldiers died in the Persian Gulf War, compared with an estimated tens of thousands of Iraqis, and Bush’s approval rating soared in its aftermath. He likewise had success with a December 1989 invasion of Panama, in which dictator Manuel Noriega, a former U.S. ally, was seized and brought to Miami to face drug-trafficking charges.
Domestically, on the other hand, Bush struggled with a Democratic-controlled Congress and a soaring national debt. “We have more will than wallet,” he acknowledged in his inaugural address. As a result, he embraced only a limited agenda, including support for community organizations that like “a thousand points of light…are spread like stars throughout the nation, doing good.” Among the bills to pass with his backing included the Americans with Disabilities Act, an anti-discrimination measure, and the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990, which addressed ozone-depleting and acid rain-causing pollutants. Bush also supported a bailout of the scandal-wracked savings-and-loan industry.
Despite his one-time popularity, Bush’s poll numbers began to plummet in the lead-up to the 1992 presidential election. The economy had slowed, Hurricane Andrew had left some 250,000 people homeless in Florida and inner-city violence had reached historic highs. Moreover, he broke a campaign promise not to raise taxes—"Read my lips: no new taxes,” he had declared—as part of a budget compromise with congressional Democrats. That November, Bush received only 37.5 percent of the popular vote (168 electoral votes), compared with 43 percent (370 electoral votes) for Arkansas Governor Bill Clinton and 19 percent (0 electoral votes) for third-party upstart Ross Perot. Following his defeat he returned to Houston, where his political career had started back in the 1960s, and largely disappeared from the spotlight. Yet he remained in good health through his 80s, taking occasional birthday skydiving trips and teaming up with Clinton to raise money for victims of the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami and Hurricane Katrina.