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| U.S. Force in Place, Bush
Can Strike at Will
St.Petersburg Times
September 30, 2001
WASHINGTON -- The United States has now amassed a
military force of 28,000 sailors, airmen and troops, more than 300
warplanes and two dozen warships spread for thousands of miles across a
military theater with Iraq and Afghanistan at its heart.
The
diverse forces, stretching from the Indian Ocean to the Red Sea, bring a
potent range of military options with them to keep pressure on those two
isolated nations, one a longtime foe and one a new target. But while there
is enough firepower to allow President Bush to order strikes at any moment
he chooses, senior Pentagon officials acknowledge that the immediate
options are in many ways both imperfect and risky.
The buildup
continues even while Pentagon officials talk of lightning raids and
precise strikes against targets in Afghanistan, because no matter how
brief and limited, such operations require a vast and expensive network of
bases, command posts, flight decks, refueling outposts and defensive
weapons, with all the accompanying logistics.
Although Bush and
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld say the campaign against terror will be
a new kind of war, the force assembling in the region still consists
mainly of sea and air power. Conventional wars are ultimately won by
taking and holding territory, as one military maxim has it, but that is
not an option being considered in what the administration has constantly
said is no conventional operation.
The Pentagon has also mobilized
special operations troops -- their numbers are secret -- but they are now
playing mainly a supporting role to possible air and missile strikes,
according to the New York Times, which cited U.S. officials.
For
now, other ground forces are most likely to play mainly protective roles
in places like Kuwait.
The United States dispatched B-52 and B-1
bombers to the region and has Navy F-14s and F-18s aboard nearby aircraft
carriers. Air Force F-15s and F-16s routinely enforce no-flight zones over
Iraq, where American and British warplanes have continued to skirmish with
Iraqi air forces even since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.
So
far, the Bush administration has resisted temptation to retaliate
immediately for the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon as
it rallies broader international support for battling terrorism and gleans
intelligence on the whereabouts of Osama bin Laden and his allies.
The question of how to battle terrorists in their remote and rocky
Afghan havens has perplexed military planners in both the Clinton and Bush
administrations, some of whom share a darkly comic answer when asked about
the war plan.
"It's called AOS," they say, using a barracks
abbreviation for "all options stink."
Even a series of precisely
calibrated strikes would require a vast and expensive network of bases,
command posts, flight decks, refueling outposts and defensive weapons,
with all the accompanying logistics.
John Bolton, the
undersecretary of state, ended last week in talks with Central Asian
countries that border Afghanistan. The United States is seeking support
for overflights and for basing aircraft in the region..
The New
York Times, citing a senior official, reported that negotiations last week
in Pakistan had given the United States significant access to bases there,
mainly for search and rescue operations and reconnaissance.
Ever
since the Persian Gulf War in 1991, the United States has maintained a
significant military presence in the region, largely to keep President
Saddam Hussein of Iraq in check.
At any given time, those forces
number more than 20,000 military personnel, nearly 200 fighter and support
aircraft and at least one aircraft carrier and its accompanying warships,
which include submarines, cruisers and destroyers able to fire scores of
long-range cruise missiles.
Since the terrorist attacks, Bush has
greatly bolstered that force.
Immediately after the attack, he
ordered the aircraft carrier Enterprise and its battle group to remain in
the region after the carrier Carl Vinson arrived in the Persian Gulf,
instantly doubling the naval firepower normally stationed there.
Each carrier has roughly 75 aircraft -- half of which are F-14 and
F-18 attack jets -- capable of conducting round-the-clock air operations
for days at a time.
Two other carriers -- the Theodore Roosevelt,
headed to the Mediterranean Sea, and the Kitty Hawk, which recently
steamed out of its home port in Japan -- could also join the operation,
but have not yet received orders to do so, officials said.
Bush
also ordered the Air Force to send nearly 50 combat aircraft to the
region, including B-52 and B-1 bombers now on Diego Garcia, the British
island in the Indian Ocean, the New York Times reported.
Although
Diego Garcia is thousands of miles from Afghanistan, the bombers have more
than enough range to reach their targets.
The B-52s, Vietnam-era
bombers in most cases older than the pilots flying them, are equipped with
20 cruise missiles able to travel as far as 1,500 miles to their targets.
The B-1s, which as recently as NATO's air war against Serbia in 1999 were
relegated to what the Air Force no longer likes to call "carpet bombing,"
now carry up to 24 satellite-guided 2,000-pound bombs.
The Air
Force has also dispatched an armada of aerial refuelers, reconnaissance
aircraft and other support aircraft to bases in Turkey, Kuwait, Oman and
Saudi Arabia, bringing the total of American aircraft in the region to
more than 300.
All told, roughly 6,000 additional American troops
have poured into the region since the attacks. Those new troops include
additional security forces as well as Army Special Forces units.
The United States has relatively few ground forces in the region.
When the terrorist attacks occurred, the Army had about 3,000 troops
there, mostly in Kuwait, Qatar and Saudi Arabia. The largest group is a
heavy task force in Kuwait, with about 1,100 troops, that has been there
for a decade in case Saddam Hussein decides once again to attack Kuwait.
The Army also maintains a stockpile of equipment in Kuwait, along
with two Patriot air defense batteries. Another Patriot battery is in
Saudi Arabia.
A brigade's worth of equipment has been positioned
in Qatar and another brigade's worth is afloat in the region.
To
see more of The St. Petersburg Times, go to http://www.sptimes.com .
© St. Petersburg Times. All rights reserved.
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