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Analysis : Middle
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US, UK warplanes bomb civilian airport in Iraq
By Bill Vann
27 September 2002
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US and British warplanes carried out successive bombing raids
against Iraqi targets on Wednesday and Thursday, inflicting substantial
damage to the main civilian airport in southern Iraqs port
city of Basra.
The air raids are the most visible element in a military buildup
for an invasion of Iraq that is accelerating even as the Bush
administration goes through the motions of pressing for resolutions
in the United Nations and the US Congress authorizing military
action.
Iraqi government spokesmen reported that the latest bombings
destroyed the main radar installations at the airport and destroyed
much of the main terminal. At least one civilian was wounded in
the bombing raids, according to these reports.
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld confirmed the attacks on
Thursday, while mocking Iraqi reports of civilian casualties.
Rumsfeld recently ordered a shift in the US rules of engagement
in the so-called no-fly zones that Washingtonwithout
UN sanctiondeclared over northern and southern Iraq. Instead
of striking against surface-to-air missiles and other mobile targets
as in the past, pilots, under the pretext of responding to Iraqi
anti-aircraft fire, have been ordered to bomb buildings, particularly
the Iraqi militarys command-and-control centers.
Iraqs Foreign Minister Naji Sabri protested the latest
attacks. While the US is seeking authorization for military action
based on Iraqs supposed violation of UN Security Council
resolutions enacted following the last Persian Gulf war, Sabri
pointed out that Washingtons current bombing campaign is
just such a breach of UN mandates. US warplanes, he said, have
carried out 859 sorties from bases in Kuwait since mid-August,
flying into airspace over the demilitarized zone separating the
oil-rich Gulf sheikdom from Iraq.
The aim of these attacks is two-fold: to destroy Iraqs
air defense capabilities in these areas and thereby create a safe
corridor for US bombers to begin an air war as a prelude to an
invasion, and to demolish the ability of the Iraqi regime to communicate
with its forces in the field.
Pentagon plans for an invasion of Iraq were submitted to the
Bush White House earlier this month, with sections of the militarys
recommendations leaked to the media. While alternative plans for
an invasion were presented, all of the Pentagons scenarios
call for a massive and protracted aerial bombardment before ground
forces are sent in.
Virtually the entire US fleet of B-2 bombers would participate
in this air war. These radar-evading stealth aircraft are each
armed with sixteen 2,000-pound high-explosive bombs. Washington
has sought permission from London to base a substantial number
of the planes on the Indian Ocean island of Diego Garcia, enabling
them to fly repeated raids against Baghdad and other cities.
The B-2s will be followed by cruise missile attacks from US
warships in the Persian Gulf and Red Sea, as well as B-52 bombers
deployed in the region.
Bush administration officials have claimed that the US air
war will be aimed at regime targetsmilitary
facilities, government buildings, presidential palaces, etc.and
not the Iraqi people. But these targets are located largely in
heavily populated areas of Baghdad, a city of four million people.
Pentagon planners have projected the civilian death toll reaching
the tens of thousands. The scope of the planned initial air attack,
a virtual saturation bombing of Iraqi cities, suggests that these
estimates may prove quite conservative.
The start of a new Iraq air campaign is likely to be
far more intense than either the bombing of Yugoslavia (1999)
or the opening salvo of the Gulf War (1991), which introduced
the world to cruise missiles and other precision munitions,
the Washington Post reported earlier this week. Air
Force officials say an attack on Iraq likely would begin with
hundreds of bombers, cruise missiles and fighter aircraft executing
a series of air strikes with a barrage of firepower only hinted
at in other recent US air campaigns.
The Bush administration is preparing to inflict upon the Iraqi
people the kind of wholesale annihilation carried out in the firebombing
of Dresden or the atomic bomb attacks on Nagasaki and Hiroshima
during the Second World War.
Targeted for complete destruction is Tikrit, the hometown of
Saddam Hussein and other leading members of the Iraqi regime.
Located about 100 miles north of Baghdad on the Tigris River,
this city of 50,000 people is to be leveled in the first days
of the US air war.
The invasion itself would reportedly involve up to 100,000
US soldiers and Marines, with another 150,000 held in reserve.
These forces would attack from Kuwait and several other surrounding
countries.
The greatest fear of the military brass is that the Bush administrations
goal of regime change will be achieved only through
bloody house-to-house combat in Baghdad, resulting in large numbers
of US casualties and a horrific death toll among Iraqi civilians.
Some have reportedly warned that if such combat is not ended within
days, the US will face the threat of popular upheavals throughout
the Middle East.
According to military strategists, January and February are
the ideal months for launching a war against the Arab nation because
the shorter days would accentuate the nighttime superiority of
US forces and cooler weather would make it easier for ground troops
to deploy in the region wearing chemical-protective gear.
Independent of any congressional debate or UN deliberations,
the Bush administration is plainly preparing to launch its war
during that time period. Tens of thousands of combat troops and
vast amounts of military hardware and munitions are already pouring
into the Gulf region.
In one key administrative change signaling the approach of
US military action, the Pentagon ordered troops in the secretive
Special Operations Command to leave their military units and join
units directed by the Central Intelligence Agency. This would
enable Washington to send these forces, trained in sabotage and
assassination, into Iraq, while publicly denying that it had any
combat forces on the ground there.
The US already has nearly 60,000 military personnel within
striking distance of Iraq, part of a vast permanent deployment
in the region that it has developed in the decade since the Persian
Gulf War. Two carrier battle groupsone in the Persian Gulf
and another in the Mediterranean Seaare in place with 25,000
sailors and Marines aboard. Combat troops are deployed in Saudi
Arabia, Kuwait and the other Persian Gulf sheikdoms, while Air
Force units are stationed in Turkey, Oman and Diego Garcia. Approximately
800 Special Operations troops are presently in the French colony
of Djibouti.
Several thousand soldiers are stationed at Camp Doha in Kuwaitjust
35 miles from the Iraqi bordertogether with enough heavy
equipment for a brigade, including 150 heavy tanks and hundreds
of other armored vehicles, as well as artillery, a Patriot antimissile
system and dozens of combat aircraft.
This force is being steadily augmented by other units that
are arriving in the region almost daily, ostensibly as part of
previously scheduled training missions. Thus, an estimated 2,200
Marines began amphibious assault exercises in Kuwait this week.
Several thousand more combat Army soldiers are arriving as well,
either for training missions or to replace other units. More than
600 senior military planners from the Florida-based US Central
Command are going to Qatar, allegedly for training in how to set
up a military headquarters in a crisis.
By mid-October, another 20,000 Marines from Camp Pendleton,
California are to arrive in the region.
While such exercises have indeed been ongoing for several years,
it is widely believed that those now being sent in will stay,
as will the units that they were supposed to replace. This would
allow the assembling of an invasion force in a matter of weeks.
The planners sent to the sprawling new Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar
are expected to remain as the forward command-and-control center
for the war on Iraq.
Earlier this month, it was reported that the Pentagon had chartered
a large civilian cargo carrier to ferry battle tanks to the Gulf
region by the end of September. Military sources, however, later
said that the real cargo consisted of missiles and other munitions
to be used in the air war.
Pentagon officials have suggested that newly developed hi-tech
weapons will be utilized in the attack on Iraq, providing the
military and the arms manufacturers with their first opportunity
to test them out on human targets.
Meanwhile, the US administration has floated plans to train
Iraqi political dissidents for use in an upcoming invasion. Initially,
the Los Angeles Times carried a report saying that up to
10,000 would be given training. Pentagon and White House officials
quickly disputed these numbers, saying that the real number would
be closer to 1,000. Nor, officials said, will the dissidents be
given combat training. They would be used mainly as translators,
scouts and possibly guards in detention camps.
Defense Secretary Rumsfeld, his deputy Paul Wolfowitz and others
in the Pentagons right-wing civilian hierarchy have reportedly
been pressing for the arming of the Iraqi opposition, while those
in the CIA and State Department, who have worked more closely
with these elements, are openly skeptical about their ability
to mobilize any forces capable of combat. The groups that Washington
is sponsoring include Iraqi royalists, ex-military officers as
well as Kurdish and Shiite groups that are united only in their
pursuit of US aid.
Washingtons ultimate aim is to select corrupt and pliable
figures from these organizations to serve as figureheads in a
colonial-style protectorate in Iraq. The principal task of such
a regime would be guaranteeing unfettered control by the US oil
conglomerates over the countrys petroleum reserves.
See Also:
Democrats jump on Bushs war wagon
[21 September 2002]
The Bush administration wants war
[18 September 2002]
Bush at the UN: Washingtons war
ultimatum to the world
[13 September 2002]
US, UK step up air war on Iraq
[6 September 2002]
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