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: News &
Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Bush administration accelerates US military buildup against
Iraq
By Henry Michaels
20 February 2003
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Having declared that he is undeterred by the size of the global
protests against his planned assault on Iraq, US President George
W. Bush is proceeding with frenzied military preparations. While
Bush cynically continues to insist that no decision has been taken
to invade Iraq, and that military attack is a last resort,
US and British troops are massing in Kuwait at breakneck speed.
Behind the diplomatic maneuvers and bullying at the UN, the
massive buildup indicates that the White Houses timing is
driven primarily by military considerations. From all indications,
the invasion strike force will be ready within two weeks, the
same deadline that the White House has given the UN Security Council
for the passage of a resolution legitimizing the assault.
According to Pentagon officials, an accelerating deployment
has put some 150,000 American forces in the Persian Gulf region,
with the number expected to exceed 200,000 by early March. Military
officials have previously stated that up to 250,000 personnel
will be involved in the attack.
This week, 60 wide-body aircraft have landed in Kuwait every
24 hours carrying personnel and equipment to the war theater.
Other troops arrived on commercial passenger planes leased by
the military to handle the mass ferrying. Lieutenant General David
D. McKiernan, who commands the US and British land forces in Kuwait,
told CNN Tuesday that 100,000 US troops had landed in Kuwait and
were ready to launch the attack whenever ordered.
A seven-ship Navy fleet was due to arrive in the Gulf this
week carrying about 7,000 Marines from the 2nd Marine Expeditionary
Brigade at Camp Lejeune, North Carolina. A similar size group
of California-based Marines is en route aboard seven other ships.
Since last December 24, the Pentagon has ordered at least 125,000
US forces to the region, joining approximately 60,000 servicemen
previously stationed there. More than 150,000 National Guard and
Reserve members have also been called to active duty, up from
58,000 just a month ago. Under an order signed by Bush three days
after the 2001 terror attacks in New York and Washington, up to
one million guard and reserve troops can be called to serve for
up to two years.
Two key components of the US ground force, the 101st Airborne
and 4th Infantry Division, will arrive in Kuwait by early March,
although defense officials in Washington have hinted that military
operations could begin with a rolling start before
the force is fully assembled.
Some 31,000 British military personnelone-quarter of
the countrys entire armed forceshave also begun to
pour into Kuwait. Together with about 2,000 Australians, they
are the only other troops to join the US invasion force.
Offshore, three aircraft carriers bristling with missiles and
jets are now within range of Iraqthe USS Harry S. Truman
in the Mediterranean Sea and the USS Abraham Lincoln and the USS
Constellation in the Persian Gulf or Arabian Sea. A fourth, the
USS Theodore Roosevelt, will soon arrive and the Pentagon has
dispatched the USS Kitty Hawk from its station in Japan and the
USS Nimitz from San Diego. A seventh carrier, the USS George Washington,
is likely to sail from Norfolk, Virginia.
Overhead, a network of spy satellites has been assembled at
400 miles in space, to back up Global Hawk reconnaissance drones
that will loiter at 65,000 feet, manned JSTARS aircraft with moving-target
radar at 40,000 feet and Predator drones with video, infrared
and radar sensors at 20,000 feet.
With the northern half of Kuwait now occupied by US and British
troops, the Kuwaiti regime last week ruled the entire region off
limits to civilians and shut down two northern oilfields in readiness
for hostilities. This week the government of Crown Prince Saad
al-Abdallah al-Salim Al Sabah raised its military alert level
from Level 2 to Level 4, one step below maximum.
Troops from the other Western-backed semi-feudal dictatorships
in the Gulf began to arrive this week to bolster the Kuwaiti regime
internally during the war. Contingents from the United Arab Emirates
landed at Ali Al Salem air base as part of the Peninsula
Shield Force formed by the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council,
which also includes Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Bahrain and Oman.
In reality, for all the diplomatic role-playing at the UN,
the war has been under way for months. US warplanes are bombing
Iraqi installations almost every day, and Special Forces commandos
and CIA officers are operating inside Iraq. Administration officials
have confirmed that in the past several days additional US troops
have crossed the border into northern Iraq. They joined a group
already there that was acknowledged several weeks ago by General
Richard Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
US forces have set up bases in Kurdish-controlled northern
Iraq in order to secure control over the regions crucial
oilfields as soon as the main assault is launched. Proven oil
reserves in the area total more than 10 billion barrelsa
rich prize that Washington is determined to seize. These operations
are a direct violation of the UN resolution passed last November,
which prohibits infringements on Iraqs national sovereignty.
This is the same Resolution 1441 the US is invoking to justify
its war drive.
Bush Tuesday revealed his determination to overcome one final
obstaclethe Turkish governments refusal to give the
final go-ahead for Turkish bases to be used for a ground assault
on Iraq from the north. Turkeys Prime Minister Abdullah
Gul Monday delayed a parliamentary vote on the use of the bases,
declaring that no approval would be granted without a second UN
resolution.
Facing overwhelming popular opposition to its decision to allow
the country to become a staging ground for the war, the Turkish
government is holding out for a larger aid package than the $6
billion in grants and $15-20 billion in loan guarantees offered
by Bush. The postponement came after the weekends worldwide
antiwar protests, followed by demonstrations at the US Embassy
in Ankara and outside the headquarters of Guls Justice and
Development party.
In true gangster style, Bush administration officials told
the New York Times that Turkey cannot afford to turn
them down, and that Turkeys leaders will ultimately understand
that. Bush himself declared that Turkey had no better
friend than the American government.
Other factors are propelling the timing of the assault. Pentagon
officials have acknowledged that any delay beyond mid-March could
begin to expose US personnel and equipment to sweltering heat.
By summer, troops will face temperatures exceeding 40 degrees
Centigrade and blinding sandstorms. The extreme conditions could
affect the high-tech weaponry that the White House is counting
on for a swift victory.
US forces will have vast superiority in firepower and resources.
Iraqs military equipmentits tanks, artillery and air
forcehas declined by more than half since the 1991 Gulf
War and has become worn out or obsolete after a decade of UN sanctions
on spare parts. American and British jets patrolling the so-called
no-fly zones over northern and southern Iraq have knocked out
many of Iraqs air defenses.
But some media outlets have reported that US officials are
concerned that any prolonged wait or protracted war could severely
undermine military morale and further turn public opinion against
the war, particularly if casualties are suffered. There is also
the question of performance of the troops in a more drawn-out
conflict. In some front-line units as many as three quarters of
the rank-and-file soldiers are only 18 or 19 years old, and have
no experience of actual combat.
According to Associated Press: With 250,000 service members
overseas even before the massive buildup began in the Persian
Gulf region for a possible war with Iraq, the strains of a soaring
operations tempo are starting to show across their
militaryon the men and women who fill out its ranks, on
their families, and on the machines they operate...
The Pentagon has relied on tens of thousands of reservists
to prosecute the war on terrorism, conduct new homeland security
missions in the United States and, now, prepare for war with Iraq....
A surge of patriotism has kept morale, recruiting and retention
high since the attacks on New York and Washington. But defense
officials fear that the open-ended nature of the war on terrorism
and a possible lengthy occupation of Iraq could deplete the ranks
of the all-volunteer active-duty force and break the reserve system.
These concerns are among the reasons that the invasion will
begin with a brutal show of force48 hours of massive air
bombardment during which 3,000 precision bombs and missiles will
be unleashed by air force and navy jets, each carrying 16 one-ton,
satellite-guided bombs, as well as B-1 stealth bombers. The Bush
administration is quite prepared to kill tens of thousands of
Iraqi civilians, as well as poorly-armed soldiers, in the hope
of achieving a rapid victory. The stated aim of this shock
and awe strategy is to terrorize the Iraqi people with the
same horror as the atom bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki
in 1945.
See Also:
US military chief admits American troops
already in Iraq
[4 February 2003]
US plans shock and awe
blitzkrieg in Iraq
[30 January 2003]
One-quarter of British army
sent for war vs. Iraq
[23 January 2003]
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