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US, Britain intensify air strikes against Iraq
Hundreds of daily sorties in run-up to invasion
By Henry Michaels
11 March 2003
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Whatever the outcome of the Bush administrations bribery
and arm-twisting of United Nations Security Council members, the
war against Iraq is well underway. In the so-called no-fly
zones, US and British jets are now conducting up to 1,000 sorties
a day. This is approximately the same number of combat flights
as in the opening days of the 1991 Gulf War.
In the latest attack Sunday, war planes bombed five underground
communication sites near An Numinayah, approximately 100 kilometres
southeast of Baghdad, according to the US Central Command. It
was the fourth successive day of bombing in southern and western
Iraq, the main directions from which ground troops will invade.
Without waiting for a new war resolution to be approved by
the Security Council, the two allies are themselves flagrantly
violating the UN Charter, launching an air war to pave the way
for an all-out assault within days. There is barely any pretense
that the stepped-up bombing is limited to enforcing the no-fly
zones in the north and south of the country, which were, in any
event, declared by the US, Britain and France in the aftermath
of the 1991 war without the benefit of UN sanction.
Iraq has condemned the bombing as the opening of an illegal
war of aggression, but its protests have fallen on deaf ears at
the UN.
More than 400 US and British planes are now operating from
about 30 locations in the Persian Gulf and elsewhere, systematically
destroying Iraqs air defenses and, more recently, surface-to-surface
missiles. In the past month, US pilots have struck from seven
to fourteen targets a week. The commander of US air forces in
the Gulf region, Lieutenant General Michael Moseley, boasted Sunday
that several months of air strikes had eliminated all fixed air
defense positions in southern Iraq.
The number of civilian casualties is rising. The Iraqi news
agency INA last week reported that six civilians were killed and
15 injured in attacks on military and civilian facilities in southern
Basra province. On at least two other occasions, INA said allied
forces had targeted civilian infrastructure.
Official spokesmen in both Washington and London have claimed,
for the record, that the warplanes are firing on Iraqi positions
only in self-defense. British Defence Secretary Geoff
Hoon told Parliament that the British aircraft were acting in
accordance with international law.
But US Air Force General Richard B. Myers, chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, last Friday confirmed that coalition planes
had been authorised to attack any Iraqi facilities considered
a threat to the tens of thousands of ground forces now amassed
along Iraqs borders. Iraqi surface-to-surface missile batteries
had been hit because they were within range of US troops. They
become a threat to our forces, absolutely, because they are new
deployments, Myers said.
The sheer scale of the air blitz makes a mockery of the US
and British claim that they are retaliating against increased
Iraqi fire. The number of allied sorties has quadrupled in recent
weeks, escalating an offensive that began as long ago as last
September, when US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld disclosed
that he had directed commanders to widen their targets.
Rumsfeld specified that in addition to Iraqi radar and missile
systems, the attacks should focus on air defense communications
centers, command posts and cable relay stations in order to eliminate
the entire air defense network in the southern zone.
A wider range of strikes has also commenced in recent weeks
across the northern zone, where US and British planes fly out
of Turkish bases. Recent targets have included military communications
sites. For some months, a narrower range of targets was maintained
in the north because of the Turkish governments political
difficulties in the face of overwhelming popular opposition to
its involvement in the military campaign.
Over recent days the air strikes have extended to western Iraq.
Last week, US aircraft launched two raids on mobile Iraqi surface-to-air
missile batteries defending the H-3 airbase in western Iraq. Pentagon
spokesmen described the air strikes as routine enforcement
of the southern zone, but the attacks were far from the Shiite
population of southeastern Iraq, the supposed beneficiary of the
zone.
Media commentators have noted that the western attacks are
designed to clear a path for forces to invade from a string of
covert bases in Jordan and Saudi Arabia, where troops have been
assembled since Turkeys parliament last week blocked the
movement of 65,000 US troops through Turkey to open a northern
front.
News of the preparations along the western front have emerged
despite efforts by the regimes in both Jordan and Saudi Arabia
to cover-up the scale of the troop mobilization on their countries
soil because of the depth of popular opposition to their participation
in the war.
In addition to the air war, it is an open secret that several
thousand American, British and Australian special forces are roaming
northern, southern and western Iraq, conducting operations which
the British Telegraph newspaper Monday described as unprecedented
in scale.
Quoting defence sources, the Telegraph said two British
SAS Sabre squadronsabout 240 menplus more than 100
support troops were engaged in various parts of Iraq. The joint
special operations were said to involve more than 4,000 American
and Australian special forces with headquarters in Qatar and bases
in Jordan, Kuwait and Turkey.
These forces were reported to be forging alliances with local
militias, repeating a tactic employed in Afghanistan. They are
also monitoring Iraqi oilfields west of Baghdad and in the north,
a further indication of one of the central aims of the warthe
seizure of Iraqs oil wealth.
These ground operations were launched long before the US and
Britain began their efforts to secure a specific UN mandate for
war. In its latest edition, Time magazine reports that
US special forces have been operating inside Iraq for at least
a month. Were on the offensive, a senior Western
diplomat in neighbouring Kuwait was quoted as saying. Were
in there. This war starts on our terms.
There are many signs that the full-scale military operation
will commence within a week, irrespective of the maneuvers in
the Security Council. According to various reports, some 300,000
troops are positioned around Iraq, considerably more than the
250,000 that the Pentagon originally set as necessary for the
onslaught.
Key US units, the 101st Airborne and units from the 82nd Airborne,
are said to be fully prepared for battle, following some delays.
These units are the US Armys traditional first response.
The British armed forces chief, General Sir Michael Jackson, said
Saturday that his countrys troops in Kuwait would be ready
in four to five days.
UN observers have reported a growing number of violations committed
by the US in the UN demilitarized zone along the Iraq-Kuwait border
in recent weeks, four of them in the past week alone. This
is a pattern that has been increasing, said Daljeet Bagga,
a spokesman for the UN border monitoring mission. Almost
every second day, we see a US vehicle inside the demilitarized
zone. We pointed out to them that they arent supposed to
be there, since its a DMZ.
Confronted by these violations, the UN is withdrawing more
than 300 of its observers from the border. The withdrawal sums
up the real relations behind the horse-trading at the UN. While
the US and British governments would prefer to secure a victory
in the Security Council to offset widespread domestic and global
opposition to their planned invasion, they are hell-bent on war,
regardless of any vote.
See Also:
The presidential press conference
[8 March 2003]
Bugging, bribes and bullying: US thuggery
in advance of UN vote
[6 March 2003]
Bush lays out his vision
for the Middle East
US imperialisms rendezvous with disaster
[28 February 2003]
Bush hands UN an ultimatum
on Iraq war
[26 February 2003]
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