In All But Name,
The
By Marc Erikson
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/DH17Ak03.html
How do you tell a war has begun? This is not the 17th or 18th
century. There are no highfalutin' declarations. Troops don't line up in
eyesight of each other. There are no drum rolls and bugle calls, no calls of
"Chaaa...rge!". When did the Vietnam War begin? When, for that
matter, World War I? When mobilizations were ordered setting in motion irreversible
chains of events or at the time of the formal declarations of war?
The lines of battle and the timelines to overt battle and
full-scale combat have become fluid. Consider this: At the beginning of this
year, when US President George W Bush started talking ever more in earnest
about taking out Saddam Hussein and signed an intelligence order directing the
CIA to undertake a comprehensive, covert program to topple the Iraqi president,
including authority to use lethal force to capture him, the US and putative ally
Britain had approximately 50,000 troops deployed in the region around Iraq.
By now, this number has grown to over 100,000, not counting
soldiers of and on naval units in the vicinity. It's been a build-up without
much fanfare, accelerating since March and accelerating further since June. And
these troops are not just sitting on their hands or twiddling their thumbs
while waiting for orders to act out some type of D-Day drama. Several thousand
are already in
For sticklers for details, here are some numbers and locations of
the allied troop build-up gathered from local sources in the various countries
where US and British forces deploy or from open allied sources: Prior to the
past seven months' troop movements, there were 25,000 US troops (army, air
force) in Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states of Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, Oman and
the United Arab Emirates and some 20,000 British troops, mainly in Oman.
Since March, 12,000
An additional 2,400 US troops are deployed in
The number of US and British aircraft in the region (land-based
and on three
The Saudi announcement of August 7 that US forces will not be
permitted to use Saudi bases for an attack on Iraq causes the US military no
major headache. The
What are these allied forces up against? As the head of the US
Defense Policy Board Richard Perle put it succinctly the other day,
Principal equipment is 2,200 tanks of Soviet-era vintage
(including a few hundred T-72s) and 1,900 artillery pieces. The Iraqi air force
is reduced to 130 attack aircraft and 180 jet fighters, but only about 90 of
the latter are combat ready at any given time. The navy no longer exists.
Ongoing actions by US and allied forces around and in
Increased support to Iraqi opposition groups and forces inside and
outside Iraq including money, weapons, equipment, training and intelligence
information;
Expanded efforts to collect intelligence within the Iraqi
government, military, security service and overall population;
Use of CIA and US Special Forces teams, similar to those deployed
in
But in part the actions go well beyond that. In Kurdish
Special Forces teams are involved in on-the-ground military target
identification, mapping out Scud and anti-aircraft battery locations. They are
also helping set up, equip and train Kurdish militias and are cooperating
closely with Turkish counterparts engaged in the same activities in Turkoman
regions.
US and British aircraft are probing Iraqi defenses beyond the
no-fly zones close to
In light of these developments, the various "war plans"
bandied about in the US press - with the New York Times and the Washington Post
trying to outdo each other with the latest scoops - are largely irrelevant as
such, whether it's the "Northern Alliance Option" (US troops and
intelligence personnel aiding an attack by opposition forces); the original
"Franks Plan" (massed attack involving some 250,000 troops); the
"inside-out" approach (commando attacks on Baghdad and key Iraqi
command centers first, followed by mopping-up action); or the
"status-quo" or "do-nothing" option of continued
containment of Saddam. Elements of all of these scenarios will eventually be
seen as having been incorporated in the removal of the Iraqi leader.
Equally irrelevant is speculation on the timing (September/October
for the sake of surprise? January/February a la Gulf War to avoid the desert
heat?) of "the" allied attack. Attacks of various kinds are ongoing.
Their intensity and intrusiveness can increase at any time ... or decrease
again. It's a game of options and contingencies, backed by ever increasing
material capabilities; perhaps a game of prodding Saddam into a tactical
mistake or a flight-forward reaction. Earlier this year, a British journalist
asked Bush how exactly he was going to get rid of Saddam Hussein. He replied,
"Wait and see." The journalist, like many of his colleagues, may well
still be waiting - for lack of ability to see that the war is on. Some
high-speed, high-intensity strikes may later be called "The Iraq
War", but it began no later than March.
©2002 Asia Times
Online Co, Ltd. All rights reserved.
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/DH17Ak03.html
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