News

American Forces Press Service

U.S. Strikes Aimed at Iraqi Weapons of Mass Destruction

 


 By Jim Garamone

 
American Forces Press Service  17 December 1998 




 WASHINGTON -- President Clinton ordered a "strong and sustained" 

 air attack on Iraq Dec. 16 in response to continued Iraqi 

 attempts to build weapons of mass destruction.

 

 Tomahawk cruise missiles streaked toward Baghdad at 5 p.m. EST 

 to start Operation Desert Fox. Defense Secretary William S. 

 Cohen said U.S. goals are to "degrade" Iraq's military 

 capability, to stop Saddam Hussein from threatening his 

 neighbors, to strike at facilities engaged in making weapons of 

 mass destruction and to deprive Hussein of the means of 

 delivering those weapons. 

 

 British airmen also joined in the strikes.

 

 Cohen said he had ordered an air expeditionary wing and more 

 ground troops to the Persian Gulf region as a precaution. 

 Pentagon officials said the deployment order has been signed and 

 about 90 Air Force and Marine Corps aircraft will soon be 

 operating in the region. Deploying Army units include a brigade 

 from Fort Stewart, Ga.; Army Patriot missile batteries from Fort 

 Bliss, Texas, and Fort Bragg, N.C.; and a light infantry 

 battalion from Fort Drum, N.Y.

 

 The new U.S. forces will join 24,100 other service members 

 already stationed in the region. There are 201 U.S. aircraft in 

 the area, including 15 B-52H bombers based at Diego Garcia, in 

 the Indian Ocean. The aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson and its 

 battle group are scheduled to arrive in the Gulf Dec. 18.

 

 Pentagon officials said eight Navy ships started the strikes by 

 launching Tomahawk missiles. Army Gen. Henry Shelton, chairman 

 of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said strikes will be flown by the 

 U.S. Air Force and Royal Air Force pilots flying from bases in 

 the area and naval aviators from the USS Enterprise.

 

 Cohen said the president agreed with advisers: "We wanted to 

 strike quickly with no more warning, no more carrots for Saddam 

 and no chance to prepare for the attacks."

 

 The attacks followed a Dec. 15 report by chief U.N. arms 

 inspector Richard Butler that said Iraq's compliance with U.N. 

 resolutions had worsened since the U.N.-Iraqi confrontation in 

 November. U.S. planes had been in the air to strike Iraq Nov. 14 

 when Saddam agreed to abide completely by U.N. resolutions.

 

 Shelton said planning for another U.S. attack started Nov. 15. 

 "We assumed a worst-case scenario [about compliance]," he said. 

 He said the timing of the attack had to wait on Butler's report.

 

 "Frankly, we thought the report would be mixed," Cohen said. 

 "But in all five areas covered, Iraq had gotten worse."

 

 Cohen and Shelton were not specific about the attack. Shelton 

 said strikes generally would hit transport, air defense sites, 

 and command and control facilities. "We're going after 

 everything [involved with weapons of mass destruction] from 

 transport to manufacturing to delivery," Shelton said.

 

 He said U.S. forces will do all they can to avoid civilian 

 casualties, but said there will be some. 

 

 Pentagon officials estimate the Iraqis have 430,000 active duty 

 troops and 650,000 in reserve. About 17,000 Iraqi soldiers are 

 involved with air defense and the Iraqi air force still has 

 about 310 planes.

 

 

http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Dec1998/n12171998_9812172.html