[CTRL] The Underground Military

2001-05-16 Thread radman

-Caveat Lector-

The Underground Military

William M. Arkin
Special to washingtonpost.com
Monday, May 7, 2001; 12:00 AM

The military facility in Iquitos, Peru is not a U.S. airbase, nor does it
appear in any list of U.S. military facilities. The Americans providing
real-time tracking information to the Peruvian air force are not government
or military personnel.

So, who are the gaggle of Iquitos contractors employed by a company named
Aviation Development Corporation, a company which is located on Maxwell Air
Force base in Montgomery, Alabama, but is not a part of the U.S. Air Force?
Who are the contractors operating a specially outfitted Cessna Citation V
surveillance plane that flies the U.S. flag but does not belong to the U.S.
government? Who are the contractors operating from a hangar built by a
Peruvian company paid by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers?

They are the fighters in our drug war!

The American people are supposed to believe that Peruvian operations to stem
the cocaine flow into the United States are innocuous, but we cannot know
who the players are or what they are up to until disaster strikes. When the
destroyer USS Cole met disaster in Yemen last October, or the Navy EP-3 was
attacked off of Hainan island, we were similarly educated about underground
activities of the U.S. military.

In his election campaign, President Bush vowed to reduce the American
military presence around the world. It's a particularly tough task when much
of the presence isn't acknowledged or official. Taken individually, each
country like Peru or a Yemen may have a justification for secrecy. But when
one adds up all the all the Peru's and Yemen's, it becomes apparent that the
U.S. military is increasingly everywhere and nowhere.
Israel: Capital of Classified Bases

At the same time Peru was in the headlines, there were press reports that
the United States and Israel had conducted an unusual joint military
exercise in the Negev desert. Jane's Defence Weekly called it Israel's
first exercise with the U.S. Air Force. The Jerusalem Post called it a
marked boost in military cooperation. Neither assertion is true, but that
is the problem of an underground military policy. It is hard to know exactly
what is going on.

In fact, the United States and Israel have a regular series of military
exercises, going under the code names Juniper Stallion, Juniper Cobra, Noble
Shirley, and other Juniper variations. A month before March's Juniper
Stallion exercise, another American contingent was in Israel for Juniper
Cobra, a tactical missile defense exercise which included test-firing
Patriot missiles while the U.S. Navy Aegis destroyer USS Porter operated off
the coast. The exercise, perhaps coincidentally, ended just five days before
the February 16 U.S. and British air attacks against Iraqi air defense
sites.

Last year's Juniper Stallion exercise involved the aircraft carrier battle
group USS Eisenhower, and was from March 19-26. Eight U.S. aircraft operated
from Nevatim airfield in Israel and U.S. Navy SEALs went ashore to train
with their Israeli counterparts. During Juniper Stallion 2000, according to
the Eisenhower public affairs office, U.S. aircraft were able to drop live
bombs at two desert ranges in Israel, giving crews valuable experience given
the temporary prohibition from dropping live ordnance on Vieques Island in
Puerto Rico.

Juniper Stallion 99, held in August 1999, was an even more extensive, and
secret, exercise. U.S. Air Force munitions personnel from Italy were
deployed to officially non-existent sites where they inspected and
maintained the $500 million worth of ammunition the United States keeps in
Israel for wartime contingencies. Their bases, called Sites 51, 53, and 54,
don't appear on any map. Their specific locations are classified and highly
sensitive.

And it's not just munitions. The United States has prepositioned vehicles,
military equipment, even a 500-bed hospital, for U.S. Marines, Special
Forces, and Air Force fighter and bomber aircraft at at least six sites in
Israel, all part of what is antiseptically described as U.S.-Israel
strategic cooperation.

Such cooperation may or may not enhance American security, may or may not be
a prudent part of planning to defend a close friend. The extent of U.S.
involvement may or may not be known and understood by U.S. decision-makers
and the Congress. But the reason for all the secrecy is clear: All around
Israel, in Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Oman, and the Gulf states, the U.S.
has newly built up an enormous and yet officially non-existent military
presence.
Nervous Hosts

Here is the web we weave: The Germany-based 22nd Fighter Squadron, the main
U.S. Air Force unit to participate in the March Juniper Stallion exercise in
Israel, returned from a 90-day tour in Saudi Arabia in late November. The
squadron's mission flying the southern Iraqi no-fly zone during its Saudi
deployment warranted a press release and a couple of stories in military

[CTRL] The Underground Military

2001-05-09 Thread Nurev Ind.

-Caveat Lector-

The Underground Military
http://washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A44024-2001May4.html

William M. Arkin
Special to washingtonpost.com
Monday, May 7, 2001; 12:00 AM

The military facility in Iquitos, Peru is not a U.S. airbase, nor does it
appear in any list of U.S. military facilities. The Americans providing
real-time tracking information to the Peruvian air force are not government
or military personnel.

So, who are the gaggle of Iquitos contractors employed by a company named
Aviation Development Corporation, a company which is located on Maxwell Air
Force base in Montgomery, Alabama, but is not a part of the U.S. Air Force?
Who are the contractors operating a specially outfitted Cessna Citation V
surveillance plane that flies the U.S. flag but does not belong to the U.S.
government? Who are the contractors operating from a hangar built by a
Peruvian company paid by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers?

They are the fighters in our drug war!

The American people are supposed to believe that Peruvian operations to
stem
the cocaine flow into the United States are innocuous, but we cannot know
who the players are or what they are up to until disaster strikes. When the
destroyer USS Cole met disaster in Yemen last October, or the Navy EP-3 was
attacked off of Hainan island, we were similarly educated about underground
activities of the U.S. military.

In his election campaign, President Bush vowed to reduce the American
military presence around the world. It's a particularly tough task when
much
of the presence isn't acknowledged or official. Taken individually, each
country like Peru or a Yemen may have a justification for secrecy. But when
one adds up all the all the Peru's and Yemen's, it becomes apparent that
the
U.S. military is increasingly everywhere and nowhere.

Israel: Capital of Classified Bases


At the same time Peru was in the headlines, there were press reports that
the United States and Israel had conducted an unusual joint military
exercise in the Negev desert. Jane's Defence Weekly called it Israel's
first exercise with the U.S. Air Force. The Jerusalem Post called it a
marked boost in military cooperation. Neither assertion is true, but that
is the problem of an underground military policy. It is hard to know
exactly
what is going on.

In fact, the United States and Israel have a regular series of military
exercises, going under the code names Juniper Stallion, Juniper Cobra,
Noble
Shirley, and other Juniper variations. A month before March's Juniper
Stallion exercise, another American contingent was in Israel for Juniper
Cobra, a tactical missile defense exercise which included test-firing
Patriot missiles while the U.S. Navy Aegis destroyer USS Porter operated
off
the coast. The exercise, perhaps coincidentally, ended just five days
before
the February 16 U.S. and British air attacks against Iraqi air defense
sites.

Last year's Juniper Stallion exercise involved the aircraft carrier battle
group USS Eisenhower, and was from March 19-26. Eight U.S. aircraft
operated
from Nevatim airfield in Israel and U.S. Navy SEALs went ashore to train
with their Israeli counterparts. During Juniper Stallion 2000, according to
the Eisenhower public affairs office, U.S. aircraft were able to drop live
bombs at two desert ranges in Israel, giving crews valuable experience
given
the temporary prohibition from dropping live ordnance on Vieques Island in
Puerto Rico.

Juniper Stallion 99, held in August 1999, was an even more extensive, and
secret, exercise. U.S. Air Force munitions personnel from Italy were
deployed to officially non-existent sites where they inspected and
maintained the $500 million worth of ammunition the United States keeps in
Israel for wartime contingencies. Their bases, called Sites 51, 53, and 54,
don't appear on any map. Their specific locations are classified and highly
sensitive.

And it's not just munitions. The United States has prepositioned
vehicles,
military equipment, even a 500-bed hospital, for U.S. Marines, Special
Forces, and Air Force fighter and bomber aircraft at at least six sites in
Israel, all part of what is antiseptically described as U.S.-Israel
strategic cooperation.

Such cooperation may or may not enhance American security, may or may not
be
a prudent part of planning to defend a close friend. The extent of U.S.
involvement may or may not be known and understood by U.S. decision-makers
and the Congress. But the reason for all the secrecy is clear: All around
Israel, in Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Oman, and the Gulf states, the U.S.
has newly built up an enormous and yet officially non-existent military
presence.

Nervous Hosts


Here is the web we weave: The Germany-based 22nd Fighter Squadron, the main
U.S. Air Force unit to participate in the March Juniper Stallion exercise
in
Israel, returned from a 90-day tour in Saudi Arabia in late November. The
squadron's mission flying the southern Iraqi no-fly zone during its Saudi
deployment 

[CTRL] The Underground Military

2001-05-09 Thread William Shannon
http://washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A44024-2001May4.html



The Underground Military

William M. Arkin

Special to washingtonpost.com

Monday, May 7, 2001; 12:00 AM

 The military facility in Iquitos, Peru is not a U.S. airbase, nor does it
appear in any list of U.S. military facilities. The Americans providing
real-time tracking information to the Peruvian air force are not government
or military personnel.

So, who are the gaggle of Iquitos "contractors" employed by a company named
Aviation Development Corporation, a company which is located on Maxwell Air
Force base in Montgomery, Alabama, but is not a part of the U.S. Air Force?
Who are the contractors operating a specially outfitted Cessna Citation V
surveillance plane that flies the U.S. flag but does not belong to the U.S.
government? Who are the contractors operating from a hangar built by a
Peruvian company paid by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers?

They are the fighters in our drug war!

The American people are supposed to believe that Peruvian operations to stem
the cocaine flow into the United States are innocuous, but we cannot know who
the players are or what they are up to until disaster strikes. When the
destroyer USS Cole met disaster in Yemen last October, or the Navy EP-3 was
attacked off of Hainan island, we were similarly educated about underground
activities of the U.S. military.

In his election campaign, President Bush vowed to reduce the American
military presence around the world. It's a particularly tough task when much
of the "presence" isn't acknowledged or official. Taken individually, each
country like Peru or a Yemen may have a justification for secrecy. But when
one adds up all the all the Peru's and Yemen's, it becomes apparent that the
U.S. military is increasingly everywhere and nowhere.

Israel: Capital of Classified Bases

At the same time Peru was in the headlines, there were press reports that the
United States and Israel had conducted an unusual joint military exercise in
the Negev desert. Jane's Defence Weekly called it Israel's "first" exercise
with the U.S. Air Force. The Jerusalem Post called it a "marked boost in
military cooperation." Neither assertion is true, but that is the problem of
an underground military policy. It is hard to know exactly what is going on.

In fact, the United States and Israel have a regular series of military
exercises, going under the code names Juniper Stallion, Juniper Cobra, Noble
Shirley, and other Juniper variations. A month before March's Juniper
Stallion exercise, another American contingent was in Israel for Juniper
Cobra, a tactical missile defense exercise which included test-firing Patriot
missiles while the U.S. Navy Aegis destroyer USS Porter operated off the
coast. The exercise, perhaps coincidentally, ended just five days before the
February 16 U.S. and British air attacks against Iraqi air defense sites.

Last year's Juniper Stallion exercise involved the aircraft carrier battle
group USS Eisenhower, and was from March 19-26. Eight U.S. aircraft operated
from Nevatim airfield in Israel and U.S. Navy SEALs went ashore to train with
their Israeli counterparts. During Juniper Stallion 2000, according to the
Eisenhower public affairs office, U.S. aircraft were able to drop live bombs
at two desert ranges in Israel, giving crews valuable experience given the
temporary prohibition from dropping live ordnance on Vieques Island in Puerto
Rico.

Juniper Stallion 99, held in August 1999, was an even more extensive, and
secret, exercise. U.S. Air Force munitions personnel from Italy were deployed
to officially non-existent sites where they inspected and maintained the $500
million worth of ammunition the United States keeps in Israel for wartime
contingencies. Their bases, called Sites 51, 53, and 54, don't appear on any
map. Their specific locations are classified and highly sensitive.

And it's not just munitions. The United States has "prepositioned" vehicles,
military equipment, even a 500-bed hospital, for U.S. Marines, Special
Forces, and Air Force fighter and bomber aircraft at at least six sites in
Israel, all part of what is antiseptically described as "U.S.-Israel
strategic cooperation."

Such cooperation may or may not enhance American security, may or may not be
a prudent part of planning to defend a close friend. The extent of U.S.
involvement may or may not be known and understood by U.S. decision-makers
and the Congress. But the reason for all the secrecy is clear: All around
Israel, in Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Oman, and the Gulf states, the U.S.
has newly built up an enormous and yet officially non-existent military
presence.

Nervous Hosts

Here is the web we weave: The Germany-based 22nd Fighter Squadron, the main
U.S. Air Force unit to participate in the March Juniper Stallion exercise in
Israel, returned from a 90-day tour in Saudi Arabia in late November. The
squadron's mission flying the southern Iraqi "no-fly" zone during its Saudi
deployment