HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
---------------------------

1) Turkish Parliamentary Vote Could Delay US Invasion
Of Iraq By A Week; New NATO Bases From Black Sea To
Central Asia To Be Used For Iraq, Future, Wars
2) Bulgarian, Romanian Black Sea Bases Are New US-NATO
Outposts For Expansion Into Middle East, Caucasus

[The second feature, by the notorious Ian Traynor, who
has served NATO's and imperialism's interests
enthusiastically in his Balkans propaganda over the
years, asserts or implies that the conversion of the
Western Black Sea area into a tri-continental attack
base is a 'reaction' to recent German demurrals on the
Iraq war and in so doing is - characteristically given
its author's history - camouflaging US and NATO
long-term plans, going back at least as far as the
NATO fiftieth anniversary summit in April of 1999, to
expand NATO into the Balkans, the Black Sea region,
the Caspian Sea Basin, Central Asia, the Southern and
Eastern rims of the Mediterranean Sea and south into
the Red Sea and the Horn of Africa. For just such
purposes as are now becoming apparent.]



-The Americans on the beach at what has been dubbed
Camp Sarafovo are the first foreign military to
commandeer Burgas airport since the Luftwaffe seized
it in 1943. 
-"Our territory could be a very good place for new
bases because it is close to the Middle East." 





http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,3604,907004,00.html


Turkish vote could delay invasion by at least a week 
Julian Borger in Washington, Owen Bowcott and Jonny
Dymond in Istanbul
Tuesday March 4, 2003
The Guardian


-The US could fly light airborne troops into Kurdish
airfields from Cyprus, Central Asia, Bulgaria or
Kuwait, but they would have no armour to take on the
Iraqi divisions in the north, and would have to rely
on air support. 


The Turkish parliament's vote against offering basing
rights to US troops along the Iraqi border threatens
to derail the Pentagon's war plans. Even if it is
reversed this week, it has set an invasion date back
by more than a week, defence officials and military
analysts said yesterday. 

Military trucks and jeeps due to head east towards the
Iraqi border were prevented from leaving the port of
Iskenderun after Saturday's vote, and are now stuck on
the dockside. Meanwhile, up to 40 US transport ships,
most carrying tanks and other equipment for an
infantry division, are sitting in the eastern
Mediterranean waiting for orders, a Pentagon official
said. 

"A decision has to be made and orders have to be given
more or less now," he said, adding that there was hope
in the Pentagon that there would be another vote by
Thursday. 

However, Turkey's ruling Justice and Development party
(AKP) offered little encouragement to the White House.
"We are analysing the situation and we will see what
happens in the next few days," the prime minister,
Abdullah Gul, said. 

Political observers in Turkey predicted that the AKP
would not bring a revised deal, permitting deployment
on Turkish soil of 62,000 US soldiers, before
parliament until next week at the earliest. 

The White House spokesman, Ari Fleischer, insisted the
US had several other military options. 

The US could fly light airborne troops into Kurdish
airfields from Cyprus, Central Asia, Bulgaria or
Kuwait, but they would have no armour to take on the
Iraqi divisions in the north, and would have to rely
on air support. 

The elite 101st airborne and 82nd airborne divisions
have other tasks under the original plan, such as
securing airfields, dams and oilfields, as well as
finding Scud missiles and weapons of mass destruction.


"The only other option is to blow through extra heavy
from the south and race up to the north," said Daniel
Goure, a military analyst at the Lexington Institute
in Virginia. 

The top US commander in Europe, General James Jones,
said that the ships carrying heavy armour for the 4th
infantry division could turn south and head to the
Gulf. 

The Kuwaiti defence minister, Sheikh Jaber al-Hamad
al-Sabah, said the country would consider accepting US
troops which Washington intended to deploy from
Turkey. 

But the vast naval convoy would face two severe
bottlenecks, the first at the Suez canal. 

Loren Thompson, a Pentagon consultant, said the delay
would mean a complete change of plan for the US
commander, General Tommy Franks. 

"This is not a little tweak," he said. "The concept of
a northern front was integral to the campaign in
dividing Iraqi forces and isolating Baghdad. Without
Turkey, there would be no large northern front." 

Staging an armoured assault from Jordan would
represent a better alternative, but Jordan has refused
to allow the use of its territory as a launch pad for
large numbers of troops. 

Whether Turkey relents or not, it now appears that the
US military will not reach peak readiness until the
second half of March, raising the prospect of having
to fight in Iraq's hot and turbulent spring. 
-------------------------------------------------------
http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,3604,907009,00.html

Payback time for America's allies as GIs set up camp
in the new Europe 
Bulgaria finds itself in the frontline of US military
build-up

Ian Traynor in Burgas, Bulgaria
Tuesday March 4, 2003
The Guardian

-[T]he men of the US air force's 409th air
expeditionary group are pioneers in a mission that is
reconfiguring decades of the US military presence in
Europe and redrawing Europe's military map. 
-Yesterday afternoon a brace of KC-10A Extender jets,
the biggest air tankers in the USAF, landed at Burgas
to play a key role in the campaign against Saddam
Hussein. The two tanker jets, capable of carrying more
than 160,000kg of fuel, are to be followed by at least
14 others. 
-"No one asks us whether we like it or not," said
Mincho Minchev, the Bulgarian airport's technical
director. "We're just under orders to service the US
aircraft. We're not told what's going on, just on a
daily basis what will be arriving." The Americans on
the beach at what has been dubbed Camp Sarafovo are
the first foreign military to commandeer Burgas
airport since the Luftwaffe seized it in 1943. 
-Just up the Black sea coast in neighbouring Romania,
hundreds of US troops as well as planes and
helicopters have been pouring into an air base beside
the port of Constanta over the past 10 days. Last
November Washington invited Bulgaria and Romania to
join Nato. 
-General James Jones, confirmed that Washington was
looking at bases in Bulgaria, Romania and Poland for
mobile and more flexible deployments of US forces in
about a year's time. 



On a beach by the grey waters of the Black sea, scores
of young American airmen are racing against the clock
to get ready for war. Surrounded by Kalashnikov-toting
Bulgarian military police, fenced in by red corrugated
iron, and shrouded by a pine grove, the men of the US
air force's 409th air expeditionary group are pioneers
in a mission that is reconfiguring decades of the US
military presence in Europe and redrawing Europe's
military map. 

"We're in a rush," said Sergeant Jason Smith, just
arrived from Charleston in North Carolina. "Our main
role is to support the global war on terror. And we're
preparing for future operations." 

Since last Tuesday night when two US Hercules
transport aircraft dropped out of the sky from
Ramstein base in Germany on to Bulgaria's Burgas
airport, 200 metres from the Americans' beachside
encampment, the airmen, many barely out of their
teens, have been working frantically to get Burgas fit
for the US war machine. 

The battleship-grey transports - huge C-5 Galaxies,
C-141s and the C-130 Hercules - have been landing
almost every day over the past week, disgorging hot
dogs and Coke, computers and secure phone systems,
huge tarpaulins for a "tent city", showers and tanks
of water, and more troops and pilots. 

Yesterday afternoon a brace of KC-10A Extender jets,
the biggest air tankers in the USAF, landed at Burgas
to play a key role in the campaign against Saddam
Hussein. The two tanker jets, capable of carrying more
than 160,000kg of fuel, are to be followed by at least
14 others. 

Orders


"No one asks us whether we like it or not," said
Mincho Minchev, the Bulgarian airport's technical
director. "We're just under orders to service the US
aircraft. We're not told what's going on, just on a
daily basis what will be arriving." The Americans on
the beach at what has been dubbed Camp Sarafovo are
the first foreign military to commandeer Burgas
airport since the Luftwaffe seized it in 1943. 

But they are the thin end of a wedge of a US military
project that is appropriating strategic assets in a
vital area that Donald Rumsfeld, the US defence
secretary, terms the "new Europe". 

"If things go on as they are right now, there will be
a lot more of this," said Sgt Smith, at 27 a nine-year
veteran of the USAF. 

Just up the Black sea coast in neighbouring Romania,
hundreds of US troops as well as planes and
helicopters have been pouring into an air base beside
the port of Constanta over the past 10 days. Last
November Washington invited Bulgaria and Romania to
join Nato. With war looming, it is, perhaps earlier
than expected, payback time for the impoverished,
corrupt Balkan states whose proximity to the Middle
East have boosted their value to Pentagon planners.
Suddenly the talk of eastern Europe is of the
Americans snubbing pacifist Germany and of redeploying
their vast military presence there to the cheaper,
more welcoming, and more passive "new European"
countries of Poland, Romania and Bulgaria. 

With not a single vote cast against the decision in
parliament in Sofia, the Bulgarian government last
month offered the US the Burgas base, the Sarafovo
camp (a holiday complex for Bulgarian army officers),
and more in the pipeline. "We're ready to negotiate
over locating American bases in Bulgaria," said
Lubomir Todorov, the foreign ministry spokesman. "Our
territory could be a very good place for new bases
because it is close to the Middle East." 

A senior western diplomat in Sofia said: "There's
going to be a lot of activity here. It's a convenient
location." 

Just back from Washington last Thursday, the Bulgarian
defence minister, Nikolai Svinarov, announced:
"There's a possibility of providing four or five bases
to the United States." The Romanians have already
offered the port of Constanta, the centre of the
national oil industry, as well as the country's air
bases. 

In Poland, derelict Warsaw pact garrisons are being
dusted down by enthusiastic locals who think the GIs
are coming their way after spending a couple of
generations in Germany. In Stuttgart yesterday, the
top US commander in Europe, General James Jones,
confirmed that Washington was looking at bases in
Bulgaria, Romania and Poland for mobile and more
flexible deployments of US forces in about a year's
time. 

He denied that the move was a "kneejerk reaction"
aimed at punishing Germany for its anti-war stance,
but was part of a reordering of US strategic planning.
"This is not about building up eastern Europe in the
same way we built up western Europe after world war
two," he said 

Public support for the Americans is soaring in Poland
and Romania. In Bulgaria, which was so cravenly loyal
to the Kremlin in the Soviet era that it was nicknamed
the Soviet Union's 16th republic, opinion is more
ambivalent. 

There was a small anti-American demonstration in
Burgas a couple of weeks ago and locals fear that the
US airmen will wreck the Black sea tourist business
that is its lifeblood. "Everyone's afraid. Who wants
this?" said Mr Minchev. 

Oil


But the opposition is passive. The government is
committed to backing the Americans. Burgas is only an
hour's drive from the Turkish border, a couple of
hours' flying time from Baghdad, and home to the
country's largest oil refinery with big money to be
made from supplying the fuel that the Stratotankers
will use. 

The base is also to be used for secret operations. "It
will be mostly refuelling operations. But I expect a
more intense exploitation of this base," Mr Todorov
said. 

Bulgaria is additionally valuable to the US. It is the
only one of the 13 east European countries that have
signed declarations of support for Washington to be
currently sitting on the UN security council. The
declarations infuriated France and Germany - old
Europe in Mr Rumsfeld's description. 

Washington can count on Bulgaria, as well as Britain
and Spain, to support it on the new UN resolution on
Iraq which aims to unleash a war. If Germany and
France deride the east Europeans as the "new vassals",
take the view that once a (Soviet) satellite, always a
satellite, and Paris warns Bulgaria that it is
imperilling its chances of joining the EU, the east
Europeans are sulking but unrepentant. 

Their history is that of being squeezed and invaded by
the rival big powers. Just when they thought they were
safe within the shelter of the west by getting entry
tickets to Nato and the EU, they are being squeezed
yet again between Europe and America over Iraq. "It's
not fair," Mr Todorov said. In Burgas, the young
Americans appear to be digging in for the long haul,
the vanguard of a new stage of the Pax Americana. 



__________________________________________________
Do you Yahoo!?
Yahoo! Tax Center - forms, calculators, tips, more
http://taxes.yahoo.com/

---------------------------
ANTI-NATO INFORMATION LIST

==^================================================================
This email was sent to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

EASY UNSUBSCRIBE click here: http://topica.com/u/?a84x2u.bdn7KI.YXJjaGl2
Or send an email to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

TOPICA - Start your own email discussion group. FREE!
http://www.topica.com/partner/tag02/create/index2.html
==^================================================================

Reply via email to