http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/31/world/middleeast/31missile.html


New York Times
January 30, 2010


U.S. Speeding Up Missile Defenses in Persian Gulf 
By DAVID E. SANGER and ERIC SCHMITT


-Mr. Obama’s national security adviser, Gen. James L. Jones, took an 
unannounced trip to Israel this month, partly to take the temperature of the 
Israeli government and to review both economic and covert programs now under 
way against the Iranian program, according to officials familiar with the 
meeting.
-Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates have bought more than $15 billion in 
American arms in the past two years, including missile defense systems. The 
United States is helping support a plan by Saudi Arabia to triple the size, to 
30,000 people, of a Saudi force that protects the kingdom’s ports, oil 
facilities and water-desalinization plants, a senior military officer said.


WASHINGTON — The Obama administration is accelerating the deployment of new 
defenses against possible Iranian missile attacks in the Persian Gulf, placing 
special ships off the Iranian coast and antimissile systems in at least four 
Arab countries, according to administration and military officials.

The Persian Gulf The deployments come at a critical turning point in President 
Obama’s dealings with Iran....

Mr. Obama spoke of the shift in his State of the Union address, warning of 
“consequences” if Iran continued to defy United Nations demands to stop 
manufacturing nuclear fuel. And Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton 
publicly warned China on Friday that its opposition to sanctions was 
shortsighted. 

The news that the United States is deploying antimissile defenses — including a 
rare public discussion of them by Gen. David H. Petraeus — appears to be part 
of a coordinated administration strategy to increase pressure on Iran.
....
Military officials said that the countries that accepted the defense systems 
were Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Kuwait. They said the 
Kuwaitis had agreed to take the defensive weapons to supplement older, less 
capable models it has had for years. Saudi Arabia and Israel have long had 
similar equipment of their own.

General Petraeus has declined to say who was taking the American equipment, 
probably because many countries in the gulf region are hesitant to be publicly 
identified as accepting American military aid and the troops that come with it. 
In fact, the names of countries where the antimissile systems are deployed are 
classified, but many of them are an open secret.

The general spoke about the deployments at a conference at the Institute for 
the Study of War here on Jan. 22....

General Petraeus said that the acceleration of defensive systems — which began 
when President George W. Bush was in office — included “eight Patriot missile 
batteries, two in each of four countries.” Patriot missiles are capable of 
shooting down short-range offensive missiles. 

He also described a first line of defense: He said the United States was now 
keeping Aegis cruisers on patrol in the Persian Gulf at all times. Those 
cruisers are equipped with advanced radar and antimissile systems designed to 
intercept medium-range missiles....

As Iran’s nuclear program proceeds — more slowly, American intelligence 
officials say, than the United States had once thought — Israel has hinted at 
various times that it might take military action against the country’s military 
facilities unless it is convinced that Mr. Obama and Western allies are 
succeeding in stopping the program. 

Mr. Obama’s national security adviser, Gen. James L. Jones, took an unannounced 
trip to Israel this month, partly to take the temperature of the Israeli 
government and to review both economic and covert programs now under way 
against the Iranian program, according to officials familiar with the meeting.

American officials argue that the willingness of Arab states to take the 
American emplacements, which usually come with a small deployment of American 
soldiers to operate, maintain and protect the equipment, illustrates the 
region’s growing unease about Iran’s ambitions and abilities. 

Gulf countries are also taking steps of their own to harden their defenses. 
Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates have bought more than $15 billion in 
American arms in the past two years, including missile defense systems. The 
United States is helping support a plan by Saudi Arabia to triple the size, to 
30,000 people, of a Saudi force that protects the kingdom’s ports, oil 
facilities and water-desalinization plants, a senior military officer said. The 
Washington Post reported both steps on its Web site on Saturday.

One senior military officer said that General Petraeus had started talking 
openly about the Patriot deployments about a month ago, when it became 
increasingly clear that international efforts toward imposing sanctions against 
Iran faced hurdles....

In discussing the Patriots and missile-shooting ships, General Petraeus’s main 
message has been to reassure allies in the gulf that the United States is 
committed to helping defend the region, said the military officer, who spoke on 
the condition of anonymity because of the delicate nature of the topic. But the 
general’s remarks were also a pointed reminder to the Iranians of American 
resolve, the officer said. 
===========================
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