From: "Sandeep Vaidya (LMI)" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


Two U.S. carriers now in Persian Gulf
By Jamie McIntyre
CNN Military Affairs Correspondent
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Pentagon sources confirmed Wednesday that a second U.S.
aircraft carrier has arrived in the Persian Gulf in what Navy officials
describe as a routine rotation.
The second U.S. aircraft carrier doubles, at least briefly, the available
sea-based firepower at a time when the Pentagon is contemplating airstrikes
against Iraq's air defenses.
Sources told CNN the USS Enterprise arrived in the southern Gulf on
Wednesday and will soon join the USS Constellation, which is about to end
its scheduled tour of duty.
The rotation of the two carriers is expected to take about a week, according
to Navy officials. The USS Enterprise will be joined by its slower escort
ships within a few days, sources said.
Meanwhile, senior Bush administration officials met at the White House
Wednesday to discuss Iraq policy, and sources told CNN the United State is
making plans for to respond to Iraq's stepped-up campaign to shoot down a
U.S. or British plane enforcing the no-fly zones.
Iraq appears to be bracing for an attack. Over the past week it dispersed
some missiles, radars and aircraft into a more defensive posture, according
to Pentagon sources.
That includes moving some radars near Baghdad above the 33rd parallel,
outside the southern no-fly zone where the U.S. bombs with some frequency.
Pentagon officials would not confirm details of the planning, including the
scale or timing of an attack.
"We reserve the right to strike targets at a time and a place in a manner of
our choosing," Pentagon spokesman Rear Adm. Craig Quigley said Tuesday.
The last time the United States attacked above the 33rd parallel was on
February 16, 2001, when more than 60 U.S. and British planes, including
two-dozen strike aircraft, attacked five targets that included more than 20
radars.
Quigley said Tuesday that President Saddam Hussein "is trying his darndest
to bring down a coalition aircraft."
He said in the southern no-fly zone there have been 370 "provocations" by
Iraqi gunners so far this year, compared to only 211 in 2000.
The Pentagon defines a "provocation" as an incident in which Iraqi air
defenses fires artillery or missiles at coalition planes, or targets them
with hostile radar.
In the northern no-fly zone there have been 62 "provocations" so far this
year, compared to 145 in 2000.
There have been no U.S. bombing raids on Iraq since July 17, when U.S.
planes hit an anti-aircraft site in southern Iraq.
President Bush was at the Pentagon for a briefing Wednesday, but senior
Pentagon officials said the topic was nuclear force levels, not Iraq.


_________________________________________________
 
KOMINFORM
P.O. Box 66
00841 Helsinki
Phone +358-40-7177941
Fax +358-9-7591081
http://www.kominf.pp.fi
 
General class struggle news:
 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
subscribe mails to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Geopolitical news:
 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
subscribe: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
__________________________________________________

Reply via email to