>From NY times International.

American Arsenal in the Mideast Is Being Built Up to Confront Saddam Hussein
By ERIC SCHMITT and THOM SHANKER


ASHINGTON, Aug. 18 - In the first tangible signs of a logistical buildup
around Iraq, the Pentagon is sending weapons and other supplies to the
Middle East that could be a critical part of the war stocks if President
Bush decides to attack President Saddam Hussein, Defense Department and
military officials have said in recent interviews.

Advertisement




The Pentagon has hired two giant cargo ships to carry armored vehicles and
helicopters, among other war mat�riel, and eight additional cargo ships
capable of carrying ammunition, tanks and ambulances.

The Air Force is stockpiling weapons, ammunition and spare parts, including
airplane engines, at depots in the Persian Gulf region and in the United
States. Arsenals of Air Force and Navy precision-guided weapons, which
proved devastating in Afghanistan, should be fully replenished by autumn,
military officials said.

Senior Pentagon officials say the logistical movements do not represent a
stealth deployment and should not be interpreted as evidence that a campaign
against Iraq is imminent, or even a certainty.

Indeed, some of the movements now under way were ordered months or even
years ago. But taken together, the steps suggest that those responsible for
arming America's fighting forces in time of war are beginning serious
planning.

"We don't know when the next contingency might be, but we want to get this
in the hands of the war fighters," Gen. Lester L. Lyles, chief of the Air
Force Mat�riel Command, said in an interview.

Of course, with the United States having just waged war in the region, a
certain amount of replenishment is to be expected. But Defense Department
and military officials who described the logistical plans indicated that a
public discussion of the growing American arsenal confronting Mr. Hussein
fit an emerging information strategy to unnerve Iraq ahead of possible comba
t and weaken it in case of war, as well as reassure skittish allies in the
region.

The Pentagon is contracting for one ship to move troop-carrying combat
vehicles from Europe and the United States to the Persian Gulf to join
equipment for four armored brigades already stored there. Another will carry
vehicles, helicopters and ammunition to a Red Sea port for a military
exercise this year.

The Defense Department also has awarded a contract to Maersk Line to operate
eight cargo ships capable of carrying ammunition and tanks. The ships will
be positioned near the Indian Ocean island of Diego Garcia, home of a
British base used by the United States as a staging point.

Senior officials acknowledge that the shipments could support war options
that Gen. Tommy R. Franks, the chief of the military's Central Command, has
recently presented to Mr. Bush.

Logistics planners are closely tracking the various war options, officials
said. The mundane task of setting aside food, fuel and weaponry for troops
is essential for sustaining any major military operation. It takes time, and
to avoid tipping adversaries off about a military operation, Pentagon
officials say, it is prudent to start the flow of supplies now, even without
specific orders.

Indications of American resolve and advance placement of weapons are
intended to reassure skittish gulf allies and Iraqi opposition groups,
officials said, and to convince Iraqi officers and their troops that the
Americans would win - especially the Iraqis responsible for weapons of mass
destruction and the missiles or artillery to deliver them. American planners
hope that Iraqi officers will not pull the trigger after calculating the
punishment awaiting them if they unleash weapons on behalf of a crumbling
government.

Military transportation planners say the magnitude of the air and sea lift
of United States troops and equipment to the Middle East would be daunting:
7,000 miles by air and 12,000 by sea from the East Coast, and more from the
West Coast.

"Logistically it won't be a cakewalk," said Gus Pagonis, a retired
three-star Army general who was chief of logistics during the gulf war of
1991. "To feed, house, equip and medically support 250,000 troops is not an
easy task, but it's not insurmountable."

Plans for positioning American military equipment in the gulf began just two
months after the 1991 war ended, military officials noted.

Today, equipment for two reinforced Army armored brigades is on the ground
in the region, and the 9,000 troops to use it could be airlifted and ready
for action in 96 hours. The armaments are stored in 37 warehouses, each
averaging 60,000 square feet, in Kuwait and Qatar.

Each of those countries holds in storage about 115 M-1A1 Abrams tanks, 60
M-2A2 Bradley fighting vehicles, 100 armored personnel carriers, 25 mortars
and 20 155-millimeter howitzers, said a spokesman for Army forces assigned
to the Central Command.

Ammunition is stored in both countries, with field artillery rounds in
Kuwait. The Kuwait warehouses also hold 30 days' worth of food and fuel.

Equipment for another armored brigade from the Army and one from the Marine
Corps - another 9,000 troops - is afloat on ships in the region, officials
said.

The Kuwait site has an 84-bed combat support hospital in storage, and
Bahrain has a 500-bed field hospital and a 200-bed combat support hospital
in storage, the spokesman said. Two Patriot antimissile batteries are in
Kuwait and two more in Saudi Arabia.

The military would need substantially more equipment, though, to support the
concepts for operations against Iraq that have been presented to Mr. Bush.

Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumseld inspected some of those locations
himself this summer when he conferred with regional leaders and visited
American forces in those states. In Qatar, where just over 3,300 American
military personnel are based, Mr. Rumsfeld toured the sprawling air base at
Al Udeid, a significant hub in the American-led campaign against terror.

Al Udeid has a fleet of Air Force KC-10 and KC-135 refueling tankers that
kept attack jets and bombers, based elsewhere in the region, in the air as
they carried out the campaign over Afghanistan. It also has Air Force
construction engineers and a smattering of Army personnel. The base has
runways long enough to handle any aircraft.

New hangars have been built into the chalk-colored desert, each disguised as
a sand dune to blend in with the Qatari badlands and foil the radar of any
adversary's missile.

Mr. Rumsfeld also visited Bahrain, home to the the Fifth Fleet and about
4,200 American military personnel, and greeted troops at Camp Doha, an Army
base in Kuwait about 35 miles from the Iraqi border.

In all, about 9,000 members of the American military are based in Kuwait,
including crews for the planes that enforce the no-flight zone over southern
Iraq. To support the more than 500,000 American troops in the gulf war, the
military consumed 1.5 billion gallons of fuel. Troops and equipment consumed
nine million gallons of water a day. The military shipped more than 112,000
tanks, trucks and other vehicles. American forces used 95,000 tons of bombs,
missiles and other munitions.

Senior officers say the military has improved its logistics network in the
decade since the war with Iraq. "We've fine-tuned that a lot," said Vice
Adm. Dennis V. McGinn, the deputy chief of naval operations for warfare
requirements and programs.








Reply via email to