http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/us-deploys-low-flying-attack-planes-in-libya/2011/03/26/AF9grPqB_story.html

U.S. deploys low-flying attack planes in Libya
 
/ ASSOCIATED PRESS - An AC-130 gunship is shown in this undated photo provided 
by the U.S. Air Force. 

By Greg Jaffe and Karen DeYoung, Monday, March 28, 7:10 PM
The U.S. military dramatically stepped up its assault on Libyan government 
ground forces over the weekend, launching its first missions with AC-130 flying 
gunships and A-10 attack aircraft designed to strike enemy ground troops and 
supply convoys.




The use of the aircraft, during days of heavy fighting in which the momentum 
seemed to swing in favor of the rebels, demonstrated how allied military forces 
have been drawn deeper into the chaotic fight in Libya. A mission that 
initially seemed to revolve around establishing a no-fly zone has become 
focused on halting advances by government ground forces in and around key 
coastal cities.

The AC-130s, which fly low and slow over the battlefield and are typically more 
vulnerable to enemy fire than fast-moving fighter jets, were deployed only 
after a week of sustained coalition attacks on Libyan government air defenses 
and radar sites. These aircraft, armed with heavy machine guns and cannons that 
rake the ground, allow strikes on dug-in Libyan ground forces and convoys in 
closer proximity to civilians.

The planes are being used to step up pressure on Libyan ground troops, who have 
retreated from the rebel's advance and fortified around several cities east of 
Tripoli, the capital. "Our strategy continues to be to pressure them where we 
think it's going to give us the best effect," said Vice Adm. William Gortney, 
director of the Pentagon's Joint Staff, referring to the use of the new 
aircraft. "The number of the strike sorties that you saw, I think, is a direct 
result of that."

Gortney emphasized that the military was not using the planes to facilitate a 
rebel advance. The Washington Post learned of their deployment last week but 
withheld reporting the information until their first missions at the request of 
U.S. military officials.

Military officials consider AC-130s and A-10s well suited to attacks in 
built-up areas, although their use has led to civilian deaths. Unlike fighter 
jets and bombers, which typically carry 500- or 1,000-pound bombs, the AC-130s 
and A-10s deliver more discriminate but still devastating machine-gun fire. 
"They offer weapons that you can meter against a much smaller area and not risk 
as much collateral damage," said retired Air Force Lt. Gen. David A. Deptula, 
who played a key role in overseeing the initial U.S. attack on Afghanistan in 
2002.

AC-130s were used to great effect during the two U.S. offensives in Fallujah, a 
stronghold of the insurgent group al-Qaeda in Iraq in the early days of the 
Iraq war. In Afghanistan, the military considers them particularly effective 
against entrenched militants, and commanders have frequently complained that 
they are in too short supply. The gunships, developed from a Hercules C-130 
transport plane for use in Vietnam, put pilots at greater risk than fighter 
jets, but they have been used in virtually every U.S. military combat operation 
since then.

In Libya, "we are determined to step up the mission, to attack his tanks and 
[troop] columns every day until he withdraws," a French official said of Libyan 
leader Moammar Gaddafi and the forces loyal to him.

The AC-130s, which are flying from a base in Italy, were requested by Gen. 
Carter Ham, the senior U.S. general overseeing the operation, and are likely to 
continue flying over Libya in the coming days as allied forces attempt to 
increase the pressure on Gaddafi's ground forces.

"The longer it lasts, the more danger of civilian casualties," said a Western 
diplomat whose country is involved in the attacks. He warned that one errant 
missile strike against a hospital or a house full of children could have a 
deeply polarizing effect on the fragile alliance of NATO and Arab nations.

The tougher and more risky mission to stop Gaddafi's ground troops from 
attacking key cities has quickly overshadowed the less challenging task of 
stopping the Libyan dictator from launching his aircraft to attack rebels. The 
ground attack mission also opened up some rifts among coalition partners in 
NATO and Arab nations, which were reluctant to support attacks that could cause 
civilian casualties. And it has led some U.S. lawmakers to accuse the Obama 
administration of inserting the U.S. military in the middle of a complex ground 
fight between rebels and loyalist forces without a clear exit strategy.

On Monday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said strikes on Gaddafi's 
forces would amount to taking sides in what he called a civil war. He said such 
attacks would breach a U.N. mandate authorizing intervention in Libya that was 
initially envisaged as establishing a no-fly zone only to protect civilians.

In discussions that began in late February, NATO planners focused primarily on 
providing humanitarian support, enforcing an arms embargo and establishing the 
no-fly zone to prevent Gaddafi from using his aircraft to attack his people, 
according to a senior NATO diplomat.

Separately, the United States, Britain and France made preparations for 
stopping a ground assault by Libyan forces. There was little support within 
President Obama's national security team for a mission that revolved solely 
around a no-fly zone seen as likely to do too little to protect civilians 
against Gaddafi's forces.

Some administration officials, with memories of enforcing no-fly zones over 
Bosnia while civilians were being exterminated on the ground, said the United 
States should not participate in such a limited operation. At the , there was 
concern about plunging U.S. forces into a conflict without a clear goal, and 
there was worry that chaos would ensue if Gaddafi fell too quickly and the 
loosely organized, tribally divided rebels tried to govern the country.

But by March 12, the Arab League had formally backed the imposition of a no-fly 
zone, after a similar move by the Gulf Cooperation Council, which consists of 
several of the United States' closest Arab allies.

Until the week of March 13, the rebels seemed to be making progress. Then 
Gaddafi unleashed his military, taking towns that the opposition had won and 
heading toward the de facto rebel capital, Benghazi. 

Pushed by Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and U.N. Ambassador Susan 
E. Rice, the administration took control of a British-French draft resolution 
for a no-fly zone and began making the case to the rest of the Security Council 
that stronger action was needed. The resolution passed March 17, authorizing 
the use of "all necessary measures" to protect civilians and civilian areas 
under threat.

"In an ideal world, we would sit down with a blank sheet of paper and say, 
'Let's get rid of Gaddafi.' That's not the way it unfolded," said the Western 
diplomat whose country is involved in the Libya mission.


jaf...@washpost.com

deyou...@washpost.com

More on this Story

  a.. Libyan rebels push toward Sirte; Gaddafi sends reinforcements
  b.. U.S. deploys low-flying attack planes
  c.. Obama strongly defends U.S. intervention
  d.. Libyan rebels say Qatar to help with oil marketing


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke