BBC News Online: Events: Crisis In The Gulf: FORCES AND FIREPOWER


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Thursday, December 17, 1998 Published at 00:42 GMT

'Sharp increase' in US troops in Gulf


'Sharp increase' in US troops in Gulf
The US Defence Secretary William Cohen has announced that more air and ground forces are being sent to the Gulf amid ongoing air strikes against Iraq.

"Iraq should not misunderstand our determination," Mr Cohen said.

Mr Cohen said a second carrier battle group led by the USS Carl Vinson is on its way to the region. Additional ground troops are going to Kuwait.

An air force expeditionary wing made up of over 30 assorted aircraft is also being despatched to the Gulf.

Mr Cohen said there have been no American casualties so far. US officials cannot calculate Iraqi casualties, he said.


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Secret targets

The US Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Hugh Shelton said he was unable to reveal the targets of the military operation at this stage.

Earlier a Pentagon official said the strikes were expected to target Iraq's elite Special Republican Guards, air defences, command and control system and facilities associated with weapons of mass destruction programs and the means to deliver them.

The aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson was in the northern Indian Ocean on Tuesday and is scheduled to arrive in the Gulf by December 18, joining the carrier USS Enterprise.

Its arrival will roughly double the number of carrier-based combat aircraft available for an attack to about 100.

The carriers carry F/A-18 Hornets, F-14 Tomcats and EA-6B electronic warfare jets.

Formidable fire power

The BBC Defence Correspondent Jonathan Marcus says that the United States already has a formidable array of fire power in the Gulf.

Because the Americans had planned a pre-Christmas changeover of their forces, those available at the moment are effectively doubled.

He added there is no doubt the United States can administer a very damaging blow to Iraq's military infrastructure, although inevitably, this would lead to significant Iraqi casualties.

A Pentagon spokesman said on Monday there were 24,100 US troops in the Gulf, 201 military aircraft and 22 naval ships, including eight warships capable of firing Tomahawk cruise missiles.

Before the bombing began, US forces in the region include:

Britain is giving the US the most military support. The UK has 12 tornado aircraft in Kuwait, six Jaguar bombers in Turkey, which could be used in bombing raids.

Britain has also deployed ships and military personnel in the Persian Gulf.

Iraq's military strength

It is thought that by the end of the Gulf conflict only a quarter of the Iraqi army's pre-war strength remained.

But it has since been rebuilding its forces and troop strength is now thought to be about 400,000.


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Since the end of the Gulf War in 1991, the United Nations has tried to uncover the true extent of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction, and its stock of long-range missiles.

Iraq is known to have produced chemical weapons like mustard gas and a deadly nerve gas called VX.

In August 1988, Iraqi forces used both chemical and gas munitions against Kurdish civilians in the area around Halabja in Iraqi Kurdistan.


Relevant Stories

Iraq on the net - comprehensive links (12 Nov 98 | Standoff with Baghdad)
Iraq - a history of conflict (12 Nov 97 | Standoff with Baghdad)
Chronology of the Iraqi crisis (07 Aug 98 | Standoff with Baghdad)
US and Iraq: Is this the endgame? (12 Nov 98 | Middle East)
US Interests In The Gulf (20 Feb 98 | DECISION MAKERS AND DIPLOMACY)
Iraq's weapons of mass destruction (09 Nov 98 | Middle East)

Internet Links

Milnet's Military Information Database - Iraq
Jane's Defence Weekly
US Department of Defence
Permanent Mission of Iraq to the UN
Milnet's Military Information Database - Unscom

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

In this section

Containment: The Iraqi no-fly zones
HMS Invincible: A city at sea
Calm after the storm
Which targets were hit
'Drones of death' hit by Tornados
Tornado crew: In the front line
The airman's guide to survival
The role of 'smart' weapons
'Sharp increase' in US troops in Gulf
Iraq's weapons of mass destruction


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