Operation Endless Deployment
The war with Iraq is part
of a larger plan for global military dominance
by William Hartung, Frida
Berrigan and Michelle Ciarrocca
The Nation magazine, October
21, 2002
The Bush Administration's march toward
war in Iraq is dangerous in its own right, and should be opposed
as such. But the preparations for "Gulf War II" are
also part of a larger plan to promote the most significant expansion
of US global military presence since the end of the cold war.
The Pentagon is determined to maintain access to the rapidly growing
network of military facilities it has built or refurbished in
the Caucasus, South Asia and the Persian Gulf for decades to come,
long after George W. Bush and Saddam Hussein have passed from
the global stage.
In the fall of 1999, in his first major
campaign speech on foreign policy, Bush criticized the Clinton
Administration for sending US troops off on "aimless and
endless deployments" that allegedly detracted from their
core mission of fighting and winning wars. Bush was primarily
referring to US peacekeeping missions in places like Kosovo, but
he gave the impression that he was planning to reduce the overall
US military presence overseas as well. Three years later, Bush's
pledge to seek a more streamlined US global military presence
has been cast aside under the guise of fighting "terrorists
and tyrants" of Washington's choosing.
Since September 2001 US forces have built,
upgraded or expanded military facilities in Bahrain, Qatar, Kuwait,
Saudi Arabia, Oman, Turkey, Bulgaria, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Uzbekistan
and Kyrgyzstan; authorized extended training missions or open-ended
troop deployments in Djibouti, the Philippines and the former
Soviet republic of Georgia; negotiated access to airfields in
Kazakhstan; and engaged in major military exercises, involving
thousands of US personnel, in Jordan, Kuwait and India. Thousands
of tons of military equipment have been added to stockpiles already
pre-positioned in Middle Eastern and Persian Gulf states, including
Israel, Jordan, Kuwait and Qatar. And discussions are still under
way with Yemen about increasing American access to facilities
there and establishing an intelligence-gathering installation
aimed at monitoring activities in Sudan and Somalia.
These forward bases, many of which have
been arranged through secretive, ad hoc arrangements, currently
house an estimated 60,000 US military personnel. This includes
20,00025,000 troops in the Persian Gulf, poised to serve as the
opening wave of a US invasion of Iraq.
Funds for training and military aid, which
are often used to grease the wheels of US access to overseas military
facilities, have been increased substantially since the start
of the Administration's war on terrorism. The budget request for
training foreign military personnel is up by 27 percent in the
fiscal-year 2003 budget, while funding for the government's largest
military aid program, Foreign Military Financing, is slated to
top $4 billion. The bulk of this additional funding is going to
countries like Uzbekistan, Pakistan and India, which had previously
been under restrictions on what they could receive from the United
States because of records of systematic human rights abuses, antidemocratic
practices or development of nuclear weapons. Now these same nations
are viewed as indispensable allies in the Administration's war
on terrorism.
The new global buildup represents not
so much a return to the cold war, when the United States had many
more troops stationed overseas than it does today, but rather
an elaboration of a new, more flexible infrastructure for intervening
in-or initiating- "hot wars" from the Middle East to
the Caucasus to East Asia.
Military analyst William Arkin has noted
that in the first four months after the September 11 attacks,
thirteen military tent cities were hastily assembled to shelter
US personnel in nine different countries. Many of the sites include
"expeditionary airfields" that were built or upgraded
on short notice to facilitate their use by US combat and transport
planes.
Despite protestations to the contrary
by Pentagon officials, there are questions about how many of the
new US forward bases will in fact be temporary. The US Central
Command has long been seeking alternatives to Saudi Arabia to
use as springboards for future interventions in the Persian Gulf,
as well as access to facilities in the former Soviet republics
of Central Asia. While Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld has been
purposely vague about the length of the US stay at any of the
new facilities, Air Force Col. Billy Montgomery, who headed a
team that expanded an air base in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, for use
by US and allied forces in Afghanistan, told the Washington Post,
"I think it's fair to say there will be a long-term presence
here well beyond the end of hostilities."
In a mid-August briefing, Gen. Tommy Franks,
the head of the Central Command, suggested that the length of
the US military presence in Afghanistan could end up rivaling
the fifty-year US presence in South Korea. And if the Bush Administration
is not dissuaded from moving full-speed ahead with its plans to
invade Iraq, several independent military experts have suggested
that an occupying force of 75,000-100,000 troops may be needed
to stabilize that country, giving rise to the need for additional
formal or informal bases to house US troops.
Growing US Military Presence Since 9/11/01
Qatar: With 600 war planners from the
US Central Command scheduled to arrive in November for an "exercise"
that could | turn into a long-term deployment, it is widely believed
that Qatar will serve as the principal base for coordinating US
intervention ~ in Iraq. The Pentagon began pouring additional
personnel and funding into Qatar's Al Udeid air base in November
2001 in hopes of using it as an alternative to Saudi bases in
the event of military action against Iraq. The facility now has
a command center with satellite links that will enable it to coordinate
thousands of airstrikes daily. The base, which has one of the
longest runways in the Middle East, is currently home to roughly
3,000 US personnel and fifty aircraft, including fighters, bombers
and reconnaissance and refueling aircraft. There are also 600
US personnel stationed at an air logistics base in Qatar-referred
to by Army officials as "Camp Snoopy"- at which C-5
and C-17 cargo planes routinely come and go, bringing supplies
for US forces in Afghanistan and the Gulf. Qatar and Kuwait (see
below) are also host to more than three dozen 60,000 square-foot
warehouses that contain hundreds of US military vehicles, ranging
from M-1 tanks and armored personnel carriers to 155-millimeter
howitzers.
Jordan: Despite public pronouncements
by Jordanian officials that their nation will not serve as a launching
pad for a US attack on Iraq, US-Jordanian military cooperation
has been increasing. During August 2,200 personnel of the 22nd
Marine Expeditionary Unit were in Jordan for "Operation Infinite
Moonlight," which several analysts believe was used as a
cover to pre-position additional US military equipment in the
Persian Gulf in preparation for war with Iraq. Recent press reports
indicate that US forces also have regular access to Jordanian
air bases at Ruwayshid and Wadi-al Murbah, both of which are close
to the Iraqi border.
Kuwait: Camp Doha is home to 5,000 US
Army personnel, plus thousands more that come for regular military
exercises in Kuwait. Counting troops in-country for extended exercises
and air crews involved in flying F-16 and F-15 aircraft on surveillance
missions over southern Iraq, there are now estimated to be more
than 9,000 US military personnel in Kuwait. As of the first week
of September 2,000 US troops were en route to Kuwait for "Operation
Desert Spring," an exercise slated to last several months.
More than sixty military vehicles are being shipped to Kuwait
as part of the exercise, apparently in an effort to bulk up the
US arsenal there in anticipation of a war against Iraq.
Saudi Arabia: As a tacit side agreement
to the controversial 1981 sale of AWACS radar planes to Saudi
Arabia, US contractors built an unparalleled network of air, naval
and communications bases in Saudi Arabia that served as the main
base of operations for US forces in the Gulf War. The most important
of these facilities is the Prince Sultan Air Base outside Riyadh,
which has served as the coordinating center for air operations
over Iraq and Afghanistan. After initially stating that Saudi
bases could not be used for a US strike against Iraq, Saudi officials
have now stated that the facilities will be available, provided
that the intervention is sanctioned by the UN Security Council.
There are currently more than 6,000 US Air Force and Army personnel
in Saudi Arabia.
Oman: The United States is upgrading an
airfield at Musnana for use as an air base that will house everything
from fighter aircraft to B-52 bombers. According to GlobalSecurity.org,
the United States has used three other bases in Oman to launch
airstrikes against Afghanistan. A base at Masirah hosts US P-3
Orion antisubmarine aircraft and AC- 130 gunships. Oman is also
a major pre-positioning site for the US Air Force, with enough
equipment and fuel stored to support three bases and 26,000 support
personnel.
Bahrain: The US Fifth Fleet, which coordinates
all US combat ships in the Persian Gulf and Indian Ocean areas,
has its headquarters at Manama, Bahrain. Twenty miles south of
Manama, Shah IA Air Base hosts US bomber and fighter aircraft,
and is expected to serve as the home for a US Air Force expeditionary
wing of forty-two aircraft in the near future. Total US personnel
in Bahrain number 4,000 or more, most of them in the Navy or Marines.
United Arab Emirates: The United States
has no ongoing military presence in the UAE, but the government
allows US reconnaissance and refueling aircraft to use its air
bases, and there is some U equipment pre-positioned there for
use in contingencies like the Bush Administration's planned intervention
in Iraq.
Diego Garcia: In August the Pentagon awarded
a contract to a Norfolk, Virginia, shipping company to operate
eight large "roll-on, roll off" cargo ships in and around
the US base at Diego Garcia, in the Indian Ocean. B-52s based
there are likely to come into play in any air war against Iraq;
the island may also serve as a stopover point and distribution
center for US personnel and equipment headed to the Gulf.
Yemen: The Pentagon is exploring the possibility
of building a signals intelligence base on the Yemeni island of
Socotra that would be used to conduct surveillance on Somalia
and the Horn of Africa. This past June, a US team arrived in Yemen
to begin installation of a computerized surveillance system designed
to link the capital of Sanaa with data flowing from major seas,
airports and border crossings.
Djibouti: In mid-September it was revealed
that 800 US personnel, most of them Special Operations forces,
have been deployed in the East African nation of Djibouti, poised
for deployment in Yemen, Somalia or Sudan in pursuit of alleged
Al Qaeda operatives. The Special Forces deployment is backed up
by the stationing nearby of the Belleau Wood, an amphibious assault
ship with helicopters and Harrier jump jets that can be used to
transport US personnel in Djibouti into battle in neighboring
nations.
Turkey: Turkey's Incirlik air base, which
has served as the launching ground for US airstrikes and surveillance
missions over northern Iraq for more than a decade, is home to
an estimated four dozen US surveillance and strike aircraft (the
exact number is classified). The Pentagon hopes to use Incirlik
as a major staging ground in its planned air war against Iraq,
and has been courting Ankara with major arms sales, including
transfers of Seahawk antisubmarine helicopters, two fully outfitted
combat frigates and a pledge to cancel a substantial portion of
Turkey's multibillion-dollar military debt to the United States.
Georgia: As part of a two-year, $64 million
"train and equip" mission, US Special Forces will be
deployed to Georgia to train a 2,000-person antiterrorist force
designed to patrol the Pankisi Gorge, an alleged refuge for Chechen
rebels and AI Qaeda fighters. Barracks and other facilities for
the US trainers will be built in cooperation with the Kellogg
Brown & Root division of Halliburton industries.
Afghanistan: The two main US bases in
Afghanistan are at Bagram, where the headquarters for US military
operations in the country is based, along with roughly 5,000 US
personnel; and in Kandahar, where 3,000 4,000 troops from the
101st Airborne Division are based, along with a detention facility
for Al Qaeda and Taliban prisoners.
Pakistan: Pursuant to an agreement struck
with Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf last December, US forces
have taken over an air base at Jacobabad, in southwestern Pakistan,
and are building airconditioned barracks and a higher security
wall. American forces will also continue to use airfields at Pasni
and Dalbandin for the foreseeable future, as part of what one
Pakistani source predicts will become a "semipermanent presence"
of US forces in Pakistan.
Uzbekistan: Roughly 1,500 US troops are
stationed at Khanabad, a former Soviet facility that is the largest
air base in Central Asia. The US Air Force is scouting sites to
set up a more permanent facility in Uzbekistan.
Kyrgyzstan: The Manas air base, also known
as the Peter J. Ganci base in honor of a New York City fireman
who died in the World Trade Center rescue effort, is home to 2,000
troops-1,000 American and 1,000 from coalition partners Australia,
Denmark, France, the Netherlands, Norway, South Korea and Spain.
American officials claim that the base will be closed after the
war in Afghanistan is over, but sources familiar with the extensive
infrastructure that has been built, including a central power
plant, a hospital and two industrial-size kitchens, expect US
forces to be stationed there for years to come.
Kazakhstan: This past July the United
States and Kazakhstan signed an agreement to allow US military
aircraft to make emergency landings-for a fee-at Kazakhstan's
largest civilian airport, in Almaty. In addition, the Bush Administration
has requested $5 million in military aid in the fiscal-year 2003
budget to refurbish an air base in order to establish "a
US-interoperable base along the oil-rich Caspian."
Tajikistan: After the September 11 attacks,
Tajikistan was one of the first Central Asian states to offer
the Pentagon access to bases, overflight rights and the use of
its territory by US military personnel. Bases at Khujand, Kulyab
and Kurgan-Tyube are available to US forces as needed, but unlike
the larger bases in Afghanistan and Uzbekistan, they have yet
to become a major focus of activity.
Philippines: More than 1,300 US troops
were involved in "counterterrorism training" in the
Philippines from February through July of this year, assisting
local military forces in their efforts to wipe out the remnants
of the Abu Sayyaf guerrilla movement, which Philippine security
officials claim forged ties with Osama bin Laden in the early
1 990s. In parallel to the training mission, US military aid to
the Philippines was increased tenfold, from $1.9 million to $19
million. A cadre of 100 US military personnel remained in the
Philippines after the larger contingent withdrew in July. The
Pentagon plans several other major training missions in the Philippines
in the next year.
William D. Hartung, Frida Berrigan and
Michelle Ciarrocca are the director, deputy director and senior
research associate, respectively of the arms-trade project at
the New School University's World Policy Institute. Research support
was provided by the Investigative Fund of the Nation Institute.
Sources: Center for Defense Information;
GlobalSecurity.org; David Isenberg, "By Infinite Moonlight,
US Readies for War," Asia Times, August 29, 2002; US Defense
Department; and numerous news stories from the Washington Post,
USA Today, Wall Street Journal, New Orleans Times-Picayune, New
York Times, Los Angeles Times and William Arkin s "Dot.mil
" column in the Washington Post Online.
******
War, Inc.
Expanding the US global military presence
is costly to taxpayers but highly profitable for private military
contractors. Even the costs of allegedly temporary facilities
and deployments have been substantial: Many of the new bases include
bowling allies, swimming pools, airconditioned quarters, elaborate
communications systems and other features that make them seem
more like small, self-contained towns than transient setups.
Kellogg Brown & Root, a subsidiary
of Vice President Cheney's former firm, Halliburton, has been
contracted to provide comprehensive logistical support for US
bases in Afghanistan, Uzbekistan and elsewhere in the region.
The company's services are likely to be expensive: When Brown
& Root was hired to provide similar services for Camp Bondsteel,
the major US base camp in Kosovo, it ended up ringing up a record
$2.2 billion in costs while wasting millions of dollars on excess
purchases of everything from furniture to electric power. Brown
& Root also has a Pentagon contract that could yield up to
$300 million over a five-year period to maintain and expand the
US military prison for "enemy combatants" at Guantanamo
Bay, Cuba.
While a full-scale war in Iraq will redound
most heavily to the benefit of major weapons makers like Boeing,
Raytheon and Lockheed Martin, which will get the contracts for
precision bombs, cruise missiles and unmanned aerial vehicles
that will be used in the conflict, lesser-known firms are already
profiting from the expanding US global presence. In August, Maersk
Lines of Norfolk, Virginia, received a contract for $219 million
from the Pentagon's Military Sealift Command to provide eight
"roll-on, roll-off" cargo ships to operate in the Indian
Ocean near the Diego Garcia base; in May DG-2 1, a Dallas-based
firm, received a $20 million add-on to a $200 million "base
operating support contract" for work at Diego Garcia. -W.H.,
F.B. AND M.C.
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