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- <text id=91TT0258>
- <link 93TG0112>
- <link 91TT0438>
- <link 91TT0317>
- <link 91TT0270>
- <title>
- Feb. 04, 1991: A Long Siege Ahead
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Feb. 04, 1991 Stalking Saddam
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE GULF WAR, Page 20
- THE BATTLEFRONT
- A Long Siege Ahead
- </hdr><body>
- <p>While the allies step up the air assault and Saddam hunkers
- down, both sides plan for a war lasting months, not weeks
- </p>
- <p>By GEORGE J. CHURCH -- Reported by Dean Fischer/Riyadh, Dan
- Goodgame and Christopher Ogden/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Remember all the chatter about a short war? Well, forget it.
- "We would prefer not to talk in terms of days or weeks but
- months," says White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater. About the
- earliest anybody in the Bush Administration expects victory
- over Iraq is mid-March; British estimates run to mid-April or
- so. Which of course would still be short by comparison with
- World War II, Korea or Vietnam, but hardly the lightning
- victory that the success of the first air strikes on Baghdad
- had led some commentators to anticipate.
- </p>
- <p> Does that mean the allied strategy is being foiled? Just the
- opposite. As the fighting enters its third week, it is -- with
- few exceptions -- going closely according to plan. In fact,
- according to two plans: the one drawn by the U.S. and its
- allies and the one apparently being followed by Saddam Hussein.
- Driven by opposing political and military reasons, both have
- shaped scenarios for a war lasting months.
- </p>
- <p> The allies want to hold off as long as possible on any
- bloody ground assault against the more than half a million
- Iraqi troops deeply dug into Kuwait. First the coalition will
- try to isolate those forces by incessant bombing of their
- supply lines, hoping that Saddam's soldiers, cut off from food,
- water and reinforcements, will pull out or surrender. If not,
- plans call for massive bombing of key points in the heavily
- fortified Iraqi front line before the tanks and infantry go
- into the breach. That probably means several additional weeks
- of aerial war before any serious ground fighting starts. And
- if a powerful ground assault does become inevitable, a senior
- American commander estimates that it will take four to eight
- weeks more to succeed.
- </p>
- <p> All of which, strangely enough, dovetails with Saddam's
- thinking. The allies are attempting to minimize casualties;
- Saddam will try to make the war supremely bloody. To exactly
- that end, however, he will try to drag out the fighting as long
- as possible. Right now he is "hunkering down" -- in the words
- of General Colin Powell, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
- -- putting up only minimal resistance to the air campaign and
- saving all possible resources to fight what the Iraqi leader
- keeps calling "the mother of all battles" on the ground.
- </p>
- <p> "Probably Saddam is banking on absorbing our air offensive
- and our ground offensive, but inflicting maximum casualties on
- U.S. forces," says General H. Norman Schwarzkopf, commander of
- the allied forces in the gulf. "Having done that, if the
- situation is promising, he would launch a counteroffensive. If
- not, having inflicted these casualties, he would rely on
- American public opinion to bring this whole thing to an end.
- And all this time he tries to portray himself as a hero to what
- he perceives as a supportive Arab world."
- </p>
- <p> That strategy does not preclude early unconventional attacks
- to keep the allies off balance. Last week Saddam turned to what
- the Bush Administration called environmental terrorism. Iraqi
- soldiers in occupied Kuwait deliberately pumped gigantic
- amounts of crude oil into the Persian Gulf, producing an oil
- slick that the Pentagon estimated was a dozen times the size
- of the one that the Exxon Valdez deposited on the shores of
- Alaska early in 1989. The slick might have been intended in
- part to foil allied attempts at an amphibious landing. More
- important, it threatened to drift along currents that would
- take it into the water-intake systems of the giant
- desalinization plant at Jubail, Saudi Arabia, cutting off
- drinking water and electricity for all of the kingdom's Eastern
- province, site of most of the oil wells.
- </p>
- <p> THE HUNT FOR SCUDS
- </p>
- <p> Iraq also continued its sporadic missile attacks. Last week
- it launched salvos of Scud missiles at Israel and Saudi Arabia.
- Patriot antimissiles blew up most of them in the air, but six
- got through to hit the Israeli cities of Tel Aviv and Haifa,
- and at least one struck Riyadh. Four Israelis and one Saudi
- died during the raids; at least 130 Israelis and 30 Saudis were
- injured, and more than 1,000 Israelis were made homeless.
- During the first 10 days of the war, Iraq fired only about 50
- Scuds, suggesting that it is saving hundreds more for later use.
- None so far has carried a chemical warhead; allied experts are
- debating whether Iraq has mastered the technology of delivering
- poison gas effectively by missile. The trick is to get the
- warhead to explode at just the right height so that the gas
- neither dissipates harmlessly into the atmosphere nor collects
- in a dense but small puddle on the ground.
- </p>
- <p> The raids are making Saddam a hero to many Arabs, whose glee
- at seeing Israelis suffer is horrifying. But so far the attacks
- have backfired in their political purpose. Though Jerusalem
- insists that it will eventually retaliate, officials have
- assured the U.S. that it will do so sooner rather than later
- only if future attacks release poison gas or kill large numbers
- of Israelis.
- </p>
- <p> The Egyptian, Syrian and Saudi Arabian governments have
- promised that their forces will continue to fight alongside the
- U.S. against Iraq even if Israel does strike back. And some
- reports have it that Syrian President Hafez Assad has quietly
- let Israel know it can fly bombers through his air-space on a
- retaliatory raid, so long as they return by a different route.
- Assad could then claim that the Israeli planes had whizzed over
- Syria too rapidly to intercept. Some danger remains that
- Israeli jets might get into dogfights over Jordan, possibly
- setting off the Arab-Israeli warfare that Saddam is trying so
- hard to ignite. But for the moment Israel seems likely to come
- out of the war strengthened militarily and economically by new
- U.S. aid and basking in praise for its restraint from the U.S.
- and other nations that only months ago were damning it for
- stubbornness.
- </p>
- <p> Searching for mobile Scud launchers last week did divert
- allied warplanes from bombing targets of greater military
- importance. That and heavy clouds over Iraq and Kuwait early
- in the week briefly slowed the tempo of the air assault. Many
- allied planes carry infrared devices and guidance systems that
- enable them to hit targets they cannot see. But assessment of
- bomb damage can only be done visually, which is impossible
- through clouds. That in turn makes it difficult to decide which
- planes should be sent to hit targets a second time and which
- can pound new ones.
- </p>
- <p> But as skies cleared late in the week, the bombing resumed
- with greater intensity than ever. On Thursday allied planes
- mounted a record 3,000 sorties (one plane on one flight); in
- the first 10 days, sorties totaled 20,000, of which more than
- half were combat missions. In the early days of the war,
- American briefers gave a misleading impression by lumping all
- sorties -- including refueling flights and AWACS flights --
- together, without disclosing that many were not devoted to
- "dropping iron," as Air Force lingo puts it. Even so, for
- sustained intensity the air campaign far outranks any other in
- history.
- </p>
- <p> The big change last week was a switch in targets. In the
- first days of the war, bombers concentrated on blasting Iraqi
- nuclear facilities, chemical- and biological-weapons plants
- (including one factory in Baghdad that the Iraqis said
- manufactured baby formula but that the White House insisted was
- devoted to preparations for germ warfare), command-and-control
- centers and, in particular, the Iraqi air force. At a midweek
- briefing, Powell and Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney counted
- a bit more than 40 Iraqi planes shot down or destroyed on the
- ground. That compares with 22 allied planes, half of them
- American, lost in combat, nearly all to ground fire -- a
- startlingly low figure given the number of sorties. As many as
- 750 Iraqi planes may have survived intact, however, either in
- underground bunkers or by fleeing to bases or highways and
- secret shelters in the north that are difficult for allied
- warplanes, most of which fly out of Saudi Arabia, to reach. But
- they can be, and have been, bombed from Turkish bases that the
- Ankara government, after some hesitation and at considerable
- internal political cost, has agreed to let the U.S. use for
- offensive purposes. In a curious twist, two dozen Iraqi
- fighters and transport planes landed at airfields in Iran last
- week. The pilots may have defected or been seeking safe refuge
- from allied planes; it is also possible that Iraq has struck
- a secret deal with Iran to keep the planes there until the war
- is over.
- </p>
- <p> Whatever Saddam is saving his planes for, they are not a
- factor in the battle now. Many may be unable to take off
- because runways they might use have been bombed full of
- craters. Powell displayed a map showing only five of 66
- airfields at which the U.S. spotted any activity last week.
- When the Iraqi planes do fly, their performance in dogfighting
- is miserable. Last Friday two Iraqi jets tried to stage an
- attack with Exocet missiles on British ships in the Persian
- Gulf; a Saudi pilot shot down both. In any case, the U.S. and
- Britain claim to have achieved practical air superiority.
- </p>
- <p> The allies are using that superiority to shift into a new
- phase of the air war. They will continue to revisit old
- targets, such as runways that often can be repaired within 48
- hours and must be bombed repeatedly to keep them out of action.
- But beginning last week they concentrated increasingly on
- targets such as transport lines, fuel dumps and tank and
- artillery parks. Again and again they hit the southern city of
- Basra, which according to legend is near the site of the
- Garden of Eden and once was home port to Sinbad the Sailor.
- Today it is the main supply gateway and communications center
- for the Iraqi troops in Kuwait.
- </p>
- <p> A particular target was and will remain the Republican
- Guards, Iraq's choicest troops, mostly stationed just north of
- the Iraq-Kuwait border. They are the key to an eventual land
- battle; they form a mobile reserve that is supposed to
- reinforce weak points, counterattack against any U.S.
- breakthrough and stop any unauthorized retreat by frontline
- troops, shooting them if necessary. "The Republican Guards have
- a very good engineering capability," says Colonel Manfred
- Rietsch, pilot of an F/A-18 Hornet and commander of Marine Air
- Group 11. "They are very well camouflaged and dug in."
- Nonetheless, he says, "we are bombing tanks, APCs [armored
- personnel carriers], bunkers and berms." That kind of bombing
- will continue, and probably intensify, to the end of the war.
- Says General Powell: "Our strategy to go after this army [in
- Kuwait] is very, very simple. First we're going to cut it off,
- and then we're going to kill it."
- </p>
- <p> THE ALLIED BLUEPRINT
- </p>
- <p> The overall allied strategy is more complicated and is
- driven as much by political as by military considerations.
- While Powell says his directives are only to force the Iraqis
- out of Kuwait, President Bush and his aides are talking,
- sometimes out loud, of war aims that go much further. Some seem
- contradictory. The U.S. intends to smash Iraq's offensive
- military power so that it is no longer a menace to neighbors.
- Yet Washington wishes to leave enough of the Iraqi army intact
- to keep the nation (under a regime succeeding a presumably
- ousted or assassinated Saddam) from being carved up by such
- neighbors as Iran, Syria and Turkey.
- </p>
- <p> Whether the allied forces can calibrate the level of
- destruction so finely is, to put it mildly, uncertain.
- Nevertheless, the U.S. is already thinking of what kind of
- postwar Middle East a post-Saddam Iraq will inhabit. Among
- other things, Washington plans a hard push for Israeli-Arab
- peace. That helps explain why it has been willing to expend so
- much effort hunting for the militarily insignificant Scuds.
- Even if enough of those missiles survived and hit Israel to
- goad the Jewish state into a retaliatory strike, that probably
- would no longer change the course of the war, given the Arab
- states' pledges to stay loyal to the coalition. But a
- counterstrike in which Israelis killed large numbers of Arabs
- would poison the atmosphere for a postwar Middle East peace
- conference.
- </p>
- <p> These political goals have heavily influenced battlefield
- strategy, beginning with the initial choice of bombing targets.
- Strange as it seems now, some tacticians before the war were
- worried that the allies would win too quickly; an overwhelming
- assault just might induce Saddam to pull out of Kuwait and sue
- for peace in a few days, with his personal power and most of
- his military machine intact. So they hit Iraq's nuclear
- reactors and chemical-weapons plants right off the bat to make
- sure that some of the dictator's terror arsenal was eliminated
- no matter what happened. Most of it was in fact destroyed,
- though Iraq could still launch a horrendous chemical attack with
- bombs and artillery shells that were manufactured and
- stockpiled before the war.
- </p>
- <p> The composition of the attacking air force in the first few
- days was also partly political. Besides the U.S. and Britain,
- the participants included Saudi Arabia, which had to be seen
- as a full partner from the very beginning to counter any
- impression among the American public that rich Saudi sheiks
- were getting the U.S. to fight their battles; Kuwait, for much
- the same reason; and France and Italy, to cement those somewhat
- reluctant nations into the anti-Iraq coalition.
- </p>
- <p> While no one worries anymore that Saddam will give up too
- soon, U.S. strategists still insist they could end the war much
- faster than they now plan if they were to launch an all-out,
- shoot-everything-at-once land-sea-air campaign. They will not
- do so, they say, because it would cause ghastly casualties,
- Iraqi as well as American and allied. Their proclaimed choice,
- reiterated by Cheney and Powell last week, is to fight a much
- more measured campaign, accepting a longer war as the price of
- avoiding a bloodbath.
- </p>
- <p> Politics is also on the mind of the dwindling number of
- American strategists who favor a ground attack sooner rather
- than later. A prolonged air war, in their opinion, conveys the
- very impression the opposing school hopes to avoid: American
- pilots killing helpless Arabs. A ground assault, on the other
- hand, would at least visibly engage Iraqis against other Arabs:
- the Saudi, Egyptian and Syrian troops who are expected to be
- in the forefront of the attack.
- </p>
- <p> For the time being at least, this school has lost to those
- who insist on trying to avoid or at least delay heavy ground
- fighting. The hope of the dominant strategists is that steady
- bombing will at a minimum soften up the Iraqi defenses enough
- to hold down casualties among the attacking infantry- and
- tankmen as well as the Iraqis behind the barbed wire.
- </p>
- <p> SADDAM'S STRATEGY
- </p>
- <p> The dictator made an address on Baghdad radio apparently
- intended to reassure Iraqis alarmed by their country's weak
- resistance to the initial allied attacks. Iraq, he said, "will
- not allow the army of atheism, treachery and hypocrisy to
- realize their stupid hope that the war would only last a few
- days or weeks." The country, he said, had so far refrained from
- ground combat and used only part of its air force, but "when
- the war is fought in a comprehensive manner, using all
- resources and weapons, the scale of death and the number of
- dead will, God willing, rise among the ranks of atheism,
- injustice and tyranny."
- </p>
- <p> Bombast aside, the speech gave a strong clue to his plans,
- which struck some American politicians as a military adaptation
- of Muhammad Ali's "rope-a-dope" ring strategy: bob, weave,
- dance and duck until the opponent tires himself out chasing an
- elusive target; then hit hard. Saddam, in fact, has supposedly
- used very nearly those words. Says an Arab diplomat in Amman:
- "Before the war, he was telling everyone, `We know that the
- first strike will be for the benefit of the U.S. But we are
- prepared for them to hit us for two or three weeks. After that,
- it is our turn.' Saddam's effort will be on the land; he wants
- to have physical contact with the Americans where he can
- inflict big losses. His forces also will suffer big losses, but
- he feels he can absorb them and that Bush cannot."
- </p>
- <p> Though that seems clear enough, some mysteries remain. One
- is what Saddam intends to do with the air force he has taken
- such care to keep intact by keeping his planes hidden in
- bunkers. Some American analysts suspect he will never use his
- jets in combat but will save them to wield as a postwar
- political weapon. In this view, the dictator knows he is going
- to be driven out of Kuwait but expects to survive still holding
- power in Iraq. If he throws the planes into the battle for
- Kuwait, they will only be shot down. If he keeps them out of
- the fight, they might enable a postwar Iraq once again to bully
- its neighbors.
- </p>
- <p> Part of this theory fits with the Iraqi action last week of
- setting fire to oil wells in Kuwait. The fires could put up
- what amounts to a thick smoke screen hampering air attacks on
- Iraqi troops. But they could also signal the start of a
- scorched-earth policy, ensuring that if Saddam is forced out
- of Kuwait, he will leave the victors only a burning, devastated
- wreck.
- </p>
- <p> Other analysts think, however, that Saddam is saving his air
- force, and virtually every other weapon he has, for climactic
- battles later on. The planes could be used for terror attacks
- on Israeli and Saudi cities, where they might cause more death
- and destruction than the Scuds have to date. Given the strength
- of the allied air armada, those sorties would amount to suicide
- missions for some Iraqi pilots, but Saddam might be able to
- find willing martyrs. There is some speculation that he is
- already forming an Iraqi kamikaze corps.
- </p>
- <p> The planes could try to attack U.S. troops and tanks
- launching the final ground assault, quite possibly spreading
- poison gas. During the long war against Iran, Iraqi pilots and
- gunners proved adept at using chemical bombs and shells, and
- Saddam has immense reserves of artillery.
- </p>
- <p> With or without gas, U.S. authorities expect frequent and
- sometimes effective counterattacks once the decisive land
- battle is joined. General Schwarzkopf points out that Saddam's
- greatest victories during the Iran-Iraq war came after
- absorbing Iranian offensives, "even at the cost of great
- casualties and even a loss of territory," and then launching
- counteroffensives when the Iranian attacks stalled.
- </p>
- <p> Saddam's strategy is obviously enormously risky. Allied air
- power could in fact cut off his troops in Kuwait or destroy so
- many of their defensive fortifications that the rest would be
- pierced relatively easily. The firepower the allies can employ
- even in a high-tech ground assault might overwhelm Saddam's
- forces, with fewer allied casualties than he now thinks likely.
- Like all dictators, Saddam may be hearing only what he wants
- to hear. Western intelligence people think he may actually
- believe the absurdly high estimates of allied planes knocked
- down that Baghdad has been reporting publicly. As ever, no one
- dares tell him any bad news. Serving Saddam is hazardous enough
- in any case; last week there were reports, believed by some
- allied intelligence sources, that the dictator had ordered the
- chief of the Iraqi air force and two of his deputies summarily
- shot.
- </p>
- <p> But there are risks for the U.S. too. One is that the public
- will grow impatient to see some measurable progress in a war
- that is yielding precious little, at least as long as the
- Pentagon jealously guards bomb-damage reports and pictures.
- Those that it has released may actually intensify the problem,
- since people may wonder why, if the missiles are doing their
- job so well, is the war taking so long? White House spokesman
- Marlin Fitzwater took care to warn last week that "there are
- going to be enemy victories; there are going to be enemy
- surprises; there are going to be days when we'll see allied
- losses." And public opinion had best be prepared for the all but
- inevitable setbacks.
- </p>
- <p> Still, those psychological problems are better than the
- military ones Saddam faces. There is no way the Iraqi dictator
- can win in the long run. But he thoroughly, and misguidedly,
- doubts that. The question is whether he can get the American
- public to share his disbelief.
- </p>
- <p>Which if any of these should be major goals in the war against
- Iraq?
- </p>
- <quote>
- <l> Yes No</l>
- <l>Forcing Iraq to leave Kuwait 93% 5%</l>
- <l>Destroying Iraq's nuclear- and</l>
- <l>chemical-weapons capabilities 90% 7% </l>
- <l>The unconditional surrender of Iraq 72% 22%</l>
- <l>Removing Saddam from power 92% 6%</l>
- <l>Killing Saddam 41% 49%</l>
- </quote>
- <p>How much longer do you think the war against Iraq will last?
- </p>
- <quote>
- <l> Less than two weeks 1%</l>
- <l> 2 to 4 weeks 4%</l>
- <l> 1 to 3 months 24%</l>
- <l> 4 to 6 months 25%</l>
- <l> 6 months to a year 22%</l>
- <l> More than a year 12%</l>
- </quote>
- <p>[From a telephone poll of 1,000 American adults taken for
- TIME/CNN on Jan. 24 by Yankelovich Clancy Shulman. Sampling
- error is plus or minus 3%. "Not sures" omitted.]
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-