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- <text>
- <title>
- (1980) Raging Debate Over The Desert Raid
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1980 Highlights
- </history>
- <link 07639>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- May 12, 1980
- NATION
- Raging Debate over the Desert Raid
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Critics ask the Pentagon: Was it too little--or too much?
- </p>
- <p> Three C-130 Hercules transport planes roared low across the
- Florida panhandle last week, two flying tightly as a pair, one
- trailing without its partner. This is the traditional "missing
- buddy" formation of the U.S. Air Force, a symbol of mourning for
- lost fliers. On the ground, in a green park just inside the
- gates of Hurlburt Field, some of the toughest men in the armed
- services could not suppress their tears.
- </p>
- <p> The ceremony honored five of the eight servicemen who died two
- weeks ago in Iran's Dasht-e-Kavir desert during the aborted raid
- to rescue the Americans held hostage in Tehran. Some 5,000
- people gathered at Hurlburt in memory of the five air commandos
- who had been stationed there. One by one, the lost men were
- eulogized. Said Lieut. Colonel Calvin Chasteen about his
- comrade, Captain Richard L. Bakke, a 33-year-old navigator:
- "He looked forward with enthusiasm and anticipation to this last
- opportunity to serve, not for the glory it offered but for the
- deep satisfaction of defending that which is good and decent."
- </p>
- <p> While the American dead were being honored in Florida, more
- than 7,000 miles away in Tehran something most indecent was
- happening to their corpses. Iranian authorities tore open the
- plastic bags that contained the charred remains, poked at them
- with knives and held up pieces for government television crews.
- "This is proof of Carter's crime," ranted the Ayatullah Sadegh
- Khalkhali, formerly the Tehran's chief Islamic judge. Then,
- switching hypocritically to mournful tones, he added: "My heart
- aches for the families of these victims."
- </p>
- <p> At first Iranian President Abolhassan Banisadr promised that
- the bodies would quickly be returned to the U.S. As middleman
- he designated Ilarion Capucci, a Greek Melchite Catholic
- archbishop and longtime ally of the Palestine Liberation
- Organization. Then the Ayatullah Seyyed Mohammed Beheshti,
- president of the National Supreme Court and a leading political
- rival of Banisadr's, stepped in and insisted that only the
- Revolutionary Council or the Ayatullah Ruhollah Khomeini could
- release the bodies. Beheshti ordered them transferred to the
- Tehran morgue, which falls under his jurisdiction. The militants
- who were guarding the U.S. embassy announced that an undisclosed
- number of the American hostages had already been dispersed among
- eight other cities in Iran, which, if true, would make a second
- rescue attempt virtually impossible.
- </p>
- <p> Reflecting the country's deep outrage at the display and
- desecration of the American dead, President Carter at a
- televised press conference assailed the Iranians' "ghoulish
- action," which he called "a horrible exhibition of inhumanity."
- He added: "This indicates quite clearly the kinds of people
- with whom we have been dealing. They did not bring shame and
- dishonor on those fallen Americans. They brought shame and
- dishonor on themselves."
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, investigations were begun by Congress and the
- Pentagon into what happened during the rescue and why it failed.
- Carter firmly defended his decision to make the attempt. He
- reaffirmed his confidence in the Pentagon's plan for the raid
- as "a fine operation that everyone believed had a good chance
- for success." And, he argued, using one of the year's more
- improbable euphemisms, "there is a deeper failure than that of
- incomplete success, and that is the failure to attempt a worthy
- effort, a failure to try."
- </p>
- <p> Nonetheless, a worldwide debate was raging over the raid. A
- Pentagon whose planes had not even been detected while flying
- into Iran, much less shot at, now was barraged by bombs of
- criticism. some were hurled wildly by armchair strategists,
- others by more knowledgeable experts.
- </p>
- <p> The main target was the rescue plan. Some critics charge that
- it was too lean and spare, with far too few men and aircraft to
- overwhelm the militants holding the embassy in crowded Tehran,
- pick up the hostages and escape safely. On the other hand,
- other critics argue that the plan was to sophisticated and
- complex, with too many staging points and too many chances for
- detection before the assault on the embassy.
- </p>
- <p> Under Phase 1 of the raid, three C-130s carrying some 90 air
- commandos and three others transporting fuel, for helicopters
- took off from an airfield in Egypt. Eight Sikorsky RH-53
- helicopters, flying in pairs, left the nuclear carrier Nimitz
- in the Arabian Sea. All were to meet at "Desert One," an
- unimproved landing strip in the Great Salt Desert southeast of
- Tehran.
- </p>
- <p> Phase 2, never carried out, called for the C-130s to fly to
- Oman and the helicopters to ferry the commandos to a mountain
- hideout some 100 miles from Tehran. The raiding party would stay
- in hiding there throughout the next day. As darkness fell, the
- men would climb aboard trucks and buses, which would have been
- supplied by an undisclosed number of CIA agents and U.S. Special
- Forces men who had entered Iran earlier, some disguised as
- European businessmen.
- </p>
- <p> The vehicles would slip one by one into Tehran and rendezvous
- at a warehouse that had been acquired by an American agent.
- During the night the commandos would divide into two assault
- teams. A small party would head for the Foreign Ministry
- building, where U.S. Charge d'Affaires Bruce Laingen and two
- other U.S. diplomats were held captive. The other commandos
- would drive to the embassy compound, where 50 Americans were
- imprisoned.
- </p>
- <p> Surprise and speed were essential. The attackers, confident
- that they knew where the hostages were within the compound,
- planned to scale the embassy walls and shoot or capture the
- guards. The assault team was armed with automatic weapons but,
- contrary to some published reports, did not carry disabling gas,
- which would have knocked out the captives and required them to
- be carried to safety.
- </p>
- <p> As the assault began, four of the choppers were to fly to the
- embassy's soccer field. In the last stage of the assault, the
- hostages (by now joined by the three from the Foreign Ministry)
- and the 90 commandos would all leave in the four choppers. They
- would join the C-130s, which would have flown from Oman, at yet
- another airstrip, "Desert Two." There the choppers would be
- abandoned, and everyone would fly to safety in the transport
- planes.
- </p>
- <p> All during the rescue, Navy fighter aircraft from the carriers
- Nimitz and Coral Sea would fly along the Iranian border, ready
- to dart toward Tehran if the assault party got into trouble.
- The U.S. planners did not fear Iran's once potent air force.
- Of the country's 76 advanced F-14 fighters, no more than seven
- can fly, and none can fire its Phoenix missiles, owing to the
- lack of maintenance. Iran has 187 operational F-4 fighters, 50
- of them near Tehran, but none is equipped for night combat.
- Moreover, insists a Pentagon official, "we knew where all their
- planes were," meaning that they could have been destroyed on the
- ground if that had been deemed necessary.
- </p>
- <p> American military experts not involved in the mission's
- planning say that whether the scheme was sound depended on what
- kind of help the rescuers expected once they reached Tehran. The
- mission commanders, as well as Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman
- David Jones and Defense Secretary Harold Brown, have refused to
- comment on speculation that units in the Iranian military or
- even defectors among the militants were guarding the embassy
- were ready to support the operation.
- </p>
- <p> One former U.S. official familiar with Iran finds the mountain
- hideout scheme more practical than it might sound, noting that
- there are several well-concealed plateaus in the remote
- mountains. But few experts can understand the contention of
- both Carter and Brown that the Tehran phase of the plan would
- have been easier than getting the assault team into position in
- the desert in the first place; both of them have refused to
- explain why they think so. Even some of the military planners
- concede that the complex mission violated an old Army rule
- called KISS, meaning "Keep it simple, stupid."
- </p>
- <p> Other questions about the raid and the answers insofar as they
- were known last week:
- </p>
- <p>Did the plan risk too many lives?
- </p>
- <p> Pentagon officials have adamantly denied reports in Washington
- of a CIA estimate that 60% of the 53 hostages would probably
- have been killed in the rescue attempt. But TIME has learned
- that initial casualty estimates once ran as high as 200
- fatalities, including both hostages and rescuers. The final
- plan did, indeed, envision the possibility of losing from 15 to
- 20 hostages.
- </p>
- <p>Did the military planners want a bigger force?
- </p>
- <p> Outsiders claiming firsthand information from the Special
- Forces officers involved in the mission insist that earlier
- plans called for at least 600 men and 30 helicopters in the
- assault force. Some of these critics contend that the plan was
- scaled down by President Carter and is National Security council
- in the belief that a smaller strike would prove less bloody,
- less provocative to Iran's Arab neighbors and more politically
- acceptable at home.
- </p>
- <p> Indeed, in the months of planning that began within days of
- the seizure of the embassy last November, a wide range of rescue
- options was considered. "in the initial stages," General Jones
- said last week, "we did not see an option that had a reasonable
- chance of success. We tried and we trained and we exercised,
- and nothing was denied to us by anybody." Some of the earlier
- plans did envision a larger force but were discarded as
- impractical. One reason: the bigger the operation, the more
- difficult it would be to keep secret. So far, there is no
- evidence that the more restrictive plan was forced on the
- military by civilian officials.
- </p>
- <p>What changed to make any plan at all seem feasible?
- </p>
- <p> The planners are secretive about this. Yet it seems clear
- that they had been more successful than expected in getting
- covert agents into Iran, gaining support from people already in
- the country and picking up precise intelligence on where the
- hostages were and how they were guarded. Over the months, the
- militants had decreased their numbers and vigilance. Also, the
- U.S. had launched two secret military satellites in late
- November, completing the Air Force's positioning of six command
- and communications satellites around the world, including one
- over the Indian Ocean. The system could send almost
- instantaneous messages between the Pentagon and rescue
- commanders in the field. It might even have helped covert
- agents get information out of Tehran.
- </p>
- <p>What went wrong with the helicopters?
- </p>
- <p> The mission was canceled when three of the eight helicopters
- heading toward Desert One broke down while flying through a
- blinding sandstorm. An electrical power supply on one craft
- overheated and failed, knocking out the gyrocompass, the horizon
- indicator and the cockpit lights. The crew flew back to the
- Nimitz, making a dangerous landing, with fuel tanks nearly
- empty.
- </p>
- <p> On the second helicopter, the crew set down in the desert
- because a warning light signaled that the chopper's 34-ft.-long
- rotor blade was in danger of failing. They discovered that it
- was cracked. The crew and all classified material were picked
- up by another helicopter.
- </p>
- <p> The crew of the third damaged chopper pushed on to Desert One,
- despite the failure of a pump that propels the craft's back-up
- hydraulic system. It is essential, supplementing the primary
- hydraulic system, which operates the helicopter's control.
- Because the pump could not be repaired, the helicopter had to
- be taken out of service, and the rescue mission had to be
- scrubbed. Planners figured that the rescue required at least
- six helicopters. There were no back-up helicopters on the
- Nimitz; even if there had been, they could not have been flown
- to Desert One before daylight.
- </p>
- <p>Did the unusually severe storms cause the malfunctions?
- </p>
- <p> Although the sandstorms were common to all three helicopter
- failures, the mission leaders do not blame their problems on the
- weather. Pentagon officials disclosed that the choppers' 150-lb
- sand screens had been removed to increase the engines' thrust
- by 3%, a possibly critical safety margin. But the screens are
- designed only to protect the engines from long-term wear from
- dirt, which apparently was not a factor in any of the
- breakdowns.
- </p>
- <p> Investigators suspect that the overheating in the first craft
- resulted from a cooling vent having been blocked by a crewman's
- flak jacket and bag. If so, that obviously was human error.
- The swirling sand, investigators say, could not have cracked the
- rotor blade in the second craft. The cause may never be known.
- The failure of the third chopper's pump also is a mystery and
- presumably could not have been caused by sand because the
- helicopters' hydraulic systems are well sealed.
- </p>
- <p>Was maintenance of the helicopters faulty?
- </p>
- <p> From President Carter down to mission officers, this
- suggestion has been vehemently denied. To the contrary, they say,
- the helicopters got unusually meticulous care, even though their
- crews did not know of the impending mission. Fifteen
- maintenance men were assigned to each of the eight helicopters
- aboard the Nimitz. In addition, two civilian helicopter
- technical experts, including one from Sikorsky, were sent to the
- carrier. Almost daily, maintenance pilots flew the choppers to
- make sure that they were in top condition. In fact, the crews
- tending the RH-53s recently won Navy awards for their
- exceptional maintenance record. The U.S. military may have a
- general problem in retaining skilled maintenance men, the
- mission planners concede, but the best were available on board
- the Nimitz.
- </p>
- <p> Just eleven hours before the start of the mission, a sailor
- accidentally hit a fire control switch, dousing five of the
- RH-53s with sea water and foam. The aircraft were rinsed with
- fresh water and inspected. No visible damage was found.
- </p>
- <p>Why were the helicopters not destroyed at Desert One?
- </p>
- <p> So far, the mission leaders have not provided a satisfactory
- explanation. Failure to destroy the choppers enabled Iranian
- officials to obtain mission maps and other secret papers.
- Whether the documents revealed the identity of some U.S. agents
- or collaborators in Tehran is not known but seems improbable.
- The mission leaders suggested that after one helicopter
- collided with a parked C-130 at the landing strip and both
- erupted into flames, the resulting shrapnel and flying debris
- from exploding ammunition threatened to damage four other C-130s
- and strand the entire party. When asked about this last week,
- Colonel Charlie Beckwith, who was in charge of the 90-man
- assault force, said tersely: "That wasn't my job. I can't talk
- to that. I got all my stuff out of there." Perhaps
- protectively, the navy has not revealed the name of the Marine
- colonel who commanded the helicopter crews once they left the
- Nimitz.
- </p>
- <p>Did the commandoes want to continue the mission?
- </p>
- <p> Friends of Beckwith, 51, a true, if little-publicized, hero of
- Special Forces missions in Viet Nam, insist that he returned
- crestfallen from the failure in the desert, angry at being
- ordered to end the effort and on the verge of resigning his
- commission. But last week he appeared at a select Pentagon
- press conference at which photos were banned to protect his
- potential future usefulness in covert operations. He brusquely
- denied all allegations that he had opposed the decision to
- abort.
- </p>
- <p> From the start, Beckwith said, everyone had agreed that if the
- rescue team could not fly out of Desert One with at least six
- helicopters, the mission could not go forward. After two of
- the eight helicopters had failed to reach the landing strip,
- Beckwith had been relieved at the arrival, although late, of the
- sixty. But then the pilot of third damaged chopper told
- Beckwith that it could not fly. The colonel's one-word reply:
- "Bullshit."
- </p>
- <p> Beckwith went to the overall on-site commander, Air Force
- Colonel James Kyle, and asked him to take a look at the ailing
- chopper. "Let's confirm this," Beckwith said. "I want to make
- sure." When Kyle climbed down from the critical craft to report
- that it was indeed useless, Beckwith said last week, his own
- reaction was immediate: "Sir, my recommendation is that we
- abort." The commander gave Beckwith a chance to change his
- mind, asking "Would you consider taking five and going ahead?
- Think about it before you answer me. You're the guy that's got
- to shoulder this." After only a few seconds of reconsideration,
- Beckwith said sadly, "There's just no way."
- </p>
- <p> When a reporter persisted, asking again if Beckwith had not
- argued in favor of continuing the mission, the rugged six-footer
- bristled and replied in a soft Southern accent: "With all due
- respect, sir, you don't know where you're coming from. I've
- been there before, and I'm not about to be a party of half-assed
- loading on a bunch of aircraft and going up and murdering a
- bunch of the finest soldiers in the world. I ain't gonna do
- that. It was a no-win situation."
- </p>
- <p> After the order to abort had been confirmed from both the
- White House and the Pentagon, Beckwith recalled, his first
- thought was "My God, I'm gonna fail." He ordered his men into the
- C-130s to take off, then rushed to gather up all classified
- papers and gear. He was aboard a C-130 when he looked out a
- window. He recalled: "A 130 all of a sudden exploded. It was one
- hell of a fire. On that 130 were 39 of my people." Beckwith said
- there was no way to get the bodies out of the fire "unless you
- wanted to burn up everybody who's going in there." Said the much
- decorated and fearless officer: "I sat there and cried."
- </p>
- <p>Vienna Waltz
- </p>
- <p> In another part of the world, U.S. Marines were almost too
- successful at raiding an embassy last week. It was 8:50 p.m.,
- and the lone Austrian policeman at the gate of the American
- embassy in Vienna was yawning with boredom. Suddenly three cars
- squealed to a stop near by. Fifteen tough-looking men in
- civilian clothes leaped out and clambered over the embassy's
- garden wall. Instead of drawing his pistol and shooting at the
- intruders, the outnumbered policeman flashed headquarters for
- help. Lots of it. Within minutes, police surrounded the
- embassy. The squad leader then made contact with the American
- duty officer to see if he could get a situation report from
- inside. "Oh, sorry," the startled American replied. "We called
- our Marines out for a special security exercise. We forgot to
- notify you."</p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-