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To: SiouxPal who wrote (81029)10/16/2002 8:09:25 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 122087
 
Task force ordered to gulf Local ships, planes and troops being sent to trouble zone

By James W. Crawley
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER

and Otto Kreisher
COPLEY NEWS SERVICE

October 16, 2002

Associated Press
Marines walk through a hangar at North Island Naval Air Station while loading supplies onto the aircraft carrier Constellation.

The San Diego-based aircraft carrier Constellation and its escort ships will depart for the Persian Gulf in early November – earlier than originally scheduled – as preparations increase for a possible war against Iraq.

Meanwhile, Pentagon sources said several hundred Marines from Camp Pendleton's 1st Marine Expeditionary Force headquarters – including high-ranking officers, intelligence experts and logistics planners – are leaving soon for an exercise in Kuwait, along with an Army command staff from Germany.

"Certainly, coupled with the early deployment of the Constellation, those can only be construed as preparations for war," John Pike, president of GlobalSecurity, a think tank that monitors the military, said yesterday.

The Constellation and other local warships will start a final training exercise tomorrow, spending about two weeks off the Southern California coast practicing bombing missions, Tomahawk cruise-missile strikes and maritime interceptions.

After the exercise's completion Oct. 30, the warships will be in port for several days before departing for the Persian Gulf, said several military officials who requested anonymity.

Citing security considerations, 3rd Fleet spokeswoman Cmdr. Jacquie Yost would only confirm that the battle group would deploy by year's end.

Normally, a carrier has about 18 months between six-month deployments for maintenance and training. The Constellation returned from its previous Persian Gulf deployment in September 2001. Navy sources said the Constellation's original departure date had been early 2003.

Word that the carrier – which carries about 5,000 local sailors and Marines and about 70 aircraft – is leaving comes days after the Pentagon ordered a Marine command staff to the Persian Gulf.

Brig. Gen. Andrew Davis, the Marine's chief spokesman, said the move is needed because "the Marine Corps wants to be absolutely ready for any contingency in the world."

Another Marine spokesman, Lt. Col. David Lapan, said the Pendleton Marines and the Army's 5th Corps staff, based in Germany, will take part in the annual "Internal Look" exercise along with the Central Command headquarters staff.

While the Marine and Army staffs will be in Kuwait during the exercise, the higher command will operate at a new headquarters in Qatar. Kuwait borders Iraq on the south, and Qatar is on a peninsula that juts into the Persian Gulf from Saudi Arabia.

Central Command, headed by Army Gen. Tommy Franks, oversees the war in Afghanistan and would be responsible for action against Iraq.

Pentagon officials say the command shift is only part of the exercise, but analysts see the move as an important war indicator.

"That's the final move, everything else is in place," said retired Rear Adm. Stephen Baker, an analyst at the Center for Defense Information.

The military has fewer than 5,000 combat-ready Army and Marine ground troops in the region – not enough to fight a war.

Tens of thousands more troops, including up to 40,000 Marines from Camp Pendleton, Miramar and Yuma, could be airlifted to the Persian Gulf in a matter of days and weeks, utilizing tanks, artillery and equipment prepositioned in the region. More Marines could be moved to the gulf from North Carolina and Okinawa.

Baker noted that the Navy, with its 5th Fleet headquarters in Bahrain, and the Air Force, with a command center at Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia, are already in place.

Military experts say that having part of the command staffs in the region will speed planning for a potential invasion of Iraq. The staffs will be setting up command posts, debugging computer and communications networks, updating troop deployment schedules and finishing operational plans, Pike said.

The difference between planning a war game and preparing for war is virtually "indistinguishable," Pike said. "It's inconceivable that Internal Look would be looking at anything other than a regime change in Iraq."

Franks could have U.S. ground forces ready to fight in less than a month after he gets a "go" order from President Bush, Baker said.

Because it takes four weeks or more to steam from San Diego to the Persian Gulf, local sailors and Marines could be in the war zone in early December.

Joining the Constellation are five San Diego-based warships – the cruisers Valley Forge and Bunker Hill, destroyers Milius and Higgins and frigate Thach. Also, the crew of the destroyer Kinkaid will take over the destroyer Fletcher, which is deployed with the Lincoln battle group in the Persian Gulf and will be part of the Constellation flotilla.

Hornet jets from Miramar Marine Corps Air Station's squadron VMFA-323, along with three Navy squadrons – Viking tankers, Seahawk helicopters and Greyhound transports – from North Island Naval Air Station, will be aboard the carrier.

While thousands get ready to leave, no plans have been announced to keep 2,000 Camp Pendleton Marines already deployed in the Persian Gulf or speed up deployment of more Marines.

The 11th Marine Expeditionary Unit, assigned to the Belleau Wood Amphibious Ready Group, left Kuwait recently after one Marine was killed and another wounded by Kuwaiti attackers during a training exercise on Failaka Island.

The unit and three San Diego ships, the Belleau Wood, Denver and Mount Vernon, are still scheduled to return home in mid-December.

The aircraft carrier Lincoln is the only U.S. carrier in the Persian Gulf. Based in Washington state, the Lincoln is being escorted by several ships, including the San Diego cruisers Mobile Bay and Shiloh. It also has two aircraft squadrons from North Island Naval Air Station on board.

Although no official due date has been announced, the carrier group would return to the West Coast in January or February if no delays occur. However, military officials said, orders can be changed.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
James W. Crawley:
(619) 542-4559; jim.crawley@uniontrib.com



To: SiouxPal who wrote (81029)10/16/2002 8:11:44 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 122087
 
U.S. warned Indonesia before blasts
Two men intensely questioned in Bali blasts
Wednesday, October 16, 2002 Posted: 6:49 PM EDT (2249 GMT)


KUTA, Indonesia (CNN) -- U.S. diplomatic and intelligence officials say in the two weeks before the Bali bombings, they repeatedly passed threat information to the Indonesian government suggesting terrorists were planning attacks in that country, including attacks against "Western tourist sites."

The most recent warning came just a day before the Saturday Bali blasts, U.S. government sources said.

A U.S. State Department notice issued last Thursday also warned that terrorists in Indonesia might attack non-official targets such as "clubs, schools, places of worship."

Bali -- where nearly 200 people were killed in back-to-back nightclub explosions -- was among the many locations the United States told Indonesia were threatened, U.S. officials said.

The U.S. warnings were made at a variety of levels, officials said, including during meetings between the U.S. ambassador and President Megawati Sukarnoputri. Sources said the threat information was also shared with the Australian government.

Officials said the threat information was "vague, not specific." But one official added: "There was a lot of it."

The threat information came not only from Omar Al-Faruq -- the Kuwaiti-born al Qaeda operative under interrogation by the United States at an undisclosed location -- but also from a variety of other intelligence sources, officials said. The officials declined to be more specific.

Since September, Al-Faruq has warned of plots against a number of targets in Southeast Asia. Both The New York Times and the Washington Post reported Wednesday that the United States invited Indonesian intelligence and law enforcement officials to interview Al-Faruq themselves, and that they were doing so on the day of the bloody attacks in Bali.

Al-Faruq was detained by Indonesian authorities in Java in June, and then turned over to the United States.

Before the Bali bombings, Indonesian officials repeatedly expressed skepticism that al Qaeda was active in their country or that the local group Jemaah Islamiah was plotting major attacks, with encouragement from al Qaeda.

Since the attacks, Indonesian Defense Minister Matori Abdul Djalil has been quoted as saying he recognizes al Qaeda has a presence in his country. President Megawati has remained silent on the issue.

Meanwhile, Indonesian police are neither confirming nor denying a Washington Post report that a former air force officer has confessed to making the bombs.

Citing an unnamed Indonesian security official, the Washington Post reported that the suspect regretted the loss of life but would not disclose who ordered him to make the bombs.

Australia has posted a $2 million (U.S. $1.1 million) reward for information leading to those responsible for the blasts that killed as many as 200 people, mostly Australian tourists.

Australian Prime Minister John Howard said the group most likely behind the blast is the extremist organization, Jemaah Islamiah. He said he would ask the United Nations to list it as a terrorist group. (Call for U.N. action)

Jemaah Islamiah's leader, Indonesian cleric Abu Bakar Bashir, denied his group's involvement and blamed "foreign parties," including the United States. (Cleric denies involvement)

Meanwhile, Indonesian authorities intensely questioned two men Wednesday.

One is Balinese, according to the national police chief. He reported seeing someone enter a nightclub across the street from Sari's nightclub and put down a white plastic bag, the chief said. A small explosion was followed soon after by the huge car bomb in front of Sari's, where most of the victims died.

The other man being questioned is the only surviving security guard at Sari's, officials said.

Authorities were also talking to the relatives of two Indonesian men whose identity cards were found in the rubble. The men themselves, said to be from East Java and Lombok, have not been located, but officials want to know why they were there.

Police Chief Dai Bahtiar said one of the two men being questioned has a connection to one of the men whose identity card was found at the blast sites. The other man being interrogated may also be linked to the owner of one of the identity cards.

Wednesday, intelligence and forensic experts from Indonesia, the United States, Japan and Australia combed through the charred debris, looking for clues in the worst terrorist attack since September 11.

Authorities said the explosives that leveled a block in the tourist district were planted in a car. Police said they hadn't determined whether it was a suicide bombing.

Tuesday, Indonesian police said traces of C4 explosives were found at the blast site.

The putty-like explosive was the same kind used in a blast in August 2000 outside the Philippine ambassador's home in Jakarta. That blast, in which two people died, was also blamed on Jemaah Islamiah.

--CNN Correspondent Mike Chinoy and CNN National Security Correspondent David Ensor contributed to this report.