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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Monday, October 8, 2001

The September 11th attack | America strikes back
Strikes target air defenses, drop aid, seek to weaken Taliban

Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Forty U.S. and British warplanes and an armada of warships and submarines pummeled strongholds of the al-Qaida network and the Taliban regime in Afghanistan yesterday with Tomahawk cruise missiles, 500-pound gravity bombs and computer-guided bombs.

A U.S. fighter jet appears as a light in the sky as it takes off from the USS Enterprise during strikes on Afghanistan that also included U.S. missile-firing ships and submarines and British missile-launching subs.

Associated Press

The targets included early warning radars, surface-to-air missiles, airfields, aircraft, military command and control installations and terrorist camps. In one case, Taliban military equipment including tanks was struck near Mazar-e-Sharif in northern Afghanistan, officials said.

The demonstration of Western firepower was the first wave of an anti-terrorism campaign promised after the Sept. 11 attacks on the United States. One senior administration official said the military strikes would be sustained and would last days or more.

"Our objective is to defeat those who use terrorism and those who house or support them," Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld told a Pentagon news conference.

Along with the strikes against air defenses of the Taliban and their small fleet of warplanes, U.S. Air Force C-17 cargo planes began dropping food and medical supplies inside Afghanistan as part of President Bush's effort to aid displaced civilians.

Rumsfeld said 37,500 sets of rations were to be dropped in an initial wave yesterday in the beginning stage of a humanitarian operation that might eventually include moving relief supplies by ground.

A Pentagon official said the United States also will conduct operations inside Afghanistan that will not be seen publicly — an apparent reference to the use of Army special operations ground forces.

Gen. Richard Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said 15 land-based bombers — including B-2 Stealth bombers flying from Whiteman Air Force Base, Mo. — and 25 other strike aircraft flying from U.S. aircraft carriers began the attack at 12:30 p.m. EDT — after darkness fell in Afghanistan. He termed the strike "the early stages of ongoing combat operations" against the Taliban and the al-Qaida network.

A senior defense official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said later that Navy F/A-18 and F-14 fighters flew missions off two U.S. carriers — the USS Carl Vinson and the USS Enteprise — in the Arabian Sea, and that no land-based Air Force strike planes other than bombers were used in the first round of attacks. The support planes used in the raids included Navy EA-6B electronic warfare aircraft and E2-C Hawkeye early warning radar planes as well as American and British tankers that refueled the bombers on their long-range strikes.

Myers, sworn into office less than a week ago, said the U.S. aircraft in the initial wave included Air Force B-1 Lancers, B-2s and B-52 long-range bombers as well as carrier-based strike aircraft. The B-2s flew from Whiteman, but after dropping their satellite-guided bombs, known as Joint Direct Attack Munitions, continued on to Diego Garcia, a British island in the Indian Ocean. The crews were to rest there and then fly their planes back to Missouri, officials said.

The B-52s dropped at least dozens of 500-pound gravity bombs on al-Qaida terrorist training camps in eastern Afghanistan, one official said.

Also participating in the initial attacks were American and British ships and submarines that launched a total of 50 Tomahawk cruise missiles from positions in the Arabian Sea, officials said.

The U.S. ships were the guided missile cruiser USS Philippine Sea, whose homeport is Mayport, Fla., and three destroyers, the USS O'Brien based in Yokosuka, Japan, the USS McFaul based in Norfolk, Va., and the USS John Paul Jones based in San Diego.

Two submarines — one American and one British — also fired cruise missiles. Officials would not identify them by name.

Rumsfeld said it was too early to judge the success of the mission. He said there was no indication that any American plane had been damaged.

Afghan sources, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the targets included Taliban headquarters in Kandahar, the city's airport facilities, housing for followers of Osama bin Laden and the home of a Taliban leader.

Rumsfeld said an initial goal of the strikes was to render air defenses ineffective and to wipe out the military aircraft of the Taliban, who rule most of Afghanistan. The Taliban are known to have a small inventory of surface-to-air missiles as well as shoulder-fired anti-aircraft missiles and anti-aircraft artillery guns.

"We also seek to raise the cost of doing business for foreign terrorists who have chosen Afghanistan from which to organize their activities, and for the oppressive Taliban regime that continues to tolerate terrorist presence in those portions of Afghanistan which they control," Rumsfeld said.

He said the U.S.-led military effort was focused on achieving several goals, including acquiring intelligence information for use in future attacks, and to "alter the military balance over time" by helping the opposition forces in their fight against the Taliban.