Posted on: Friday, September 14, 2001
America's bloodiest day
Pentagon poring over options for war
Advertiser Staff and News Services
WASHINGTON The Pentagon is poring over options for war with top officials vowing to eradicate the terrorists who hit New York and Washington as well as the states and organizations that support them.
The military strike options go far beyond the short-term cruise missile assaults of years past in Afghanistan and Sudan and isolated airstrikes against sites in Iraq.
Instead, they involve the potential lengthy use of military forces on the land, at sea and in the air. Options include the covert insertion of elite special forces and long-range bomb strikes from manned aircraft, said senior military and administration officials, all speaking on condition of anonymity.
In the most explicit description yet of the Bush administration's intentions, Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz said yesterday the retaliation would be continued until the roots of terrorism are destroyed.
"These people try to hide. They won't be able to hide forever," Wolfowitz said. "They think their harbors are safe, but they won't be safe forever. One has to say it's not just simply a matter of capturing people and holding them accountable, but removing the sanctuaries, removing the support systems, ending states who sponsor terrorism."
Said Navy Secretary Gordon England: "This is not going to be a short program."
The huge number of dead and the vast destruction wrought by Tuesday's strikes has caused "a different mindset" to take hold among senior Defense Department officials, a ranking military official said.
"If you are really going to do war, you do it with all assets political, economic and military, and that's what they want to do," the officer said.
President Bush was considering a request by Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld to call several thousand members of the National Guard and Reserve to active duty in the next few days, a defense official said Thursday. The last presidential call-up was in January 1991 when 265,322 reservists were federalized for the Gulf War.
John Ma, command executive officer for the Army's 9th Regional Support Command, said less than a dozen O'ahu reservists were placed on active duty Tuesday to assist with heightened security.
No further call-ups had been ordered yesterday for Hawai'i's approximately 2,000 reservists.
"Right now, we have not received any notification of a partial call-up," said Ma.
Ma said the Pentagon initially may be looking for support from "grave registration" units to provide assistance with recovery efforts at the World Trade Center. No such units are based in Hawai'i, he said.
The Defense Department is making some moves to return the nation to normal. The military's fleet of sophisticated radar planes called AWACS have been ordered to stop flying missions over the nation's airspace, Rumsfeld said last night on CNN's "Larry King Live."
The decision coincided with the resumption of commercial airline flights yesterday morning.
But Rumsfeld also noted that combat planes continue to fly over the New York-Washington corridor. He said he has not decided when those flights should stop. "And we do have interceptors on 15-minute alert across the country on some 26 bases," Rumsfeld told CNN.
In comments at the White House earlier yesterday, Bush repeated his assertion that the attacks with hijacked jetliners on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon were acts of war.
"Now that war has been declared, we will lead the world to victory," Bush said.
Appearing with England in a Pentagon briefing room still reeking of smoke, Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Vern Clark pointed out that the Navy already has two aircraft carrier battle groups, each with 75 warplanes, near the Arabian Sea.
That is twice the usual number for that part of the world. The USS Enterprise had been due to return home after being relieved this month by the USS Carl Vinson, but it was ordered to remain in the area indefinitely.
Such battle groups normally include cruisers and submarines, which can be launch pads for long-range cruise missile strikes, perhaps a prelude to attacks by manned aircraft such as B-2 stealth bombers or B-1 Lancers.
There were no other indications yesterday of a buildup of American forces in the Middle East or elsewhere.
Neither Wolfowitz nor other defense officials hinted at when the United States might begin military strikes. Bush said he would be patient. On Capitol Hill, some lawmakers urged the administration to gather more information about the perpetrators of Tuesday's attacks and their supporters.
"This has got to be a very sophisticated inquiry," said Sen. Dick Lugar, R-Ind., a senior member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
Bush is seeking $20 billion in emergency money to strengthen U.S. military readiness for the fight against terrorism and other uses related to Tuesday's attacks. The House is debating amendments that would add allocations, perhaps by as much as another $20 billion.