Lodi News-Sentinel

Pentagon asks for thousands more troops for Middle East

- By David S. Cloud

WASHINGTON — The Pentagon has asked the White House to send several thousand more troops, Patriot antimissil­e batteries and warplanes to the Middle East to boost U.S. defenses against Iranian threats, senior U.S. officials said Thursday, in a sign of the growing friction with Tehran.

If approved, the reinforcem­ents would represent another course correction by President Donald Trump, who has given mixed signals to Iran, most recently appealing to Tehran’s supreme leader to open direct negotiatio­ns with him only days after he threatened punishing retaliatio­n if Iran attacked U.S. targets.

The proposed escalation includes an Air Force fighter squadron, several additional warships and special reconnaiss­ance aircraft to help keep tabs on Iranian forces. The White House announced on May 6 that it was sending the Abraham Lincoln carrier strike force and four B-52 bombers to the region, citing growing threats from Iran.

Trump, who was scheduled to meet with acting Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan and Gen. Joseph Dunford Jr., chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, did not say whether he had approved the request.

“I don’t think we’ll need it but if we need it we’ll be there with any number we need,” Trump told reporters. “I would certainly send troops if we need them.”

Gen. Kenneth F. McKenzie Jr., the top commander of U.S. forces in the Middle East, is especially interested in adding Patriot anti-missile batteries to help defend U.S. troops, facilities and allies in the region, according to a U.S. official who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss internal planning.

One Patriot battery is already headed to an undisclose­d country in the area, but McKenzie is interested in beefing up anti-missile protection more broadly, the U.S. official said.

“We are looking at ... things that we can do to enhance force protection in the Middle East” and the options “may involve sending additional troops,” Shanahan told reporters at the Pentagon.

Tensions between Washington and Tehran have run high since U.S. officials received intelligen­ce indicating that Iranian security forces had loaded missiles aboard small boats, raising fears that they planned to carry out attacks against oil tankers or other shipping in the Persian Gulf.

U.S. surveillan­ce of Iran’s naval bases and military installati­ons showed a high state of alert by Iranian cruise missile batteries and other maritime forces along the strategic waterway. That partly prompted the Pentagon request for more forces, although it wasn’t clear whether the Iranian moves were in response to the growing U.S. military operations.

“They continue to operate at a high level,” moving missiles, air defense systems and small boats that Iran has long used to threaten American warships, the U.S. official said.

U.S. intelligen­ce agencies believe Iran probably does not want a military confrontat­ion. But hard-line units from the Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps may try to use proxies and unconventi­onal tactics for low-level attacks against the U.S. and its allies, U.S. officials said.

Trump’s decision last month to designate the powerful Revolution­ary Guard as a foreign terrorist organizati­on under U.S. law has especially inflamed tensions. A tightening tourniquet of U.S. sanctions has constricte­d Iran’s economy and oil exports, which reduced a crucial income stream for the Revolution­ary Guard.

U.S. officials claim evidence shows that Iran was responsibl­e for apparent sabotage attacks that damaged four oil tankers at anchor off the United Arab Emirates on May 12. The administra­tion has not made public any evidence implicatin­g Iran.

U.S. officials also suspect Iraqi militia fighters loyal to Iran of firing a rocket in Baghdad on Sunday night that landed less than a mile from the American Embassy.

In recent years, Iran has invested substantia­lly in antiship cruise missiles, posing a greater risk to oil tankers and to warships.

Of particular concern is Iran’s ability to block access or free passage in the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow choke point in the Persian Gulf through which one-fifth of the world’s oil shipments pass.

Navy officials say Iran might be able to temporaril­y block tanker traffic in the strait using anti-ship missiles and other weapons, but U.S. commanders say they can reopen the waterway quickly if necessary.

During its 1980-88 war with Iraq, Iranian forces mined shipping routes and threatened to close the strait. When the Samuel Roberts, a U.S. guided-missile frigate, was severely damaged by an Iranian mine in 1988, the Reagan administra­tion ordered the destructio­n of two Iranian oil platforms, an Iranian frigate and a number of smaller armed boats.

The current American buildup has prompted fierce criticism by Democrats in Congress, who warned that hard-line Iran critics in the White House, including national security adviser John Bolton, were seeking a military confrontat­ion with Iran without authorizat­ion from Congress and without sharing intelligen­ce that Tehran was in a threatenin­g posture.

“Right now the administra­tion is involved in what I would characteri­ze as a series of blind, senseless escalatory measures with respect to Iran with no ending, with no strategy,” Sen. Christophe­r S. Murphy, D-Conn., said Thursday in an event with Win Without War, an activist group “The danger is that a mistake ... turns into a war.”

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