The Philippine Star

6th US ship now in Mediterran­ean

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) – A sixth US warship is now operating in the eastern Mediterran­ean, near five US destroyers armed with cruise missiles that could soon be directed against Syria as part of a “limited, precise” strike, defense officials said late on Friday.

They stressed that the USS San Antonio, an amphibious ship with several hundred US Marines on board, was in the region for a different reason and there were no plans to put Marines on the ground as part of any military action against Syria.

One of the officials said the San Antonio’s passage into the Mediterran­ean was long- planned, but offi thought it prudent to keep the ship in the eastern Mediterran­ean near the destroyers given the current situation.

“It’s been kept there as a precaution,” said one of the officials, who was not authorized to speak publicly.

The San Antonio transited through the Suez Canal on Thursday from the Red Sea, and received new orders on Friday to remain in the eastern Mediterran­ean, near the destroyers, according to defense officials. It is one of three ships that are carrying 2,200 Marines who have been on a six-month deployment in the region around the Arabian peninsula.

The Obama administra­tion released evidence on Friday that it said demonstrat­ed the Syrian government had used chemical weapons against civilians. It made clear on Friday that it would punish Syrian President Bashar Assad for the “brutal and flagrant” attack that it said killed more than 1,400 people in Damascus last week.

Officials cautioned the operation under discussion involved a limited, precise set of targets that would be of a short duration, unlike the broader campaign against Libya in March 2011.

The US Navy generally keeps three destroyers in the Mediterran­ean, but kept two additional destroyers there at the end of their deployment­s as the situation evolved in Syria over the past week.

The five destroyers are each carrying an estimated three dozen or more Tomahawk missiles for a combined total of about 200 missiles, according to defense officials.

Byron Callan, analyst with Capital Alpha Partners, projected that a limited Syrian strike would use about 200 to 300 Tomahawk missiles, compared to about 221 used in the Libya operation.

Defense officials said a more narrowly targeted operation against Syria could involve even less missiles.

They cited a debate within the Obama administra­tion about strik- ing the right balance between a limited cruise missile attack aimed at delivering a message about chemical weapons, and a broader attack that could be seen as a strong insertion of the United States into the Syrian civil war.

Military and civilian officials have expressed the need for caution to avert a cascading military conflict that could have repercussi­ons throughout the region. Some officials have cautioned that even an attack on military helicopter­s could be seen as part of a US campaign to disable the Syrian military.

Retired Admiral Gary Roughead, who served as chief of naval operations during the 2011 strikes on Libya, said any strike on Syria would have to be targeted precisely to do the maximum amount of damage to Syrian military headquarte­rs and other key sites — and to avert the possibilit­y of retaliator­y action.

“If you’re going to try to shape events, you really need to hurt them,” said Roughead, now a visiting fellow at Stanford University’s Hoover Institutio­n. “You would have to do something that would diminish the effectiven­ess of the Syrian military and that would be their command and control, perhaps their leadership, and then their ability to control air space.”

 ?? AFP ?? File photo shows a French aircraft carrier sailing to the harbor of Toulon in France. US Secretary of State John
Kerry lavished praise on France yesterday, caliing the
country ‘our oldest ally’ as he paid tribute to the French
for standing ready to...
AFP File photo shows a French aircraft carrier sailing to the harbor of Toulon in France. US Secretary of State John Kerry lavished praise on France yesterday, caliing the country ‘our oldest ally’ as he paid tribute to the French for standing ready to...

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