Houston Chronicle Sunday

Attack exposes missile defense challenges

- By Dan Lamothe

For more than an hour, the missiles knifed in with a whoosh, explosions bursting in the night sky. It wasn’t clear when they’d stop, or what they’d hit.

U.S., coalition and Iraqi troops hunkered down for the Iranian attack in Iraq on Tuesday night had prepared over several days for such an onslaught, following the U.S. drone strike in Baghdad that killed Qasem Soleimani, the Iranian general with involvemen­t in the death of hundreds of U.S. troops, according to U.S. officials.

But the attack highlighte­d an ongoing challenge for the Pentagon: For all its might, the U.S. military had little ability to stop such a missile attack once it was underway.

The challenges include the sheer volume of Iran’s missile arsenal, believed to number more than 2,000, along with the Pentagon’s scarce number of missiledef­ense options. Iran launched 16 missiles, with 11 hitting al-Asad air base west of Baghdad, one landing at a facility in Irbil in northern Iraq and four malfunctio­ning, Defense Secretary Mark Esper said.

One senior U.S. military official, who like others spoke on the condition of anonymity due to the issue’s ongoing sensitivit­y, said that a ballistic missile is “obviously a significan­t threat for anybody.” In the face of one, the official said, “You become a small target, if you will. You stay away from openings, windows, that kind of thing. It’s what you would do in a tornadolik­e scenario.”

The best missile-defense weapons that may have been able to help - Patriot missiles and a newer system known as Terminal High-Altitude Area Defense, or THAAD - were not in position in the two locations in Iraq that Iran attacked. The Army has 15 Patriot units, many of them committed to protecting U.S. interests elsewhere in the world. Four are permanentl­y deployed to Europe and Asia, to guard against possible aggression from Russia and North Korea.

With such a limited number of systems in the U.S. arsenal, the Pentagon assessed last fall that the best place to position additional missile-defense weapons in the Middle East was in Saudi Arabia, which has faced regular attacks from Iranianbac­ked forces in Yemen, two senior defense officials said.

Adjustment­s will be made now, one of those senior officials said, though he declined to say how. U.S. officials believed for months that it was unlikely Iran would launch missiles at Americans in Iraq, considerin­g the diplomatic relations between Iraq and Iran. That was before U.S. forces killed Soleimani, however.

With no missile defense available, U.S. commanders in Iraq relied on a mixture of intelligen­ce to prepare and practical options on the ground, including removing some service members from al-Asad and dispersing those who remained under hardened shelters far apart to make it harder to kill a large number of troops. Esper attributed those defensive measures for “the fact that we had no casualties.”

Some senior U.S. officials have said they believe that Iran wanted to avoid killing any Americans, though Gen. Mark Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said it is his assessment that Iran did want to cause fatalities. At al-Asad, the strike caused destructio­n to nine aircraft maintenanc­e structures and three pickups, severe damage to a Black Hawk helicopter, and some damage to an aerial drone and runway taxiways, a defense official said. In Irbil, the missile damaged a watchtower.

The major challenge to protecting bases like al-Asad is the scarcity of missile-defense weapons, and significan­t number of other bases that the United States must protect, said Becca Wasser, a policy analyst at the Rand Corporatio­n who studies war gaming and defense in the Middle East. Other bases that need protection include Camp Arifjan in Kuwait, Al Dhafra Air Base in the United Arab Emirates and Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar - some of which have fighter jets and other expensive weapons on them. The Navy’s fleet in the Middle East also has headquarte­rs within range in Bahrain.

Even where Patriot missile systems are, they have limitation­s, said Tom Karako, who studies missile defense for the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies in Washington.

“Patriots are high-demand, scarce assets, and they are, furthermor­e, point defenses,” he said. “And so their defended area is relatively modest. Patriots are very good at doing what they are designed to do, but they can’t be everywhere at once.”

 ?? Tribune News Service file photo ?? A long-range Qadr ballistic missile is launched in the Alborz mountain range in northern Iran.
Tribune News Service file photo A long-range Qadr ballistic missile is launched in the Alborz mountain range in northern Iran.

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