Secret
US air force team to perfect plan for Iran strike
Sarah
Baxter, Washington
THE
United States Air Force has set up a highly confidential strategic planning group
tasked with fighting the next war as tensions rise with Iran.
Project
Checkmate, a successor to the group that planned the 1991 Gulf Wars air
campaign, was quietly reestablished at the Pentagon in June.
It
reports directly to General Michael Moseley, the US Air Force chief, and consists
of 20-30 top air force officers and defence and cyberspace experts with ready
access to the White House, the CIA and other intelligence agencies.
Detailed
contingency planning for a possible attack on Iran has been carried out for more
than two years by Centcom (US central command), according to defence sources.
Checkmates
job is to add a dash of brilliance to Air Force thinking by countering the militarys
tendency to fight the last war and by providing innovative strategies
for warfighting and assessing future needs for air, space and cyberwarfare.
It
is led by Brigadier-General Lawrence Stutz Stutzriem, who is considered
one of the brightest air force generals. He is assisted by Dr Lani Kass, a former
Israeli military officer and expert on cyberwarfare.
The
failure of United Nations sanctions to curtail Irans nuclear ambitions,
which Tehran claims are peaceful, is giving rise to an intense debate about the
likelihood of military strikes.
Bernard
Kouchner, the French foreign minister, said last week that it was necessary
to prepare for the worst . . . and the worst is war. He later qualified
his remarks, saying he wanted to avoid that outcome.
France
has joined America in pushing for a tough third sanctions resolution against Iran
at the UN security council but is meeting strong resistance from China and Russia.
Britain has been doing its best to bridge the gap, but it is increasingly likely
that new sanctions will be implemented by a US-led coalition of the willing.
Irans
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who arrives in New York for the United Nations
general assembly today, has been forced to abandon plans to visit ground zero,
where the World Trade Center stood until the September 11 attacks of 2001. Politicians
from President George W Bush to Senator Hillary Clinton, the Democratic frontrunner
in the 2008 race for the White House, were outraged by the prospect of a visit
to New Yorks most venerated site by a state sponsor of terrorism.
Bush
still hopes to isolate Iran diplomatically, but believes the regime is moving
steadily closer to obtaining nuclear weapons while the security council bickers.
The
US president faces strong opposition to military action, however, within his own
joint chiefs of staff. None of them think it is a good idea, but they will
do it if they are told to, said a senior defence source.
General
John Abizaid, the former Centcom commander, said last week: Every effort
should be made to stop Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons, but failing that,
the world could live with a nuclear-armed Iran.
Critics
fear Abizaid has lost sight of Irans potential to arm militant groups such
as Hezbollah with nuclear weapons. You can deter Iran, but there is no strategy
against nuclear terrorism, said the retired air force Lieutenant General
Thomas McInerney of the Iran policy committee.
There
is no question that we can take out Iran. The problem is the follow-on, the velvet
revolution that needs to be created so the Iranian people know its not aimed
at them, but at the Iranian regime.
Checkmates
freethinking mission is to provide planning inputs to warfighters that are
strategically, operationally and tactically sound, logistically supportable and
politically feasible. Its remit is not specific to one country, according
to defence sources, but its forward planning is thought relevant to any future
air war against Iranian nuclear and military sites. It is also looking at possible
threats from China and North Korea.
Checkmate
was formed in the 1970s to counter Soviet threats but fell into disuse in the
1980s. It was revived under Colonel John Warden and was responsible for drawing
up plans for the crushing air blitz against Saddam Hussein at the opening of the
first Gulf war.
Warden
told The Sunday Times: When Saddam invaded Kuwait, we had access to unlimited
numbers of people with expertise, including all the intelligence agencies, and
were able to be significantly more agile than Centcom.
He
believes that Checkmates role is to develop the necessary expertise so that
if somebody says Iran, it says: here is what you need to think about.
Here are the objectives, here are the risks, here is what it will cost, here are
the numbers of planes we will lose, here is how the war is going to end and here
is what the peace will look like.
Warden
added: The Centcoms of this world are executional they dont
have the staff, the expertise or the responsibility to do the thinking that is
needed before a country makes the decision to go to war. War planning is not just
about bombs, airplanes and sailing boats.