US warplanes, ships and troops ready in the Middle East if the conflict expands
UNB
Publish: 20 Sep 2024, 01:04 PM
WASHINGTON,
Sep 20 (AP/UNB) - The U.S. has kept an increased military presence in the
Middle East throughout much of the past year, with about 40,000 forces, at
least a dozen warships and four Air Force fighter jet squadrons spread across
the region both to protect allies and to serve as a deterrent against attacks,
several U.S. officials said.
As attacks between
Israel and Hezbollah sharply spiked this week, worries are growing that the
conflict could escalate into an all-out war, even as Tel Aviv keeps up its
nearly yearlong fight against Hamas militants in Gaza.
Hezbollah says Israel
crossed a "red line" with explosive attacks on its communications
devices and vowed to keep up the missile strikes it's launched since fellow
Iranian-backed militant group Hamas attacked Israel on Oct. 7, setting off the
war in Gaza.
Israeli Defense Minister
Yoav Gallant - who has spoken repeatedly this week to U.S. Defense Secretary
Lloyd Austin - has declared the start of a "new phase" of the war,
shifting its focus to the northern front against Hezbollah in Lebanon.
So far, the U.S. hasn't
signaled a troop increase or change as a result of the latest attacks, and
there is already a beefed-up force in the region.
"We're confident in
the ability that we have there right now to protect our forces and should we
need to come to the defense of Israel as well," Pentagon spokeswoman
Sabrina Singh said Thursday.
A military official said
the additional resources have helped as the U.S. patrols various conflict
areas, including operations targeting the Islamic State group in Iraq and
Syria, defending Israel and countering threats from Iranian-backed Houthi
rebels in Yemen, who have targeted commercial ships in the Red Sea and launched
ballistic missiles at Israel.
The officials spoke on
condition of anonymity to describe U.S. troop movements and locations.
Here's a look at the
U.S. military presence in the Middle East:
Troops
Normally, about 34,000
U.S. forces are deployed to U.S. Central Command, which covers the entire
Middle East. That troop level grew in the early months of the Israel-Hamas war
to about 40,000 as additional ships and aircraft were sent in.
Several weeks ago, the
total spiked to nearly 50,000 when Austin ordered two aircraft carriers and
their accompanying warships to stay in the region as tensions roiled between
Israel and Lebanon. One carrier strike group has since left and moved into the
Asia-Pacific.
The beefed-up presence
is designed both to help defend Israel and protect U.S. and allied personnel
and assets.
Navy warships are
scattered across the region, from the eastern Mediterranean Sea to the Gulf of
Oman, and both Air Force and Navy fighter jets are strategically based at
several locations to be better prepared to respond to any attacks.
Warships
The U.S. is back to one
aircraft carrier in the region. Austin has extended the deployment of carriers
several times in the past year so that on a few occasions, there has been the
rare presence of two at once.
American military
commanders have long argued that the presence of a formidable aircraft carrier
- with its array of fighter jets and surveillance aircraft and sophisticated
missiles - is a strong deterrent against Iran.
The USS Abraham Lincoln
and its three destroyers are in the Gulf of Oman, while two U.S. Navy
destroyers are in the Red Sea. The USS Georgia guided missile submarine, which
Austin ordered to the region last month, had been in the Red Sea and remains in
U.S. Central Command, but officials declined to say where.
There are six U.S.
warships in the eastern Mediterranean Sea, including the USS Wasp amphibious
assault ship with the 26th Marine Expeditionary Unit aboard. And three Navy
destroyers are in that area.
About a half dozen of
the F/A-18 fighter jets from the USS Abraham Lincoln have been moved to a land
base in the region. Officials declined to say where.
Aircraft
The Air Force sent in an
additional squadron of advanced F-22 fighter jets last month, bringing the
total number of land-based fighter squadrons in the Middle East to four.
That force also includes
a squadron of A-10 Thunderbolt II ground attack aircraft, F-15E Strike Eagles
and F-16 fighter jets. The Air Force is not identifying what countries the
planes are operating from.
The addition of the F-22
fighter jets gives U.S. forces a hard-to-detect aircraft that has a
sophisticated suite of sensors to suppress enemy air defenses and carry out
electronic attacks. The F-22 also can act as a "quarterback,"
organizing other warplanes in an operation.
But the U.S. also showed
in February that it doesn't have to have planes based in the Middle East to
attack targets. In February, a pair of B-1 bombers took off from Dyess Air
Force Base in Texas and flew more than 30 hours in a roundtrip mission in which
they struck 85 Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps Quds Force targets in Iraq
and Syria in response to an attack by IRGC-backed militias that killed three
U.S. service members.
End/UNB/AP/SU