Some
"Curious" US And French Military Deployments
29
September, 2012
Regular
readers are aware that periodically, usually weekly, Zero Hedge
presents critical naval updates demonstrating the positioning of key
US maritime assets, primarily strategic aircraft carriers. The
location of these indicates far more what US foreign policy is
focused on at any moment, than propaganda distributed for general
consumption via the coopted media.
Today,
however, instead of focusing on aircraft carriers, using Stratfor
analysis, we present several broad "curious" US and French
military developments.
What
the ultimate purpose of these movements is for now unclear - they may
be perfectly normal deployments or they may be a precursor to
something more. Remember: we know that both CVN-74 (which is
currently just briefly caught up in that whole Senkaku Snafu between
Japan and China) Stennis and Marine force LHA-1 Peleliu are en route
to Iran, where following last week's modestly paliative Netanyahu
comments, the military strategists believe the tide has turned and
there will be no war with Iran in the immediate future. Ironically,
following a spike in war chatter in the early summer, we said that
precisely because of that there will be no conflict imminently as the
Israeli military will never telegraph what it plans on doing in
advance.
And,
as always when dealing with military data originating from "sources",
reader beware. Ultimately, even if untrue, the information will
provide hints about whose agenda it is to foment military tensions.
Analysis,
via Stratfor
According
to a worldwide network of aircraft spotters and trackers, at least a
dozen MC-130H, HC-130N, HC-130P and AC-130U military transport planes
and gunships crossed the Atlantic Ocean on Sept. 13 heading
eastbound. These aircraft are typically used for a variety of special
tasks, including in close cooperation with special operations forces.
The last reported stop for the aircraft was Souda Bay, Crete. It is
unclear whether the aircraft have left Crete, but we are working on
tracking them down.
A
week and a half later, on Sept. 24, the same network of aircraft
spotters noted 12 U.S. Marine Corps F/A-18 Hornet fighter jets
arriving in two waves at Moron air base in Spain. It is not known
where the squadron is heading, though it could be en route to
Afghanistan to reinforce elements there. The Harrier squadron that
suffered heavy losses in the Sept. 14 attack on Camp Bastion has
already been replaced by another Harrier unit, so it is unlikely that
the squadron's deployment is directly linked to that event. It is
also possible that the F/A-18s are heading to the Gulf Cooperation
Council region. A number of air superiority squadrons, including an
F-22 Raptor squadron, have already deployed to the region. If that is
the case, the squadron is intended simply as reinforcements or
replacements for assets currently deployed there.
Also
on Sept. 24, The New York Times published an article stating that
Iraq and the United States were negotiating an agreement that could
result in the return of small units of U.S. soldiers to Iraq on
training missions. At the request of the Iraqi government, according
to U.S. Gen. Robert Caslen, a unit of Army special operations
soldiers was recently deployed to Iraq to advise on counterterrorism
and to help with intelligence. It is possible that at least some of
the MC-130 aircraft previously mentioned were delivering these
special operations troops to Iraq.
Another
report on Sept. 24, this one by the Le Figaro French-language
newspaper, said some 100 French special operations troops had been
deployed in the sub-Saharan region to counteract militants in
northern Mali. Le Figaro also reported that maritime patrol aircraft
that can be used to collect intelligence will be deployed to the
region and that commandos of the French navy will reinforce the
French special operations troops.
Finally,
Italian journalist Guido Olimpio reported in September that U.S.
unmanned aerial vehicles are currently tracking militants in
Cyrenaica, the historical name for eastern Libya. He also said
"reliable sources" had confirmed that U.S. special
operations forces were planning to carry out intelligence operations
that could be in preparation for surgical strikes in North Africa,
including in Libya and in Mali.
All
these deployments could be previously scheduled movements for
training or part of ongoing operations. They also do not necessarily
mean any one mission is imminent. The United States and France could
simply be positioning military assets in a region that is rife with
conflict and that may eventually require rapid military intervention
or action.
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