It
is only a few weeks since the editor
at CollapseNet scoffed at the 'fear mongers' that the Stennis was
back from the Gulf and war with Iran was definitely off the table.....
"See my post about Iran on the World News Desk. The Stennis is supposed to ,be on the way to the Arabian Sea according to Stratfor, so why the panic? The same analysis above applies here, too. This is a show of force only, don't expect anything to come of it." – Wes Miller, 5 October, 2012
"See my post about Iran on the World News Desk. The Stennis is supposed to ,be on the way to the Arabian Sea according to Stratfor, so why the panic? The same analysis above applies here, too. This is a show of force only, don't expect anything to come of it." – Wes Miller, 5 October, 2012
This
article from the august British newspaper, the Telgraph seems to indicate the possibility of
things being otherwise.
US
aircraft carrier strikeforce readies in case of war with Iran
When
the aircraft carrier USS John C Stennis returns to the placid blue
waters of the Gulf with her strike force of 70 jets in the next few
days, she will be ready for action off the coast of Iran.
25
November, 2012
The
flagship $4.5 billion carrier, a 100,000 ton floating city with a
crew of 5,000, was despatched four months earlier than planned to
bolster the United States Navy's already formidable force in the
region, the Fifth Fleet.
Its
mission is to keep some of the world's busiest shipping lanes open in
its most combustible region; at any moment America's standoff with
Iran could escalate into a crisis.
"Could
there be a threat?" asked Rear Admiral Mike Shoemaker, the man
who would command any mission to force open the sea lanes. "Yes
is the answer. Is it manageable? Also yes."
Admiral
Shoemaker, a wiry man with a Navy buzz cut, runs through the likely
threats: anti-ship cruise missiles; midget submarines; speedboats on
suicide missions. Iran's conventional air force and navy are clapped
out and no match for the US Navy, but they had years of practising
mine-laying.
"If
they sunk a tanker, that could shut the Strait for a couple of days
or a week," Adm Shoemaker said. "But we could deal with
that quite quickly. A massive mine-laying effort, though, would take
a while to clear."
Iran
plans military exercises in preparation for Israeli strike 16 Sep
2012
Last
year, Iran's navy held mine-laying wargames. In September, America
and its allies ran their biggest ever mine clearance-exercise,
indicating the likely nature of a future conflict.
This
weekend the carrier is briefly docked in Bahrain, the headquarters of
the Fifth Fleet.
But
if America is drawn into another big war in the Middle East, a key
nerve centre for operations will be the admiral's bridge on the ship,
a surprisingly uncluttered space. There are only two computer
screens, a big telephone, and an old-fashioned ship's compass. The
view is spectacular, high above a heaving flight deck, the length of
three football fields, where screaming jets land and take off. Most
are flying daily combat missions over Afghanistan.
As
the ship patrolled not far from the Strait of Hormuz, officers on the
bridge pointed out the different planes: Hawkeyes, which see over the
horizon with radar; Prowlers, which blind the enemy's electronic
eyes; and Hornets, the ones that do the damage by dropping
precision-guided bombs as heavy as one ton on any target the admiral
chooses. Iran's nuclear sites are within easy range.
The
bombs are now nearly all precision-guided by laser and GPS. The
biggest can be carried by a jet, but landing with a one-ton bomb is
too risky so they are dropped at sea if they are not used against an
enemy.
The
crew boast of being ready for any mission, 24 hours a day, but there
is little enthusiasm for a new war with Iran, America's old enemy in
the region - and currently crowing over the fact that long-range
rockets it supplied to Gaza were a key part of the armoury launched
against Israel 10 days ago.
"I
hope it's never going to happen, nobody on this boat is looking for a
fight, but if it does we have the capability," said Ordnance
Handling Officer William Donals, 46, the man in charge of preparing
bombs to be loaded on planes.
"I
was in the Gulf in the run-up to the 2003 war and back then it was
different," he said. "There was a lot more energy and a
sense that something was about to happen. This time it's more a sense
that we are ready if we are needed."
The
Iran problem is a chief foreign policy headache for the newly
re-elected President Obama, who tried a mix of sanctions and
diplomacy in his first term to stop Iran's alleged ambition to build
the Bomb, without much success.
Now
he is expected to try again with greater urgency, and so the
temperature is rising again in the Gulf. The White House has not
ruled out air strikes; Israel gives the impression it is only
American pressure that has restrained it from sending in the bombers.
Iran,
its economy buckling under sanctions, has pledged that if it is
attacked it will block the Strait of Hormuz, the 21-mile wide
entrance to the Gulf, and thus send the price of oil sky high,
jeopardising the fragile world economy. On an average day, eight
supertankers each carrying two million barrels of oil traverse the
Strait - about 35 per cent of the world's seaborne oil. There are
fears that as Iran's economy crumbles, its leaders could at some
point lash out in desperation.
America
has promised to keep the Strait open at all costs, and that may
become Admiral Shoemaker's mission. Prior to being an admiral he was
an aviator - the usual career route to the top in the US Navy. He has
years of experience in the Gulf region, mainly flying against the
forces of Saddam Hussein.
What
keeps him up at night is fear of stumbling into an accidental war.
The two nations have repeatedly skirmished at sea since Iran's
Islamic revolution three decades ago. Now both are careful. American
and Iranian ship's officers regularly communicate by radio, speaking
in English, carefully avoiding discussion of politics. Even the
Revolutionary Guard's navy is generally polite. Its boats sometimes
sail close to American vessels, but not too close.
However,
the two sides have started to probe and test each other. Earlier this
month the Pentagon announced that two Iranian jets had fired at a US
drone for the first time, as it flew over international waters. The
drone got away, in an embarrassing demonstration of the competence of
Iran's pilots. Then Iran announced new war games, to test the air
defences of its eastern border.
The
Americans say they are careful not to push back too hard. "We
are aware of what we are doing and always working hard to avoid some
kind of miscalculation, something that could be interpreted as a
hostile action," Adm Shoemaker said.
Last
time he was in the Gulf, during the 2011 pull-out of US forces from
Iraq, Iranian leaders crowed about the US "retreat", and
when the Stennis departed for home waters, they boasted that they
would never let her return.
Navy
officers have the unenviable task of trying to work out whether
bombast like that emanating from the regime is wild rhetoric or cold,
hard threat. "I wish I knew a little bit more about them,"
Admiral Shoemaker said. Asked if he thought Iran's leaders were
rational, he admitted: "It's a good question. I am not really
sure."
Those
under his command wonder what they are sailing into. "There may
be a lot of rhetoric at the diplomatic level, but it's just
day-to-day routine operations for us," said Steve Scott, the
commanding officer of an F-18 Superhornet Squadron.
"When
you are far out at sea, you can feel a little bit cut off from the
real world, but we all watch television and we know about the
situation with Iran," said Michael Nicholas, 29, whose job is to
move jets around the deck prior to take-offs and landings.
"We
feel we have a purpose, we are the first line of defence, and we are
right in their back yard."
Meanwhile,
life on board goes on in the cramped and labyrinthine passageways and
huge hangars. The working day is long and hard, typically 12 hours
spent under a baking Gulf sun for those working on deck, with a
weekly half day off.
Enlisted
sailors sleep 100 to a dormitory and eat in canteens. Many admit they
are desperate to get home towards the end of an eight month mission.
There is one treat to look forward to - the 100th day at sea, when
the ship traditionally drops anchor and lowers a deck so sailors can
swim in the ocean, with a barbecue afterwards on the flight deck.
Alcohol
is strictly forbidden, prayers are said over the ship's intercom, and
although dating is allowed - there are 600 women on board, and the
average age of ratings is about 19 - "intimacy" is not.
Time off is spent catching up with sleep or watching the ship's
24-hour movie channel.
Tension
is never far off, and on the flight out to the carrier from Bahrain
in a Greyhound logistics plane, The Sunday Telegraph got a glimpse of
it when a mystery reconnaissance aircraft emerged from Iranian
airspace.
"That's
never happened before," said Lieutenant-Commander Julio Galvan,
39, the pilot, as he peered through the cockpit's window. For a while
the two aircraft flew in parallel, a mile or so apart, before the
mystery plane banked and headed towards the mountains of Iran's coast
in the distance.
Soon
afterwards, the Greyhound flew high over the Strait, where dozens of
supertankers were queuing as they waited their turn to get through.
"I
don't think that plane was any threat to us," Commander Galvan
said. "We've learnt to live with the Iranians."
That
understanding has helped keep the peace in the one of the world's
most militarised waterways. But how long it will last is anybody's
guess.
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