Fifth
US warship deployed to Syria
The
United States is sending a fifth warship towards Syria, defense
officials said Thursday, upping the ante as a showdown between the US
and President Bashar al-Assad’s regime remains all but declared.
RT,
29
August, 2013
A
505-foot-long guided missile destroyer, the USS Stout, has been sent
to the Mediterranean Sea to assist the four US warships already
deployed to await potential orders to strike Syria amid an
international investigation into Assad’s reported use of chemical
weapons to gas innocent civilians outside of Damascus last week.
Should
the White House ask for an assault on Assad’s regime, the USS Stout
and the rest of the seafaring fleet will join an arsenal of US, UK
and French warheads already surrounding Syria in every which
direction.
The
Stout left its home port in Norfolk, Virginia more than a week ago
with hundreds of soldiers on board en route to the Mediterranean. In
the days since, however, Obama administration officials have
suggested that the president has not taken the possibility of
ordering a military strike against Syria off the table. Now should an
assault be ordered from Washington, the US will have one more option
at its disposal with regards to striking from the sea.
Norfolk’s
WAVY News reported Thursday morning that the Stout was already on
patrol in the eastern Mediterranean, but is now heading east to
relieve one of the ships stationed within striking distance of Syria.
According
to Sky News, a US defense official said the ship will replace the USS
Mahan, but noted that both vessels may remain in place for the time
being.
In
an official Navy document, the Stout is said to be “equipped with
the world's most sophisticated weapon system,”
The
Stout, said the Pentagon paper, “can guide vertically-launched
standard missiles to intercept hostile aircraft and missiles at
extended ranges.” It’s equipped to fire anti-ship cruise missiles
as far away as 65 nautical miles and can perform a sea-to-land attack
with deadly Tomahawk missiles.
Meanwhile,
Pres. Obama is meeting with members of Congress on Thursday to
discuss what the US intelligence community has discovered about the
reported use of chemical gas last week.
Earlier
in the week, White House press secretary Jay Carney said the
administration had not ruled out a strike, and that evidence linking
Assad’s regime to chemical weapon use would merit a response that
might include military force.
“[W]e
have made clear for a long time, notwithstanding our views about the
fact that we don’t envision US boots on the ground in Syria, that
we retain—and the president retains—all options available to him
in Syria, and that includes military options,” Carney said. “And
that is the case here in response to this transgression.”
“Broadly
speaking,” Carney said during a press briefing Tuesday at the White
House, “I think it’s important to note that it is in the clear
national security interest of the United States that the use or
proliferation of chemical weapons on this scale not go unanswered.
The consequences of a dissolution of that norm would be profoundly
not in the interest of the United States or in the international
community, in particular in this highly volatile region, but also
around the world.”
On
Wednesday, the Associated Press quoted two unnamed White House
officials who said on condition of anonymity that the administration
is struggling to decide what Syrian targets could be hit and what
kind of response the US would want as a result.
"If
there is action taken, it must be clearly defined what the objective
is and why" and based on "clear facts,” one of those
officials said.
"They
are looking at what is just enough to mean something, just enough to
be more than symbolic," a second official told the Los Angeles
Times on condition of anonymity.
Now
with a five ships all outside of Syria, at least for now, any strike
against Assad’s regime could call upon more firepower than before.
As
RT reported earlier this week, the US and its allies have all-but
surrounded Syria. The US has military bases in the neighboring
countries of Bahrain, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates, and
air-defense Patriot missiles are available to the north and south of
Syria in Turkey and Jordan, respectively.
Additionally,
at least one British cruise missile-carrying nuclear submarine and
one French vessel could be sent towards Syria, and the US, UK and
Turkey have airbases in the region that could assist with an
air-to-land strike using F-16 fighter jets.
During
Tuesday’s briefing, Carney said the president would consult with
Congress before a strike but did not say explicitly that Obama would
ask for permission. According to Carney, confirmation that Assad
ordered the use of chemical weapons would violate international norms
and warrant a response that would not be necessitated by
congressional approval. Pres. Obama will reportedly make available a
declassified intelligence report justifying any response aimed
towards Syria should elect to take action.
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