-Caveat Lector-

Bombs in Iraq Raid Fell Wide Of Targets

<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A36729-2001Feb21.html?GXHC_gx_session_id_FutureTenseContentServer=5a488bf9dec93e60&referer=email>


New Navy Weapon Blamed for Misses
By Thomas E. Ricks
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, February 22, 2001; Page A01

Most of the bombs dropped by U.S. warplanes on Iraqi radar stations during
last
week's airstrikes missed their mark, Pentagon officials disclosed
yesterday, with most of the misses blamed on a new and expensive Navy
guided bomb.
About 25 of the guided bombs, which were first used in combat two years ago,
were dropped in the attack, and the majority fell "tens of yards" from their
"aimpoints," a Navy official said. Another official said he had been told
the bombs
missed by an average of more than 100 yards, an unsatisfactory performance
for a modern precision-guided weapon.
Pentagon officials' assessment of Friday's airstrikes against the Iraqi
anti-aircraft system, which involved U.S. and British warplanes, was
initially glowing. But the disclosure of the guided weapon's failure rate
stunned defense officials yesterday and led them to scale back their
assessment of the damage done in the attack.
"We feel we had a good effect. Was it perfect? No. Did every weapon system
perform perfectly? No, but they never do," said Rear Adm. Craig Quigley, a
Pentagon spokesman.
The guided bombs were fired at about 25 parts of Iraqi radar stations,
radar dishes, communications bunkers and other components, and the Pentagon
has been able to confirm damage to only eight of these targets, one
official said.  About another eight targets escaped damage, while satellite
imagery has not produced usable pictures of the remaining radar targets,
the official said.
In a second part of the raid, communications nodes connecting the Iraqi
anti-aircraft system were hit with two other types of smart weapons, about
five
AGM-130 guided missiles and about 10 Standoff Land Attack Missiles. One or
two of the AGM-130s also missed their targets, but the communications nodes
were destroyed by the bombs that did hit, an official said. "Everything
they were fired at was destroyed or heavily damaged," he said about the
AGM-130s.
The communications nodes were considered the most important targets because
they linked large radars around Baghdad to surface-to-air missile batteries
in southern Iraq.
In the past, those batteries used their own radar to guide missiles toward
U.S.
and British aircraft patrolling the southern "no-fly" zone. But U.S.
radar-seeking
missiles have proven so lethal against the batteries the Iraqis turned off
those
radars. Instead, they moved to a new system of using the large radars
stationed
outside the "no fly" zone to locate aircraft and then fire at allied planes
from
missile batteries in the south. It was the communications links tying
together the new system that were attacked Friday.
Almost all the Navy guided bombs, known as the AGM-154A "Joint Standoff
Weapon," that missed on Friday did so in the same way, veering to the left of
where they were supposed to hit, officials said. The consistency of this
error has
led Navy officials to believe that it is likely a software glitch threw off
the bombs'
guidance systems. The weapon receives data from global positioning
satellites as
it glides as far as 40 miles to its target.
But officials also are looking at whether the bombs were mishandled or
otherwise damaged before they were put on F/A-18 jets flying from the USS
Harry S.  Truman, an aircraft carrier that was in the Persian Gulf.
"It could be a mechanical problem, it could be a software problem," a Navy
official said. He emphasized that a bomb that misses its "aimpoint"the actual
spot where it is supposed to strike, still can damage its target as it
explodes and
sends fragments flying for hundreds of yards. "Most of those which were
assessed as missing their aimpoints still damaged their targets," he said.
"They
missed by tens of yards when they were sent from 30 to 40 miles away."
But others said the Navy was embarrassed over the weapon's poor performance
and taken aback by how many radar stations escaped damage. "There is great
concern with how these things performed," a Navy officer said.
The Joint Standoff Weapons range in cost from about $250,000 to about
$700,000 apiece, according to the Federation of American Scientists.
The new Iraqi air defense system hasn't succeeded in downing a U.S. warplane.
But a new fiber-optic communications system that Pentagon officials say was
being installed threatened to dramatically increase the speed with which
aircraft could be targeted accurately. "We were going after the brains," a
Pentagon official said yesterday.
Pentagon officials contend that Chinese advisers were helping install the
fiber-optics network. They said the airstrikes were timed to occur on the
Muslim Sabbath of Friday, when no major construction work is done in Iraq,
to reduce the chances of injuring or killing the Chinese.
The United States has protested the presence of the Chinese advisers in Iraq
several times. Secretary of State Colin L. Powell met yesterday with China's
new ambassador, Yang Jiechi, who was presenting his credentials, and expressed
U.S. displeasure over the matter, a State Department spokesman said. Powell
"took this occasion to convey a message, and the message was that we're
concerned about the issue of Chinese workers in Iraq," said State
Department spokesman Richard Boucher. The United States maintains that such
outside assistance is not permitted under U.N. Security Council resolutions.
The United Nations office that administers the oil-for-food program for
Iraq said
it had received three requests last year, two involving French firms and one
involving a Russian firm, to release money for Iraq to buy fiber-optic cables,
allegedly for its telecommunications industry. The committee of nations
running the program did not approve the sales requests, a U.N. official said.

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