-Caveat Lector-

http://news.scotsman.com/politics.cfm?id=1012482002

Is the war with Iraq already under way?

Tim Ripley

THE STEPPING up of US and British bombing raids on Iraq and other military
moves around the country over the past week have raised speculation that the
allied campaign to force "regime change" on Baghdad has already started.

The US air force and RAF have begun systematically to demolish the air
defences in southern and western Iraq under the guise of the existing no-fly
zone regime, giving the allies the air superiority needed for an overt
attack on Iraq.

President George Bush has made it clear that while his determination to
remove Saddam Hussein, the Iraqi leader, from power remains, the rules of
the game have changed.

"My administration still supports regime change," he declared at Camp David
on Saturday, adding: "There’s all kinds of ways to change regimes. The
battlefield has changed. We are in a new kind of war, and we’ve got to
recognise that."

For when Mr Bush and Tony Blair, the Prime Minister, talk about seeking to
build a coalition for action against Iraq, it is becoming clear they are
only referring to the "overt" elements of their strategy to be conducted by
uniformed military under the gaze of the world’s media.

We are currently in a twilight zone between war and peace. In this "new
type" of warfare, the last thing the Bush team wants is for there to be a
formal declaration of war by the United Nations Security Council, with a
grand opening air strike on Baghdad broadcast live on CNN.

It seems highly likely that the British and Americans, with French backing,
will soon try to get the cloak of legality from a UN Security Council
resolution warning Baghdad to allow weapon inspectors to return or face
attack. But these moves are simply a part of US strategy - Washington
clearly sees the return of weapon inspectors not as a way to end the crisis,
but as just another bar for Saddam to jump over.

US strategy was formed earlier this year, once it became clear the Afghan
war was manageable. In February, Mr Bush authorised the Central Intelligence
Agency to step up covert efforts to foment unrest in Iraq and possibly
prompt a coup d’etat. Feverish efforts have been under way for weeks to
cultivate Iraqi opposition groups - Donald Rumsfeld’s "hawkish" Pentagon has
taken over funding these groups from Colin Powell’s "dovish" State
Department.

Argument has raged within the Bush administration about the size of an
invasion force needed to overthrow Saddam. This appears to have been settled
in favour of a "light" force of 50,000 men, and the Pentagon has begun
quietly to hire shipping to move its heavy equipment to the Middle East.

The sharp rise in anti-Saddam rhetoric over the past month must be viewed in
this context. First, it is clearly designed to unsettle Baghdad and force
the regime to begin to worry where and when the US will strike. The Bush
team hopes to force Saddam to make a mistake, such as attacking the Kurdish
safe haven in the north: that would allow his opponents to strike or give
the US an excuse to intervene with its own military might.

The way Washington envisages it, over the next two to three months the game
plan will be played out until the Iraqi leader cracks, putting his head in
the noose. On the agenda will be an intensified enforcement of the no-fly
zones, with Turkey being pressured to allow more intensive air strikes
against Iraqi air defences in the north. In the inevitable game of
cat-and-mouse that will develop over UN inspectors, there will be ample
opportunity for a "Desert Fox"-style air blitz against Iraqi military
installations.

This, then, could be the moment for the Iraqi opposition to be encouraged to
form a government-in-exile in the Kurdish safe haven. Such a move would be
designed to enrage Saddam and might goad him into attacking the Kurds,
giving the US an excuse to intervene.

But these are only the opening moves of the US game plan. It is not clear
yet whether Saddam is going to play along or spoil things for the allies by
refusing to walk into the elaborate trap being set for him by Washington.

A day like any other in Cuba

FOR many of the 598 detainees at the remote Cuban outpost an ocean away from
where the World Trade Centre once stood, 11 September was just another day
spent behind bars.

The men from 43 countries - accused of links to the al-Qaeda terrorist
network or Afghanistan’s fallen Taleban regime - have no calendars and were
not being told what day it was. General Rick Baccus, in charge of the
detention mission in Guantánamo Bay, said: "We’re not making any special
announcements to them."

The 1,600 troops at the US naval base on Cuba’s eastern tip honoured those
killed in the 11 September attacks on New York and Washington with sombre
ceremonies.

The detention mission, nearing its ninth month, is under increased pressure
as interrogators squeeze information from the suspects and US officials
question whether there is enough evidence to try them in tribunals or
whether some should be freed.

Major Ted Wadsworth, a spokesman for the Pentagon, said: "Although the
Department of Defence is preparing to conduct military commissions, no
trials are imminent. No charges have been approved."

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