Secret US air
force team to
perfect plan for
Iran strike
By Sarah
Baxter,
Washington
Original date of
publication -
September 23,
2007
18/06/08 "The
Times"
-- -- THE
United States
Air Force has
set up a highly
confidential
strategic
planning group
tasked with
“fighting the
next war” as
tensions rise
with Iran.
Project
Checkmate, a
successor to the
group that
planned the 1991
Gulf War’s air
campaign, was
quietly
reestablished at
the Pentagon in
June.
It reports
directly to
General Michael
Moseley, the US
Air Force chief,
and consists of
20-30 top air
force officers
and defence and
cyberspace
experts with
ready access to
the White House,
the CIA and
other
intelligence
agencies.
Detailed
contingency
planning for a
possible attack
on Iran has been
carried out for
more than two
years by Centcom
(US central
command),
according to
defence sources.
Checkmate’s job
is to add a dash
of brilliance to
Air Force
thinking by
countering the
military’s
tendency to
“fight the last
war” and by
providing
innovative
strategies for
warfighting and
assessing future
needs for air,
space and
cyberwarfare.
It is led by
Brigadier-General
Lawrence “Stutz”
Stutzriem, who
is considered
one of the
brightest air
force generals.
He is assisted
by Dr Lani Kass,
a former Israeli
military officer
and expert on
cyberwarfare.
The failure of
United Nations
sanctions to
curtail Iran’s
nuclear
ambitions, which
Tehran claims
are peaceful, is
giving rise to
an intense
debate about the
likelihood of
military
strikes.
Bernard Kouchner,
the French
foreign
minister, said
last week that
it was
“necessary to
prepare for the
worst . . . and
the worst is
war”. He later
qualified his
remarks, saying
he wanted to
avoid that
outcome.
France has
joined America
in pushing for a
tough third
sanctions
resolution
against Iran at
the UN security
council but is
meeting strong
resistance from
China and
Russia. Britain
has been doing
its best to
bridge the gap,
but it is
increasingly
likely that new
sanctions will
be implemented
by a US-led
“coalition of
the willing”.
Iran’s President
Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, who
arrives in New
York for the
United Nations
general assembly
today, has been
forced to
abandon plans to
visit ground
zero, where the
World Trade
Center stood
until the
September 11
attacks of 2001.
Politicians from
President George
W Bush to
Senator Hillary
Clinton, the
Democratic
frontrunner in
the 2008 race
for the White
House, were
outraged by the
prospect of a
visit to New
York’s most
venerated site
by a “state
sponsor” of
terrorism.
Bush still hopes
to isolate Iran
diplomatically,
but believes the
regime is moving
steadily closer
to obtaining
nuclear weapons
while the
security council
bickers.
The US president
faces strong
opposition to
military action,
however, within
his own joint
chiefs of staff.
“None of them
think it is a
good idea, but
they will do it
if they are told
to,” said a
senior defence
source.
General John
Abizaid, the
former Centcom
commander, said
last week:
“Every effort
should be made
to stop Iran
from obtaining
nuclear weapons,
but failing
that, the world
could live with
a nuclear-armed
Iran.”
Critics fear
Abizaid has lost
sight of Iran’s
potential to arm
militant groups
such as
Hezbollah with
nuclear weapons.
“You can deter
Iran, but there
is no strategy
against nuclear
terrorism,” said
the retired air
force Lieutenant
General Thomas
McInerney of the
Iran policy
committee.
“There is no
question that we
can take out
Iran. The
problem is the
follow-on, the
velvet
revolution that
needs to be
created so the
Iranian people
know it’s not
aimed at them,
but at the
Iranian regime.”
Checkmate’s
freethinking
mission is “to
provide planning
inputs to
warfighters that
are
strategically,
operationally
and tactically
sound,
logistically
supportable and
politically
feasible”. Its
remit is not
specific to one
country,
according to
defence sources,
but its forward
planning is
thought relevant
to any future
air war against
Iranian nuclear
and military
sites. It is
also looking at
possible threats
from China and
North Korea.
Checkmate was
formed in the
1970s to counter
Soviet threats
but fell into
disuse in the
1980s. It was
revived under
Colonel John
Warden and was
responsible for
drawing up plans
for the crushing
air blitz
against Saddam
Hussein at the
opening of the
first Gulf war.
Warden told The
Sunday Times:
“When Saddam
invaded Kuwait,
we had access to
unlimited
numbers of
people with
expertise,
including all
the intelligence
agencies, and
were able to be
significantly
more agile than
Centcom.”
He believes that
Checkmate’s role
is to develop
the necessary
expertise so
that “if
somebody says
Iran, it says:
‘here is what
you need to
think about’.
Here are the
objectives, here
are the risks,
here is what it
will cost, here
are the numbers
of planes we
will lose, here
is how the war
is going to end
and here is what
the peace will
look like”.
Warden added:
“The Centcoms of
this world are
executional –
they don’t have
the staff, the
expertise or the
responsibility
to do the
thinking that is
needed before a
country makes
the decision to
go to war. War
planning is not
just about
bombs, airplanes
and sailing
boats.”
© Copyright 2008
Times Newspapers
Ltd.
