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Secret plans for 10-year war: Generals rule out 'D-Day invasion'
The Times (UK) ^ | SEPTEMBER 20 2001 | BY MICHAEL EVANS, DEFENCE EDITOR

Posted on 09/19/2001 7:50:33 PM PDT by aculeus

AMERICA and Britain are producing secret plans to launch a ten-year “war on terrorism” — Operation Noble Eagle — involving a completely new military and diplomatic strategy to eliminate terrorist networks and cells around the world. Despite the mass build-up of American forces in the Gulf and the Indian Ocean, there will be no “D-Day invasion” of Afghanistan and no repeat of the US-led Operation Desert Storm against Iraq in 1991, defence sources say.

The notion that a US-led multinational coalition would attack Afghanistan from all sides for harbouring Osama bin Laden, the wealthy Saudi dissident leader and prime suspect for the terrorist outrages in New York and Washington, has been rejected in Washington and London. The sources also say that the planned campaign is not being focused on just “bringing bin Laden to justice”.

The build-up of firepower by the Americans in the region, notably the two aircraft carrier battle groups that are to be joined by a third carrier, USS Theodore Roosevelt, is seen as a major display of available military capability. While it is important for these assets to be in the right place in case of a political decision to launch a strike, there are no plans for a “short-term fix”.

The dramatically different anti-terrorism campaign is being planned to meet what is now regarded as the most dangerous threat to global security, known as asymmetric warfare. “We’re expecting it to last from five to ten years,” one source said.

New ideas are needed to counter small groups armed with the minimum of weaponry, whether conventional or non-conventional. Such groups have the capability to attack a nation as powerful as the United States, which is equipped with the full range of modern weapons and professional Armed Forces.

Old doctrines for fighting wars, based on lining up tanks and artillery and layers of troops, are being thrown out and replaced by a more subtle and wide-ranging doctrine which seeks to defeat the enemy at its own game. “The aim is not to go for the enemy’s strengths, but its weaknesses,” one source said.

American and British planners are working on the basis that military strikes will take place only as part of a broader global counter-terrorist operation, embracing every other type of international action — diplomatic, economic and political.

Most of the focus of the ten-year campaign plan, the sources say, is on using military action as a potent back-up to all the other strands of Operation Noble Eagle.

However, President Bush, conscious of the demand for “revenge” from the American public, might sanction shorter-term military operation by special forces, or airstrikes, but only if there is sufficient intelligence to guarantee a sucessful outcome. “There’s no point in firing a lot of missiles at bin Laden if they miss their target, or launching Tomahawks at bin Laden training camps if they are empty,” one source said.

Donald Rumsfeld, the American Defence Secretary, also gave the strongest hint yesterday of what Operation Noble Eagle is all about. “I think what you will see evolve over the next six, eight, ten, 12 months, probably over a period of years, is a coalition to help battle terrorists,” he told CNN.

He added: “This is a very new type of conflict or battle or campaign or war or effort, for the United States. We’re moving in a measured manner. As we gather information, we’re preparing appropriate courses of action, and they run across the political and economic and financial, military, intelligence spectrum.”

British officials said the whole focus of the long-term American approach was being driven by Richard Cheney, the American Vice-President, and General Colin Powell, the Secretary of State. The combination of the two highly experienced men was guaranteeing a well-coordinated strategy. “Everyone now knows it’s going to be a long haul, not a spectacular single strike,” one official said.

The war on terrorism could be likened, they said, to the war on drugs or poverty, and the best way to undermine and eventually dismantle the terrorist structures around the world was to use the method of “hearts and minds” — encouraging foreign governments and people to join in the “war” so that terrorists would be isolated and identified.

Some of the most dramatic achievements, the sources say, might come, not from military action, but from political pressure on foreign governments to turn their backs on terrorism and to hand over the organisers of terrorist networks.

They point to the campaign against Yugoslavia in 1999. Although the airstrikes fitted more closely to the “old doctrine concept” of using massed firepower to target the enemy, which brought criticism from many parts of the world, Nato was also seen to be working as a humanitarian agency with its operation in Albania helping to build shelters for the thousands of refugees pouring out of Kosovo.

The eventual outcome, the political downfall of Slobodan Milosevic and the decision by the new Government to hand him over to the war crimes tribunal in The Hague, is seen as a classic example of how military action can serve two purposes, defeating the enemy and effecting political change.

In the Gulf War, the American-led coalition achieved one objective, driving the Iraqis out of Kuwait, but not the other, the overthrow of President Saddam Hussein by his own people.

Already, the sources say, just over a week after the terrorist attacks in America, there have been positive developments: the Israeli and Palestinian leaders have agreed a new ceasefire and 1,000 clerics have been forced to gather in Kabul, the capital of Afghanistan, to discuss the fate of bin Laden.

Yesterday it was also announced that President Putin is to visit Nato headquarters in Brussels on October 3 and will meet Lord Robertson of Port Ellen, the Secretary- General, another positive sign that the Russian leader supports the campaign against terrorism.

Russia and Nato put out a joint statement last week condemning the terrorist attacks and vowing that they would not go unpunished.

Other coalitions against terrorism are also being rapidly formed and several countries, notably Pakistan yesterday, have offered bases for American military action.

However, sources in Washington say there are no plans to deploy huge numbers of US troops to Pakistan, which would only inflame Islamic fundamentalists opposed to the decision by President Musharraf to grant US access to two air bases in the country.


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To: Teacher
Oh here we go, the damn CHILDREN. The thing is, we adults don't want to die either. The terrorists don't give a shit about their children let alone ours. The children can't make it without their adults alive for god's sake. The adults gotta make it first then we will worry about the children. Remember when you get on a plane they say if it depressurizes put your mask on before you put on the kids. I have three kids and three grands and believe me their lives are not more holy or more deserving than yours or mine or granny's. I am sick up the wazoo about hearing about the damn CHILDREN from the dems in their attempt to socialize the world. Let the damn village of hillary's take care of the rug rats. So there, a rant.
21 posted on 09/19/2001 8:20:05 PM PDT by cajungirl
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To: aculeus
If this is going to be like the war on drugs. We will lose!
22 posted on 09/19/2001 8:20:14 PM PDT by xclusiv1
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To: independentmind
"The analogy to the drug war is frightening." You noticed that too? I can't believe they used that analogy. Have they no sense of _irony_?
23 posted on 09/19/2001 8:20:45 PM PDT by ConsistentLibertarian
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To: In fact I think the source is a Clintonian outsider...
This has all those little tidbits designed to peel off the wavering clueless, like soccer moms. 10-years? "Gee, that's a really long time." War on drugs, war on poverty? "But didn't they fail?" Its genesis is Dick Cheney. "Cause Bush is too dumb, and doesn't that guy have heart problems?" Make war by talking. "Yeah, If we just reason with them and listen to their feelings, they'll respect us."

This has the smell of DNC infowar.

24 posted on 09/19/2001 8:22:05 PM PDT by Diddle E. Squat
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To: aculeus
The movie _Brazil_ comes to mind ...
25 posted on 09/19/2001 8:22:07 PM PDT by ConsistentLibertarian
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To: aculeus
How many of our nuclear reactors, dams, subways, airplanes, and bridges can the terrorists sabotage in 5 to 10 years?
26 posted on 09/19/2001 8:23:13 PM PDT by AC86UT89
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To: aculeus
The war on terrorism could be likened, they said, to the war on drugs or poverty

Prima facie evidence that this article is complete BS.

27 posted on 09/19/2001 8:25:45 PM PDT by M. Thatcher
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To: AC86UT89
None if they are dead
28 posted on 09/19/2001 8:26:30 PM PDT by madison46
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To: aculeus
This article is garbage. The author compares the War on Terrorism with the War on Drug and the War on Poverty---both abject failures.

George Bush told the rescue workers the people who "knocked down this building will hear from all of us soon...." I take the man at his word.

However, I do like the idea of bin Laden's group shivering or sweating in their caves for a while wondering when the attack will begin.

29 posted on 09/19/2001 8:26:40 PM PDT by BigBobber
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To: randog
From your mouth to God's ear, hand and gun. Assassinate, assassinate, assassinate. No war, just assissination. Much cheaper, more effective.
30 posted on 09/19/2001 8:30:04 PM PDT by garyhope
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To: aculeus
This is funny. How secret can all this be if it's published on Free Republic? Not very, in my estimation. This looks to me like some sort of PR stunt, to show they're thinking about the long term in this war, while doing something in the short term.

While I have every confidence in the Vice President and Secretary of State, and even our British allies, I must say that the immediate crisis demands the death of Bin Laden.

We can certainly plan for a long term war, but first we must get through the rest of the year and the beginning of the next. I think this whole crisis demands the death of Osmana Bin Laden. The public simply won't stand for anything less than his death.

Anyone in his or her right mind doesn't expect a D-Day type invasion. Hell, there's no coastline to storm. What we do expect is the death of Mr. Bin Laden.

31 posted on 09/19/2001 8:32:43 PM PDT by TKEman
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To: aculeus
Is it possible that they have no good plans at all? That this 10-year plan is really a determination to REACT?
32 posted on 09/19/2001 8:33:12 PM PDT by Petronski
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To: Yankee
Pressholes making things up again.
33 posted on 09/19/2001 8:33:20 PM PDT by gov_bean_ counter
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To: BigBobber
I agree this is bunk. The Hussein family will be checking out by 2002...
34 posted on 09/19/2001 8:34:24 PM PDT by Crouching Intern Stolen Sofa
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To: BigBobber
Yes, I forgot about that in my post. If they're going to use the War On Drugs as a model to fight this war, then really, I must riot. I want to win this war. Not lose it. Nor fight it for the next 30 years.
35 posted on 09/19/2001 8:34:59 PM PDT by TKEman
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To: Petronski
Well, they'd better be planning to get Bin Laden, even if they have to put up $100 million dollars for his head.
36 posted on 09/19/2001 8:36:14 PM PDT by TKEman
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To: BigBobber
Ten years is too long. I don't want my kids to grow up in a war. I want this to take no more then 4. We beat the Japanese and the Germans in four. The Great war was less and when we beat the south it was four. Come on, Leeeeet's take this up a notch.

here is some other news on the Newstrolls daily

37 posted on 09/19/2001 8:38:00 PM PDT by CJ Wolf
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Comment #38 Removed by Moderator

To: aculeus
bump
39 posted on 09/19/2001 8:45:26 PM PDT by Salman
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To: independentmind
How exactly does a president with a four-year term "plan" to wage a ten year war? The analogy to the drug war is frightening.

Most people don't like to change horses in mid-stream. Take it as a good thing.

40 posted on 09/19/2001 8:45:55 PM PDT by WRhine
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