‘Allies Concerned About Collateral Damage’
| Monday March 24, 2003
Barbara Ferguson, Arab
News War Correspondent AT AN ALLIED AIR BASE IN KUWAIT, 24 March 2003 — In an effort to
placate disgruntled journalists — seven left the embed program here
yesterday claiming lack of access, while four remain embedded — the
Marine Air Command has started up regular evening media briefings. The briefings, an encapsulation of the day’s activities, are an
effort by MAW, the Marine Air Wing, to share information with the media
without compromising the safety of Marines, their positions, or
operations. Col. Jon Miclot, the wing’s operations officer, started the brief
announcing the pilots were “maintaining good discipline with their
ordinance.” He said “concern for collateral damage (civilian
casualties) was in the forefront,” and the pilots were also careful
about building infrastructures. They are not destroying facilities just
to destroy them. “The one thing we do not want to do is to ransack southern Iraq,”
he added. Journalists were given details of the day’s sorties, or flights. By
late last night, the pilots “had delivered the same amount of attack
sorties as the previous day, about 300, with both fixed and rotary wing
aircraft.” No Marines had been involved in the bombing of Baghdad, Miclot said.
“We’re primarily supporting a division in the south, and focusing on
refueling, logistic, food and ammunition sorties.” The pilots also decided their laser bombs were not effective due to
the thickness of the clouds and the smoke, and instead used GP (global
positioning) and cluster bombs. “If they were unable to engage, the pilots would still be able to
collect data, and bring it back and we’ll send it through the
information cycles,” Miclot said. The pilots had also been running “a lot of reconnaissance flights
to watch the Iraqi troops and see what they’re doing.” Miclot said that operations, as the allies move forward, will
eventually turn into humanitarian, wing and platform support. Regarding
humanitarian efforts, he said: “It’s still too early in the game for
this. The situation is still too unstable.” Miclot said he did not have any details of several US missiles
mistakenly fired over the Iranian border. “I don’t even know if
they’re ours. I don’t know anything but what I saw on TV.” Iraqi
defense was “exactly what we had anticipated, and a continuation of
what we had previously known.” Iraq’s surface-to-air threat, he
said, “is also exactly what we anticipated.” A pivotal objective had been to secure the southern oil fields,
Miclot said. However, they were not intended for US use, but for the
Iraqi infrastructure “so Iraq can continue to produce for its own
economy.” Most of the southern oil fields had been taken, and are
“mostly totally intact,” he said, though at least three oil fields
were set alight. “My assumption is that (the fires) were probably started by Iraqi
forces.” Taking Umm Qasr was also of strategic importance for the Marines, he
said, because it was “very important for humanitarian results, and
it’s on the waterway.” “As we stretch forward, there is a logistic challenge to get our
supplies forward,” Miclot said. The colonel was reticent regarding future plans, saying a series of
decision points needed to be made on the next phase. “We have a plan,
but it may always change, depending on the enemy.” Asked if he was surprised the ground troops moved forward so quickly
yesterday, Col. Miclot said: “No. We have a very aggressive ground
commander.” |
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