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<text id=90TT2998>
<link 91TT0495>
<title>
Nov. 12, 1990: Ready For Action
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
Nov. 12, 1990 Ready For War
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
NATION, Page 26
COVER STORIES
Ready for Action
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Dick Cheney and Colin Powell are the savviest pair to lead the
Pentagon in years. They will be put to the ultimate test if
Desert Shield becomes a sword.
</p>
<p>By BRUCE W. NELAN--Reported by William Dowell/Riyadh and
Bruce van Voorst/Washington
</p>
<p> On the scorched sands of Saudi Arabia, 180,000 American
ground troops wait impatiently, cleaning their weapons,
exercising, thinking of D-day. Flashing overhead are the best
attack planes of the U.S. Air Force: F-15s, F-16s, radar-evading
F-117 Stealth fighters. At sea, U.S. Navy Aegis cruisers train
their Tomahawk cruise missiles on Iraqi targets, while aircraft
carriers launch and recover squadrons of bombers and
interceptors.
</p>
<p> Even more muscle is on the way. An additional 100,000 U.S.
soldiers have been earmarked for the Persian Gulf. Military
commanders in Saudi Arabia say no limit has been placed on the
number of troops that might be sent. George Bush says, "We must
keep all our options open."
</p>
<p> While the U.S., European and Arab forces arrayed in the gulf
are not yet strong enough to mount an overpowering offensive
against the 430,000 Iraqi troops in and around Kuwait, Bush
clearly counts military force as one of those options. He has
pledged to liberate Kuwait and restore its government, which
means that if necessary Operation Desert Shield can become
Desert Sword. The buildup and the war that may ensue have cast
the spotlight on two men who may be the most important
policymakers in the Bush Administration: Defense Secretary Dick
Cheney and General Colin Powell, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff (JCS). Already these Pentagon partners have smoothly
directed the biggest U.S. military effort since Vietnam.
</p>
<p> Whether this crisis leads to war or to a peaceful outcome,
it has fortuitously arrived at a time when the Pentagon is
headed by two of the most seasoned and able leaders in years.
Cheney's experience as a Congressman and White House operative
and Powell's as National Security Adviser have made them masters
of the political wars in Washington. Each has a unique
understanding of what pressures the other is under. The outcome
of the gulf confrontation may be determined by the way they
carry out their duties.
</p>
<p> The pair's organizational and diplomatic skills have been
strikingly evident since the earliest moments of Desert Shield,
which began only a few hours after Iraqi tanks rolled into
Kuwait on Aug. 2. Early the next morning, Cheney tucked a
top-secret briefing file under his arm and walked to the small,
heavily guarded Current Situation Room on the second floor of
the Pentagon. Powell was waiting there for him. Amid the maze
of projection screens, television monitors and colored
telephones, they drafted the advice on military responses Cheney
would offer Bush: the U.S. could--and must--defend Saudi
Arabia with a rapid infusion of military might.
</p>
<p> Cheney's support for armed intervention was unqualified,
though he pointed out to Bush that the U.S. presence in the
region at the outset was weak--only a handful of ships in the
gulf. Powell backed Cheney with the proviso that an insertion
of American forces should be massive and swift, not gradual.
</p>
<p> Many in Washington assumed Powell's insistence on that point
was a hangover from the painful escalation of the Vietnam War,
where he served two tours, but Powell denies it. "It's not so
much my Vietnam experience as 32 years of military education and
training," he says. "If you are going to commit the armed forces
of the U.S. to a military operation that could involve conflict
and loss of life, then do it right."
</p>
<p> The biggest short-term obstacle to U.S. intervention was the
traditional unwillingness of Saudi Arabia and most of the other
Arab states to provide bases or facilities for American forces.
To deal with that, Bush picked Cheney, who flew to Saudi Arabia
on Aug. 6. There the Defense Secretary negotiated with King Fahd
a three-page agreement that opened the door to deployment of
U.S. troops and warplanes. Cheney's pact with the King, though
its text is still secret, has been likened to an "instant NATO"
treaty by Administration officials.
</p>
<p> Moving on to Cairo, Cheney worked with Egyptian President
Hosni Mubarak to orchestrate the Arab League's response to
Iraq's aggression. That groundwork led to the decision to
dispatch Arab army units--including those of Egypt and Syria--to Saudi Arabia. Last month Cheney undertook yet another
diplomatic mission to Moscow, where he coordinated gulf policy
with Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev, Foreign Minister Eduard
Shevardnadze and Defense Minister Dmitri Yazov.
</p>
<p> With the political agreements in place, Cheney and Powell
pushed the military deployment with amazing speed. Units from
the 82nd Airborne Division arrived in Saudi Arabia less than 24
hours after they were ordered to move out; the more heavily
armed 24th Infantry Division was on its way by ship in a week.
Even Cheney is awestruck by the pace and size of the buildup.
"It is a truly impressive phenomenon," he says, "when the
President signs off on the deployment, and you give the orders,
and boom, within three months there are 180,000 people plus 7
billion lbs. of equipment, hundreds of aircraft, tanks, all that
combat power represented in Operation Desert Shield halfway
around the world."
</p>
<p> Desert Shield quickly accomplished its first objective:
deterring an Iraqi attack on Saudi Arabia. The initial
deployment, while not powerful enough by itself to turn back an
Iraqi onslaught, served as an unmistakable sign of U.S.
determination to prevent Saddam from making further territorial
gains.
</p>
<p> Now, however, the U.S. is adding such large amounts of
manpower and firepower to the region that the very nature of its
mission may change. Once the additional troops recommended by
Cheney and Powell arrive and become acclimatized to the desert
heat, the U.S. and its allies will for the first time be in a
position to go on the offensive against Iraq. The existence of
that capability could generate pressure to use it. As a military
maxim puts it: You can do anything with a sword except sit on
it.
</p>
<p> If Bush decides to use the full arsenal of weapons at his
disposal, there is little question about the outcome of a clash
with Saddam Hussein. The American commander in the gulf, General
H. Norman Schwarzkopf, said last week that the U.S. could
obliterate Iraq. When forces large enough to demonstrate that
fact arrive in Saudi Arabia, even Saddam might be convinced--and withdraw from Kuwait. Thus the buildup serves two purposes:
preparing for war while hoping to avoid one.
</p>
<p> That is the double-edged strategy being pursued by the
Pentagon duo, Dick Cheney and Colin (pronounced Cole-in) Powell.
Cheney, a brainy conservative from Wyoming, honed his political
skills as chief of staff in Gerald Ford's White House. He was
the respected Republican whip in the House of Representatives
when Bush tapped him for Defense last year after the
unsuccessful battle to confirm former Senator John Tower.
</p>
<p> Powell, the New York-born son of Jamaican immigrants,
entered the Army via the ROTC program at the City College of New
York. He too got a boost from the White House, where he was a
fellow in 1972, working for Frank Carlucci, then deputy director
of the Office of Management and Budget. When Carlucci became
National Security Adviser to Ronald Reagan, he named Powell as
his deputy. Powell became Reagan's Security Adviser in 1987 when
Carlucci was appointed Secretary of Defense.
</p>
<p> Along with these policy-oriented jobs, Powell has served in
demanding field assignments from infantry adviser in Vietnam to
commander of an Army corps in Germany to chief of all forces in
the continental U.S. He winces when anyone calls him a
"political general" and claims he is "just a foot soldier." In
fact, no one climbs to the top of the military hierarchy without
political instincts, and nominations to the top command are as
political as Cabinet appointments. Representative Dave McCurdy
says everyone who deals with Powell learns "they don't come
smoother than Colin."
</p>
<p> Though Cheney was advised by the outgoing Chairman of the
Joint Chiefs, Admiral William Crowe, to pick an officer from the
Pentagon's top echelon to be his successor, Cheney passed over
15 more senior generals. He recommended Powell, the first black
and, at 52, the youngest officer ever to serve in the post.
Powell may be Cheney's equal as a political insider in
Washington; many believe he could become the first African
American to be nominated for Vice President by either major
party. And while both men have a quick smile and ready wit, they
hold the reins tightly inside their own operations.
</p>
<p> "We're very different persons," says Cheney. "We have very
different backgrounds. He is a professional military man, and
I'm a professional politician. But it works because we bring
different skills to our assignments and it meshes nicely." Says
Powell: "There is no competition. I work for him. He is my boss.
I am his adviser. Period."
</p>
<p> In the nation's military chain of command, Cheney is second
only to the President. He is also the manager of the Pentagon's
million-strong civilian component. Powell, who is Cheney's
direct subordinate, runs the uniformed two-thirds (2.1 million
on active duty) of the Defense Department. His job is to provide
Cheney with the best military advice available from inside the
services. He is then charged with delivering the forces
necessary to carry out actions ordered by the President.
</p>
<p> Until recently, the Chairman of the JCS was little more than
a mouthpiece for the lowest common denominator that could be
agreed upon by the heads of the Army, Navy, Air Force and
Marines. But since the Goldwater-Nichols Reorganization Act of
1986, the Chairman has become superior to the individual service
chiefs, with his own staff of 1,600 and enhanced status and
authority. "Goldwater-Nichols," says Lawrence Korb, director of
public-policy education at the Brookings Institution, "changed
the Pentagon like nothing else in recent memory."
</p>
<p> Powell's staff members describe him as a freewheeling
administrator who encourages open discussion of issues. "There's
no intimidation," says an aide. But when a decision has to be
made, Powell is very much the four-star general officer. Says
Senator John McCain of Arizona, a retired Navy pilot who was a
prisoner of war in Vietnam: "Powell has a terrific leadership
style."
</p>
<p> Although he once advised against intervention in Panama,
Powell has earned a reputation as a man not afraid to use force
to advance American interests. In the 13 months he has served
as America's top soldier, Powell has steered several important
military operations, including providing support for the
government of the Philippines against a coup attempt, the
invasion of Panama and the rescue of Americans trapped by the
civil war in Liberia. After years of reluctant generals and
admirals, the White House values Powell as a man who
unhesitatingly carries out his mission.
</p>
<p> In a right-of-center Republican Administration, Cheney may
be the most conservative Cabinet member. As a Congressman,
Cheney recalls with some pride, "I never voted against a weapons
program." His only significant misstep since taking over at the
Pentagon resulted from his ingrained distrust of the Soviet
Union. He once speculated publicly that Gorbachev would not last
long in Moscow. He jokes that he keeps a list of 10 actions that
will prove that the Soviets have truly changed. Even though some
of them--like the unification of Germany--have been
fulfilled, the list always stands at 10. "Every time they do
one, I add another," Cheney explains. "It's like moving the
goalposts."
</p>
<p> Even in jest, that kind of talk helps explain why the
Pentagon bosses were in big trouble on Capitol Hill until the
Iraqi invasion of Kuwait rescued them and their budget. Before
Iraq attacked its neighbor, Congress was considering very large
cuts in defense spending while Cheney was proposing annual
reductions of only 2%. Members of Congress were deep in
discussions of the peace dividend--money that could be saved
from the $160 billion spent each year to defend Western Europe
from the Soviet Union, and diverted to domestic uses.
</p>
<p> In the wrangling over deficit reduction this year, most of
the participants from both parties assumed at first that the
Department of Defense would have to accept major spending cuts.
But then came the gulf conflict, and the hoped-for peace
dividend began to fade. Budget summiteers made an implicit
agreement not to wreak hardship on the military. In the end, the
budget resolution set Pentagon spending for fiscal 1991 at
$288.3 billion, a reduction of $19 billion from the President's
request.
</p>
<p> As Cheney sees it, the current pro-Pentagon mood represents
a return to reality. The gulf confrontation, he says, "reminds
everyone that even with significantly improved relations between
the U.S. and the Soviets, there is still a significant
requirement for a U.S. military force in the world."
</p>
<p> During the Reagan years, the justification for new Pentagon
programs was the Soviet threat. The eight-year buildup cost $2.4
trillion. Although it was flawed by corruption and expensive
mistakes, it also created the world's best armed forces. The
all-volunteer service has brought in some of the sharpest,
best-educated troops in Pentagon history. Its arsenal includes
M-1 Abrams tanks, high-performance missiles, nuclear-powered
aircraft carriers and air-superiority fighters.
</p>
<p> Ironically, those sophisticated weapons are being aimed at
an unexpected kind of foe. With the ebbing of the Soviet menace,
Pentagon planners had concentrated on preparing for
"low-intensity" wars against lightly armed opponents in remote
Third World settings. Instead the first threat to world peace
to follow the cold war is presented by a country wielding a
million-man army and some of the most advanced weaponry
available anywhere.
</p>
<p> Iraq's arsenal includes Soviet tanks, French Mirage fighter
planes, Soviet Scud missiles, which can be topped with either
explosive or poison-gas warheads, and South African-made
artillery pieces with more range and greater accuracy than
anything in the U.S. inventory. Says Powell: "It turns out that
the kinds of forces we built to deal with the Soviet threat are
the kind that have great utility in this crisis, because--guess what?--the Iraqi army is not riding camels. They're
driving Soviet tanks, flying Soviet aircraft."
</p>
<p> There is more to it than that, though. The best of armies
must get to the field before it can fight. Where the Pentagon
spenders, uniformed and civilian, fell short was in airlift and
sealift, the vital cargo ships and planes. Cheney had refused
to spend $600 million that Congress handed him specifically to
buy fast logistics ships. The Air Force, bored by transport
planes, stopped buying sturdy C-141s and giant C-5s and called
for the completely new C-17. Six years later, with the price tag
near $400 million each, no C-17 has ever flown. For the money
invested in its development so far, the country could have
bought 70 more C-5A Galaxies.
</p>
<p> Result: while the gulf buildup has been extraordinary, the
U.S. does not have enough land forces and logistical support to
attack confidently the 430,000 troops, 3,500 tanks and 2,200
artillery pieces the Iraqi army has in fortified positions in
Kuwait and southern Iraq. In addition to Marines and
infantrymen, American forces include 800 tanks and 800 combat
planes. According to British military officials, by
mid-November the total U.S. and allied force will include 1,600
tanks and 750 heavy artillery pieces. This will not give the
allies parity with the Iraqis, let alone the 3-to-l superiority
of attacker over defender that is called for in military
textbooks. But American generals think they can more than make
up for that disadvantage through air superiority: the
multinational force will have 1,110 combat planes to 800 for
Iraq. U.S. Army officers in Riyadh are confident that
Schwarzkopf will get as many troops as he thinks he needs. Says
he: "For a military man, you can never have enough."
</p>
<p> Just back from the gulf last week, Powell went to Cheney's
office in the Pentagon to brief him on the need for 100,000 more
troops. The two then drove to the White House to report to Bush
at a 2 1/2-hour session in the Situation Room. Cheney told
reporters the Administration was not yet ready "to say that
we've put enough forces into the gulf." Bush endorsed the plan
to augment U.S. troop strength, but no announcement of which
units will go is expected until Secretary of State James Baker
discusses the increase with the Saudi government in Riyadh this
week.
</p>
<p> It is not yet clear what military options Bush wants to
have. Most U.S. strategists put heavy air attacks at the center
of their battle scenarios. They would focus first on knocking
the Iraqi air force out of the war. Once air superiority is
attained, strikes would focus on cutting roads and bridges and
destroying military installations. No matter how much faith they
place in air power, however, the planners are convinced that
ground assaults would have to play a major role in ousting Iraqi
troops from Kuwait.
</p>
<p> U.S. Central Command headquarters in Saudi Arabia is getting
ready. "We wait for someone to tell us what the mission is,"
says Brigadier General Stephen Arnold, assistant chief of staff
of Centcom. "Then we figure out the best way to accomplish the
mission." Centcom staff officers foresee a shooting war with
Iraq as three simultaneous battles. The first would be the great
air battle behind the Kuwaiti and Iraqi frontiers. The second
would be a combined attack on Iraqi armored units inside Kuwait
by A-10 Thunderbolt tank killers, armed helicopters, missiles
and artillery. The third fight would be with Iraqi
special-operations units that would slip into Saudi Arabia and
attack from the rear.
</p>
<p> Though the Pentagon senior officers have little doubt they
would ultimately defeat Saddam Hussein, they think the cost
could be high. "I don't think we should fool anyone into
thinking there are not going to be casualties," says Arnold.
Intelligence analysts in Washington, meanwhile, project total
U.S. casualty figures as high as 20,000.
</p>
<p> There are time factors at work, and Bush's window for war
might close. By March, rising temperatures will make large
military operations much more difficult, if not impossible.
Another ominous time limit is the Muslim fast of Ramadan, which
begins in March, followed by the hajj, the pilgrimage to Mecca
of hundreds of thousands of the faithful. The Saudi government
would face a huge threat of terrorism with so many arrivals from
Islamic countries where Saddam is regarded as a hero, along with
the embarrassment of Western armies camped on Saudi soil.
"Ramadan is no time to have infidels killing Muslims," says an
intelligence officer in Washington. "If the President doesn't do
it by March, we're talking about next fall."
</p>
<p> That would be a very long wait for action and could put an
intolerable strain on military morale, domestic opinion and the
political links that support the coalition of American, Arab and
European armies. Impatience to get the crisis over with and a
growing recognition that efforts for a peaceful resolution have
made no headway are producing a sense that war is inevitable.
</p>
<p> Only two men have the power to decide whether war breaks
out. Saddam, once he is convinced that the U.S. really means to
attack, could withdraw his troops from Kuwait and try for a deal
that might reward him with territory, oil and money from
relieved Arab states. While many experts believe retreat would
lead to his downfall, there is no clear evidence for that.
Saddam has already handed back to Iran territory he seized in
eight years of war. He is a ruthless dictator who does as he
pleases.
</p>
<p> The other man of decision is Bush. With a quarter of a
million troops in the region and more on the way, he can hardly
behave like the grand old Duke of York, who marched his men to
the top of the hill and marched them down again. He cannot
withdraw unless Saddam does so. His political survival would be
thrown into question, as would the credibility of the U.S. in
the new emerging world. But if it is to be war, Bush will find
it reassuring that he can rely on one of the best leadership
teams ever to operate in the Pentagon. That could even be an
element affecting his decision.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>