Iran
Adding Attack Boats in Persian Gulf, U.S. Says
Originally at: http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aoXpWTwSAPMA&refer=home
June 6 (Bloomberg) -- Iran is increasing its fleet of small attack
boats capable of challenging warships and disrupting oil traffic in
the Strait of Hormuz, the sea route for two-fifths of the world's daily
supply of crude oil, the U.S. Navy says.
Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps already has more than 1,000 of the
speedboats ``and continues to add boats armed with anti- ship cruise
missiles,'' said Robert Althage, spokesman for the U.S. Office of Naval
Intelligence.
``Iran still states that the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps will
employ swarming tactics in a conflict,'' Althage said in an e-mail.
Naval intelligence, in its latest report on threats, said an attack
against U.S. forces and commercial tankers ``could include over 100
boats in coordinated groups of 20 to 30 approaching simultaneously from
multiple axes.''
The U.S. has two carrier groups in the Persian Gulf. The commander
of these forces, Vice Admiral Kevin Cosgriff, said the attack boats
have ``a significant military capability.'' His fear is that Iran's
central leadership might not have enough control over this Revolutionary
Guard force to ensure against unauthorized attacks.
``I'm fairly comfortable that the regular Iranian navy and air force
has a pretty good command-and-control system -- the key word is `control,'''
he said. ``I don't have the same sense with the Revolutionary Guard.''
``Is there a rigorous, disciplined chain of command where people pay
attention?'' Cosgriff said. ``In some instances, the answer would be
yes. In other instances I've had some concern that people may be prone
to miscalculation.''
``Somebody who gets fired up based on firebrand rhetoric is what I
am speaking about,'' he said.
Mines, Torpedoes, Missiles
The boats -- up to 70 feet long and capable of speeds up to 57 miles
per hour -- are armed with torpedoes and rocket- propelled grenades
as well as cruise missiles and also are used to lay mines. The U.S.
estimates Iran has 5,000 sea mines.
Cosgriff and other U.S. naval officers say they can defend against
this threat. Still, attacks on tankers and a few sunken ships could
disrupt traffic through the chokepoint of the world's most important
oil transit route.
Iran launched a much smaller fleet of these attack boats against U.S.
ships and U.S.-flagged tankers in the Persian Gulf in late 1987 through
mid-1988 after the Reagan administration sided with Iraq in its war
with the Islamic Republic.
The ships were able to lay mines, attack ships and disrupt oil traffic.
They damaged at least one tanker traveling under the U.S. flag as well
as the frigate USS Samuel Roberts.
Cosgriff said the U.S. now has four minesweepers deployed to the Gulf
and the British Navy has two. The coalition ``routinely'' practices
minesweeping and ``we are actually quite good at it,'' he said.
Defense Against `Swarming'
Cosgriff, in a telephone interview yesterday from the United Arab Emirates,
said the U.S. Navy has ``devised various tactics and other ways of coping
with'' the swarming tactics of the small attack boats.
In addition, ``there are some limitations'' to launching an attack
by these boats, he said. ``You just don't get 1,000 or 500 or even 20
of anything under way and tightly orchestrated over a large body of
water to create a specific effect at a specific time and specific place.
They have their own challenges.''
Officers of the aircraft carrier USS Stennis in the Persian Gulf offered
similar assurances in onboard interviews June 1.
``We spend a lot of time making sure we have eyes out for that sort
of thing,'' said Commander Chris Rentfrow, director of the Stennis's
self-defense nerve center.
Cheney's Warning
The Stennis arrived in the Gulf 12 days after Vice President Dick Cheney
spoke on the warship, highlighting the capability of the two carrier
groups to protect sea lanes and send a warning that the U.S. won't tolerate
Iran developing a nuclear capability.
The Stennis was joined by the Nimitz and the Marine Corps's Bonhomme
Richard amphibious assault group in sailing through the Strait of Hormuz
to conduct joint training exercises -- nine ships with 17,000 personnel
in the largest daylight transit since 2003.
The maneuvers mark the second time in two months that two of the Navy's
11 aircraft carriers are in the Gulf for joint exercises. The Stennis
exercised in March with the USS Dwight D. Eisenhower. Before that, the
last time more than one carrier deployed in the Gulf was March 2003
for the Iraq invasion.
The current exercise will continue through tomorrow.
Raytheon System
The centerpiece of the Stennis's defenses is a Raytheon Co. Shipboard
Shelf-Defense System installed last year that synthesizes data from
the carrier's radar and anti-submarine sonar as well as Aegis air defense
information gathered by the flattop's escort vessels into a single picture
displayed on consoles.
Stennis operators can track up to 200 vessels or aircraft simultaneously,
Rentfrow said in an interview. Two large digital maps showed the carrier
was in the middle of the northern Persian Gulf about 37 miles from Busher,
Iran. There was no significant Iranian naval or air presence.
The system can ``absolutely'' deal with Iran's small boats, Rentfrow
said. ``We practice a lot with these ships in terms of how to defend
the zone around the carrier,'' he said.
One method is an old-fashioned .50 caliber machine gun on the vessel's
stern, manned by a gunner in a grimy red t-shirt peering through binoculars
into a hot, hazy Gulf horizon.
Senior officers of the Stennis, in interviews June 1 and May 31 onboard
the ship, said the strike groups aren't exercising specifically to counter
Iran but were practicing generic tactics to counter submarines, aircraft
and missile attacks.
This week the Stennis and Bonhomme Richard groups also planned an exercise
practicing earthquake relief.
Stennis Strike Group Commander Rear Admiral Kevin Quinn, in response
to a question, said the deployment of the two carrier groups isn't intended
to send a message to Iran. ``I don't see it that way, but I'm the tactical
guy,'' he said. ``My focus has been on exercising maritime skills''
and providing air support for ground troops in Iraq