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US Air Force
not doing enough in Iraq: Gates
WASHINGTON—Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Monday the Air Force is
not doing enough to help in the Iraq and Afghanistan war effort,
complaining that some military leaders are “stuck in old ways of doing
business.”
Gates said in a speech at Maxwell Air Force Base, Ala., that getting the
Air Force to send more surveillance and reconnaissance aircraft to Iraq
and Afghanistan has been “like pulling teeth.”
Addressing officer students at the Air Force’s Air University, the
Pentagon chief praised the Air Force for its overall contributions but
made a point of urging it to do more and to undertake new and creative
ways of thinking about helping the war effort instead of focusing mainly
on future threats.
“In my view we can do and we should do more to meet the needs of men and
women fighting in the current conflicts while their outcome may still be
in doubt,” he said. “My concern is that our services are still not
moving aggressively in wartime to provide resources needed now on the
battlefield.”
He cited the example of drone aircraft that can watch, hunt and
sometimes kill insurgents without risking the life of a pilot. He said
the number of such aircraft has grown 25-fold since the terrorist
attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.
He said he has been trying for months to get the Air Force to send more
surveillance and reconnaissance aircraft, like the Predator drone that
provides real-time surveillance video, to the battlefield.
“Because people were stuck in old ways of doing business, it’s been like
pulling teeth,” Gates said. “While we’ve doubled this capability in
recent months, it is still not good enough.”
To push the issue harder, Gates said he established last week a
Pentagon-wide task force “to work this problem in the weeks to come, to
find more innovative and bold ways to help those whose lives are on the
line.”
He likened the urgency of the task force’s work to that of a similar
organization he created last year to push for faster production and
deployment of mine-resistant, ambush-protected armored vehicles that
have been credited with saving lives of troops facing attacks by
roadside bombs in Iraq.
“All this may require rethinking long-standing service assumptions and
priorities about which missions require certified pilots and which do
not,” Gates said, referring to so-called unmanned aerial vehicles that
are controlled by servicemembers at ground stations.
The military’s reliance on unmanned surveillance and reconnaissance
aircraft has soared to more than 500,000 hours in the air, largely in
Iraq, according to Pentagon data. The Air Force has taken pilots out of
the air and shifted them to remote flying duty to meet part of the
demand.
Gates, who served in the Air Force in the 1960s as a young officer
before he joined the Central Intelligence Agency, urged the officers in
his audience to dedicate themselves to thinking creatively. “I’m asking
you to be part of the solution and part of the future,” he said.
Gates made no direct mention of a series of mistakes and missteps
involving the Air Force in recent months, beginning with an episode last
August when a B-52 bomber flew from an Air Force base in North Dakota to
another in Louisiana with the crew unaware that it was carrying nuclear
weapons.
Last month Air Force Secretary Michael Wynne announced that four Air
Force nose cone assemblies designed for use with nuclear missiles were
mistakenly shipped to Taiwan in 2006. The error was not verified until
shortly before Wynne made the announcement, and the matter is under
Pentagon investigation.
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki on Monday urged other Arab countries to
reopen their embassies in the capital as a show of support for his
government as it cracks down on Shiite militias in Iraq.
Meanwhile, a police commander said six people died in clashes in
Baghdad’s embattled Shiite enclave of Sadr City. They included three
policemen and three civilians, according to the officer who asked not to
be named since he was not authorized to release the information
.—Agencies
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