LONDON — The U.S. military has drafted and won approval
for attack plans ir response to an Iran attack.
Western diplomatic sources said the U.S. military's Central
Command has submitted plans for an air and naval strike on
Iran. The sources said the plan envisioned escalating tensions
that would peak with an Iranian-inspired insurgency strike
against U.S. military assets in the Gulf.
Meanwhile, on April 29, a second American aircraft carrier,
USS Abraham Lincoln, steamed into the Gulf in what officials
termed a show of force. They said the U.S. Navy plans to withdraw
a carrier group, USS Harry S. Truman, from the region.
"There is tremendous tactical benefit to us to operate
the two side-by-side in restricted space," Lt. Gen. Carter
Ham, director of operations at the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
said on Wednesday. "We can generate more sorties, some
of them strike, some of them reconnaissance, some of them
to perform other operations."
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"This is not some grand scheme to destroy the Iranian
regime and its nuclear program," a source said. "It
is a practical plan on how to respond to an Iranian strike
or a provocation."
Officials said the Defense Department has sought an update
for plans to attack Iran amid what they term its "increasingly
hostile role" against the United States. The officials
cited the weapons flow to insurgency groups in Iraq as well
as confrontations with U.S. ships in the Gulf.
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