What Are We Hitting Syria With and How Long We Have Been getting Ready?
REUTERS
Last December, U.S. satellite images showed Syria’s chemical weapons factories began readying Sarin nerve gas. Two weeks later, just as early reports of chemical attacks in rebel-controlled hot zones rolled in, the U.S. Navy re-upped a $254.6 million contract to buy Tomahawk Block IV cruise missiles from Raytheon Company (NYSE:RTN).
Now, those tubular, jet-powered missiles – each worth about $1.45 million – are aimed at Syria.
The Waltham, Mass.-based defense giant stands to make a killing – pun, intended – if Congress greenlights President Barack Obama’s proposal to strike Syria in the coming weeks.
Already, the White House ordered 196 Tomahawks for fiscal 2013 – totaling about $320 million. It is requesting the same number for the next fiscal year, at a total cost of about $5 million, thanks to inflation and a shrinking supply chain, Politico reported.
The 20-foot-long missiles – used widely in Afghanistan, Iraq and, most recently, Libya – will likely garner Raytheon some extra sales to the Pentagon in the coming years, if, say 100 are fired off at Syrian targets this year.A spokesman for Raytheon told International Business Times that the Department of Defense asked that all reporter inquiries about weapons that may be used in Syria be directed to the Pentagon.
“It certainly get some replacement business out of it,” William Hartung, an analyst at the Center for International Policy, told IBTimes. “But compared to the size of the company, it won’t be huge, especially given that the Pentagon budget has leveled off.”
Using the missiles won’t be without their consequences, though.
Washington, as with the rest of the international community, appears split on whether to bomb Syria, which allegedly used Sarin nerve gas to slaughter more than 1,400 civilians, according to U.S. officials.
“If you look at what would be the likely strategic objectives of any campaign, like limiting civilian casualties or containing the scope of the conflict, or, for some, tipping the military balance in favor of the opposition,” Jeffrey Martini, a Middle East analyst at the Washington-based Rand Corporation, told IBTimes, “it doesn’t appear that any of the military options the U.S. has would be very effective.”
“It underscores the poor choices the Obama administration has,” he added.
Indeed, while Raytheon boasts about the Block IV missile’s accuracy, Hartung said the projectiles are responsible for some “failed strikes” on al-Qaeda operatives during President Bill Clinton’s administration.
“They’re not as accurate as some other ways of delivering warheads,” he said, hinting that using them could increase the possibility of killing civilians, which seems to be the antithesis of the West’s goals in a country stricken by two years of brutal civil war.
But, easily fired from air bases or submarines, they represent a low-risk option for U.S. forces.
And as criticism of Obama, so-far dubbed (repeatedly, just scroll through this Google search) a “reluctant warrior,” pours in, the choice that keeps U.S. personnel out of harm’s way.
He was similarly called a “reluctant warrior” when he committed U.S. missiles and warplanes to the opposition side in Libya two years ago, a decision which, asMichael Lewis chronicled for Vanity Fair last year, was almost entirely his own.
Had U.S. Air Force pilot Tyler Stark died when his plane was shot down over Libya, history would likely judge Obama as an extension of his predecessor George W. Bush, whose presidency was marred by what most of the world perceived as war-mongering and stars-and-stripes-strewn coffins.
Raytheon’s missiles, it seems, may be his safest option.
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