[Salon] Biden Pushed Operation Prosperity Guardian Despite Strong Objections
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- Date: Sun, 14 Jan 2024 08:07:01 -0500
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https://gcaptain.com/biden-pushed-operation-prosperity-guardian-despite-objections/Biden Pushed Operation Prosperity Guardian Despite Strong Objections
Bloomberg
By
Peter Martin (Bloomberg) President Joe Biden was vacationing in St.
Croix on the morning of Jan. 1 when he convened a meeting of his
national security team. Pressure had been building for weeks for
military action against Iran-backed Houthi militants for their
persistent attacks on shipping in the Red Sea.
Just a day
earlier, the Yemen-based Houthis had fired on US Navy helicopters
responding to a distress call from a container ship. The Navy fired
back, sinking three small boats and killing their crews. Amid the
near-daily Houthi attacks on container ships and tankers over six weeks,
shipping costs were rising and critics of Biden’s leadership were
warning that American credibility was on the line.
A constant throughout the discussions: The difficulty in finding an off-ramp once hostilities began.
The
meeting set in motion twelve days of diplomacy and military planning
that culminated in the airstrikes on 70 Houthi targets — all while
trying to avert a wider Mideast war. The pre-dawn strikes Friday
followed by a follow-up strike on a radar installation a day later, were
by far the most wide-ranging military action undertaken by the US since
Hamas’s Oct. 7 attack on Israel ignited its operation to eliminate
militants in Gaza. Biden said the military action sent a “clear
message.”
This is how those plans unfolded, according to US and British officials who provided details on condition of anonymity.
During
the conference on New Year’s Day, Biden directed his team to accelerate
efforts to condemn the Houthi attacks at the United Nations and to
continue building a multilateral coalition intended to defend shipping.
But he also gave instructions to prepare to proceed on a second track if
diplomacy failed, telling military leaders to refine a list of targets
to hit in tandem with allies.
In the days after the meeting, discussions with UK politicians and defense planners accelerated.
The
two countries discussed options that included special forces
operations, more aggressive action at sea and strikes on land. The US
pushed for strong action from the beginning, while UK, European and
Middle East allies cautioned that an overzealous response could draw the
West into direct conflict with Iran.
In the background, both US
and UK officials pondered the economic impact of a wider war in an
election year for both countries. Official assessments warned of
significant inflationary impacts and a hit to GDP if a full-blown
Mideast war erupted.
Private diplomacy — and public messaging —
continued. On Jan. 3, the US and 13 other countries issued a joint
statement warning of “consequences” if the Houthis failed to halt their
attacks in the Red Sea.
In private, the US sent repeated
back-channel messages to Iran, urging it to stop the Houthi attacks.
Tehran responded that it had no control over the group, despite
continued indications from UK intelligence that showed the Houthis
restocking with weapons that could be traced to Iran.
On Jan. 9, a
massive Houthi attack concentrated the minds of US and British
policymakers, making it clear that diplomacy was unlikely to succeed.
The Iran-backed group launched its biggest missile and drone attack yet
in the Red Sea, prompting the US and UK forces to shoot down 18 drones
and three anti-ship missiles.
Biden’s national security team met
again on Jan. 9, this time with the president in Washington. He was
presented with military options from a list of potential strike targets
that US Central Command maintains. A senior official said the president
chose one of the more aggressive options.
At the end of the
meeting, Biden directed Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin to carry out a
military response. Austin joined the meeting from Walter Reed National
Military Center, where he was hospitalized for complications after
undergoing prostate cancer surgery, a diagnosis he’d failed to disclose
to Biden until that day.
A constant throughout the discussions: The difficulty in finding an off-ramp once hostilities began.
London Turns
The
latest Houthi attack also shifted thinking in London. HMS Diamond, a
Royal Navy destroyer, had been among the ships targeted by the Houthis.
Secretary of State for Defense Grant Shapps and UK military chiefs now
backed the US plan for airstrikes.
UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak
backed the plan on Thursday, Jan. 11, as he traveled to Ukraine.
Opposition leader Keir Starmer also threw his support behind it.
Deputy
Prime Minister Oliver Dowden moved to Admiralty House to watch the
operation unfold. Biden tracked developments from the West Wing of the
White House.
Strikes Begin
At about 6:30 p.m. Thursday in Washington and 2:30 a.m. the next day in Yemen, the strikes began.
Residents
in Sanaa, Yemen’s capital, reported hearing huge explosions and
watching as fire consumed a string of military targets.
American
and British forces hit radar installations, storage sites and missile
and drone launch sites using fighter jets from the US Air Force and the
USS Eisenhower aircraft carrier, as well as Tomahawk missiles launched
from a submarine and surface ships.
A senior US military official
said the targets were selected to minimize the risk of collateral
damage and precision munitions were used for the same reason.
Biden
warned that more action may follow. “I will not hesitate to direct
further measures to protect our people and the free flow of
international commerce as necessary,” he said in a statement.
In
the hours that followed, the president’s national security team received
no back-channel messages from Iran or the Houthis indicating a desire
to deescalate. But within hours, protesters holding Palestinian and
Yemeni flags had gathered in Sanaa to denounce the US and Israel. A
Houthi commander said retaliation was “imminent.”
That
possibility has yet to unfold, although a ship hauling Russian oil had a
narrow miss with a missile fired from Yemen. “We will make sure that
we respond to the Houthis as they continue this outrageous behavior,”
Biden told reporters Friday afternoon.
About 24 hours later, the
US followed with another strike, described as a follow-up action,
against a radar installation that hadn’t been fully destroyed the night
before, US officials said. It signaled Biden would not stop hitting the
Houthis to degrade their capabilities even without retaliation.
As
for the prospect for a wider war that would draw in Iran, Biden said,
“I’ve already delivered the message to Iran. They know not to do
anything.”
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