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Hegseth: Iran Conflict Not Endless 03/03 06:03
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth spoke Monday to widening concerns that the
U.S.-Israeli strikes in Iran could spiral into a protracted regional conflict
by declaring: "This is not Iraq. This is not endless," even as he warned that
more American casualties are likely in the weeks ahead.
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth spoke Monday to widening
concerns that the U.S.-Israeli strikes in Iran could spiral into a protracted
regional conflict by declaring: "This is not Iraq. This is not endless," even
as he warned that more American casualties are likely in the weeks ahead.
While the Trump administration has cited Iran's nuclear ambitions as the
chief concern to be addressed, officials increasingly are pointing to the
threat from Iran's ballistic missiles as a key reason to launch the attacks as
well as an opportunity to take out the government's leadership and the sense
that negotiations around the nuclear program have stalled.
Trump said Monday that Iran's conventional missile program "was growing
rapidly and dramatically, and this posed a very clear, colossal threat to
America and our forces stationed overseas."
Hegseth said at a separate press conference with Gen. Dan Caine, chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff, that the operation had a "decisive mission" to
eliminate the threat of Iranian ballistic missiles, destroy the country's navy
and ensure "no nukes."
Trump, Hegseth and Caine have not suggested any exit plan or offered signs
that the conflict would end anytime soon as the killing of Iranian Supreme
Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei cast doubt on the future of the Islamic Republic
and hurtled the region into broader instability. Caine said the biggest U.S.
military buildup in the Middle East in decades would only grow because the
commander in the region "will receive additional forces even today."
"This is not a so-called regime-change war, but the regime sure did change,
and the world is better off for it," Hegseth said.
Trump, however, in video statements released after the strikes began, urged
the Iranian people "to take back your country."
More American troop casualties expected
The conflict has spilled into the wider region, with Iran and its allied
armed groups launching missiles at Israel, Arab states and U.S. military
targets in the Middle East.
Six American troops have been killed, with Trump, Hegseth and Caine
predicting more casualties. All were Army soldiers and part of the same
logistics unit in Kuwait, according to a U.S. official who was not authorized
to comment publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.
When asked about the six deaths Monday, Hegseth said an Iranian weapon made
it past allied air defenses "and, in that particular case, happened to hit a
tactical operations center that was fortified."
Eighteen American service members also have been seriously wounded, said
Capt. Tim Hawkins, a spokesman for U.S. Central Command.
The latest sign of the escalating upheaval came when, the U.S. military
said, ally Kuwait "mistakenly shot down" three American fighter jets during a
combat mission as Iranian aircraft, ballistic missiles and drones were
attacking. U.S. Central Command said all six pilots ejected safely from the
American F-15E Strike Eagles and were in stable condition.
Asked if there are boots on the ground now in Iran, Hegseth said, "No, but
we're not going to go into the exercise of what we will or will not do."
He said it was "foolishness" to expect U.S. officials to say publicly
"here's exactly how far we'll go."
Trump told the New York Post on Monday that he wasn't ruling out U.S. forces
in Iran if "they were necessary." He noted, "I don't have the yips with respect
to boots on the ground."
At the White House, Trump said the mission was expected to take four to five
weeks but "we have the capability to go far longer than that."
Secretary of State Marco Rubio told reporters at the Capitol that the U.S.
"will do this as long as it takes to achieve" its objectives and warned that
"the hardest hits are yet to come from the U.S. military."
Hegseth also dismissed questions about the time frame and said Trump had
"latitude" to decide how long it would take. "Four weeks, two weeks, six
weeks," he said. "It could move up. It could move back."
Pentagon gives justification for strikes
In laying out a case for the strikes, Hegseth did not point to any imminent
nuclear threat from Iran and said again that strikes by the U.S. and Israel
last June "obliterated their nuclear program to rubble."
Instead, Hegseth pointed to threats from other weaponry that justified the
operation: "Iran was building powerful missiles and drones to create a
conventional shield for their nuclear blackmail ambitions."
He added: "Our bases, our people, our allies, all in their crosshairs. Iran
had a conventional gun to our head as they tried to lie their way to a nuclear
bomb."
Hegseth said that during negotiations leading up to the attack, Iranian
officials were "stalling" despite having "every chance to make a peaceful and
sensible deal."
He also justified the operation by describing Iran's government as having
started the conflict from its inception, declaring that for 47 years it has
"waged a savage, one-sided war against America."
In a private briefing Sunday, Trump administration officials told
congressional staffers that U.S. intelligence did not suggest Iran was
preparing to launch a preemptive strike against the U.S., three people familiar
with the briefings said.
Trump, a Republican, had said the objective of the mission was to eliminate
"imminent threats from the Iranian regime." And senior Trump administration
officials, who were not authorized to comment publicly and spoke on the
condition of anonymity, told reporters Saturday that there were indicators that
the Iranians could launch a preemptive attack.
Military doesn't specify Iran's nuclear sites as targets
As with the attack that dropped massive bunker-buster bombs on Iranian
nuclear facilities last year, Caine said the military used B-2 stealth bombers
in the new operation with a 37-hour round trip.
He said the penetrating bombs were dropped on Iranian underground
facilities" but did not specify that they were nuclear facilities. Nuclear
sites were not among the types of targets on a list released over the weekend
by U.S. Central Command.
The administration says Israel and the U.S. have bombed Iranian missile
sites and targeted its navy, claiming to have destroyed its headquarters and
multiple warships.
Caine on Monday referenced the use of cyber technologies, saying the U.S.
"effectively disrupted communications and sensor networks" that left "the
adversary without the ability to coordinate or respond effectively."
Without giving specifics, Caine said the military "delivered synchronized
and layered effects designed to disrupt, degrade, deny and destroy Iran's
ability to conduct and sustained combat operations on the U.S. side."
Caine said Trump gave the go-ahead order for the strikes at 3:38 p.m. EST on
Friday. That meant the president gave the green light when he was aboard Air
Force One heading to Texas with Republican Sens. Ted Cruz and John Cornyn and
actor Dennis Quaid.
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