U.S. troops protect Turkey from missiles
For the past eight months, close to 300 U.S. soldiers have stood guard on a hillside overlooking one of Turkey's largest cities, scanning the skies for the threat of missiles fired from nearby Syria.
The American men and
women, wearing full battle armor and helmets under the hot September
sun, operate a series of Patriot missile launchers and radar stations,
designed to hunt and shoot down incoming missiles.
It is a U.S. military
"boots on the ground" deployment close to the Syrian border that has
been largely overlooked during the furious debate in Washington over
whether to attack the Syrian regime.
"We're protecting against
any tactical ballistic missile or rocket attack that may come from the
country of Syria," said Lt. Col. John Dawber, commander of the Patriot
missile battalion originating from Fort Sill, Oklahoma.
"Our presence here is to deter such an attack, and if that attack does come, to defeat any attack on our asset."
The "asset" is Gaziantep,
a fast-growing industrial city of 1.4 million inhabitants. This
sprawling metropolis is about 30 miles from the Syrian border and barely
a two-hour drive from the northern Syrian battlefield city of Aleppo,
which has been the target of months of Syrian government airstrikes and
Scud surface-to-surface missile attacks.
Late last year, at the
request of the Turkish government, the U.S., Germany and the Netherlands
agreed to send three Patriot missile battalions to their NATO ally, to
protect the Turkish cities of Gaziantep, Adana and Kahramanmaras.
The decision was reached
after a series of deadly cross-border incidents, during which the
Turkish government accused Syrian government forces of killing Turkish
citizens with artillery and small arms fire.
The possibility that
chemical weapons were used on a massive scale in neighborhoods around
Damascus last week has only escalated the potential threat along the
border, especially after the Syrian government threatened retaliation
against U.S. allies Turkey, Jordan and Israel if it was targeted by an
American attack.
The U.S. troops
stationed in Gaziantep say surface-to-surface missiles equipped with
chemical warheads are weapons the Patriot missile systems are designed
to combat.
"The nature of our
branch (of the military), air defense artillery, is that there is always
a chemical threat," said Capt. Tarik Jones, a native of Woodbridge,
Virginia.
Lt. Col. Dawber added
that the Patriot missiles' ability to destroy missiles armed with
chemical weapons depended on many factors, including the quantity of
poison on the warhead, the type of chemical agent and weather
conditions.
But, he added, "I'm pretty sure we can mitigate most of that, if not all of that, based on certain conditions."
For laymen, Jones summed
up the complicated advanced technology and physics behind the Patriot
system with a Nintendo video game analogy. He called the Patriots "Duck
Hunt."
"We are able to engage
missiles that are coming into the city, by shooting missiles out that
are able to intercept it in the middle of the air," he said.
There are ample reasons
why the Syrian government would want to attack Gaziantep. Tens -- if not
hundreds -- of thousands of Syrian refugees and exiles are believed to
have settled here over the past two years. It is a key operations hub
for international aid efforts to northern Syria.
But Gaziantep is also an
important rear base of operations for Syrian opposition groups, who are
supported and, in some cases, armed by the Turkish government.
The mission of the U.S.
troops deployed here is unusual because from their vantage point, they
can see the city they have been assigned to protect.
"This is the first time
in my 18-year career that we can see the asset that we're defending,"
said Dawber, who gazed past rows of Patriot missile launchers at the
cityscape below.
"It's a special reward to also enjoy the view, while protecting the asset that we cover."
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