UNITED24 - Make a charitable donation in support of Ukraine!

Intelligence

ACCESSION NUMBER:301278
FILE ID:POL204
DATE:08/31/93
TITLE:DEFENSE DEPARTMENT REPORT, TUESDAY, AUGUST 31 (08/31/93)
TEXT:*93083104.POL
DEFENSE DEPARTMENT REPORT, TUESDAY, AUGUST 31
(Somalia, Bosnia)  (340)
NEWS BRIEFING -- Spokesman Kathleen deLaski discussed the following topics:
RANGERS IN SOMALIA USED BEST INTELLIGENCE AVAILABLE
The U.S. Army Ranger unit in Somalia was "operating with the best
intelligence that it had at the time" when it raided a building in south
Mogadishu August 30 that was thought to be the hiding place of members of a
Somali faction, deLaski said.
"Intelligence in a place like Mogadishu is not going to be perfect, but
because it's perishable it has to be acted upon quickly.  They reacted as
they best saw fit" when they entered the building and found only U.N.
personnel there, the spokesman asserted.
"The primary target was a place where the Quick Reaction Force believed they
had intelligence that would help in their goal of improving the security
situation.  It turned out that they found nothing at that location," she
said.
"The people who might be hampering the security situation in Mogadishu move
around constantly," she told reporters.  "There were reports that one of
the elements of the security threat might have been at this place."
DeLaski declined to identify the Rangers' target.  In response to reporters'
questions about whether warlord Mohammed Farah Aideed was the object of the
search, she said: "The U.N. has a warrant for Aideed's arrest, and the
Quick Reaction Force is doing what it can and what it is asked to do in
1rying to achieve the objective of improving the security situation in
Mogadishu."
U.S. BOSNIA PEACE ROLE RESTS ON VIABILITY
The spokesman reiterated President Clinton's August 30 assertion that a
peacekeeping role in Bosnia for U.S. troops would depend on several key
elements.
"We haven't seen what the peace plan looks like," said deLaski.  "Whether
the United States would be prepared to supply some peacekeeping forces
depends on whether we're convinced that the agreement is fair and fully
embraced by the Bosnian government and that it is enforceable."
NNNN



NEWSLETTER
Join the GlobalSecurity.org mailing list