/ 991 age i tiddle *nged ading ul tes- ; Bra- |The Battalion Vol. 90 No. 79 GSPS 045360 26 Pages College Station, Texas Call to Duty A&M cadet called service by Marines See Life Style Thursday, January 24,1991 vice. idem, Ji'-tion a end I also words. eight- Troops dig in for ground war >vides veil as eel of Grace i, said : most siders d. “If rica is triple r Life id his ig aid taken devel- nstra- ve any ie call said, y de- gpro- r, the DHAHRAN, Saudi Arabia (AP) - U.S. armored cavalrymen skir mished with Iraqis in the first S round clash at the northern bor er, where vast fleets of tanks ma neuvered and dug in on the desert floor Wednesday for the land war just over the horizon. The Americans captured six Ira- flisand suffered two slight casualties, tne U.S. command said. It denied a Baghdad claim that the Iraqis also seized prisoners. Iraq apparently fired off a double- barreled volley of Scud missiles at both Saudi Arabia and Israel. One Scud was intercepted by two Patriot defense missiles over northern Is rael. There were no immediate reports of damage or casualties in either place. The Israeli leadership was hold ing its fire Wednesday at the urging of the United States. Kuwaiti oil installations burned on, sabotaged by the Iraqis, and sho wered nearby Iran with “mack rain.” The skies over Iraq itself began to clear, and allied air commanders , Kuwait:. \ IRAN • Persian Gulf Strait of SAUDI Wi -• Hormu2 ARABIA O ? *-GATAft t Sy Riyadh - E ./^ U.S. Central I V Command OMAN';} apOmitM :/ YEMEN <-*, ^^AmbianSea ... \ jft ZJC mil#* !/ YEMEN pressed their mission-a-minute cam paign in the seventh day of Opera tion Desert Storm. Allied bombers have demolished half of Iraq’s oil-refining capacity, A&M official describes ‘worst-case scenario' commanders said. Iraq announced it was suspending gasoline sales. More and more Iraqis were emerging from their shelters in Baghclacf, said CNN’s Peter Arnett, the only Western journalist allowed to report from the Iraqi capital. Commerce seemed to be resum ing, Baghdad residents were shop ping at the central market and water trucks were making their rounds, he said. The allied army is deployed along the 130-mile Saudi-Kuwaiti border and farther west, along the Iraqi- Saudi border, where the desert- trained 3rd Armored Cavalry Regi- mentTrom Fort Bliss, Texas, is be lieved to be conducting reconnais sance and guarding the allied force’s western flank. Wednesday’s first report of a ground action came from the Ira nian news media, which said Iraq re ported its forces had attacked enemy troops in Saudi territory and cap tured allied prisoners. The U.S. command reported that 3rd Armored Cavalry troopers were manning an observation post near the Saudi-Iraqi border late Tuesday when they came under small-arms fire from an Iraqi patrol and re turned fire. Two Americans were slightly wounded and returned to duty after treatment, and six Iraqis were cap tured, the command said. It denied that any Americans had been cap tured. American armored units contin ued maneuvering into place along the frontier Wednesday after a days- long spell of rain and drizzle that turned desert-dry areas into small lakes and created sinkholes that can bog down a tank. Commanders have begun to slow the pace of combat exercises at the front lines so soldiers can rest and equipment can be kept in good shape for what could be a prolonged ground battle. A ground offensive is not ex pected until February. American tank officers, like Marine Capt. Rob Philon, know it will not be a rollover. Philon’s M-60 tanks will have to go up against Iraq’s Soviet-made T-72s. By MIKE LUMAN Of The Battalion Staff An Arab-Israeli war is part of the “worst-case scenario” for events in the Middle East, the deputy director for administra tion of Texas A&M’s Mosher In stitute for Defense Studies said Wednesday night. Dr. Art Blatr, speaking as part of the MSC Great Issues program titled “War in the Gulf, said an Arab-Israeli conflict could trigger Saudi officials to order U.S. troops off Saudi land. “There would be all kinds of trouble,” Blair said. “If you want to pray at night, pray this doesn’t become an Arab-Israeli war.” To make his point, Blair said the 250 students and faculty at tending the program likely would be sent to the Middle East if the Arab coalition fell apart. He added he did not think events would deteriorate to that point and said allied forces almost certainly will triumph over Iraq. Dr. Alex Mintz, another pan elist and an A&M professor of political science, said he thinks Is rael will retaliate massively if Sad dam Hussein launches chemical See Issues/Page 6 agcl) :er for id the i. to 5 e con- o-Lay, r Inc., : and '1 rep-