The U.S. Navy launched more than 50 Tomahawk missiles early Friday at military targets in Syria in response to a chemical-weapons attack this week on civilians, relying on a mainstay weapon when the Pentagon wants to attack from a safe distance.
The missiles were launched from the USS Ross and USS Porter, Navy destroyers in the eastern Mediterranean Sea, off Syria's western coast, defence officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the operation. They targeted al-Shayrat air base in Homs province, from which the Syrian military allegedly launched chemical weapons attacks against civilians Tuesday.
The Tomahawk has been a critical part of U.S. warfare since the Gulf War in 1991 and commonly carries a 1,000-pound warhead. It was last used by the Pentagon in October, when the military launched Tomahawks from the Red Sea at three coastal radar sites in Yemen after Houthi rebels there fired missiles at several U.S. ships over several days.
Before that, the United States used them in September 2014 as the country expanded its air war against militants from Iraq into Syria. The Pentagon said at the time that it launched 47 Tomahawks from two ships - the USS Philippine Sea in the Persian Gulf and the USS Arleigh Burke in the Red Sea - and hit sites used by what it called the Khorasan Group, an Islamist cell said to be linked to al-Qaeda.