Weapons That Wait . . .and Wait
From the earliest years of the Republic, the U.S. Navy has had a love-hate relationship with mines, long known as the “weapons that wait.” The Navy used mines offensively on only two occasions in strictly naval operations during the 45 years of the Cold War—the belated 1972 mining of North Vietnamese ports, and the mining of the northern Persian Gulf in 1991 to prevent Iraqi naval craft from leaving their bases. (Strangely enough, mines were also dropped by naval aircraft on jungle trails in Vietnam and on Iraqi airfields and bridges in 1991.)