The Air Force,
a separate service since 1947, is still answering basic questions about
its legitimacy and effectiveness. In the past year, the indictment of
airpower has been strident.
The military reform analyst Dr. Jeffrey Record ticked off a whole laundry
list of accusations in "Into the Wild Blue Yonder: Should We Abolish
the Air Force?" in the Spring 1990 issue of the Heritage Foundation Policy Review.
Since then, other critics have picked up the theme.
Surveying Persian Gulf strategy options in the National Journal, David
C. Morrison sneers at the Air Force's performance in three wars and wonders
why "this history of costly failure does not deter airpower advocates." In
a September column, strategist Harry G. Summers warns against "the
fanciful notion that a war can be won quickly and decisively by the use
of airpower alone."
Summing up for the prosecution in the Baltimore Sun October 5,
Dr. Record charges that "the history of Air Force claims for what
airpower can do has been one of inflated expectations followed by postwar
alibis."
This might be shrugged off as media speculation except that it corresponds
with a certain chariness about airpower that seems to be developing among
some in Congress and elsewhere in government. Ignoring it would be a
mistake.
The main allegation is that airpower is not decisive. What exactly
is this supposed to mean? That the Air Force did not win all by itself
in World War II, Korea, and Vietnam, or merely that its contribution
was marginal?
If the criterion is single-handed victory, then no arm of service is
decisive in modern warfare. If the definition is something else, the
commentator critics have not made a convincing case. In support of their
point, whatever it is, they dig up again the tired old theory that the
strategic bombardment of Germany in World War II was irrelevant.
Among those who repudiated that notion was Albert Speer, Hitler's Minister
of War Production. He said the bombing was tantamount to an additional
front, destroying nine percent of his total production capacity and tying
up 900,000 troops, 10,000 pieces of artillery, a third of the optics
industry, and half of the electronics industry. To that add damage done
directly to German forces, logistics, and railroads.
Dr. Record tells us that "Germany's decision to capitulate came
only with its conquest on the ground." Well, yes, but it took a
combined arms effort to put Allied armies on the Oder and the Elbe. The
Normandy invasion for example, would have gone much harder had not a
three-month air campaign almost completely neutralized the Luftwaffe
before D-Day.
It is outrageous to claim, as Dr. Record and others do, that subsequent
wars, especially Vietnam, demonstrated a failure of airpower. Vietnam
did not prove much of anything about war except that politicians make
poor generals.
In measuring decisiveness, the commentators might ask themselves two
questions: Would the absence of airpower tend to make a difference in
modern warfare, and would they prefer to fight an enemy on the ground
before or after the Air Force hits him from the air?
The second allegation is that airpower has been oversold. There
is some truth to that, particularly if one uses seventy years of hindsight
to punch holes in Giulio Douhet's Command of the Air, published
in 1921. Douhet and other early thinkers did promise too much, but their
vision was closer to reality than that of their traditionalist contemporaries
who said military airpower was no more than a novelty.
Some advocates of airpower overstate their case on occasion, but the
same is true of those promoting seapower, land power, and any other social,
political, economic, or military concept you can name. Even analysts
and newspaper columnists have been known to push a point to excess.
The real issues are whether today's Air Force leaders claim airpower
can win alone and if they promise more than they can deliver. In the
estimation of this magazine, which has followed the subject more closely
than most, the Air Force has not made such claims.
Dr. Record, analyzing the Persian Gulf problem in August, found airpower "the
single most important comparative military advantage we have over Iraq." In
a later epistle, he describes airpower as "absolutely indispensable
to military power as a whole. Airpower may not be able to win wars by
itself, but try winning one without it." That is approximately what
the US Air Force has been saying all along.
No one seriously questions the value of airlift or the advantage of
air superiority over a battlefield. The importance of speed, range, and
flexibility in military strategy should be obvious. These qualities are
intensified in airpower. Projecting force over long distances is useful
not only in fighting wars but also in deterring them.
The other combat arms have important qualities, too. Talking with this
magazine in August, for example Gen. Michael J. Dugan, former Air Force
Chief of Staff, cited persistence as a special strength of armies and
recognized the mobility of naval forces but added that nothing beats
airpower when you need to "deliver a big punch between the eyes."
It is pointless to argue about single dimension strategies or whether
individual services are "decisive" in isolation. Wars are not
fought that way. The longer you look at the rambling indictment of airpower,
the less sense it makes.
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