On March 4, 2002, while
fighting raged in eastern Afghanistan during Operation
Anaconda, USAF intelligence analysts watched a battle
unfold by means of imagery from an orbiting Predator
unmanned aerial vehicle. The airmen had critical intelligence
on the locations of dug-in al Qaeda and Taliban forces
but no way to relay it directly to the troops on the
ground.
Seven US troops were killed
in the battle of Roberts Ridge, as it is known. The
inability to provide real-time
intelligence provided new impetus to a developing
capability called reachback.
Reachback refers to the
ability of combat forces to receive intelligence,
surveillance, and reconnaissance
(ISR) data directly from databases and experts
located in the US. It has been developing steadily
for a
decade.
By the time Operation Iraqi Freedom began on March
20, 2003, a series of technological improvements
had given ISR analysts the ability to communicate
with
forces in the field through secure online chat
rooms.
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| SSgt. Sabrina Vaseleck
and now-MSgt. Kevin Pease at Langley AFB, Va.,
perform real-time analysis
of potential targets in Iraq. New technology allows
USAF to base such intel analysts in the States,
greatly reducing its forward footprint. (USAF photo
by SSgt. Brendan Kavanaugh) |
Deployed forces now carry
laptop computers with which they can receive intelligence
that Stateside
analysts
upload via satellite, according to Col. Larry
K. Grundhauser, commander of the 480th Intelligence
Wing, headquartered
at Langley AFB, Va.
During OIF, intelligence
units in the US sent more than 30,000 intelligence
reports forward
to the
theater and provided data that identified more
than 1,000
targets.
Brig. Gen. Kelvin R. Coppock, Air Combat Commands
intelligence director, said the reachback operations
were continuous during the peak hostilities
in Afghanistan and Iraq. Moreover, no missions were
lost due to ISR
communications failures.
Intelligence teams in the 480th IWs pair of
distributed ground systemsDGS-1 at Langley and
DGS-2 at Beale AFB, Calif.performed the analyses.
The airmen process and analyze data from Predator and
Global Hawk
UAVs, high-flying U-2 reconnaissance airplanes,
and other ISR assets.
Until late last year, both DGS units functioned
relatively independently of each other. Langleys
DGS-1 is operated by the 497th Intelligence
Group; Beales
DGS-2 is run by the 548th Intelligence Group.
On Dec. 1, 2003, the Air Force officially activated
the 480th
Intelligence Wing, placing both the 497th IG
and 548th IG and several other intelligence
functions under the
new wing. Additionally, the 497th and 548th
intel groups each have one Air National Guard
squadron: at Wichita,
Kan., and Reno, Nev., respectively.
Reducing the Footprint
The wings DGS units were designed to be deployed
into a theater of operations. Indeed, Langleys
DGS-1 was in Saudi Arabia in 1996 at the time
of the Khobar Towers bombing. By 1999, however,
advances in
communications technology meant the Air Force
could conduct these DGS operations from within
the United
Statesminimizing the services forward
deployed footprint.
In fact, Coppock said, the Air Force can better
perform its intelligence missions by not deploying.
For one
reason, new technology has made the operations
seamless, and, for another, the service can
save money.
Air Force officials estimated USAF would have
spent $6 million to $15 million to deploy the
two ground
stations to Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan
and OIF in Iraq. This included force protection,
supply, and transportation needs. It would
take, they said,
17 C-5 airlifters to transport one station.
Today, USAF has no need to deploy most of the
wings
personnel into a theater of operations. Many
airmen can remain in the US and go home at
night.
Actually, officials said, going home has been
one of the more difficult adjustments for the
wings
airmen. They said it can be difficult for the
analysts to switch from watching a war unfoldsometimes
seeing coalition forces engaged in bloody combatto
going about their domestic routine at home
at the end of a shift.
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| Predator UAVs
can be flown from
the US even though the aircraft themselves may
be half
a world away. US-based units can capture data,
analyze it, and send it where it needs to go as
fast as if the units were in theater. (USAF photos
by SSgt. Suzanne M. Jenkins) |
Out of some 2,000 assigned airmen, only about
90 are deployed to support operations in Southwest
Asia. Many
of the deployed airmen are needed to staff
the U-2s
line-of-sight (LOS) ground relay station, known
as Mobile
Stretch. All but three of the Air Forces
U-2 aircraft require an LOS ground station
to relay electro-optical and infrared data.
The other three U-2s have been upgraded with
the capability to make a direct satellite linka
capability known as the extended tether program
(ETP). Grundhauser said the extended tether
satellite link, which was
recently developed as an advanced concept technology
demonstration program, shows promise. It will
be especially useful, he said, in areas such
as the Pacific or sub-Saharan
Africa regions, where ground stations are not
practical.
ETP is a modular communications package mounted
on top of the U-2 fuselage. It was first used
in Afghanistan.
Ultimately, USAF wants to upgrade all its U-2s
with ETP.
Key to the Kill Chain
Such advances in ISR reachback capability enable
the Air Force not only to reduce its forward
deployed footprint
but also to reduce the time it takes to find
and destroy a target. That amounts to a compression
of the kill
chain, the series of steps taken to attack
a target.
The attack timeline is shrinking, said Coppock.
From the war in Afghanistan to the war in Iraq,
there
has been marked progress, he said, adding that
compression of the kill chain revolves around
ISR capability.
Two April 9, 2003, air strikes in Iraq highlight
this reality.
In the first, the destruction of an enemy surface-to-air
missile site began with the transmission of
a Global Hawk image. Two minutes after receiving
it, a US-based
imagery analyst spotted the SAM. Ten minutes
after that, the image was forwarded to the
combined
air
operations center (CAOC) for targeting. Only
57 minutes after
the picture was taken, B-2 stealth bombers
hit the SAM site.
In the second, airpower needed even less time
to destroy a pair of Iraqi tanks. A Predator
searching
for missile
transporters instead found two tanks in a tree
line. A DGS passed positive identification
of the tanks
to the CAOC, which, a minute later, gave the
target data
to aircraft already orbiting over the area.
Within 17 minutes of discovery, the tanks were
destroyed.
The 480th provided target information for 153
B-52 cruise missile strikes and supported numerous
F-117
strikes. The time needed to get ISR data to
commanders was reduced to single-digit minutes,
said Grundhauser.
That doesnt mean we dropped the
bombs that fast, he noted in an Air Force
news release. We
just gave the commanders the ability to decide
earlier.
Four weeks before the start of the war, the
wings
airmen went to combat surge mode
so they could begin target preparation missions.
Among other
actions, they prepared a targeting folder to
aid the March 20 F-117 strike on a Baghdad
site where Saddam Hussein was believed to be
hiding.
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| The Air Force
is upgrading its U-2 manned reconnaissance
aircraft with direct satellite links. The modifications
will eliminate the need to transfer data through
in-theater ground stations. |
In preparation for combat operations, DGS crew
members receive a mission briefing that provides
the objectives
and establishes a chain of command. From that
point, said one official, the DGS members become
a part
of the CAOC. A crew will spend six to 12 hours
monitoring UAV live feeds or data from other
ISR sources. Members
review the imagery, find their targets, and
report on the targets to the CAOC.
For OIF, the unit also organized an Iraqi Airfield
Group at Langley. Its members kept watch
over seven enemy air bases, ready to alert
coalition fighters
to any activity spotted there.
Round-the-clock monitoring of those bases allowed
the airfield group to track activity levels,
including personnel movements, facility improvements,
and
repairs, said Col. Don Hudson, ACCs deputy
chief of intelligence. The group provided the
information to CAOC planners,
who then knew which airfields were operational.
Those planners could allocate strike sorties
accordingly.
Officials deemed the airfield group so successful
that they gradually expanded its monitoring
mandate to more
than 25 airfields, including helicopter bases.
Although the Iraqi Air Force never took to
the sky to challenge the coalition, planners
initially
were
nervous that one airplane could have gotten
up, Hudson said.
The 480th intel specialists continue to provide
nonstop support for operations in Afghanistan
and Iraq. According
to MSgt. Mike Welch, 480th IWs chief
of imagery operations, the work is not
so fast and furious any
longer. However, he said, it is now more difficult
to determine what targets are of interest.
Force protection is the primary mission today.
The difference is going from known [targets]
to unknown, said
TSgt. Terrence Warner, an imagery mission
supervisor. Analysts have been told to simply watch
an area and
look for anything suspicious. Their efforts
have led to identification and interception of insurgents
approaching
coalition forces.
Coppock fully expects ISR capability to continue
to grow as technology advances.
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| The 480th
Intelligence Wing analysts support combat operations
round the clock. Above, exploitation
systems maintenance technicians A1C Eyal Filkovsky
and SSgt. Vincent Palmer (standing) help ensure
the equipment is on line. (USAF photo by SSgt. Brendan
Kavanaugh) |
For instance, Global Hawk is currently
only being used at about one-third its
capacity,
because
processing the intelligence is so time-
consuming and labor-intensive.
Coppock said the Air Force is working
on automatic target recognition systems that
should greatly
reduce that processing time.
Copyright Air Force Association. All rightsreserved.
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