A massive study considers the Air Force's
place in a future
that will be much different from today.

By John A. Tirpak, Senior Editor
A little over a year ago, the
Air Force tasked some of its most promising midlevel officers
and members of other services to look hard at technology, global
politics, social trends, and other critical factors and then
conjure the "most stressful" situations that might
confront the US three decades hence. The Air Force, thus forewarned,
could begin to prepare itself for the challenges.
That forecast, called "Air Force 2025," is now complete,
and the potential dangers that it identifies are daunting.
They include arrival on the world scene of a gigantic, hostile
Asian meganation or, alternatively, a network of collaborative
transnational corporations. The world of the future might well
be plagued by widely dispersed weapons of mass destruction or
swarms of robotic "insects" sent to attack cities.
The American armed forces might have death rays capable of vaporizing
aircraft.
If the forecasters are right, the Air Force in 2025 will be significantly
different from that of today, despite the fact that most of the
systems on which USAF will depend decades from now are already
in service or development. Most strikingly, the team found that
the Air Force three decades out will be oriented far more toward
space than toward air. This shift in emphasis will be so profound,
said participants, that they grappled with whether the Air Force
should spin off an all-new "Space Force" or, at a minimum,
rename itself "US Aerospace Force."
"We grappled with that," said Col. Joseph A. Engelbrecht,
Jr., who headed up the Air Force 2025 effort. "But we found
that the heritage of the name is still important and valuable."
For most civilians, he said, the name Air Force "already
connotes 'air and space'--and, increasingly, 'air, space, and
information.' "
More important, however, the team decided to stick with the name
because "integration of all these disciplines--air and space
and information--will be the key to success. Air [forces] alone
won't be effective without space and information tied in, . .
. and the Air Force is pretty good at integrating them right
now. So separating them into different branches or services makes
less sense now than it ever did." Making that integration
more seamless "is the main challenge facing the Air Force,"
the Colonel observed.
The 3,300-page, ten-volume report was produced at Air University,
Maxwell AFB, Ala., with input from technologists, futurists,
science fiction writers, scientists, historians, active-duty
officers, and retired Air Force generals. It is billed as a projection
of the economic, political, and military conditions that could
arise around the year 2025, as well as a prescription for the
capabilities USAF must have if it is to remain relevant under
those conditions.
Lt. Gen. Jay W. Kelley, USAF (Ret.), who headed Air University
during the 2025 effort, said that satellites "will increase
in quantity and quality" and that many nations will have
the ability to develop and launch them, "cutting our margin
of superiority in this area." Additionally, a need is likely
to arise for satellites that can "maneuver"--to avoid
or fight one another in orbit--as dependency on satellite-provided
information becomes greater. There will also likely be a decrease
in the size of ground stations for controlling space operations.
Sword and Cyber
In 2025, General Kelley continued, "most major battles"
between nations or coalitions of nations "may not be to
capture territory, and they may not be fought on the Earth's
surface." Instead, conflicts between technologically adept
entities might occur entirely or chiefly "in space or cyberspace."
According to General Kelley, the Air Force will probably develop
manned and unmanned transatmospheric and hypersonic vehicles
"with multiple functions." High-power lasers employed
both within and outside the atmosphere will increasingly become
a "weapon of choice."
"We see a trend where there will be an increase in the number
of vehicles in space as opposed to vehicles in the air,"
said Colonel Engelbrecht. "And more of the air vehicles
will be unmanned, while there will be more manned space vehicles."
The fundamental insight of the 2025 study, said General Kelley,
is that the Air Force "must pursue the exploitation of information
and space with the same fervor with which it has mastered atmospheric
flight." USAF must become comfortable and practiced at dominating
"the atmospheric, exoatmospheric, and infospheric"
realms.
Completed this summer, the study is one of several forecasting
efforts ordered up last year by the Air Force Chief of Staff,
Gen. Ronald R. Fogleman. In one of them, called "New World
Vistas," the Air Force Scientific Advisory Board evaluated
the technologies now emerging, looking for the ones that, with
proper investment, could yield breakthrough capabilities for
tomorrow's USAF [see "New World Vistas," March 1996,
p. 20].
The Air Force 2025 participants took a different approach. First,
they determined the possible characteristics of the most stressful
future worlds in which USAF might have to operate. Then, they
looked for "common-denominator capabilities"--that
is, systems that would be critical to military success in any
of these scenarios.
The study participants emphasized that they were working in the
"worst-case" realm. While the major scenarios they
used were certainly possible and plausible, they "do not
represent the 'most likely' potential futures," contended
Colonel Engelbrecht.
He went on, "What we were trying to do was consider alternative
futures that represent very difficult challenges for the Air
Force. It's a way to think about the future and devise a strategy.
. . . We want to try to avoid being surprised by the challenges
that confront us in thirty years."
The 2025 team made several predictions:
- Information--as a commodity as well as a combat medium--will
be "more influential than bombs" in thirty years, and
expertise in manipulating information will offer the United States
its most telling advantage over future adversaries.
- Industry, not government, will be responsible for developing
critical new technologies, and government more often than not
will borrow, license, or lease systems rather than buy or develop
them on its own.
- Human beings increasingly will direct operations at a distance
from the scene of action--"in the loop" as opposed
to "in the cockpit"--as uninhabited machines assume
ever-greater importance.
- Military education will become more frequent and more tailored,
with gaming and simulations--of everything from air combat to
running an expeditionary base--taking on greater significance.
With the aid of computers and digital technology, the distinction
between taking a course "in residence" and "by
correspondence" will become moot.
- "These evolutions may each or all have dramatic or even
revolutionary effects," General Kelley wrote in his executive
summary of Air Force 2025. The impact of these trends, he added,
is "unavoidable."
- To think systematically about what kinds of conditions may
prevail three decades hence, the 2025 team decided to bound the
future along three axes.
The first of the three axes was labeled the "American
World View." Would the United States tend toward isolationism
or remain fully engaged around the globe?
The next axis was the rate of technological change in the world,
and its distribution, abbreviated "Delta TeK." Would
high technology remain in the hands of a few world actors or
become widespread?
The final axis reflected the "World Power Grid." Would
economic, political, cultural, and military power be concentrated
in a few major nations or be broadly dispersed?
The intersection of these variables defines the box that contains
the range of possible futures. The study participants gave each
of the box's corners a name and a "plausible history"
describing how that world came to exist.
"Gulliver's Travails."The first corner features
the intersection of global world view, modest technological progress,
and dispersed world power grid. In this future, the US is pinned
down by a host of microcrises around the world, much as Jonathan
Swift's character, Gulliver, was bound by Lilliputians. The US
is "overwhelmed and preoccupied with worldwide commitments,
such as counterterrorism and counterproliferation efforts, humanitarian
assistance, and peacekeeping operations," according to the
report.>
The US, the report contends, attempts to be "the world's
policeman, fireman, physician, social worker, financier, and
mailman." Unwelcome at overseas bases, the US must maintain
a high operations tempo at long distance, with tight funding.
"Zaibatsu." In the next corner, the variables
change. The US is self-absorbed; technology growth around the
world has become exponential; and power has been concentrated
in a few transnational corporations--hence the use of the Japanese
word for corporate collaboration. In this future, the military
faces a struggle to demonstrate why it is even relevant as corporations
rule the world in loose coalitions. Conflicts are few and brief,
and the US military serves chiefly to guard access to resources,
assets, and trade routes. There is a rising threat from a rapidly
growing underclass, but, with foreign tensions eased, the United
States turns inward and focuses on its domestic problems.
"Digital Cacophony."This is a world in which
real power and technology are widely dispersed, and the US continues
to focus outward. In this future, nearly everyone has access
to high technology, up to and including weapons of mass destruction.
However, the most likely threat to the nation comes in the form
of an attack from cyberspace. For example, terrorists or hostile
nations could attempt to "crash" the US banking or
air traffic control systems via computer. This world would be
characterized by a gradual breakdown of order and traditional
forms of authority.
"King Khan."At this corner, the 2025 study speculates
on the rise of a "Sino-colossus" incorporating the
lands, peoples, and economies of China, Hong Kong, Malaysia,
Singapore, and Taiwan. Here, the US turns inward because of severe
economic problems; in the study's words, "the American Century
has given way to the Asian Millennium." American defense
budgets hit bottom, and only a few capabilities can be afforded.
The United States, according to the study, resembles Britain
in the 1950s, after losing its empire: "a superpower has-been."
The King Khan scenario occupies a corner characterized by concentrated
power, gradual technological progress, and a domestically oriented
US.
By special request, the team produced two other future-world
scenarios.
- Fifteen percent of the world's population--including the
people of the US--is relatively wealthy. The other eighty-five
percent lives in squalor and has nothing to lose. The threats
to the United States increase. Here, the US looks outward in
self-defense, but power and technology are in flux. This alternative
future was requested by regional commanders in chief as a kind
of "middle of the box" comparison model with other
alternatives.
eering thirty
years into the future, the Air Force sees the need for stealthy
air bases, high-powered lasers on transatmospheric craft, tiny
"attack microbots," solar-powered weapons, and the
biggest, fastest, most powerful information systems possible. |
- General Fogleman requested exploration of a specific future,
"Crossroads 2015," which arrives ten years before the
other scenarios. Here, the US faces economic hard times, and
the pace of technological progress has slowed. Russia, its power
on the rise, attempts to seize and incorporate independent Ukraine.
The US confronts the danger of fighting a major war using those
forces developed with the investments of the late 1990s. The
choices the US makes in this crisis--whether to strike an isolationist
stance or accept the costs of remaining the military leader of
Western democracies--has a lot to do with which of the 2025 scenarios
becomes more likely.
Common Themes
A number of common themes shook out of these scenarios, according
to General Kelley. First and foremost, he warned, the world "is
not likely to be more benign" in thirty years.
The 2025 team anticipates that the world will see a rise in the
number of nation-states--witness the breakup of the Soviet Union
and Yugoslavia in the past decade--but each will have less influence.
"Coalitions and empires may emerge," General Kelley
wrote, "but the state sees much of its dominance of the
twentieth century ebbing away to nonstate entities, both larger
and smaller than itself."
The US will face the threat posed by weapons of mass destruction,
but it will increasingly have to defend itself against information
warfare attacks that are "nonviolent but powerfully destructive,"
said the Air Force report. The value of information itself will
be outweighed by "the architecture of and infrastructure
for its collection, processing, and distribution."
The forecast team believes that the ICBM--a dominant system in
the Air Force of thirty years ago and a key system today--will
still be around, but its importance will have diminished, with
no upgrades to ICBMs or nuclear weapons anticipated.
In addition, space and information systems will more and more
become the enablers of surface and air operations, while also
allowing the US to keep out of such conflicts while exerting
just as much power. Though there will be competitors who can
challenge the US on an even footing in selected areas--such as
aircraft technology, information warfare, or space systems--very
few, if any, will be able to compete in all areas at once.
There will be nations or coalitions with the ability to project
military power on the surface and in the air, but they won't
be able to sustain high-tech combat for long. Thus, the forecast
perceives a continued need for a "full-service" Air
Force.
In each of the postulated scenarios, operations analyses were
run to see which capabilities--real, prospective, and not-yet-invented--would
prove most useful and cost-effective to USAF. These capabilities
were weighted and ranked against each other to identify a core
group of technologies that would be essential regardless of the
future that plays out.
The group considered a total of forty-three of these capabilities.
From that group, ten systems or technologies were deemed essential
for the Air Force's toolbox in 2025, having application across
the spectrum of missions it might be called on to perform.
The Top Ten
"These ten systems were found to be high leverage,"
General Kelley noted. "No matter what kind of world you're
living in, you need these [systems] . . . or something very much
like them."
First on the list is a Global Information Management System (GIMS),
described as a "pervasive network" of information and
data collectors, processors, and analyzers. It would not only
be "smart" in the sense that it "sees all and
knows all," but it would also be smart enough to tailor
the information at its disposal to a particular user, giving
him the data he most needs, and at an appropriate level of detail.
The GIMS could also provide a three-dimensional "holographic
war room," summarizing instantly and in real time what it
could take hours to figure out from numbers, reports, or even
flat-panel images.
Another high-leverage capability is the sanctuary base. This
would essentially be a stealthy air base, hard for an enemy to
detect, target, or hit, and able to set up and repair, maintain,
and manage itself, largely through the use of robots. Security,
fire-fighting, and even ordnance-loading could be automated.
Chemical or biological agents could be cleaned up by microscopic
machines--called "nanobots"--and biotechnology.
A Global Surveillance, Reconnaissance, and Targeting System would
be a spacebased sensor and data-distribution system that could
create and relay a real-time, three-dimensional image of a target
or other area of interest to a ready room or gathering of decision-makers.
It would be useful for command-and-control and situational awareness
"at all levels."
The combination of a high-energy laser system, a kinetic-energy
weapon system, and a transatmospheric vehicle would constitute
the Global Area Strike System. Groundbased lasers could be bounced
off of satellite mirrors to hit ground, air, and orbital targets.
Rods of denatured uranium could be dropped from orbit to hit
ground targets with great precision and huge destructive effect
"with and without explosive enhancers," while the vehicle
could provide support for the space systems and rapidly transport
special operations forces directly to the scene of action from
a CONUS base.
Like "New World Vistas," Air Force 2025 portends a
large role for uninhabited combat aerial vehicles (UCAVs). Without
the need for a person on board, they could loiter in the target
area for twenty-four hours or more, maneuver at many times the
human limit of nine Gs, and carry a vast array of sensors and
precision munitions. In secondary roles, UCAVs could perform
jamming and bistatic radar functions.
A Spacebased High-Energy Laser System is seen as a multimegawatt
chemical laser that can zap ground, air, or space targets. At
lower power settings, it could disable enemy optics, perform
passive sensing missions, actively illuminate a target with a
laser, or even modify the weather. Between fifteen and twenty
such satellites could provide global coverage.
A Solar-Powered High-Energy Laser System would perform much the
same function but derive its power from the sun rather than an
on-board power source.
Like a UCAV, an uninhabited reconnaissance aerial vehicle can
stay airborne for long periods, can remain on station high in
the atmosphere, and could perform outside of human limits. Carrying
a multispectral suite of sensors, such as infrared, optical,
radar, and laser, it could also collect electronic intelligence
as an aerial "listening post" and as a bistatic radar
sensor.
As computer chips and mechanical devices get smaller and smaller,
attack microbots become more feasible. These would be one-millimeter-scale
devices that could fly in a swarm and collectively attack an
armored column, powerplant, or virtually any target. Launchable
by almost any means, they would have "full flying and crawling
autonomy," according to the 2025 text. They could spy, gum
up mechanical works, designate targets, or short-circuit equipment
and would be inherently stealthy and have "high penetration
capabilities."
Also deemed critical is a Piloted Single Stage to Orbit Transatmospheric
Vehicle. This rocket/hypersonic air-breathing hybrid would take
off vertically, refuel in air or space, and land conventionally
on a runway. It could lift a variable payload weighing up to
10,000 pounds and serve as a sensor or weapons platform. It would
be uniquely suited to placing satellites in orbit, repairing
them, or bringing them home for maintenance and eventual replacement.
Big Payoff, Big Challenge
Not surprisingly, the systems deemed to be of highest utility
in the world of thirty years from now are among "the most
technically challenging" of those looked at, General Kelley
observed. The 2025 team also recognized that it would at present
be premature to try to develop most of these systems. The technologies
to make them possible must first be mastered.
The team therefore recommended investments in a number of disciplines
so that the proposed critical systems will be available in three
decades. The short list of highest-leverage technologies for
USAF investment are data fusion, power systems, advanced materials,
micromechanical devices, high-energy propellants, and high-performance
computing.
As a postscript to 2025, General Kelley included "the null
hypothesis"--namely, that the Air Force itself won't be
around in thirty years. One of the white papers included in the
study, "Paths to Extinction," suggested that the Air
Force could disappear from the landscape due to forces already
at work, such as the strong emphasis on joint operations and
shrinking defense budgets.
The white paper also warned that the service risks its future
if it fails to invest in the right technologies, loses its vision,
or mismanages its people. "The only element common to all
the paths to extinction," the paper concluded, "is
the failure to understand the significant attributes of airpower."
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