When the C-130's rear cargo door touched the tarmac
at the Tuzla airfield in Bosnia-Hercegovina, the loadmaster
and aerial port team swarmed into the hold, rapidly
unloading pallets of spares and supplies for NATO peacekeepers.
On a runway apron, an An-124 transport awaited clearance
for takeoff, ready to take home a contingent of Russian
troops. Nearby, more aircraft were waiting their turns
to land or depart.
Tuzla, once dilapidated and virtually unused, now
is bustling. With sustainment trips, troop rotations,
and VIP visits, Tuzla has been handling 2,000 flights
per month, making it the busiest aerial port terminal
in the Air Force's busiest major command, US Air Forces
in Europe (USAFE).
The strain of a high operations tempo and long deployment
is etched into the faces of the airmen at Tuzla, many
of whom are pulling twelve-hour shifts, seven days
a week. Alcohol is banned. Officers' and NCO clubs
don't exist. On a typical day recently, the base volleyball
court stood empty. Rarely are Air Force personnel permitted
to leave the base, and then only in heavily armed convoys.
Col. Paul Cooper, commander of the 4100th Air Base
Group (Provisional), notes that air traffic operations
continue without letup, and work never ceases. "We
can't go downtown and have a beer," said Colonel
Cooper, "and there's not a lot to do here, so
even the people who get time off tend to come back
to the operations building to lend a hand."
The Colonel added, "Like most people here, the
last day I had off was before I arrived in Bosnia,
and the next day I have off will be after I go home."
We Worry About It
Such pressures are felt throughout the Air Force but
especially in USAFE, a command charged with executing
many of the recent US peacekeeping and contingency
operations. Lt. Gen. Everett H. Pratt, Jr., USAFE's
vice commander at Ramstein AB, Germany, frankly acknowledged
that USAFE has a problem. "No matter how you want
to measure it," said General Pratt, "we clearly
have a significant operations tempo, and it's something
that we worry about."
The fact that Colonel Cooper, a Reservist, is in Bosnia
illustrates part of the problem. Seldom has an AFRES
officer been placed in charge of an active-duty unit,
but USAFE needed such assistance.
"It is probably unique that a Reservist has been
brought in to command an active-duty unit," said
Colonel Cooper, "and it probably wouldn't have
happened fifteen years ago. . . . My coming over .
. . gives an active-duty officer a break."
Since 1990, the Air Force has cut force structure
by nearly one-third, while the number of contingency
operations involving its forces has increased by 300
percent. According to Air Force statistics, the number
of airmen deployed to contingencies has increased steadily
since the late 1980s--from fewer than 5,000 in 1988
to more than 18,000 today.
Even in a highly stressed Air Force, USAFE stands
out, struggling mightily to stretch a smaller force
structure to cover a dramatically larger set of operations.
Once, the command's forces were sprawled across sixteen
main operating bases and thirty-seven smaller installations.
Today, USAFE is confined to just six MOBs and fourteen
smaller installations. Its Cold War force structure
of nine fighter wings with 636 aircraft has dropped
to just three fighter wings and 168 aircraft. Since
1990, USAFE's troop levels have declined from 62,000
to 27,000, with more reductions in store.
This massive consolidation has caused major disruptions,
but USAFE's commanders have had to cope with a steady
rise in the number of crisis deployments.
USAFE forces played a major role in Operation Desert
Storm. In the years since, they have flown thousands
of sorties out of Incirlik AB, Turkey, to enforce a
no-fly zone over northern Iraq. Air Force strength
at Incirlik, a USAFE base, has grown by twenty-two
percent since 1990--not including large numbers of
airmen assigned there for temporary duty.
Meanwhile, USAFE units at Aviano AB, Italy, have continued
to log combat flight time on missions in support of
Operation Joint Endeavor, the peace mission in Bosnia [see "The
Force at Aviano," p. 26]. Aviano's population
has nearly doubled, even without counting the large
number of personnel on TDY.
Elsewhere, USAFE personnel have played major roles
in missions to Somalia, Rwanda, and more recently,
Liberia. These operations have come on top of normal
training missions that are part of every major Air
Force command.
Operations Other Than War
USAFE's leaders continue to train their forces to
fight in a major regional conflict, such as Desert
Storm. However, they said the command is increasingly
preoccupied with the demands of the smaller ventures,
which drain their energy and resources on a daily basis.
If such contingencies are indeed the future of military
operations, as some defense analysts maintain, then
USAFE will have to change its rotation policies, force
structure, and organization.
"Though we still have to be prepared for the
worst-case scenario and operating across the full spectrum
of conflict, the most likely scenarios we face are
these Operations Other Than War," said Brig. Gen.
William R. Hodges, USAFE director of Logistics at Ramstein. "We
just have to accept the fact that these Operations
Other Than War are the nature of the beast we'll be
dealing with on a day-to-day basis."
Six years of wrestling with that beast have taken
a toll on USAFE. General Pratt recalled, "When
I first got here in 1994, we had a pretty big flap
[over] a squadron where almost every pilot had received
a waiver to miss training because of deployments in
the previous six months. We had some kids who were
on the road and away from home for more than 200 days
that year."
USAFE has been able to "drive those numbers down" over
the past two years, the General noted. On a computer
screen in his office, he has displayed a chart that
depicts the reenlistment rates and average number of
days USAFE's active-duty personnel have spent away
from their home bases and from their 46,000 dependents.
At the touch of a key, General Pratt can find out how
many fathers recently missed a wedding anniversary
or the birth of a child, for instance. The prototype
software is part of a USAFE effort to accurately track
operations tempo and catalog the many intangibles that
collectively constitute command readiness and well-being.
By any measure, the figures reveal that USAFE rates
as one of the busiest commands in the US military structure.
For example, they show that USAFE aircraft have flown
more sorties over northern Iraq as part of Operation
Provide Comfort than the Air Force flew in the entire
Korean War. They also have been deployed far longer.
"Yet, I doubt the average American citizen could
tell you what Operation Provide Comfort was or what
we're doing still flying over northern Iraq," said
General Hodges. "Because there is usually no [previously
appropriated] funding to support these kinds of operations--some
of which seem to go on forever--a lot of those costs
come out of our hide."
"Highly Stressed"
A number of serious mishaps in the last few years
has made some wonder if USAFE is beginning to come
apart under the stress. In 1994, two USAFE F-15 fighters
enforcing the no-fly zone over northern Iraq accidentally
shot down a pair of Army UH-60 Black Hawk helicopters,
killing twenty-six persons. An investigation identified
training and procedural lapses.
It was a USAFE transport of the 86th Airlift Wing,
based at Ramstein, that crashed near Dubrovnik, Croatia,
on April 3, killing Secretary of Commerce Ronald H.
Brown and thirty-four others. An investigation found
that USAFE officials had asked for and had been denied
authority to allow aircraft to fly into eastern European
airports before USAFE had conducted safety inspections.
"The investigation revealed poor crew training
and a commander who had asked for and been denied waivers
to facilitate a high operations tempo," said one
knowledgeable USAFE officer. "Both of those are
signs of a highly stressed command."
General Pratt acknowledges the pressures but believes
the command has relieved some of the strain. As part
of its effort to reduce operations tempo, USAFE has
set a goal that personnel will not be deployed away
from home base for more than 120 days a year, and no
more than twenty-five percent of the command will be
deployed at any one time.
"I think we'll meet those goals this year, because
we're just not leaving our people deployed for six
months or more if we can help it. We're trying to rotate
fresh blood in every 120 days," says General Pratt.
Besides averting fatigue and alleviating long spells
away from homes and families, he says, the 120-day
rotations allow individuals--especially pilots--to
sharpen their critical skills through home-base training.
"Even though pilots log combat time flying in
some of these contingencies, some of their skills are
degrading because they're not practicing the full spectrum
of operations," said General Pratt. "While
the after-action reports [on the accidents] did reveal
a few problems associated with our operations tempo,
we think we at least understand the problems now, and
we're working to fix them."
The move to limit deployments to 120 days in the face
of major operational requirements forced USAFE to lean
heavily on US-based Air Reserve Component units. Reservists
and Guardsmen not only routinely fly transports into
Tuzla but also fly fighters over northern Iraq and
Bosnia.
In Fiscal 1995, the most recent year for which complete
data are available, reservists contributed more than
100,000 "man-days" of work to USAFE. According
to USAFE, aircraft piloted by reserve components accounted
for the following:
Nearly sixty percent of F-16 sorties, nearly twenty
percent of F-15 sorties, and more than fifty percent
of defense suppression sorties flown in support of
Operation Provide Comfort.
Nearly twenty percent of F-16 sorties, forty-five
percent of A-10 sorties, and twenty-five percent of
tanker flights in Operation Deny Flight over Bosnia.
Burnout
Col. Robert Marshall, reserve advisor to USAFE, said
that the infusion of help from the Air National Guard
and AFRES is not a luxury but a necessity. "The
reserve forces are doing more and more of the work
in USAFE because the operations tempo [is] so high,
and they were burning the active-duty guys out by deploying
them all the time," he said.
He added, "With all the reserve units back in
the United States eager to come over here, . . . it
was a natural to just fold them into these peacekeeping
operations."
Senior USAFE officials concede that their present
operations tempo would probably be unsustainable without
increased support from the Guard and Reserve.
USAFE officials have attempted to rein in extracurricular
activities. For example, the number of so-called "joint
contact events" between the command and other
nations as part of the Partnership for Peace program
has mushroomed from sixty-five in 1993 to more than
400 events in 1996. Senior US officials, civilian and
military, would visit eastern European countries and
pledge USAFE's participation to various events. Now,
such events must be approved and scheduled a year in
advance.
"We kept getting these 'pop-up' exercises," said
Lt. Col. Tony Salmonson, USAFE director of Partnership
for Peace programs. "Each of those exercises requires
a lot of effort from the worker bees, and we were really
getting overtasked."
USAFE has evolved from its Cold War persona (a forward-deployed
force prepared to fight a major war from its home bases)
to a new, post-Cold War self--a forward staging base
for contingency deployments on Europe's periphery.
General Hodges pointed out, "We've clearly downsized
dramatically in this theater, and that's meant going
from a big, fight-in-place force to a much smaller
force that considers the need to deploy as a given.
We've also become so small that any significant fracas
we get involved in--and that means something even the
size of Bosnia--requires that we receive significant
augmentation from forces based in America."
It was their concept of USAFE as a forward-based but
swift-deploying air arm that prompted USAFE officials
to retain basing capacity in excess of what would be
needed merely to bed down the command in the wake of
a two-thirds cut from its Cold War size.
USAFE essentially vacated Rhein-Main AB, Germany,
near Frankfurt, but concluded a base-maintenance contract
to keep the facilities in working order and ready for
use in an emergency. During the initial stages of Operation
Joint Endeavor late last year, Rhein-Main was pressed
into service as a billeting post for Bosnia-bound troops
and airmen.
To better prepare for and manage such deployments,
USAFE officials have also established an Air Operations
Squadron at Ramstein. The AOS staff's job is to anticipate
and plan for potential contingencies and to manage
and execute operations in the event of a deployment
decision.
"The AOS is our stay-at-home command post to
plan for and execute these contingency Operations Other
Than War," reported General Hodges. "Any
time a crisis kicks off, the AOS becomes the nucleus
of the crisis-action team."
General Hodges has seen the strain that deployments
have placed on a smaller logistics structure. During
the Cold War, for instance, major operating bases in
Europe typically hosted a wing of seventy-two fighters,
twenty-four aircraft per squadron. Today Spangdahlem
AB, Germany, is home base to a single squadron of only
eighteen aircraft.
Peter Is Gone
"In the past, there were a lot of synergisms
to having three squadrons, with three sets of testing
equipment, three packages of spare parts, and three
maintenance crews," said General Hodges. "In
an emergency, you could also cannibalize one squadron
in order to launch two robust ones.
"Now, we don't have the luxury to beg from Peter
to pay Paul. When you start to split up one squadron
of eighteen aircraft, which is not unusual for these
contingencies, you find that the synergisms are gone.
So our logisticians start meeting themselves coming
and going, trying to support these Operations Other
Than War."
To compensate, USAFE has developed High-Priority Readiness
Spares Packages tailored to specific aircraft types.
Unlike the old War Readiness Spares Kits, which individual
squadrons brought along when they deployed, the new
spares packages are brought to a site in advance and
are used by all arriving units.
"By predeploying these High-Priority Readiness
Spares Packages for operations like Provide Comfort,
we save our rotating squadrons from having to move
a lot of spares back and forth as they deploy and then
return home," said General Hodges.
USAFE officials believe that, barring new contingencies
or a new round of force reductions, the adjustments
they've made in operations tempo, organization, and
procedures will be sufficient to cope with the present
level of operations. The problem, they say, is that
the unexpected has been occurring with almost predictable
regularity. "The problem comes when something
pops up that you haven't planned for," said General
Pratt. "I mean, we went into Provide Comfort in
Turkey as a 'contingency operation,' and we've been
down there for five years."
James Kitfield is a defense correspondent for the National
Journal in Washington, D.C. His most recent article
for Air Force Magazine, "Flying
Safety: The Real Story," appeared in the
June 1996 issue.