Lawmakers: Boost End Strength
Despite Pentagon resistance, lawmakers are beginning to clamor
for the first true increase in military force structure since
the Cold War drawdown of the early 1990s.
One bill, introduced Dec. 8 by Rep. Ellen O. Tauscher (D-Calif.),
called for temporarily boosting the end strength of each of the
armed services by about eight percent. This would result in nearly
30,000 additional personnel for the Air Force.
The bill, cosponsored by 25 other Democrats, would carry out
the boosts through 2008. According to the bills sponsors,
the estimated five-year cost would be $1 billion.
Meanwhile, Sen. John F. Kerry (D-Mass.) called for adding 40,000
troops overall to help carry out expanded US missions worldwide.
Kerry, who is seeking the Democratic nomination for President,
said that a Kerry Administration would work to enlarge the military
during its first 100 days in office.
Chiefs: No More End Strength
In contrast to the lawmakers noted above, the military service
Chiefs are not pushing for end strength increasesat this
time.
Three of the four service Chiefs of Staff stated at a December
forum, sponsored by the Institute for Foreign Policy Analysis,
that they did not need additional end strength to support ongoing
operations.
Gen. John P. Jumper, Air Force Chief of Staff, although not present
at that event, previously had said that he supports Defense Secretary
Donald H. Rumsfelds effort to find efficiencies in-house
before seeking additional uniformed personnel.
At the forum, Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Vern Clark said
that he is working hard to make the Navy less manpower-intensive
and that technological advances will allow future ships to have
smaller crews. I am actively pursuing less end strength, the
CNO asserted.
Army Gen. Peter J. Schoomaker said, There is no commander
in Iraq or Afghanistan who is asking for more people. He
added that he would not rule out seeking more soldiers in the future,
but, for the time being, the Army is making quite a bit of
headway in recasting its force to meet future demands.
The problem with increased force structure is that the services
become stuck with it for better or worse, Schoomaker said, adding, The
big challenge, resource wise, is paying for more people.
Marine Corps Gen. Michael W. Hagee said that if current requirements
are a spike and not a permanent change in worldwide
demands, then no, we do not need an increase in end strength.
SAMs Hit Aircraft in Iraq
In the past two months, surface-to-air missiles apparently hit
two USAF aircrafta C-17 on Dec. 10 and a C-5 on Jan. 8as
they took off from Baghdad Airport in Iraq. Both aircraft made
emergency landings and no one on board was injured.
Sixteen persons, including five crew members, were aboard the
C-17, and 63 persons, including 11 aircrew, were on the C-5.
The C-17s No. 2 engine was hit and exploded shortly after
takeoff. An Air Mobility Command investigation team has not concluded
its probe, but its possible that the transport was hit by
a SAM. The aircraft commander, Capt. Paul Sonstein, with the 62nd
Airlift Wing, McChord AFB, Wash., said he knew they were hit by
something big.
The impact just shuddered the plane, he said. I
thought we were hit by something; I didnt know what, but
I knew something got us.
The experience was much the same for the C-5 crew. The huge airlifter
had barely left the runway when its No. 4 engine exploded. The
C-5 belongs to the 60th Air Mobility Wing, Travis AFB, Calif.
Air Force officials said that initial reports on the C-5 emergency
definitely pointed to hostile action from the ground.
Time for New Mobility Study
The Air Forces most recent comprehensive study of airlift
and mobility needsMobility Requirements Study 2005, which
was completed in January 2001has long been obsolete, according
to Gen. John W. Handy, commander of US Transportation Command
and Air Mobility Command.
Handy told reporters at the Defense Logistics Conference in December
that MRS-05 was a good study for its time but that
it predated the 9/11 terrorist attacks and subsequent operations
in Afghanistan and Iraq. The Defense Departments next mobility
study, Handy said, should be more scenario driven, and
it is almost a given that the next study will call for more airlift
capability.
MRS-05 called for a force of at least 222 C-17s, and, since then, the
world has changed, and [the real requirement] is probably something
well above that, but I dont know what it is, Handy
said. At present, the Air Force has approval to buy only 180
C-17s.
F-117s To Get a Day Job?
The Air Force is studying whether the F-117 stealth fighter is
suitable for daylight operations. The service has repainted one
of its all-black F-117 Nighthawks in the flat gray paint scheme,
common to other fighters, to conduct tests that will determine
whether the F-117 can be part of a 24-hour stealth presence
over future battlefields, said Lt. Col. Buck Rogers.
Rogers said the project is an initiative of Gen. John P. Jumper,
the Air Force Chief of Staff. Rogers is the operations officer
of the Holloman AFB, N.M., detachment conducting the testDet.
1 of the 53rd Test and Evaluation Group.
The gray F-117 will fly with the services new stealthy
fighterthe
F/A-22in several tests at Holloman and other locations,
officials said.
USAF Forms Active C-130J Unit
The Air Force on Dec. 5 reactivated the 48th Airlift Squadron
at Little Rock AFB, Ark., as the services first active
duty C-130J squadron. The units first C-130J is in final
production and will be delivered in early 2004.
An initial cadre of 14 pilots and 10 loadmasters worked with
the Air Force Reserve Command C-130J team at Keesler AFB, Miss.,
to
prepare for the new squadrons establishment.
The entire initial group of 24 C-130J personnel became qualified
on Dec. 4.
Gunship Crew Wins Mackay
A 16th Special Operations Squadron AC-130H Spectre crew, Hurlburt
Field, Fla., has been awarded the Mackay Trophy for the Air Forces
most meritorious flight of the year for 2002.
The gunships 14 airmen helped save the lives of 82 soldiers
and the crews of two HH-60 Pave Hawk helicopters on March 2,
2002, during the second day of Operation Anaconda in Afghanistan.
During Anaconda, enemy forces surrounded US Army soldiers and
opened a fierce battle. The Grim 31 AC-130H crew
was tapped to provide close air support as two USAF helicopters
began medical
evacuations. Working with an Air Force enlisted tactical air
controller on the ground, the gunship blasted enemy forces to
clear the way
for the helicopters.
The Spectres 40 mm gun malfunctioned three times, but the
lead gunner said that the crew switched over to the 105 mm like
clockwork. He added, We just bounced back and forth
between the two guns as our [controller] needed them.
US Seeks New Incirlik Agreement
The Administration would like to see long-standing arrangements
for US military use of Incirlik AB, Turkey, continue, now that
Operation Northern Watch has ended, a senior State Department
official said in December.
What wed like to see, in the future, is for those
arrangements to continue, said Marc Grossman, undersecretary
of state for political affairs. We think those arrangements
are good for Turkey and are good for the United States. Grossman
was in Ankara to discuss proposed changes in the US global
force posture.
Incirlik was critical for Northern Watch operations patrolling
the northern no-fly zone over Iraq, but Ankara refused to permit
the US to use the base for combat operations during Operation
Iraqi Freedom.
According to news reports in mid-January, Turkey approved use
of Incirlik for the rotation of US troops in and out of Iraq.
Langley Stands Up Intel Wing
The Air Force officially established on Dec. 1, 2003, the newest
wing for 8th Air Force when it activated the 480th Intelligence
Wing at Langley AFB, Va.
The 480ths mission incorporates many different intelligence
missions, according to its commander, Col. Larry Grundhauser.
The units now subordinate to the wing played a major role during
Operations
Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom.
Among other functions, the new wing oversees a DOD Intelligence
Information System Center and maintains an intelligence imagery
library and an image base production entity that collects commercial
satellite or airborne imagery. Additionally, the wing produces
target materials for mission planning for some USAF weapons
systems and produces threat recognition products.
Whether its creating target materials and geospatial
information for global strike missions ... or critical exploitation
and dissemination
architecture, the 480th Intelligence Wing wields a potent
mix for warfighters, said Grundhauser.
The new intel wing comprises some 2,000 airmen in three
groups, which oversee eight active duty squadrons and four
Air National
Guard squadrons. These subordinate units are based at various
locations around the country. The 480th also has one squadronthe
27th Intelligence Support Squadronthat reports directly
to the wing.
F-16 Mx Requirements Reduced
The Air Force recently extended from 300 to 400 flight
hours the interval between routine phase maintenance
periods for newer F-16 fighters, contractor Lockheed Martin
announced in
December. The change affects about 600 of USAFs F-16s.
According to the company, the change is expected to
cut the inspection workload nearly 20 percent [and] increases
the
number
of aircraft available on the flight line for operational
training or combat missions.
A company news release further noted that the change could
result in a five percent drop in total base-level F-16
maintenance hours.
Eglin Embraces Greenway
Lawmakers have given the Pentagon slightly more leeway
to protect precious military training ranges from encroachment,
and Eglin
AFB, Fla., is one of the first installations to benefit.
In an unusual partnership, Eglin, the state of Florida,
and the Nature Conservancy produced the Northwest Florida
Greenway
agreement.
It reserves the first 7,600 acres of a planned 750,000-acre
corridor that would maintain existing open space in the
states panhandle.
The corridor, which will stretch from Eglins eastern
border to the Apalachicola National Forest, is considered
an environmental
hot spot because of its large number of rare species.
Brig. Gen. Chris T. Anzalone, Eglins Air Armament Center
vice commander, called it a win-win strategy, in
that urbanization had threatened both the military training
mission and the environment.
The Air Force said the greenway corridor is strategically
important to five USAF and Navy installations and is one
of the larger
open-air military training areas in the country.
Sea-Based BMDS Test Successful
The Missile Defense Agency successfully tested its Aegis
cruiser-based ballistic missile defense system (BMDS) over
the Pacific Ocean
in mid-December.
The test team launched an Aries short-range missile from
Hawaii, and, about four minutes later, a Standard Missile-3,
launched
from USS Lake Erie, struck the Aries, destroying it with
only the force
of the collision.
Flight mission-6 (FM-6) produced the fourth successful
intercept for the Aegis BMD and SM-3 system. FM-6 was part
of a test
series, dubbed Block 2004, that includes increasingly complex
and operationally
realistic tests, said officials. Last June, the FM-5 test
failed to intercept its Aries target missile. There are
three more
tests slated for Block 2004.
President Bush ordered the Pentagon to field an initial
missile defense capability by Oct. 1. (See Year of
the Missile Shield, January,
p. 24.) Up to 20 sea-based interceptorsbased on board
three Aegis cruiserswill be part of the system beginning
in 2005.
V-22 Reaches Milestone
The V-22 Osprey program late last year reached 1,000 mishap-free
flying hours since the program returned to flight in May
2002. Before that, the program had been grounded for more
than a
year after two fatal crashes forced many V-22 specifications
to be
redesigned.
Osprey No. 24 hit the 1,000-hour mark during a flight over
Nova Scotia, where icing tests are being conducted.
The Osprey is being developed primarily as a Marine Corps
transport. The Air Force is pursuing the CV-22 configuration
as an insertion
vehicle for Air Force Special Operations Command commandos.
The Air Force intends to buy 50 CV-22s.
MDA Lets Billion Dollar Contracts
The Missile Defense Agency on Dec. 3 awarded Northrop Grumman
a major contract to develop and test a concept for the
Kinetic Energy
Interceptor. The goal of the KEI program is to produce
a system to intercept and destroy ballistic missiles in
their
boost
phase.
According to DOD, the contract is worth approximately $4.5
billion over eight years. It is MDAs first
capability-based development and test contract featuring
a design that is no
longer constrained by the Antiballistic Missile Treaty.
In a separate contract on Dec. 9, MDA selected Lockheed
Martin to develop targets and countermeasures that represent
the
capabilities of ballistic missiles that might be used in
an attack on the
US. The initial contract is worth $210 million but could,
over 10 years,
go up to $4.6 billion. MDA will use the targets to test
the performance of all elements of the ballistic missile
defense
system.
S. Korea To Search for Remains
South Korea plans to search for Korean War dead along the
Demilitarized Zone border with North Korea, a move that
could uncover the
remains of US troops, Pacific Stars and Stripes reported
in December.
South Korean Lt. Col. Song Bong-jun, who works in that
nations
remains recovery office, said it is possible that the bodies
of deceased Americans will be found.
The remains of 89 Americans are believed to be located
within the 2.5-mile wide DMZ that separates democratic
South Korea
from the
communist North, according to the Defense Prisoner of
War/Missing in Action Office.
News Notes
By Tamar A. Mehuron, Associate Editor
- Space operators at Vandenberg AFB, Calif., on Dec. 2 launched
the final Atlas IIAS rocket, boosting a National Reconnaissance
Office payload into
orbit.
- The headquarters for 8th Air Force, located at Barksdale AFB,
La., reopened in December, nearly two years after the building
was gutted by a lightning-based fire. Officials began
moving back into offices in
the renovated building Dec. 8. An official opening for the
new accommodations is scheduled for this spring.
- The Air Force in late November received the 100th F119 engine
manufactured by Pratt & Whitney at its Middletown, Conn., facility
for the services new F/A-22 fighter. A company news release noted
that the new engines containing features never before seen in a
fighter engine, are demonstrating unmatched reliability and durabilitymore
in keeping with an engine that has been in production for decades.
- The National Imagery and Mapping Agency on Nov. 24 officially
became the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA).
Officials said that the new name emphasizes the agencys
primary purpose of providing both imagery and geospatial intelligence
for combat support
and policy-makers.
- US Joint Forces Command in mid-January conducted its first
large-scale horizontal joint
training exercise under its new Joint National Training Capability
initiative. Called Western Range Complex JNTC Horizontal Training
Event 04-1, the
exercise was slated to aid joint operations by helping US forces
of all services train as they fight, said officials. Its
the first in a series of four exercises that will lead
to the initial operational
capability of the JNTC by October.
- NATOs chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear
defense battalion became operational Dec. 1, according to NATO
officials. The
unit, with
up to 700 personnel, will conduct CBRN reconnaissance operations,
identify CBRN substances, detect and monitor biological
operations, provide assessments
and advice to NATO commanders, and conduct decontamination
procedures.
- Australia will participate in the US missile defense system,
the Australian foreign minister announced Dec. 4. Such involvement
might involve cooperation on missile detection, acquisition
of ground and sea-based
sensors, and assistance on research and development.
- Japans Defense Ministry wants to produce jointly with the US
crucial elements of next generation interceptor missiles that would
form part
of an eventual US missile defense system. Such production would
require a review and possible revision of Japans law prohibiting
export of weapons or parts. Following the North Korean ballistic
missile launch
over Japan in 1998, Japan has engaged in joint research with
the US on a missile defense system.
- The Air Forces new metallic name tag on Jan. 1 began
appearing on service dress uniforms and pullover sweaters around
the world, as
the
service implemented its mandatory wear date for the new accoutrement.
- An Air Force investigation report, released on Dec. 4, concluded
that equipment malfunction, combined with pilot error, led
to the June 12, 2003, crash of an F-16 in Iraq. The pilot had
been
flying a close
air support mission for five hours when the fighters single engine
failed from fuel starvation because the pilot did not follow
checklist procedures. The pilot, assigned to the 421st Fighter Squadron,
Hill AFB,
Utah, failed to notice that the fuel was not flowing from the
external tanksthe product of one of three possible mechanical
failures. He ejected safely, but the aircraft was a total loss.
- The Air Force and Navy agreed late last year to merge two separate
programs to acquire radio systems. They will now work on
development of the Joint Tactical Radio System, a single family
of radios
designed to
improve compatibility across all the services.
- In a reorganization in December, the Air Mobility Warfare
Center at Ft. Dix, N.J., created two new centers of excellence
and two
new Air Force schools. The two new centers of excellence
are Agile-Combat Support
and Air Mobility. The two schools are the USAF Mobility Operations
School and USAF Expeditionary Operations School. Officials
said that growth in
the centers mission drove the expansion.
USAF Identifies Operational Capability Shortfalls
A two-year review of Air Force capabilities and requirements
has led to a prioritized list of 50 critical operational
shortfalls, USAF announced Dec. 17.
The list is the result of one of the services capability
review and risk assessments, which are designed to weigh warfighting
requirements based on desired effects. Service officials said
the list will help guide Air Force spending and modernization
plans.
The corporate list of 50 prioritized capability areas represents
the most significant and immediate Air Force-wide capability
objectives, said Brig. Gen. Stephen M. Goldfein, USAF
director of operational capability requirements.
The Air Force released a list of six of the CRRA-identified
shortfalls. They are:
- Global information gridneed an interconnected
capability that collects, processes, stores, disseminates,
and manages information on demand.
- Battlespace managementmust implement effects-based
planning and provide a common operational picture.
- Fleeting and mobile targetsmust reduce the
time needed to find, track, and target hostile forces.
- Battle damage assessmentneed a toolkit and
clarified definitions for commanders to determine effects-based
decisions
across the battlespace.
- Base defensemust clarify roles and responsibilities
between the Air Force and sister services.
- Cargo airliftneed a study to review requirements
and prepare for possible force-structure changes.
In implementing the CRRA process, USAF leaders departed
from the previous system of quarterly acquisition program
reviews.
Those quarterly reviews frequently looked at weapons systems
in isolation, while the new process, said Goldfein, is a change
from a threat-based, system-by-system requirements process
toward an analysis methodology focusing on capability. |
F/A-22 Steering Group Tackling Long-Range Issues
The panel of Air Force lieutenant generals charged with
overseeing the F/A-22s transition to an operational
system is working in virtually new territory. It has been
more than
20 years since the service introduced a new fighterthe
F-117 in 1983. USAF expects to achieve initial operational
capability with the Raptor by the end of 2005.
We havent done this in a while, said Lt.
Gen. Bruce A. Wright, the head of the steering group, in
an interview.
Wright is also vice commander of Air Combat Command.
Wright said that a primary objective of the General Officer
Steering Group is to ensure the F/A-22 remains on its current
pathto deliver operationally credible and relevant
combat capability. There are lots of opinions on how
this airplane will be used, he said.
The group will refine schedules and milestones to meet
the Chiefs expectations about IOC, Wright said.
To ensure the fighter meets its IOC date, the commands involved
must coordinate training, maintenance, and the availability
of the aircraftall elements must work to the schedule.
Consequently, one of the groups first tasks was to
bring together the development, maintenance, and operational
communities.
According to the panels charter, multicommand issues become
even more important as the Raptor fleet expands in
size and begins operations at more locations. Test and training
F/A-22s are currently flying at Edwards AFB, Calif., Nellis
AFB, Nev., and Tyndall AFB, Fla.
Another key priority is to ensure the long-term viability
of the fighter by predicting what the system will need in
terms
of maintenance planning, support personnel, and future upgrades.
One such long-term sustainment issue is the development
of technical orders. This is the kind of thing that
people forget, explained Wright, but it takes
a staff [across] major commands to get the tech orders rightso
that we have the right guidance out there on the flight line.
Besides Wright, the steering group comprises the vice commanders
of Air Education and Training Command, Air Force Materiel
Command, Pacific Air Forces, and US Air Forces in Europe.
It also includes
the vice commander of AFMCs Aeronautical Systems Center.
(See Aerospace World: F/A-22 Gets Three-Star Oversight, January,
p. 15.)
Recent GOSG discussions also have led to a better picture
about the threat environment that the F/A-22 is going to operate
in, the double-digit SAM environment, said Wright.
Findings such as the updated threats are passed to a second
group that, according to the GOSGs charter, is to focus
on the short-term success and day-to-day operations
of the F/A-22 program. This second group includes the
program executive officer for the F/A-22 and members of USAFs
test community that are responsible for the Raptors
nascent operational testing program. |
Saddam Capture Unfolded Swiftly
When an Iraqi tipster came into US custody Dec. 12, he set
off a chain of events that led to the capture of Saddam
Hussein the next day and three other former generals just
a few days
later.
On Dec. 13, Saddam was found hiding on a farm near Tikrit.
The tipster had long been sought because of his close ties
to the deposed dictator, officials said in December.
Documents found with Saddam enabled US forces to identify
insurgent cells carrying out attacks on coalition forces
and the financial
network that supported them.
What the capture of Saddam Hussein revealed is the
structure that existed above the local cellular structure, said
Army Brig. Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, commander of 1st Armored
Division and leader of all US forces in Baghdad. He called
it a network.
Coalition troops moved quickly against six of the 14 cells
believed to be operating within Baghdad, Dempsey told reporters
at a mid-December press conference. By Dec. 16, three days
after Saddams capture, he said a series of raids
had chipped
away at that network above [the cells] to the 60th percentile.
|
ACC Seeks To Close the Requirements/Funding Gap
Air Combat Command officials want to reconcile a proposed objective Air
Force for 20 years hence with likely budgets.
ACC is developing a Future Force Structure Flight Plan
that will help it determine how best to bring in new forcesfor
example, the F/A-22 Raptor and F-35 Joint Strike Fighterwhile
it continues to use so-called legacy systems.
How do we fight, win, and pay for the next war? asked
Col. Gary L. Crowder, in an interview. He is chief of strategy,
concepts, and doctrine for ACCs planning directorate.
ACC has developed a vision force to show what
a fully capable Air and Space Expeditionary Force might look
like in 2025. It is now trying to find the ways to get
the
Air Force as close as possible to that marker on
the wall, Crowder said.
Crowder noted that USAF could conceivably trade force structure
for new systems. However, force structure studies frequently
become political lighting rods.
Crowder saw this dynamic in action twice in the last year.
First, a study of A-10 upgrade programs was misinterpreted
as a call for retiring the Warthog. (See Washington
Watch: Close Air Support Criticisms, August 2003,
p. 7.) Second, a look at whether Total Force units could
wring greater efficiency
out of the F/A-22 and F-35 was mistakenly portrayed as
an Air Force move to buy fewer of the aircraft. (See Aerospace
World: USAF Studies F/A-22, JSF Associate Units, December
2003, p. 19.)
Crowder said that the studies are designed to produce efficient
planning, not force structure cuts; therefore it is important not
to take the takes before the benefits of doing so
are actually realized. He said that capability improvements
can
come from two directionseither by maximizing the
benefits of new systems or cutting less efficient old ones.
The latter
move, of course, presupposes that any funds saved are actually
reinvested in higher-payoff programs. That is not always
the case.
He said that the first major results will probably be seen
in the Air Forces 2006 budget request due out in
about one year. |
The Latest in Iraq
Massive Troop Rotation Planned
The Pentagon begins a large-scale swap out of the forces
in Iraq early this year, a move that would send more than
100,000
fresh troops to relieve the 130,000 that are there now.
The rotation is expected to occur roughly through May.
The scale of the effort worries some planners who are concerned
that the transit of large numbers of soldiers through unfamiliar
terrain may make them vulnerable to attack until they are
settled in at more secure locations.
Pentagon officials have said they want to make this wholesale
exchange of troops to keep units intact and not engage in
piecemeal replacements of individuals, as happened in Vietnam.
The rotation
is designed to let the services bring home entire units that
have spent a year deployed for Operation Iraqi Freedom.
Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld in December acknowledged
that turbulence is always undesirable. However,
he said that the new units will be better designed for
operations in Iraq, and it is appropriate to be worried about
the changeover.
ETAC Coordinates Air Strike
An Air Force enlisted terminal attack controller (ETAC)
working with Army ground forces on Dec. 27 directed USAF
F-16s, as
they dropped Joint Direct Attack Munitions on a house frequently
used by Iraqi insurgents to launch strikes against coalition
forces.
According to US Central Command, the house had been used
at least six times to attack the coalition. There were improvised
explosive device-making materials in the house that were
destroyed in
the air strike, said CENTCOM officials.
The F-16s and crews are deployed to Southwest Asia from
the 510th Fighter Squadron, Aviano AB, Italy. The ETACs
name and unit were withheld.
Casualties
A total of 23 US service members were killed in Iraq during
the first three weeks of December, according to Defense Department
figures.
All told, 463 US troops died in Iraq between the beginning
of Operation Iraqi Freedom on March 20, 2003, and Dec. 22.
Among these fatalities, 317 Americans were killed in combat
incidents, while 146 died in noncombat events, such as accidents.
Of the 463 deaths, 325 Americans died after May 1the
end of major combat operations. These included 202 combat
deaths and 123 noncombat fatalities. |
Copyright Air Force Association. All rights reserved.
|