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The Air Force is stepping
up to the challenge of revitalizing its doctrine for
a world in which joint operations will depend on greater
understanding of the contributions from air and space
forces.
For years, USAF treated doctrine as a formality. Today, however, the Air Force
is being pushed forward by awareness that its individual service doctrine could
become a major ingredient in the development of joint-force military power.
In the wake of Operation Desert Storm, debates over joint doctrine revealed that
the airman's view of warfare could spark doctrinal conflicts with other service
components--even more so if aerospace doctrine is not clearly articulated.
Early last year, the Air Force Chief of Staff, Gen. Ronald R. Fogleman, and the
Army Chief of Staff, Gen. Dennis J. Reimer, openly acknowledged their differences
over such basic issues as control of air and missile defenses and deep operations
conducted beyond the fire-support coordination line but within the land commander's
area of operation. It became clear that neglect of doctrine can translate to
less than optimal use of airpower and cloud the debate over future forces.
The Army, Navy, and Marine Corps maintain dedicated doctrine organizations under
flag rank command. The purpose is to integrate doctrine with education and training
and link it to the requirements process. In contrast, the Air Force traditionally
has kept basic doctrine separate from the day-to-day business of airpower. The
Air Force last published basic doctrine in 1992 and operational-level doctrine
in 1969.
However, with the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Army Gen. John M. Shalikashvili,
putting new emphasis on joint doctrine and vision, each service's approach to
doctrine has become an important contributor to the overall shape of defense
concepts.
Army: "Close Engagement" Decisive
Army doctrine encapsulates principles for maneuver
warfare and acts as a springboard for advanced experiments
with concepts for the future of land warfare. At the
Army's Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC) at Fort
Monroe, Va., a four-star general oversees all Army
training and doctrine. Two-star deputies supervise
doctrine, training, combat development, and requirements.
Setting up a strong doctrine and training command was a step toward revitalizing
the Army after the Vietnam War. In the 1980s, AirLand Battle doctrine emphasized
the concept of maneuver warfare and the nonlinear battlefield as a way to capitalize
on Army strengths and prepare to defeat the numerically superior forces of
the Warsaw Pact. To the Army, the ground-war segment of Desert Storm proved
the value of reinvigorated doctrine and training.
TRADOC supervises and integrates doctrine, but most of the Army's more than
600 tactical and operational doctrine publications are written in the field. "FM
100-5, Operations," the Army's best-known doctrine manual, is drafted
at the Combined Arms Center at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., headed by a three-star
general. Logistics doctrine comes from the two-star commander of Combined Arms
Support Command at Fort Lee, Va. Specialized Army branch schools also contribute
to the doctrine development process.
Doctrine goes hand in hand with what the Army calls combat development. TRADOC's
combat development branch runs war games, field exercises--such as the Louisiana
Maneuvers--and simulations that test future concepts. By experimenting with
combinations of soldiers, equipment, and tactics in real-world situations,
the Army looks out about 10 years ahead of the basic doctrine cycle. Concepts
for the Army's Force XXI stem from combat development and will feed into future
revisions of basic doctrine. TRADOC also sponsored work on long-range planning
for the Army of 2025.
The philosophy behind Army doctrine reveals why the Army crafts its doctrine
with such care. Doctrine, to the Army, is more than just concepts. Army officers
feel a special burden to win and terminate the nation's wars--a role that,
in their view, is not shared by other services, who are considered valuable
but supporting arms in the joint force. This is why Army doctrine, in FM 100-5,
states that the Army is "the nation's historically proven decisive military
force."
Army operational doctrine concentrates on the corps and maneuver warfare at
the operational level, where commanders translate strategic goals into military
objectives.
Maneuver is more than just mobility. It is a means to gain positional advantage
over the enemy with armor, infantry, and attack helicopters. Firepower supports
and enhances the maneuver-warfare plan of operations. Army forces conduct maneuver
warfare by synchronizing close and deep operations while protecting the force.
Simultaneous operations delay, disrupt, and destroy the enemy's follow-on echelons
and strategic areas behind the lines. Close engagement reaps these advantages
and "is where soldiers close with and destroy the enemy," achieving
victory. Even if this takes just 100 hours, as did the ground offensive in
Desert Storm, Army doctrine defines close engagement as the point where decisive
and lasting results are achieved.
Success in land warfare calls for principles that soldiers understand. Army
officers promoted to the rank of major begin to draw on doctrine to master
the basics of maneuver warfare and the art of commanding larger units and more
complex missions. At Command and General Staff College, for example, officers
learn to create operations orders for brigade, division, corps, and theater-level
forces. For the field-grade Army officer, mastering operational doctrine, like
leadership and battle management, is part of doing the job right.
Navy/USMC: Battlespace Dominance
and Peacetime Presence
For most of its more than 200-year existence, the
Navy has kept doctrine at arm's length for fear that
a binding set of principles might restrict the initiative
and independence of the captain at sea--the very foundation
of naval combat arms. Strategy and tactics substituted
as the focus of debate.
The Reagan Administration, for example, formally embraced the Maritime Strategy
in early 1981, and much controversy ensued. Whatever it was, however, it wasn't
doctrine. One defense analyst, John Mearsheimer, said it was "best described
as a loose combination of four offensive concepts--direct military impact,
horizontal escalation, offensive sea control, and counterforce coercion."
Desert Storm's joint-force air attack procedures on land targets jolted the
Navy out of its independent operations.
In 1993, Adm. Frank B. Kelso II, the Chief of Naval Operations, reversed the
Navy's course by establishing Naval Doctrine Command at Norfolk, Va. Chartered
in part to provide the doctrinal foundation for "From the Sea," issued
in 1992, Naval Doctrine Command followed up with publication of "NDP-1,
Naval Warfare" in 1994. Naval Doctrine Command, headed by a rear admiral,
still reports directly to the CNO.
Naval doctrine still shines with tradition. Adm. Horatio Nelson and Adm. Arleigh
A. Burke appear frequently in sidebar illustrations of such concepts as commander's
intent and other imperatives of operations at sea. Despite the reverence for
history and aversion to formal doctrine, the Navy harnessed its new doctrine
process to explain littoral warfare and how naval forces project combat power.
The command compressed some 300 naval warfare publications into the new joint
numbering system.
NDP-1 covers the Navy's role in national security and discusses dominant operational
concepts. Prominent among them are two concepts: battlespace dominance and
presence.
Naval doctrine defines battlespace dominance as establishment of a zone of
superiority from which naval forces project power. Battlespace reaches as far
as the combat radius of naval weapons and covers the surface, undersea, air,
land, space, and time. In littoral warfare doctrine, battlespace stretches
to permit projection of power over land. Naval forces act alone when required
or serve as the node of control for a joint force.
Forward presence is another aspect of naval power grounded in new doctrine
publications. When a crisis occurs, naval forces may be first on the scene
and remain behind after other landbased forces depart. With such concepts as
presence and battlespace dominance, Navy doctrine, like Army doctrine, offers
a rationale for force roles and missions and a comprehensive perspective on
the operational level of war from the sea.
Marine Corps doctrine is part of naval doctrine, but the Marine Corps also
generates its own concepts of maneuver operations ashore. An elaborate, concept-based
requirements system limits doctrine to organizing, training, and equipping
Marine forces. Marine Corps doctrine publications begin with "FMFM-1,
Warfighting," last published in 1991. FMFM-1 presents basic and enduring
principles of warfare. A second layer of publications on strategy, campaigning,
and tactics begins the discussion of the operational level of warfare and continues
into a series of subordinate publications. Most of all, however, the Marine
deliverable is Marines.
USAF: Airman's Perspective
During most of the 1990s, Air Force doctrine stood
apart in its sparse organization and lack of attention
to the operational level of warfare. Since 1947, the
Air Force leadership within the Pentagon and Air University
have waged a sporadic tug-of-war over responsibility
for developing Air Force doctrine. The Air Force Doctrine
Center at Langley AFB, Va., commanded by a colonel,
reported to the two-star deputy for Plans on the Air
Staff at the Pentagon. A second Air Staff office assisted
with headquarters and joint coordination, while the
Center for Aerospace Doctrine, Research, and Education
was a separate function under Air University at Maxwell
AFB, Ala.
Organizational turmoil reflected the Air Force's tendency to approach doctrine
as an academic exercise, but the raw material of air doctrine is a blueprint
for concepts of warfare inherently different from surface maneuver traditions.
Basic principles of air doctrine describe and present a view of warfare from
the vertical dimension.
For biplane pilots and jet-age crew members alike, elevation above the surface
gave a unique perspective and allowed aircraft to make use of increased range
and speed to gain advantage over the enemy. The airman's perspective and ability
to see and operate across the battlespace made unified command of air assets
crucial to full success, while making decentralized execution of air operations
highly efficient. While many of these advantages were available as early as
World War I, the improved lethality and effectiveness of air attacks hold out
the potential to change the focus of warfare from twentieth-century surface
maneuver to twenty-first-century air and space dominance.
The Air Force developed a wealth of basic principles, but keeping doctrine
publications up-to-date often proved arduous. Operational-level doctrine suffered. "Air
Force Manual 2-1, Tactical Air Operations," written in 1969, has not been
revised since it was adopted. This overarching operational-level publication
discusses counterair, close air support, and air interdiction missions but
has not been updated to reflect the maturing capabilities of the 1970s and
1980s or the success of these mission areas in Desert Storm. Save for a few
publications co-written with the Army in the 1980s, the Air Force has failed
to participate in formal discussion of doctrine at the operational level of
war.
Until 1992, the development of operational-level doctrine suffered from fragmentation
of the Air Force into the cultures and missions of Strategic Air Command, Tactical
Air Command, and Military Airlift Command. SAC and TAC honed independent procedures
and ways of thinking about airpower. At SAC, the mission to deter or fight
a global nuclear war required a full suite of thinking on the tactical, operational,
and strategic levels of war. However, SAC's association with the nuclear mission
lessened its impact on overall air doctrine.
TAC concentrated on achieving air superiority over the battlefield and employing
airpower in support of ground forces--a consuming challenge, especially because
NATO's doctrine of Follow-On Forces Attack depended on air and ground forces
working together to defeat the superior numbers of the Warsaw Pact without
first resorting to nuclear weapons. Killing MiGs and flying close air support
were the name of the game. Army and Air Force cooperation on AirLand Battle
may have reduced the incentive to think about other roles for airpower in the
joint battle.
Prior to Desert Storm, one of the few full-length discussions of air war at
the operational level was Col. John Warden's The Air Campaign, published
in 1988 by the National Defense University at Fort McNair, D. C. Milestones
like the 1990 "Global Reach, Global Power" or 1995's "Global
Presence" germinated outside the formal doctrine process.
The Air Force's apathy about operational doctrine may have stemmed from the
fact that tactical doctrine guides squadron and wing employment of airpower.
Seldom are Air Force officers required to master principles of operational-level
doctrine to carry out their day-to-day force-employment responsibilities. The
numbered air force commander may be the first to take on responsibility for
operational plans and understand how they fit with a Joint Force Commander's
objectives. In contrast, Army and Marine majors are starting to master doctrine
for combined arms warfare. This "fact of life" of airpower organization
and employment creates a gap where there is little natural demand for operational
doctrine.
Joint Vision
Gaps in formal airpower doctrine at the operational
level can affect the role of airpower in joint doctrine.
Joint doctrine is by law the near-exclusive province
of the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Fully
empowered by the Goldwater-Nichols Defense Reorganization
Act of 1986, which emphasized joint operations, General
Shalikashvili has spurred the process of joint-doctrine
development in the 1990s.
Joint doctrine flows from service doctrine but takes on added responsibilities.
Joint doctrine's charter is to help the theater commander in chief meld the
different capabilities and perspectives provided by the services into the most
efficient and effective joint force possible. Joint doctrine knits together
service components and concepts by prescribing guidelines for areas of operation,
command relationships, and support and coordination of the joint force.
The goal is to create tight "seams." When seams pull apart, lives
may be at risk. In the aftermath of the UH-60 Black Hawk shootdown in 1994,
General Shalikashvili declared joint doctrine to be "authoritative." He
said, "This doctrine will be followed except when, in the judgment of
the commander, exceptional circumstances dictate otherwise." Changing
the status of joint doctrine from "recommended" to "authoritative" crowned
its emerging importance and impact on military power.
Joint Pub 3-0, Doctrine for Joint Operations, coordinates
the surface maneuver of ground forces with the supporting
abilities of naval and air forces. Drafted by the Army
in 1993, before the Navy or Air Force reengaged with
joint doctrine, the current manual reflects the Army's
emphasis on maneuver warfare. Specific instructions
detail the task of establishing command and organization
of joint forces.
For example, Joint Pub 3-0 says that Joint Force Commanders will establish
the size, shape, and position of land and naval areas of operation, based on "the
land or naval force commander's requirement to maneuver rapidly and to fight
at extended ranges." Within their areas of operation, the land or naval
component commander will be supported by other force elements and will be responsible
for the "synchronization of fires, maneuver, and interdiction." The
Joint Force Air Component Commander has no geographic area of operation but
manages theater-wide air operations beyond land and naval areas of operation.
Joint Pub 3-0 cautions commanders to "carefully balance doctrinal imperatives
that may be in tension, including the needs of the maneuver force and the undesirability
of fragmenting theater air assets."
However, gray areas remain at the intersection of air and surface operations.
Joint Pub 3-0's authoritative prescriptions for organization and command affect
operation of each component differently. As General Fogleman and General Reimer
noted in their discussion of differences, "What might be optimum for one
component can come at the expense of the other," either "decreasing
its combat power or increasing its risk."
To balance each service's core capabilities, US joint doctrine must be able
to draw on fully developed operational doctrine in each service. Air Force
members working in the joint-doctrine process often experience disadvantages
that stem from their service's lean doctrine structure.
A recent example was the drafting of a Joint Pub 3-09 on joint fires. Proposals
for a joint-forces fires coordinator fit well with maneuver warfare doctrine.
However, from an airman's perspective, it threatened to complicate the situation
and weaken the air component commander's authority, depending on how much of
the air component was grouped under the heading of indirect fires. Without
a parallel publication on the operational level of war, Air Force doctrine
representatives faced numerous uphill battles on this and other issues affecting
the role of airpower in joint warfare.
There are those who say that the presence of several Army officers in key senior
billets on the Joint Staff during the early 1990s resulted in a surface warfare
tinge to joint doctrine produced after Desert Storm. While both Gen. Colin
L. Powell and General Shalikashvili brought their Army experience to joint
doctrine, it is also true that Army doctrine easily embraced joint doctrine.
The Navy and Air Force were comparatively late players, not in position to
dominate joint-doctrine dialogue.
Joint doctrine today carries forward a land-centric focus because it is still
largely based on dominant surface maneuver. Key air concepts--and some naval
concepts--receive short shrift. Differences between land and air components
generally are resolved in favor of the land commander. Most of all, it is striking
how closely joint doctrine runs parallel to the Army doctrine of maneuver,
fires, and force protection. As a result, major conflicts in the joint-doctrine
process most often erupt over differences between air and ground views of operational
strategy, command, and organization. For all the periodic USAF-Navy fireworks
over bombers and carriers, it is the clash of the surface soldier's view of
the battlefield and the airman's perspective that creates the deepest misunderstandings.
One such misunderstanding that spread from joint doctrine to last year's "Joint
Vision 2010" was the description of air superiority as a part of full-dimension
protection--what might be called freedom from attack. But air superiority's
goal as defined in air doctrine is to eliminate by one means or another the
enemy force that can interfere with air operations. Air superiority provides
positional advantage, with "supporting" firepower aboard the aircraft--a
close match to the definition of dominant maneuver, but not how it is described
in joint doctrine.
The Way Ahead
Joint Vision 2010 established the importance of joint
doctrine as an influence on future military capability.
Drawing on tested concepts of dominant maneuver, precision
engagement, full-dimension protection, and focused
logistics, Joint Vision 2010 springboards from doctrine
to forward-looking concepts of operation that light
the way for all components in the joint force. According
to General Shalikashvili, Joint Vision 2010 will focus "the
strengths of each individual service or component to
exploit the full array of available capabilities" and "guide
the evolution of joint doctrine, education, and training
to [ensure that] we will be able to achieve more seamless
joint operations in the future."
There are dangers, too. The increasing authority of joint doctrine may amplify
the joint voice in future planning and investment. The danger is that, as joint
doctrine and visions gain strength, the services may find it hard to carry
out their missions if they are not allowed to develop new doctrine and capabilities
outside of the joint framework--a framework that hinges primarily on surface
maneuver.
For the Air Force, Joint Vision 2010 appears to present an opportunity to expand
on operational concepts for how inherent maneuver, battlespace control, air
superiority, and fast, long-legged forces will strengthen future joint operations.
The challenge is to clarify the links between airpower doctrine and the Joint
Force Commander's priorities. General Shalikashvili chartered the Joint Warfighting
Center at Fort Monroe, Va., to expand concepts and begin implementation of
Joint Vision 2010. The Air Force and all the services have a chance to engage
in debate to sharpen their capabilities and means of interaction.
First steps for the Air Force include plans to reorganize doctrine functions
under a single two-star commander and to update doctrine publications. A single
commander--with authority over every major doctrine function in the field--will
strengthen the Air Force's doctrine organization by providing direct oversight
of all major doctrine functions. Doctrine will be firmly linked to professional
military education and training. An independent structure can also keep USAF
up to speed with fast-moving changes in the world of joint doctrine.
General Fogleman discussed upcoming doctrine changes with senior leaders at
the October 1996 Corona conference. Later this year, the Air Force will publish
its "equivalent" of FM 100-5--a new operational doctrine publication
that will document the basic principles, abilities, and operational concepts
for air- and spacepower in joint warfare. At its best, doctrine is like an
observation tower from which to survey past lessons, current practices, and
future concepts for military operations.
As General Fogleman explained, "The ultimate goal of our doctrine should
be the development of an airman's perspective on joint warfare and national
security issues--not just among our generals but among all airmen, in all specialties."
Rebecca Grant is president of IRIS, a research organization
in Arlington, Va. She has worked for Rand Corp., in the
Office of Secretary of the Air Force, and for the Chief
of Staff of the Air Force. This is her first article
for Air Force Magazine.
Copyright Air Force Association. All rightsreserved.
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