The Persian
Gulf War of 1991 set a high standard for airpower. It began with a 38-day
air campaign that destroyed Iraq's command and control system, closed
down the bridges and supply routes, and put the world's sixth largest
air force out of business for the duration of the war.
Iraqi tanks moved from their entrenched positions but twice--in the
ill-fated lurch toward Khafji and, later, in the desperate retreat from
Kuwait--and were shot to pieces by airpower on both occasions.
Before the ground offensive started, the casualties and desertions reduced
Iraqi troop strength by at least half. Two-thirds of the armor had been
destroyed. In just four days, coalition ground forces rolled over what
was left of the world's fourth largest army. US personnel losses were
615 killed and wounded rather than the 20,000 casualties that had been
anticipated.
There were memorable feats of precision attack. In the most famous example,
a fighter rolled in on the Iraqi Defense Ministry in Baghdad and tucked
a bomb neatly down the air shaft. In another instance, F-111Fs hit an
oil-pumping manifold from 20 miles away with a precision guided bomb.
The Gulf War standard for airpower has loomed large in the various force
alignment exercises of the 1990s--the Bottom-Up Review, the Quadrennial
Defense Review, and most recently, the National Defense Panel report--with
critics attacking it and defenders defending it in the competition for
resources.
What even airpower advocates tend to overlook, though, is that the Gulf
War standard is seven years old, says Brig. Gen. Charles F. Wald, who
becomes USAF director of strategic planning this month. The Air Force
today meets a higher standard than it did in 1991.
- Precision attack missions in the Gulf War were
flown by a few kinds of aircraft. Only the F-117s,
the F-111Fs, and a squadron of F-15Es were equipped
to deliver laser guided bombs. By contrast, says
Wald, the Air Force has about 450 precision droppers
today, and the number increases steadily. Furthermore,
the Navstar Global Positioning System receivers used
in the Gulf War were handheld models. GPS was not
yet wired into the aircraft. Today, it is integral
to F-16s and B-2s, adding to their prowess in precision
attack. F-15Es will soon be similarly equipped.
- Some of today's premier systems had little or no
involvement in the Gulf War. The B-1B bomber lacked
a conventional attack capability. The B-2 was still
in flight testing. The deep-looking Joint STARS surveillance
aircraft was there in the form of two developmental
prototypes.
Today, the conventionally armed B-1B deploys as
part of air expeditionary forces. The B-2 has demonstrated
that it can strike 16 targets on a single sortie.
Joint STARS is in great demand for the whole gamut
of theater operations.
- The capability to attack at night and in weather
was quite limited in Desert Storm. LANTIRN (Low-Altitude
Navigation and Targeting Infrared for Night) pods
were scarce. Presently, about 400 Air Force aircraft
have them.
Operations in the Gulf were delayed by bad weather.
Wald says that with today's systems, notably
the B-2, "you can see through weather with
the radar and pick out cars in the parking lot." In
the near future, he adds, the Air Force will
have almost routine capability to drop guided
munitions "day or night, in almost all weather
short of a hurricane."
- Intelligence in the Gulf
War was "stovepiped," primarily
fed from the battle area
to Washington and then
back to the theater. Sometimes
the combat forces got the
information they needed
in time to use it. Sometimes
they didn't. Today, the
shooters are in the loop
to get intelligence directly
from the sensors.
"You can focus
your radar on the same
thing the off-board
synthetic aperture
radar is looking at," Wald
says. "The commander
has real-time targeting.
The intelligence capability
at wing level at Aviano
Air Base in Italy today
is probably 10 times
better than [theater
commander Gen. H. Norman]
Schwarzkopf had in
the Gulf War."
It is fashionable
once again to disparage
airpower. Newspaper
analysts tell us that
the four-day ground
offensive, not the
air campaign, was decisive
in the Gulf. They do
not explain how, before
the ground offensive
began, the Iraqi force
came to be so depleted,
demoralized, and unable
to conduct coherent
military operations.
The General Accounting
Office has tried twice
to prove that aerial
precision attack doesn't
amount to much. The
Pentagon's main war
planning model rates
airpower as less effective
than its actual performance
in the Gulf. When budget
reduction candidates
are identified, airpower
leads the list.
The nation's top defense
leaders were right
in 1991 when they said
airpower was the decisive
element in the Gulf
War. It is perverse
that seven years and
many improvements later,
airpower is still fighting
for respect.
It is not an automatic
assumption that airpower
will be decisive in
every case, but it
is the best thing we
have going for us.
It is difficult to
imagine a future conflict
of any major scope
in which landpower
or seapower could survive--much
less be decisive--without
airpower.
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