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During the Armys dash toward Baghdad in March 2003, lead elements
of the 3rd Infantry Division ran into a sudden and serious problem.
Soldiers lost contact with the overhead Milstar communications satellite
network, which wiped out their secure link to trailing support elements.
No longer able to send targeting data to their fire support units,
the 3rd ID was momentarily stalled and isolated.
A call for help went out to Schriever AFB, Colo. Soon, airmen of
the 4th Space Operations Squadron went to work finding and fixing
the problem.
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| Space operators such as these
at Schriever AFB, Colo., make sure critical communications,
intelligence, and targeting systems are ready to aid combat
forces. Space Command wants its operators to think like warfighters.
(USAF photo by SrA. Mike Mears) |
According to Capt. Ryan Stalnaker, the 4th SOPS chief of plans,
tactics, and requirements, someone had shifted the Milstar spot
(one of six spot-beam user antennas) away from the 3rd IDs
lead elements toward another area. Technicians began asking questions.
Where was that spot?
The squadron consulted a system showing exactly where Milstar spots
are on Earth. They confirmed that the 3rd IDs spot was in
the wrong place. Specialists also quickly determined that it had
not been diverted to a higher-priority mission. In this case, another
Army unit had inadvertently snatched the Milstar spot that was supposed
to be over the 3rd ID.
With the problem identified, the Milstar spot was moved back, and
the problem was solved. The 3rd ID was able to resume its coordinated
attack against the Iraqi forces.
Elapsed time: some 15 minutes from the time 4th SOPS got the call.
The victorious outcome of this engagement, along with numerous
other battles in Operation Iraqi Freedom, would not have been certain
without dominant US military space power, said Col. James
C. Hutto Jr., head of force development and readiness for Air Force
Space Command.
The Goal: Space Superiority
Examples such as this one show that, in combat, space capabilities
can be a matter of life and death, say Space Command officials.
US control of space is not a birthright or a destiny,
warned Gen. Lance W. Lord, AFSPC commander. For that reason, the
command is moving to secure US space capabilities for the future.
The concept of space superiority needs to roll off the tongue,
like air superiority, Lord said. The war for control
of space has already started, he said, and the United
States can no longer assume that space will be a benign operating
environment.
Space power came to the aid of the 3rd ID on many other occasions.
Lt. Gen. Daniel P. Leaf, AFSPC vice commander, cited a second example.
Charlie Troop, part of the 3rd Squadron of the Armys 7th Cavalry,
was a lead element in the advance toward Baghdad, from south of
Najaf, in March 2003.
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| A B-1B bomber crew handles
a Joint Direct Attack Munition. Provision of satellite guidance
to munitions such as JDAM has pushed the Air Force into a new
age of precision attack. (USAF photo by SSgt. Joanna E. Hensley) |
When the weather turned bad, [Charlie Troop] was, in essence,
surrounded, at night, in a dust storm, Leaf said. At the time,
the 3/7 Cavalry had a real big problem on the west.
It was battling 20 Iraqi T-72 tanks, other enemy armor and vehicles,
and a couple of hundred or so Iraqi soldiers.
The US and Iraqi forces were so close that SSgt. Mike Shropshire,
an Air Force tactical air controller deployed with the unit, later
told Leaf, Iraqis were being killed by [rocket propelled grenades]
ricocheting off US armor, and American troops were dismounting and
grabbing Iraqi AK-47s to fire back.
At the time, Leaf was listening to the battle unfold, by radio,
at the forward command center. The general was serving as US Central
Commands air component coordinator at Camp Doha, Kuwait.
Shropshire was able to reach a B-1B bomber crew and call in Joint
Direct Attack Munitions, Leaf said. The B-1 dropped seven 2,000-pound
satellite guided JDAMs on the enemy forces.
Remember how close this combat is, Leaf said. Ive
been a forward air controller, ... and the idea that you would drop
a 2,000-pound bomb, through the weather, at night, in a dust storm,
in contact that close, is mind-boggling.
Charlie Troop was fighting off Iraqis on three sides, but the attack
on the enemy forces to the west in essence destroyed them
in detail. The impact of the JDAMs defeated an enemy that
had us in a really terrible situation, Leaf said. What
would ordinarily be a tactical defeat turned into a rout of
the attacking enemy.
In that engagement, Charlie Troop lost a Bradley fighting vehicle
and an Abrams tank, but suffered zero deaths and zero wounded, Leaf
said.
In his view, said Leaf, that was the beginning of the end
of the Iraqi Army. He added, They had as much advantage
as they were going to get, during the US drive to Baghdad,
but lost it due to close coordination between land- and air-force
elements and the availability of space capabilities.
Space is just as integrated into modern combat as bullets are, said
Leaf, adding that he looks forward to the day when space is not
thought of as something distinct or divorced from regular
combat power.
To that end, AFSPC is working hard to change the mind-set of both
warfighters and the space community. For starters, even though the
Defense Department has made enormous strides in integrating space
capabilities since the 1991 Persian Gulf War, there is still much
room for improvement.
Right From the Start
According to Lord, combat planners must think about space
from the beginning and not bring it on as an afterthought.
The end state, said Brig. Gen. Richard E. Webber, commander of
21st Space Wing at Peterson AFB, Colo., must be for planners to
bring space to the fight, rather than integrate it into the fight.
If you come up with a plan and wrap space onto it, [that
is] not the way to go, he said. The change requires a huge
evolution in thinking.
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| At Baghdad airport, SrA. Trent
Lundell of the 447th Expeditionary Communications Squadron checks
a satellite signal. Space Command wants to develop space control
systems to defend US orbital assets. (USAF photo by SSgt. Verlin
Levi Collins) |
Webber said he has seen it both ways. Successful planning
during OIF included the massive C-17 airdrop into northern Iraq,
used to open up the second front during the war. For that mission,
Webber (the senior space officer in the combined air operations
center) helped ensure that GPS requirements, satellite communications
needs, and other space support efforts were all brought into the
war plan at the outset.
Placing an official senior space officer in the CAOC
is a recent phenomenon. Webber was the first, serving as space and
information warfare coordinator for Gen. Tommy R. Franks, then head
of US Central Command, during the first six months of Operation
Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan.
Since that time, the position has evolved but has become a permanent
fixture, typically staffed by a senior colonel.
Brig. Gen. Larry D. James, now vice commander of Space and Missile
Systems Center at Los Angeles AFB, Calif., held the job during the
major combat phase of OIF, when several issues required quick resolution.
During his time at the CAOC, James told Air Force Magazine, space
officers planned GPS accuracy improvements and worked to mitigate
Iraqs attempts to jam the GPS signal.
Space officers also had to improve Defense Support Program satellite
surveillance. Initially, coalition forces lacked the desired level
of missile-launch awareness because there were DSP connectivity
problems to resolve, he said.
Today, the established presence of a senior space officer in the
theater eases the mission planning process, said Col. Teresa A.H.
Djuric, commander of the 21st Operations Group at Peterson (and
recently CENTCOMs senior space officer at the CAOC).
Discussions now center on tactical issues such as how best to provide
convoy security and the eternal need to optimize GPS coverage, she
said.
The traditional means of temporarily improving GPS is to boost
power and defer maintenance, to ensure the maximum number of satellites
are online at once. But these efforts must be balanced. Deferring
maintenance comes at a price, and, when GPS signal power is increased,
Djuric noted, it improves the signal for all users, not just the
US military.
All Phases
Space Command officials note that the systems they develop and
operate now play a role in every phase of combat. Space provides
communications, battlespace awareness, missile warning, positioning
and tracking capabilities, and precision-weapon guidance. The prospect
of taking these capabilities away is undoubtedly enticing to adversaries.
Potential enemies know that the US is reliant, perhaps even dependent,
upon space-based capabilities.
Space is often referred to as the ultimate high ground,
just as the tallest hills and aircraft represented the high ground
in the past. Hills and aircraft became valid military targets, and
space-based capabilities are now thought to be targets as well.
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| SSgt. Michael Huffman, left,
and SrA. Ricky Williams query GPS for coordinates needed to
guide JDAMs to a target. Space Command officials want to thoroughly
integrate space capabilities into combat operations. (USAF photo
by SSgt. Shane A. Cuomo) |
In a speech last year, Lord said Space Command predicts that adversaries
will increasingly try to deny us the asymmetric advantage
that space provides. ... Vulnerable space systems invite attackinviting
a move to level the technological playing field.
Iraq tried this during OIF, through the use of GPS jammers. The
jamming attempts were unsuccessful, but brought attention to the
fact that some types of crude counterspace capabilities are available
on the open market.
Enemies can also use space-based capabilities to their advantage
by buying access to commercial communications systems or by purchasing
satellite imagery that can show bases and staging locations. The
Pentagon arranged to purchase all the high-quality commercial satellite
imagery of Afghanistan at the beginning of Enduring Freedom to keep
valuable details out of enemy hands.
Officials say that space control efforts are increasingly important
to protect US capabilities andif necessaryto deny enemy
access to space.
The Air Forces space control efforts include three mission
areas: space situational awareness (SSA), defensive counterspace
(DCS), and offensive counterspace (OCS).
The Foundation
Space situational awareness serves as the foundation for everything
else.
USAFs 1st Space Control Squadron, Cheyenne Mountain AFS,
Colo., has long maintained a catalog of the man-made objects in
orbit. This database provides SSA and helps protect US assets from
accidental damage. If a newly launched system or piece of debris
threatens to collide with the objects already in orbit, satellites
are moved.
Squadron commander Lt. Col. Mark Vidmar noted that, in 2004, the
International Space Station and two classified DOD systems were
moved for just such reasons. This was done when other objects were
projected to get too close for comfort.
Of more immediate interest to warfighting commanders is the knowledge
of whats above them, Vidmar added.
The Air Force in October took possession of a system that used
to be called the Navy Fence, a series of radars spread
across the southern part of the lower 48 states. The Fence tracks
all the space objects passing overhead and had always been
integrated with the Air Force mission, said 1st Lt. Jenn Berger
of the 21st Operations Support Squadron at Schriever.
The transfer of authority, giving the Air Force control of the
Fence and 195 new military and civilian positions, was smooth.
Over the years, space essentially has been a militarily benign
environment. For that reason, operators had come to assume that
failures were the result of equipment malfunctionsnot the
deliberate and malicious acts of enemies.
Space Command is trying to break the operators of that thinking.
The first response when something goes wrong, said Maj. Gen. (sel.)
Daniel J. Darnell, commander of AFSPCs Space Warfare Center,
should be think possible attack.
The Air Force lacks a flawless means for determining if a functional
breakdown is the result of an attack, but it does have procedures
to try to make that determination. Databases detailing how systems
operate and what the previous failures were can tell operators if
a malfunction is normal or if it is likely malicious,
Darnell said.
Space situational awareness feeds directly into defensive counterspacethe
mission of protecting whats up there.
Officials note that systems located in space tend to get the lions
share of attention, but space-based capabilities are actually vulnerable
three ways: at the satellites, through their relay links, and at
the ground stations. Disrupting any of these parts of the system
will have a negative effect.
A key focus today is training operators to identify and respond
to possible threats to their systems. Red Teaming plays a crucial
role in developing DCS tactics, and Space Command has teams in place
to help educate the units.
For example, GPS jammers are available on the open market for $38,000,
and satellite communications noisemakers can be bought
for $7,500, explained Lt. Col. Todd Freece, commander of a space
aggressor squadron at Schriever. GPS jamming is a verified
adversary tactic, he said, so Red Teams use these techniques
as a training tool. In that way, he said, US forces dont see
the effects of jamming for the first time in combat.
The goal is not simply to get space operators to recognize how
it feels to be jammed, added Lt. Col. Guy Morley Jr., who commands
a second space aggressor squadron. According to Morley, these Red
Teams make the warfighter experience what its like to have
to fight without such advanced technology.
Sometimes problems can be fixed immediately by switching frequencies
or by increasing power to users, but units must also learn to fight
through the interference.
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The Bandwidth Burden
As a force supplier to US Strategic Command and regional
combatant commanders worldwide, Air Force Space Command must
be responsive to warfighting needs. The driving force behind
many AFSPC acquisitions, said Maj. Gen. Roosevelt Mercer Jr.,
is the need to provide greater persistence over the battlefield.
Mercer, Space Commands director of plans and programs,
said persistence will come from a variety of future assets,
such as Space Based Radar, for unblinking battlespace awareness,
and the Transformational Satellite (TSAT) communications system,
for sustainable connectivity.
There is a glaring need for more space-supplied bandwidth.
Unmanned systems are a tremendous combat asset, officials
say, but they are also bandwidth hogs.
Predator and Global Hawk UAVs, for starters, are controlled
and monitored through already taxed communications systems.
Beyond command and control, even more bandwidth is required
to send the radar data and digital streaming video from these
systems to the final users, noted Lt. Col. Scott Gilson, director
of the AFSPC Commanders Action Group.
We have got to have an on-orbit communications infrastructure
to handle this growing demand, he said, because the
UAVs continue to proliferate.
Systems such as TSAT and the Wideband Gap-filler System will
meet the burgeoning communications demands and enable larger
numbers of armed UAVs to complete their missions more efficiently,
officials say.
There is also a security concern. Gilson noted that military
communications satellites only provide about 40 percent of
DODs communications needs, with commercial carriers
providing the balance. During recent operations, 78
percent of the communications capability came via leased systems.
The Defense Department does not want to depend on private
sources for combat communications. |
Offensive Counterspace
Finally, there is the sensitive issue of offensive counterspace
operationsthat is, disrupting an adversarys space capabilities
to keep him from using space to his advantage. The Air Force needs
to walk a very deliberate path, with regard to OCS,
said Darnell, but officials are unequivocal about the need to follow
that path.
Offensive counterspace effects can be accomplished in many ways.
Darnell cited the case of a Hellfire missile, fired from a Predator
UAV, which destroyed an Iraqi satellite antenna in Baghdad. That
was the first offensive counterspace mission of OIF,
he said.
The Air Force in September fielded its first dedicated OCS capability,
the Counter Communications System. CounterComm uses a ground-based
antenna to temporarily jam enemy satellite communications. It is
a mobile, no-kidding tool that will be deployedif
neededto assist theater commanders, said TSgt. James Logan
of the 76th SCS at Peterson. The 76th is Space Commands first
counterspace squadron.
Many lawmakers and arms control advocates are less than excited
about the prospect of weapons in space. Leaf argues that US counterspace
operations have a moral component. If the US were to allow enemies
the ability to disrupt space assets, this lapse would come at a
cost. Battles would still be fought, he said, but they would likely
last longer, be more destructive, and result in more deaths of US
and enemy troops alike.
Somebody is betting [American lives] on space capabilities
right now, Leaf said.
He went on to say that counterspace operations should be temporary,
reversible, and conducted to avoid collateral damage. Once those
factors have been put into the equation, he said, then shame
on us if we dont do it.
In the past, space operators had an unhealthy tendency to get tunnel
vision with regard to their particular machine. Space Command is
pushing hard to get its space professionals to think like warfighters.
Our guys have got to get their heads up out of their
space operations centers, said Col. Kevin McLaughlin, commander
of the 50th Operations Group at Schriever. Even in an era of reachback
and distributed operations, it is hard for space professionals to
see and appreciate the combat effects they provide.
Getting job satisfaction can be difficult, said MSgt. George P.
Davlis, superintendent of the 22nd Space Operations Squadron. Operators
dont see the results of what they do, Pavlis said.
Airmen in the space field often get more information about combat
effects from CNN than they do from official sources.
Here Are the Results
Consequently, Schriever began hosting warfighter talks
for its space operators. The base brings in the end users to speak
about what theyve done in combat and what role space capabilities
have played in the mission. McLaughlin said speakers who came to
Colorado to tie it to reality have included an Apache
helicopter pilot and an Army Special Forces soldier who fought the
Taliban in Afghanistan.
Operators have also become more tactical in their approach to their
jobs.
McLaughlin said that, throughout OIF, GPS accuracy was routinely
better than 10 feet because of the actions taken by space operators.
Typically, the GPS constellation is uploaded with fresh navigation
data once a day, he explained. But for OIF, the data were uploaded
each time a satellite was about to go over the combat theater.
Officials also laud the space communitys creativity in devising
new ways to meet warfighter requirements. The infrared DSP satellites,
for example, were originally designed to detect the hot plumes of
launched Soviet ICBMs, but DSP has also been used to monitor tactical
missile launches since the 1991 Gulf War.
Creative thinking has transformed the systems on board [the
DSP satellites] for tactical coverage, said Lt. Col. Scott
Gilson, director of the AFSPC Commanders Action Group. A fact
sheet notes that upgrades enable the 1970s-vintage DSP spacecraft
to provide accurate, reliable data in the face of tougher
requirements such as greater numbers of targets, smaller targets,
and advanced countermeasures.
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| For Operation Iraqi Freedom,
the 379th Expeditionary Communications Squadron set up these
satellite dishes. Gen. Lance Lord, commander of Air Force Space
Command, says the war to control space has already begun. (USAF
photo by SSgt. Suzanne M. Jenkins) |
Space Command is now trying to institutionalize the warrior mentality
through professional development. The Space Commission, led by Defense
Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld before he returned to the Pentagon,
was critical of DODs space community in its 2001 final report.
The commission found the US military had a weak space culture that
lacked focus, and that not enough personnel had experience with
both space operations and acquisition.
Space Command is addressing these concerns by building a new community
of space developers and operators with focused experience.
The community has intermittently been called the space cadre,
a term that officials say will probably not stick. Cadre
implies a temporary or initial group, and officials are adamant
that a space corps or space service, separate from the Air Force,
is not necessary at this time.
This community will consist primarily of space scientists, acquisition
officials, and operators who will follow a tailored career path
to include courses on how space fits into warfare.
Hutto, AFSPCs force development chief, said improvements
over traditional space career paths include an operational exchange
program that will move officials between operational and acquisition
assignments, giving them a broad understanding of the entire commands
mission.
The increasing space presence in operations centers and at unified
commands also pays dividends, officials say, as it teaches space
operators valuable tactical lessons that are useful when brought
back to traditional space assignments. The payoff, already large,
is sure to grow in the years just ahead.
Copyright Air Force Association. All rights reserved.
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