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Mission capable rates for USAFE
aircraft are running higher than for Stateside
units. However, the Air Force still doesn't have
enough spares to guarantee the flexibility it
wants. Here, A1C Kenneth Randall checks over
an F-15E, based at RAF Lakenheath, UK, but deployed
to Aviano AB, Italy. (USAF photo by TSgt. James
D. Green)
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Gen. Gregory S. Martin, head of US Air Forces in Europe,
says his command today falls far short of the level
of precision guided munitions it would need to be able
to conduct another Major Theater War such as Operation
Allied Force. Restocking the bins that were depleted
by that 1999 air campaign over the Balkans could well
take up to a decade, he added.
Precision guided and standoff weapons have become
the "preferred" munitions for conducting
aerial attacks, but only one-quarter to one-third of
the required number actually is on hand, according
to the USAFE commander.
Martin delivered his views in a September interview
with Air Force Magazine and in extended remarks to
the Defense Writers Group in Washington, D.C.
USAFE is, "in the precision weapons area, [at]
about 25 percent of the need we would have in a Major
Theater War in Europe," Martin reported. Funds
in the pipeline would, within a few years, raise that
level to "50 to 60 percent" of requirements,
with the remainder to be funded in the out-years.
"That's a general view of where I would say our
precision ordnance is now," Martin added.
He also discussed readiness issues confronting USAFE,
technology efforts under way by allies, the nature
of NATO war planning in the post-Cold War era, the
availability of training ranges, and his perceptions
of what NATO allies think about continued US military
presence in Europe.
The shortfall in precision guided munitions stems
from two main factors. First, only PGMs were used in
the early phases of the Balkans conflict, when pinpoint
accuracy was considered critical. Stocks-which were
not at full levels to begin with-were drawn down rapidly.
Second, continued success of precision weapons in conflicts
throughout the last decade has caused USAFE to rethink
the question of how many of the smart munitions it
needs to fight a war. It wants more.
The Joint Direct Attack Munition, for example, was
still technically completing its test phase when it
was called on for the Balkans conflict. The satellite-guided
weapon consistently performed better than specification,
typically hitting within a few feet of its intended
impact point in all weather, and strike planners clamored
for as many JDAM missions as they could get. Halfway
through the 78-day conflict, JDAMs had to be rationed
for critical targets requiring the munition's unique
capabilities.
Robbing Peter ...
USAFE "may actually have enough to prosecute
three months' worth of war" if it tapped rounds
slated for test and training as well as those held
in reserve for another conflict close on the heels
of the first, Martin noted. These other rounds would
be pressed into operational service. However, when
they were gone, "then there wouldn't be [any]
... left over."
USAFE would have to "ask some of the other theaters
to provide weapons if we're in a Major Theater War," Martin
admitted.
The calculus of how many weapons are needed is conducted
under a process called the Non-Nuclear Consumables
Analysis, he explained. The NNCA is "a method
by which we determine what the right numbers of each
type of weapon are and ultimately where they should
be distributed," he told the DWG, "but those
numbers change based on our experience."
The high degree of success achieved by PGMs, coupled
with an increasing intolerance for stray weapons of
any kind, means greater and greater reliance on them,
explained Martin.
"Before, we used [precision guided munitions]
for specialized targets" and used general-purpose
bombs-of which "we have plenty"--for the
bulk of airstrikes, said Martin. "What we're finding
now is the kinds of targets we want to go after now
require more precision."
"The numbers of weapons that we want-we haven't
achieved those inventories yet," Martin said.
Procurement rates have been increased, but the total
number desired may take "five to 10 years to ultimately
procure."
One key program is to upgrade the many laser-guided
bombs in the inventory with Global Positioning System
capability. This improvement will allow a precision
strike mission to go forward even if the target area
is obscured by smoke or bad weather, thus improving
the speed and efficiency of an air campaign.
Martin also eagerly anticipates receiving the new
Joint Standoff Weapon. This stealthy glide bomb will
be able to carry the BLU-108 sensor fuzed weapon, which
can target many ground vehicles at once, and "will
become very important," said the USAFE chief. "They
will begin to help us with the mobile target business."
The BLU-108, he explained, lays down "a pattern
of ordnance that will destroy moving targets." The
JSOW is in production but has not yet entered the inventory
in significant numbers.
A key lesson of Allied Force was that NATO allies
needed to more aggressively pursue the acquisition
of precision weapons for their inventories, and Martin
said that is happening-slowly.

The Balkans operation highlighted
the need to add even more precision to US and
NATO strike capabilities. The Joint Standoff
Weapon here will add stealth and range to precision
attacks, and USAFE units will likely get them
first. (USAF photo by TSgt. Cary Humphries)
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"With respect to filling up their stores, ...
we're seeing that they are spending a certain amount
of resources to try and replenish, particularly, those
precision weapons," he said.
However, he added, "It's going to take years-several
years. And they're working very hard to make the most
prudent decisions that will have the most bang for
the buck, because they have fewer bucks."
"White Paper" Exercise
After the Balkans war, Martin noted, the UK raised
its defense budget by about $3 billion, but "that
doesn't appear to have been the case in many of the
other NATO countries."
Martin contended that the allies over the last two
years have gone through a "white paper" process-that
is, an analysis of defense forces and requirements.
"Most of those reports ... tend to talk about
reduced size and force structure," he noted.
Shortfalls in allied air forces included precision
weapons, command-and-control systems, and secure communications.
Martin said, "They will also tell you that they
are short in the area of tankers and lift and they
are not able to pursue some of the actions they'd like
to pursue without using American lift and tankers.
Those are the areas that I think they've felt a little
behind in." He added that "I think they are
pursuing many of those areas but not quite as rapidly
as we are."
With the exception of the UK, he continued, "I
think almost all of the [NATO partners] have either
reduced their defense budget or have flat lined it,
and there are no indications that they are willing
to turn that around and spend more money on some of
these programs" that need attention. And, observed
Martin, "They'd rather not just 'buy American.'
They have an industry ... that must be sustained."
However, he pointed out that most of the allies are
keeping up with modernization of systems, noting that
the F-16 partner countries had recently installed the
midlife update, which blends the maneuverability of
an F-16 Block 15 fighter with the displays and avionics
of a Block 50.
"Those guys are good," Martin said of the
Allied forces equipped with these systems. "When
it comes to training and proficiency ... there is absolutely
no question" about the commitment of NATO allies. "They've
got good systems [and] they are proud of them. ...
They are ... very professional."
Mission Capable Rates Up
The munitions situation aside, Martin said USAFE is
in good shape, in terms of readiness. Mission capable
rates of USAFE aircraft are running higher than that
for Stateside bases, though he admitted that USAFE
gets "a little higher priority in terms of the
effort for spares and parts," so that the Europeanbased
units get a "full complement."
The mission capable rate for USAFE aircraft is "very
close in many of our areas" to the Air Force-wide
standards. The standard for fighters is 80 to 85 percent.
Maintaining such a rate means that, within a day or
so, given a surge effort, "somewhere between 90
and 95 percent" of aircraft can be brought to
bear in a conflict. Dropping too far below the 80 percent
level "slows your reaction time," Martin
asserted. The 80 percent level is "about right" in
that it doesn't overstress the workforce, he added.
Air Force-wide, Martin said, fighters have a mission
capable rate of 75 to 80 percent. The C-5 fleet is
about 60 to 65 percent mission capable, well under
the standard of 70 to 75 percent. The C-130 force is
at 75 to 80 percent in overseas locations, lower in
the States. The C-17s are "significantly higher;
they're doing fine."
The decline in spares that characterized most of the
1990s has been "arrested," Martin said.
"We have not turned the corner and filled up
the spares to the point where we have the flexibility
that we want," he cautioned. "Some units
are in pretty good shape. Others don't quite have enough
to give them the confidence that they can pursue a
major activity for a length of time ... without having
to pull from other units."
Martin said the Air Force leadership simply failed
to foresee the onset of the spare parts problems that
plagued USAF in the mid-1990s. He was frank to acknowledge
that he was a part of that leadership. He explained
that the Air Force in the post-Cold War years began
to draw down from 36 wings to 20 wings, which meant "we
had lots of parts left over." The remaining force
was able to live off of these parts for quite a while,
and the Air Force did not have to put much money into
operations and maintenance accounts. At the same time,
additional people were available to fix airplanes.
"While opstempo was going up, we had excess people,
we had excess parts, and these were very capable people
that disguised the fact that we were running out of
those parts," Martin explained. "It wasn't
until 1995 that we bottomed out and began to see the
parts were gone, the people [were] gone, the opstempo
was up, and we [were] in pretty big trouble."
Even so, it was hard justifying a strong reinvestment
in spares because diligent ground crews continued to
work around shortages and turn in better mission capable
rates on their aircraft. Martin noted that, without "unimpeachable
data" to point to, it was difficult to raise alarm
about the spares shortages.
"There is a reluctance to say the sky is falling,
until you have really got the facts there to establish
it," he said. "We are taken to task every
time we make an exaggerated statement."
Recovery funding got "turned on" in about
1996, but there is generally a two-year lag time between
funding for spares and the time they begin showing
up in parts bins. In 1998, spares began arriving, but
then operations began to heat up.
In Allied Force, "we flew a year's flying hours
in two-and-a-half months," Martin said, putting
a major dent in the progress toward recovering readiness.
Projections for readiness and mission capable rates
looked rosy in 1998, but the Balkans conflict and the
ongoing strikes against Iraq have blunted the healing
power of the added funds.

Martin believes the US military
is welcome in Europe, but issues such as availability
of ranges continue to challenge the relationship.
These jets from the 52nd Fighter Wing at Spangdahlem
AB, Germany, go far afield for low-level work.
(USAF photo by MSgt. Blake R. Borsic)
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Diversion of Funds
"We basically got the system turned on," said
Martin. "It started responding and then we used
up that surge for the war. ... Now, we are not ahead
of the game. We have arrested the decline. ... We are
not filling up those spares and war reserve materiel
stocks as quickly as I think the 1998 projection would
have led you to believe."
He said that "we are probably a year behind in
our readiness recovery" due to combat action in
Yugoslavia and Iraq.
Readiness, however, is more than just spare parts
and munitions. Martin added that his people, while
highly capable and proficient at what they do, are
suffering from two problems: a shortage of mid-level
supervisors and neglect of USAFE installations throughout
the 1990s.
The supervisory ranks are "thinner than we'd
like," and the problem is being worked by accelerating
the training and promotion of some junior people as
well as by putting funds into retention programs.
When the armed forces began to be drawn down in the
early 1990s, very little money was applied to shoring
up European facilities, because no one at that point
knew which ones would be closed, Martin explained.
As defense budgets grew tight, plus-ups in the budget
added by Congress went mainly to home districts, not
to overseas locations.
Now, though, he says members of Congress who have
seen the problem in firsthand visits are giving support
to halting the decay of USAFE bases.
"We've gotten great support from both the Administration
and Congress in our family housing program, and in
the military construction, we are beginning to turn
the corners," Martin asserted. The troops feel
they are being noticed again, he said.
"The people over there, now, they have a pretty
good attitude about where we are going," said
Martin. "People are seeing that the country is
behind them, and it is making a difference." Martin
pointed to gains in retirement and pay, medical coverage,
facilities refurbishment "and now, very importantly,
education" as strong motivators helping with retention.
He noted that USAFE enjoys better retention rates
than other commands. One reason is that some airmen
are on controlled tours of duty and therefore cannot
retire out of USAFE. Also, the hot job market that
attracts many is an ocean away in the US. Finally,
USAFE people get great satisfaction from being on the
front lines, performing a mission "where they
feel they are making a difference," said Martin.

Germany-based C-130s are among
the busiest in the Air Force, stitching the far-flung
USAFE command together with hauls of everything
from engines to mail. The C-130s also participate
in allied paradrop missions, such as this one.
(USAF photo by SrA. Delia Castillo)
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Today's Scenarios
Martin said NATO and USAFE no longer plan for war
with Russia as such. Today's war plans have "nowhere
near the elegance of the set piece" plans that
had been drawn up for a possible world war in Europe
against the forces of the Warsaw Pact.
"We are still in a period ... of definition and
transformation," Martin said, from a posture of
pure defense of NATO territory to one of "out
of area" operations in places such as the Balkans.
NATO still does some planning for generic scenarios
against a possible peer competitor "that may look
a lot like ... Russia or China," but "it's
fairly dangerous to announce that you have decided
to do some deliberative planning against a specific
country [with whom] ... you're now fostering a relationship."
Instead, NATO conducts "an appropriate series
of exercises" that works the command-and-control
sinews of the alliance and refines tactics, techniques,
and procedures while not directing it all against any
particular threat.
He reported recently returning from NATO Air Meet
2000, in which Poland played a large air role for the
first time.
There are scenarios for out-of-area action, Martin
acknowledged, and there has been "what if" consideration
given to how NATO would react to conflict between Serbia
and Montenegro, but Martin emphasized that NATO's "focus
is not pre-emption."
In the Balkans, if there was some sort of a "flare-up" NATO
has contingency plans for "what kind of air commitment
that the NATO Alliance should provide and have on call
or in theater."
Martin believes the new members of NATO that are strapped
for cash and need new systems to better integrate with
the allies would do well to team up and buy systems
together.
"Cooperative development is an area of opportunity
that industry needs to grab onto and make it work," said
Martin. "That gives us the best opportunity for
interoperability, at the most reasonable cost for everyone."
Buy Together?
He said the places where the alliance would benefit
from coordination in buying single systems together
are those where no one country has a solution yet to
a technological military problem. However, the new
members could save significant amounts in support and
operating costs if they would buy something off-the-shelf.
"There are six nations right now that are looking
at a supersonic interim fighter" and are considering
the Swedish Gripen, the US F-16 and F/A-18, and the
French Mirage 2000.
"What if they all came together and chose one,
and industry supported that? Then, all of a sudden,
their ... costs go down [in] ... software integration,
their weapons certification, their training, their
depot, their ... sustainment."
Martin held out the NATO Airborne Warning and Control
System and the F-16 aircraft multinational efforts
as good examples of how NATO can coordinate on systems,
but he added, "I've got to be real careful when
I use those examples, because it makes it look like
I'm saying, 'Buy American.' " In fact, he said,
he's more interested in interoperable, capable systems
than that they be of any particular type.
Martin will be launching a series of symposia, including
alliance members and "industry from all over the
aerospace world," to "see if we can get some
of these juices flowing for the potential of coalition."
He also noted that the former Warsaw Pact nations
may have a harder time doing cooperative projects because
of their experience in the Cold War.
"NATO is a significantly different animal than
the Warsaw Pact," he said. Whereas NATO has evolved
with an elaborate--and sometimes tortuous--set of multilateral
and bilateral arrangements between member countries,
the Warsaw Pact members typically worked only with
Moscow.
"The Soviets seemed to work on more of a bilateral
basis with each of the countries, and [they] did not
necessarily coordinate, communicate, and cooperate
among themselves," Martin observed.
To get the new member countries to cooperate, there
will have to be constant confidence-building measures
and "a constant drumbeat and a demonstration and
a series of successes," Martin said.
Mobile targets and advanced, "double digit" surface-to-air
missiles continue to be the biggest operational challenge
to USAFE, Martin said. For four or five years, he said,
the Air Force has been working on technologies for
hitting mobile targets-like Scud launchers and anti-aircraft
missiles. The same techniques for finding Scuds apply
to hunting mobile SAMs. He noted, "You pattern
them, you look for a footprint, you look for ... their
maneuvers, movements, their signals, and you cue the
systems."
Part and parcel of the mobile targets challenge is
Martin's biggest headache: trying to lash together
the various sensors, command-and-control systems, surveillance
and reconnaissance assets within the command to form
an integrated picture of the battlespace.
Martin noted that his predecessor, Gen. John P. Jumper,
now commander of Air Combat Command, first voiced this
problem and has provided money in an effort to solve
it. This fall's Joint Expeditionary Force Experiment
was focused on trying to resolve the issue. It highlighted
the fact that the air operations center is becoming
a weapon system in its own right.
However, said Martin, "you've got to be careful
that you don't turn your whole Air Force upside down
for that one objective, because if you do, you'll miss
some other very important areas."
In a broader sense, Martin is grappling with disparate
intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance systems
throughout NATO. The various systems are "stovepiped," he
said.
"It is not integrated, fused, and displayed in
a holistic way." He said work is proceeding on
a NATO airborne command-and-control system "which
will ultimately be in all their air operations centers
and be connected to our battle management platforms." This,
he said, is an example of the alliance "trying
to come to a common solution" on a hardware issue
where no one country has solved the problem, yet.
The Way, Not the Will
Martin expressed his concern with the notion that
airstrikes can be targeted against an enemy's "will" to
conduct war. Rather, he believes the emphasis should
be on depriving the enemy of the ability to make war-and
leave it up to him as to whether he wants to capitulate.
"I'm going after his capability to prosecute
war," said Martin. "He'll make up his mind
later if he's going to prosecute the war or not. I'm
not going to guess about whether this will affect his
will."
Targets that matter most, Martin said, are communications,
command-and-control nodes, ground forces, ammunition
storage, and manufacturing areas-and industry, if it
is critical to an enemy's ability to operate as a nation
and produce war materiel.
For Martin, a serious emerging problem concerns finding
good ranges for pilot training. Very little flying
training is done in Germany anymore. Ever since the
Cavalese accident (in which a Marine EA-6B aircraft
sliced through the cable of a mountain tramcar, killing
20 Europeans), range training in Italy has become a "sensitive" subject,
Martin said.
He said USAFE pilots get range training in Morocco,
Poland, Turkey, and the UK and lately have been getting
good training at the Kuchyna range near Malacky airfield
in Slovakia.
Denmark has opened up to more training opportunities
and hosted this year's NATO Air Meet 2000, which Martin
likened to a Red Flag exercise. Norway will host the
event next year.
USAFE provides the forces behind Northern Watch, the
no-fly zone operation over northern Iraq. As a result,
USAFE watches Iraq very closely, said Martin, but "we
haven't seen changes in movements that are things we
haven't seen before."
Operations Northern and Southern Watch have made frequent
strikes against provocative systems that endanger aircraft
patrolling the no-fly zone, Martin said.
"I think we have been very effective at reducing
significant numbers of ... his missile systems," he
added. However, Saddam Hussein is, overall, "probably
not significantly different [in capability] than where
he's been."
Europeans are more receptive to having Americans garrisoned
in their nations than they were in the 1970s, Martin
said.
At that time, "we had many more Americans over
there than we do today. We had just come out of the
Vietnam War, and there were nations there that did
not support what we were doing" in Southeast Asia.
"It's different today," he asserted. Efforts
at producing an outside-NATO European Security and
Defense Identity so far have not borne fruit. The Europeans
he encounters say, " 'We need you,' and 'We want
Americans here.' " They never then say, " 'And
we want them to behave,' ... but that's implied."
The Europeans also say they want Americans "to
be agreeable to [their] way of doing things," Martin
asserted.
"Americans have a tendency to be very aggressive
in terms of leadership positions. But in the end, it's
my impression that most of the nations I've dealt with
are glad we're there, want us to be good guests, believe
that we enhance security, but they don't want us to
try to control them."

Deployed for range training in
Slovakia, SrA. Esther Solhiem keeps the "book" on
the 510th FS, Avianobased F-16 for which
she's a crew chief. The mission markings along
the airplane attest to its combat service over
Yugoslavia. (USAF photo by SSgt. Mitch Fuqua) |
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