Congress
Passes Iraq Resolution
Lawmakers in both the House and Senate voted overwhelmingly to
grant President Bush the authority to use force against Iraq, as
he deems necessary, and destroy Iraq's nuclear, chemical, and biological
weapons.
The vote in the Senate, taken Oct. 10, was 77 to 23. The day before,
the House voted 296 to 133 in favor of the measure.
A joint resolution, titled "Authorization for the Use of Military
Force Against Iraq," listed Saddam Hussein's continued violations
of United Nation's sanctions since their inception following the
liberation of Kuwait from Iraqi forces in 1991. The resolution continued,
"The President is authorized to use the armed forces of the
United States as he determines to be necessary and appropriate in
order to defend the national security of the United States against
the continuing threat posed by Iraq."
After the House vote, President Bush said, "The days of Iraq
acting as an outlaw state are coming to an end."
Iraq Continues Strikes
Calling the number "remarkable," a Joint Staff spokesman
said Iraqi forces, since Sept. 16, had fired 122 times on coalition
aircraft enforcing UN sanctions.
"Of those 122 firings, 33 were against aircraft flying in
Operation Northern Watch, and 89 were against Operation Southern
Watch coalition aircraft," Rear Adm. David Gove told reporters
Oct. 11.
Sept. 16 was the day Saddam Hussein sent a letter to the UN promising
to allow weapons inspectors back into Iraq "without conditions."
Gove noted the Iraqi attacks on coalition aircraft over the past
three years have been relatively consistent, except "there's
been a remarkable number since Sept. 16 in terms of near continuous
engagements."
"Within hours of the arrival of [Saddam's] letter, Iraq was
again firing at US and coalition aircraft," Defense Secretary
Donald H. Rumsfeld said Sept. 30. Those aircraft, he said, in addition
to patrolling the northern and southern no-fly zones, "conduct
aerial surveillance to help determine compliance with ... bans [on]
nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons."
The Pentagon reported that Iraq started firing on coalition aircraft
in 1992. During the past three years, Iraqi forces have targeted
coalition aircraft with anti-aircraft artillery more than 1,000
times, launched 600 AAA rockets, and fired nearly 60 surface-to-air
missiles.
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USAF
Awards Eight Bronze Star Medals
The Air Force has awarded Bronze
Star Medals over the past few months to a number of airmen
for their actions during Operation Enduring Freedom. The medal
recognizes valor or meritorious service.
The service recognized two airmen
from the 66th Rescue Squadron at Nellis AFB, Nev. They were
Lt. Col. Lee dePalo and Maj. Lee Harvis. They each received
the Bronze Star Medals for their leadership of rescue operations
while deployed to Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Uzbekistan.
CMSgt. David Whitaker of the
99th Supply Squadron at Nellis received a Bronze Star. He
was stationed in Bahrain, where he organized a team of 37
fuels specialists from 18 bases to maintain fuel support for
aircraft flying OEF missions.
Air National Guard Lt. Col.
Sandra Duiker, a medical crew director with the 167th Aeromedical
Evacuation Squadron at Martinsburg, W.Va., received a Bronze
Star for ensuring the rapid evacuation of combat casualties.
She commanded all US aeromedical personnel in Oman, Turkey,
and Uzbekistan.
The Air Force awarded a Bronze
Star to Lt. Col. Kimberly Cochran from Tinker AFB, Okla.,
for her leadership of an E-3 AWACS battle management aircraft
squadron that flew 284 missions over Afghanistan.
TSgt. John Travis, noncommissioned
officer in charge of 437th Fuels Management Flight Support
at Charleston AFB, S.C., received the medal for his actions
on March 5 at Gardez airfield in Afghanistan. He helped get
a USAF MC-130E out of the mud where it had sunk after landing
on an abandoned runway. The airfield came under enemy attack
as Travis was organizing Afghan helpers, despite the language
barrier, to use a truck to drag a concrete slab out of the
aircraft's path. The team finished digging and pulling the
aircraft out as the enemy mortars grew closer.
A USAF air traffic controller
from Hickam AFB, Hawaii, MSgt. Jeffrey Haynes, received a
Bronze Star for managing the combat airspace cell in Uzbekistan
that helped maintain the flow of coalition aircraft and personnel
from there into Afghanistan. He also deployed to locations
within Afghanistan, where he came under fire, to assist air
control operations.
The Air Force awarded Lt. Col.
Kevin Wooton, 25th Information Operations Squadron commander
at Hurlburt Field, Fla., a Bronze Star for leading an intelligence
team, operating from two locations, that provided critical
intelligence for a number of combat missions. |
Iraq Attacks A-10 Dropping Leaflets
On Oct. 2, Iraqi forces fired AAA and SAMs at an Air Force A-10
dropping warning leaflets in the southern no-fly zone, according
to DOD officials. The leaflets advised Iraqi air defense operators
not to fire on coalition aircraft or risk being targeted themselves.
It marked the first leaflet drop since last year.
The leaflets, in Arabic, say: "The destruction experienced
by your colleagues in other air defense locations is a response
to your continuing aggression toward planes of the coalition forces.
No tracking or firing on these aircraft will be tolerated. You could
be next."
On Oct. 3, in retaliation for the Oct. 2 attack, coalition forces
struck an Iraqi air defense center about 160 miles southeast of
Baghdad.
USAF To Limit Personnel Working in
Other Agencies
Out of 14,000 airmen working outside the Air Force, the service
expects to return some 4,000 to the fold. The plan is to use those
personnel to help relieve the critical workload stress occurring
in some career fields.
"We have an end strength ceiling of approximately 360,000
people, and we have requirements that far exceed that," said
William H. Booth Sr., USAF Manpower and Organization Directorate
senior advisor. "The goal of this process is to reduce the
stress on our people."
The 14,000 USAF personnel fill about 37 percent of the requirements
levied by unified commands and defense agencies, while the service
only makes up some 26 percent of DOD's active duty strength. Air
Force leaders want to reduce the service's share of joint personnel
requirements to just 26 percent--about 10,000 personnel.
The goal will be to use Air Force personnel only where they are
critical, which means each joint entity would not necessarily have
exactly 26 percent of its manpower filled by Air Force personnel.
"There are certain commands, based on mission, that would
require our contributions to probably be higher," said Booth.
The personnel shifts will not happen overnight. "This will
be something we will work in phases over a three-to-four-year period,"
said Booth.
The service is working on an implementation plan with affected
commands and agencies.
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"Some Assets
in Short Supply"
Questioned by Congress about
the adequacy of military forces and equipment to meet the
Pentagon's growing list of commitments, including a potential
war with Iraq, the nation's top military officer said that
while some assets have shortages, the military can carry out
its missions.
"There are some assets
that are in short supply," Air Force Gen. Richard B.
Myers, Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman, told the Senate Armed
Services Committee.
"Intelligence, surveillance,
reconnaissance assets have historically been in short supply,"
he said in mid-September. "We tried to fix this through
our budget requests in recent years, and in '02 we have made
some headway there. You'll see more requests for those types
of assets."
Myers emphasized, "Any
major combat operation will, of course, require us to prioritize
the tasks given to such units." He added, "We have
to prioritize them today. We have to prioritize them in peacetime,
for that matter. ... And, we will have to prioritize them
if we are asked to do something else." |
The "Yes Kind of Force"
The director of the Air National Guard said his force has become
an "always-say-yes kind of force."
Lt. Gen. Daniel James III told reporters that the Air Guard is
utilized more than ever. So much so, he said, "The Secretary
of the Air Force is looking at that very closely."
Service leaders are worried that the high level of activity for
the Guard will have a negative impact on retention and on equipment,
James said. "We've figured out a way to get the job done, and
one of the ways we've figured out to get the job done was to involve
the Guard and Reserve more," he said.
James said the high operations tempo has affected not only pilots
and aircraft maintainers but also firefighters, security forces,
civil engineers, and intelligence analysts. After the Sept. 11 terror
attacks, the peak number of Guard personnel mobilized was about
25,000. Some 16,000 remain on active duty.
The ANG director said Guard members are being asked to complete
a survey to show how many times they deployed in the last year and
whether there was a negative impact on either their family or civilian
work. The goal is to help ANG leaders determine the break point
before the Fiscal 2004 budget is complete.
"We're very concerned about where ... we've gone far enough,"
said James.
USAF Expands Anthrax Program
The Air Force announced Oct. 11 that the service plans to ask more
airmen to take anthrax shots. It will expand the program from Priority
1 personnel to include Priority 2, as well.
Personnel in the Priority 2 category are military members, emergency-essential
DOD civilians, and specified contractors assigned or deployed to
designated higher-threat areas for more than 15 consecutive days.
The higher-threat areas include countries primarily in Southwest
Asia, said Maj. Linda Bonnel with the Air Force Medical Operations
Agency, Bolling AFB, D.C.
Priority 1 personnel, who had already been receiving shots, include
those in designated special mission units.
Bonnel said Priority 2 individuals will be notified when to appear
for immunization.
The Pentagon had initiated a plan in 1998 to vaccinate all military
members. Since then, the program was reduced several times as the
supply became increasingly scarce.
The sole US supplier, Bioport of Lansing, Mich., closed its production
facility for renovations then had trouble regaining Food and Drug
Administration approval. The FDA recertified the Bioport facility
and its manufacturing processes last January.
DOD announced in June that the number of personnel receiving the
vaccinations would begin to increase. Officials said then that the
Pentagon previously had vaccinated about 525,000 of its 2.3 million
military personnel.
|
After Leaving
USAF Out of Anaconda Planning,
Army General Blasts Air Support
The commander of the US Army's
10th Mountain Division failed to bring the Air Force into
planning for Operation Anaconda until the 11th hour and then
complained about lack of effective air support.
Maj. Gen. Franklin L. "Buster"
Hagenbeck, in remarks to Field Artillery Magazine,
grudgingly conceded that the Air Force achieved success in
striking fixed targets in the Afghan operation last March.
However, he groused that USAF jets took too long to mount
attacks on "fleeting" targets.
Hagenbeck went on to add this
claim: What success the Air Force managed to achieve stemmed
from the work of Army troops who pinned down al Qaeda fighters
with mortars and small-arms fire.
Field Artillery,
published at Ft. Sill, Okla., bills itself as the "professional
bulletin for Redlegs." Redleg is a nickname for artillerymen.
Hagenbeck's comments stirred
a controversy after they were repeated and amplified in a
Sept. 30 Army Times article.
Hagenbeck planned and commanded
the 17-day operation to destroy al Qaeda forces hiding in
the caves of Afghanistan's Shah-e-Kot Valley. He emphasized
the role of ground troops in the action, calling it a success.
It was a vindication of the role of "boots on the ground,"
Hagenbeck suggested. In his opinion, airpower played a marginal
role.
The remarks didn't sit well
with Gen. John P. Jumper, the Air Force Chief of Staff. Upon
hearing them, Jumper contacted his Army colleagues and was
told that Hagenbeck's comments don't represent "the consensus
of the leadership of the United States Army," Jumper
told Inside the Pentagon.
Jumper went on, "I'm in
charge of making sure that these sorts of things are not the
opinion of our Army people on the ground that we serve. It's
our job to make sure that this sort of thing doesn't happen."
Jumper announced that, in response
to Hagenbeck's statements, he had launched a high-level review
of the Air Force performance in Anaconda.
"If people really believe
this, I want to talk to them," Jumper told Inside
the Pentagon.
Privately, however, the Air
Force leader was furious about the criticism, mainly because
the Army commander had not bothered to coordinate Anaconda
with the Air Force or the joint air component of US Central
Command. Though Anaconda had been in the works for weeks,
the Air Force got its first notice just 24 hours before the
start of the operation. (See "The Airpower of Anaconda,"
by Rebecca Grant, September, p. 60.)
Hagenbeck, who commanded Coalition
Joint Task Force Mountain in Afghanistan during Anaconda,
had many complaints about USAF.
He thought it took too long
to program satellite-guided bombs used against fleeting targets.
"It took anywhere from 26 minutes to hours (on occasion)
for the precision munitions to hit the targets," he said.
"That's OK if you're not being shot at or the targets
aren't fleeting."
The enemy could foil high-tech
airborne Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance simply
by running under cover or hiding under a blanket, Hagenbeck
said. He claimed airborne ISR assets had trouble finding cave
complexes, and it took "boots on the ground" to
do the job.
However, he allowed that he
had specifically not wanted a bombing effort prior to ground
operations. "Air campaigns are most effective against
'fixed' targets," he explained.
Success stemmed mostly from
Army actions, he suggested.
"We got a number of kills
with close air support," said Hagenbeck, "primarily
because our mortars and machine guns kept the al Qaeda from
getting up and running back into the caves."
The Air Force effort did have
some value, according to Hagenbeck. A-10 fighters by day and
AC-130 gunships by night "were great," he said.
USAF officials noted Hagenbeck
could have avoided some problems by letting the Air Force
know he was about to go into action. The Army, making its
own calculations, underestimated how long it would take to
bring in squadrons based 1,600 miles away.
Hagenbeck gave the Air Force
one day's notice that he would need massive C-130 transport
assistance to deploy and sustain his forces. He got it, despite
the lack of forewarning.
Hagenbeck said organic fire
support was "indispensable" to Anaconda's success.
(Airpower is "inorganic" support.) However, the
general acknowledged he did not bring in big 105 mm howitzers
because doing so would be "very difficult and dangerous."
Hagenbeck seemed to be saying
that, while the air support wasn't all that good, he wanted
more of it. He complained that USAF won't drop a precision
guided munition unless the strike has been called in by an
Air Force controller. The Army needs its own troops to be
qualified to do the controller job, he said.
The general also took a swing
at those who point out the large number of Air Force support
sorties.
"A ground force commander
does not care about the number of sorties being flown or the
number and types of bombs being dropped and their tonnage,"
said Hagenbeck. "Those statistics mean nothing to ground
forces in combat."
By contrast, the Army's AH-64
attack helicopter won high Hagenbeck praise--sort of. "The
most effective close air support asset we had was the Apache,
hands down," Hagenbeck said. "The Apaches were extraordinary.
They were lethal and survivable." Then, he added, "We
had six in the fight, with two left flying at the end of the
first day. They were so full of holes. ... I don't know how
they flew."
Jumper was not pleased to learn
of the criticism via the medium of a press interview. "I'm
a little surprised it comes out in the newspaper before it
comes to me," he told Inside the Pentagon reporter
Elaine Grossman.
Jumper went on to say that he
had spoken to troops who actually had fought in Anaconda.
"I don't think you'll get any of them to bad-mouth any
of those great Navy or Air Force aviators that came in there
and saved the day," said the Chief.
The timing of the interview
may have been significant. Sean Naylor, author of the Army
Times report, noted: "The comments come at a time
when Army leaders are fighting a rear-guard action in Washington
against what they see as the Defense Department's trend toward
overreliance on precision guided munitions in shaping the
future US military."
-Adam J. Hebert
|
USAF Trims Security Forces Optempo
The Air Force has reduced the number of security forces personnel
it needs to deploy by about 10 percent, according to an Oct. 10
news release. The move will ease the workload on one of the service's
most stressed career fields.
It enables some 200 airmen to return to their home station earlier
than expected. Most of those are Air National Guard and Air Force
Reserve Command personnel.
A manpower assessment also concluded the service could reduce another
300 security forces positions from future deployments. The reductions
are the result primarily of technological advances and the findings
of an operations review, said Lt. Col. Troy Robinett, US Central
Command Air Forces chief of force protection operations.
Peacekeeper Deactivation Begins
On Oct. 3, Air Force missile maintainers pulled a Peacekeeper ICBM
from its launch facility in Wyoming, starting a three-year process
during which the service will dismantle all 50 of its Peacekeeper
ballistic missiles.
"It's a momentous point in history," said Air Force Secretary
James G. Roche at the deactivation ceremony. "It's a reflection
of how the world has changed and how we are adapting to a new era."
Last May 24, President Bush and Russian President Vladimir Putin
signed the Treaty of Moscow, agreeing to reduce their respective
nuclear arsenals. Each country will go down to between 1,700 and
2,200 warheads by Dec. 13, 2012.
The 90th Missile Wing, at F.E. Warren AFB, Wyo., was the only unit
to operate USAF's largest and newest ICBM. The Peacekeeper, capable
of delivering up to 10 independently targetable warheads, reached
initial operational capability in December 1986.
"This is the most accurate ballistic missile that was ever
designed and fielded," said Roche. "And it did its job."
ANG Wants JSF Earlier Than Planned
The Air National Guard should field the Joint Strike Fighter, or
F-35, at the same time as the active duty Air Force, according to
its director, Lt. Gen. Daniel James III. The current plan is to
equip the active force first.
The Air Force plans to purchase more than 1,700 of the new fighters
as replacements for F-16s. The F-35 is slated for initial delivery
in 2008.
James told reporters in late September that the plan needs to be
changed to ensure the Guard can handle its operational load.
He noted that the tradition of moving, or cascading, older equipment
from the active force to the Guard is under review because of the
extraordinary stress placed on ANG aircraft by current operations
in the war on terror.
"Cascading alone is not the answer," he said. "If
we're really going to be full partners in transformation, just as
we're full partners in the warfight, we need to have modernized
weapons systems."
|
USAF
Forecasts Changes in AEFs
The Air Force said it plans
to make changes in its Aerospace Expeditionary Force beginning
with Cycle 4 in June 2003. Service officials, in a Sept. 23
news release, outlined three major changes:
The personnel and equipment
from the service's two on-call wings will be distributed among
the 10 AEFs.
The draw of Expeditionary Combat
Support assets from throughout USAF will be equalized.
Some Air National Guard and
Air Force Reserve Command AEF contributions will be realigned.
A senior Air Force official
said the changes would enable the service to handle both steady-state
requirements and surge support for contingencies.
"The thing that everyone
needs to understand is [the AEF construct] has worked pretty
well," said Maj. Gen. Timothy A. Peppe, special assistant
to the Chief of Staff for air and space expeditionary forces.
However, he added, "We know there are issues out there,
and leadership is committed to fixing those issues."
One of those issues is that,
while the AEF assumes personnel will have three-month deployments
in a 15-month window, about 15 percent of those deployed have
faced longer tours, especially since the Sept. 11 terror attacks.
Some of those on longer tours have been reservists.
The service realized it needed
to fold all combat assets into the normal AEF rotation and
get all deployable personnel positions into its AEF library,
now numbering more than 175,000. The goal is 250,000 out of
nearly 360,000.
The on-call wings, which were
reserved for pop-up operations, are the 4th Fighter Wing at
Seymour Johnson AFB, S.C., and the 366th Wing at Mountain
Home AFB, Idaho. Each will have its elements aligned within
the 10 AEFs, and each will be a lead combat wing. Peppe said
their change in status will not require people or equipment
to move from their current bases.
The leveling process for Expeditionary
Combat Support assets, said Peppe, will make some airmen vulnerable
to deployment sooner than they expected, while others will
see extended cycles.
"Instead of having 15 months
between cycles, they will have 12," he said. "Some
are going to move backward, having 18 months vs. 15 months,
because the AEF Center is trying to match ECS assets, where
possible, to where the iron is moved."
The third major change will
move some reserve assets across AEFs to stablize the workload
for the Guard and Reserve.
"If you look at how they're
postured right now, you'll see that they're heavily weighted
in AEFs 7, 8, 9, and 10," said Peppe. The goal is to
provide "a more ideal mix throughout the AEF cycle."
He said the service will realign
ANG fighter aircraft by block type and geography.
"The bottom line is, we're
making changes to maximize capability available across the
board," said Peppe. "We want to smooth-flow capabilities
across the AEFs and minimize the hills and valleys."
|
Two New Commands Stand Up
DOD officially launched its newest unified command and reinvented
an older one on Oct. 1. The US Northern Command was activated, while
US Space Command and US Strategic Command were disestablished, only
to be reborn as the new US Strategic Command.
The activation of Northern Command, headquartered at Colorado Springs,
Colo., was termed "historic," by Deputy Defense Secretary
Paul D. Wolfowitz at the activation ceremony. It is the first unified
command with responsibility for defense of the US homeland. (See
"Aerospace World: Pentagon Establishes New Combatant Command,"
June 2002, p. 13.)
Officials stood down US Space Command at Peterson Air Force Base
in Colorado Springs and US Strategic Command at Offutt AFB, Nebraska,
followed by activation of the new US Strategic Command at Offutt
by Air Force Gen. Richard B. Myers, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff.
"This new command is going to have all the responsibilities
of its predecessors but an entirely new mission focus, greatly expanded
forces, and you might even say several infinite areas of responsibility,"
said Myers.
The command will retain primary responsibility for nuclear forces,
while at the same time define, plan, develop, and conduct space
operations, Myers said. "We're even looking at new global missions,
... including taking the lead for missile defense worldwide,"
he added.
|
Army Plans
To Drop Some Guard Tank Units
To Make Way for Light Infantry
The Army National Guard will
have two new types of organizations--mobile light brigades
and multifunctional divisions--to make it "more deployable,
more mobile, and more flexible," said Army Secretary
Thomas E. White.
These units will be able to
respond rapidly to hot spots at home or abroad, he said at
the National Guard Association of the United States conference
in Long Beach, Calif., in early September.
The Army Guard will have to
reduce its tracked vehicle fleet by one-third--approximately
2,400 vehicles--to create the new light brigades.
Army officials had already briefed
the adjutants general on the plan, dubbed the Army National
Guard Restructuring Initiative. However, it still must pass
muster with Congress.
Work on the plan continues,
so White did not announce which units the Army expects to
convert. He did say that implementation would begin in Fiscal
2008 and the process would be completed by 2012.
Lt. Gen. Roger C. Schultz, Army
National Guard director, believes the changes will prepare
"the Guard for the future and those missions emerging
in the new defense strategy." |
USAFE Gains Two Units
US Air Forces in Europe assumed responsibility for two Air Combat
Command units Oct. 1, as part of the new Unified Command Plan.
USAFE will now oversee the 65th Air Base Wing at Lajes Field, Azores,
and the 85th Group at NAS Keflavik, Iceland.
The missions of the two units will not change, said USAFE officials.
The 65th ABW provides support for intertheater and transient aircraft,
while the 85th Group supports air defense and air rescue missions.
The two new USAFE units will fall under 3rd Air Force, headquartered
at RAF Mildenhall, UK.
USAFE is the air component of US European Command, which received
greatly expanded responsibilities in the new UCP. In addition to
Europe, European Command's area of responsibility now includes most
of Russia and the Caspian Sea.
"The change will increase our military-to-military relations
with Russia and the scope of our cooperation," said Lt. Col.
Colleen Ryan, bases branch chief in USAFE's Directorate of Plans.
Cause of B-1 Crash Still Mystery
The Air Force announced in late September that investigators had
not been able to determine the cause of the Dec. 12, 2001, crash
of a B-1B bomber into the Indian Ocean.
The four-member crew, which ejected safely, was flying a mission
for Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan. (See "Aerospace
World: B-1B Crashes in Indian Ocean," January, p. 8.) The
aircraft was destroyed on impact and sank. It has not been found,
said service officials.
Investigators speculated that aircraft malfunctions might have
affected the reliability of the attitude information and, consequently,
might have made it difficult for the pilots to maintain control.
Navy Bases Subs in Guam
The Navy sent the first of three fast-attack submarines it plans
to base in Guam to the Pacific island last month, according to a
service news release.
The first of the subs to call Guam home is the Los Angeles-class
City of Corpus Christi. The other two are scheduled to arrive
by Fiscal 2004.
The Navy believes the move will help alleviate the critical shortage
it has in attack subs. By homeporting the subs in Guam's central
Pacific location, it expects to increase overall the attack sub
days of operations. However, the Congressional Budget Office does
not think three will be enough to provide sufficient mission days
without having to build additional subs.
According to a CBO study released earlier this year, the Navy must
base more than three subs in Guam to offset its shortage. If it
does that, the service could meet its requirements with a fleet
of 55 subs. (See "Aerospace World: CBO Claims Navy Can Meet
Goals With Fewer Subs," May, p. 30.)
The Navy considers the Guam basing a temporary measure. It would
like to field 68 attack subs by 2015 and 76 by 2025.
The Clock Stops at 34+ for 42nd
The 42nd Airborne Command and Control Squadron at Davis-Monthan
AFB, Ariz., inactivated Sept. 30, after more than 34 years of service.
The unit's mission is now being handled by E-3 Airborne Warning
and Control System aircraft, E-8 Joint STARS surveillance aircraft,
and ground systems, said Lt. Col. Norm Potter, 42nd ACCS commander.
The unit flew EC-130E Airborne Battlefield Command and Control
Center aircraft. The Air Force will distribute those aircraft and
the unit's 300 personnel to other units.
USAF plans to modify four of the aircraft into HC-130s for combat
search and rescue. Two will go to the 41st and 43rd Electronic Combat
Squadrons at Davis-Monthan. One will retire to the base's Aerospace
Maintenance and Regeneration Center.
|
Blair
Publicizes British Dossier on Iraq
British Prime Minister Tony
Blair declared that Saddam Hussein's Weapons of Mass Destruction
program is "active, detailed, and growing."
"The policy of containment
is not working," he said in a statement accompanying
the release of the British intelligence dossier on Iraq on
Sept. 24. "The WMD program is not shut down. It is up
and running."
Blair said that normally the
work of the British Joint Intelligence Committee is secret.
In this case, he said in a foreword to the 50-page dossier,
it was released because "I believe this issue to be a
current and serious threat to the UK national interest."
The dossier details the history
of Iraq's WMD program, its breach of UN resolutions, and its
current attempts to rebuild its illegal WMD program.
Blair related some of that history
in his remarks, "because occasionally debate on this
issue seems to treat it almost as if it had suddenly arisen,
coming out of nowhere on a whim, in the last few months of
2002." Instead, he said, "It is an 11-year history
... of UN will flouted, lies told, ... obstruction, defiance,
and denial."
The intelligence picture represented
in the dossier, said Blair, was accumulated over the past
four years. He called it "extensive, detailed, and authoritative."
Among the dossier's findings:
- Iraq has chemical and biological
weapons and existing military plans for their use that could
be activated within 45 minutes.
- Iraq continues to produce
chemical agents for weapons, has rebuilt previously destroyed
production plants, has bought dual-use chemical facilities,
has retained key personnel, and has a "serious ongoing
research program into weapons production--all well funded."
- Iraq has continued production
of biological agents, rebuilt facilities formerly used for
biological weapons, purchased bio-weapons equipment, retained
personnel, and purchased mobile, easier-to-hide bio-weapons
facilities.
- Iraq has been working toward
restarting its nuclear weapons program by buying or attempting
to buy specialized vacuum pumps, other equipment, and chemicals
needed for gas centrifuge uranium enrichment; has been trying
to buy "significant quantities of uranium"; and
has brought back key personnel. These actions have taken
place since the UN inspectors were forced to withdraw in
1998.
- Iraq concealed from UN inspectors
a "significant number of longer-range missiles,"
including up to 20 extended-range Scud missiles, that could
be used to deliver these weapons. In 2001, Iraq increased
its ballistic program, such that development of weapons
with a range greater than 620 miles has been "well
under way" this year. Sanctions and import controls
have only slowed Iraq's progress in this area.
Blair said that some will dismiss
this intelligence and others will claim it will be years before
Saddam acquires a usable nuclear weapon.
"With what we know and
what we can reasonably speculate: Would the world be wise
to leave the present situation undisturbed, to say, despite
14 separate UN demands on this issue, all of which Saddam
is in breach of, we should do nothing?" asked Blair.
He continued, "Why now?
... I cannot say that this month or next, even this year or
next, he will use his weapons. But I can say that if the international
community, having made the call for his disarmament, ... shrugs
its shoulders and walks away, he will draw the conclusion
dictators, faced with a weakening will, always draw. That
the international community will talk but not act."
"There is no way that this
man ... could begin a conflict using such weapons and the
consequences not engulf the whole world," said Blair.
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NATO Ministers Back US Rapid Reaction
Force Plan
Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld met with NATO Secretary-General
George Robertson Sept. 24 in Warsaw to urge NATO to develop lean,
agile forces to deploy within days instead of months and to create
a rapid reaction force that could deploy outside the alliance's
traditional European area of operations.
These changes are needed to respond to the asymmetrical threats
of today and tomorrow, said a senior DOD official.
Robertson and, later, the NATO defense ministers voiced their support
for the proposals.
As envisioned, the rapid reaction force would include air, land,
and sea forces and could perform traditional military missions or
noncombatant evacuations. The force, which could take years to build,
would have about 21,000 troops from across the 19-member alliance,
on a rotating basis to minimize cost to any one nation.
Without such a force, said Rumsfeld, NATO could become irrelevant
in light of 21st century threats.
Arnold Boosts Test Capability
Air Force officials plan a $10.4 million test facility upgrade
at Arnold AFB, Tenn. The upgrade would give Arnold Engineering and
Development Center a Mach 8 capability, greatly enhancing its aerodynamic
and propulsion test operation.
The Mach 8 milestone would nearly double the center's test capabilities,
according to 1st Lt. Tim Budke, an AEDC project manager.
"AEDC's [aerodynamic and propulsion test unit] will be the
only free jet test facility in the world that can test advanced
hypersonic air-breathing propulsion systems over the entire flight
range from subsonic to Mach 8 for extended periods of time,"
said Budke.
Other facilities can reach Mach 8, but they can only hold the speed--about
6,000 mph--for about 15 seconds, he said.
Customers are already lining up, said officials, for the projected
spring 2004 upgrade completion date.
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The Iraq Situation
In an early October survey,
Americans told pollsters the national issue Americans discussed
most often was the possibility of war with Iraq.
The Pew Research Center found
that six out of 10 Americans were following the issue very
closely. That number had grown from 48 percent in September.
The survey also showed that
more than half of those Americans polled discussed the issue
frequently in their personal conversations, and nearly as
many often talked about terrorist attacks. The next closest
topic of conversation was health insurance and HMOs.
At the heart of public opinion,
according to the PRC poll analysis, were perceptions about
Saddam Hussein's capabilities. The key perception was that
Saddam either has or is close to having nuclear weapons--a
view shared by 79 percent of Americans.
Surprisingly, seven out of 10
persons who oppose war with Iraq believed Saddam possesses
nuclear weapons, or will soon. Two-thirds of those opposed
to war with Iraq believed he must be removed not just disarmed.
Overall, 85 percent said they thought Iraq must have a regime
change.
At the same time, a majority
of Americans felt there was still the possibility of a peaceful
solution.

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News Notes
- USAF awarded a $63.8 million contract to Northrop Grumman in
late September to build the Global Transportation Network 21,
which will improve an existing tracking system that the Air Force
said reviews people and materiel on the move about two million
times per day.
- Pakistan test-fired a new surface-to-surface missile in early
October. Pakistan notified India ahead of time. Tensions have
run high between the two countries, each of which say they have
increased their arsenals of nuclear weapons, for some time over
the disputed Kashmir area.
- The Air Force and Boeing may be near an agreement on the lease
of up to 100 767 transports to be modified for use as aerial refueling
aircraft. The price tag would be "significantly" lower
than has been suggested by the General Accounting Office, USAF's
top acquisition official, Marvin R. Sambur, told Bloomberg.com
last month. (See "Aerospace World: Tanker Wars Continue,"
September, p. 23.)
- The Pentagon extended USAF's permit to operate the PAVE PAWS
radar station at Camp Edwards, Mass., for another 20 years. The
previous permit would have expired in 2006. Local residents have
long considered the radar a health hazard; however, Air Force
officials maintain the station is safe.
- The Air Force announced Oct. 1 that a fatigue crack in a high-pressure
turbine blade caused catastrophic engine failure and resulted
in the April 15 crash of an F-16 from Misawa AB, Japan, into the
Sea of Japan. The pilot ejected, sustaining only minor injuries.
- On Oct. 3, USAF announced that pilot error caused an A-10 to
crash June 27 in a rural area in France. The pilot, Capt. Robert
I. Lopez, from Spangdahlem AB, Germany, was killed. (See "Aerospace
World: A-10 Pilot Killed in Crash," August, p. 14.) According
to the investigation board, Lopez misprioritized his tasks, failing
to properly execute a descent to 500 feet about ground level during
a training mission. His attempt to recover came too late.
- The Civil Air Patrol, USAF's auxiliary, opened a new national
operations center Oct. 1 at Maxwell AFB, Ala.
- Sierra Military Health Services said Oct. 7 that DOD had extended
Sierra's five-year contract to manage 13 states and the District
of Columbia. This is an interim move as the Pentagon seeks to
overhaul the Tricare system, reducing the number of regions from
12 to three.
- On Oct. 1 the Air Force announced selection of a new name tag
for the service dress uniform. Officials had decided last year
that it would return to the wear of a name tag on the service
dress and reviewed several proposed types. The new tag has a brushed
satin finish and blue letters. The previous name tag was blue
with white letters.
- Tricare awarded Express Scripts of Maryland Heights, Mo., a
new mail order pharmacy contract in September. The new Tricare
Mail Order Pharmacy contract, which covers a five-year period,
replaces the existing National Mail Order Pharmacy contract. The
NMOP expires in February. The TMOP begins in March and will provide
a worldwide, full-service mail order pharmacy program to all Tricare-eligible
beneficiaries.
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North Korea Stuns US
With Nuke Claim
In a diplomatic bombshell, North
Korea acknowledged it has for years been secretly developing
nuclear arms, thereby making a mockery of a 1994 agreement
brokered by ex-President and Nobel laureate Jimmy Carter.
Some US officials called the
disclosure "a jaw-dropper."
The Stalinist regime, which
President Bush has named as part of the "axis of evil,"
told US officials about their nuclear weapons program during
talks in Pyongyang in early October. The US, in turn, made
the admission public Oct. 16.
Pyongyang said its action nullifies
the 1994 deal, known as "the Agreed Framework."
It called for North Korea to halt its nuclear-weapon-development
effort in return for economic and political assistance.
The US said the project is a
"very serious material breach" of the accord.
Before it was revealed to be
an empty gesture, the Agreed Framework stood as a proud achievement
for Carter, who was in the White House in the period 1977-81.
Though out of office in 1994, Carter took a lead role in diplomacy
that opened the way for the Clinton Administration to produce
the accord.
Completing his mission to North
Korea on June 18, 1994, Carter hugged dictator Kim Il Sung
and called his trip "a good omen." On his return
to Washington, D.C., Carter declared, "The crisis is
over," a claim that left Clinton officials aghast.
Carter offered a strikingly
uncritical assessment of the brutal communist dictatorship.
"People were very friendly and open," he said, adding
that Pyongyang, one of the world's most destitute cities,
was a bustling place that reminded him of Times Square.
"I don't think that they
are an outlaw nation," Carter opined. "Obviously
they've done some things in the past that we condemn. They
have their own justification for them and I won't go into
that. ... This is something that's not for me to judge."
He added, "I don't feel
as if I have been duped."
Former Secretary of State Lawrence
S. Eagleburger said he was "horrified" to hear Carter
"taking the word of this murderer who runs North Korea."
The Washington Post noted, "Mr. Carter seems to
take at face value much of the stated position of North Korea
and its 'Great Leader,' dictator, aggressor, and terrorist
Kim Il Sung, whom he found a rather reasonable and pleasant
fellow."
The 78-year-old ex-President
on Oct. 11 was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for devoting
his life, since being turned out of office, to freelance peace
efforts and ventures such as the North Korean diplomacy.
More recently, Carter has criticized
President Bush's determination to use force, if necessary,
to remove the threat posed by Saddam Hussein. In fact, Nobel
Committee Chairman Gunnar Berge declared Carter's selection
"should be interpreted as a criticism of the line that
the current Administration has taken. It's a kick in the leg
to all that follow the same line as the United States."
The statement did not draw a response from Carter.
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Comments
of Top Marine Spur Senators
To Review Roles of Joint Chiefs of Staff
Outgoing Marine Corps Commandant
Gen. James L. Jones Jr. told Senators that the Joint Chiefs
of Staff spend too much time on individual service responsibilities
and not enough on providing military advice.
Asked to explain, Jones said
that the role of the Chairman and the Vice Chairman were "crystallized
more effectively" by implementation of the Goldwater-Nichols
Act of 1986, but "the service chiefs have found themselves
occupied in the majority of their time with the organize,
train, and equip function." They have spent "a corresponding
less amount of time dedicated to participating in the day-to-day
dialogue of worldwide operations, emerging problems that should
require a more focused attention," he said. "It's
a question of devoting time to the issues."
Jones made his comments at the
Senate Armed Services Committee confirmation hearing on his
nomination to head US European Command and serve as Supreme
Allied Commander Europe.
He went on to say that part
of the solution to the problem requires each Chief to adjust
his own schedule. "I see some self-adjustment being done
right now in the JCS," said Jones. "The JCS is now
into a more balanced division of time and labor on the more
substantive issues."
"It is very easy to take
your eye off the ball sometimes because there's so much to
do," Jones added. "I am simply suggesting, not that
anything is broken, but that we need to make sure that the
contribution the Joint Chiefs can make as a body is still
something that is valued and necessary and expected."
However, both Sen. Carl Levin
(D-Mich.), committee chairman, and Sen. John Warner (R-Va.),
ranking minority member, indicated they believe there could
be more fundamental problems.
Levin told Jones, "You're
being very candid ... and balanced, ... but I think we should
really dig deeper."
Warner said he and Levin had
been considering what reviews should be made of Goldwater-Nichols,
now more than 15 years old. He agreed with Levin that the
division of responsibilities for the service chiefs should
be one of those reviews.
"Possibly some statutory
emphasis on what we see as the need for greater balance between
these two responsibilities may be needed," said Warner.
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Yale
Opens Doors to Military Recruiters,
Vowing To Challenge Pentagon
Yale University agreed to allow
military recruiters to attend a law school career day when
it faced the loss of $350 million in federal funds. Unlike
Harvard and several other prestigious schools that have also
grudgingly opened their doors recently, Yale said the move
is only temporary.
Yale announced it intends to
challenge the Pentagon's interpretation of the 1996 federal
law, called the Solomon Amendment. The law links federal research
funds to open access for military recruiters.
In an official statement Oct.
1, Yale University President Richard C. Levin said, "The
university is committed to complying with the law, but we
intend to pursue a determination of whether the law school's
current policy satisfies the legal requirements."
Levin said the school provides
names, addresses, and other student information to military
recruiters and allows them to come to the law school to meet
with students. He believes that policy satisfies the federal
law. However, Yale did not allow military recruiters to participate
in career day unless they submitted a nondiscrimination certificate.
At issue is the Pentagon's "Don't
Ask, Don't Tell" policy governing homosexuals in the
military.
The Pentagon earlier this year
began cracking down on universities that had been skirting
the Solomon Amendment. (See "Aerospace World: Harvard
Law Finally Gives Up Military Recruiting Ban," October,
p. 16.) The services notified various universities that they
would forfeit their federal research funds if they did not
open their doors completely to military recruiters.
The universities have complied
in fact, if not spirit. |
Copyright Air Force Association. All rights reserved.
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