A century ago, near Kitty
Hawk, N.C., Orville and Wilbur Wright ushered in the
age of sustained powered flight. Later, visionaries
such as Mitchell, Andrews, Arnold, Eaker, Spaatz, Doolittle,
and others advanced the military application of the
airplane. They are the forefathers of todays
United States Air Forcea 21st century Air and
Space Expeditionary Force.
 |
| The courage, commitment,
and skills of airmen today are truly phenomenal. |
Throughout USAFs
history, its people, technology, and culture of transformation
have served it and the
nation remarkably well. In World War II, it took
nearly 3,000 air sorties to eliminate a single target.
Today,
an aircraft can destroy multiple targets in a single
sortie. The Air Force continues to transform, as
was seen most recently in Operation Iraqi Freedom.
Airmen, fighting alongside soldiers, sailors, Marines,
and allied forces, attacked Iraq on March 20, 2003,
local Baghdad time. Together, they ended the ruthless,
decades-old dictatorship of Saddam Hussein.
The Air Force Association (AFA) and the nation salute
all the men and women of the armed forces for their
service during Operation Iraqi Freedom and in the
ongoing war on terrorism. AFA is especially proud
of the Air
Force. The courage, commitment, and skills of airmen
today are truly phenomenal. Their bravery and outstanding
decision-making abilities were on full display in
Iraq.
US and coalition airpower forces achieved air dominance
at the outset of the war. Together, airmen delivered
debilitating air strikes against Republican Guard
divisions, their command and control systems, and
key leadership.
Iraqi Freedom was the first major military operation
since the announcement in 2002 of the new National
Security Strategy of the United States. In essence,
the strategy states America will take action against
emerging threats before they are fully formed. This
places a premium on intelligence capabilities, especially
space and airborne systems primarily funded and operated
by the Air Force.
Most Americans saw the war through the eyes of 630 embedded journalistsadmittedly,
a soda straw view of the battlefield providing virtually
no perspective on air and space contributions. The
media experienced firsthand the professionalism and
heroics of US ground forces as they advanced on Baghdad.
The extraordinary achievements of air and space personnel
went largely unreported, mainly because of host country
restrictions on news coverage of US air operations.
 |
| Global power projection forces in air and
space played a pivotal role in joint operations. |
Thirty Days Over Iraq
In the first 30 days of Operation Iraqi Freedom,
the Air Force:
- Flew more than 24,000 sorties, 58.4 percent of
the coalition total.
- Conducted about 9,300 strike and counterair sorties,
45 percent of the coalition total.
- Carried out more than 13,600 air mobility sorties,
81.3 percent of the coalition total.
- Provided aerial refueling that off-loaded more
than 376 million pounds of jet fuel, 90 percent of
the
coalition total.
- Flew approximately 880 intelligence-surveillance-reconnaissance
and command and control sorties.
- Executed more than 190 combat search and rescue
sorties.
- Flew approximately 110 Unmanned Aerial Vehicle
ISR or strike sorties, with Predator and Global Hawk
systems.
- Conducted more than 1,500 Global Positioning System
satellite uploads, providing enhanced GPS accuracies
for coalition operations throughout the theater.
By mid-April 2003, the Joint Air Component had dropped
on enemy targets 19,948 munitions, 68 percent of
which were precision guided. Additionally, Air Force
aircrews
dropped more than 31 million leaflets in support
of psychological operations and other activities
and carried
out approximately 136 aeromedical evacuation sorties.
Beyond the view of the cameras, global power projection
forces in air and space played a pivotal role in
the success of joint operations that demonstrated
speed,
range, flexibility, lethality, and precisionall
fundamental attributes of modern airpower. Moreover,
specialized USAF forces working near and behind enemy
lines aided precision bombing by directing devastating
air strikes.
Air and Space Dominance
Air operations in Operation Iraqi Freedom used virtually
all Air Force combat aircraft types: B-1Bs, B-2s,
B-52s, F-15s, F-16s, F-117s, A-10s, AC-130s, and
Combat Search
and Rescue and Special Operations Forces helicopters.
In a combat first, one force package included all
three bomber typesB-1Bs, B-2s, and B-52s. Another
first entailed the B-1Bs use of moving target
indicator data from ISR aircraft.
E-3 AWACS, E-8 Joint STARS, RC-135 Rivet Joint, U-2,
and EC-130 aircraft provided round-the-clock command,
control, communications, surveillance, and electronic
warfare capability. Unmanned systems such as Global
Hawk and Predator UAVs also provided remote surveillance.
For the first time, Global Hawk was used for strike
coordination and reconnaissance. In another first,
four Predators flew simultaneously in support of
combat operations.
 |
| Air and space power
can ... shorten a conflict and help to minimize
casualties. |
The contributions of space systems were substantial.
While this war featured 40 percent fewer troops than
were deployed in 1991, the amount of available bandwidth
increased by almost 600 percent. The Global Positioning
System (GPS) satellite constellation provided accuracies
to about 10 feet and allowed the delivery of 5,500
GPS-guided Joint Direct Attack Munitions (JDAMs)
with pinpoint precision and minimal collateral damage.
Some
50 US satellites provided communications, surveillance,
warning, and weather forecasting to the Combined
Force Air Component Commander (CFACC). For the first
time,
the CFACC was designated as space coordinator.
Workhorse C-17 and C-130 aircraft, along with C-141s
and C-5s, staged a massive airlift. In one major
nighttime operation, 15 C-17s air-dropped approximately
1,000
Army paratroopers and 40 vehicles into northern Iraqthe
first time the C-17 had been employed operationally
in a combat personnel drop.
A USAF tanker contingent of 149 KC-135s and 33 KC-10s
formed the backbone of air operations and kept combat
and support aircraft from all services fueled and
on station. Combat search and rescue assets flew
more
than 190 sorties. Air Force Special Operations Forces
aircraft also operated effectively in the skies over
Iraq.
The war plan was a success. As the operation unfolded,
Iraqi forces were not able to initiate attacks on
US and coalition forces, mount an attack against
neighboring
countries, or destroy Iraqi oil fields. There was
no refugee crisis, and the number of Iraqis who fled
the
war was much less than anticipated.
In the first six months of action, more than 290
US service members were killed, and more than 1,000
had
been wounded. While major combat operations were
declared over on May 1, 2003, postwar Iraq remained
a dangerous
place. US military forces have transitioned from
combat to restoration of civil order and basic services
and
the delivery of humanitarian assistance in a country
with little functioning infrastructure. It is apparent
that long-term stability in Iraq will require considerable
resources and a lengthy commitment of US military
forces.
Those who made the ultimate sacrifice in Iraq, and
others who continue to do so in the ongoing war on
terrorism, have the eternal gratitude of the nation.
Their families and loved ones deserve our continuing
support.
The loss of life might have been greater were it
not for the airmen who helped shape the battlefield,
protect
the flanks of rapidly advancing US ground elements,
and decimate whole divisions of enemy forces. Airpower
operated 24-hours a day, in all weather conditions,
including sandstorms. Targeted by overhead satellites,
manned and unmanned aircraft, and specialized forces
on the ground, the enemy could not escape as precision
strike was brought to bear. Iraqi forces that survived
the bombings were cut off from their leaders, left
without command and control, and made vulnerable
to ground attack.
Lifting the Fog of War
The imperative of modern airpower in the 21st century
is now apparent. It can deliver the appropriate amount
of firepower on enemy locations, in day or night,
in all weather, and with a precision unparalleled
in the
history of conflict.
The Combined Air Operations Center, or CAOC, helped
display information from C4ISR aircraft such as AWACS,
Joint STARS, Rivet Joint, Global Hawk, Predator,
and satellites in space. These assets produced a
near real
time view of the battlefield.
The fog of war is beginning to lift, an event spurred
by vastly improved situational awareness within the
common battle space. Concurrently, sensor-to-shooter
time is shortening, making it possible to apply lethal
force more swiftly and effectively.
 |
| We face the danger
of major theater war as well as possible challenges
in space. |
Fundamental differences between Gulf War I and Gulf
War II included the maturation of information operations,
the prevalence of precision strike, and the compression
of operational timelines. Air and space power provided
the key infrastructure that made the difference in
Operation Iraqi FreedomISR, communications
links, mobility, strike, and security.
The introduction of Effects-Based Operations has
furthered a new American way of war, one that has
moved beyond
strategies of annihilation and attrition. The goal
now is to achieve rapid dominance by obtaining effective
control over systems an adversary relies on for power
and influence. The new American way of war gains
leverage from modern military capabilities such as
information
superiority, mobility, and precision strike and uses
them to achieve US goals.
In modern warfare, ground forces have a vested interest
in maintaining a strong Air Force. Because of its
superior airpower, the US has not lost a single soldier
to enemy
aircraft attack since the early 1950s.
Joint warfighters know the significance of air dominance
and the impetus it lends to rapid decisive operations.
Operations Iraqi Freedom, Enduring Freedom, Allied
Force, and Desert Storm confirm the rising imperative
of air and space power and its pivotal role in the
security of the nation.
AFA does not advocate airpower going it alone. The
services have unique and complementary capabilities,
all of which are essential to successful joint operations
across the spectrum of combat situations. Properly
applied air and space power can, however, shorten
a conflict and help to minimize casualties.
Vigilance
As time blurs our memories of the terrorist attacks
of 9/11, we must resist the tendency to let down
our guard. Terrorist attacks on the homeland and
US interests
abroad are still possible. We also cannot afford to neglect other current and
future threats. We face the danger of major theater war as well as possible
challenges in space. Potential adversaries are looking
everywhereincluding in cyberspacefor
vulnerabilities. Given our nations ever-increasing reliance on computer
networks, cyber attack could cause damage comparable to that from use of a
weapon of mass destruction.
AFA believes nuclear deterrence provided by the triad
of land-, air-, and sea-based nuclear forces is essential
to our national security. The United States should
maintain flexible, reliable, and survivable nuclear forces while continuing
to press ahead with research and testing that could lead to a comprehensive
missile
defense capability.
As the worlds only superpower, this nation
must maintain strong and balanced military capabilities
in order to respond effectively across the spectrum
of
conflict. Potential adversaries will draw their own lessons from Iraq, and
one will be the need to try to counter or disrupt US
air dominance in the future,
perhaps with the use of next generation surface-to-air missiles. The emergence
of a serious adversarynot necessarily even a peer adversaryshould
be a concern.
Daunting Challenge Now and for the foreseeable future, the Air Force
must provide integrated and interoperable capabilities
for
executing joint and combined operations in support
of the war on terrorism, deterring the use of weapons of mass destruction (WMD),
dissuading regional threats, and supporting peacekeeping operations.
 |
| Force structure
should be sized to match the requirements of
... strategy. |
Current commitments, especially those growing out
of the global war on terrorism, have substantially
increased
the operations and personnel tempo across the
Air Force. AFA believes force structure should be sized to match the requirements
of our national security strategy. Although funding for Air Force personnel,
readiness, and modernization is up, more resources are needed.
Infrastructure funding also remains a concern. Recapitalization
of aging and deteriorating facilities requires sustained
additional funding. AFA believes
the Administration and Congress should fund the equipment, training, and facilities
required for the mission. Also, a fair and efficient method of identifying
and reducing excess infrastructure must be pursued.
The impressive combat power brought to bear against
Iraq was the result of years of sound leadership
decisions affecting the acquisition structure and
depots
and our unmatched military, civilian, and aerospace industry workforce.
Air Force equipment performed well in Iraqi Freedom,
in large part because of superb maintenance crews
and logisticians. Still, the wear and tear on aging
systems must be addressed, and replenishment of the munitions stockpile will
be critical to preparing the Air Force for the next conflict.
DOD has indicated that it wants to reshape and not
just reconstitute the force for the future. Nonetheless,
servicing and repairing the Air Force inventory
of equipmentfrom aircraft to communication equipmentcannot be postponed.
The Air Force is optimizing its capability within
resource limits. Air Force investment plans directly
support
rapid global mobility, precision engagement,
aerospace superiority, focused and sustained logistics, and agile combat support
for future wars. By developing the skills of its airmen, fielding new technologies,
and introducing new warfighting concepts, USAF maintains itself as the worlds
premier air and space force. Still, air dominance cannot be sustained without
adequate investment.
DOD must have access to military ranges and operating
areas so as to provide the necessary training and
testing environment for airmen seeking to prepare
for combat today and in the future. The commitment to comprehensive and realistic
training is, and should continue to be, compatible with the Air Forces
strong stewardship of the environment.
One hundred years after Kitty Hawk, rapid advances
in air and space are possible but will require
a sustained national commitment. Air and space
power plays
a central role in joint and combined military operations and holds the key
to military
transformation.
Copyright Air Force Association. All rightsreserved.
|