Newly commissioned Air Force officers, despite having
just completed years of academic and military training,
are being sent back to school. This time, their objective
is to learn what it means to be "an airman."
During 1999, more than 1,000 second lieutenants will
attend the four-week Aerospace Basic Course under Air
University at Maxwell AFB, Ala. The Air Force hopes
that, by the Year 2002, it will be able to send all
new officers to the school, along with selected civilian
employees.
The course, unique in AU's catalog, is designed to
teach the students where they fit into the Air Force
and where that service fits in among the nation's other
armed forces. The curriculum is weighted heavily toward
USAF's Core Values and Core Competencies and reinforced
with problem-solving exercises, wargames, computer
simulations, and simulated joint operations.
An obvious question is why new officers, including
those coming directly from the Air Force Academy, should
need yet another course in being officers.
The answer, said Lt. Col. Douglas R. Lengenfelder,
ABC commandant, is that the course is intended as a
leveling process to focus officers from various commissioning
sources on a common goal. "Even though an individual
may get a fair amount of this information in the academy
and other officer training courses," he said, "those
teach at the knowledge level. We teach at the comprehension
and application levels. So, even if they may have heard
the terms, how they are expected to use the information
has changed considerably."
Roots of the Project
The idea of a basic training course for officers had
its roots in a series of reports on the state of the
force. In 1989, an internal USAF study, titled "A
View of the Air Force Today," found a growing
concern and frustration among service members. In 1994,
Carl H. Builder, a researcher at Rand, issued another
report, titled the Icarus Syndrome, that drew on the
earlier study and pinpointed specific causes for the
problem.
Builder said that the contributing factors included
the air arm's long infatuation with technology, narrow "occupationalism" of
members, and the lack of an overarching service vision.
USAF leaders took both reports seriously, but, at
the time, they had even more fundamental problems with
which to deal. Gen. Merrill A. McPeak became Chief
of Staff in October 1990 and presided over a major
restructuring and consolidation of the force. During
his tenure, the service began implementing a new philosophy
known as "Global Reach, Global Power," but
the main emphasis was on managing the post-Cold War
drawdown and preserving the effectiveness of the surviving
force.
In October 1994, when Gen. Ronald R. Fogleman became
Chief, he shifted the focus to some of the internal
problems that had begun to appear. During his tenure,
the Air Force emphasized personal accountability for
members' actions, laid down a list of Core Values,
and defined Core Competencies (things the Air Force
does-or is expected to do-best). Fogleman emphasized
a "back to basics" approach.
The 1996 Corona Conference of senior USAF leaders
also took a critical look at the force and found a
number of shortcomings. One was that young officers
lacked an understanding of core values, core competencies,
and the importance of teamwork. They were too preoccupied
with their own careers, the leaders concluded, and
had little appreciation for the role of aerospace power
in joint operations.
Needed, the conferees agreed, was a training program,
similar to the Marine Corps Basic Course, to indoctrinate
new officers with the culture of the Air Force.
The following year, Fogleman ordered Air University
to set up a single test course to explore the possibilities.
Called the Air and Space Basic Course, it ran seven
weeks and trained 312 new officers representing all
commissioning sources and a variety of Air Force specialty
codes.
The results were encouraging, and the Corona Conference
of 1998 approved the training as part of the Professional
Military Education package for officers.
Its length and name now shortened, the four-week Aerospace
Basic Course is scheduled to run two classes this year
and train 1,014 students. AU plans to bring in seven
classes in 2000, nine in 2001, and enough in 2002 for
all newly commissioned officers. Lengenfelder said
he expects the current faculty of 24 to roughly double
over the same period.
Not unexpectedly, the ABC curriculum is built around
the now-familiar core statements. The Core Values--"integrity
first, service before self, and excellence in all we
do"-are the subject of a "Little Blue Book," which
the Air Force supplies to members. The Core Competencies--"air
and space superiority, global attack, rapid global
mobility, precision engagement, information superiority,
and agile combat support"--speak more to the attributes
the service itself is trying to attain or maintain.
Translating such concepts into academic subject matter
is not easy, Lengenfelder observed. "There is
a difference between living Core Values and just reading
them," he said.
Working Through Scenarios
To make the point, the course uses a variety of tools,
from simulation to role-playing. One example the colonel
likes to cite is a digital video disk titled "What
Now, Lieutenant?" It presents a number of hypothetical
problems and requires the student to work through scenarios
to a solution.
Lengenfelder explained, "Let's assume you pull
up a scenario in which a young lieutenant says, 'I
think it's wrong that my wing commander won't let me
hang glide. It's my time and my body and I do it on
the weekends. This isn't fair.'
"Then he starts going through a decision matrix
where he's gathering information. He can click on his
peers, his boss, his wing commander, and the [judge
advocate general]. He keeps learning more information.
If he gets to the end of the scenario and doesn't like
the answer, he can back himself out of the decision
tree and go down another branch, re-explore, discuss,
and work through it again.
"There are no right or wrong answers, but we
want them thinking about these questions. In this scenario,
the officer finally clicks on the wing commander, who
says, 'We've lost three people already to hang gliding.
We deploy in another month and I can't afford to lose
another person and I'm ordering my troops not to hang
glide.' So now the lieutenant starts thinking not just
how this affects him or her but how it affects the
team and the Air Force. We push team really hard in
our course. We have no individual awards. The only
thing we reward in our course is team."
Like any college-level course, ABC encourages students
to study related materials. It draws on reading lists
approved by the Chief of Staff and has worked up another
specifically for newly commissioned officers. This
last list includes Builder's Icarus Syndrome and
three works by historian John Keegan which examine
historic battles and commanders. Other books cover
subjects as wide-ranging as the evolution of warfare
and the Linebacker II offensive of the Vietnam War.
Students also receive lists of recommended movies
including everything from contemporary films ("Top
Gun" and "The Right Stuff") to World
War II films ("The Battle of Britain," "Tora,
Tora, Tora," and "Patton") to history
epics ("Gettysburg," "Glory," and "Braveheart").
Eye Exercises
"This is a visual generation," Lengenfelder
said. "If there is a movie out there that has
a demonstration of Core Values or Core Competencies,
we recommend they watch it. Even though it may not
come out and say, 'This is about integrity first' or
'You are going to learn about service before self,'
they're still learning and dealing with these issues
as they watch these movies. We're trying to get them
to think about these tough issues before they, as officers
and senior civilians, have to deal with them."
A third list includes computer wargames normally sold
for entertainment. "If there is a commercial off-the-shelf
wargame that teaches Core Competencies," said
Lengenfelder, "we recommend they play it. In fact,
we use some commercial off-the-shelf software in class
to teach several of the Core Competencies."
Course officials insist they provide a good workout
for the students' minds and allow them to make their
early mistakes without paying the penalties of erring
in actual combat. Like the movies, the wargames cover
both history ("Red Baron 2" and "A Bridge
Too Far") and contemporary combat ("Total
Air War" and "M1 Tank Platoon 2"). The
student can experience Pickett's ill-fated charge at
Gettysburg, command an armored unit in Desert Storm,
or traverse centuries of geopolitical history, from
3000 B.C. to the future launch of colonists to a distant
galaxy ("Civilization II").
ABC is more than videos and computer games, however.
A substantial part of the curriculum involves developing
mock war plans and then applying them in simulated
combat. The idea here is to help young officers understand
their roles in the Air Force and USAF's responsibilities
in joint-service and international operations.
As Lengenfelder said, "Our course uses the building-block
approach. We start out with foundations, where we give
them a little theory, doctrine, and strategy, but the
real concentration is on what it means to be an airman.
We also talk about what the Air Force brings to the
joint warfighting table.
"Then, we move to forces, functions, and Core
Competencies. Here, we bring in the Navy, the Army,
and the Marines, and we let the students know the strengths
and weaknesses of each of the services and what each
brings to that joint warfighting partnership. We talk
about the importance of having different forces, but,
again, what we really stress is, know your business
and what it means to be an airman. And, when they think
they understand each of the Core Competencies, we make
them wargame them. We use simulations extensively in
our program so that they understand how to use those
attributes."
Lengenfelder went on, "Our final wargame is called
Blue Thunder. What they do there is a full joint aerospace
operations plan. They have to work through all the
phases of planning an actual war, including analysis,
picking targets, and making sure that national security
strategy is met. And, having planned it, they war-fight
their plan in the field."
Jump Out
The three-day Blue Thunder exercise is a mixture of
reality and virtual reality. Students are in battle
dress and occupy tents set up at Maxwell. One recent
class was "flown" to the site by an Air Force
Reserve unit on the base. "We stuck them in a
C-130," said the colonel, "flew them around
the pattern for a while and did an engine-running off-load
right into our deployed location. Then, we started
the war."
If the war is synthetic, it has the feel of the real
thing, said Lengenfelder. "We have simulated attacks
on the base with machine guns that are run off propane
and that sort of thing. They hear the attack going
on. They're required to respond according to wing operations
check lists and standard operating procedures. They
learn what sort of forces are brought to bear when
there's an airplane crash or an attack on the field
or even something such as a riot or a demonstration
outside the gate.
"They don't deal with every problem perfectly,
but we want them to have an understanding of the big
picture. What does it take to get our mission done?
Who really makes this happen? They learn the significance
of civil engineering, the security forces, the hospital,
and how all of these different organizations interact
to make our mission work. It isn't just airplanes and
pilots."
The rest of the warfighting is largely done by simulation.
In the process, AU hopes, the students will develop
a greater appreciation for where aerospace power fits
into the community of forces and where they, individually,
fit into the overall picture.
The course puts heavy emphasis on the "airman" as
the basic element of the force. That term has been
used narrowly in the past, officials admit, usually
to mean any enlisted member but sometimes to identify
one in a specific enlisted rank. Only rarely has it
been applied to officers, too. The Air Force would
like to use it as the generic term for all USAF members,
including members of the Guard and Reserve, and, in
the broad sense, civilian employees.
In effect, this would make it the USAF equivalent
of the Army's soldier, the Navy's sailor, and the Marine
Corps' Marine.
Some years ago, the Air Force began speaking of its
members as "warriors" and trying to develop
the concept that not just aircrews, but all of them,
are fighters. To underscore the point, units had members
wear battle dress uniforms to work and operate under
simulated field conditions. Again, the results were
spotty, but the term "warrior" now appears
at a number of points in the ABC course material.
Producing warriors may be a tall order for a course
dealing with everybody from future fighter pilots to
civil engineers and administrative officers, but ABC
has one important thing going for it: Most students
are just beginning their careers. Those marked for
rated specialties, for example, will attend ABC before
going to flight training. Others may already be selected
for various support jobs but, as yet, most know little
about the demands of their specialties.
Big Picture First
"We give them the big picture first," said
Lengenfelder. "Then, when they go off and learn
their specialties, they understand the significance
of what they do and how that fits into the Air Force
mission."
The aim is to get the young officers to think of their
service as something more than an occupation. "We
emphasize that rather than looking at it just as a
job," the colonel said, "they should think
of it as a profession or even in the concept of a calling."
Because the new officers come from different commissioning
sources-Air Force Academy, Officer Training School,
and Reserve Officer Training Corps-some presumably
might be more receptive to this idea than others. In
fact, studies of the first test class to take the course
confirmed that there were some differences as the officers
began their training. Interestingly, however, tests
among the same officers as they finished the course
showed that their attitudes had become more similar.
The study also asked graduates for their reactions.
Most were positive. As one officer put it, "The
greatest strength was getting to meet people from different
commissioning sources. Also, all the things I 'blew
off' in ROTC, I actually learned here and I think I'll
even retain most of it."
Another said, "As a support officer, I now feel
much more qualified to articulate the objectives and
capabilities of my service."
A third said, "There was no Distinguished Graduate
program. This was good because the environment inspired
teamwork and unity instead of just competition."
The graduates also were asked to cite course weaknesses,
and most focused on the lectures as being too long
and repetitious. By contrast, a number praised the
less traditional tools, particularly the interactive
CD-ROM, and the Blue Thunder exercise.
Youth in the Saddle
One strength of the course may be that many of the
instructors are not much older than the students. The
teaching positions call for captains, but because of
USAFwide shortages in that grade, the school has
substituted lieutenants in many of them. The teachers
attend a four-month training program that stresses
how younger people learn today. Students and teachers
alike are comfortable with using videos and interactive
wargaming, the colonel said.
What the course does not cover, said the commandant,
is politics. "We don't discuss whether we can
use weapons in space or things like that," he
said. "What we do is say, 'Here are the current
laws and here are some future things that you'll probably
see.' Congress already has authorized the military
to look into developing weapons in space. And, so,
we're having them think about it but we don't get into
the morals issue with space.
"Along those same lines, not only do we teach
a futures block in our course but we give them future
weapons systems to wargame with. Within Blue Thunder,
they actually get to 'use' an airborne laser and other
advanced weapons. Some still are being developed but,
eventually, they are going to come online. If that's
10 years from now, that's not when we want these folks
to start thinking about them. We want them thinking
about them today so that they're ready for tomorrow's
Air Force."
How well the training works may not be immediately
evident, said Lengenfelder. "The value of our
course probably won't even be seen until maybe 15 years
down the road," he said. "It could start
around the 10-year point, when they start having to
deal with joint issues and being able to deal with
what the Air Force does in terms of the joint area
and our national security.
"I would hope that it would help them do their
jobs better now because they have that big picture," said
Lengenfelder. "I would hope that they are more
effective officers. But the real value comes when,
let's say 10 years from now, they're planners at a
joint table and have got all the different colors around
the table. Somebody has to sit there and explain why
we do the things we do. I would hope that, by then,
these officers would have been thinking about that
for most of their careers."
Bruce D. Callander, a regular contributor to Air Force Magazine, served tours
of active duty during World War II and the Korean War. In 1952, he joined Air
Force Times, serving as editor from 1972 to 1986. His most recent story for Air
Force Magazine, "Training in
Networks," appeared in the August 1999 issue.