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In an article in the September issue, I noted some
of the major misconceptions and myths concerning the
use of airpower and especially strategic bombing during
World War II. The problem does not end there.
The Vietnam War has engendered more emotion, more
loose talk, and more misunderstandings about airpower
than any conflict since the 1940s.
Surprisingly, one even hears criticism of airpower's
outstanding showings of the past decade--that is, in
Operations Desert Shield and Storm in the Gulf, Deliberate
Force in Bosnia, Allied Force in Serbia, Enduring Freedom
in Afghanistan, and Southern Watch and Northern Watch
over Iraq.
Charge: Airpower generally was a failure in
Vietnam. It lost the war and let the Army down.
Response:: Some
8.7 million Americans served in uniform during the
Vietnam War. Of those, 4.4 million were in the Army;
1.8 million in the Navy; 1.7 million in the Air Force;
and nearly 800,000 in the Marines. In addition, at
any one time there were nearly one million South Vietnamese
soldiers on duty. Thus, at the height of the war, there
were well over one million allied ground troops continuously
operating in South Vietnam--a country roughly the size
of Washington state. Yet, all of those troops were
unable to control the countryside. If the Air Force,
with its 1.7 million personnel failed in Vietnam, the
nine million personnel of the other services and South
Vietnam failed even more completely.
It is also important to note who was in charge of
formulating US political and military strategy during
this war. There were seven key leadership positions
occupied by 21 men from 1963 to 1973.
Of these 21 leaders, only one, Robert S. McNamara,
had served in the Air Force (actually, the Army Air
Forces). Ten others were or had been Army officers;
nine others, including all three Presidents, were or
had been Naval officers; and one, Ambassador Ellsworth
Bunker, had no military experience. Moreover, during
the Rolling Thunder air campaign against North Vietnam
from 1965 to 1968, the strategy, targets, and even
sometimes the tactics, were usually determined in Tuesday
lunch meetings in the White House. No airman was ever
invited to those meetings. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff Gen. Earle G. Wheeler, an infantryman, attended
instead and purportedly gave "the air point of
view."
Certainly, there is much blame to go around regarding
how the Vietnam War was planned and fought, and I am
not trying to absolve airmen from sharing responsibility
for defeat. But given that airpower played only one
small part of an overall strategy that was fatally
flawed, and given further that airmen were permitted
to play virtually no direct role in formulating that
flawed strategy, one cannot place the main onus for
defeat on airpower. It is also noteworthy that the
most vocal senior military critic of our Vietnam War
policy at the time was Air Force Chief of Staff Gen.
Curtis E. LeMay. For his pains he was forced into early
retirement.

Linebacker II
B-52s struck targets at Hanoi and Haiphong,
forcing North Vietnam back toward peace talks.
(USAF photo)
Charge: Because Rolling Thunder did not break
the will of North Vietnamese leader Ho Chi Minh and
his cohorts to continue the war in the south, strategic
bombing failed in Vietnam.
Response: Rolling Thunder was not strategic
bombing--it was an interdiction campaign and a halfhearted
one at that. Approximately 90 percent of all targets
struck during Rolling Thunder were transportation targets,
and most of those were located south of the 20th parallel--well
below Hanoi and Haiphong. The latter, North Vietnam's
major port through which it received 85 percent of
all supplies, was not closed by mining until 1972.
Supplies could not, therefore, be halted near their
source. Indeed, both cities were usually off-limits
to bombing during Rolling Thunder, and restricted zones
were placed around them--up to 30 miles for Hanoi and
10 miles for Haiphong. There were also 16 bombing halts
between 1965 and 1968. Finally, it is a principle of
air war that achieving air superiority is a top priority:
Without it, air operations become far more difficult.
Yet, the Administration would not allow North Vietnamese
airfields to be struck until April 1967--more than
two years after the start of Rolling Thunder. Similarly,
surface-to-air missile sites were often placed off-limits
to American air strikes--unless and until they took
hostile actions against our aircraft.
In mid- to late 1964 the Joint Chiefs of Staff proposed
various plans to the Administration that included air
strikes against 94 key targets in North Vietnam that
would be conducted over a period of 16 days; the strike
aircraft would include B-52s. In addition, the JCS--and
note these were joint plans, not USAF plans--also proposed
the blockade of North Vietnam and the mining of Haiphong
harbor, as well as the introduction of US ground troops
into South Vietnam to combat the insurgency. These
plans were rejected by the Administration. Eventually,
most of the 94 targets were hit, but over a period
of three years, not the 16 days called for by the JCS.
It was and still is a tenet of airpower doctrine that
force should be used quickly and overwhelmingly to
have the desired effect. A campaign of gradual escalation
robs airpower of both its physical and psychological
impact. Indeed, piecemeal attacks are generally counterproductive.
This tenet, however, was ignored. This does not mean
that the JCS plans would have been successful if they
had been approved and implemented. It is simply to
say that the plans submitted by the country's top military
experts were rejected. Certainly, President Johnson
had cogent political reasons for doing so--his fear
of Chinese intervention, for example. The result, nonetheless,
was to make it extremely difficult to devise options
that could navigate political shoals while also providing
military success. The options that were implemented
were failures.
The only time strategic bombing was attempted against
North Vietnam was during the 11-day Linebacker II offensive
of December 1972, when B-52s struck targets in and
around Hanoi and Haiphong in a series of massive strikes.
Linebacker II did not "win the war" for the
US and South Vietnam, but it did force the North Vietnamese
government to return to the negotiating table and sign
an agreement that had been agreed to "in principle" but
not signed two months before. At the same time, Linebacker
II reassured the South Vietnamese government--erroneously
as it turned out--that we remained committed to its
survival.
It has long been debated whether or not Linebacker
II actually coerced North Vietnamese leaders into signing
an agreement. Although the December settlement was
similar to the one negotiated two months earlier, Hanoi's
leaders did not sign that accord. It is impossible
to know if they would have done so without the Christmas
bombing. It is interesting to note the words of two
expert observers who expressed their opinions on the
significance of the air attacks:
- "One look at any Vietnamese officer's face
told the whole story. It telegraphed hopelessness,
accommodation, remorse, fear. The shock was there;
our enemy's will was broken."--Vice Adm.
James B. Stockdale, POW and Medal of Honor recipient
- "I am convinced that Linebacker II served
as a catalyst for the negotiations which resulted
in the cease-fire. Airpower, given its day in court
after almost a decade of frustration, confirmed its
effectiveness as an instrument of national power--in
just nine-and-a-half flying days."--Adm.
Thomas H. Moorer, Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff,
1973
Charge: Airpower was an indiscriminate weapon
that killed excessive numbers of Vietnamese civilians.
Response: Guenter
Lewy has provided the most authoritative statistics
on casualties in the Vietnam War--although he himself
admits these numbers are estimates. He states that
250,000 South Vietnamese civilians were killed in the
fighting, with another 39,000 assassinated by the Viet
Cong. Breaking down the casualties by cause is difficult,
but based on those civilians admitted to hospitals
between 1967 and 1970, Lewy estimates that 67 percent
of all injuries resulted from mines, mortars, guns,
and grenades. The other 33 percent were injured by
shelling or bombing. If these percentages are
used for the entire war, and if we assume that
the number of those injured by shelling or bombing
are equal (Lewy doesn't break this category down),
and if we assume that those killed met their
fates in the same percentages as did those who were
wounded--and all of those are big ifs--then of the
587,000 Vietnamese civilians, both north and south,
that Lewy states were killed during the war, around
147,000 (25 percent) died from air attacks. The other
75 percent, more than 440,000 people, were killed by
ground or naval action.
Also note that ground commanders declared certain
areas in South Vietnam "free-fire zones" where
there was unrestricted use of artillery and mortar
fire: "Anything that moved could be killed and
anything that stood could be leveled." While Air
Force, Navy, Marine, and South Vietnamese aircraft
dropped five million tons of ordnance on South Vietnam,
the Army shot eight million tons of artillery rounds
there. For example, it was the policy of Maj. Gen.
Ellis W. Williamson, commander of the 25th Infantry
Division, to shoot 1,000 rounds of artillery for every
one received by the enemy. Of interest, the Viet Cong
used the 27,000 tons of dud artillery rounds fired
by the Army and Marines to build booby traps that caused
6,000 US casualties. A great deal of fire and steel
was rained down on South Vietnam, but the majority
of it was not dropped by aircraft.
Charge: The US Air Force was insufficiently
responsive to Army needs in South Vietnam.
Response: USAF flew 3.9 million combat
sorties in South Vietnam in support of the Army; of
those, 633,180 were "attack" sorties, including
67,477 B-52 strikes, each delivering up to 30 tons
of bombs. It is crucial to understand that Gen. William
C. Westmoreland, commander, US Military Assistance
Command, Vietnam, 1964-68, determined the targets in
South Vietnam for USAF aircraft--including the tens
of thousands of B-52 strikes usually directed against "suspected
enemy locations." Westmoreland also chose the
targets in Route Package 1--the area just north of
the demilitarized zone. There was only token USAF representation
on the MACV staff, despite the fact that a full general,
the commander of 7th Air Force, had his headquarters
collocated with that of Westmoreland and was his "air
deputy." When 7th Air Force aircraft went north
of Route Pack 1, the targets came from US Pacific Command
headquarters in Hawaii (after they were approved in
Washington, D.C.). The deputy for air also had no control
over Navy, Army, Marine, or South Vietnamese aircraft
and helicopters operating in South Vietnam. During
the siege of Khe Sanh in 1968, the 7th Air Force commander,
Gen. William W. Momyer, pushed for control of all air
assets in South Vietnam so as to protect the beleaguered
Marine post most effectively. Such control was initially
denied, and only a decision by the Secretary of Defense
to consolidate airpower under a single air commander,
temporarily, allowed a system that put the lives of
the troops under fire above parochial service interests.
Despite successes in Desert Storm and thereafter,
some unjustified criticisms of airpower continue.

An A-1 Skyraider
performs a near-vertical dive on enemy positions
in North Vietnam. (USAF photo)
Charge: In the 1991 Gulf War, the Air Force
was too focused on strategic attack; support of ground
forces was inadequate.
Response: Strategic attack made up only a small
part of the coalition air campaign. In fact, the air
tasking order that codes all air missions by type does
not even have a "strategic attack" category.
Thus, missions that struck chemical weapons bunkers
in northern Iraq or an electrical power plant in Baghdad
were coded as "air interdiction." Such a
classification system seems incongruous if airmen really
wished to emphasize strategic attack as their primary
mission.
Even so, some targets were unofficially considered
as being of a strategic nature: leadership (especially
telecommunications), key production facilities (electricity
and oil), transportation infrastructure (railroads
and bridges), and NBC--Nuclear, Biological, and Chemical
research, production, and storage facilities. Using
these categories, of the 41,039 strike sorties flown
by coalition aircraft, only 5,692 (13.7 percent) would
be classified as "strategic." Moreover, because
heavy bombers like the B-52 dropped a disproportionate
share of the bomb tonnage during the war (32 percent),
and most of those strikes were flown against the Iraqi
army, it is apparent that the vast amount of all bombs
delivered fell on enemy ground forces and their equipment.
Consider also the weight of ordnance actually falling
on Baghdad--the epitome of a strategic center of gravity.
In 43 days a mere 330 weapons (244 laser-guided bombs
and 86 Tomahawk cruise missiles) were delivered against
Baghdad targets. Those 330 weapons represent three
percent of all the precision weapons used during the
war, which in turn amounted to only nine percent of
all the air weapons expended. As a consequence, the
total tonnage falling on Baghdad during the war was
a mere 287 tons--a minute fraction of the total tonnage
of 84,200 tons dropped by the Air Force.
The effect of this massive air campaign directed against
the Iraqi ground forces in Kuwait was enormous. US
Central Command estimated that prior to the start of
coalition ground operations on Feb. 24, 1991, all front-line
Iraqi divisions had lost more than 50 percent of their
strength; rear divisions had been reduced by 25 percent.
More detailed examinations by US intelligence agencies
after the war confirmed these percentages. When it
is realized that a military unit is considered "combat
ineffective" when it has lost 40 percent of its
strength, it is small wonder that more than 80,000
Iraqi soldiers deserted during the aerial pounding
and another 86,000 surrendered virtually without a
fight.
Charge: Air attacks such as were conducted
in Operation Allied Force constitute nothing more than "recreational
bombing." Pilots remain at such an altitude that
they can't possibly hit their targets accurately.
Response: In operations such as Allied Force,
the war over Serbia to free Kosovo in 1999, political
leaders deemed it fundamental that NATO casualties
be kept to an absolute minimum. The alliance was shaky
from the start, but it would undoubtedly split apart
if heavy casualties were sustained. Hence, early on
President Clinton and NATO leaders declared that a
ground invasion was out of the question. The number
of personnel involved--Gen. Henry H. Shelton, JCS Chairman,
stated that at least 200,000 troops would be necessary--combined
with the memories of the vicious fighting in the Serbian
mountains during World War II, warned that an invasion
would mean heavy losses for NATO, as well as massive
casualties and collateral damage for the Serbs. Instead,
airpower would be used as the weapon of first resort.
Yet, the need to limit casualties, on both sides, remained
a primary consideration for NATO leaders.
As a consequence, allied aircraft were directed to
remain at medium altitude, usually above 15,000 feet,
so as to stay above the range of most enemy ground
fire. Some have argued that this policy induced inaccurate
bombing, thus increasing collateral damage and civilian
casualties.
In the vast majority of cases this was not true. A
Precision Guided Munition is most accurate when it
is dropped in the midaltitude range--from 15,000 to
23,000 feet--allowing enough time for the weapon to
correct itself in flight. If dropped from a lower altitude,
the weapon will have less kinetic energy, and its steering
fins will have less opportunity to correct the aim;
the weapon will usually land short of the target. From
the pilot's perspective, medium altitude is also advisable
because it allows time to identify the target at sufficient
distance, "designate it" (if laser guided),
and launch the weapon. In short, for PGMs against a
fixed target whose position is already established--which
was the case in most of the targets struck in Serbia--the
optimum altitude to ensure accuracy is at or above
15,000 feet.
To ensure accuracy, the optimum drop altitude for
nonguided munitions is lower than for a PGM. Even so,
acquisition remains a limiting factor: Coming in too
low at 575 mph makes it nearly impossible to acquire
the target, line up, and place the bomb accurately.
As a result, the compromise altitude for the delivery
of unguided bombs is around 5,000 feet. However, this
places the delivery aircraft right in the thick of
fire from ground defenses. Allied Force commanders
resolved this dilemma by keeping aircraft at medium
altitudes but restricting the use of non-PGMs to areas
where there was little or no chance there would be
civilian casualties or collateral damage.

In Allied Force,
precision munitions dropped from medium altitude
destroyed targets such as tanks. (USAF photo)
A difficulty arises in identifying and attacking mobile
targets. On April 14, 1999, near Korisa, Kosovo, NATO
pilots attacked what intelligence sources had identified--and
which indeed appeared to be--a military column. It
is now known the column also contained refugees: Several
dozen civilians were killed in the air strikes. This
is the only instance in the 78-day air campaign when
NATO intelligence sources and aircraft at medium altitude
combined to misidentify a target, thereby causing civilian
casualties. Could this accident have been avoided if
the aircraft had flown at a lower altitude? Probably.
Indeed, NATO changed the rules after this, allowing
aircraft in certain circumstances to fly lower to ensure
target identification. There is, however, a trade-off
in such instances: If flying lower increases the risk
to aircrews due to enemy ground fire, at what point
does the risk of misidentifying a target override the
risk of losing an airplane and its crew? If friendly
losses meant the shattering of the alliance, were they
preferable to allowing Slobodan Milosevic to continue
his atrocities unchecked?
Charge: Despite all the talk by airmen, airpower
remains an indiscriminate use of military force that
deliberately targets civilians.
Response: Various books and articles continue
to perpetuate this myth. Although one must recall the
caution of Mark Twain regarding lies, damned lies,
and statistics, the following statistics are fairly
unambiguous.
Gil Elliot in Twentieth Century Book of the Dead estimates
that 110 million people, military and civilian, died
in wars during the first seven decades of the 20th
century. More than half of those died due to genocide
and forced starvation. Of the 46 million who died due
to "technology," Elliot lists the causes
of death as small arms, which accounted for 24 million; "big
guns," 18 million; "mixed," three million;
and aerial bombing, one million. He notes that the
figure of one million dead due to air attack may be
higher but certainly less than two million. Thus, even
if we add the numbers of those who have died since
Elliot wrote in 1972, the number of those dying due
to air attacks during the entire 20th century would
not exceed two million.
Other researchers have listed as many as 170 million
dead in both internal and external wars during the
20th century. Those who advance higher casualty figures
usually attribute the additional deaths to even more
vicious dictators than those assumed by Elliot. Gerhard
Weinberg, for example, states that 60 million people
died in World War II (10 million more than most estimates),
and those extra deaths occurred largely as a result
of more civilians massacred and starved on the Eastern
Front and in China than was originally thought.
If we are to accept these staggering figures, it means
that of the 170 million people who died in wars during
the 20th century, the overwhelming majority died as
a result of military operations by armies, navies,
and paramilitary "police" forces. Two million
people, or about 1.2 percent of the total, were the
victims of air attack. Below are some more statistics
relative to warfare since World War II:
- According to Greenpeace, 3,000 civilians died in
the six-week Desert Storm air campaign; later studies
lower that figure to 1,000.
- UNICEF and the World Health Organization maintain
that more than one million Iraqi civilians have died
due to UN sanctions since 1990--55 percent of whom
are children under the age of five.
- Milosevic told US Ambassador Richard C. Holbrooke
that perhaps 25 Serbs died in the 1995 air campaign
over Bosnia; NATO lost one aircraft, and the two
crewmembers were captured and later released.
- Human Rights Watch states that approximately 500
civilians died in the 78-day NATO air campaign over
Serbia/Kosovo; there were no allied casualties.
- 18 US Army Rangers died in Mogadishu, Somalia,
with another 70 or so wounded, but at least 500 Somali
civilians were killed and another 500 wounded during
the 24-hour firefight of October 1993.
- The American Red Cross states that 200 people worldwide
are killed each week by land mines, with another
100 or so wounded. The US is not a signatory of the
Land Mine Ban Treaty.

An airman prepares
a 2,000-pound bomb for a B-1B sortie during Operation
Enduring Freedom. (USAF photo by SSgt. Shane
Cuomo)
Certainly, it is most regrettable that any civilians
are killed or injured by air attack, but we must be
realistic. Innocent people always die in war--tens
of millions of them over the past century. Given that
less than two percent of them were victims of air attack,
it is peculiar to charge that airpower is an indiscriminate
or inhumane weapon. Unfortunately, there are those
who still do. Yet, the arithmetic and facts are clear.
The biggest killers of the 20th century were small-arms
fire, blockades, sanctions, sieges, artillery fire,
land mines, and worst of all, despotic leaders who
inflicted genocide and starvation on friend and foe
alike.
War is indeed hell and always has been, but there
are ways to mitigate its effects on the innocent. Airmen
have maintained since the advent of flight that this
invention offered a form of war that was less deadly,
to both sides, than traditional means of war
on land and sea. History has proved these prophets
were correct. Moreover, the ability of aircraft to
project force in a discriminate manner so as to minimize
civilian casualties and collateral damage has continued
to increase over the past two decades. It is not the
answer to all problems and can still inflict most grievous
harm. Yet, recent conflicts have made it clear that
the centuries-old desire to wage war with humanity
and discrimination has finally become possible.
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A Note on Sources
For statistics
on Vietnam, see Guenter Lewy, America in
Vietnam (Oxford, 1978); Micheal Clodfelter, Vietnam
in Military Statistics (McFarland, 1995);
and Defense 89 "Almanac" (Government
Printing Office, September/October 1989).
For JCS warplans,
see John P. Glennon (ed.), Foreign Relations
of the United States, 1964-1968, Vol. I: Vietnam,
1964 (Government Printing Office, 1992).
For background
and details on air operations in Vietnam, see
Wayne Thompson, To Hanoi and Back: The US
Air Force and North Vietnam, 1966-1973 (Smithsonian
Institution Press, 2000); John T. Smith, The
Linebacker Raids: The Bombing of North Vietnam,
1972 (Arms and Armour Press, 1998); Neil
Sheehan, A Bright Shining Lie: John Paul
Vann and America in Vietnam (Random House,
1989); and Willard J. Webb, "The Single
Manager for Air in Vietnam," Joint
Force Quarterly (Winter 1993/94).
For the Persian
Gulf War, see Eliot A. Cohen (ed.), Gulf
War Air Power Survey, five volumes (Government
Printing Office, 1993); William M. Arkin, "Baghdad:
The Urban Sanctuary in Desert Storm?" Airpower
Journal (Spring 1997); and John G. Heidenrich, "The
Gulf War: How Many Iraqis Died?" Foreign
Policy (Spring 1993).
For Operation Allied
Force, see Human Rights Watch, "Civilian
Deaths in the NATO Air Campaign" (HRW,
February 2000).
For casualty figures
in wars over the past century, see Gil Elliot, Twentieth
Century Book of the Dead (Scribner, 1972);
R.J. Rummel, Death by Government: Genocide
and Mass Murder in the Twentieth Century (Transaction,
1994); William Eckhardt, Civilizations,
Empires, and Wars: A Quantitative History of
War (McFarland, 1992); Robert Owen (ed.), Deliberate
Force: A Case Study in Effective Campaign Planning (Air
University Press, 2000); Mark Bowden, Black
Hawk Down: A Story of Modern War (Atlantic
Monthly Press, 1999); and UNICEF, "Child
and Maternal Mortality Survey, Preliminary
Report" (July 1999). |
Phillip S. Meilinger is the deputy director of the
Aerospacenter at Science Applications International
Corp. He is a retired Air Force colonel and command
pilot with a Ph.D. in military history. He is the author
of four books and more than 60 articles on military
theory and operations. These views do not reflect those
of SAIC.
Copyright Air Force Association. All rightsreserved.
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