Iraqi soldiers, interviewed
by US troops during and just after Gulf War II, commonly
reported that their morale collapsed when, in the midst
of a raging sandstorm, armored vehicles began exploding
all around them. They knew then that the blowing, obscuring
sand was no refuge from American sensors and bombs.
There was no place to hide.
Watching the Iraqis from
high above the billowing clouds of sand were E-8C
Joint STARS surveillance
airplanes,
whose ground moving target indicator radars could
clearly see convoys of vehicles inching along
a major highway.
Battle managers aboard the Joint STARS were able
to cue other aircraft, as well as special units
on the
ground, to confirm the locations and types of the
vehicles and execute their wholesale destruction.
To the terrified Iraqis, it made little difference
that the crews of those radar aircraft, as well as
the maintenance people supporting them at forward
locations, were part of a unique USAF experiment
in managing its
force. The Joint STARS systems belong to the 116th
Air Control Wingthe first and, so far, only blended
wing comprising active duty and Air National
Guard personnel.
The unit had been in existence only three months
when it went off to take part in Operation Iraqi
Freedom.
By the end of major combat operations, it had logged
more than 300 sorties and 3,000 hours of flying time,
said Col. Tom Lynn, commander of the 116th. And,
while Lynn would not say so, others have described
the Joint
STARS operation in the sandstorm as a key eventmaybe
the key eventin the brief but intense drive
on Baghdad.
This marked not only the first combat deployment
of a blended wing but also the first time that Joint
STARS
had gone to war as a mature system. In the 1991 Gulf
War, two developmental A models went to the Gulf,
providing limited but valuable information to war
commanders.
Developmental E-8C models were used in Operation
Allied Force in 1999 and early production models
in Operation
Enduring Freedom in 2001. This time, the full E-8C
version went in nearly full wing strength.
Nine of the 15 Joint STARS aircraft that were in
the USAF inventory deployed forward to bases on the
Arabian
peninsula. The 116th set up shop for about 600 airmen
in two locations, the largest E-8 deployment ever.
The Air National Guard provided about a tenth of
the air crew members and about one-fourth of the
support
team members. More Guardsmen would have deployed
had there been enough time to train them. As it was,
many
were new to the Joint STARS mission.
The E-8 has the capacity to observe the terrain and
spot moving objects. Though it cannot yet distinguish
between civilian and military vehicles, it can distinguish
between tracked and wheeled vehicles. By coordinating
information with satellite data and with intelligence
from Predator and Global Hawk unmanned reconnaissance
platforms, Joint STARS battle managers put symbology
on particular targets, identifying them for attack
aircraft and Army ground and helicopter units. This
was done via use of both voice and digital means.
The information was also forwarded to the combined
air
operations center, where commanders can use Joint
STARS data to get a feel for the big picture of
the unfolding battle.
Such was the demand for Joint STARS information that
some missions lasted 23 hours. At times, two or more
E-8s (the precise number is classified) were in the
air simultaneously, to provide both an overall battle
picture and a tightly focused one on certain areas
of interest, such as Baghdad.
The mission shifted rapidly from intelligence
preparation of the battlefield to command and
control of strike assets, according to the wing vice
commander, Col. Mark Hall.
 |
| Gulf War II generated
the largest Joint STARS deployment to date,
with nine aircraft
and about
600 airmen sent to two forward locations. Joint
STARS performance during the sandstorm was
a turning point in the war. |
Baptism by Fire
Lynn, himself a Guard member, said OIF proved to
be a baptism by fire for the unit,
a steep
learning curve, instant maturation for a lot
of these guys. They acquitted themselves incredibly
well.
Joint STARS performance during the dust storms
proved to be a major turning point in
the war, according to Air Force Chief of Staff
Gen. John P.
Jumper.
At that point in late March, Jumper told Defense
Daily, The
Iraqis, who thought we couldnt see them
any better than they could see us, boldly struck
out on roads,
to try to reinforce [their units], especially
the Medina Division of the Republican Guard.
He said, the Iraqis essentially got torn
apart, and, as a result, walked away from their
equipment.
The E-8Cs were able to directly cue both Army
AH-64 Apache helicopters and USAF F-15Es through
data
links, andthrough data-sharing systems
with the combined air operations centerwith
virtually all of the strike aircraft involved
in the war.
On one mission, an E-8 lost one of its four engines
but stayed on station for three hours to provide
intelligence-surveillance-reconnaissance and
command and control support to US Marines advancing
on Tikrit. After the war, a Marine report singled
out Joint STARS: No other collection asset
provided the wide area, all-weather coverage
of the battle-
space that the JSTARS did. The report went
on to relate that the combination of the airborne
E-8
and its Army ground communications crews ensured
the Marines were not blind on the battlefield.
The Army changed its tactics to include use of
Joint STARS with its Apache helicopters when
the Apaches
ran into trouble with sand and enemy tactics.
Maj. Gen. David H. Petraeus, the Armys
101st Airborne Division commander, said, When
we could not get the target definition that we
needed, we went to daylight,
deep armed reconnaissance operations [that had]
JSTARS supporting them, to direct them. This
combination, he said, enabled the Apaches to
destroy very
significant targets on a number of occasions.
The OIF air boss, Gen. T. Michael Moseley, credited
Joint STARS in combination with other airborne
sensors, strike aircraft, and special operations
forces with
preventing Saddam Hussein from unleashing Scud
missiles, as Saddam had done during Gulf War
I. I believe
he has not shot one because weve been out
there, he
told reporters on April 5. We rehearsed
the command and control of this. We rehearsed
all of
the orchestration
and lash-up of supporting and complementing assets.
 |
| Air Force officials and
Georgia lawmakers worked closely to craft the
first blended
wing. Here,
Sen. Saxby Chambliss (R-Ga.) and Col. Tom Lynn,
116th ACW commander, listen to a briefing on the
units Gulf War II exploits. |
Despite its high profile as an enabler of the
fast-paced attack on Iraqi forces, much of the
detailed experience
of the Joint STARS unit in OIF will, at least
for the moment, remain hidden.
I think youll find that, with any ISR system, they tend to hold those
cards pretty close to the vest, said Lt. Col. John LaBuda of the 116th.
A senior Air Combat Command official put it more bluntly: As
long as things are still pretty warm in SWA [Southwest
Asia] and in Korea, I dont think
anybodys going to be telling ISR war stories. Its ... a good
idea to keep your tricks to yourself.
Seeking a Mission
The blended wing came into being as a political expedient.
Robins AFB, Ga., home of the 116th, had been host to
a Guard unitthe 116th Bomb Wingthat
was flying B-1B bombers. The Air Force in 2001 decided to retire 33 B-1Bs
assigned to Guard units at Robins and McConnell AFB, Kan., and an active
unit at Mountain
Home AFB, Idaho. The move came as a shock to ANG and state officials,
who did not want state ANG members (some 1,150 at Robins) left without
a mission.
Maj. Gen. Paul A. Weaver (now retired) was the director
of the Air National Guard at the time. He was determined
to get the best possible outcome
for Georgia and Kansas.
Air Force Secretary James G. Roche came up with the idea of the blended
wing, Weaver said. It was a notion that would benefit the Air Force and
make good use of the leverage provided by the Air National Guard.
 |
| The feared clash of cultures between
active and Guard airmen has proved to be mostly
a nonissue. The biggest problems tend to be mundane,
such as who pays travel vouchers. |
The adjutant general of the Kansas ANG did not want
a blended wing, so the focus fell on Robins. Joint
STARS aircraft already were based there
with
the 93rd Air
Control Wing. Could the Air Force actually conduct such an experiment
with one of the services most heavily tasked aircraft?
We never, quite frankly, considered JSTARS, Lynn recalled. It was
a mission still in growth, meaning it had not yet received all
its personnel or aircraft. Moreover, Joint STARS was a so-called low-density,
high-demand system.
Roche, however, believed that Joint STARS was an excellent
platform on which to try out the blended wing concept
because, if it worked,
it could
usher
in even tighter coordination between active and Guard forces. Success
could conceivably
spell an end to the Guard operating hand me down aircraft
from the regular Air Force.
In February 2002, Roche told Congress that blended
units will integrate
active, civilian, Guard, and Reserve capabilities in creative new
ways that may appear as radical departures from the
past but which have already been part of
the Air Force business practice for years. Flying and support
functions, he said, would become so integrated between the force
components as
to be invisible to outside observers.
Roche subsequently suggested that blended wings could
work even with a brand-new system such as the F/A-22
fighter. Service officials
see such
possibilities
as a potential consolation prize to constituencies that take hits
in the next round
of base closures, slated to be announced in 2005.
Both the 93rd Air Control Wing and the 116th Bomb
Wing officially stood down in October 2002. The new
organization,
the 116th Air Control
Wing,
was the
immediate successor. Lynn, who had commanded the old ANG bomb wing,
became commander of
the new blended wing.
Melding Two Perspectives
Hall said that he, like many in the active force,
had only a vague understanding of the Guard and had
some
serious concerns about how
such an organization
could work.
We always looked at the Guard as weekend warriors, Hall noted. We
thought, Here we are, an LD/HD, and were going to deploy all the
time, and what is the Guard going to do? ... We really didnt
understand all the differences in the Air National Guard, or the
Reserves, for that matter.
ANG personnel fall into two basic categories: part-time
and full-time personnel. The first, or traditional, group
comprises those who drill one weekend a month and
two weeks a year, the so-called weekend warriors.
These can be mobilized
at the state or federal level. The second categoryfull timeincludes
two subgroups: Active Guard Reserve (AGR) and military technicians.
AGRs serve in uniform in the same federal pay status as active
duty personnel,
but, under
Title 32, they report to the state. If AGRs are mobilized at the
federal level, they serve under Title 10. Military technicians
are federal
civilian employees
who must, by statute (Title 32), serve as weekend-warrior drilling
members of their Guard unit. Title 32 also requires the technicians
to wear their
military
uniforms on the job. They can be mobilized with their unit at the
federal level.
About 25 percent of my folks are full time, said Col. Lois Schmidt, commander
of the 116th Mission Support Group. The rest are what we call traditional
Guard members. We dont like the term part time.
While Title 10 federalized Guard officers can write
performance reports, recommend promotions, and exercise
the Uniform Code
of Military Justice
over all airmenactive
and mobilized personnelunder their command, Title 32 officers
cannot.
Normally, Lynn serves under Title 32. For this reason,
Hall, the active duty vice commander, holds a unique,
second, and simultaneous
office.
He is the 116th
Air Control Wing active duty element commander. He handles
all UCMJ actions. He is the senior rater for promotion board
endorsements. I do all that
stuff for the active duty side, because Im a Title 10 person, said
Hall.
However, after Hall has racked and stacked airmen
for promotions, for example, he gives all of the packages
to Lynn. If there is a disagreement,
Hall said, he defers to Lynns judgment. Under the law,
however, he does not have to defer.
Lynn likewise confers with Hall on the Guard personnel
issues. Its
a leadership thing based on mutual trust, Lynn observed. There
are no problems.
 |
SrA. Robert Vance runs an engine test at a forward
location. During the war, many Guard members were
still in training. Now, however, air and ground
crews are much more balanced between active and
Guard members. |
Changing the Law
Nevertheless, the situation is an unwieldy one, and
the Air Staff has proposed some legal changes that
could smooth the way.
Weaver said that, after retirement, he consulted for
the Air Force to work the blended wing legislative
issue, among others.
We had to change the language of the law, Weaver asserted.
One solution was to get the states to offer active
duty officers assigned to Guard units a temporary
Title 32 commission, which
they would hold
simultaneously with their Title 10 commission. This would give
them temporary authority
over
Guardsmen in their units. However, the law specifically forbade
the reverse, of Guardsmen being given temporary Title 10 commissions
within the boundaries
of the US.
Weaver reworked the language allowing such a dual
commissionwhich would
be limited only to the commander of a dual or blended organizationand
the Office of the Secretary of Defense took an interest.
They asked me to pull it back, run it past [OSD] general counsel, run it past
the Justice Department. ... It passed everybodys test, Weaver
said.
The proposed law would put such commanders in two
reporting chainsone
to a state governor, one to the President.
By late summer, the legislation was included in the
Senate Armed Services Committee defense authorization
bill for Fiscal
2004,
and Weaver said
hed
received assurances that the House Armed Services Committee
would defer to the SASC language
in conference.
So Tom Lynn will have both a Title 10 and a Title 32 commission,
Weaver said.
After Lynn leaves as wing commander, his successor will
be decided jointly by the adjutant general of the Georgia
ANG
and the commander
of Air Combat
Command.
If an active duty commander is selected, the vice commander
will be from the Guard, to preserve the dual nature of
the organizations
leadership.
When USAF announced the blending, there was some concern
that the cultures of the Guard and active force might clash,
said
CMSgt.
Donald Camp,
Lynns
command chief master sergeant.
Clashing Cultures?
Yes, there are cultural differences, Cays said. Most of
these have to do with the way that Guardsmen and active duty
personnel
are evaluated,
paid, and
promoted. There are two systems, and they are not easily meshed.
This can cause friction.
Enlisted people in the Guard are hired directly into
a slot and dont
compete for jobs as their active counterparts do. To
be promoted, Guardsmen must hire into a slot that carries
a higher rank. Moreover,
not all
Guard slots are
considered supervisory, whereas all active duty noncommissioned
officers are trained to be leaders, Cays noted.
A senior technician with 25 years of service may well
bridle at working
side by side with active duty people of lesser military
rank, or working
for a younger person or one with fewer stripes, Cays
said. This was a problem that was anticipated before
the blend but for which there is no easy solution. Most
people just suck it up, Cays said.
The Guard also has a reputation for informality, he
said.
First name, that type of stuff, he explained. Its not anything
other than, you work with somebody for 20 or 30 years, you tend to lose that
formality. The active dutys not like that. Regulations
call for greater formality, which is rapidly sinking in, Cays
added.
While Guardsmen are evaluated strictly on performance
of their stated duties, active duty people must also
score
points for above and beyond stuff, Cays
said, as well as time on station, awards, schools,
etc.
Finally, Guardsmen compete differently for recognition,
such as in Airman of the Quarter awards. While active
duty personnel
compete
within the
wing, then
the base, and then their major command, Guardsmen go
through a different
process, focused on the state. Even physical training
tests are different.
There are some tribal tendencies between
the two groups, possibly because nearly all Guard enlisted
people live
off base while
many enlisted
active airmen live in the dorms, and the Guard people
stay put while the active duty
rotate out after two or three years.
Still, we let them in our club, they let us in their club, said
SSgt. Joseph Stuart, an active duty NCO.
There is a sense of family and belonging in the Guard which is appealing,
Stuart said. In the Guard, you really get to know people,
and there is a tremendous esprit de corps.
However, there remain vexing, Catch-22 problems regarding
things such as travel vouchers. People sometimes bounce between
the wing, base headquarters, and ops group because
clear lines have not
been completely
established about
financial responsibilities, Stuart said.
The unit is working through most issues. I think
the blending is going well, said Cays. Weve
come a long way in a short period of time.
There are solid benefits to the blending. Because
the Guard typically has veterans with long experience,
while the
active element has
many junior
airmen, the
result is an in-house mentoring system, Lynn said.
The junior members have the benefit
of watching and learning from old hands, most of
whom
have at least some active duty experience.
Operational benefits accrue, too, from the experience
of flight crews. When the B-1Bs departed, many of
the wings offensive
and defensive weapons systems officers cross-trained
to be air battle managers
in the E-8C, Hall
reported.
The ABM specialty is one in which there is a chronic
shortfall in the Air Force.
 |
| After the success of a
blended wing with Joint STARSa new system and a low-density, high-demand
assetthe Air Force may try the concept with
another new system, the F/A-22. |
The thing thats exciting to me, Hall said, is that individuals who
were on the tip of the spear as strike aircrew members in the B-1B will now be in
the back of our jet talking to someone who is now tip of the spear. ... They
will bring some insight to that conversation. Likewise, bomb loaders and
people in other specialties that didnt have an exact analogy with an intelligence-surveillance-reconnaissance
unit have had a great opportunity to
cross-train into flight operations, such as becoming
flight engineers.
The differences ... are slowly dissolving away, Lynn said, and
I think that just comes from working together and
building relationships.
For the most part, the functioning of the wing is transparent, Hall
said, and there are no discernible differences
between active and Guard personnel. The wing leadership
was
not told how to
manage the
blend,
but was left to
figure out the details on its own.
Cays said there is little trouble getting volunteers
to go on deployments, some of which are open-ended
in length.
Why
do the
Guardsmen raise
their hands to
go?
Patriotism, Cays offered, or they just want to do it. Ive
found out from my career in the Guard that the people
are there because they want to
be there, not because they have to be there. Some
people do it for educational benefits [or] extra income,
but the majority
of our people
do it because
they like it.
While the wing is not writing a how-to book on
building a blended wing per se, Lynn said it
is capturing
all the lessons learned. Should there
be another blended wing, it would be easy for
that wing to review the 116ths
experience. However, so much of the 116ths
experience is necessarily unique that were
not naive enough to think that is the end solution to
all future blending initiatives.
Lynn said the 116th has entertained a steady
stream of visitors, not only from the media but
from other
Guard
units.
Lt. Gen. Joseph H. Wehrle Jr., then USAFs assistant
vice chief of staff, said the senior leadership
has kept a close eye
on Robins
but maintained
a hands-off approach.
They are smart people, and we know they will figure these things out, Wehrle
said. They have pride of ownership of this
concept.
The senior USAF leadership was very pleased with
the wings
performance in Gulf War II, Wehrle said, and
hopes the success of the unit in combat
will make it easier to develop similar units
in other systems.
They did very well, Wehrle said. We would hope people dont
forget just how well they did.
Weaver said he has participated in a number
of what-if drills, scrutinizing other missions
and
other bases
where blended
wings might be employed.
There are a multitude of scenarios where this might work very well, he
said. Blending is one of the smart things we
might do to ease the opstempo and perstempo in our
force.
What Robins has done, he added, is give us
a roadmap for how we might do this elsewhere.
Copyright Air Force Association. All rightsreserved.
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