For all practical
purposes, the verdict is in: The decisive military factor in Gulf War II was jointness. It
is agreed that the US was able to pulverize Iraqi defenses because air, space,
land, and sea forces worked togethr as never before.
Gen. Tommy R. Franks, the war commander, and Donald
H. Rumsfeld, the Secretary of Defense, say US forces
did more than simply stay out of each others
way. They achieved true integration of their efforts. Victory stemmed
from joint powernot any single service.
Franks and Rumsfeld are clearly correct. It has never made sense to assert
that one service is more decisive than another.
However, this does not mean the debate has ended. New lessons-learned reports
regularly appear. (Example: A June 23 paper by the Center for Army Lessons
Learned says the war validated ... the continuing relevance of the
Armys
heavy forces.) Such analyses are bound to stir new controversies.
These postwar reviewsespecially DODs main report, now in preparation
at US Joint Forces Commandare important. Rumsfeld says the JFCOM
study will
most certainly affect how the armed forces ... organize, train, and equip
for many years to come.
JFCOMs final review may not be out for a while, but some general conclusions
about air and space power already can be reached.
For instance, no one seriously questions the enormous value of strategic
and tactical airlift or the advantage conferred by air superiority
in the most
recent war.
Likewise, space power is widely recognized as a critical
force multiplier,
as is the Air Forces unmatched air refueling capability.
Stealth proved itself once again.
As for precision guided weapons, all signs are that Iraqi forces
took so much damage from the air that they often could not engage
US ground
forces.
Shooters dropped
29,199 bombs and missiles, two-thirds of them precision guided.
Rumsfeld called it the most powerful and precise air campaign ever.
Some believe that the impact of airpower is felt in deeper and
even more important ways.
In a new study for the Aerospace Education Foundation, Rebecca
Grant, a top airpower analyst, concludes that Gulf War II was an
airpower war. She does
not claim USAF won the war. Rather, she reports, airpower created
a framework
for victory.
Airpower, Grant writes, set the conditions for success. It
made it possible to: destroy Iraqi air defenses and communications
in advance
of war;
reshuffle, at
the last minute, the order of opening attacks; wipe out much
of the Republican Guard before US forces came into contact;
sustain
the
war even when the
ground force was not moving; and wage simultaneous and very
different wars in the
south, north, and west of Iraq.
This framework, Grant argues, afforded coalition forces unprecedented
flexibility, power, speed, and surprise. It allowed a relatively
small coalition ground
force to handle potential threats ranging from armor attack
and Scud launches to terrorism
and oil field sabotage, while opening the way for a rapid
advance on Baghdad.
In Senate testimony, Rumsfeld offered his own view of the
wars key lessons.
He noted (besides jointness) three factors: speed, intelligence,
and precision.
He said overmatching powerpower delivered precisely and
at precisely the right momentis more important than overwhelming
force, and
that while the US once defined force in terms of massthe
number of troops on the groundmass may
no longer be the best measure of power in a conflict.
Rumsfelds words echo Joint Vision 2010, a 1996 Joint Chiefs
of Staff paper that held that information technology
and precision strikehallmarks
of airpowermade it possible to produce the effects of
mass without actually massing troops and equipment.
Rumsfelds remarks suggested endorsement of effects-based operationsattacks
designed not to destroy a target but rather to
produce a desired effect. Careful targeting and precision munitions lessened
the danger to noncombatants, producing
fewer civilian casualties. Today, EBO is largely
an airpower domain.
A fundamental difference between Gulf War I and
Gulf War II was use of information to dramatically
compress
the
time required
for an
attack. The infrastructure
that made the differencemobile intelligence-surveillance-reconnaissance
systems, powerful and reliable voice and data
communicationswas provided
by air and space forces.
Maj. Gen. David A. Deptula, Air Combat Commands director of plans and
programs, and Lt. Col. Sigfred J. Dahl, wrote recently that the wars of the
1990s, and
Gulf War II especially, saw the use of
airpower as a distinct maneuver element against
enemy ground forces. He predicted more
of these battlefield
air operations in which ground forces
will support air operations.
Gen. T. Michael Moseley, the Gulf War air boss,
recently concluded his own lessons-learned
report, which,
according to the various
press accounts,
noted
not just successes
but also a number of shortcomings, such as
weak battle damage assessment and shortages
of electronic
bandwidth.
Those specific problems, however, certainly
are negligible compared to the magnitude
of airpowers contribution to the
joint fight in Iraq.
We repeat: This war was won by the Joint
Force, not the Air Force. Given different
circumstances,
airpower
might
not
look as dominating
as it
did last spring
in Iraq. However, its hard to deny
that, in Gulf War II, airpower made it
happen.