
Enduring Freedom has seen the
longest-ever combat fighter mission-more than
15 hours. Meanwhile, B-52s have flown close
air support. The distinctions between strategic
and tactical platforms are gone-what matters
are effects. (USAF photo by SSgt. Wayne Clark)
One of the "right lessons" to draw from
the military operation in Afghanistan is that US airpower
is accurate and highly reliable, said Army Gen. Tommy
R. Franks, Commander in Chief of Central Command. And
space communications was the lifeblood of that operation,
said USAF Gen. Ralph E. Eberhart, Franks's counterpart
at US Space Command.
The two operational Commanders in Chief were directly
involved in carrying out the innovative operation.
In the past, ground forces commanders have talked
among themselves about whether they can depend on precision
engagement of the enemy from the air. "What I've
told all my friends and neighbors is, 'By God, you
can count on it,' " said Franks.
Franks, the officer who ramrods Operation Enduring
Freedom in Southwest Asia, told an Air Force Association
audience in Orlando, Fla., that he has learned to trust
the capabilities of airpower in the effort to defeat
the Taliban and al Qaeda forces.
He added that Enduring Freedom has been "the
most precise war in America's history, to be sure,
beyond question."
Operations over Afghanistan began Oct. 7. Thirteen
days later, virtually all the air defenses and early
warning systems in the country had been destroyed by
air strikes, said the CENTCOM chief.
About that time, special operations forces linked
up with the Northern Alliance and other opposition
combatants to sharpen "the incredible operational
fires provided by you and yours," said Franks.
Within weeks, the Taliban force had been destroyed
as a coherent military entity. A new government was
introduced in Kabul on Dec. 22.
Precision engagement was the linchpin of the whole
effort, Franks observed.
"I suspect we have seen the first glimpse of
precision engagement as it was described in Joint Vision
2020," he said, referring to the JCS Chairman's
operational template for US military operations in
years to come.
The technology supported hunter-killer operations,
strikes and restrikes, and the employment of sensor-shooter
grids unlike any seen in the past. The ability to plan
and count on ISR--Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance--was "incredible," Franks
asserted.
In "the largest and most complex use ever of
Unmanned Aerial Vehicles of multiple varieties," operators
achieved an availability rate that approached 100 percent,
Franks noted.
"If you are a CINC, you count on everything to
be where you need to have it at the time that you need
to have it there--incredible work when you can ...
receive about 100 percent of what you count on, thanks
to great young people on the ground and ... in the
air."

The Predator UAV has proved
its worth in providing detailed views of the
battlefield, in cuing other weapons platforms,
and as a shooter in its own right. (USMC photo
by William D. Crow)
Technology since the 1991 Gulf War has come a long
way, too, he noted, making operations more swift and
efficient. During the early part of Enduring Freedom,
the US conducted about 200 attack sorties a day, but "the
hell of it is that the 200 sorties today have hit roughly
the same number of targets we hit with 3,000 a day
during Desert Storm."
Franks added that in Desert Storm "we used about
10 airframes per target. In Enduring Freedom, we struck
two targets per aircraft."
Among Enduring Freedom's firsts were the longest combat
fighter mission in history; an F-15E mission covered
more than 15 hours. One surveillance mission lasted
for more than 26 hours.
"With all due respect to those who accomplished
something incredible during the Berlin Airlift, it
seems to me that the duration, size, intensity, and
the result of those aviation efforts into and out of
Afghanistan are beyond what we may have ever planned
for," said Franks.
Enduring Freedom involved the first opening of US
Air Force bases in Central Asia and the largest RED
HORSE construction effort since Vietnam War days.
USAF aircraft delivered more than 100 Joint Direct
Attack Munitions during a single 20-minute period,
and they also dropped more than 50 million leaflets
(one of which sold on eBay for $147.80, Franks noted)
and more than 2.5 million humanitarian daily rations,
all by air.
End-to-end linkages of sensor platforms, such as E-8
Joint STARS surveillance and battle management aircraft
and Predators with shooters and command and control,
provided revolutionary fusion of information and functional
commands, said Franks. And all this was to back ground
forces that sometimes used less-technological transport.
"Unbelievable--close air support and interdiction
fires in support of people riding around on horses," said
Franks.
Among the lessons learned from the conflict is the
incredible flexibility of bombers, which enables them
to do even close air support, said Franks.
Not that other types of strike aircraft are now outdated.
"We are going to have to continue to wrap our
arms around this business of the flexibility we gain
by having a balance of multiple types of platforms,
because what served well in Afghanistan may not be
the precise trick we need in the next fight," said
Franks.
Afghan operations also had a lot to teach about the
necessity of the C-17, the kinds and numbers of tanker
refueling platforms needed, and the benefits of mixing
and matching sensors and shooters to the needs of the
mission.

Without much fanfare, space
has become integral to everything USAF does
in war and peace. Space has become so critical
that it is time to seriously address protecting
US satellites. To do less would be "naive," Eberhart
said. (USAF photo by TSgt. Cedric H. Rudisill)
"General Billy Mitchell, once upon a time, said
airpower has the power of offense always with it. We
choose the time, the place, and the method of attack," said
Franks. "If we carry anything forward with us
out of Enduring Freedom, that probably ought to be
it."
Franks concluded that, in the future, "sometimes
we will find ground power supported by airpower [and]
in some cases, we will have airpower leveraged by ground
forces."
In the decade since Desert Storm, the Air Force has
been working hard on learning how to leverage space
systems for operational use, said Eberhart, Commander
in Chief not only of US Space Command but also of North
American Aerospace Defense Command and commander of
Air Force Space Command.
That means taking systems designed for national, strategic
purposes and figuring out how they can help solve smaller,
tactical problems, Eberhart told AFA.
"The analogy I use is a two-engine airplane," he
said. "We had both throttles back toward idle,
in terms of space control and force enhancement. We've
moved that force enhancement throttle right on up to
[full power]."
Space communications, for instance, has been a lifeline
of Operation Enduring Freedom. Space Command doubled
the bandwidth available to Central Command--in part
by going out and buying additional commercial capabilities
and in part by picking the pocket of the other CINCs.
"They are not happy about that, but they understand
because they know we would do the same thing for them
if they were sending people in harm's way," said
Eberhart.
In fact the military may have even reached the point
where it takes many of the advantages of space for
granted. Think of GPS. Only a small handful of GPS-guided
munitions were used in Desert Storm. In Enduring Freedom,
upward of 50 percent of the bombs dropped were JDAMs.
"And in terms of the accuracy that we have provided--it
is all fuzzed up for security reasons--but we are providing
accuracy half again as good as the operational requirements
document stipulates," said Eberhart.
The JDAM was originally specified to be accurate to
within a few meters of its intended aim point.
If the force enhancement throttle is on full power,
to repeat Eberhart's analogy, the space control throttle
is not--at least, not yet.
Mention "space control," and many people's
thoughts turn immediately to weapons in space and space
battle. "But I would offer to you that the pillars
of space control start with surveillance," said
Eberhart. "We've got to know what is up there.
[A] space 'order of battle,' if you will."
Even when moving into the area of denial of space
capabilities to adversaries, there are ways of completing
the mission without destroying orbital equipment--attacking
ground equipment, for one thing, or jamming transmissions.
"There are lots of things you can do. You can
use nonkinetic means," said Eberhart.
Even in Enduring Freedom, the US has practiced negation
of a sort by buying up as much imagery of the area
of operations as possible. It's an expensive technique--but
an effective one, for now.
At least the Air Force can say the phrase "space
control" again. In the 1990s, there was a period
when broaching the subject was unpopular.
"We couldn't talk about it," says Eberhart. "I
think that is terribly naive."
Today, force application through space means what
the CINCSPACE called the "big guys"--ICBMs.
If there is one nuclear weapon on the face of the Earth,
it should belong to the US, he added.
But in decades to come, with the Global Strike Task
Force, the situation may change.
"You are going to kick down the door, in my view,
with weapons through space and possibly from space," said
Eberhart.
Considering the length of system development times,
the Air Force needs to dedicate itself now to thinking
what that capability might be.
"Whether it is a conventional ICBM, which causes
some people to shudder, or whether it is a [Combat
Aerial Vehicle] or Pegasus off a B-52, whatever it
might be, we've got to develop those capabilities in
the coming decades," said Eberhart.
Doing missile defense right will also probably involve
doing some of it from space, according to Eberhart.
"You are going to do it with space based lasers
or things like that," he said.
Peter Grier, a Washington editor for
the Christian Science Monitor, is a longtime defense
correspondent and regular contributor to Air Force
Magazine. His most recent article, "Bush's
Nuclear Blueprint," co-authored with Robert
S. Dudney, appeared in the March 2002 issue.