Senior Air Force leaders
and other top military officials outlined trends, plans,
and lessons learned from Operation Iraqi Freedom at
the Air Force Associations 20th Air Warfare Symposium
in Orlando, Fla.
Specifically, they unveiled
what could prove to be a historic new level of Air
Force engagement
in the
nations ground combat operations.
This years symposium, held Feb. 13-14, was titled Integrated
Air War in the 21st Century: Lessons Learned From
Operation Iraqi Freedom and the Way Ahead.
 |
| Catalyst.
This airman,
part of a combat control team, walks a desert
in Southwest Asia, where specialized
troops were key to the focused application of airpower.
The Air Force plans to pull together battlefield
airmen, of all types, under a common organizational
and training structure. (USAF photo by SSgt. Jeremy
T. Lock) |
What follows are summaries of the speakers presentations
and press remarks during the two-day conference.
Full transcripts of the formal presentations may be
found
at www.afa.org.
James G. Roche, Secretary of the Air Force
The Air Force will devote more resources to special
operations forces and put more emphasis on directly
supporting ground forces, said Air Force Secretary
James G. Roche.
The new focus stems from Air Force experiences in
the Global War on Terror. Roche cited an Operation
Iraqi
Freedom action in which some 1,400 SOF troops, working
with air and space forces, essentially paralyzed
11 Iraqi divisions. Not only did they virtually
hold terrain with a minimum footprint, they ensured
that the 3rd Infantry Divisions drive to Baghdad
was significantly easier than it would have been
had those Iraqi divisions moved south, said
Roche.
He directed special attention to what he termed battlefield
airmenUSAF personnel on the ground who
work directly with land forces. They were highly
effective, controlling large areas with limited forces
and ... tailored coalition airpower, he said.
This was a powerful lesson that wont be forgotten,
Roche asserted.
Special operations in our Air Force is not and
cannot be a peripheral capability. ... Wherever we
fight in
the future, the capabilities of our special operators
will be integral to our success, he said.
Among recent changes, combat search and rescue
has been transferred from Air Combat Command to
Air Force
Special Operations Command, said Roche. He also
noted that the Air Forces CSAR community
will get a new helicopter as soon as possible.
USAF is developing lighter, all-weather gear for
combat controllers as part of its battlefield airmen
project,
said Roche. He predicts ground controllers will
soon be able to precisely designate targets at
a distance
of more than six miles, pass data directly to overhead
aircraft, and get an electronic receipt stating
the time when ordnance will strike the target.
Moreover, the Air Force plans to pull together
all battlefield airmenincluding combat controllers,
pararescuemen, combat weather specialists, enlisted
terminal attack controllers, and tactical air control
party airmenunder a common organizational
and training structure. Roche said that will strengthen
the combat power they bring to the battlefield,
whether they bring it as part of ACC or part of
AFSOC.
The Air Force already is committed to buying CV-22s
to replace the MH-53 Pave Low helicopters, now
nearing 40 years in age, Roche noted. He said the
CV-22 will
provide unprecedented capabilities for infiltration
and extraction of SOF troops and maybe even long-range
CSAR. However, it will not be suitable as a gunship,
a helicopter tanker, or as a C-130 replacement,
Roche asserted.
 |
| For Tight Spots. USAF
will buy F-35Bsthe
short takeoff and vertical landing version of the
Joint Strike Fighter. The fighter can use small,
rugged airfields and thus offer on-call support
to troops on remote battlefields. |
Roche said the service needs a C-130 replacement
and is considering several possibilities. However,
he said,
each new USAF study seems to come up with alternatives
that are not affordable. If the answer is
new C-130s to bridge us to some distant future,
then we
will need to do that, said Roche.
To strengthen USAFs support to land forces,
the service plans to enhance and extend the life of
the
A-10 attack aircraft, giving it new engines, new
sensors, new weapons, and structural improvements.
The A-10
modification program will emulate the B-1B model.
In that case, USAF took some airframes out of service
and used the savings to upgrade the remainder.
Roche
said the service had not yet determined the numbers
of A-10s that will be retired early.
Roche announced that the Air Force intends to buy
some number of F-35Bsthe short takeoff and
vertical landing (STOVL) version of the Joint Strike
Fighter.
Such a move has been considered for nearly 10 years,
but its announcement now illustrates the Air Forces
renewed commitment to ground support. The conventional
takeoff version, the F-35A, will still be purchased
in far greater numbers, Roche said. It, too, will
be oriented to the air-to-ground mission.
In addition, Roche declared a new program to maximize
the strike capability of all our air-to-ground
systems by
upgrading targeting and sensor pods on existing
aircraft. The Air Force, he said, believes its
important that our land forces see us demonstrate our
commitment
... to air-to-ground supportboth deep interdiction
and close air support.
In 2002, service leaders announced a change for
its stealthy new fighter, redesignating the F-22
the
F/A-22. That move signaled a mission-parameter
shift from primarily
air superiority to a balance of air-to-air and
ground attack. Because of its speed and stealth,
the F/A-22
will offer strong support to special operations
forces deep behind enemy lines. Roche noted this
year that
the service had added new equipment to the Raptor
for that purpose.
Roche told Air Force Magazine that the FB-22a
missionized, somewhat larger version of the F/A-22is
the leading candidate to fill a gap in long-range
strike capability, pending the maturation of new
technologies
for deep strike. He said Air Combat Command will
lead a multidisciplinary, multicommand review of
options
and present recommendations in time for budget
deliberations in August.
Gen. John P. Jumper, USAF Chief of Staff
The Air Force and its sister services are reinventing
close air support mostly with new concepts of operation,
not merely with improvements to hardware, said
Gen. John P. Jumper, Air Force Chief of Staff.
Jumper recalled that Operation Anaconda, which
took place in Afghanistan in 2002, highlighted
communications
problems that have long beleaguered the services.
In Anaconda, the Army complained, it didnt
get enough close air support, although it hadnt
even told the Air Force what was being planned
until the 11th
hour. According to Jumper, Anaconda was an object
lesson: We
had not gotten the United States Army, the United
States Air Force, the joint force land component
commander,
the joint force air component commander together
at the right level to do the detailed planning
needed
to make sure the resources were there when that
operation kicked off.
That wont happen again, Jumper said.
Were going to exercise our air and ground
together in ways that assure that our Army leaders
understandthey
know what air and space power can do for them, he
said. There will be proper planning with all
parties involved, he said.
Elaborating on Roches announcement regarding
the STOVL version of the F-35, Jumper said the
airplane will enhance the capability of the air and
space expeditionary
force (AEF) by helping airmen get into smallerand
therefore more numerousairfields than is
now possible.
The Air Forces shift from platform-based solutions
to capabilities-based solutions, said Jumper,
is a formula
that works, and its paying off large for
us in
the pitch for resources to senior DOD leaders.
The Air Force can now tie its hardware requests
directly
to operational results.
 |
| PJ Practice. Pararescue
jumpers load an all-terrain vehicle after a
practice jump
from a C-130 transport.
The Iraq war taught Air Force officials a
powerful lesson about the importance of battlefield
airmen. (USAF photo by Sgt. Lanie McNeal) |
Jumper predicted that the same approach should
ease pressure on low-density, high-demand assetsthose
airmen and systems in heavy use and short supply.
He said Air Force leaders are trying to work
the problem by
making sure that we have proper control over
the [combat commanders] appetite for those
platforms. The
Air Force is pushing the Joint Staff to adopt
a joint presence policy, one that tasks USAF,
a year in advance,
to provide those assets sought by regional commanders.
With this policy, he said, an AEF could be equipped
more properly and without undue strain.
Jumper told Air Force Magazine that enhancing
existing platformstaking advantage of their
previously unused capabilitiesand bringing
on new systems all will reduce the impact of
a long-predicted shortfall
in capability, referred to as the fighter
bathtub. He
said, If you think about capabilities,
then you dont have to worry about platform-centric bathtubs.
Jumper went on to say that better systems make
every sortie more effective and thus reduce the
number
of aircraft needed. However, he maintained that
USAF must
still have enough platforms to sustain its AEF
rotational base.
In his remarks to the symposium, Jumper said
further efforts to reduce stress on the force
will come
from greater use of the blended wing approachthe
practice of combining active forces with either
Air National Guard or Air Force Reserve Command
forces
into a single unit. The concept has already been
applied with great success in the E-8 Joint STARS
aircraft
and in cargo aircraft units. Now, said Jumper,
the Air Force is going to do what it reasonably
can to move those benefits into other platforms,
such as
the fighter world. This would include the
F/A-22 Raptor, the next USAF fighter to be fielded.
Jumper also said the Air Force will, in Fiscal
2006 budget deliberations, take a close look
at equipping
B-52s with wing pods to enable them to perform
a standoff jamming mission. He said the pods
would replace little-used
external fuel tanks and could easily be fitted
with
electronic warfare pallets.
Gen. Hal M. Hornburg, Air Combat Command
The Air Force will pursue for other legacy systems
a similar strategy that it used to successfully
draw down and modernize its B-1B fleet, said
Gen. Hal
M. Hornburg, commander of Air Combat Command.
The plan,
he said, is to build a bridge in
capabilities from existing systems to next generation
aircraft.
With 32 B-1Bsroughly one-third of the 93-airplane
B-1B fleetnow in storage, the Air Force
has been able to properly modernize the remaining
60 airframes.
However, Hornburg now thinks the B-1B drawdown
may have gone a bit too far.
The ACC leader told reporters at a press session
that he would like to reactivate seven or eight
of the 32
mothballed B-1Bs. Congress has directed USAF
to return 23 of the B-1Bs to service. Hornburg
said
that idea wont
fly because there is no money to sustain
the effort.
Plans call for early retirement of other legacy
aircraft, specifically older A-10s. Savings will
be used to
upgrade those that remain and, thereby, sustain
the services
fighter force until the new F/A-22 and F-35 aircraft
come into operational service.
Hornburg called the upgraded fighters a bridging
force.
The proposed improvements are significant. The
entire fleet of F-15Es will be equipped with
advanced radars,
as will Block 40 and Block 50 F-16s.
Plans for the F-15C are even more dramatic. The
air-to-air fighter will not only get a better
central computer,
but also may receive radar enhancements
to give
it a strong air-to-ground capability. Recent operations have shown that,
once air dominance is achieved, the F-15C is
underutilized. Hornburg said there
are jobs
that the F-15C needs to do that it cannot do today.
 |
| Herk. A
C-130 crew chief at a forward location conducts
a
check before
takeoff. USAF officials, finding that the C-130
force was lacking in capability to use night
vision goggles, directed everyone in AMC to
become NVG-qualified. (USAF photo by SSgt.
Shane A. Cuomo) |
ACC will upgrade its attack aircraft with new targeting
pods to enhance their ability to support ground forces.
Older LANTIRN pods will be retired
and
replaced by modern Sniper and Litening targeting pods. The changes will
make USAFs
A-10s and F-16s more relevant to todays battlefield, said Hornburg.
He flatly denied rumors that the Air Force wanted
to purchase new F-15Es.
He did say, however, that USAF is beginning to ask: What
if some of our transformational acquisitions dont
arrive on time or, for one reason or another, simply
dont make it? In that event, said Hornburg, weve
got to have a mitigation strategy.
That strategy would not be based upon one specific
airframe, he said.
Backup plans could entail the purchase of more than one type of existing
aircraft.
We must look for something that can be there
in case of a slippage, should that occur, Hornburg
said, adding, Im not predicting that it
will.
Gen. John W. Handy, Air Mobility Command
Mobility is a premier instrument of national power.
That is the basic message conveyed by Gen. John W.
Handy, commander of US Transportation
Command
and Air Mobility Command, at the Orlando symposium.
During Operation Iraqi Freedom, he noted, 56 percent
of all Air Force sorties in US Central Commands
area were mobility related. Out of the 50,000 sorties
flown since the end of major combat operations on May 1, 2003, some 38,000
involved AMC assets. More than 70 percent of all
Air Force airlift and tanker aircraft
have been involved in Southwest Asia operations.
Also, said Handy, air mobility assets played a critical
role in the swap of 250,000 troops between Iraq and
Afghanistan and the United States
and Europe.
He said
that, on one day alone, USAF had moved 5,600 troops. USAF had never contemplated
a troop movement on this scale without using the services Civil
Reserve Air Fleet, said Handy, but, today, were doing it
in a non-CRAF environment. The
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff has called this the greatest
military logistics feat in history, said Handy. He added, I
think thats
a bit of an overstatement, but it certainly characterizes the nature
of the things that were doing.
Not that mobility operations have been confined to
Iraq and Afghanistan. The C-130s of the Air National
Guards 109th Airlift Wing in New York are now
up to about 400 missions to the South Pole and back, as part of the annual
closeout of summer operations in Antarctica. Air
Force aircraft flew relief equipment
into Iran following a major earthquake late last year. C-17s have flown
into Libya to take nuclear-related equipment and
supplies back to the continental
United States.
Im thrilled at what weve been able
to achieve, but we cant
rest on our laurels, said Handy. There is still room for change. Speed
is what Im talking about. Speed of mobilityair, land, and
sea, he
said.
As recently as Desert Storm, US troops deployed with
supplies sufficient for 30 to 60 days of operations.
For todays operations, they take supplies
sufficient for only five to seven days. For Gulf War II, AMC launched
an aircraft every 12 minutes, 24 hours a day, seven
days a week, for 12 weeks straight.
Last fall, the Pentagon took a major step toward
correcting what Handy called a logistics seam problem.
Secretary
of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld
signed
a memo giving TRANSCOM ownership of the militarys distribution
process.
In January, the command placed a TRANSCOM-like organization
on the receiving end of the supply chain. It identified
63 mobility expertsPh.D.s in logistics,
in Handys wordsfrom throughout DOD, gave them a quick dose
of training, and deployed them to the CENTCOM theater of operations
with the same information
technology used by TRANSCOM. They immediately made the system more
efficient. Within days of their arrival, forward-based logisticians
found that someone had
requested 1,700 containers of construction material, needlessly. There
were already more construction supplies in the theater than US forces
could ever hope to use,
so the order was canceled, saving many cargo flights.
 |
| Immortal Hog.
An A-10 prepares
to land. USAF will upgrade many Warthogs and
operate them into
the 2020s. To help pay for this, the Air Force
will retire some A-10s and reinvest the savings
in those that remain. (USAF photo by A1C Isaac G.L.
Freeman) |
Handy also has worked to enhance AMCs Air Mobility
Warfare Center. AMC began Eagle Flag exercises earlier
this year to train the Air Forces expeditionary
combat support forces. Handy, finding that the C-130 force was woefully
lacking in night vision goggles capability, directed
everyone in the command to become
NVG-qualified. He said, We look forward to a time when we own
the night completely on the mobility side.
What does AMC need most? The answer: I need
a mobility capability study because, the truth is,
none of us wants to buy more capability than the nation
really needs, said Handy.
Gen. Lance W. Lord, Air Force Space Command
Fifty years after the service first entered the space
and missile business, the integration of air and space,
land and space, and sea and space
is coming together,
said Gen. Lance W. Lord, commander of Air Force Space Command.
That means the impact of space power in coming decades
will be as great as that of airpower in past decades. Its
my viewand, I think, the argument
of manythat space is going to have maybe even a greater effect, said
Lord.
In Lords estimation, there were valid reasons
that military space developed in an isolated mannerwhat
many term a stovepipe. Space emerged
during the Cold War and was meant to help the US deal with the strategic
nuclear threat. By the 1990s, US security requirements
had changed radically. In the
first Gulf War, the Air Force fought the best way it could with strategic-based
systems adapted to a theater context. Global Positioning System receivers
were provided as quickly as possible. Strategic missile
warning crews added an extra
operator whose sole job was to watch for missile launches from Iraq
and report directly to the theater commander.
Those who said Desert Storm was the first space
war owe much of the credit to those who took the long-established
strategic stovepipes and bent them to focus
on the theater, said Lord.
Today, Air Force Space Command is more operationally
integrated into, and relevant to, the tactical fight
than ever before. Top defense
officials have said that
military space was an equal partner in Operation Iraqi Freedom. That
was
then, Lord said. Victory in the next war will require more improvement,
and that
will require putting aside biases and differences to achieve true
air and space integration.
We must provide the most relevant information
about the enemy, as fast as possible, to command and
control our forces [in order] to kill targets, said
Lord.
During Operation Allied Force, the Air Force, in April
1999, targeted a large multipurpose satellite ground
station in central Serbia.
The target
was destroyed,
but so was some of the surrounding infrastructure. Collateral damage
wasnt
eliminated. In Iraqi Freedom, satellite communications were again
a target. Last year, a Predator unmanned aerial vehicle armed with
a Hellfire missile struck
a satellite dish in downtown Baghdad temporarily shutting down
Iraqi TV. Nearby trucks, a school, and a mosque werent touched.
We certainly increased the precision, decreased
the collateral damage, and shortened the kill chain, Lord
said. However, Iraqi TV remained on the air, said Lord,
because Baghdad had set up redundant systems. The lesson
here, he said,
is that precision is important, it makes us all better,
but our focus needs to be on the overall effect.
New capabilities should help. Air Force Space Command
is developing a rapid launch capability with an operationally
responsive spacecraft
dubbed
RASCAL,
for Responsive
Access Small Cargo Affordable Launch. It will be a low-cost way
to put microsatellites into space. It will employ a reusable
airplane-like first
stage and an expendable
rocket second stage. Lord said first launch is set for 2006.
Another new effortTACSAT, for Tactical Satellitefocuses
on building a series of microsatellite prototypes.
The first prototype, scheduled for launch
this spring, will demonstrate machine-to-machine collaboration
with air and space systems.
Through these developments and many more, said
Lord, space will be
more responsive to the theater than ever before.
Gen. Gregory S. Martin, Air Force Materiel Command
The head of Air Force Materiel Command, Gen. Gregory
S. Martin, briefly discussed some of the key capability
shortfalls USAF
surfaced during
what it terms
a capabilities review and risk assessment (CRRA).
The CRRA-identified gaps become ... our touchstones
or our guide points that
lead the services focus on resources, different concepts
of operations, and transformational technologies, said Martin.
Full spectrum defense for bases and forces is one
shortfall. Whether in the United States or overseas,
in hostile areas
or benign ones,
he said, theres
a whole review of operational concepts that you have to conduct
if youre
going to properly understand the nature of the threat, and
then the types of systems and organizational units and structures
that it takes to properly provide
base defense and force protection.
Martin said one new technology would provide protection
for mobility aircraft. It is called the Large Aircraft
Infrared
Countermeasures
System. A sensor
on the aircraft would detect an incoming infrared missile,
which would prompt a directed energy weapon to divert it.
Another CRRA-identified need is construction of a
global information grid. The Air Force must have a self-forming and self-healing network
that can pass along information in ways which improve the ability
of the force to integrate across horizontal lines.
Battlespace management is another. The Pentagon has
not yet reached the point where it can produce effects-based
planning
that minimizes
collateral
damage
or provides a common operating picture. The goal, said Martin,
is to achieve victory
at a rate and at a speed that weve never, ever been able
to accomplish before. Such a capability, he added, requires the
ability to understand targets of significance that might be
fleeting or mobile, that you only have
a short period of time to be able to take out.
Martin said that theater commanders need real-time
battle damage assessments of the effects of air strikes.
They need to be
able to move quickly
to the next set of targets without conducting time-wasting
restrikes. New
technologies
wont
totally eliminate these problems, but they can certainly help,
said Martin.
Martin also discussed solving a problem that revolves
around what Chief of Staff Jumper has described as tribes. Each
tribeor functional entitywithin
the service has different information management systems and
databases. Overall,
we have literally thousands of them in our Air Force, in our
military today, all satisfying a valid need for someone
to get information about something, said
Martin.
Unfortunately, he added, the systems are set
up to satisfy a functional user, not necessarily the command
chain.
Such proprietary, closed-loop systems that dont
interact waste an
awful lot of ... time, he said.
In the past few years, the service made strides in
connecting systems at a lower levelfor instance,
between finance and personnelbut not at a command
level. AFMC has begun working to remedy this problem by setting
up a process for commanders to view information from
all the separate databases.
Martin said this is a very exciting job for
AFMC. His command will
not own the systems, he said, but will try to figure
out the right plan and methodology for bringing it together.
| News From Orlando
Some of the announcements made at this years
Air Warfare Symposium:
- The Air Force will buy some number of short
takeoff and vertical landing F-35Bs to
perform close air
support for ground forces.
- The Air Force will re-engine and upgrade
a number of its A-10 attack aircraft to keep
them in service
well into the 2020s. To help pay for this,
it will
retire some A-10s early and reinvest the savings
in the fleet.
- USAF will give F-15Cs new radars and ground-attack
capability for use after achieving air superiority.
- The service will fit F-16s with new targeting
pods and upgraded radars.
- The FB-22 appears to be the preferred bridge capability
to provide long-range strike options until more
futuristic long-range strike technologies come
along.
- USAF would like to bring seven or eight B-1Bs
back from storage to enhance ground attack
capabilities.
- Air Force Special Operations Command will
be given new resources to develop unique
systems,
possibly to include new aircraft.
- USAF will take up to 10 F-117 stealth fighters
out of service to reduce operations and
maintenance costs.
- The Air Force will work with the other
services to buy new helicopters to
replace Vietnam-era machines.
|
Adm. Edmund P. Giambastiani Jr., US Joint
Forces Command
The Air Force is an invaluable partner in the
development of a coherently integrated joint
force, Adm. Edmund
P. Giambastiani Jr., commander of US Joint Forces
Command, told the AFA symposium audience.
The Air Force, in my view, has stepped
up to the joint plate in a big way, Giambastiani
said.
The Joint Forces commander declared three key
operational insights about integration:
- The US does not send any individual service
to conduct major operations, but instead
deploys its
military as a joint force.
- The power of a coherently joint force is
now greater than the sum of separate service,
interagency,
and coalition capabilities.
- Speed kills. Physical and mental speed reduces
decision and execution cycles, creates opportunities,
denies enemy options, and speeds his collapse.
These insights had to be proven in the cauldron
of combat, said Giambastiani. He added
that it took a significant change in some service
cultures
before they could accept the message that the
power of the joint force is greater than any
individual
service component by itself.
JFCOM established a lessons-learned team for
Operation Iraqi Freedom, placing it in the theater
before
major combat operations began. It remains there
today.
Among its impressions was that integration and
adaptive planning topped the list of joint capabilities. Joint
force commanders today will tell you its
not the plan, its the planning, said
Giambastiani. They understand that the
ability to plan and adapt to changing circumstances
and
fleeting opportunities is the difference between
success and failure on a modern battlespace.
Large-scale vertical and horizontal collaboration
is essential to such planning.
This does not mean that everyone knows
what is happening at every point in the battlespace
at
all times, he said. Rather, they
are clear on understanding commanders
intent and have a persistent awareness of the
overall
operational environment.
The powerful synergy created by blending conventional
and special operations forces was another major
lesson. In Desert Storm, 30 detached SOF teams
worked
their missions separately from conventional forces. In Iraqi Freedom, the
US deployed more than 100 such teams. The chain
of command was sometimes surprisingin
western Iraq, SOF teams were supporting the air component commander, not
his land counterpart.
The sum of the lessons is that our traditional
military planning and perhaps our entire approach
to warfare has shifted, said Giambastiani.
He added, We want to create the capabilities
that will enable us to achieve asymmetric advantages
in knowledge, speed, precision, lethalityadvantages
again that we glimpsed in OIF. |
Peter Grier also contributed to this report. Grier
is a Washington editor for the Christian Science Monitor,
a longtime defense correspondent, and a contributing
editor to Air Force Magazine. His most recent article, The
New Drawdown, appeared in the March issue.
Copyright Air Force Association. All rightsreserved.
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