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Commanders engaged in urban warfare long have regarded airpower
as a blunt instrument. In battles from Stalingrad in the 1940s to
Grozny in the mid-1990s, airpowers primary purpose was to
turn buildings into rubbleand fast.
Such no longer is exclusively the case, however.
With more than 150,000 US soldiers and marines on the ground in
Iraq and Afghanistan, the public focus understandably has been on
land war. Yet behind the scenes, coalition air forces have been
deeply involved in urban stability operations. In fact,
the November 2004 sweep of the Iraqi town of Fallujah has become
the benchmark for airpower in urban joint force warfare.
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| USMC photo by SSgt. Jonathan
C Knauth |
Fallujah marked the unveiling of an urban-warfare model based on
persistent air surveillance, precision air strikes, and swift airlift
support. Together, these factors took urban operations to a new
and higher level.
When President Bush declared that the major combat operations phase
of Operation Iraqi Freedom was at an end on May 1, 2003, he was
announcing the start of one of the most difficult and uncertain
transitions in warfare: the switch from battle to stability operations.
The term stability operations was relatively new when
Iraqi Freedom began on March 20, 2003. It was derived from an Army
doctrine change in the mid-1990s. Operations in Panama and Bosnia
convinced the Army that contending with conflict after a regime
change would be an important part of future military missions.
Stability operations joined offensive operations, defensive operations,
and support operations as major parts of combined-arms doctrine.
Army planning put Phase IV, Stability Operations, right after Phase
III, Decisive Combat Operations.
Phase IV Stability Operations in Iraq turned out to be a major
test, one which created unprecedented demands on air and space forces
as well as ground forces.
Twitching Regime
OIF decapitated Saddams regime but left some body parts strongespecially
in the north. Baathists who dominated the government bureaucracies
and army also had used Iraq as a source of personal wealth. A variety
of insurgent groups sought to tip the political balance through
violence aimed at the coalition and the interim Iraqi government.
It was, by definition, an urban battleIraqs 16 biggest
cities held 70 percent of the countrys population.
From the very start of Phase IV, the town of Fallujah35 miles
west of Baghdadwas a hotbed of revolt. Tribal loyalties, nationalism,
and dislike of foreigners were strong. These political features
led to friction with coalition forces soon after they occupied the
city in late April 2003.
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| Precise application of airpower
was a hallmark of the Fallujah II campaign, which required close
integration of ground and air forces. Here, an airman calls
in air support, while another airman provides cover. (USA photo
by Sgt. 1st Class Johancharles Van Boers) |
In Fallujah, the insurgency comprised not only hard-line
Baathists but also foreign jihadists such as the Jordanian-born
terrorist leader, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.
It was not until March 31, 2004, however, that Fallujah became
notorious as the focal point of the insurgency. On that day, Iraqi
gunmen ambushed and killed four American contract workers, whose
bodies were subsequently burned, mutilated, dragged through the
streets, and hanged from a bridge. Later that same day, five soldiers
were killed by a roadside blast a few miles north of the city. In
US Central Commands judgment, the killings demanded a response.
Fallujah was located in the easternmost region of the Marine Corps
sector of Iraq, and thus responsibility for taking action fell to
the I Marine Expeditionary Force commander, Lt. Gen. James T. Conway.
He was ordered to attack on April 4.
Operation Vigilant Resolve featured 1,300 marines from I MEF, along
with some Iraqi participants. The marines surrounded the city, and
then teams made forays into it in an attempt to locate those responsible
for the slayings and draw out other insurgents.
From the start, the hunt for the ringleaders featured airpower.
Air Force AC-130 gunships targeted specific sites, and marines called
in precision air strikes against buildings harboring terrorists
or Sunni insurgents. I never thought Id be calling for
mortars and air strikes and all that, Marine Corps 2nd Lt.
Joshua Jamison, who was among the first to go in, told the North
County (Calif.) Times.
After a few days, however, US Central Command commanders halted
the operation. They were responding to political pressure brought
to bear by Iraqs interim governing council and to the problem
of deaths of Fallujan civilians. Negotiations got under way. Iraqi
forces were formed into the Fallujah Brigade, which was to take
control of the city while the marines remained outside.
This abortive April foray demonstrated an emerging set of goals
for operations against insurgents in the urban environment. This
was no pitched battle of army on army. The key to the strategy lay
in isolating insurgent leaders and strong points inside the city.
Manhunt
It was, in part, a manhunt. Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld
said marines were systematically moving through the city,
looking for targets that are identified, that they have photographs
of, and that they know who they want and what they want
and why they want that person.
Even after coalition ground forces pulled back, air operations
continued. Gen. Richard B. Myers, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, said AC-130 gunships and fixed-wing aircraft went on attacking
targets. There were a lot of enemy [fighters] that died there,
he said.
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| The ability to precisely hit
targets such as this insurgent stronghold marks a major departure
from traditional air attacks on cities. There are many accounts
of precision weapons plucking buildings. (USMC photo
by Lance Cpl. Thomas D. Hudzinski) |
Still, Round 1 in Fallujah left questions about use of airpower
in urban operations. In some cases, ground forces just wanted to
use their own organic direct and indirect weapons, rather than airpower.
Making positive identification and a collateral damage estimateboth
requirements for an air attackwere cumbersome. Commanders
wanted to exhaust all other means before going through that process.
Only if the time was right and it was necessary would they call
in an AC-130 or a fixed-wing platform to drop precision guided munitions.
In Fallujah, the goal of coalition leaders was not so much the
taking of the city as it was about altering conditions there. Gen.
John P. Abizaid, the coalition commander, explained that there were
certain things we will not tolerate in Fallujah, such
as the presence of foreign terrorists.
We insist that the heavy weapons come off the streets,
added Abizaid. We want the marines to have freedom of maneuver
in Fallujah, along with Iraq security forces and Iraqi police.
Through the summer and fall, the air component joined in what might
be described as an ongoing hunt for prime insurgency targets in
Fallujah and other cities.
Counterinsurgency efforts across Iraq relied heavily on persistent
intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance from air and space
platforms. Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom
had already proved the value of persistence. Now, for stability
operations, the role of persistent surveillance was doubly important.
That is because the air component was not dealing with a battle
roster of military targets such as Taliban trench lines near Kabul
or Republican Guards tanks in a field. Every target struck from
the air in this stability operations phase had to be carefully developed
and massaged, keeping recent intelligence and overall political
goals in mind.
The result was a steady pace of air attacks, even though there
were no US ground force attacks in Fallujah. Example: Sept. 13 air
strikes targeted a suspected Zarqawi hideout in Fallujah. According
to the Associated Press, there had been at least five series of
air strikes over the previous week.
Turning to the air component in this way was a significant change
in joint operations. A few years earlier, it would not have been
possible.
Since Kosovo
Take, for example, the pursuit of Serbian police and military forces
in Kosovo during Operation Allied Force, which unfolded in 1999.
Serb forces went house to house, killing ethnic Albanians. Some
600,000 were forced to flee to refugee camps across the border in
Albania.
The only way to stop the ethnic cleansing was to go to the heart
of dictator Slobodon Milosevics power base in Belgrade and
to interdict his forces in the field. Eventually, it workedafter
a 78-day air campaign. At the operational and tactical levels of
war, however, airpower did little to stop the house-to-house terror.
The USAF Chief of Staff, Gen. Michael E. Ryan, summarized the situation
this way: There was never any delusion that airpower was capable
of stopping door-to-door thuggeryat less than platoon level
and squad level. ... Youre not going to stop that directly
with airpower.
Ryan likened attempts to do so to hitting leaves and branches
instead of striking at the roots of a problem.
In Fallujah, however, the air component proved it could do quite
a lot to target those engaged in door-to-door thuggery. The situation
was different from Kosovo, in that enemy forces were fewer, but
the combination of persistent ISR and on-call strike aircraft was
nothing short of stunning.
Heading the list of star systems was the Predator UAV. Its full-motion
video had proved its utility in Afghanistan and in the major combat
operations phase in Iraq. However, the swiftness of the coalitions
assault on Baghdad left Predators urban operations talents
largely untestedalong with those of many other sensor and
shooter platforms.
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| AC-130 gunships, such as this
one, can identify and track targets. If necessary, they will
lay down close air support fire when friendly forces are dangerously
close to enemy locations. |
Round 2 in Fallujah, which unfolded in November 2004, was to show
the full impact of the new sensor and shooter technology when integrated
with other forces in joint operations.
For several weeks before the main assault, air strikes and artillery
fire targeted key sites in the city as they were identified. The
hunt for insurgents evolved into battlespace shaping.
Beginning in July 2004, the CAOC focused ISR coverage on building
a picture of the insurgent network in Fallujah. Persistent ISR,
ranging from imagery to electronic and signals intelligence was
important, particularly with a determined adversary
with a low signature, said Lt. Col. John Johanson of
the CAOCs ISR division. He said that constant ISR was required,
lest collection gaps create a collection bias that could
skew the overall assessment and characterization of the enemy network.
It culminated in August and September with a series of preplanned
strikes that took out key insurgent targetsand did so with
great precision. One such strike targeted a weapons-carrying vehicle
moving between a residence and a small warehouse. US forces were
watching it with Predator and waiting for the target to drive back
to the walled compound of the residence. When it did, the driver
parked the vehicle under the carport. We put a Hellfire over
the wall [of the house] and under the carport with no damage to
the house, said Johanson. Thats the payoff.
Operations began on the night of Nov. 7, 2004, as lead elements
of the 10,000-strong coalition force seized a hospital that doubled
as a known insurgent base of operations. Aircraft hit preplanned
targetssuch as barricaded insurgent sitesthen shifted
to on-call response.
After eight days, Fallujah was securemeaning
that 100 percent of it was passable for coalition and Iraqi forces,
although sporadic fighting continued. By the end of the month, it
had been cleared of most insurgent resistance. Strike sorties across
Iraq that week surged to 379a one-third increase over the
average. ISR sorties for Iraq also hit a peak of 161 sorties, the
highest total that fall.
Sharper Focus
From the start, the air component was able to focus on the urban
area and provide major advantages scarcely seen in urban warfare.
These included expanded situation awareness down to the tactical
level, rapid precision strikes, and airlift support.
Planners had also mapped Fallujah down to the street addresses,
as one said. Information about a total of just under 800 buildings
was fed into a database, to be shared among air planners, aircrews,
and ground forces. For each building, mensurative coordinates already
were in place.
When joint tactical air controllers called for strikes, data about
a particular building often was already in the database. Alternatively,
controllers could use the data to call for strikes on a building
near a mapped site. One of the huge successes of Fallujah
II was the ability to preplan and get the playbook to everyone,
said Maj. Eric Grace, an air planner.
In both April and November, Lt. Col. Greg Harbin spent time on
the ground controlling air strikes. Harbin said a big lesson
of Fallujah is that preplanning shortens the kill chain.
He added, We knew their alleyways better than they did.
On the front lines creating that new level of situation awareness
was Predator. Its Predator TV, a Gods-eye picture
for troops on the ground, that saves lives every day, Lt.
Col. Stew Kovall, 17th Reconnaissance Squadron commander, explained
to a Texas CBS News affiliate. He was speaking about Predators
focus on battlefronts from Afghanistan to Iraq. However, the value
of the real-time overview was intensified in urban operations.
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| Persistent battlespace awareness
is critical in urban settings, and platforms such as this Predator
UAV help meet the demand. Real-time surveillance lets ground
forces see around corners and over buildings. (USAF
photo by SSgt. Suzanne M. Jenkins) |
Restricted lines of sight had always been a factor that favored
defenders. Predatoralong with other tactical UAVs such as
Pioneerhelped overcome that in many cases.
Direct feeds via satellite to command centers and selected forces
on the ground opened up a full-motion video perspective on the street
battle. Insurgent forces often were unaware of how closely they
were being watched by airborne sensors.
For many coalition forces, watching such action was an eerie experience.
Weve seen people setting up mortars, said Capt.
Catherine Platt, a Predator sensor operator with the 17th RS, to
CBS News reporters in Dallas, and actually located improvised
explosive devices [known as IEDs], and were able to prevent somebody
with weapons from being able to shoot or injure any of our troops.
Thanks to laptop links to the aircraft, troops on the ground in
Fallujah got the same view of the battlefield as that given to Predator
operators and command center duty officers.
The sensors of other aircraft, such as the AC-130 gunship, also
got a tremendous workout in counterinsurgency operations. A widely
circulated piece of video footage showed the gunships ability
to track, monitor, and target insurgents, make a positive ID, and
then destroy them according to the rules of engagement.
Here were the main features of the air component operations for
Fallujah:
Complete air dominance. Despite the later discovery of a handful
of SA-7 surface-to-air missiles in Fallujah, there was no doubt
the coalition had complete air dominance there, courtesy of years
of no-fly zone operations and the OIF air campaign. Air dominance
over Fallujah and other hotspots permitted ISR assets and fighter,
bomber, and gunship pilots to take the time required to build situation
awareness, work with joint tactical air control parties on the ground,
and select weapons ranging from Hellfire to the satellite guided
Joint Direct Attack Munition.
Layered 24-hour support. With air dominance, the air component
could put its top sensor and strike platforms in holding patterns
over the city and acquire from above a level of battlespace awareness
never before seen in an urban fight. As with Baghdad in the spring
of 2003, the air component planned its air support for Fallujah
meticulously. Task one was deconflicting platforms over the citys
airspace by time, altitude blocks, and ingress and egress routes.
Planners referred to the aircraft in the stacks as the upside-down
wedding cakelayered all the way up, as USAF Lt.
Col. David Staven said to a reporter for the Associated Press.
Joint integration. In those layers, fighters were on call for designated
time slots. Air component planners scheduled their in and out trips
to achieve 24-hour coverage with no gaps. That gave the teams of
special operations forces, Air Force, and Marine Corps tactical
air controllers a constant resource. Improved consistency and training,
plus better connections with higher command centers, now kept the
flow of air support running smoothly even with multiple teams on
the ground. Joint assetsNavy carrier-launched aircraft and
land-based Marine Corps aircraft as well as Air Force aircraftsupplied
the stacks. AC-130 gunships with their combination of sensors and
precise artillery fire once again proved immensely popular with
the ground forces they supported.
Strafing. Gen. John P. Jumper, USAF Chief of Staff, cited what
he called a surprising amount of strafing. He said that
it was necessary at times in order to get precision.
Harbin, referring to his personal experiences calling in strafing
in Fallujah, said, Its a wonderful thing. We were ambushed,
and an F-15 strafed and got us out of that. Ive seen enemy
break and run just because you have a fighter down low.
In addition to strafing, said Jumper, we had a significant
number of airplanes in there, working against individual buildings.
There are many accounts of our GPS-guided weapons plucking buildings
out of the middle of very populated areas.
Heavy ISR tasking. It took a much greater percentage of ISR sorties
to sustain urban operations during the Fallujah fight. In OIF in
2003, strike sorties flown outnumbered ISR sorties by more than
12-to-1. For Fallujah, the ratio was just over 2-to-1. That made
ISR a top contributor to modern urban operations.
Demand for first-strike success. In Fallujah, the targets for fighters,
bombers, and gunships were generally clusters of insurgents being
identified by ground forces or other sensors in real time. The targets
ranged from buildings to trucks to snipers. Aircrews tasked with
the strikes had to hit targets the first time to be effective. The
nature of the close support operations also meant there was rarely
an opportunity to go back and restrike the same target.
Immediate follow-on attacks. As a result of operations throughout
the prior months, airmen already knew what to do when insurgents
fled a site under air attack. Ideally, air component systems would
follow them and hit the next building they entered and resume the
attack. The Washington Post reported the details of such a one-two
punch that took place Nov. 10. Air strikes hit one house holding
insurgents, then struck a second smaller house where the survivors
had fled. That combination took persistent surveillance, communications,
and striking power.
Airlift and medevac. Positioning people, equipment, ammunition,
and supplies heavily taxed the air components mobility forces.
At Balad AB, Iraq, mobility airmen on one day tripled their typical
daily transport average to 1.3 million pounds. Air Force strategic
and tactical airlift surged to put in place the pieces needed for
the renewed offensive. Medical evacuation moved wounded to higher-level
care facilities rapidly.
It wasnt only the marines on the ground who were using innovative
tools and tactics in the urban fight. The air component worked hard
to maximize accuracy and minimize collateral damage. Americas
powerful military force could, if it wished, quickly turn Fallujah
into a pile of rubble, but there was no point to doing that. Making
rubble was the old ideal, precision the new.
Ideal Weapon
When large quantities of the 500-pound GBU-38 JDAM arrived in the
theater in fall 2004, the system quickly became a top air weapon
for use in the urban environment. The GBU-38 caused less collateral
damage and eliminated uncertainties associated with laser guided
bombs.
This was the right weapon for the job, said the F-16
lead pilot who flew the first GBU-38 mission. If we used any
bigger [weapon], we would have caused unnecessary damage.
Air component support increased ground force efficiency. The end
result was a speedy offensive that focused firepower where it was
needed.
As with other campaigns in recent years, commanders were admonished
to keep attacks precise. Reported Marine Corps Col. Mike Regner,
the I MEF operations officer: Not a piece of ordnance goes
into that city that I dont watch in one way or another.
Regner also described how air attacks used laser guided bombs to
topple a minaret hiding snipers, without causing damage to an adjacent
mosque.
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| The proper integration of airpower
into Fallujahs ground operation provided on-call strike
and created an unprecedented level of urban warfare competence.
The new model added to the margin of superiority
for ground forces. (AP photo by Anja Niedringhaus) |
In Regners view, the weapon precision was unprecedented.
Is this like Vietnam? he asked. Absolutely not.
... Hue City ... was leveled, and there wasnt precision targeting,
and they didnt secure it in the amount of time that weve
secured Fallujah, he said.
There was no doubt the second battle for Fallujah was a necessary
one. Many of the estimated 2,000 insurgents in the city were killed
and their sanctuary eliminated.
Besides being a safe haven for leadership command and control,
Fallujah was a center for making the IEDs that were being produced
and used in other parts of the country to attack the coalition,
said USAF Lt. Gen. Lance L. Smith, CENTCOM deputy commander.
Fallujah was hardly left unscarred by recent operations there.
Destruction was great. Even so, the evolution of airpower changed
the calculus for insurgency operations in the urban environment.
Air and space power working together can now engage targets with
dial-up precision and immediate command and control.
The model unveiled in Fallujah adds to the margin of superiority
for forces on the ground and takes the pursuit of major targets
to a new level of competence through persistent ISR and on-call
strike.
Rebecca Grant is a contributing editor of Air Force Magazine. She is president of IRIS Independent Research in Washington, D.C., and has worked for Rand, the Secretary of the Air Force, and the Chief of Staff of the Air Force. Grant is a fellow of the Eaker Institute for Aerospace Concepts, the public policy and research arm of the Air Force Association’s Aerospace Education Foundation. Her most recent article, “Bomber Harris,” appeared in the January issue.
Copyright Air Force Association. All rights reserved.
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