In World War II, the German
synthetic oil refinery at Merseburg churned out high-quality
aviation gasoline used by the Luftwaffe. That made
it a prime target of the anti-oil air campaign then
being waged by Eighth Air Force. Bomber crews attacked
the site in mid-May 1944, returning more than a dozen
times that year. Germany protected Merseburg with rings
of anti-aircraft batteries, making it a dangerous target
indeed.
Every raid generated demands
for bomb damage assessment pictures, which were the
responsibility of the 7th
Photographic Group. One squadronthe 14thused
low-flying Mark XI Spitfires, P-38s, and P-51s for
this dangerous work. Its commander was a risk-taking,
Ivy League-educated New Yorker trained to fly Spitfires
by the Royal Canadian Air Force even before the US
entered the war.
His name was Robert J. Dixon.
This same Dixon was to become, three decades later,
a towering figure in the United States Air Force.
He was the hard driving commander of Tactical Air
Command
in the critical years 1973-78, a formidable figure
given to bold ideas and wire-brushings of
foes and incompetents. One year ago this month, on
March 21, 2003, as the US Air Force embarked on war
in the Persian Gulf, retired Gen. Robert J. Dixon
died in Fair Oaks Ranch, Tex. His imprint on the
Air Force,
however, is a lasting one.
Dixon was born in New York City in 1920 and graduated
from Dartmouth College in June 1941 with a degree
in literature. Soon, he entered pilot training in
the
Royal Canadian Air Force and was commissioned. In
September 1943, Dixon transferred to the US Army
Air Forces.
Dixon had a long career as an airman, but it almost
ended over Merseburg. The intense German flak that
engulfed the bombers at 27,000 feet was even more
lethal for Dixons fighters flying photoreconnaissance
at low altitude. Dixon had survived the flak on more
than 65 combat missions, but, during one flight over
Merseburg, he was shot down.
Just the Start
He survived the ordeal, however, and was picked up
by the Nazis. Dixon became a prisoner of war and
was held captive until May 1945, when Nazi Germany
surrendered
and Allied prisoners were released. What might have
been the end of the line for another airman was just
the beginning for Dixon.
For one thing, Dixon was not done with combat. He
spent 11 months in theater in the Korean War, where
he flew
another 28 combat missions and commanded the 335th
FighterInterceptor Squadron. Much later, in
the period 1969-70, Dixon served as vice commander
of 7th
Air Force and logged 36 combat missions over Vietnam.
It was after his tour in Southeast Asia, though,
that Dixon found his opportunity to help reshape
the Air
Force, and he took it.
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| Dixon began his career with World War II photoreconnaissance
missions. He initially flew XI Spitfires, such
as this one, on more than 65 combat missions before
being shot down over Nazi Germany. |
One who vividly recalls Dixon in the post-Vietnam
period is retired Gen. Michael E. Ryan, Chief of
Staff in
1997-2001. He was my dads DP [director
of personnel], said Ryan, referring to Dixons
three-star assignment under Gen. John D. Ryan, who
served as Chief of Staff in the early 1970s.
The DP post was but one in a long series of personnel
jobs held by Dixon. After World War II, Dixon worked
as a group and wing personnel officer for the 82nd
Fighter Wing. He followed this up with five years
in personnel at Strategic Air Command headquarters.
Dixon
also spent the period 1967-69 at Randolph AFB, Tex.,
as commander of the Military Personnel Center.
This gave Dixon a deep interest in and knowledge
of airmen. His experience was broadened in other
ways.
During tours with the Air Staff, Dixon immersed himself
in national security issues. He did the same thing
while assigned in the early 1960s to Supreme Headquarters
Allied Powers, Europe, which was then in Paris.
Dixons years under the elder Ryan earned him
a fourth star and led to the crowning assignment
of his career. On Oct. 1, 1973, he took command of
TAC,
headquartered in Virginias Tidewater area.
The Dixon years are well-remembered by retired Gen.
Larry D. Welch, a former Chief of Staff who served
under Dixon at TAC. Dixon, said Welch, took
command of Tactical Air Command during one of the
most challenging
times in its history. Welch said that the year
1973 was a low point in public support for the post-Vietnam
military, and the Air Force badly needed to rebuild
its morale and force structure.
Training was at the top of the list for a combat
veteran like Dixon. Michael Ryan recalled how USAF
squadrons
deploying to Vietnam had never been given a chance
to conduct dissimilar air combat trainingthat
is, flying against different kinds of aircraft and
tacticsall because of the fear of an accident.
Dixon was well aware of these stupidities, said
Ryan. Dixon implemented more realistic training and
made sure airmen got the most out of every precious
hour of flying time.
Red Flag
One day, Dixon took a briefing from Col. Richard
M. Suter, an original thinker with a new concept
of realistic
air crew training. It was called Red Flag. Moody Suter
based his plan on lessons from Vietnam. He realized
that young pilots who were shot down or had accidents
usually suffered these reverses during the first
10 combat missions. His plan was to get those young
pilots
into a combat-like environment, where those first
10 missions could be performed in a controlled, nonlethal
arena.
Dixon leaped at the concept, seeing in it a chance
to further improve TACs warfighting skills.
He ordered TACs deputy for operationsMaj.
Gen. Charles A. Gabriel, who also would later become
a Chief of Staffto have Suters brainchild
up and running in four months.
Ryan noted of Dixon, He took huge risks by pushing
things like Red Flag and the aggressors. He was a
man who said, Yes.
In recognition of the great work done on Red Flag,
Dixon and TAC were jointly awarded the 1977 Collier
Trophy.
Dixon would prove to be a strong patron of Red Flag
throughout his final years at TAC. Dixons successor,
Gen. W.L. Creech, expanded the training program.
Dixon and Creech certainly were not close, but the
need for
Red Flag was a point of agreement.
Dixon did not stop at the tactical level. He pioneered
a form of system of systems thinking
about airpower and how to integrate the new technologies
then becoming available. Welch said Dixon got TAC
airmen
to think about integrated concepts of operations.
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| After assuming command of Tactical Air Command
in October 1973, Dixon was an early proponent for
Red Flag. This F-16 at Nellis AFB, Nev., sports
the Red Flag aggressor paint scheme. (Photo by Ted Carlson) |
These, according to Welch, included such concepts
as combining EF-111 and F-4G defense suppression
capabilities
with A-10 and F-16 attack capabilities to provide
maximum combat power in high-threat areas, and linking
together
E-3 AWACS and the F-15 fighter aircraft with ground-based
radars and command and control systems to win early
air superiority.
All of these concepts, said Welch, were honed
during long Saturday morning sessions.
Ryan came to TAC as a major in July 1976, and he
has not forgotten what Dixons honing felt like to
staff officers such as himself.
I was under his scrutiny, said the retired
Chief of Staff. Their encounters were frequent, as
Ryan had
the duty of briefing the man known as the
Tidewater Alligator.
Cut to the Chase
Dixon was famously impatient. Those who briefed
him had to move fast. Ryan, cut the striptease
and show me the naked lady, he shouted
one day. On another occasion, Dixon simply took
over
the
briefing
and began flipping through the slides himself.
When he finished, he rose from the conference
table.
Thats not a bad concept, Dixon said
to Ryan. He walked out the door, slammed it, and yelled
back, Thats a terrible concept.
Ryan later realized the bark was worse than
the bite. Welch agreed.
Dixon was often a hard taskmaster, said
Welch, who added that the general frequently fired
for effect. When
he was impatient, Welch went on, it
was because he thought more of a subordinates
potential than did the subordinate.
Dixon put his heart into his work. At TAC,
he called for improving maintenance as a
means for
strengthening
combat readiness.
He shed tears over the frustration of an F-111
mechanic coping with multiple fuel tank leaks, said
Welch, and
responded by demanding that everyone from
TAC generals to defense contractors leave no stone
unturned
to support that F-111 mechanic. And they
did.
The sagging state of TACs top fighter aircraftthe
old F-105s, F-4s, and so onspurred
Dixon to make sure the Air Force revamped
its force
structure.
In the 1970s, after Vietnam, we were in free
fall when it came to force structure, Ryan said,
adding that Dixon fought the battle to
recapitalize the
Air Force with major new programs such
as the F-15 and
F-16, creating a new and modern core
to the fighter force.
As US attention shifted from Southeast
Asia to Europe in post-Vietnam years,
Dixon reached
out
to other
services to help develop a common doctrine
of warfighting. According
to Welch, Dixon would not tolerate parochialism.
Yet Dixons view of how the services
operated was hard and realistic.
His combat experiences and command of
units ranging from squadron to numbered
Air Force
gave Dixon
a clear view on the key airpower issues
of the day.
In conversations
with historians of the Vietnam conflict,
Dixon talked of the battles over air
apportionment, noting that
there were times when Marines, Army units,
and even diplomats demanded dedicated
airpower.
Thats what youve got generals like
7th Air Force commanders for, Dixon argued, to
say that nobody owns it, it belongs
to us, and well
put it where it belongs.
Dixon placed a high priority on improving
cooperation between the Air Force and
Army. In this, he
helped to lay the foundation for dialogue
between TAC
and the Armys Training and Doctrine
Command on issues such as close air
support.
If you look at their public statements and listen
to what they said, you kind of wonder why we ever had
any argument with the Army about
close air support
[in the 1970s], Dixon said, but,
if you get in the competitive arena
for money, ... youre
liable to hear a different story.
Dixon believed frequent demands for
close air support attested to the
Armys desire for and reliance
on it. He hoped for a better
understanding of the interrelationship
between airpower and
ground power.
He cared about everything, said Welch.
That dedication continued long after his time at
TAC. Dixon served as president
of Fairchild Republic Co.,
but he never lost contact with
the Air Force. Twenty years after Dixons retirement,
Ryan, as Chief of Staff, gave him a major advisory
role in the Developing
Aerospace Leaders project, an initiative
to reevaluate the Air Forces management of
officers on their way to the top.
Dixons style had not changed.
Everything that man said was for a purpose;
every dagger was to get you to react and think, said
Brig. Gen. Richard S. Hassan,
who has for several years
run the Air Force office in charge
of general officer assignments
and who worked closely with Dixon
on the Developing Aerospace Leaders
project.
In Hassans view, it was the combination of Dixons
unique experiencescombat
in three wars, time at SHAPE,
work for Gen. John D. Ryan, time
at TACthat
made him great. Theres
this other level of general,
a sort of military statesman, Hassan
explained. Dixon was one.
The Air Force was his life, said Hassan.
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