The decisive phase of Operation Enduring
Freedom lasted two months, and most of it was an air campaign. This
should have--but did not--end what has become the almost routine disparagement
of military airpower.
The recent successes of airmen--in the Gulf in 1991, Bosnia in 1995,
Kosovo in 1999, and Afghanistan one year ago--have not been enough to
satisfy airpower's critics. They continue to propagate doubts, especially
in times of military tension.
This summer, as the US faced war with Iraq, the "boots on the ground" lobby
favored sending 200,000 ground troops to the Gulf. Retired Army Gen.
Frederick J. Kroesen called it "disturbing" to learn DOD might
use airpower, special forces, and local proxy forces, à la Afghanistan.
In this, Kroesen saw the "promise of disaster."
Writing in the Army War College journal Parameters, analyst William
R. Hawkins implied Afghanistan was not even a "real war." With
Iraq clearly in mind, Hawkins warned: "American leaders should not
expect the next war to be as undemanding."
A surprisingly large number of people still harbor such doubts, which
Yogi Berra would describe as déjà vu all over again.
In the run-up to Enduring Freedom, critics also predicted that the air
war would flop. Fears of massive civilian casualties were widespread.
Robert Scheer of the Los Angeles Times thought it pointless
to fight elusive Taliban and al Qaeda jihadis. The US, he warned, could
do little more than "shadowbox with the devil."
When the shooting started on Oct. 7, the hand-wringing began in earnest.
Soon, there were calls for ground troops--as many as 100,000. Pundits
everywhere dusted off the word "quagmire."
It had to be embarrassing to the critics when November rolled around
and the foe was seen to be taking a ferocious beating from the air. The
strikes of October had weakened and isolated enemy forces. The strikes
of November featured heavy attacks by bombers using precision ordnance
such as the Joint Direct Attack Munition.
As special operations scouts spotted targets, precision airpower beat
Taliban positions to pieces, opening huge gaps in the front lines. Irregular
Northern Alliance forces took the key towns of Mazar-e Sharif, Kunduz,
Taloqan, and Kabul, then turned south toward Kandahar.
Suddenly, it was over. The Taliban-Qaeda force that once controlled
85 percent of Afghanistan was, by early December, in control of nothing,
on the run, and hiding in caves.
Some attributed the rout to the presence of Afghan ground forces. Defense
Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld maintained that "the air war enabled
the ground war to succeed."
Each US armed service (and those of allied forces) had a hand in the
victory. Still, the Air Force contribution stood out.
USAF bombers, fighters, and special operations gunships delivered some
10,000 tons of munitions--75 percent of the total--and struck more than
half of all targets. The work of SOF teams--Air Force, Army, and Navy--enhanced
the accuracy of these strikes.
Vice Adm. John B. Nathman, mindful that US carrier aircraft flew 75
percent of all combat sorties (and dropped 25 percent of the munitions),
summed up his view in three words: "We Were Great." The Navy was great,
its aviators displaying skill and fortitude. Nathman also noted, "The
US Air Force provided lift, munitions, ... intelligence and surveillance,
and more than 80 percent of the mission tanking to our carrier striking
forces."
Civilian deaths were remarkably few. As Rumsfeld said, "No nation
in human history has done more to avoid civilian casualties than the
United States has in this conflict."
The Air Force's workhorse airlifters transported everything that went
into or out of Afghanistan. Its tankers flew more than 5,000 refueling
sorties.
USAF spacecraft, unmanned aerial vehicles, and intelligence, surveillance,
and reconnaissance aircraft gave war planners a battlefield view of unprecedented
clarity.
RED HORSE units created 190,000 square yards of new ramp space--equivalent
to 30 football fields--at nine Central Asia airfields.
It was a humanitarian war. Through December, 162 C-17 sorties had brought
to hungry Afghans some 2.5 million individual rations.
The success of the air campaign may be, as some partisans say, an anomaly.
If so, it is an anomaly that occurs again and again. Enduring Freedom
marks the fourth time that this particular anomaly has appeared in a
decade.
Nothing written here should be construed as claiming that joint airpower,
by itself, can fight and win all of the nation's wars. As editors of
this magazine have stated on numerous occasions, the United States needs
to maintain the full complement of modern military capabilities--air,
land, sea, space, and cyberspace. There's no need for a one-trick pony.
However, some of airpower's more-strident critics would do well to show
a similar open-mindedness.
One who makes the case for airpower is Army Gen. Tommy R. Franks, the
commander of US Central Command and ramrod of the Afghan war. He pointed
out that ground force commanders--Army and Marine--have long recognized
the potential of airpower, but have questioned whether they would actually
be willing to count on it in battle.
For them, Franks has an answer. "What I've told all my friends
and neighbors," he said, "is, 'By God, you can count on it.'"