By James W. Canan, Senior Editor

F-4G Wild Weasels from wings in the US and Europe fly formation
over Bahrain during Operation Desert Storm. Carrying ALQ-131
and ALQ-184 electronic countermeasures pods and armed with radar-busing
HARMs, Wile Weasels waged electronic warfare, with stunning results.
(USAF photo by MSgt. Bill Thompson)
Supremacy in electronic warfare from start to finish was a
big reason--maybe the biggest reason--for the stunning success
of the allied coalition's air campaign against Iraq. EW, waged
in every imaginable way, enabled allied air forces to confound
Iraqi air defenses throughout the six-week war. It cleared the
way for allied aircraft and protected them to near-perfection.
US Air Force Lt. Gen. Charles A. Homer, architect of the allied
air campaign, gave EW great credit for its triumphant outcome.
In an interview with AIR FORCE Magazine [see p. 571] at his headquarters
in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, the Central Air Forces Commander in
Chief was asked to appraise the "results of your electronic
countermeasures" (ECM).
He replied, "I would have to say it's one of the highlights
of the war, especially if you look at the number of sorties we
flew and the intensity of the air defenses."
The CENTAF CINC noted that "our losses to surface-to-air
missiles were something like ten planes ," even though the
enemy "fired thousands and thousands of surface-to-air missiles."
This, he said, "would tell you automatically that the combination
of electronic countermeasures and the Wild Weasel operation was
certainly effective.
"In fact," he continued, "the only kills [the
enemy] got were probably flukes. We know of many cases where
they just shot the missiles in the air. In one case, they spun
one off, and it hit an airplane. The airplane got back okay,
but [with] some holes in it."
Countermeasures were only part of allied air forces' electromagnetic
arsenals. Led by USAF, those air forces used just about every
conceivable electronic asset in the fight. Iraqi air defenses
and communications were crushed or rendered confused and chaotic
by jamming, decoys, and attacks with missiles and bombs.
Air Force F-117A Stealth fighters, exemplars of contemporary
electronic combat, were first to hit Iraqi air defense radars,
which never saw them coming. Then, surging through the radar
gaps opened up by the F-117As, came wave after wave of allied
"strike packages" spearheaded by USAF's nonstealthy
Wild Weasels and fighter-bombers.
The F-117As showed the world, to say nothing of Iraq, that
modern electronic warfare relies as much on mystifying enemy
radars as it does on disrupting and destroying them.
At the height of Operation Desert Storm, Brig. Gen. Richard
B. Myers, Tactical Air Command's deputy chief of staff for Requirements,
described "the entire spectrum of electronic combat that
we try to defeat -from enemy detection through identification,
acquisition, whatever kind of track mechanism, missile launch,
guidance, and then, eventually [missile] fuzing."
Addressing an Air Force Association symposium in Orlando,
Fla., General Myers went on to explain that "our electronic
combat is tasked to work with parts of that spectrum in various
ways," from the EF-111 standoff jammer "against the
front end of [enemy] detection and identification" radars
to "systems hanging on our [individual] aircraft that work
on the other end of the spectrum [against enemy] missile guidance
and fuzing."
He declared, "Overlaying all of that, in addition to
those systems, is stealth."

An Air Force EC-130 Compass Call aircraft takes on fuel for a
communications jamming mission in the Gulf War. Disruption of
communications necessary for centralized command and contra/
threw Iraqi forces into disarray.
Just in Time
Aside from the F-117A Stealth fighters, there was nothing
especially exotic about the ECM equipment that made it possible
for Air Force fighters and bombers to survive the war in such
remarkable numbers. Some of that equipment showed up just in
time, though, and its fortuitous availability for combat is now
regarded as a tribute to EW acquisition as practiced by the Air
Force in recent years.
Desert Storm's spectacular results are seen as vindication
of the Air Force's EW acquisition community. It had come under
fire in recent years for failures of several key EW systems in
development or in operation. Desert Storm showed the other side
of the story-the successes.
In the opinion of Air Force Col. Robert Walsh, a top EW official
in the office of the Assistant Secretary of the Air Force for
Acquisition, Desert Storm demonstrated under difficult circumstances
that "our EW systems are better than we ever expected them
to be. We knew they were good, but we couldn't prove it in a
court of law. Desert Storm was our confirmation."
In his interview with AIR FORCE, General Horner described
allied EW assets and their employment in Desert Storm as follows:
- Countermeasures pods on air-planes to "provide terminal
protection" by jamming enemy missile-guidance radars and
misleading them with chaff and by shooting off flares to fool
heat-seeking missiles.
- Air Force F-4Gs and Navy F/A-18s in the Wild Weasel role
tiring high-speed antiradiation missiles (HARMS) at enemy ground
radars, making it dangerous for their operators to keep them
turned on long enough to "put [air target] information into
the missile guidance system and guide the missile to the target."
Up against Wild Weasels, an enemy radar operator knows all too
well that "if he stays on longer than a few seconds, he
dies," the General declared. "What he has to do is
like shooting a rifle by closing his eyes and blinking them open.
That was nearly impossible."
- Area-jamming aircraft "like the Air Force EF-111 and
the Navy EA-6B, which pour electrons into [the enemy's] target-acquisition
radars so he just doesn't know where you're coming from."
This technique cloaks the attacking aircraft and has the effect
of making all of them stealthy, whether or not they are built
that way.
Allied electronic combat involved other key elements as well.
General Myers noted, for example, the vital role of the Air Force's
EC-130 Compass Call aircraft in disrupting Iraqi military communications
at strategic and tactical levels.
"We have seen what technology can do over there in terms
of weapons," he told his AFA symposium audience. "Some
of that makes for good video. . . . What we don't see are the
technologies that are enabling us to use those smart weapons."
Those technologies do their stuff in "the mostly invisible
world of electronic combat," the General said. "I can
guarantee you that Iraq understands electronic combat and has
a very real and very intense defense." He noted that ECM
suites on all Air Force aircraft were "working very, very
well" under tire.
Who would have believed it? Only a few years ago, the Air
Force was in a funk about electronic warfare. Big problems plagued
several key programs in development or in operation, such as
the defensive avionics suite aboard the B-1B bomber, the airborne
self-protection jammer (ASPJ), the upgrade of the area-jamming
gear aboard the EF-111, and an "advanced capability"
jamming pod for a wide variety of aircraft.
Disaster Area
Beset by such failures, top uniformed and civilian leaders
in the Air Force's operational and acquisition communities called
EW a disaster area for the service. Much of the blame was laid
on the EW acquisition strategy conceived by the Defense Department
in the name of all the services in the early 1980s. That strategy
was criticized for having overreached itself in setting unrealistic
expectations for excessively capable EW systems. It was sound
in other respects, though, and this became apparent in the Gulf
War. The EW strategy had been largely pegged to pushing new EW
systems through development and into production much more quickly
and efficiently than had been the norm. It put a premium on "quick
reaction" development of jammers and warning systems for
a wide range of combat aircraft.
Several such systems did their stuff in Desert Storm and helped
mightily to save the day. Thanks to the EW acquisition game plan,
some had come through several years of development and production
just in time to be installed on Air Force fighters deployed to
the Gulf. The timing was uncanny. By all accounts, the new systems
made a big difference once the shooting started.
One was the ALQ-184 ECM pod. The Air Force contracted with
Raytheon in 1982 to develop it for a wide range of aircraft.
A problem with one part of the system cropped up during operational
testing, which was not completed to the Air Force's full satisfaction
until near the end of last year.
Meanwhile, the Air Force made a decision that would turn out
to have been opportune indeed. Convinced that the problem could
and would be fixed, USAF put the ALQ-184 system into low-rate
production almost two years before the testing would run its
course. As a result, a goodly number of Air Force fighters were
able to go to war with ALQ-184 pods slung underneath.
The ALQ-184 did a great job of bamboozling enemy radar-guided
missiles. It gets much of the credit for the Air Force's astonishingly
low losses.
The ALQ-184 story makes a telling point: Had the Air Force
been purist about putting off production until testing was all
done, the ALQ-184 would have missed the war, with sorry consequences,
in all likelihood, for at least some Air Force fighters that
carried it into combat. Production would not even have begun
until last January, just about the time that those very fighters
first came under fire over Iraq and Kuwait. Why did the Air Force
conclude that there was no risk in going to war with ECM pods
still being tested?
Because, in effect, the testing was tougher on the pod than
the war was expected to be.
The problem discovered during operational testing of the ALQ-184
was caused by a single part. The Air Force decided that the system
did not need that part in order to do good work in the air war
around the Gulf.
Colonel Walsh describes the part as "an auxiliary receiver
that gives the system an increased capability against specific
threats." Those threats "were irrelevant to Desert
Storm," and, in any case, "the auxiliary receiver would
not have been installed" in the ALQ-184 pods that were deployed
to the Gulf.
ALQ-184 pods, each costing about $900,000, will eventually
replace Westinghouse ALQ-119 pods aboard a wide range of Air
Force fighter and attack aircraft. The ALQ-119 did yeoman work
for many years but is based on outdated ECM technology of the
1970s and has seen its day. The ALQ-184 outperforms and outlasts
it by far. All ALQ-119s in the inventory are now being transformed
into ALQ-184s.

An Air Force F-117A takes cover in a hardened shelter. Epitomizing
modern electronic combat, stealthy F-117A attack fighters escaped
detection in the Gulf War and went unmolested while taking out
top-priority targets.
Tough Pod
The ALQ-184 has shown its toughness too. It tested out at
eighty hours mean time between failures (MTBF) in the field and
actually did a little better than that under the heavy stress
of combat sorties galore around the Gulf. The best the ALQ-119
could ever manage by way of reliability was twenty hours MTBF.
Colonel Walsh claims that the ALQ-184's performance, reliability,
and maintainability are "all very important in terms of
our having a highly deployable Air Force," one that will
remain capable of fulfilling USAF's "Global Reach, Global
Power" responsibilities. He also predicts that the system
"will get even better over time" in all respects.
The ALQ-135, an internal jammer that Northrop began developing
for the Air Force in 1983, also sprang from the Pentagon's EW
acquisition strategy and performed for USAF on short notice in
Desert Storm. It had been installed in the squadron of F-15C
air-superiority fighters from the 33d Tactical Fighter Wing at
Eglin AFB, Fla., in plenty of time for that squadron to go into
combat-and claim the lion's share of all Air Force air-to-air
victories-- in Desert Storm.
The most up-to-date models of the ALQ-135 jammers did not
emerge from production and go into operational service until
last June. Even as Iraq invaded Kuwait less than two months later,
those jammers were being installed on F-15Es of the 4th Tactical
Fighter Wing at Seymour Johnson AFB, N. C.
Two squadrons of Air Force F-15Es went to war in Desert Storm.
They belonged to the 4th TFW, and they racked up big scores against
all sorts of targets all over Iraq and Kuwait. They were also,
and hardly by chance, the very F-15Es equipped with upgraded
ALQ-135s. Through days and nights of seemingly endless sorties,
only one was shot down, most likely by a lucky shot from an antiaircraft
gun.

An F-16C returns from a Desert Storm mission with its bomb racks
empty and an ALQ-719 ECM pod slung on its centerline. Air Force
planes used assorted pods and internal jammers to great effect
in fending off missiles and keeping losses very low.
The EW success story in Desert Storm was not about new systems
alone. Most Air Force planes in that war carried older-generation,
external ECM systems, such as the Westinghouse ALQ-119s and ALQ-131s.
All did the job.
Each plane went to war with the pods it already had. As a
rule, ECM systems were not switched around at the last minute.
"We don't just take the best pods we have and move them
around from plane to plane or base to base," Colonel Walsh
explains. "Aircrews aren't used to flying with them. Maintenance
crews aren't used to fixing them."
Operation Desert Storm also showed that the Air Force had
made sound decisions through the 1980s in developing new radar
warning receivers for its top-line fighters. One such RWR, the
Loral ALR-56C, was carried by all F-15Es and by many F-15Cs used
in that war. Other F-15Cs were equipped with the first model
of the line, the ALR-56A.

The ALQ-131 jammer pod is conspicuous on this F-4G Wild Weasel
being readied for wartime action. The ALQ-131, which has been
around for a while, did tie job in Desert Storm. The technology
in newer jammers, such as the ALQ-184, allows them to do more
and hold up better Some older pods are being upgraded.
The solid performance of its ECM systems under fire does not
mean that the Air Force can leave well enough alone. Improvements
are always in order. Says Colonel Walsh, "We have to keep
looking into the future, judging what the threat environment
is going to be, and deciding which upgrades we will need to make
to counter it."
Upgrading ECM is much easier than it used to be, thanks to
reprogrammable computers. Most of the Air Force's modern radar
warning receivers embody such computers. If the planes carrying
those RWRs run up against new or different radars and missiles,
or if intelligence sources see such menaces in the making, squadrons
can reprogram their RWRs with new software that will attune them
to the changing threats.
Air Force ECM software specialists did that sort of thing
on nearly all ECM systems throughout Desert Shield and Desert
Storm. As combat aircrews and intelligence analysts caught on
to new or modified characteristics of enemy missile radars, the
relevant ECM components were reprogrammed, flight tested, and
installed on flight lines. What this demonstrates, declares Colonel
Walsh, is that "we have truly made monumental gains in our
ability to reconfigure EW systems, which gives us great flexibility."
Not By Chance
The Air Force's turn to reprogrammable RWRs and other ECM
systems was not happenstance. "The Air Force made the decision
to do it--to make the necessary investment--as part of the [EW]
acquisition strategy of the early 1980s," Colonel Walsh
explains. "There was no doubt at the time that it would
become increasingly difficult to rebuild and reinsert hardware
components of computers to adjust to new threats and that software
would have to be the answer."
It also appears easier to keep readily reprogrammable ECM
systems in shape to stay the course of combat. TAC's General
Myers told the AFA symposium in Orlando that the trend to digital
programmable computers through the 1980s "helped us a lot"
in maintaining ECM systems. He said, for example, that in 1980,
it took two and a half hours to reprogram an ECM pod. The pod
had to be removed from the airplane, taken to the ECM "pod
shop," reprogrammed there, and put back on the plane.
"Today we can do that same job in seven minutes because
we can do it on the aircraft," General Myers declared.
With radar warning systems seemingly well in hand, the Air
Force has begun attending to the development of missile warning
systems to complement the RWRs on combat aircraft. An RWR is
sensitive only to the approach of a radar-guided missile. An
MWS, on the other hand, is designed to detect all kinds of missiles,
including those using infrared and electro-optical sensors to
seek their prey.
Missile warning systems are currently carried by limited numbers
and types of Air Force aircraft, including B-52 and F-111 bombers
and special operations planes, such as fixed-wing gunships. Now
USAF is looking at missile warning systems for such planes as
C-5, C-141, and C-130 transports and F-15 and F-16 fighters and
attack aircraft. The F-111 may need a new MWS.
The Air Force is feeling pressure at the Defense Department
level to get cracking on an MWS for the F-16. Last year, the
Defense Acquisition Board approved USAF's controversial, much-debated
plan to assign the F/A-16 to the close air support (CAS) mission
as successor to the A-10 and assign it to the longer- range battlefield
air interdiction (BAI) mission as well.
There was one caveat. The DAB ruled that the Air Force must
put a missile warning system on the lighter. The Air Force moved
to comply.
Its Tactical Air Warfare Center at Eglin AFB, Fla., examined
the technology of missile warning systems already on "heavies,"
with an eye to its suitability for fighters. MWS contractors
converged on Eglin for flight tests of their technologies on
drones.
The testing resulted in "fairly high confidence that
the technology was there and ready to make the transition to
the fighter force," and "gave us just what we were
looking for," General Myers said.
He predicted that more such expeditious testing of ECM technologies
and systems will take place in the future. Why? Because the Air
Force is intent on "streamlining" its ECM acquisition
process, and "rapid prototyping and flight demos" like
those at Eglin are in keeping with that.
Meanwhile, the Air Force is assured of having more than enough
individual ECM systems for its tighter force, he said, "not
because we are buying more ECM pods or radar warning receivers,
but because our force structure is drawing down, and we are able
to take pods that were flying on A-7s for example, and move them
to the [fighters] that are left."
General Myers emphasized that the Air Force will continue
to "need ECM systems that are effective, timely, and affordable--a
blend of stand-alone, bolt-on systems and fully integrated [internal]
systems"--plus a continuation of top-notch training in their
use. Otherwise, he warned, the impressive record racked up in
Desert Storm electronic warfare may not be duplicated the next
time around.
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