There is a touch of
irony in the fact that in an era of smart bombs and
stealth aircraft, the effectiveness of modern air operations
often depends on a relative handful of Air Force specialists
who spend most of their time on the ground. These airmen,
mostly enlisted members, are USAFs commandos.
 |
USAF combat controllers, such as
these participating in Operation Enduring Freedom,
set up and control air assault zones for Special
Operations Forces. |
They often commute to work by parachute or other unusual
means. Their job is to direct air operations, spot
targets, suppress enemy forces, and help rescue downed
aircrews. These operations fall to two groups of elite
troops: combat controllers and enlisted terminal attack
controllers.
While they share a general specialty, the two groups
train and work separately.
Combat controllers are ground combat forces assigned
to special tactics squadrons of Air Force Special Operations
Command. They are schooled in unconventional warfare
and operate in forward areas, where they control everything
from assault landings to air strikes.
Enlisted terminal attack controllers, who fall under
Air Combat Command, spend most of their time working
with Army units. They, too, train in extreme tactics
and operate with forward ground forces. Their primary
job is to call in and then direct close air support
aircraft.
Both specialties date back to the days of propeller-driven
aircraft, but todays practitioners are among
the most highly trained operators in any service, employing
new technologies and equipment.
Combat controllers trace their history to World War
II, when the Army Air Forces formed glider units to
insert troops into combat quickly and quietly. The
method had promise, but the glider pilots often got
lost en route or missed their intended target areas.
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| Enlisted terminal attack controllers, assigned
to ACC but stationed with Army units, call in close
air support strikes. Here, an ETAC checks one of
his radios during a field skills test in South
Korea. |
Charting the Path
The solution, Allied leaders decided, was to train
a small group of specialists to land first and guide
the main assault force. These advance personnel, called pathfinders, used
lights, flares, and other devices to mark the landing
zones, and they provided on-site weather information
to the inbound aircraft.
Pathfinders had their debut in 1943 during the Allied
invasion of Sicily. They participated in the Normandy
invasion and airdrops into Holland. Their use continued
after the war, and, in 1947, when the Air Force became
a separate service, USAF kept the specialists but later
dubbed them combat control teams, or CCTs.
This group of airmenalso known individually
as CCTshas overseen air operations in conflicts
from the Korean War to the most recent action in Iraq.
In addition to training in ground combat, each CCT
is a certified air traffic controller. The work includes
setting up navigational aid equipment to guide aircraft
to landings on makeshift runways. CCTs deploy into
combat areas by air, land, or sea and set up bare bones
airfield capabilities. The CCTs are trained in demolition
work to clear obstructions and hazards from potential
runways and landing zones. They manage parachute assault
zones and aircraft landings and low-altitude airdrops
for resupplywithout air control towers or extensive
communications systems. Once they have an airfield established,
the CCTs control air operations, provide command and
control, gather intelligence, and make weather observations.
However, said Maj. Jerry Kung, a combat controller
now serving as commandant of AFSOCs Advanced
Skills Training school at Hurlburt Field, Fla., The
primary thing we do is air-to-ground interface.
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| This ETAC helps secure a road in Iraq after major
operations ended for Gulf War II. |
Jack of All Trades
Kung explained that the manner in which a CCT provides
air-to-ground interface varies with each mission. Sometimes
its providing air traffic control, he said. Sometimes
its doing tactical control or close air support,
and sometimes its placing navigation aids or
actually controlling aerodromes.
He went on, We are trained to take over an
airfield and run it just as if it were right here at
Hurlburt
Field. That means directing airplanes during
landing and instructing pilots where to taxi and where
to off-load personnel or equipment. Basically
everything you would do at a normal airfield, said
Kung.
Because their aircraft land in combat zones, he said,
CCTs also must provide the long-range coordination
to get them out of the airfield and on to their
next mission.
Training is varied and usually beyond USAFs mainstream
courses. There are two major elements: Air Education
and Training Command handles the first and AFSOC the
second.
AETC first provides a two-week combat orientation
course at Lackland AFB, Tex. Students undergo flight
physicals,
receive initial shooting instruction, and learn about
the history of the combat control specialty.
Whats next on the agenda varies depending on
Air Force and Army schedules. The prospective enlisted
CCTs go through a four-month air traffic control school
at Keesler AFB, Miss.; Army airborne school at Ft.
Benning, Ga., which can last several weeks; and a 2.5-week
survival school at Fairchild AFB, Wash. Following those
three, the airmen must complete a three-month combat
control school at Pope AFB, N.C.
The entire process takes about a year, said Kung,
and prospective CCTs leave the AETC pipeline
with a three-level apprentice skill level from combat
control
school. They are ready then for the AFSOC portion
of their traininganother year during which they
learn advanced skills at Hurlburt. By the time
they finish with this, he said, they are
five-level qualified controllers.
 |
| Members of a combat control
team walk through the rubble of one of Saddam
Husseins
palaces. These CCTs were operating from Baghdad
Airport,
where, among their other duties, they perform air
traffic control. |
Officer combat controllers follow much the same process.
One exception is that officers spend slightly less
time on air traffic control, but they receive training
in airfield management.
AFSOCs 720th Special Tactics Group, headquartered
at Hurlburt, is home to combat controllers. Within
the group, there are seven special tactics squadrons:
six active duty and one Air National Guard. Of the
six active units, one is located at Kadena AB, Japan,
and one at RAF Mildenhall, UK.
Depending on the mission, Air Force CCTs operate
with Navy SEALs, Army Rangers, and Special Forces.
The mission
also dictates whether the 720th STGs other special
tactics airmencombat weathermen and pararescuemendeploy
with the combat controllers. There are instances
when all three will be on the same mission, said
Kung.
The weathermen can deliver time-sensitive forecasting,
explained the major, and that can affect a commanders
decision on how to prosecute a coming mission or an
ongoing mission. The weather channel provides
an overview of the weather situation, but in a combat
situation, said Kung, You dont know whats
happening at that mountain pass. That is why,
he added, You need to send somebody out there
to collect the data.
Combat controllers display a number of talents, not
the least of which is their ability to recognize and
sort out air traffic in the combat areathat includes
rockets or artillery. Kung called it an ability
to see in three and four dimensions. The CCT
must be able to deconflict air traffic
in the area to prevent problems from developing. That
is really our core skill, he said. All
the other specialty skills, such as free-fall parachuting
and scuba diving, just comes with the territory.
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| A combat controller on a four-wheel off-road
vehicle provides escort as the first civilian aircraft
lands at Baghdad Airport after coalition forces
secured the site in early April. |
The CAS Controllers
The history of the other elite group of controllers
dates to the Korean War when the Air Force sent fighter
pilots to Army units to call in close air support for
ground attacks. USAF deployed some enlisted airmen
to operate the heavy communications gear needed by
the officers. Only the officers were permitted to direct
CAS air strikes. That practice continued through the
Vietnam War.
By the 1980s, however, the Air Force could not afford
to continue using pilots for these ground assignments,
so it began to train enlisted men for the job. Today,
USAFs enlisted terminal attack controllers (ETACs)
work directly with Army combat forces to manage their
close air support.
The Air Force awards the ETAC specialty (which has
no officer counterpart) only after an airman has served
a long apprenticeship and taken a variety of courses,
many of them with the Army. Becoming an ETAC is an
extended process, said MSgt. Charles Heidal, who has
been in the career field since the 1980s. The first
step is to gain basic credentials as a tactical air
command and control specialist.
First, theres a 75-day technical school at
Hurlburt. There, Heidal said, an airman receives training
on
ground maneuvers, handling weapons, and radio equipmentthe
basics that you need to use just to wander around with
the Army.
After this initial training, the airman may take a
number of specialized courses with the Army or other
services. Heidal, for instance, went through the Armys
basic parachute course and pathfinder course. Ive
also been through EIB [Expert Infantryman Badge] training
and some sniper weapons stuff and miscellaneous courses
that are available at various forts where I have been
stationed, he added.
Heidal said that while the Air Force does not require
such courses, they help the airmen to support the Army
customer. Airmen working with the airborne forces,
for example, have to be jump-qualified, he explained.
However, the majority of training for airmen hoping
to become enlisted terminal attack controllers comes
from work in the field, serving as an assistant to
an ETAC and as a member of a tactical air control party
(TACP). After an airman has been working in the career
field for approximately two years, said Heidal, he
is sent to the Joint Firepower Course at Nellis AFB,
Nev. That course provides training in advanced close
air support tactics. On returning to his unit, the
airman gets a check ride with an experienced
ETAC or air liaison officer. If he passes, Heidal said,
he is qualified to handle CAS air strikes without
the direct supervision of an officer.
Once certified, an ETAC may spend most of his USAF
career living and working with an Army unit. Frequently,
a single ETAC is the sole Air Force representative
with a small Army Special Forces or Ranger unit. At
battalion level, Heidal said, an ETAC likely will be
working with a younger tactical air command and control
specialist trying to gain the experience needed to
move up the TACP chain.
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| These combat controllers
are setting up communications to guide in assault
aircraft
during training at
Hurlburt Field, Fla. Their skills include the ability
to deconflict various aircraft, rockets,
and artillery in their combat area. |
Weight Watching
Calling in close air support strikes is the primary
mission, but an ETAC also winds up simply sorting out
air traffic in a combat area. With his equipment mounted
on a small vehicle, Heidal said, an ETAC probably
can control about 100 square miles of airspace by racking
and stacking aircraft, watching fuel loads, and the
whole bit. At the same time, the ETAC must keep
in close contact with Army counterparts to let the duck
shootersthe air defense troopsknow
that American aircraft are going to be in the area.
However, operating from a vehicle is a luxury rarely
afforded USAFs enlisted terminal attack controllers.
The ETAC works with what he can carry on his back.
That includes several different heavy radio systems.
The Air Force has been able to reduce the load somewhat.
Heidal tries to find even more ways to lighten
that stuff because were being one-pounded
to death. There is always someone who wants
to hand me one more pound of gear, he said.
Heidal noted that, when he jumps out of an aircraft,
he weighs 405 pounds. The only part he can dump quicklythe
parachuteweighs just 65 pounds. The rest of the
weight is on his back, which makes it a significant
issue, he said.
Body armor and tactical gear weigh close to 40 pounds.
Then come a helmet with a night-vision kit, a rucksack
with food and water, and the radios.
We went from carrying four radios down to one, said
Heidal. Then they said, Well, we need you
up on multiple channels, so now were carrying
two radios.
The relationship between these special airmen and
the Army has changed over the years. Heidal thinks
the
change has been for the better.
The Air Force began placing its tactical air control
parties with the Army in 1977. Earlier, USAF tactical
air support units were assigned to Air Force bases
and farmed out to the Army. That was a problem, said
Heidal, because the airmen had to work with different
Army personnel on every mission. They could not establish
a close rapport.
Today, that situation is reversed. The airmen, who
wear Army badges and Army patches on their shoulders,
are more accustomed to the Army way. Most of
my NCO experience is dealing with soldiers, said
Heidal.
After the Air Force moved most of its ETACs directly
onto Army posts, soldiers started viewing them as
part of the Army team. Now, soldiers call Heidal
by name
and know that, when he talks about close air support,
he knows what he is talking about.
Air Combat Command has three air support operations
groups:
- 1st ASOG assigned to 12th Air Force and headquartered
at Ft. Lewis, Wash.
- 3rd ASOG assigned to 8th Air Force and headquartered
at Ft. Hood, Tex.
- 18th ASOC assigned to 9th Air Force and headquarterd
at Pope AFB, N.C., adjacent to Ft. Bragg.
Each group has subordinate squadrons or flights stationed
at various Army posts around the country.
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| Enlisted terminal attack controllers usually
carry on their backs all their gear, which can
weigh several hundred pounds. Here, an ETAC passes
coordinates over one of his two radios during an
exercise. |
Many ask why the Army has not developed its own ETACs.
This issue surfaced most recently during Operation
Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom, when
ground units said there were not enough Air Force
ETACs to go around. As a result, both the Army and
Marine
Corps have started pursuing their own programs. The
Air Force has adapted some of its ETAC course material
for a new joint terminal attack controller program.
Despite the rigorous training and long apprenticeship,
the Air Force has no shortage of volunteers for enlisted
terminal attack controller duty. We have to
turn people away, said Heidal.
We have had to raise the bar at the tech school, he
said. This is not Rambo stuff. He explained, I
can take a very smart individual and make him an ETAC,
but I cannot take an overly muscled individual who
just wants to break things and make him one.
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