Airpower in the Post Cold War 1 Overview
- Slides: 55
Airpower in the Post Cold War 1
Overview I • Gulf War Background • The Enemy • The Plan of Attack – – – Objectives Concept of Operations Five Strategic Rings Targets Phases of the Campaign • Operations PROVIDE COMFORT/NORTHERN WATCH – The Conflict and Lessons Learned 2
Overview II • Operation SOUTHERN WATCH – The Conflict and Lessons Learned • History of the Balkans – Background – Ethnic Groups • Operation DENY FLIGHT – The Conflict and Lessons Learned 3
Overview III • Operation ALLIED FORCE – – – Background NATO Actions Operation ALLIED FORCE Begins Lessons learned by US Military Political Lessons Learned Impact of Lessons Learned on Future DOD Budget • Evolution of Airpower 4
Gulf War Background • Conflict began 2 August 1990 • Iraq and Kuwait could not settle grievances over oil • Saddam Hussein sent armies to invade Kuwait 5
US Objectives • Immediate, complete, and unconditional withdrawal of all Iraqi forces from Kuwait • Restoration of Kuwait’s legitimate government • Security and stability of Saudi Arabia and the Persian Gulf • Protection of American citizens abroad 6
Operation DESERT SHIELD • CENTCOM CINC—Army Gen H. Norman Schwarzkopf – CENTAF Lt Gen Charles A. Horner • Became JFACC during the war • In first 5 days: – Five fighter squadrons, contingent of AWACS, and part of 82 d Airborne Division – Equaled Iraqi force in first 35 days • Air Reserves/Air National Guard called to active duty 7
DESERT STORM Begins • 16 Jan—An 11 th-hour appeal for Iraqi withdrawal from Kuwait drew silence • 17 Jan—Operation DESERT STORM began as allied forces answered Iraq’s silence • Within 10 days, air sorties reached the 10, 000 mark 8
Iraqi Threat • • • 4 th largest armed force in world Well over 1 million troops 750 combat and 200 support aircraft Nuclear, biological, and chemical capabilities SCUD Missiles 9
Air Defense Threat • Iraq’s air defense system thought to be the best outside of the Soviet Union • United States was probably the only nation in the world with the airpower to “disintegrate” an integrated system of this type 10
Leadership Focus
Objectives • Isolate and incapacitate Iraqi command structure • Win air superiority • Destroy nuclear, biological, and chemical capabilities • Eliminate Iraqi offensive military capability • Eject Iraqi Army from Kuwait 12
Concept Of Operations • Powerful and focused air attacks on strategic centers of gravity over a short period of time – Target Hussein Regime, not Iraqi people – Minimize civilian casualties and collateral damage – Minimize Coalition losses – Pit US and Coalition strengths against Iraqi weaknesses 13
Instant Thunder • Developed by Colonel John Warden and his Checkmate staff in Washington – Named in direct response to Vietnam’s unsuccessful Rolling Thunder campaign • Based on a unique fivering model of the modern nation-state 14
The Five Strategic Rings 15
Target Systems 16
Leadership Focus
Campaign Overview • Four Part Campaign: – Phase I: Strategic Air Campaign – Phase II: Suppression of enemy Air Defenses over Kuwait vicinity – Phase III: Air Attacks on ground forces in Kuwait and vicinity – Phase IV: Ground Operations as directed 18
And in the end… • On 27 Feb 1991, the Iraqi military was scattered and defeated – Iraq lost 90 aircraft to coalition forces – 122 Iraqi aircraft fled to Iran • Stealth provided the needed edge • The Persian Gulf War officially ended on 11 Apr 1991 19
Leadership Focus
Post-Desert Storm Video 21
The Crisis in Iraq—ONW • UN Security Council established a no-fly zone over northern Iraq to protect the Kurdish people from attacks by Saddam Hussein • Operation Provide Comfort began on 5 Apr 1991 as a humanitarian relief effort to deliver food, clothing, and supplies to Iraq’s Kurdish refugees • C-130 s began airdropping supplies on 7 Apr 1991 • Lasted approximately 8 years and was then replaced by Operation NORTHERN WATCH 22
The Crisis in Iraq: Lessons Learned—ONW • • • The need to avoid fratricide The limitations of airdrops Host-country tensions The need for alternate bases Lack of an exit strategy 23
The Crisis in Iraq—OSW • OSW was a Combined Task Force enforcing the “no-fly zone” below the 32 nd parallel (extended to 33 rd in 1996) in southern Iraq • Not an aggression against Iraq—executed as a self-defense measure • Coalition partners included the US, UK, France, Saudi Arabia, and Kuwait • Fire from more than 850 Iraqi SAMs and AAAs directed at coalition aircraft • Iraq violated the no-fly zone more than 160 times • More than 150, 000 USAF sorties by 1998 24
“What we’ve effectively done since 1992 is conduct an air occupation of a country…” General Ronald R. Fogleman Jul 1995 25
The Crisis in Iraq: Lessons Learned—OSW • Became a test for USAF AEF concept in Oct 1995 • Quality-of-life changes needed due to high Ops -Tempo • Reorganized Security Forces 26
Leadership Focus
The Balkans: A Brief History • After World War II, monarchy abolished; Communist Party leader Tito proclaimed the country the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia, with himself as prime Minister • Eliminating opposition, the Tito gov’t executed Mihajlovic in 1946 Tito died in 1980, and the fragility of the federation he ruled quickly became apparent 28
Three Ethnic Groups In Conflict • Serbs—Dominant in Yugoslavia's politics and army, orthodox Christianity makes them natural allies of Russia • Croats—Roman Catholics, closer to the West than Serbs and exposed to Western Influences • Muslims—Living mainly in ethnically mixed towns and cities in Bosnia-Herzegovina 29
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Operation DENY FLIGHT • Oct 1992, UN Security Council Resolution 781 established a no -fly zone over Bosnia-Herzegovina • Operation DENY FLIGHT – Enforced the no-fly zone – Provided close air support to UN troops – Conducted approved air strikes under a dual-key command arrangement with the UN • 28 Feb 1994, NATO aircraft shot down four warplanes violating the no-fly zone over Bosnia-Herzegovina – This was the first military engagement ever undertaken by the Alliance 31
Operation DENY FLIGHT • NATO objectives – Bosnian Serb compliance to cease attacks on Sarajevo and other safe areas – Withdrawal of Bosnian Serb heavy weapons from the total exclusion zone around Sarajevo – Complete freedom of movement for UN Forces and personnel, and nongovernment officials – Unrestricted use of Sarajevo airport 32
Operation DENY FLIGHT • NATO missions of Operation DENY FLIGHT – To conduct aerial monitoring and enforce compliance with UN Security Council Resolution 816 – To provide close air support for UN troops on the ground at the request of, and controlled by, UN forces – To conduct approved air strikes against designated targets threatening the security of the UN-declared safe areas 33
Operation DENY FLIGHT • Operation DENY FLIGHT lasted from 12 Apr 199320 Dec 1995 – Almost 100, 000 sorties flown • A formal closure ceremony was held in Vicenza, Italy on 21 Dec 1995 – Forces associated with Operation DENY FLIGHT were then transferred to Operation DECISIVE ENDEAVOR as part of the overall NATO operation JOINT ENDEAVOR. 34
The Crisis in Bosnia: Lessons Learned • Lack of doctrine • Tactical air and space power problems • Bases weren’t large enough to accept the contingency surges • Coalition/Joint problems • Technological problems 35
KOSOVO 36
Kosovo Crisis • Kosovo lies in southern Serbia and has a mixed population, the majority of which are ethnic Albanians (Muslims) • Serbian leader Slobodan Milosevic altered the status of the region, removing its autonomy and bringing it under the direct control of Belgrade, the Serbian capital • The Kosovar Albanians strenuously opposed the move 37
United States & NATO Interests at Stake • Serb aggression threatened peace throughout the Balkans and the stability of NATO’s SE region • Belgrade’s repression in Kosovo created a humanitarian crisis of staggering proportions • President Milosevic’s conduct directly challenged the credibility of NATO 38
NATO Action • After the failure of repeated international diplomatic efforts since the spring of 1998 to peacefully resolve the conflict in Kosovo • North Atlantic Council decided on 23 March 1999 to authorize NATO air strikes • Aimed at strategic targets in the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia to end the repression of Kosovar Albanians by the Yugoslav government 39
NATO’s Objectives 1. A stop to all military action and the immediate ending of violence and repression 2. The withdrawal from Kosovo of the military, police, and paramilitary forces 3. The stationing in Kosovo of an international military presence 40
NATO’s Objectives (cont’d) 4. The unconditional and safe return of all refugees and displaced persons 5. Establish political framework agreement for Kosovo in conformity with international law 41
Significance of Air Power in Allied Force • B-2 s make combat debut • 30 hour flight • JDAM technology enables all weather bombing • F-117 s used in majority of strike packages • Lost F-117 and recovered pilot
Significance of Air Power in Allied Force UAVs: - Provided target information - Conducted battle damage assessment - Monitored refugees - ISR synchronized combat operations
NATO’s Strategic Objectives • Demonstrate the seriousness of their opposition to Belgrade’s aggression in the Balkans • Deter Milosevic’s attacks on helpless civilians, and reverse ethnic cleansing • Damage Serbia’s capacity to wage war against Kosovo 44
Military Objective “Degrade and damage the military and security structure President Milosevic has used to depopulate and destroy the Albanian majority in Kosovo. ” William Cohen, SECDEF 15 April 1999 45
Lessons Learned on Kosovo War Objectives US Grand Strategy • Maintain a peaceful, prosperous US-led Europe • Convince NATO to transition from old Cold War common defense against external threats to new Continental security coalition • Persuade NATO to acquire means and will to conduct out of area military ops European Strategy Kosovo War Aims • Stop the Serbian slaughter and expulsion of ethnic Albanians • Remove Milosevic from power • Accomplish the above with minimal collateral damage and NATO casualties • Maintain a peaceful, prosperous, and independent Europe • Prevent spillover into Albania and Macedonia, then to Greece and Turkey • Maintain NATO relationship with Russia and give it a role in helping end the crisis • Demonstrate European unity Common Effort Concealed Widely Differing Objectives 46
Lessons Learned by US Military • United States air refuelers were stretched thin during operation • Force structure numbers and resources were inadequate for current level of commitments (all services); support and training as important to victory as strike • Older platforms with smart weapons may be seen as good enough; smart weapons may be better than smart platforms • Need the right force structure for the future • C 4 ISR is currently the weakest link in joint and coalition ops • On the brink of another “hollow force” 47
Political Lessons Learned by Europeans • Militarily, Europe remains dependent on Americans – Best technology, weapons, and platforms “Made in USA. ” – Politicians unwilling to pay the cost of matching unique US capabilities • United States cannot always be counted on to serve the Alliance’s interests – US focus shifted with opinion polls – Fear US commitment could falter if US forces take heavy casualties 48
More Political Lessons Learned by Europeans • European Union can provide diplomatic muscle (Martti Ahtisaari saves the day); many foreign policy interests are similar among EU Nations – Threat of rising Islamic fundamentalism – Humanitarian (ethnic cleansing) – Need to build external identity • Europe can overcome internal diversity to maintain cohesion – German Luftwaffe conducted first combat missions since 1945 – Greece provided logistical support despite popular opposition – Italy and France (which have Communist ministers) offered air bases 49
Impact of Kosovo Lessons Learned on Future DOD Budget Trends • No DOD/Allied spending surge like post. Desert Storm • International defense market continues to shrink • Readiness and retention will increasingly consume $$$$ for modernization • Inevitable tax cut legislation will further erode DOD budgets • Services must eventually deal with the bow wave • Old platforms with smart weapons were “We have to make a trade between good enough smart weapons and platforms. . . We • Congress may balk at big bills for new need to encourage the services to platforms (JSF, F-22, CVX, DD-21) concentrate more on smart weapons. ” • Support forces will need big $$$$ too Jacques Gansler Former Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics 50
Evolution of Airpower • What were significant airpower achievements and changes during this period? • Who were some of the key leaders? • What doctrinal changes occurred during this period?
Air Power during the 1990 s Key People Gen Mc. Peak Lt. Gen Horner Col Warden Key Weapons Precision Guided Munitions Stealth Technology UAVs and Space Technology Key Doctrinal Focus Precision Engagement Air Superiority Building Partnerships
Summary I • Gulf War Background • The Enemy • The Plan of Attack – – – Objectives Concept of Operations Five Strategic Rings Targets Phases of the Campaign • Operations PROVIDE COMFORT/NORTHERN WATCH – The Conflict and Lessons Learned 53
Summary II • Operation SOUTHERN WATCH – The Conflict and Lessons Learned • History of the Balkans – Background – Ethnic Groups 54
Summary III • Operation DENY FLIGHT – The Conflict and Lessons Learned • Operation ALLIED FORCE – – – Background NATO Actions Operation ALLIED FORCE Begins Lessons learned by US Military Political Lessons Learned Impact of Lessons Learned on Future DOD Budget • Evolution of Airpower 55
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