Through the course of many
posts, we’ve discussed naval force structure, strategy, combat doctrine,
etc. In other words, we’ve discussed how
to wage a war.
Defense News website has an
article about airpower usage in the current anti-ISIS campaign (1). While this is Air Force centric, the concepts
apply equally to the Navy which is why we’ll look at this. This is how we fight wars today. This is how we envision fighting wars in the
future.
First, just a bit of
perspective on the entire anti-ISIS endeavor.
It’s been a year or so since the US began the fight against ISIS. The president promised to
degrade and destroy ISIS, you’ll recall.
How’s that working out? Marginal,
at best, right?
On a related note, those who
argue that the US is militarily stronger than the next X countries combined would do well
to note the stunning lack of success against a handful of militarily bereft
thugs. To be fair to the military, the
military is probably being tightly handcuffed by the President and his
political goals. Still, I haven’t heard
anything worthwhile from the military regarding a viable strategy (assuming
it’s even in our national interest to be involved in this). To be further fair, we have no way of knowing
what strategies the military has proposed to the President in private.
Anyway, back to the
topic. How do we want to wage war? As reported,
“As of Oct. 6, the US and partner nations had
conducted 7,323 strikes against ISIS: 4,701 in Iraq and 2,622
in Syria, according to
a Pentagon report on OIR. … that averages out to about 13 strikes in Iraq and seven
strikes in Syria each day.
By comparison, during the 42-day Desert Storm air
campaign against Saddam Hussein in 1991, coalition fighters and bombers flew
48,224 strike sorties, or 1,100 a day. Twelve years later, the 31-day Iraqi
Freedom air campaign averaged more than 800 offensive sorties a day.
We see, then, a focus on
limited, precision attacks.
Unfortunately, the result of limited attacks is limited results – a key
lesson that the President and military seem to be ignoring.
We also see a key
characteristic of modern warfare as conducted by the US and summed up in the following.
“Since Desert Storm and Iraqi Freedom, the US has made
great strides in precision-guided munitions, Lt. Gen. Robert Otto, deputy chief
of staff for ISR, pointed out in an interview with Defense News. Today, the US is
deploying primarily precision-guided bombs in the region to avoid collateral
damage, he stressed.”
We’ve discussed this
before. Arguably, the US’ main goal in modern conflicts is avoidance of
collateral damage even at the cost of increased risk to US personnel and
decreased likelihood of operational success.
We have forgotten that war is destruction. We are trying to conduct clean, surgical wars
where equipment gets destroyed but no one on either side gets hurt. The reality is that this is a recipe for long,
drawn out conflicts that ultimately result in many more people getting hurt
because the enemy has no qualms at all about hurting innocents.
There are some who recognize
this but too few. For example,
“What is the logic of a policy that limits the
application of force to get rid of the evil that is the Islamic State while
allowing them to kill innocent men, women and children?” Deptula [Lt. Gen. Dave
Deptula, Ret., former deputy chief of staff for intelligence, surveillance and
reconnaissance] said. “It’s laudatory that Operation Inherent Resolve has
resulted in zero civilian casualties ... but how many innocent men, women and
children have been killed in that same time?”
So, by trying to avoid
collateral damage we ensure on-going civilian deaths on a much greater scale
over a much longer time frame.
What other problems do we
see in the anti-ISIS campaign? Intel and
targeting. As Defense News notes,
“One frustration for the Air Force is a lack of
assets and intelligence on the ground, Otto [Lt. Gen. Robert Otto, deputy chief
of staff for ISR] noted. US agencies
and coalition forces need to do a better job using intelligence, particularly
human intelligence, to discern targets the Air Force can then strike from
the air, he stressed.”
“I think we need to do a better job at holistically
using our intelligence to create the targets. So it’s using signals
intelligence, what we hear with geospatial intelligence, what we can discern
from pictures with moving target indicators,” Otto said. “That’s hard work, but
work that we need to improve.”
We see in these statements
both the recognition that targeting is difficult and the failure to recognize that
more technology is not the answer. All
the explosive capability in the world is useless unless you have a target to
use it against. Typically, though, the
Air Force’s solution to targeting is more technology rather than eyes and boots
on the ground. Another approach to
targeting is to accept that less precise targeting is acceptable. If a sniper is in a building, our approach is
to initiate a gazillion dollar program to develop a UAV that can enter the
building, find the sniper, and disable his rifle. The alternative is to drop a mortar shell on
the building and move on. This goes back
to the avoidance of collateral damage issue.
If we are more concerned with avoidance of collateral damage than
elimination of the threat, we shouldn’t be involved in the first place. War is hell and the only good aspect to it is
ending it quickly and decisively. Fewer
people will die in the long run.
Can the US fight a war with simpe, basic weapons? No!
Consider this,
“We won’t send airplanes into certain areas if they
don’t have F-22s with them because they make everybody better, they provide a
capability that allows those fourth-generation airplanes to be even better than
they would be on their own.” [Gen. Hawk Carlisle, commander of Air Combat
Command]
Really? We’re plinking pickup trucks. Gen. Carlisle is suggesting that a fourth
generation aircraft can’t do that sufficiently well? How does an F-22 make that better? Hey, how many F-22’s does it take to change a
light bulb? How many F-22’s does it take
to plink a pickup truck? It doesn’t
matter. We’re going to use technology
for its own sake.
“The stealthy F-22 is a game-changing air dominance
platform, according to Col. Larry Broadwell, commander of the 1st
Operations Group. Broadwell emphasized the Raptor’s enhanced ability to
identify and destroy targets on the ground, adding that the plane’s integrated
sensors have improved battlefield awareness for both US and coalition aircraft.
Raptors from the 1st Wing were the first to deploy with a new air-to-ground
capability upgrade, Broadwell noted.”
Well, how can anyone argue
with that? Using our most advanced jet
to plink $30,000 pickup trucks doesn’t seem like overkill, does it? Risking our most advanced jet to plink
$30,000 pickup trucks doesn’t seem unwise, does it?
But for all its new technology, the F-22 has some
limits. While the Raptor is able to communicate back and forth with other
F-22s, the plane does not yet have the ability to send information to
fourth-generation aircraft, Broadwell acknowledged. The plane can import
information across traditional data links, but can’t export data, he said.”
Wait a minute! Put the afterburner in reverse. Didn’t we just read that Gen. Carlisle said
the F-22 makes every other aircraft better?
How does it do that if it can’t communicate with them? Could it be that the F-22 doesn’t really
enhance every other aircraft and that the Air Force is just engaged in the same
kind of exaggeration that the Navy routinely does?
Moving on, what about all
those expensive surveillance toys the Air Force has?
“The Air Force’s ISR platforms are also performing
well in the region, Otto said. For high-altitude surveillance missions,
commanders are using Lockheed Martin’s U-2 spy plane and Northrop Grumman’s
unmanned RQ-4 Global Hawk to gather intelligence.
For medium-altitude ISR operations, the Air Force
deploys General Atomics’ MQ-1 Predator and MQ-9 Reaper drones. These platforms
use full motion video to provide a clearer understanding of the battlefield,
Otto said.
“The technology is incredible,” Otto said. “We’re
able to do the Global Hawk or the MQ-1s and MQ-9s and fly those from back in
the United States, which is
when you think about that from a technological standpoint, very very advanced.”
Our UAV surveillance capability
is incredible, the Air Force tells us, but didn’t we read earlier that
targeting is a “frustration” for the Air Force?
So, all that incredible UAV surveillance technology is still not
producing actionable targets. Hmm …
One last aspect of the anti-ISIS
effort that is noteworthy is our refusal to use ground combat power. We want to fight this using only
airpower. This is, undoubtedly, due to
our goal of fighting a war without casualties.
It’s a tossup which is our main goal:
avoidance of collateral damage or avoidance of casualties. Regardless, those are one and two on the
objectives list. Certainly, winning is
not in the top two (it may not even be a top ten goal).
Let’s look at the overall
picture. We’re fighting the ideal war,
as we conceive it. We have total
domination of the air. We have unlimited
and unimpeded UAV surveillance. There is
no electromagnetic countermeasure interference.
There is almost no air-to-ground threat.
We have the most advanced aircraft in the world working the
problem. ……… And yet, in a year of combat, we’ve made no
progress and may have lost ground. How
do we explain that?
We explain that by
recognizing that our modern concept of warfare is fundamentally flawed.
- Our main goal is avoidance of collateral
damage.
- We have no commitment to ending the conflict
quickly and decisively.
- Our solution to every military challenge is
technology.
- Our targeting capability is insufficient
relative to our goal of avoidance of collateral damage.
- Our cost effectiveness (ratio of resources
expended to results produced) is completely out of whack.
- We believe that airpower alone can win a war.
Let me repeat. Our concept of how we want to wage war is
fundamentally flawed and almost guaranteed not to produce a decisive military victory.
I’ve criticized what we’re doing. Criticism is easy, solutions are hard. What is ComNavOp’s solution? Well, there are two alternatives.
First, we need to ask
whether we should even be involved. I’m
not going to get into the politics of this beyond noting that a very strong case
can be made that none of the people involved in the fighting are true friends
of the US and that allowing them to kill each other off at no cost to us is not
a bad scenario. Of course, there are
many other factors that could make involvement worthwhile. I’ll leave it at that.
Second, assuming we have
good reason to be involved, the only rational objective is a quick and decisive
end. Defeating ISIS would be nothing more than a short, trivial live fire exercise for a
WWII armored division, if allowed to do the job without being subjected to
overly restrictive rules of engagement.
In other words, if a sniper is in a building, blow it up and move
on. If we aren’t that serious, we
shouldn’t be there and if we are that serious, it’s a trivial combat exercise. Yes, there would be collateral damage but far
less than if the conflict is allowed to drag out for years. How many people has ISIS executed because we won’t do what’s needed to quickly and decisively
end them?
We need to seriously
re-examine our concept of modern war. Russia and China have a concept and it isn’t even remotely like
ours. When it comes to how to wage a
war, I like their concepts far more than ours.
Sidenote: No, this isn't turning into an Air Force blog. These concepts apply equally to the Navy/Marines and, thus, are worth consideration.
(1)Defense News, “Fighting ISIS: Is Pentagon Using Air Power's Full Potential?”, Lara Seligman, October 11,
2015,