7/7/2008
"We cannot escape some of the ways war must be fought...if our Soldiers cannot fight and kill at close range, our status as a superpower is in question"
--Robert Kaplan, Neocon but before becoming a prejudiced fascist fantatic was a prescient author of The Coming Anarchy
RMA/PGM air strike mentality meets its Waterloo in Lebanon thanks to the IDF
Our hats off to the IDF for leading the way once again.
They have taken our RMA/PGM/UAV air strike anti-physical, pro-mentalism BS we have fed them and applied it to hilly, rocky mountainous urbanized Lebanon against C3D2 camouflaged sub-national terrorists and its FAILED miserably for all the world to see. RMA has failed miserably in open desert and urban Iraq, too but it was covered up by the DoD lie machine. This is a blessing we need to take to heart as we reform ourselves to have effective an military.
The only way to expel Hezbollah and keep it out of south Lebanon will be by MANEUVER on the ground.
However, keeping Hezbollah from firing rockets using UAVs and then dispatching a F-15/F-16 fighter-bomber sitting on an air base on strip alert before war broke out is not the best air power approach and has failed miserably, too.
Here's a web page showing two approaches to getting a manned observation/attack plane with sensors over the Israeli/Lebanon border to target Hezbollah rockets instantly:
Modifying a Cessna (less to work with but cheaper)
www.oocities.org/usarmyaviationdigest/grasshoppersmustreturn.htm
Modifying a Crop-Duster with sensors, armor, armament (can attack, too)
www.combatreform.com/killerbees3.htm
(scroll down to nearly bottom for AY-65 Vigilante II)
Plus, having Aerostat blimps with sensors could enable as soon as a rocket team or firing signature is detected, the manned observation/attack plane to launch a missile if its within range to take them out (Armed Crop Duster option).
The best thing America could do to help the Israelis defeat the rockets would be to buy them some O/A attack planes and Aerostats that they can afford to run 24/7/365. Israeli AH-64 attack helicopters are simply too expensive and cannot fly continuously overhead like fixed-wing O/A aircraft can as former DoD Director of Air Warfare, Chuck Myers [cmyersaero@aol.com] calls: "Maneuver Air Support by COntinuous Overhead Presence". Relying on F-16s on strip alert at air bases rearward even as fast as they are takes too long.
www.nytimes.com/2006/07/20/world/middleeast/20military.html?fta=y
Military Analysis: Strategy
To Disarm Shadowy Guerrilla Army, Israeli Air Power May Not Be EnoughBy THOM SHANKER
Published: July 20, 2006WASHINGTON, July 19 — With its bombardment of Lebanon, Israel aims to accomplish the military goals of eliminating Hezbollah’s ability to fire missiles over the border, cutting its lines of resupply from Syria or Iran and demonstrating — under pain of chaos — the cost to the Lebanese government of allowing the militant group to operate freely from its territory.
PIC
David Furst/Agence France-Presse - Getty Images
Israeli Soldiers carried a wounded Soldier in the Israeli area of Avivim at the border between Lebanon and Israel.
But recent combat history provides a chastening lesson that air power, regardless of its accuracy and punch, cannot defeat even a conventional adversary unless it is backed by ground forces. Thus, American military analysts monitoring the conflict caution that Israel may be unable to reach its goal of disarming a shadowy guerrilla army by missiles, bombs and long-range artillery alone.
To that end, small numbers of Israeli commandos already have entered Lebanon, senior Israeli officials acknowledged Wednesday, and more ground forces may be sent in.
The Israeli Defense Forces are “right now doing pinpointed entries into south Lebanon to deal with Hezbollah locations,” said one senior Israeli official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was discussing his nation’s classified military planning.
Israel is wary of replicating its demoralizing, 18-year occupation of southern Lebanon, and there are no plans for “clear and hold” missions, these officials said. Instead, once their tactical objectives are reached in missions aimed at clearing the rocky, cavernous, bunker-laden terrain of militants and their arsenals, Israeli forces would return home.
Then it would be up to Lebanese troops, perhaps with assistance from an international force, to fill the security vacuum under the Israeli plan, the Israeli official said.
Geoffrey Kemp, a Middle East expert who served on the staff of the National Security Council under President Reagan, said that while it may not be possible for the Israelis to destroy Hezbollah completely, especially through bombardment alone, “They can degrade that guerrilla army’s capacity to inflict unacceptable pain on Israeli civilians and Israeli cities with rockets.”
But even a successful conclusion of the current military effort in southern Lebanon cannot resolve Israel’s broader security problems, he cautioned.
“The Palestinian suicide bombers were much more effective than these rockets have ever been,” said Mr. Kemp, who is now director of regional strategic programs for the Nixon Center, a Washington policy institute.
Over the past week of fighting, after Hezbollah forces captured two Israeli Soldiers, Israeli forces have carried out air and artillery strikes to degrade Hezbollah military capabilities in southern Lebanon. The attacks focused first on rockets and launchers.
“We are still working through our original targeting menus, but we are chasing these strategic missiles as we find them,” said the Israeli official. “This is our first priority — and it will take weeks, not days.”
American military officers who study the missile threat noted that Israel faced significant problems in countering Hezbollah’s arsenal. Even with perfect missile defenses — which do not exist — the short-range weapons that have struck northern Israel follow such a brief trajectory that they are nearly impossible to hit. For those short-range rockets, and the longer-range missiles that have struck Haifa, the Israeli tactic is not to defend by bringing them down in flight, but to hit their launchers in hiding or immediately as they are rolled into the open before firing, which requires persistent and detailed surveillance.
More broadly, Israel also has sent its missiles and artillery shells into Hezbollah outposts, weapons depots and command posts, aiming at troops and ammunition buried in the rocky Lebanese terrain. The goal is to create less a cordon sanitaire than an empty zone to be refilled by forces, either Lebanese or international, capable of preventing Hezbollah from returning within striking range of Israel.
To destroy Hezbollah’s ability to plan and communicate, the neighborhood in southern Beirut that served as the unofficial Hezbollah capital has been pounded; Israeli officials acknowledge that this is part of an attempt to strike directly at the organization’s leadership, as well as to disarm its fighters and dismantle its support infrastructure.
In addition, to keep weapons from reaching Hezbollah, a number of road links and bridges to Syria, and Beirut’s airport, have been hit, as Israeli warships impose a quarantine of the Lebanese coast. To the same end, Israeli officials are demanding that a stringent monitoring regime be put into place along all entry points to Lebanon.
But the Israeli military campaign is intertwined with another goal aimed at the Lebanese government and civilian population, in the view of some American experts. “That is to create enough pain on the ground so there would be a local political reaction to Hezbollah’s adventurism,” said Edward P. Djerejian, who formerly was the American ambassador to both Israel and Syria.
Mr. Djerejian, now director of Rice University’s Baker Institute for Public Policy, warned that, ultimately, there was no military solution to reduce the security threats to Israel — and that the Israeli leadership understood it had a limited time to achieve its current military goals.
“There is only a certain window of time before the international community truly weighs in,” he said.
Until the United States and other nations decide to pressure Israel to rein in its attacks, Israel itself must weigh the impact of bombarding civilian infrastructure targets and even legitimate Hezbollah operations centers within residential areas. These attacks could quickly undermine any potential for the Lebanese government, and its population, to support actions to constrain Hezbollah.
“Everybody understands the Israelis want to degrade Hezbollah’s ability as a military fighting force and as an organization capable of launching missiles into Israel,” said Theodore H. Kattouf, a former American ambassador to Syria.
“I believe they want to turn the Lebanese people — those outside of the true believers within the Shia community — against Hezbollah,” he added. “I think they are quite misguided in the policy they are following. These [air] attacks are, if anything, making people feel somewhat less hostile to Hezbollah and more convinced in their dislike of Israel.”
Precision Bombing of Nothing: an American Tradition
www.oocities.org/operationalliedforces/airinterdictionfails.htm
www.history.navy.mil/library/online/bombing_tool.htm 
Americans want to replay WW2 on the cheap and do the firepower part from sexy aircraft and not do the necessary ground maneuver to take a Berlin or a Tokyo. Since nuclear SHEs are off the table to break the will of a nation-state foe, small amounts of HEs from small fighter-bombers from extremely costly, vulnerable aircraft supercarriers or piss-off-the-locals land bases going too fast to see what they are hitting means they can only hit what is obvious. Smart foes will not offer obvious targets seen from the air. Foes that are not nation-states with American-style industries will not HAVE ANY OBVIOUS air targets. Only if many heavy bombers are used to mass HE effects can nation-states be forced to bend their wills but only if we are willing to carpet-bomb and kill many civilians in the process and be just as evil as the government leaders we are opposing if those citizens are victims and not guilty accomplices of placing the governmental leaders in power.
The power of planet earth to absorb our inefficient fighter-bomber airstrikes is greater than our ability to throw money down the drain or create narcissistic egomaniacs to fly such pricey aircraft. America will continue to be defeated by foes refusing to play our partial WW2 re-enactment game with small amounts of HE until we finally realize that firepower cannot win wars short of SHE annihilation of all the people we THINK are against us, and to develop a MANEUVER based warfighting force structure that can DIFFERENTIATE between good guy and bad guy from the ground without getting itself hurt by it being in armored tracked combat vehicles with EFFICIENT firepower proving leverage to HELP. This would mean projecting massive amounts of precision HE BALLISTICALLY via guns from ships and artillery pieces whenever possible so as to prevent a human pilot from having to fly over or near a target to try to hit it. We must preserve THE WILL OF OUR OWN PEOPLE and not fritter it away delivering HE against mud huts. Men in aircraft flying low and slow must help ground forces find the enemy to not only hit him with HE/KE attacks but to control the ground itself so he cannot use it to wage war. Robbing the enemy of the ability to wage war by not allowing him the ground needed can force him to conclude that he should stop trying. When an enemy can no longer fight you, he is defeated. When an enemy has been made to changed in his mind to stop trying to fight you, you have hope that he can someday be your friend.
The Good News: Post-Lebanon Conclusions will enlighten the general public
We think the general public will realize for first time:
1. Wars can't be won just by air strikes---even precision ones
2. Israel succeeded but it used tanks (things with tracks)
Its up to us now to connect-the-dots and remind them their tax dollars are still being wasted on air strikes-can-win-wars and wheeled trucks-are-combat vehicles.
I. Air strikes without effective recon does not hit targets
The USAF and Navy commanded by fighter and bomber jock egotists (instead of adult professionals who use the best tools possible to win the war and save lives) go to war without the best physical platforms/systems like air recon aircraft because the SR-71 as the fastest plane on earth bruises their egos so they retired the aircraft! Its not been available ever since General Schwartzkopf asked for them and they were gone in Desert Storm!
Even the USAF has had to grudgingly admit recently that it needs men on the ground to control air strikes:
Afghanistan War Showing Air Force The Importance Of 'Eyes On The Ground'
By Lisa Burgess, Stars and Stripes
ARLINGTON, Va. - Afghanistan has added a "new wrinkle"; to the Air Force's basic doctrine, according to the service's top analyst for the war on terrorism: Wars aren't won by air alone.
The rugged and unforgiving mountains of Central Asia have revealed many hard truths to each of the services. But for the Air Force, perhaps no single lesson resonates more clearly, Col. Fred Weiners said Tuesday: "Eyes on the ground" are essential to round out the advanced space- and air-based sensors, weapons and platforms that make up the service's inventory.
"You can have all the high technology you want, but it's these 25-year-old staff sergeants on the ground making strike decisions" that, according to Weiners, have in the past been made by high-level planning officers located nowhere near the battlefield.
Weiners is acting director of the Air Force's Task Force Enduring Look, and spoke with Stripes in an interview in his office in Arlington, Va.
Air campaigns traditionally have been planned in advance. Coordinates have been known, and target sets could be chosen from data gathered weeks or months in advance.
To hear an Air Force official emphasizing the need for "boots on the ground" is a significant shift in conventional U.S. military thinking.
The Army and Marine Corps both are founded on the principle that war is never won until "boots hit the ground" - when military personnel actually occupy the turf. The Air Force has tended to be dominated by officers who believe air operations alone can conquer an enemy.
In Afghanistan, however, forward air controllers and special operations forces -not planners sitting in Washington with maps and satellite photographs - have been responsible for almost all critical targeting calls, Weiners said.
"They are our most versatile and highly sophisticated sensor, and they are proving highly effective," Weiners said. "They dramatically enhance overall air power and bombing effectiveness."
Thanks to ground controllers, "We've enjoyed an accuracy like we've never enjoyed," Weiners said - and not only due to more sophisticated "smart" bombs, such as the Joint Direct Attack Munition.
Sensor-To-Shooter Loop
But Afghanistan also revealed a critical break in this "sensor-to-shooter" loop: Air Force pilots had not had enough practice working with the ground operators, particularly the special operations forces.
The service has moved with extraordinary speed to remedy that deficiency, Weiners said.
His task force first identified the need for more pilot training with ground forces in January, and by June, pilots at the Air Force Weapons School at Nellis Air Force Base, Nev., were "engaging special operations forces on the ground, including full mission profiles and simulations, to replicate what we were doing [in Afghanistan]."
Not every lesson coming out of Afghanistan is revolutionary. Much of what the Air Force is gleaning validates tactics and technologies that have worked well in exercises, but never have been proven in combat, Weiners said.
One especially critical validation to come out of the Central Asian campaign is proof that the Air Force's Air and Space Expeditionary Forces, which were designed for peacetime, also work in war, Weiners said.
As the Defense Department continued to pull back from its overseas bases throughout the 1990s, Air Force leaders decided they needed a way to keep the increasingly home-based service ready for action.
C-17 Proves Itself
One example: Afghanistan is the first major conflict for the Pentagon that has required "everything to come in and out by air," Weiners noted.
The Air Force's newest transport, the C-17, was key, Weiners said.
"The C-17 really proved itself, given the austere nature of our bases" in Central Asia, he said.
Creative aircrews also have found ways for the C-17 to perform that its designers never anticipated, Weiners said, citing in particular its function as a "mobile filling station."
Afghanistan has no fuel supply infrastructure, and roads there are so treacherous that trucking large amounts of fuel in is out of the question.
That means every drop of aviation gas and jet fuel needed by the U.S. forces is supplied by the Pentagon's fleet of KC-10 and KC-135 tanker aircraft.
Meanwhile, Army and Marine helicopters and the assorted special operations aircraft stationed at the rough airfields that dot Afghanistan "need a lot of gas," Weiners said.
During Operation Anaconda in March, when fuel was at an absolute premium, an unknown airman came up with a novel idea to get fuel to the fighters quickly: Combine the C-17's ability to land almost anywhere with its large fuel tanks.
"We would park a tanker in an orbit, and the C-17 would go up, tap the tanker, land and off-load the fuel - and now you have avgas [aviation gas]" where tankers can't land, Weiners said.
Bombers With Eyes
Another much-discussed evolution was the decision to use of Cold-war era strategic bombers in tactical combat.
The Air Force's B-1, B-2 and B-52 bombers all were originally designed to deliver nuclear munitions in end-of-the-world scenarios.
In Afghanistan, however, Air Force officials took advantage of the bombers' extensive payloads, range and high-altitude capability to deliver lethal strikes on enemy forces - all while being directed by ground-based forces.
The bombers proved very effective, Weiners said.
"The B-1s and B-52s flew approximately 10 percent of the sorties and delivered close to 60 percent of the weapons," Weiners said.
During the Gulf War, B-52s dropped some 30 percent of all U.S. bombs. Neither the B-1 nor the B-2 was deployed.
One reason for that is the versatility of the bombers: They can carry traditional "dumb" bombs, but thanks to modifications, they also can deliver a range of smart weapons.
Secondly, all this can be done with greater standoff. The bombers fly much higher than fighter craft with no need for a visual, using coordinates from forward air controllers - the eyes on the ground.
Change comes with difficulty for the military; it's a "risk-averse group," Weiners said.
But, he said, "this is a great time to question the old way of doing things."
Or that slower-flying MANNED, armored attack aircraft are needed to do CAS?
The X-45 UCAV will be unmanned "fall guy" to do dirty work of making enemy Air Defenses reveal themselves to clear way for manned fighter-bombers to strategic bomb with some token USAF FACs and SOF on the ground shining laser beams so USAF can get the glory.
However, X-45 UCAV will neither be agile or observant enough to do CAS to enable ground MANEUVER. It will have problems like most UAVs have of simply not flying themselves into the ground.
The answer is:
CAS/MAS Air-Ground Team
A-10s in a "Cactus Air Force" guided by USAF FACs for CAS
Army helos and U/MCAV "Killer Bees" flying Maneuver Air Support (MAS) guided by Army Attack Pathfinders
In the August 2002 issue of G2mil, "GPS Guided Munitions and Fratricide" Carlton Meyer writes:
"The May 2002 issue of the Marine Corps Gazette has an interesting article by LtCol John T. Rahm entitled: 'Bombing Accuracy for Idiots'. He points out the circular error probable (CEP) is commonly used to measure the accuracy of a weapon. However, he points out that "probable" means the circle, often very elliptical, where 50% a projectile or bomb is likely to hit. While that was good for ballistic weaponry, it is very misleading for GPS guided munitions. While they have great CEPs, many of their guidance systems malfunction and the bomb goes miles off target. LtCol Rahm states that testers disregard such failures when measuring CEPs anyway, and he worked at China Lake were the testing occurred. He writes this makes them too dangerous for close air support.
This explains the frequent 'mistakes' in Afghanistan where bombs landed far from any real target. The complexity of GPS guided bombs like JDAM, or the Navy 5-inch ERGM still under development, or the proposed 155mm Excalibur will often lead to friendly fire casualties which may be caused by any of these factors: a defective guidance system; a guidance system damaged during transport or installation; an incorrect GPS coordinate sent by the targeting system; and incorrect GPS coordinate entered into the bomb; GPS signal interference from nearby mountains, buildings, or solar flares; or GPS signal jamming. So if an aircraft drops a GPS guided bomb from several miles away, any guidance problem may prove disastrous. Even if 90% work great, that loose 10% may prove too dangerous".
If we over-rely on just UAVs then its inevitable that they will be shot down and crash by mishaps resulting in us not having adequate reconnaissance to either target properly or maneuver. Consider UAV loses during Operation Allied Forces:
TOTAL OFFICIAL UAV LOSSES (by June 3, 2000): 48 (49)
(According to a June 3 New York Times article "at least 21 drones" were lost by NATO during the war in Yugoslavia. Following the publication of this article another UAV loss was officially admitted by NATO on June 8. This brings the number of officially-acknowledged UAV losses to 22 aircraft. A July 6 article from the French Le Monde newspaper mentions that France lost a total of 5 UAVs, two CL-289s and three Crecerelles.)
Two articles published on the official U.S. Navy web site (http://uav.navair.navy.mil) and on Pilot Online web site report that at least 14 U.S. UAVs were lost in Yugoslavia, including 4 Pioneer types, three of which are believed to have been lost due to fire. Some 6 Hunter UAVs were also lost: 4 due to enemy fire and 2 because of technical failures. Four more U.S. UAVs were lost, three of which are Predator types (serial numbers: 95-3017, 95-3019, 95-3021).
Yugoslav military sources claimed 30 NATO UAV kills: 25 UAVs shot down by the 3rd Army air defenses (the 3rd Army was stationed in Kosovo under the command of Gen. Nebojsa Pavkovic), 3 UAVs were downed by Yugoslav Navy air defenses (information released by FRY Navy Commander, Milan Zec), and 2 UAVs were shot down by the 2nd Army air defenses (information released by Major General Spasoje Smiljanic).This includes only those UAV that crashed in Yugoslavia.
According to some sources, a fourth Predator UAV, serial number P-016 95-3016, crashed during the Operation Allied Force in May.
Shortly after the Phoenix UAV was exhibited at the Yugoslav Aeronautical Museum, government sources in Britain told the BBC that some 12 British UAVs were lost in the operation "Allied Force". The report by the British National Audit Office mentions a loss of twelve British UAVs. This brings the total number of confirmed UAV losses to 45-46. This is at least 15 UAVs more than claimed by the Yugoslav military officials.
United States: 17 (3 Predators, 9 Hunters, 4 Pioneers, 1 UAV of undetermined type)
Germany: 7 (presumably all CL-289 turbojet drones)
France: 5 (3 Crecerelle, 2 CL-289)
Britain: 14 (14 Phoenix)
4 UAVs of undetermined origin (possibly U.S., German, or Italian)
The U.S. Army Center for Army Lessons Learned (CALL) Afghanistan report reveals that UAVs have weather limitations that prevent them from flying at all:
http://call.army.mil/products/handbook/02-8/02-8ch2.htm
"Weather Limitations
The weather must be considered in developing the collection plan. If any of the following conditions are present, the mission will not launch:
Ceilings of 6,000 feet or less will prevent collection during mission.
 
Winds: Headwind of 35 knots, tailwind of 3 knots, and crosswind of 20 knots.
 
Winds aloft of greater than 50 knots.
 
Lightning within 10 nautical miles.
 
Ice."
A U.S. Army Master Aviator notes about manned recon platforms:
"Any helicopter we have now certainly can operate in this environment, but it will be a bumpy ride in a OH-58D. Eventually UAV's will be able to operate in this environment, but it will be a while, and the dreaded software monster (the same one that is eating RAH-66) could easily get an appetite for UAV."
II. Air Strikes alone and the actual realistically possible "situational awareness" will not defeat a capable foe
To set the U.S. military and the debate on a better course, this presentation is one of a series of presentations by the 1st Tactical Studies Group (Airborne) which lays out an optimal, reality-based force structure for primarily the U.S. Army transformation and why it must be based primarily around air/sea-transportable and numerous light tracked armored fighting vehicles for the 3D force and heavier tracked AFVs for the 2D force both with robust mobility and human reconnaissance capabilities that can overcome nation-state as well as sub-national group C3D2 evasion and their own SSC fire effects not vulnerable rubber-tired armored cars nor over-relying on mouse-clicking firepower to defeat the enemy---Air-Mech-Strike Force structure---in order to to achieve decisive world-wide strategic operational maneuver (AWSOM).
The U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) defines "Cover, Concealment, Camouflage, Denial and Deception (C3D2). Many potential adversaries, nations, groups, and individuals are undertaking more and increasingly sophisticated C3D2 activities against the United States. These operations are generally designed to hide key activities, facilities, and capabilities (e.g. mobilization or attack preparations, WMD programs, advanced weapons systems developments, treaty non-compliance, etc.) from U.S. intelligence, to manipulate U.S. perceptions and assessments of those programs, and to protect key capabilities from U.S. precision strike platforms. Foreign knowledge of U.S. intelligence and military operations capabilities is essential to effective C3D2. Advances in satellite warning capabilities, the growing availability of camouflage, concealment, deception, and obscurant materials, advanced technology for and experience with building underground facilities, and the growing use of fiber optics and encryption, will increase the C3D2 challenge.
Counter-Space Capabilities
The U.S. reliance on (and advantages in) the use of space platforms is well known by our potential adversaries. Many are attempting to reduce this advantage by developing capabilities to threaten U.S. space assets, in particular through denial and deception, signal jamming, and ground segment attack. By 2015, future adversaries will be able to employ a wide variety of means to disrupt, degrade, or defeat portions of the U.S. space support system. A number of countries are interested in or experimenting with a variety of technologies that could be used to develop counter-space capabilities. These efforts could result in improved systems for space object tracking, electronic warfare or jamming, and directed-energy weapons".
Is JCROP really an attainable goal, ever?
The U.S. way of war is increasingly characterized as leveraging our asymmetric advantage in information superiority to attack with precision, often from a distance. Policymakers and military theorists have long talked of the U.S. potential for dominant battlespace knowledge (DBK) - essentially knowing everything of military significance within a theater, perhaps a 200km by 200 km box, based on the capability of our sensor grid, information processing technology, and superior intelligence analysis. Central to DBK is achieving a Joint Common Relevant Operational Picture (JCROP), implying that everyone across the joint force can access a single, accepted, operational picture of the battlespace, that incorporates all the information available to the joint sensor grid, in real time. Ideally, such a capability would ensure that what is on your screen and what is in the battlespace is the same - a goal that is much easier said than done.
Background to the "situational awareness" panacea
Great progress has been made in the technological sophistication of our sensors and the ability to process and display the stream of data from those sensors. We have also improved the interoperability of those sensors and the information from them, with an increasingly broad array of intelligence processing and analysis systems, and command and control systems. That is the good news. The less-than-good-news is that with the proliferation of strategic, operational, and tactical sensors across our joint military force and other government agencies, we have literally dozens of sensors looking at the same battlespace, at approximately the same time. And they all see it a little differently! Consequently, a fighter pilot or tanker looking at their platform's digitized display may see a dozen entities or "blips" on the far side of a hill. The first problem is figuring out whether those entities or good guys, bad guys, or neither - that is a difficult enough problem in itself. The more troublesome issue is knowing whether those blips actually represent 12 different entities over the hill, or 12 sensors looking at the same entity a little differently, or the more likely outcome of somewhere inbetween.
Discussion: will precision strike work? let alone replace ground maneuver?
The United States either has, or will soon possess the air, land and naval platforms and munitions to hit any location, virtually anytime, anywhere on this planet. But that is not relevant! The issue is ensuring a viable target is at that location when the munitions explode. In light of enemy C3D2 and the proliferation of active decoys and countermeasures its highly likely the enemy will give us the targets we want to see to waste away our expensive ordnance on nothing or civilians to turn world public opinion against us, which is likely the critical win/lose center-of-gravity in 4th Generation Warfare (4GW). Platforms and ordnance are only a subset of the operational end-to-end architecture associated with long range precision strike they must be backed by other forms of military force like ground control and maneuver or else we present an easy asymmetry for the enemy to exploit. In short, until we demonstrate in a joint venue the technical capability to fuse information from the strategic, operational, and tactical sensors of all services and agencies, and automatically recognize targets, verify they are targets (not decoys) with reliable air/ground HUMINT and THEN dynamically plan missions, we will never realize the potential of long range precision strike against an actual enemy to enable decisive dominant MANEUVER that encircles, isolates, and collapses enemy forces, controls the lands that people live on and changes governments. The idea that firepower, even precise firepower will win wars without us taking any risks with men on the ground doing maneuver is a false goal and waster of national resources. When this approach inevitably fails, men's lives are wasted as maneuver is done underfunded but in dire emergency. Rather, we will continue to kid ourselves about the effectiveness of the current "fixed aimpoint approach" to warfare. Furthermore, we will sustain the current approach of all services/agencies wanting to rely on their own budgeted electronic sensors -- case in point: the U.S. Army's interim RSTA squadron.
Challenge
In its simplest form, U.S. sensors obtain "blue force" and "other" information. Getting the blue part should be relatively straightforward. The challenge is that the processes underlying our JCROP must differentiate the "other" category into enemy, noncombatant, decoy, and "friend without functioning identification systems;" and do so in real time. Such a capability requires instantaneous fusion of information from multiple sensors to include the best input, mankind in the air and on the ground actively investigating if targets are real and not decoys, across multiple spectrums -- a task for which we still must develop the required suite of stable mathematical algorithms and as diverse platforms as possible to cover as many enemy countermeasures as possible.
The Kosovo Cover-Up: NATO said it won a great victory, but the war did very little damage to Serb forces. By not conceding this, the Pentagon may mislead future presidents about the limits of U.S. power. A Newsweek exclusive.
 
By John Barry and Evan Thomas
Newsweek
May 15, 2000, Pg. 23
It was acclaimed as the most successful air campaign ever. "A turning point in the history of warfare," wrote the noted military historian John Keegan, proof positive that "a war can be won by airpower alone." At a press conference last June, after Serbian strongman Slobodan Milosevic agreed to pull his Army from Kosovo at the end of a 78-day aerial bombardment that had not cost the life of a single NATO Soldier or airman, Defense Secretary William Cohen declared, "We severely crippled the [Serb] military forces in Kosovo by destroying more than 50 percent of the artillery and one third of the armored vehicles." Displaying colorful charts, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Gen. Henry Shelton claimed that NATO's air forces had killed "around 120 tanks," "about 220 armored personnel carriers" and "up to 450 artillery and mortar pieces."
An antiseptic war, fought by pilots flying safely three miles high. It seems almost too good to be true-and it was. In fact-as some critics suspected at the time-the air campaign against the Serb military in Kosovo was largely ineffective. NATO bombs plowed up some fields, blew up hundreds of cars, trucks and decoys, and barely dented Serb artillery and armor. According to a suppressed Air Force report obtained by NEWSWEEK, the number of targets verifiably destroyed was a tiny fraction of those claimed: 14 tanks, not 120; 18 armored personnel carriers, not 220; 20 artillery pieces, not 450. Out of the 744 "confirmed" strikes by NATO pilots during the war, the Air Force investigators, who spent weeks combing Kosovo by helicopter and by foot, found evidence of just 58.
The damage report has been buried by top military officers and Pentagon officials, who in interviews with NEWSWEEK over the last three weeks were still glossing over or denying its significance. Why the evasions and dissembling, with the disturbing echoes of the inflated "body counts" of the Vietnam War? All during the Balkan war, Gen. Wesley Clark, the top NATO commander, was under pressure from Washington to produce positive bombing results from politicians who were desperate not to commit ground troops to combat. The Air Force protested that tanks are hard to hit from 15,000 feet, but Clark insisted. Now that the war is long over, neither the generals nor their civilian masters are eager to delve into what really happened. Asked how many Serb tanks and other vehicles were destroyed in Kosovo, General Clark will only answer, "Enough." In one sense, history is simply repeating itself. Pilots have been exaggerating their "kills" at least since the Battle of Britain in 1940. But this latest distortion could badly mislead future policymakers. Air power was effective in the Kosovo war not against military targets but against civilian ones. Military planners do not like to talk frankly about terror-bombing civilians ("strategic targeting" is the preferred euphemism), but what got Milosevic's attention was turning out the lights in downtown Belgrade. Making the Serb populace suffer by striking power stations-not "plinking" tanks in the Kosovo countryside-threatened his hold on power. The Serb dictator was not so much defeated as pushed back into his lair-for a time. The surgical strike remains a mirage. Even with the best technology, pilots can destroy mobile targets on the ground only by flying low and slow, exposed to ground fire. But NATO didn't want to see pilots killed or captured.
Instead, the Pentagon essentially declared victory and hushed up any doubts about what the air war exactly had achieved. The story of the cover-up is revealing of the way military bureaucracies can twist the truth-not so much by outright lying, but by "reanalyzing" the problem and winking at inconvenient facts. Caught in the middle was General Clark, who last week relinquished his post in a controversial early retirement. Mistrusted by his masters in Washington, Clark will retire from the Army next month with none of the fanfare that greeted other conquering heroes like Dwight Eisenhower after World War II or Norman Schwarzkopf after Desert Storm. To his credit, Clark was dubious about Air Force claims and tried-at least at first-to gain an accurate picture of the bombing in Kosovo. At the end of the war the Serbs' ground commander, Gen. Nobojsa Pavkovic, claimed to have lost only 13 tanks. "Serb disinformation," scoffed Clark. But quietly, Clark's own staff told him the Serb general might be right. "We need to get to the bottom of this," Clark said. So at the end of June, Clark dispatched a team into Kosovo to do an on-the-ground survey. The 30 experts, some from NATO but most from the U.S. Air Force, were known as the Munitions Effectiveness Assessment Team, or MEAT. Later, a few of the officers would refer to themselves as "dead meat." The bombing, they discovered, was highly accurate against fixed targets, like bunkers and bridges. "But we were spoofed a lot," said one team member. The Serbs protected one bridge from the high-flying NATO bombers by constructing, 300 yards upstream, a fake bridge made of polyethylene sheeting stretched over the river. NATO "destroyed" the phony bridge many times. Artillery pieces were faked out of long black logs stuck on old truck wheels. A two-thirds scale SA-9 antiaircraft missile launcher was fabricated from the metal-lined paper used to make European milk cartons. "It would have looked perfect from three miles up," said a MEAT analyst.
The team found dozens of burnt-out cars, buses and trucks-but very few tanks. When General Clark heard this unwelcome news, he ordered the team out of their helicopters: "Goddammit, drive to each one of those places. Walk the terrain." The team grubbed about in bomb craters, where more than once they were showered with garbage the local villagers were throwing into these impromptu rubbish pits. At the beginning of August, MEAT returned to Air Force headquarters at Ramstein air base in Germany with 2,600 photographs. They briefed Gen. Walter Begert, the Air Force deputy commander in Europe. "What do you mean we didn't hit tanks?" Begert demanded. Clark had the same reaction. "This can't be," he said. "I don't believe it." Clark insisted that the Serbs had hidden their damaged equipment and that the team hadn't looked hard enough. Not so, he was told. A 50-ton tank can't be dragged away without leaving raw gouges in the earth, which the team had not seen.
The Air Force was ordered to prepare a new report. In a month, Brig. Gen. John Corley was able to turn around a survey that pleased Clark. It showed that NATO had successfully struck 93 tanks, close to the 120 claimed by General Shelton at the end of the war, and 153 armored personnel carriers, not far off the 220 touted by Shelton. Corley's team did not do any new field research. Rather, they looked for any support for the pilots' claims. "The methodology is rock solid," said Corley, who strongly denied any attempt to obfuscate. "Smoke and mirrors" is more like it, according to a senior officer at NATO headquarters who examined the data. For more than half of the hits declared by Corley to be "validated kills," there was only one piece of evidence-usually, a blurred cockpit video or a flash detected by a spy satellite. But satellites usually can't discern whether a bomb hits anything when it explodes.
The Corley report was greeted with quiet disbelief outside the Air Force. NATO sources say that Clark's deputy, British Gen. Sir Rupert Smith, and his chief of staff, German Gen. Dieter Stockmann, both privately cautioned Clark not to accept Corley's numbers. The U.S. intelligence community was also doubtful. The CIA puts far more credence in a November get-together of U.S. and British intelligence experts, which determined that the Yugoslav Army after the war was only marginally smaller than it had been before. "Nobody is very keen to talk about this topic," a CIA official told NEWSWEEK.
Lately, the Defense Department has tried to fudge. In January Defense Secretary Cohen and General Shelton put their names to a formal After-Action Report to Congress on the Kosovo war. The 194-page report was so devoid of hard data that Pentagon officials jokingly called it "fiber-free." The report did include Corley's chart showing that NATO killed 93 tanks. But the text included a caveat: "the assessment provides no data on what proportion of total mobile targets were hit or the level of damage inflicted." Translation, according to a senior Pentagon official: "Here's the Air Force chart. We don't think it means anything." In its most recent report extolling the triumph of the air war, even the Air Force stopped using data from the Corley report.
Interviewed by NEWSWEEK, General Clark refused to get into an on-the-record discussion of the numbers. A spokesman for General Shelton asserted that the media, not the military, are obsessed with "bean-counting." But there are a lot of beans at stake. After the November election, the Pentagon will go through one of its quadrennial reviews, assigning spending priorities. The Air Force will claim the lion's share. A slide shown by one of the lecturers at a recent symposium on air power organized by the Air Force Association, a potent Washington lobby, proclaimed: "It's no myth... the American Way of War." The risk is that policymakers and politicians will become even more wedded to myths like "surgical strikes." The lesson of Kosovo is that civilian bombing works, though it raises moral qualms and may not suffice to oust tyrants like Milosevic. Against military targets, high-altitude bombing is overrated. Any commander in chief who does not face up to those hard realities will be fooling himself.
It is good that Newsweek is airing some of the fallacies of the Kosovo War and the exagerations of the "Air Power" Myth. I was amazed the the reknowned historial John Keegan esposed the "revolution" in warfare. For a historian of his stature to do so is gross intellectual dishonesty. However, the author draws the wrong conclusions: airpower directed against civilians is largely ineffective, also.
The bottom line is that we are about to establish foreign policy, military doctrine and defense funding decisions around a flawed interpretation of the outcome of this war. This will only result in failure in the international arena in the future and stack high the flag-draped coffins at Dover AFB.
Based on his book, On Killing, LTC Dave Grossman found that bombing civilians is largely ineffective. In every case in which strategic bombing was tried (with the exception of two atomic weapons detonated on Japan at the close of WWII) it has failed to produce the results the airpower proponents said it would. The Brits were ever more defiant of Hitler and the Luftwaffe than when they were under constant bombardment.
This campaign was declared a "victory" because it met the real objective: draw heat of the President Clinton's impeachment trial (re the film, "Wag the Dog"). Several independent sources have again and again (though largly unnoticed by American mainstream press) that the figures the Admin provided and the severe atrocities alleged committed by the Serbs in order to justify this foray were about as exaggerated as the damage assessments touted by NATO. We claimed victory while Milosevic marched, defiantly out of Kosovo under his own terms (which was a victory for him).. Indeed, more Serb armored vehicles road marched out of Kosovo than we even thought the Serbs HAD in the region to begin with. It is alarming that a Presidential Administation that would spend substancial political and military capital on such a shallow aim as to preserve the sitting President. At least LBJ was trying to thwart the spread of Communism.
Scarier still is the quickness with which the Pentagon is ready to support such a dishonest boondoggle to save a few careers and secure the next promotion. It is the job of the military to follow the legitimate orders of the civilian leadership. It is also their responsibilty to question orders that are unlawful and disastrous. After WWII, we hung several German Soldiers and officers whose only defense was they were "only following orders" so this is not a valid excuse.
Indeed, what little bloodshed we were trying to prevent has not been averted, merely exchanged.
The trouble with bombing an enemy into submission is that bombing alone only presents a problem to the enemy, not a dilema. To avoid our efforts the enemy can dig deeper, disperse the targets, bolster air defenses, and/or deceive our air forces. He can then weather out the storm until he can achieve favorable results though attrition of our aircraft or though back room political negotiations. To truly affect REAL defeat upon an enemy, you must present him a dilema through the employment of two or more differing problems like MANEUVER. We bombed Iraqi forces in Kuwait into the "stone age", but it was not until we sent ground forces into Kuwait and Southern Iraq that we achieved our goals and even then, the Republican Guards still put up a fight. It was not until the real threat of ground forces was perceived that Serbia's resolve began to wane.
The real conclusion we should take is that airpower alone will never affect defeat. We should, therefore, realign our focus on improving the rapid deployabilty of subtantial ground and sea combat power along with air power and prepare to suffer casualties to achieve worthwhile political goals. We should, likewise, question the integrity of our current crop of civilian and senior military leaders who are willing to sacrifice the truth and service members' lives to further their own temporal careers based on lies of aircraft bombardment attaining results. Have we not learned anything from Vietnam?
July - August 1999 issue of Military Parade magazine, "LESSONS OF THE BALKANS WAR", Yuri Rodin-Sova, President of the Defence Systems Financial and Industrial Group writes:
March 1999 was marked by the beginning of yet another war in the world, one in a long series of armed conflicts. However, this war was different. First, it began in the center of Europe, and second, it was blatantly aggressive. The situation reminded one of a school fight when a gang of high school guys beat up a junior school pupil, while other students stand around them, feeling sorry for the boy and wondering why he still keeps on resisting. Indeed, why did Yugoslavia resist NATO air raids for so long? Why did NATO's anticipated 'blitzkrieg' fail? NATO obviously planned to carry out a small victorious war to mark its forthcoming 50th anniversary, but those plans failed.Operation Desert Storm in the Gulf area had been such a success! The anti-Iraq Coalition's first air raid quickly shattered Iraq's air defenses, and soon after Coalition aircraft freely flew above Iraq, destroying targets without being afraid that they could be shot down. Also, they showed to the whole world how they could guide their missiles-even into a targeted window of a building.
And now such a failure in Yugoslavia! Yugoslavia had the same air defense systems that Iraq had, and made at the same time, but the effect was quite different. The war in the Balkans has proved once again the old truth: it is not the weapons that fight but the people who control them that makes the difference. A well-organized fire system, an efficient combination of different arms and fire means, and a good knowledge of the enemy and the enemy's tactics, enabled Yugoslav air defense troops to down NATO aircraft, including the much-vaunted F-117 stealth plane, cruise missiles and other aircraft.
In the not so remote past, during the wars in Vietnam and the Middle East, aircraft that participated in air raids had to fight air defenses in order to make their way to targets. Both aircraft and air defenses suffered heavy losses in such fighting. According to an established practice, if aviation losses reached 20 percent in fighting air defense systems, pilots terminated their missions and returned to their bases. The self-preservation instinct prevailed over combat orders.
To reduce pilots' deaths, many countries around the world began to develop pilotless aircraft to break through air defenses and deliver strikes at targets. Emphasis in those efforts was made on cruise missiles (Tomahawks, ALCMs and others). The first cruise missiles were far from perfect: they had a small range, were not accurate, and were intended to destroy targets largely owing to the great capacity of their (usually nuclear) charges.
Now things have changed. The understanding that a global nuclear war would be suicidal, together with the strong wish to flex their muscles and show to the world who the real boss is, prompted the United States and its NATO allies to develop precision-guided weapons. These are really very accurate missiles capable of delivering a high-yield conventional charge into any window at a distance of 2,500 kilometers. To ensure this accuracy, a global navigation, communications and information support system was set up, comprising satellites and ground-based centers equipped with state-of-the-art computers.
Why put pilots' lives at risk now? Today, one can hit targets from the deck of the Missouri battleship [Editor the Russian doesn't realize we mothballed our battleships even though our foes respect/admire/fear them as his statement indicates], while drinking coffee after each Tomahawk launch. Usually cruise missiles break through air defenses at a low altitude and in a narrow sector, covered by jamming. This factor faces air defenses with the need to destroy all cruise missiles breaking through them. Now one cannot expect that heavy missile losses will lead to the termination of combat missions, so targets will remain in danger until the last missile is destroyed. Air defense systems have to concentrate all of their available means to repulse missile attacks, fire very many antiaircraft missiles, and use all reconnaissance and target designation means available. The enemy easily reconnoiters an intensively operating air defense system, detects its active elements and then destroys them. After that, pilots can fulfill their missions, fearing no resistance. Such tactics were used in Iraq.
Of course, it is difficult to say how exactly Yugoslav air defenses operated, but the little information that was made public gives one an idea about some elements of their tactics.
Yugoslavia's air defenses were comprised mostly of Soviet-made medium-range missile systems built in the 1970s-1980s. It was these systems that quickly cooled down the combative NATO warriors. Deployed on advanced defense lines and mutually connected by a system of control from highly protected command posts, the systems created zones and belts of defense, forcing enemy aviation to act in extremely unfavorable conditions. The systems did not attack cruise missiles, but tried not to let piloted aircraft reach their targets. Their efforts produced good results, forcing NATO pilots to make very many mistakes. The pilots either dropped their bombs onto the wrong targets, or their missiles flew into neighboring countries. NATO aviation suffered losses too, despite its immense superiority.
To combat cruise missiles, Yugoslav air defenses took avail of the missiles' weak points in combat uses. The main weak point of a cruise missile is that to fulfill its combat mission it must reach and hit its target, just like a kamikaze. The Yugoslavs placed small-range air defense systems and small-caliber anti-aircraft artillery around and at possible targets and successfully downed cruise missiles while they were approaching a target.
These tactics resulted in the high survivability and high efficiency of the Yugoslav air defenses. The use of small-caliber anti-aircraft artillery instead of medium-range anti-aircraft missiles (this factor was very important in conditions of a total blockade) made the Yugoslav air defense system efficient and mobile.
One may ask, if the Yugoslav air defense was so well-organized and efficient, why did NATO keep destroying facilities and buildings and killing people in Yugoslavia?
First, NATO ensured an overwhelming superiority of forces for itself (remember the example with high school guys beating up a junior school pupil?). Second, it achieved complete isolation of Yugoslavia, after which it began an all-out war of extermination. The damage inflicted on the Yugoslav air defenses was not repaired and kept increasing, resulting, in the final analysis, in their reduced efficiency.
Other factors that weakened the air defenses included the lack of an early warning system and insufficient electronic intelligence and radar reconnaissance.
So, what conclusions can one draw from the war in Yugoslavia?
1. Short and medium-range air defense missile systems should be placed not around potential targets in a bid to defend them on all sides, but on advanced lines, creating zones of solid fire and defense lines far from the targets, on the country's borders. Such zones will keep piloted aircraft at a distance, forcing them to deploy into combat formations while they are away from the targets, imposing on them direct land-air fighting, inflicting heavy losses on them and forcing them to cancel their mission. Such air defense systems must not combat cruise missiles, or they would expose their fire systems too early, or it would be the equivalent to shooting at sparrows from a cannon.
2. To defend target facilities properly, it is advisable to use highly mobile, short-range air defense missile systems and small-caliber anti-aircraft artillery. These armaments are characterized by their high accuracy, high rate of fire and short reaction time, and are capable of destroying all types of cruise missiles and, if armed with hypersonic air defense missiles, even individual warheads of tactical missiles at the final stage of their approach to targets. Being highly maneuverable, these air defense means can create, within a short period of time, a high density of fire in a narrow sector of an enemy cruise missiles' breakthrough, thus ensuring their maximum destruction.
Also, they can quickly disperse, avoiding enemy strikes. Their high cross-country ability and small size make it possible to use them inside large-area targets (towns, areas of troops' location, etc.) and thus increase the depth of the air defense fire zone. Small-size air defense systems can be used to cover larger systems from air and ground attacks.
3. It requires a stable and reliable control system to allow such air defense systems to function, and thus to ensure the high efficiency of all air defenses. Today, the creation of a centralized air defense control system is a must for any country wishing to have highly efficient air defense.
The main elements of any modern air defense system must include stationary and mobile command posts which must be equipped with automated control systems that will ensure the automatic solution of a majority of arising problems, and allow people to concentrate on strategic issues in forthcoming or current land-air fighting.
Other important elements are large-scale reconnaissance and communications. An early detection of the enemy, exposure of its plans, and the fast transmission of information about them to command posts will help to quickly and efficiently distribute tasks among the system's elements and concentrate the main air defense means on the main axis of the enemy's advance. The lack of such a system will lead to the scattering of forces, require the creation of circular defense zones around facilities, and cause a sharp increase in the cost of the air defense system to achieve the required efficiency, or a decrease in its efficiency, which is unacceptable.
In this article I have deliberately not mentioned possible actions of air defense fighter aircraft and electronic warfare means. First, these issues must be analyzed by specialists from those arms, and second, I believe their analysis will only confirm the main conclusion of this article, namely that the future belongs to zone-based air defense groupings. Attempts to create circular defense zones around facilities will only cause the undesirable scattering of forces and means and reduce their efficiency.
The main element of zone-based groupings must be automated command posts capable of controlling various air defense means, united by a high-speed and reliable communications system, while being provided with all kinds of reconnaissance information.
III. Air strikes without ground maneuver does not win wars.
Employing air strikes against Serbia over Kosovo, Bill Clinton, the liberal anti-war protestor, followed the same policies as Lyndon Johnson, the man he protested against in the 1960s as a college student. Air strikes, isolated from a general warfighting strategy with ground MANEUVER, does not convince adversaries of our resolve but that we are actually weak. Serbia, like North Vietnam, drew the conclusion that the U.S. is not prepared to wage war against Serbia in an effective way via ground maneuver. Like Vietnam, Serbia saw weakness in U.S. policy. Let's consider the utility of air power as a force, by itself, for influencing the behavior of adversaries.
WWII
The use of air power to compel political acquiescence has a long and not particularly distinguished history. First, the Germans launched an air campaign against Great Britain in 1940 intended to force the British to accept a peace treaty that acknowledged German domination of the European continent. The campaign failed to achieve its end. Second, the Anglo-Americans launched a massive air campaign against Germany in 1943-1945. The goal of this campaign in the mind of some air power advocates was to force unconditional surrender without the need for a land assault. In the minds of most strategists, the goal was to attack and destroy Germany's industrial infrastructure so as to undermine Germany's ability to wage war. "Unconditional surrender" required the death of many tankers and infantrymen employing ground maneuver, while the post-war Strategic Bombing Survey cast serious doubt on the effect of the air assault on German wartime production. Third, the United States launched a massive air campaign against Japan in 1945. Its goals were similar to the air campaign against Germany. The Japan campaign has the greatest possible claim to success. Even here, the outcome was ambiguous, since it is not at all clear that it was the conventional air campaign that compelled surrender. Surrender came only after atomic bombing, different in nature from conventional air attack. The more serious challenger for war-ending act was the encirclement of the Japanese home islands by ground maneuver.
All three of these campaigns are examples of great powers using the air campaign as an instrument against other great powers. We also have examples of the use of air power by a great power against a secondary or even tertiary power: the U.S. air campaigns against North Vietnam, and then against Iraq in 1991. These may be more germane in evaluating a bombing campaign against Serbia or any other minor power.
Vietnam War
The initial theory of the campaign against North Vietnam was divided into two parts. The first was the assumption that North Vietnam did not take American resolve seriously, that North Vietnam did not think the United States was truly committed to the defense of South Vietnam. The second assumption was that North Vietnam would not place at risk its own infrastructure, industrial, military and social, merely to continue its support of the National Liberation Front in the South. Therefore, the theory went, once the North experienced an intense bombing campaign, it would quickly understand American resolve and it would also rationally calculate that continued support for the NLF was not in its interests. The North would either abandon the war in the South or negotiate an acceptable settlement.
The North Vietnamese saw the air campaign in a very different light. They saw the air campaign as proof of a lack of will and an inability on the part of the United States to risk serious casualties. For both demographic and political reasons, the North understood that the United States could not afford to lose 5,000 men a week in combat. From the North Vietnamese point of view, the use of air power represented a desperate attempt on the part of the United States to wage war without incurring the risks and costs of warfare. The recourse to air power during the early stages of war convinced the North Vietnamese that the Americans lacked resolve. The North Vietnamese strategy, therefore, was to absorb the American air attacks while drawing the United States into a war of attrition on the ground in the South. They understood fully that they would absorb much greater casualties than the Americans in such a war. But they also understood that the Americans, in the final analysis, would find almost any level of casualty unacceptable -- while they were prepared to incur massive losses.
The psychology behind this strange calculus had to do with something social scientists like to call "issue saliency." In simple English, this means simply the relative importance of an issue to each side. To the United States the future of South Vietnam was an important issue but not one on which the survival of the United States in any way depended. For North Vietnam, the absorption of South Vietnam into a united, communist Vietnam was a matter of fundamental national interest. No other interest superceded it.
Therefore, the idea that the United States could stage an air campaign that could impose a level of pain sufficiently high to dissuade North Vietnam to abandon a national obsession was delusional. It was not clear that any level of pain would have persuaded North Vietnam to capitulate on this subject. Second, it is not clear that, short of carpet bombardment with nuclear weapons, the United States possessed sufficient aircraft and weaponry to impose the necessary level of pain. How much pain would Washington's army have endured before surrendering at Valley Forge? How much pain would the American Confederacy have been willing to endure, even after Gettysburg, to secure secession? How high a price were the Russians willing to pay at Leningrad or Stalingrad? These are measurable, quantifiable indications of national endurance. It takes a great deal to compel capitulation where fundamental national interests are at stake. Threats of bombing North Vietnam back to the stone age not withstanding, it is simply not clear that air power has ever had the ability by itself to impose levels of suffering that are unendurable to a people committed to a national goal.
In Vietnam, to the contrary, the air campaign convinced the North of the lack of American resolve. It understood that a nation seriously committed to the defense of South Vietnam would not take recourse to the air campaign as the foundation of its national strategy. They understood, particularly in its early stages, that the air campaign was a bluff, covering up American weakness. Indeed it was a bluff. McNamara and Johnson both hoped that the air campaign would persuade that North Vietnamese to back down. For some reason, in spite of the fact that they were fully aware of their own lack of resolve, the Johnson administration genuinely believed that this lack of resolve would not be apparent to their adversaries.
It is not that an air campaign cannot work. Its problem is that it cannot work except as part of a comprehensive warfighting program in which the air campaign operates as part of a single, integrative, strategic, operational and tactical package which employs decisive ground maneuver. The purpose of this package is, as Clausewitz saw clearly, to destroy the enemy's ability to wage war primarily by rendering its armed forces inoperable. Air strikes used as a weapon against populations has consistently failed. Air strikes used in isolation as an instrument against conventional military power has similarly failed. However, air strikes, when it is used as part of an integrated war fighting system based on decisive MANEUVER, is invaluable.
Desert Storm
In 1991 during Operation Desert Storm, air strikes were used as a direct instrument of war, intended to reduce the ability of the Iraqis to wage war. It was not intended to signal American resolve nor was it intended to win the war by itself. Rather, air strikes were an all out assault on the Iraqi war fighting ability. Starting as an assault on Iraq's command, control, communications and intelligence capabilities and on its air defense system, it shattered the ability of Baghdad to command its armies in the field. Following this, the air campaign turned on the major formations of the Iraqi army in Kuwait, destroying tactical command and communications, as well as killing soldiers and destroying equipment. At the end of the air campaign, Allied ground maneuver forces were able to encircle, engage and destroy Iraqi forces, while aircraft cut off the retreat on the famed "highway of death." Air strikes made the successful ground war possible at lower costs, but without the ground maneuver war, Kuwait would not have been liberated and Desert Storm would have failed. In fact mosdt of the damage done to the Iraqi army was done by U.S. ground maneuver forces not air strikes.
Serbia and Kosovo
Political leaders seeking low risk ways to wage war are constantly tempted by air strikes. They expect the other side to collapse in fear at the very thought of bombing. During the early stages of Vietnam, the Johnson administration seriously hoped that the air campaign would constitute the essence of the war or, to be more honest, as an alternative to waging war. Now, there are some cases in which this may happen. That is a case where the issue at hand is of only marginal importance to the people being bombed. But it is not effective when the campaign is against a country pursuing its fundamental national interest. In that case, the only thing that can dissuade the nation is to take actions that threaten the very survival of the regime or even of the nation. It was when the Japanese realized that the survival of the nation was at stake from ground maneuver encirclement that they capitulated to the air campaign. The North Vietnamese never felt that either the nation or even their regime was at risk from the air campaign. Therefore, the campaign was futile. In the later stages, in 1972, air power may have motivated the North to be more flexible at peace talks, but it never caused them to abandon fundamental national interests.
Serbia reminds us of Vietnam. From the Serb point of view, the introduction of NATO forces into Kosovo will end their sovereignty over it. They see this as part of an ongoing American campaign to dismember Serbia. Having blocked the secession of predominantly Serbian regions from Bosnia, they are now seeing support for the secession of predominantly Albanian regions from Serbia. They see this inconsistency in American and NATO policy as a sign of a desire to destroy Serbia as a nation. The question of Kosovo, like the question of South Vietnam, represents a challenge to a fundamental understanding of what the Serbian nation means. Whatever other calculations might intrude, the threat of air attacks will not cause them to surrender fundamental national interests.
Serbia studied both Desert Storm and Vietnam very carefully. It was aware that Serbia's terrain and weather reduce the effectiveness of an air campaign substantially, as compared to what the U.S. was able to achieve over Kuwait and Iraq. They were aware that the United States has not deployed anywhere near the ground maneuver forces it had available during Desert Storm. The Serbs were fully aware that neither the United States nor NATO have the stomach for the type of casualties that they would have to absorb if they were prepared to attack Serbia. Finally, they were aware that during a bombing campaign, stories about Kosovo casualties in the Western Press would be replaced by pictures of dead Serbian children; and that human rights protestors, eager to be on both sides of any photogenic issue, would quickly begin condemning the war on the Serbian people.
What makes all of this possible was the Serbian government's sense that it has the support of the Serbian people. The Clinton administration's dream that a bombing campaign will drive a wedge between the Serbian government and the Serbian people, with the people demanding a change in policy because they were unwilling to endure the pain. There is not a single instance in history in which an air campaign caused a split between a government at war and its people. It didn't happen during the Battle of Britain, in Germany, in Japan, in North Vietnam and it hasn't yet happened in Iraq.
Thus, an air campaign, isolated from a comprehensive warfighting strategy with ground maneuver designed to defeat the Serbian army did not succeed. The Serbs, as a nation, have too much at stake to permit their territory to be occupied by foreign troops. Moreover, with Russian winds shifting, the Serbs calculated that they have a great power ally prepared to sustain them, just as North Vietnam did. The U.S. could have defeated North Vietnam by invading it. It chose not to, rationally understanding that the prize was not worth the cost. The United States could have defeated Serbia by invading it, but again, the prize isn't worth it. The problem is that as in Vietnam, the United States can neither commit the forces needed to win nor abandon the issue. In search for a solution at a cost the United States can bear, Clinton, the anti-war protestor, paradoxically followed the precise policy of Lyndon Johnson, the man against whom he protested. Sadly, he is not the only U.S. civilian politician and DoD leader deceived by the air strike madness. The British politician Baldwin summed up the narrow-minded smug attitude best when he said: "the bomber will always get through". Viewing air strike bombardment as a cheap, politically safe panacea for waging war has been a siren's song for western societies for the entire 20th century. The question is will we survive the 21st century or smash on the rocks as we fail to effectively destroy with decisive maneuver enemies avowed to destroy free societies?
A DoD "transformation" to digital firepower without ground maneuver is suicidal madness be it from a sexy fighter-bomber at 15,000 feet or a peacenik gentle-looking LAV-III/IAV armored car along a paved road. We must have air-deliverable 2D/3D ground MANEUVER combat forces--Cavalry--that can VERIFY targets with HUMINT not soda straw vision UAV/UGVs are hit not decoys and civilians. We need stealthy light tracked scout vehicles, scout-tracker dogs and dismounting Soldiers to do this. We must be able to do close combat and not get hurt by smarter use of tracked tanks in better-organized combined-arms units or we are finished as a nation as Kaplan has warned us.
Its increasingly clear that as the U.S. retreats into introversion and hedonism, it embraces mentalism through computers and gets less and less physical. We have a Navy that doesn't want to bombard shores effectively with battleships or clear seamines. A marine corps that doesn't want to wear helmets when its in a combat zone or parachute jump that wants a half-helicopter/half-airplane to deliver them ashore, but not in any kind of force so they can rush back to the ship and eat ice cream to start their bragging and selective mention of what took place. We have an Air Force that doesn't want to fly below 15,000 feet and bomb for the Army, but is increasingly excited about robot planes doing all their dirty work. Then you have an Army that doesn't want to leave roads riding comfortable in an thinly armored Sport Utility Vehicle with air-filled rubber tires called a LAV-III/IAV and thinks its doesn't have to fight because it will be a long distance away and can email someone else to drop ordnance onto where they think the enemy is according to their computer screen. That Field Artillery doesn't want to do direct support to maneuver units is no surprise or that Armor branch wants to ride around in a 70-ton invincible tank or ride in nothing at all. They are perfectly happy sitting on their asses waiting for Desert Storm II so they can joust with other heavy tanks. What's even worse is we have civilians in DoD who take this lethargy as a signal to get rid of artillery and rely on air strikes ALONE.
Internally, the OSD leadership should ask some hard questions about Anaconda:
Why was there NO ARTILLERY BROUGHT INTO AFGHANISTAN FOR THIS FIGHT? Did Secretary of the Defense Rumsfield or his minions "do an Aspin" and deny artillery to our fighting men so he could showcase his favored aircraft delivered firepower and later use a success in Afghanistan as an excuse to get rid of Army gun artillery just like the missile-crazy Navy got rid of battleships?? Notice the U.S. marines, the biggest braggerts on earth, didn't bring any artillery during their short time ashore in Afghanistan...we certainly would have heard about their "big guns". Was this no accident? Or was it someone else that told everyone no arty in Afghanistan?? Who determined the force structure would have no artillery? CENTCOM? This is a telling question in light of Rumsfield's DoD trying to cancel the Army's Crusader self-propelled howitzer system...
Battle: Secretary Rumsfeld, airpower advocates about to overrun "Firebase Crusader"
 
The ambush that November day nearly 37 years ago was a total surprise to the American column on its way to Landing Zone Albany in the Ia Drang Valley. The well-prepared North Vietnamese attack separated, killed and wounded many American troops. In some areas, the North Vietnamese were inside the defensive perimeter, moving toward the positions occupied by the Americans.
Often on the battlefield, a shot would ring out, followed by a scream. The enemy was taking no prisoners.
Lt. Bob Jeanette, a weapons officer of the 2nd Battalion, 7th Cavalry, was severely wounded, but had a radio. "As it got dark, I was still in the same position. I was trying to maintain contact with whoever I had talking to me back at brigade. There was a lull in the battle, and suddenly I was talking to an artillery outfit.
"The North Vietnamese were now running around the area, and we could see them moving. Bunches of 10, 20, more of them circling the perimeter of the landing zone. It was maybe 150 yards to the landing zone perimeter, and the enemy were between us and them."
Ultimately, Jeanette was able to convince the artillery unit to bring high explosive rounds down on top of the enemy.
"I never really knew how effective that artillery fire was until two things happened," he remembered.
The first incident happened while he was recovering from wounds at St. Albans Navy Hospital in New York, "I met someone who had been in that fight, a 2nd Battalion, 7th Cavalry guy, who came over to me and thanked me for that artillery fire. I was out in the halls on my crutches for exercise and he came up to me on crutches, too. He had an empty trouser leg. He told me the artillery took his leg, but it saved his life and he was grateful. I was stunned."
Later at Fort Levenworth, Jeanette met a sergeant who was in the same battle whose position was about 50 yards from his position. "Sgt. Howard said that every time the enemy got close to them, the artillery would come in close, too, and really whack them. He said the artillery fire was the only thing that kept the enemy away and kept them alive."
The above is just one of many war stories from the Vietnam conflict, but maybe the civilian movers and shakers in Washington need to re-read "We Were Soldiers Once And Young" by Lt. Gen. Hal Moore and Joseph Galloway.
The scene described occurred after air strikes by the highly efficient A-1E Skyraiders. Despite napalm and other ordnance, many enemy soldiers remained alive. It took artillery fire to save American lives.
That was long ago. But proof that it wasn't just an artifact of history emerged only weeks ago during Operation Anaconda in Afghanistan, when a U.S. infantry company found itself under mortar and rocket fire for nearly 12 hours without close air support. Unfortunately, it also had no artillery support: the unit's artillery had been left behind in the U.S.
Pentagon civilians who threaten to cut the Crusader artillery system seem to have forgotten their history. Airpower is a wonderful tool, but it isn't enough. Infantrymen on the ground need the combined firepower of both close air support and artillery.
Strangely, combat veterans who understand the value of combined firepower have been deafeningly quiet about the need for more advanced artillery. That's hard to understand, because they know air power has its limitations and that their grandsons will pay the price.
In the late 1940s when air power advocates tried to eliminate aircraft carriers and shift responsibility for power projection to the Air Force, active duty admirals revolted, cranked up the public relations machine on the need for Naval airpower and won.
The battle for Crusader may be over. The "after action report" will be prepared soon. Maybe the report should look at why the Army failed to convince the Pentagon, public and President that the Crusader was a vital asset. If so, it should also examine why the combat veterans who experienced the live-saving value of artillery hid in their foxholes.
Many when they talk about 1939-40 wail endlessly about how the Germans had a "new" style of mechanized infiltration warfare to where "blitzkrieg" has become a cliche' that brings yawns. That's only PART of the story.
While the Germans were "transforming", the French were also "transforming" to their vision of the future battlefield; the Maginot Line of forts along the border with Germany. The story is NOT the wily Germans had a vision and the decadent Allies sat on their asses doing NOTHING, they did the WRONG THINGS.
The Germans had a vision AND THE ALLIES HAD A TRANSFORMATION VISION. The Germans were right and the Anglo-French vision was wrong even though mechanized infiltration was the idea of Englishmen B.H. Liddell-Hart, J.F.C. Fuller and Percy Hobart NOT German General Guderian.
Just having a transformation vision does not mean its right (Gen Shinseki's wheeled armored cars). The U.S. DoD RMA/Tofflerian C4I digital this and digital that mentalism to direct FIREPOWER that thinks it doesn't need PHYSICAL, ROBUST PLATFORM MANEUVER IS... WRONG.
It has already failed 3 times: Iraq, Kosovo and Afghanistan as the ppt slides and links below document.
If we invade Iraq for "Desert Storm II" and its "Air-Centric" (code word for air strike firepower) its highly likely after all the bombing is over the Iraqis will still be there. Just like the Serbs.
The issue is not "Air-Centric" versus "Ground Centric". Its Firepower or Maneuver. America, a nation of increasingly cowardly persons that like the decadent French who thought a wall could do all of their their dirtywork, thinks C4I directed firepower can take their place on the ground doing maneuver. When it fails really badly we are going to have to fire almost all our current crop of senior officers that believe in firepower non-sense and promote some maneuver believing officers if they are still around and hadn't given up in frustration or forced out of the service by the Courtney Massengales. To win WWII, General Marshall had to retire 50+ Generals and 100+ colonels, America post-911 has yet to do this, heck we haven't even declared war!
Realizing the apathy of the U.S. for ground maneuver combat requiring troops, our European Allies have created an Allied Mobile Force of about a Brigade in 1991. In 1992 it was expanded to a DIVISION of 4 Brigades. In 2000 it was expanded to the European Rapid Reaction Force (ERRF) of 100,000 men! Its now larger than a Corps, its an ARMY. Now they can intervene if they want to anywhere in the world WITHOUT THE U.S.
They have a Eurodollar. They are clearly on the march to a United States of Europe, a 10 nation confederation predicted in the Bible in the Book of Revelation as the tool of the false messiah, the antichrist. All because the U.S. is turning into a bunch of pussies.
The U.S. marine corps has 172,000 men and women yet it can only field 3, read that 3 puny battalions of foot-sloggers at sea?
The U.S. Army has 475,000 men/women and fields 10 Divisions of about 10,000 men but how many of this force of 100,000 trigger-pullers is really world-class ready-to-fight when everyone thinks our air strikes will do all our dirty work?
The more the U.S. declines, the more Europe will have to rise, and frankly I don't want to see it. As screwed up as America is executing missions, I trust her to defend world freedom more than the Europeans who are so full of naive relativism as evidenced by their absurd support of the Palestinians recently when Israel was defending itself by MANEUVER against terrorists. If NATO had a 9/11 attack, believe me, the ERRF would be knocking on whoever did it's doorsteps in a matter of hours, led by the bulldog and pugnacious Brits.
I believe that the world we live in is run by God as communicated to us by the King James Bible, and he specifically warns us to not turn against Israel. The minute we do this, Secretary of Defense Rumsfield's Ballistic Missile Defense shield will not stop America from becoming a nuclear parking lot as per Ezekiel 38. The Israelis are in the right and have offered to co-exist with the Islamic Palestinians time and time again, but Arafat and others do not want peace. They want Israel to cease to exist because as easterners it bothers them to see a western society put their evil totalitarian ideas to shame. The point is that the west must be strong and use its resources to build a security fence and vigilantly guard it, and to on demand do effective, skilled MANEUVER--which takes thinking professionals----into enemy lands to spoil terrorist attacks before they can become 9/11-type asymmetric attacks.
History is repeating itself today just like the 1920s/30s. The storm is gathering. Time for everyone to become Winston Churchills and save the west from the east (Red China/Islam). WWIII is coming.
www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A62618-2002Apr16.html washingtonpost.com
U.S. Concludes Bin Laden Escaped at Tora Bora Fight
Failure to Send Troops in Pursuit Termed Major Error
By Barton Gellman and Thomas E. Ricks
Washington Post Staff Writers
Wednesday, April 17, 2002; Page A01
The Bush administration has concluded that Osama bin Laden was present during the battle for Tora Bora late last year and that failure to commit U.S. ground troops to hunt him was its gravest error in the war against al Qaeda, according to civilian and military officials with first-hand knowledge.
Intelligence officials have assembled what they believe to be decisive evidence, from contemporary and subsequent interrogations and intercepted communications, that bin Laden began the battle of Tora Bora inside the cave complex along Afghanistan's mountainous eastern border. Though there remains a remote chance that he died there, the intelligence community is persuaded that bin Laden slipped away in the first 10 days of December.
After-action reviews, conducted privately inside and outside the military chain-of-command, describe the episode as a significant defeat for the United States. A common view among those interviewed outside the U.S. Central Command is that Army Gen. Tommy R. Franks, the war's operational commander, misjudged the interests of putative Afghan allies and let pass the best chance to capture or kill al Qaeda's leader. Without professing second thoughts about Tora Bora, Franks has changed his approach fundamentally in subsequent battles, using Americans on the ground as first-line combat units.
In the fight for Tora Bora, corrupt local militias did not live up to promises to seal off the mountain redoubt, and some colluded in the escape of fleeing al Qaeda fighters. Franks did not perceive the setbacks soon enough, some officials said, because he ran the war from Tampa with no commander on the scene above the rank of lieutenant colonel. The first Americans did not arrive until three days into the fighting. "No one had the big picture," one defense official said.
The Bush administration has never acknowledged that bin Laden slipped through the cordon ostensibly placed around Tora Bora as U.S. aircraft began bombing on Nov. 30. Until now it was not known publicly whether the al Qaeda leader was present on the battlefield.
But inside the government there is little controversy on the subject. Captured al Qaeda fighters, interviewed separately, gave consistent accounts describing an address by bin Laden around Dec. 3 to mujaheddin, or holy warriors, dug into the warren of caves and tunnels built as a redoubt against Soviet invaders in the 1980s. One official said "we had a good piece of sigint," or signals intelligence, confirming those reports.
"I don't think you can ever say with certainty, but we did conclude he was there, and that conclusion has strengthened with time," said another official, giving an authoritative account of the intelligence consensus. "We have high confidence that he was there, and also high confidence, but not as high, that he got out. We have several accounts of that from people who are in detention, al Qaeda people who were free at the time and are not free now."
Franks continues to dissent from that analysis. Rear Adm. Craig Quigley, his chief spokesman, acknowledged the dominant view outside Tampa but said the general is unpersuaded.
"We have never seen anything that was convincing to us at all that Osama bin Laden was present at any stage of Tora Bora -- before, during or after," Quigley said. "I know you've got voices in the intelligence community that are taking a different view, but I just wanted you to know our view as well."
"Truth is hard to come by in Afghanistan," Quigley said, and for confidence on bin Laden's whereabouts "you need to see some sort of physical concrete proof."
Franks has told subordinates that it was vital at the Tora Bora battle, among the first to include allies from Afghanistan's Pashtun majority, to take a supporting role and "not just push them aside and take over because we were America," according to Quigley.
"Our relationship with the Afghans in the south and east was entirely different at that point in the war," he said. "It's no secret that we had a much more mature relationship with the Northern Alliance fighters." Franks, he added, "still thinks that the process he followed of helping the anti-Taliban forces around Tora Bora, to make sure it was crystal clear to them that we were not there to conquer their country . . . was absolutely the right thing to do."
With the collapse of the Afghan cordon around Tora Bora, and the decision to hold back U.S. troops from the Army's 10th Mountain Division, Pakistan stepped in. The government of President Pervez Musharraf moved thousands of troops to his border with Afghanistan and intercepted about 300 of the estimated 1,000 al Qaeda fighters who escaped Tora Bora. U.S. officials said close to half of the detainees now held at the U.S. base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, were turned over by the Pakistani government.
Those successes included none of the top al Qaeda leaders at Tora Bora, officials acknowledged. Of the dozen senior leaders identified by the U.S. government, two are now accounted for -- Muhammad Atef, believed dead in a Hellfire [Predator UAV launched] missile attack, and Abu Zubaida, taken into custody late last month. But "most of the people we have been authorized to kill are still breathing," said an official directly involved in the pursuit, and several of them were at Tora Bora.
The predominant view among the analysts is that bin Laden is alive, but knowledgeable officials said they cannot rule out the possibility that he died at Tora Bora or afterward. Some analysts believe bin Laden is seriously ill and under the medical care of his second-in-command, Ayman Zawahiri, an Egyptian-trained physician. One of the theories, none supported by firm evidence, is that he has Marfan syndrome, a congenital disorder of some people with bin Laden's tall, slender body type that puts them at increased risk of heart attack or stroke.
The minority of U.S. officials who argue that bin Laden is probably dead note that four months have passed since any credible trace of him has surfaced in intelligence collection. Those who argue that he is probably alive note that monitoring of a proven network of bin Laden contacts has turned up no evidence of reaction to his death. If he had died, surely there would have been some detectable echo within this network, these officials argue.
In public, the Bush administration acknowledges no regret about its prosecution of Tora Bora. One official spokesman, declining to be named, described questions about the battle as "navel-gazing" and said the national security team is "too busy for that." He added, "We leave that to you guys in the press."
But some policymakers and operational officers spoke in frustrated and even profane terms of what they called an opportunity missed.
"We [messed] up by not getting into Tora Bora sooner and letting the Afghans do all the work," said a senior official with direct responsibilities in counterterrorism. "Clearly a decision point came when we started bombing Tora Bora and we decided just to bomb, because that's when he escaped. . . . We didn't put U.S. forces on the ground, despite all the brave talk, and that is what we have had to change since then."
When al Qaeda forces began concentrating again in February, south of the town of Gardez, Franks moved in thousands of U.S. troops from the 101st Airborne Division and the 10th Mountain Division. In the battle of Shahikot in early March -- also known as Operation Anaconda -- the United States let Afghan allies attack first. But when that offensive stalled, American infantry units took it up.
Another change since Tora Bora, with no immediate prospect of finding bin Laden, is that President Bush has stopped proclaiming the goal of taking him "dead or alive" and now avoids previous references to the al Qaeda founder as public enemy number one.
In an interview with The Washington Post in late December, Bush displayed a scorecard of al Qaeda leaders on which he had drawn the letter X through the faces of those thought dead. By last month, Bush began saying that continued public focus on individual terrorists, including bin Laden, meant that "people don't understand the scope of the mission."
"Terror is bigger than one person," Bush said March 14. "He's a person that's now been marginalized." The president said bin Laden had "met his match" and "may even be dead," and added: "I truly am not that concerned about him."
Top advisers now assert that the al Qaeda leader's fate should be no measure of U.S. success in the war.
"The goal there was never after specific individuals," Gen. Richard B. Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said last week. "It was to disrupt the terrorists."
Said Quigley at the Central Command: "There's no question that Osama bin Laden is the head of al Qaeda, and it's always a good thing to get rid of the head of an organization if your goal is to do it harm. So would we like to get bin Laden? You bet, but al Qaeda would still exist as an organization if we got him tomorrow."
At least since the 1980s, the U.S. military has made a point of avoiding open declaration of intent to capture or kill individual enemies. Such assignments cannot be carried out with confidence, and if acknowledged they increase the stature of an enemy leader who survives. After-action disclosures have made clear, nonetheless, that finding Manuel Noriega during the Panama invasion of 1989 and Saddam Hussein in the 1991 Persian Gulf War were among the top priorities of the armed forces.
The same holds true now, high-ranking officials said in interviews on condition that they not be named. "Of course bin Laden is crucial," one said.
In Britain, Armed Forces Minister Adam Ingram told BBC radio yesterday that bin Laden's capture "remains one of the prime objectives" of the war.
Staff researcher Robert Thomason contributed to this report.
Landpower In History
 
Strategists Must Regain An Understanding
Of The Role Of Ground Forces
 
Brig. Gen. David T. Zabecki, USAR 
www.afji.com/AFJI/Mags/2002/August/landpower.html
SYNOPSIS:
Landpower In History
Of late, an airpower-centric mindset has taken hold among US leaders that promises little risk to U.S. military personnel, but really has gained little for American interests. The principal historical lesson that strategists must understand is that physical occupation of territory by ground forces facilitates positive and direct control over the social, political, and economic destiny of that territory.
INTRO
The United States confronts challenges to its interests by drawing on diplomatic, economic, and military policy tools. Wise strategists know what each tool can do and when to apply it for maximum effect. As the U.S. meets its first great challenges of the 21st century, strategists must understand exactly what the military tools at their disposal can and cannot do. Least understood, perhaps, are ground forces, which are the military instrument most capable of producing lasting changes in the international arena.
Only ground forces can take and hold territory, which is an absolute prerequisite for any political, economic, or ideological change. Cold War strategists understood this. Of late, however, this joint approach has fallen victim to an airpower-centric mindset that promises little risk to U.S. military personnel, but really has gained little for American interests. As a result, many modern strategists have little understanding of the role and capabilities of ground forces.
The use of ineffectual air and missile strikes in recent years has led many of our potential enemies to conclude that Americans are willing to kill to advance their interests and values, but not willing to die for them. Our reluctance to put boots on the ground looks weak to friends and foes alike.
LESSONS OF HISTORY
Every war is different; no war is like the last one. Military planners cannot draw upon the same type of historical analysis that is central to the medical and legal professions. Military planners cannot forecast future contingencies in absolutes, because the very nature of war is that enemies adapt against each other. Instead, planners must confront the unexpected and apply their training, doctrine, and equipment to the situation at hand.
Defeat is often war's best teacher; opponents learn from their own mistakes and those of others. Strategists, therefore, must revise their plans continuously to account for countervailing enemy capabilities. Iraq, for example, continues to study the Coalition air campaign in Kosovo, so as to better blunt American airpower in any future conflict.
Military planners must adapt to the particulars of each new conflict, and historical lessons about how force has been used can guide these adaptations. Because training and technology change over time, the tactics used to capture a city in 1943 most likely would not work against that same city in 2003. But the strategic value of capturing that city does remain just as valid for strategy planning 60 years later.
The principal historical lesson that strategists must understand is that  
During war, however, [nation-] states seize enemy territory to bolster their own power by forcibly imposing a new social contract on the conquered. Only ground forces can do this in newly seized territory. Soviet forces occupied Eastern Europe after World War II and were able to dictate the fate of those nations for the next 50 years-the more than 400 Red Army divisions occupying the ruins of Nazi Germany in 1945 gave Moscow a monopoly on violence and sealed Eastern Europe's fate. 
 
Lasting Control Requires Physical Occupation. If forces do not occupy a given piece of territory, they cannot control what happens in it. Soviet forces did not seize Western Europe, and those nations escaped the yoke of Communism. By contrast, the American occupation of Imperial Japan and two-thirds of Nazi Germany transformed those two states into stable, prosperous democracies. It follows, then, that to control a territory effectively, ground forces must occupy it for an extended period. 
 
As soon as a force withdraws from territory, it can quickly revert to a hostile base. The Vietnam-era truism that "we controlled the day; they controlled the night" is the best recent example of this. Because most American Soldiers withdrew to secure bases each night, Vietnamese Communist forces had carte blanche to maneuver to better effect for the coming day's operations. 
 
Occupation Decisively Signals Intent. Occupation to defend territory signals that a nation is willing to spend its blood and treasure for that particular piece of ground and the resources contained therein. This signal is understood clearly by friends and foes alike. Robust NATO ground forces in Western Europe, for example, signaled clearly to the Soviet Union that because NATO troops were vulnerable to attack, the Alliance was willing to risk violence to preserve its interests against Soviet encroachment. 
 
Defensive Occupation Raises The Cost Of Conquest. It follows, then, that if defensive occupation signals intent, it also raises the cost of conquest. Aggressors may still choose to attack, but they do so knowing that the price in personnel and materiel will be much higher than if the territory were undefended. Moreover, if the defenders can make the price of aggression sufficiently costly, the result is deterrence. This balance between costs and benefits is the basis of traditional conventional deterrence. Thus, NATO ground forces stationed in Western Europe meant that, although the Soviets might invade, the costs would likely exceed the benefits. 
 
Occupation Limits Strategic Choices. Territory occupied by a nation's military forces cannot be used by others. In peacetime, sacrosanct national boundaries ensure that states deal with one another through political and economic means. Occupation prevents encroachment by adventurous states. The presence of NATO peacekeepers in Kosovo, for example, precludes further attempts by either the Serbs or the Kosovars to redraw boundaries. Unlike observer overflights, which can be avoided or interdicted, the NATO ground force in Kosovo is a tripwire that cannot be avoided. 
 
Destruction Of Enemy Ground Forces Produces Political Leverage. Occupied territory limits an enemy's strategic options during conflicts as well as in peacetime. Ground forces take territory by destroying or otherwise neutralizing the enemy forces in that territory. These tactical and operational gains create a cascading effect that reduces and eventually eliminates the enemy's strategic flexibility.
 
Each time an enemy unit is destroyed, the enemy's overall capabilities decrease, making it harder for that enemy to prosecute its political objectives. As additional territory is seized, the restrictive effects cascade, and the enemy government's diminishing ability to execute its will produces diplomatic concessions as the defeated power cuts its losses rather than face capitulation. 
 
As Coalition forces surged into southern Iraq and Kuwait, for example, Saddam Hussein's diplomatic position eroded rapidly. Prior to the start of the ground war, Hussein was able to reject calls to abandon his newly occupied territory in a negotiated withdrawal. After the start of the ground offensive, however, that option of intact withdrawal was stripped from him, as many of his heavy forces were destroyed in the field. He was forced to make more expansive diplomatic concessions to end the war.
 
Airpower Alone Can Coerce Only Slow And Indecisive Negotiations. Air forces cannot occupy territory; they can only attack infrastructure or interdict enemy operations within the territory. Whenever aircraft are not overhead, the enemy has freedom of action. Indeed, even when aircraft are present, dispersed enemy forces can still operate, albeit with decreased effectiveness. Serbia, for example, actually increased ethnic-cleansing activities in Kosovo despite the NATO air campaign. After all, it is very hard to decide from a mile up who is a paramilitary, and harder still to kill that paramilitary without harming civilians-even with a laser-guided bomb. Moreover, continued difficulties with concealment, dispersal, and decoys make true control of the battlefield by air forces a questionable issue. 
 
Because hostile governments are able to operate despite air interdiction, it becomes harder to pursue diplomatic objectives through military means. Sustained bombing of North Vietnam achieved no lasting effect because both Hanoi and the North Vietnamese army remained functional. Hanoi was willing to absorb the punishment from the air and saw no reason to concede the fight to the United States. 
 
The Changing Nature Of Deterrence. The nature of deterrence is changing. In the post-9/11 campaign to combat dispersed, often substate terrorism, classic deterrence frequently does not work. Al Qaeda, for example, appears content to abandon its destroyed bases in Afghanistan and re-emerge elsewhere. There is a real need to find a new way to defeat or deter such foes on the ground in their widely dispersed operating bases. [Editor: Air-Mech-Strike]
 
Simply put, the fact that the U.S. can rapidly put boots-on-the-ground anywhere in the world gives our opponents pause. Missile strikes interdict; American ground forces destroy and occupy. This capacity for destruction terrifies, and fear is the currency of deterrence. As our foes realize that there are no more safe havens because we will bring the battle to them, conventional deterrence will resume. 
 
The Fallacy Of Shock Without Maneuver. Military forces take and hold territory by applying firepower (shock) and maneuver (positional advantage). These classic elements of combat power act in concert. Maneuver positions the forces to better apply shock, which destroys or disrupts the enemy and creates favorable conditions for subsequent maneuver. When ground forces operate on a piece of terrain, they restrict or prevent enemy maneuver. The cumulative effect of this continuing cycle of controlled violence renders the enemy ineffective and delivers victory. 
 
Designed for speed, maneuverability, and range, aircraft cannot be heavily armored. Aircraft cannot remain in fixed positions; to stop moving is to die. As a result, aircraft can only produce a temporary battlefield presence. The moment they expend their fuel or ammunition, aircraft must leave to return to distant bases, thereby freeing the enemy to maneuver. 
 
The only way to overcome this problem is to constantly cycle aircraft to and from the battlefield. This places a tremendous stress on the personnel and equipment involved and requires large numbers of aircraft as well as mountains of stores and fuel. 
 
One study of the Rolling Thunder air campaign estimated that every dollar of destruction caused to North Vietnam cost America $9.60 to produce. Indeed, if one considers the resource drain of Operation Northern Watch's no-fly zone, the notion of a large-scale, sustained, independent air campaign quickly becomes prohibitive. 
 
By contrast, ground forces are designed to be sustained without leaving the battlefield, through forward area re-supply points just behind the forward edge of the battle area. They can maintain their battlefield presence and continue to deliver shock and maneuver-with fewer units and with significantly lower levels of consumption.
 
Airpower cannot maneuver in the classical sense, and it cannot prevent reoccupation by enemy ground forces. Airpower, by itself, is essentially nothing more than an extension of firepower. And firepower by itself, no matter how devastating, cannot produce a lasting military effect. [AMEN!]
  
Airpower and ground forces must work in a combined, synergistic relationship. World War I represents a tragic attempt to produce military victory through firepower alone. The German Blitzkrieg in World War II and the American AirLand Battle in the Gulf War, however, are remarkable examples of the combined application of shock and maneuver with technologically sophisticated equipment. 
 
The Problem With Proxies. The experiences of Kosovo and Afghanistan have led many to the erroneous conclusion that the U.S. can "buy" cheap ground combat power by employing local ground force proxies where needed. Ideally, these hypothetical proxies will prosecute future ground wars supported by American stand-off weapons. This assumption, however, is dangerously misguided.
 
Proxies simply may not exist. American strategy and force structure cannot be predicated on the assumed availability of allied ground forces. Local proxies were available in Afghanistan, but not in Mogadishu. Moreover, available local proxies may not fight effectively. The poor performance of the South Vietnamese army made it a liability rather than an asset. American planners cannot guarantee any combat effectiveness that they themselves do not create. 
 
In addition, although local proxies may be aligned with overall American objectives, this will not necessarily produce effective command and control over them. Local proxies' own allegiances may impugn American objectives. To understand this problem, one need only recall that al Qaeda and Taliban commanders were allowed to escape by using tribal arrangements and bribes. 
 
Finally, the consistent use of foreign proxies to protect U.S. interests corrodes America's international standing. To friends and allies, such a policy signals that American Soldiers are not willing risk death or even injury and privation to protect the country's interests, which by extension means that the U.S. would be even less willing to risk anything to protect friendly and allied interests. Moreover, perceiving weakness, our foes would further challenge American interests.
 
Foreign proxies must be employed on a case-by-case basis. Foreign allies and friends are vital to any American military effort, but they are not likely to accept an ancillary role based on an "our airpower, your bodies" strategy. Washington must lead from the front, using American ground forces to bolster coalition forces when possible and to defend American interests alone when necessary. This will ensure battlefield victory and diplomatic respect.
 
LASTING CHANGES
 
Occupying territory creates the conditions for lasting political and economic changes while limiting other international actors' freedom of action. History offers no starker lesson than this. 
 
Acting in concert with the other services, ground forces create lasting changes on the battlefield and at the international level. Creating lasting change will be absolutely critical when the U.S. confronts the unexpected adversaries of this century. Given the changing nature of deterrence and the need to retain the traditional balance of shock and maneuver, American ground forces remain indispensable.
 
War is an extension of political will; therefore, it is essential to put American boots-on-the-ground to defend American interests. We cannot pay others to fight our wars while we strike from over the horizon. But this doesn't require a return to the massed infantry assaults of World War II. Rather, what is needed is a highly trained and superbly led force equipped with every advantage that 21st century American technology can provide, including the world's finest air support.
 
The U.S. must continue to maintain and further transform its robust ground forces to protect our national interests. Today we enjoy a combat overmatch so fearsome that our adversaries must look to asymmetric warfare to even begin to challenge our power. This predominance is a political asset, not a liability. Transformation will guarantee that American ground forces remain preeminent.
 
AMERICA'S FLIGHTS OF FANCY: FROM AIRCRAFT TO NOW COMPUTERS?
 
World Weariness and flights of fancy 
 
There are serious fundamental world-view flaws in the current DoD vision which is based on the Tofflerian world-view that centers around the computer. In the following article on Aviation it reveals that we have swapped our fascination with physical flights of fancy to virtual, make-believe flights of fancy for war doctrine. 
 
We offer a sound, truthful understanding of war in the following PPT presentation:
 
www.oocities.org/transformationunderfire
 
The truth we need to consider is that actually WAR is not just armed groups of men doing violence but a CONFLICT OF IDEAS. If we are fighting for the wrong ideas like computers-mean-we-can-be-lazy-and-not-do-the-physical-things to-win-wars like have tracked AFVs with gunshields, we are going to have our half-baked "romance" with computers end up in flames like our unsound love affair with aviation did on 9/11/2001. 
 
When the status quo is diving into a building, its no time for world weariness to tone down our message so its lost in the shuffle of other things going on. Real people are dying and being maimed in Iraq while the enemy escapes and if we are human we should call it the bullshit it is. If this is "unprofessional", what is being mum and saying and doing nothing?
 
Bravo! to a good article revealing America's unsound fascination for flight. 
 
However, the ability of man himself to fly in direct contact with the elements lives on much more akin to the Wright Brothers through ultra-light aircraft.
 
What McDougall decries is a lack of wide-spread public use of aerocars as the utopians promised. The problem of massed Aerocars is current heavier-than-air flight requires forward motion through the air to get lift using fixed or rotary wings. This puts too many Aerocars in motion across the earth at one time and would create too many collisions.
 
What we need is a more docile, controlled flight that gets us out of contact with the ground that doesn't have to keep moving forward or spinning furiously overhead. If we combined helium lighter-than-air technologies with heavier-than-air technologies we could create practical and safe Aerocars. Of course, anti-gravity drives would work, too.
 
But McDougall is right that flight as long as its a flight of fancy will not progress if we give up on it for the latest wundertoy, today being the computer.
 
 
Foreign Policy Research Institute 
E-Notes
Distributed Exclusively via Fax & Email
 
THE ECSTASY AND THE AGONY OF OUR ROMANCE WITH FLIGHT
A MEDITATION ON THE CENTENNIAL OF THE WRIGHT BROTHERS' TRIUMPH
 
by Walter A. McDougall
 
December 17, 2003
 
Walter A. McDougall is a Senior Fellow of the Foreign Policy
Research Institute  and chairman  of FPRI's History Academy.
He is  author of  "...The Heavens and the Earth: A Political
History of  the Space  Age," which  won a  Pulitzer Prize in
1986.
 
I: THE HUNGER
 
I believe  it was  1979.   While researching  the history of
space technology  at the  NASA headquarters  in  Washington,
D.C., I  frequently visited  the  Smithsonian  Institution's
National Air  and Space  Museum--the most  visited museum in
the world.   It had recently installed a two-story high IMAX
movie theater and crowds flocked to view its inaugural film,
"To Fly!"   A  paean to  the romance  of human  flight,  the
cinematography thrilled.   But  the magic  began for me even
before the  lights  dimmed.    Music  was  played  over  the
speakers while the audience filed in and found seats.  Music
that did not still the chatter of children, but reduced most
adults to silence, then wonder, as if setting the mood for a
religious experience.   It  was the  Canon in D Major by the
Lutheran organist  Johann Pachelbel.   Sublime beyond words,
its haunting, bittersweet melody put into sound the feelings
of a mortal race able to imagine heavenly things, but unable
to grasp  them.   Alas, Hollywood  spoiled Pachelbel's magic
the following  year by  using the  Canon for  theme music in
Ordinary People,  whereupon it  devolved into  Muzak.  But I
shall always  associate Pachelbel with the sweetest of human
hungers: To Fly!
 
The story  of human flight is rightly called a romance, both
in the  sense of  a romantic affair full of anguish and joy,
and in  the grander sense of Romanticism, that cultural mood
expressing  the  human  psyche's  disillusionment  with  its
rational efforts to control and give meaning to life itself.
Wild Nature,  to the  Romantic, is a beautiful temptress who
beckons mankind  to possess  her only  to turn  all  of  our
dreams into  nightmares.   Our youth  is vanquished until we
aging dreamers  succumb to  what Germans  called Weltschmerz
(world-grief )  and Lebensmuedigkeit  (life-weariness).  And
no part of Nature conjures our hopes and fears more than the
sky.   Who hasn't  dreamed in  their sleep  they could  fly,
cruising like  Superman over  the houses  and trees  in  the
neighborhood?   Who hasn't  envied the  birds?   Who  hasn't
imagined that  if heaven  exists surely  we shall be able to
fly there, like angels?  The dream of breaking the chains of
gravity and  escaping our  two-dimensional life  seems to be
part of what makes us human.
 
Our own  wistful fairytales  tell of magic carpet rides, the
pixie dust in Peter Pan, and the plaintive lament of Dorothy
in The  Wizard of Oz ("birds fly over the rainbow, why then,
oh why  can't I?").  But abundant evidence suggests that all
human  civilizations   have  imagined   flight  a  privilege
reserved only  to the  gods whose  abodes are  in the  "high
places."   The Greeks  placed their  pantheon on Mt. Olympus
and  warned   of  the   hubris  mere  mortals  displayed  in
attempting to  poach on their preserve.  Thus, Icarus soared
on the  waxy wings  crafted by  Daedalus until  he dared  to
approach the  Sun and  fell to his death.  Thus, Bellerophon
was permitted  to ride  the winged horse Pegasus in order to
slay the  monster Chimera,  but was  cast down the moment he
tried to  fly to  the  top  of  Olympus.    He  should  have
remembered that Pegasus was born of the blood of the hideous
gorgon Medusa  and  his  destiny  was  to  serve  as  Zeus's
courier,  "air-mailing"   thunderbolts  to   him.     Hindu,
Buddhist, and Chinese mythologies contain similar cautionary
tales about  human efforts to fly.  In Hebrew texts the Lord
was "up  there."  He led His people from the sky as a pillar
of cloud  or light,  met with Moses on the top of Mt. Sinai,
showed Jacob  a vision  of angels  ascending and  descending
from heaven, and carried Elijah on high in a flaming, flying
chariot.   In Christian texts the Holy Spirit descended as a
dove upon  Jesus, who in turn ascended into heaven after the
resurrection.   Likewise, the  Bible offered the sternest of
warnings to men who would build a Tower of Babel and attempt
to reach  heaven through  artifice.   Wrath--be it divine or
evil--invariably came  from above.   The  Chinese version of
nemesis was  the fire-breathing  dragon.   Christians  named
Satan  the   Prince  of   the  Power   of  the  Air.    Many
civilizations  endowed   ravens,  cranes,  albatrosses,  and
eagles with  transcendent powers.   After all, birds can fly
and we cannot, hence they must somehow share in the godhead.
Finally, the  human hunger  to fly has often been distinctly
erotic.   The pagan Romans made that explicit in myths about
people abducted  or raped  by deities  disguised  as  birds.
They  even  sculpted  intricate  pendants  depicting  winged
penises.   To fly!  It must be, the ancients imagined, "like
sex with gods!"
 
II: THE HUNT
 
Birds inspired  the first  technological efforts  to realize
humanity's primordial  lust.   As a  boy, Leonardo  Da Vinci
dreamed that  a swooping  hawk brushed  his mouth  with  its
feathers.     (Freud  linked   such  dreams   to   infantile
sexuality).   As an  adult,  Da  Vinci  observed  how  birds
manipulated  their   tail  and  wing  feathers  to  regulate
attitude and  lift: the  basic principle  behind rudders and
ailerons.   But the  ornithopters  he  and  later  inventors
sketched were  based on the assumption that a flying machine
needed wings  that could  flap.   The source  of aerodynamic
lift was  a mystery  until Daniel Bernoulli, an 18th-century
Dutch  mathematician,  discovered  the  principle  of  fluid
mechanics named  after him.  As the speed of a liquid or gas
moving across  a surface  increases, the pressure exerted on
that surface decreases.  The brilliant English scientist Sir
George Cayley  applied that  principle  to  aerodynamics:  a
curved and  tapered wing  (airfoil) would  force air to pass
more quickly  over the  top  than  under  the  bottom,  thus
creating a  "low-pressure center"  that sucked  the wing up.
By 1800 he identified thrust, lift, drag, and gravity as the
forces in  need of  control  and  imagined  the  first  true
airplane with fuselage, cockpit, wing, and tail.  Suffice to
say the  Wright brothers said "Cayley carried the science of
flying to  a point  which it  had never  reached before  and
which it scarcely reached again during the last century."
 
By then  human beings  were already  aloft in  balloons.  In
"the astonishing  year" of 1783 the paper-making Montgolfier
brothers and  scientist Jacques  A.C. Charles  kicked off  a
frenzy in  Paris  with  their  ornately  painted  egg-shaped
balloons inflated  with  hydrogen.    But  as  thrilling  as
ballooning  could   be  (Thomas  Jefferson  wrote  of  those
"endeavoring to  learn us  the way to heaven on wings of our
own"), it  was not  really flying but rather drifting at the
mercy of  winds.    Not  until  1884  did  French  aeronauts
construct the  first lighter-than-air "dirigible" boasting a
propellor driven  by an  electric motor  and an elevator and
sliding weights  for steering.   That  was humanity's  first
controlled, powered  flight, and  it sparked the imagination
of the  retired general,  Ferdinand Graf  von Zeppelin.  His
LZ-1, a  gigantic cigar  loaded with  400,000 cubic  feet of
hydrogen, first  flew in 1900, giving birth to the brief and
ultimately   tragic   era   of   luxurious,   earth-circling
zeppelins.   But "birdmen"  believed the  future belonged to
wings, if  someone could  just figure  out  how  to  keep  a
heavier-than-air craft aloft and under control.
 
The most  charismatic "birdman"  was  another  German,  Otto
Lilienthal.   Suspended beneath  two bowed gossamer wings he
leapt from heights and glided for long distances controlling
his flight  by shifting  his weight.   He  was  more  of  an
"aerial gymnast"  than a  scientist,  and  even  if  he  had
succeeded in  perfecting hang-gliding  as we  know it today,
his methods  were useless  to those  trying to  design aero-
planes.   Still,  Lilienthal's  Icarus-like  death  in  1896
inspired others,  not least  the Wright brothers, to realize
his dream  through meticulous observation of the behavior of
gliders.
 
No one  contributed more technocratic optimism and acumen to
the United  States  than  the  dapper  Parisian-born  Octave
Chanute.   Brought to  America by  his immigrant  father,  a
history professor,  Chanute became  a builder  of railroads,
bridges, and  the great  stockyards of  Chicago  and  Kansas
City.  He grew rich, famous, and honored with the presidency
of the  American Society  of Civil Engineers until, in 1883,
he gave  it all  up to  pursue his  real dream:  To fly!  He
imported all  the aeronautical  texts he  could find over in
Europe, consulted  with Thomas  Edison, physicist  Albert F.
Zahm, and  engine designer  F.A. Pratt  (later  of  Pratt  &
Whitney).   He staged  conferences to  share information and
ideas, experimented  with trusses  to stabilize  wings,  and
taught Americans scientific flight-testing.  Scoffers denied
the possibility  of heavier-than-air  flight.   But  Chanute
gave birdmen  reason to persevere, above all Samuel Langley.
If anyone  could conquer the air, he believed, it was he.  A
distinguished scientist and president of the Smithsonian, he
enjoyed the  patronage of  Theodore Roosevelt  and Alexander
Graham Bell,  and won  grants totaling  $73,000 (almost $1.5
million today)  from  the  Army,  Smithsonian,  and  private
donors.  Langley proceeded methodically for seventeen years,
experimenting with scale models of flying machines he called
aerodromes.   He hired  crack engineers, expanded his staff,
and at  length built a full-size fabric-winged flyer powered
by a  52 horsepower  gasoline engine.  Confident of success,
Langley launched a publicity campaign that fixed all eyes on
his Great Aerodrome moored in the Potomac River.  On October
7, 1903,  rockets  and  horns  signaled  the  moment  of  an
apotheosis.   Whereupon the  machine snagged on its launcher
and "slid into the water like a handful of mortar."  So much
for big  government R&D.  But even if Langley had succeeded,
his Aerodrome was a turkey.  It needed to be catapulted into
motion and  lacked control  mechanisms, landing  gear, and a
cockpit.   Had the  plane reached its planned cruising speed
of 50 mph, the pilot would have been doomed!
 
Unbeknownst to  the crowds  on the  Potomac,  the  venerable
Smithsonian Institution  housed in its Norman-style "Castle"
on  Washington's   Mall  had  already  made  a  far  quieter
contribution that  proved nothing  less than  decisive.   It
happened on June 2, 1899, when an invisible bureaucrat named
Richard Rathbun  perused a  letter  from  a  humble  citizen
asking if the Smithsonian might send him materials to assist
his   "systematic    study"   of   flight.      Rathbun,   a
paleontologist,  might   have  discarded   the   letter   or
considered its  author a crank.  Instead, he bade his office
assemble the  best available  scholarship for  a Mr.  Wilbur
Wright of Dayton, Ohio.
 
The Wright  brothers were  middle-class, Middle West foliage
of a  family tree  nurtured by  English, Dutch,  and  German
roots.   Their father,  in good  Yankee fashion, sired seven
children, and  served as  a bishop in the stern, evangelical
Church of  the United Brethren.  The boys Wilbur, born 1867,
and Orville  (nickname "Bubbo"), born 1871, grew up behaving
in ways  the next  century's shrinks would term repressed or
compulsive.   They both  stuck close  to home, were very shy
(especially  around   females),  and   displayed   obsessive
interest in  their serial  projects.  When a fad for bicycle
racing swept  the nation  they went  into that  business  in
1892.   Then news  of Lilienthal's  death reminded them of a
passion kindled  way back in 1878 when the bishop gave a toy
to his  sons.   It was  a rubber  band-driven whirligig that
"flew" around  the room  when released.   The  boys tried to
fashion bigger  versions without success.  But by 1899, when
the Wright  brothers took up their quest for powered flight,
they were  experienced mechanics, self-taught mathematicians
and philosophers,  residents of  one of  America's "highest-
tech" towns,  and in  possession of the best current data by
grace of  Rathbun.  Above all, they adopted the method known
today as  systems integration.  Uppermost in their minds was
the challenge of mastering attitude, pitch, and yaw, because
getting an  airplane into  the air  would be  suicidal if it
could not  be controlled.  That in turn obliged the brothers
to mesh  several new  or improved technologies, including an
engine/propellor, handles and pedals, and a sturdy airframe.
As any  reader of Robert Pirsig's classic Zen and the Art of
Motorcycle Maintenance  knows, acquiring  the  "feel"  of  a
complex machine  is an art as much as a science.  Third, the
Wrights  engaged   in  dogged   research,  development,  and
testing, first  with gliders  and models in a makeshift wind
tunnel, then  prototype flyers.   Their  temperaments suited
them to such careful, repetitive, empirical work.  Thanks to
the principles  established by  Cayley, Chanute, and others,
the negative  examples of  Lilienthal and Langley, their own
trial-and-error  adjustments,  and  a  light  12  horsepower
aluminum engine  with magneto  ignition,  the  Wrights  made
remarkable progress  in just  a  few  years,  spending  just
$1,000 of their own money.
 
After the disaster on the Potomac, Orville wrote Chanute, "I
see that Langley has had his fling, and failed.  It seems to
be our  turn to  throw now,  and I wonder what our luck will
be."   A month  later, the  "Whopper Flying Machine," as the
brothers called  their minimalist  box of fabric and struts,
was assembled  at breezy Kill Devil Hills near Kitty Hawk on
North  Carolina's   Outer  Banks.     On  December  12  they
positioned the  craft on a slight downward slope thinking to
help it  gain speed.   But  that only forced Wilbur (who had
won a  coin toss  to go  first) to  lean  too  much  on  the
elevator.   The craft stalled, then fell gently to the sand.
So it  was on  December 17,  a  date  which  would  live  in
ecstasy, that the brothers tried again from a level surface.
Orville reclined at the controls, warmed up the engine, then
broke the  tether  holding  the  airplane  in  place.    The
headwind  plus  the  velocity  generated  by  the  propellor
sufficed to  lift the  biplane while  Orville, learning  the
pilot's trade "on the wing," kept it aloft and stable for 12
seconds and  120 feet.   On  their fourth trial that morning
Wilbur stayed  in "thin  air" for  just under  a minute  and
covered almost  three football  fields.   A small  group  of
locals witnessed the historic event, of whom juvenile Johnny
Moore was  most eloquent:  "They done  did it, they done it,
damned if  they ain't  flew!"   The brothers,  collected  as
always, shared  a lunch  basket then walked casually down to
the coastal  lifesaving station  at Kitty  Hawk  where  they
scribbled a telegram to the bishop in Dayton:
 
     "SUCCESS FOUR FLIGHTS THURSDAY MORNING ALL AGAINST
     TWENTY-ONE  MILE  WIND  STARTED  FROM  LEVEL  WITH
     ENGINE  POWER  PLANE  AVERAGE  SPEED  THROUGH  AIR
     THIRTY-ONE MILES  LONGEST 57  SECONDS INFORM PRESS
     HOME CHRISTMAS."
 
III: THE HONEYMOON
 
Invention of  the airplane  did not  kick off a frenzy.  The
Wrights did  not want  it to.   Indeed,  they spent  several
years  dodging   publicity  while  conducting  private  test
flights and awaiting approval of patents.  So most Americans
did not  know, understand,  or believe  what had happened at
Kitty Hawk  until September  1908 when the Army Signal Corps
asked Orville  to perform at Fort Myer, Virginia.  The brass
wanted to  know if  this alleged "aeroplane" might have some
military utility.   News  spread by  newspaper and  word  of
mouth until 5,000 civilians crowded the fort on Labor Day in
what came to resemble a religious revival.  Some people said
it was  "inhuman" or  even "occult"  for man to take flight.
Most just  cried, "My God, my God," and called it a miracle.
The Wrights  went on  tour, charging  $5,000 per exhibition,
and performed  their wonders  before  entire  towns.    They
opened a  school to  train pilots  who competed  to top each
other's daredevil  loops  and  rolls.    Dozens  of  copycat
mechanics and  birdmen soon  built variations  on the Wright
flyer and taught themselves to pilot them.  William Randolph
Hearst put up prize money for the first person to fly across
the United  States.   Calbraith Rodgers did it in 49 days in
1911 and  was greeted  in Pasadena by 20,000 screaming fans.
Women leapt  at the  chance to  soar above  the confines  of
terrestrial society,  truly "equal in the eyes of God."  Air
races were  front page news, as well as each "first" such as
the first  scheduled passenger  service in  1914  and  first
airmail service  in 1918.    A  new  age  of  limitless,  if
ineffable potential  seemed to  have dawned.   Aviators were
gods; aviation a secular religion.
 
The sole sour note was played by motorcyclist Glenn Curtiss,
who founded  the second  U.S. aircraft manufacturing company
and viciously  challenged the  Wrights' patents.   When  the
courts ruled  against him Curtiss conspired with Smithsonian
officials to  cobble a  case suggesting  Langley's aerodrome
deserved legal priority!  In 1929 the issue became moot when
the Curtiss  and Wright  firms  merged.    But  Wilbur  died
unvindicated of  yellow fever  in  1912,  and  it  took  the
Smithsonian until 1942 to apologize to Orville and display a
replica of his flyer in its castle.
 
Not even  World War  I troubled the honeymoon of America and
the airplane.   Aviation  advanced rapidly under the impress
of war.   The Packard auto company designed the V-12 Liberty
engine with  Delco ignition that powered the Curtiss Jennies
on which hundreds of military pilots trained.  They returned
home eager  to own  planes and  either barnstorm  or fly for
airlines serving the post office.  Even aerial combat seemed
pristine  and   chivalric  by  comparison  to  the  barbaric
slaughter in  the trenches  below.  Hollywood rode the craze
with films  featuring fighter  pilots and  stunt men.    The
public thrilled  as the  earth shrank.   In 1919 the six-man
crew of  a U.S. Navy "flying boat" crossed the Atlantic.  In
1923 two  Army pilots  made the first nonstop coast-to-coast
flight in  just 27  hours.   In 1924, four Army crews flying
Douglas World  Cruisers took  off from Seattle bound for ...
Seattle!  Clinging to coastlines and hopping islands, two of
the aircraft  circled the globe in 175 days.  A quarter of a
million people  cheered their  return.   In  1926  Commander
Richard E. Byrd flew over the North Pole.
 
The federal  government promoted  aviation, but with a light
hand.   The  National  Advisory  Committee  for  Aeronautics
(1915) was nothing like the NASA behemoth it would become in
1958, but  a modest  assemblage of  scientists with a meager
budget and a few wind tunnels.  They nonetheless did a great
deal to  advance airfoil  design, avionics,  and navigation.
The Kelly  Air Mail  Act (1925)  fostered free enterprise by
authorizing the Postmaster General to contract with airlines
and establish a national grid of lighted airports, emergency
runways,  and   meteorological  radio  stations.    The  Air
Commerce Act (1926) provided for the licensing of pilots and
federal regulation  of aircraft for safety.  Hence, far from
setting up government-owned airlines as most other countries
did, the United States subsidized private competition.  That
is what  gave a  lease on  life  to  entrepreneurs  such  as
Clement Keys  (North American),  Malcolm and  Allen Loughead
(Lockheed), Pop  Hanshue (TWA),  Juan Trippe (Pan American),
Erle Halliburton  (Delta), Donald  Douglas, William  Boeing,
Glenn Martin,  Jack Northrup,  Leroy Grumman,  Jerry Vultee,
Chance Vought,  Tom Braniff,  William Piper,  Clyde  Cessna,
Walter and Olive Beech, Curtiss, and Wright.
 
The  only  threat  to  public  ownership  of  airplanes  and
airlines was  Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal.  In 1934 the
President, Postmaster  General  James  Farley,  and  Alabama
Senator Hugo Black claimed the former Republican postmasters
had been  "dictators" whose  choice of  airmail contracts in
"spoils conferences"  spelled death  for some  airlines  and
windfall profits for others.  Roosevelt ordered the Army Air
Corps to  start delivering  mail.    But  due  to  penurious
budgets the  corps' obsolete  aircraft and  fledgling pilots
were so  inadequate to  the task  that a  dozen crewmen  and
planes were  lost in  three weeks.   Roosevelt  repented  of
socialism.   He did,  however, press  Congress to create the
Civil Aeronautics Board to regulate the airlines and approve
routes and  rates (thereby  granting himself the same powers
he claimed Republicans had abused).
 
"Our gaze  drew upward--from  the skies  you taught,  Man is
divine, and  meant by  God to  soar!"  So did a poet express
what "air-minded"  Americans took  on faith  in the interwar
years.   First thousands,  then  hundreds  of  thousands  of
people were  born again as disciples of the "winged gospel."
If flying  was reserved  for gods,  then human  beings  must
themselves be,  or on  the way to becoming, gods.  Aviation,
said its  ecstatic proponents,  promised to  end war for all
time, either by making neighbors and partners of all nations
through cultural  contact and  trade, or  by making  war  so
horrible no  sane person  would wage it.  Aviation, said its
proponents, promised  to liberate  people from  their  sooty
cities and  tenements, mundane  jobs and impediments, indeed
from each  other.   As Henry  Ford put  an automobile within
reach of  each working  man, soon every family would own its
own airplane and commute from rustic retreats.  Most of all,
the "air-minded" testified to the spiritual high, the almost
orgasmic thrill,  of soaring  through the  skies under one's
own control.  To look down on the world from high above made
instantly clear  how base and petty was the earthly rat race
for money, power, prestige.
 
Believers in  the "winged  gospel" formed  myriad clubs  and
gathered at  air shows.  They took their air circuses on the
road to  woo converts.   They  made shrines  of the Wrights'
bicycle shop  and Kitty  Hawk.   The very site chosen by the
Wrights--Kill  Devil  Hills--seemed  inspired.    They  made
December 17  into a  holy  day,  a  sort  of  technologists'
Christmas, and  gathered to  hear the  gospel read anew from
the Wrights'  journals.   Tracts, posters, models, statuary,
futuristic artistry  depicting the transformation of society
through aviation:  all were  employed to  spread  the  "good
news," especially  to children.  But evangelization, however
pervasive, would not have moved so many American hearts were
it not for a lone eagle named Lindbergh.
 
In 1919 a prize of $25,000 was offered for the first nonstop
flight from  New  York  to  Paris.    By  1927  aircraft  of
sufficient size  and power  were coming  on line,  and three
French aces  from the  Great War  plus three famous American
pilots were  determined to  win.   But two  of the Frenchmen
perished in  the attempt,  while the  other four pilots were
thwarted by  accidents or  injuries.   Against all odds, the
prize was  still up for grabs when Charles "Slim" Lindbergh,
a handsome tow-headed barnstormer from Minnesota, arrived in
New York  in his  single-engine Ryan NYP monoplane.  When he
announced his  intention to  cross the  ocean alone  through
uncertain weather just days after the Frenchmen disappeared,
people called him "The Flying Fool."  But all Americans held
their breath when the Spirit of St. Louis took to the air on
May 19.   The  next morning  Lindbergh landed  at Le Bourget
Aerodrome, Paris,  exhausted and  utterly unaware of what he
had become in the hearts and minds of his countrymen. "He is
US personified,"  wrote The New Republic.  "He is the United
States."   Lindy "is the dream that is in our hearts," wrote
the North  American Review.   He  taught America "to lift up
its eyes  to Heaven," said the New York World.  He was Lucky
Lindy, the  Lone Eagle, the new Daniel Boone calling America
back to  its pioneer  virtues.   He was welcomed back to New
York by  4 million  people, and  millions more turned out in
all 48  states, which  he toured  in the  Ryan.  What did it
mean?   Did Lindbergh's  solo flight  thrill  Americans  who
instinctively  felt  that  modern,  industrial,  urban  life
ground down  individuals and  left no room for heroism?  Not
quite, because, as President Coolidge noted, Lindy's "silent
partner" was  American industry.   "I am told that more than
100 separate companies furnished material, parts or service"
to the airplane.  Lindbergh himself honored his "partner" by
naming his  memoir WE.   We  did it:  my Ryan  and I.   What
Lindbergh and the winged gospelers hallowed was the marriage
of man and machine, rugged individualism and modern science.
U.S. Ambassador Myron Herrick, Lindy's host in Paris, had no
doubt as  to the source of his luck.  "He was the instrument
of a  great ideal, and one need not be fanatically religious
to see in his success the guiding hand of Providence."
 
Many more  such flights  in the  1920s and  1930s  rekindled
Americans' new  faith.   But with  the possible exception of
Amelia Earhart's  feats all  subsequent aerial "firsts" were
like routine  visits to  church by contrast to the thrill of
their  initial   conversions.  From   the  Wright   brothers
Americans learned  Yankee pluck  and know-how  still trumped
big money  and organization.   From  Lindbergh they  learned
that Ralph  Waldo Emerson was wrong when he wrote, "Machines
are in the saddle and ride mankind."  Self-reliant Americans
were still  in the  saddle, and through their machines could
make magic.
 
Anne Morrow Lindbergh, the aviatrix who married Charles, put
it exactly  that way.   Gazing  down from  10,000  feet  she
thought the  busy, bothered old earth looked frozen in form,
as if  a glaze  were put  over life.  "And if flying, like a
glass-bottomed bucket, can give you that vision, that seeing
eye, which  peers down  to the  still world below the choppy
waves, it will always remain magic."  Pilot John Magee, Jr.,
looked up  not down,  so to  him magic  became mystique.  "I
have slipped  the surly  bonds of  earth..." he  wrote, "and
touched the face of God."
 
IV: THE HEARTBREAK
 
When and  why did  the honeymoon  end and  heartbreak ensue?
The answer  most likely to leap to mind is December 7, 1941,
when Americans awoke to the truth of what many Jeremiahs and
Cassandras had  prophesied about  fire and death from above.
As early as 1908 H. G. Wells predicted in The War in the Air
that the  20th century would witness urban conflagrations of
Biblical  proportions.    The  Allied  powers'  Spring  1919
offensive against Germany would have inaugurated massive, if
primitive bombing  behind enemy  lines had the Armistice not
intervened.   In the 1920s, Italian strategist Giulio Douhet
wrote in  The Command  of the  Air that future wars would be
won in  a matter  of days  by  whichever  side  boasted  the
superior air  force.  America's own Cassandra was Army pilot
and war hero Billy Mitchell.  He lectured incessantly on the
potentially decisive  impact of  air power  and proved it in
1921 by demonstrating how a few flimsy biplanes could sink a
Dreadnought-class battleship.   In 1924 he even described in
a secret  report how  the Japanese  were planning  to  build
aircraft carriers  and inaugurate  the war  they  considered
inevitable by  launching aerial  attacks at  first light  on
Pearl Harbor  and the  Philippines.   Mitchell was  ignored,
derided, and  reprimanded to  the point  that he accused the
War  and   Navy  departments   of  "incompetency,   criminal
negligence, and  almost treasonable  administration."   That
earned him a court martial.
 
By the  1930s, the  dictators made  abundantly clear how the
winged gospel  might be  perverted.   Mussolini, Hitler, and
Stalin all  patronized aviation  to prove their regimes were
futuristic,  scientific,   and  mobilized   by  contrast  to
democracies enervated  by the Depression.  Italian designers
and  pilots  won  numerous  air  races.    Hitler  made  the
Luftwaffe a  showpiece of  Nazism commanded  by his henchman
Hermann Goering.  Visitors such as Lindbergh were impressed,
if not  cowed, by the evident superiority of fascist regimes
to promote  air power.   The  Soviets  called  their  pilots
"Stalin's Eagles" and plastered cities with placards crowing
over their  international  triumphs.    The  most  terrified
nation was  Britain since  aviation promised  to nullify her
traditional naval  defenses.   Even before  the  Nazis  took
power Prime  Minister Stanley  Baldwin  lamented,  "Whatever
people may  tell  
Wrong.   Americans' romance  with flight  continued in spite
and  because   of  the   war.    The  principal  reason  was
undoubtedly the  fact that  the American mainland was spared
any attack,  much less  the carpet  bombing  that  flattened
cities in the other belligerent nations.  Aerial war did not
poison the  whole enterprise of flight.  Rather, the Germans
and especially the Japanese had sinned against the dreams of
mankind by  perverting technology  to their  evil  purposes.
Hence, the  Allies, led  by the U.S. Army Air Corps, had the
right, duty, and necessity to pay the enemy back, many times
over, in their own coin.  Meanwhile, of course, World War II
was  the   greatest  opportunity   yet  to  educate  average
Americans  about   the  wonders  of  flight.    Millions  of
servicemen got  their first  ride on  an airplane during the
war.   Tens of  thousands of  male pilots  were trained plus
thousands of  Women's Airforce  Service Pilots  (WASP),  who
ferried  aircraft  and  supplies  around  the  world.    The
technology leapt  forward, from  the Lockheed P-38 Lightning
to the  Grumman F6F Hellcat, and Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress
to North American's B-25 Mitchell to the B-29 Superfortress.
No airplane  was more  beloved than  the sturdy Douglas DC-3
(C-47 transport),  whose production  run  surpassed  13,000.
Far from  repenting of  what aviation had come to, Americans
honored their brave bomber crews, undisturbed by the napalm-
lit firestorms  that consumed Hamburg and Dresden, Tokyo and
Yokohama.  Walt Disney Studios promised "Victory Through Air
Power" in  a stunning animation in which armadas of American
bombers crossed  the Pacific  then morphed into angry eagles
tearing at  Japan's vitals with their talons.  The climactic
events, the  atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, were
greeted as  godsends by  the million servicemen poised for a
bloody invasion  of Japan  and their  tens  of  millions  of
family  members  back  home.    The  atomic  bomb,  not  the
airplane, was  the horrific  invention, and  in any case the
United States had a monopoly.  By 1945 Americans' industrial
might and  technological supremacy  seemed  to  ensure  they
would enjoy  air superiority,  even invulnerability, forever
and ever.   World  War II, far from disillusioning the "air-
minded," seemed  only to have hastened the day when the full
promise of aviation would be fulfilled.
 
Polls conducted  near the  end of  World War II showed hopes
far outpacing  fears.   No less  than 85 percent of Army Air
Force pilots  said they  intended to  own their  own  planes
after  the   war.    Some  43  percent  of  businessmen  and
professionals expected  their firms  to own planes after the
war.   Almost a third of all American civilians confessed to
wanting a  private plane, while 39 percent of the readers of
Women's Home  Companion intended to take flying lessons!  In
1946 alone,  civilians purchased  33,254 private  planes and
back ordered so many more that new manufacturers leaped into
business.   Even Macy's  department store  peddled a line of
aircraft.
 
Then reality sank in.  The novelty wore off.  Other consumer
goals ranging  from  homes  to  automobiles  and  appliances
soaked up Americans' cash.  Not least, the Soviets tested an
A-bomb  in   1949  and   boasted  they   would  soon  deploy
transcontinental bombers.   So if one had to pick a date and
say, with  the country  song, "that's  when  the  heartaches
begin," the  year 1950  is as  good as  any.   The Cold  War
turned hot  in Korea  where North  American's F-86 Sabre jet
fighters dueled Soviet MIG-15s nearly equal in prowess.  The
military   again   monopolized   aviation   technology   and
personnel.   The most  symbolic of  sad events may have been
the recall  of baseball  star Ted  Williams  to  duty  as  a
fighter pilot  despite his having lost four years already to
World War  II.   In the  mid-1950s Congress  investigated an
alleged "bomber  gap," suggesting  the sort  of  armageddons
visited upon  other continents  might next  time touch North
America.   The Eisenhower  administration built  the Distant
Early Warning  (DEW) line  of radar  stations in  Canada and
convened secret  scientific committees  predicting  imminent
Soviet parity  in strategic  weapons.  Most shocking of all,
the launch  of Sputnik  1 in 1957 seemed to prove the Soviet
Union had  grabbed the  lead for  control of outer space and
possessed ICBM's  able  to  hurtle  nuclear  weapons  on  to
America's cities.   Suddenly  the sky  became as scary as it
had been  to the  ancients.   Men could  fly,  perhaps  even
rocket in  space, but  they were  still men:  some evil, all
flawed, and none gods.
 
Aviation's progress continued by leaps, in good part because
of the  Cold War  arms race.   Americans  might have exulted
when test  pilot Chuck  Yeager broke  the sound  barrier  in
1947, but  it was  kept a  secret. They  put on their Sunday
best  when  boarding  commercial  airliners  in  the  1950s,
assured by  elegant stewardesses  there was nothing to fear.
But even  the advent  of jet  travel with the Boeing 707 and
DC-8 airliners  in 1957 only postponed disillusionment for a
time.   If  anything,  the  very  success  of  routine  mass
transport by  air helped  to kill  the  nation's  excitement
about flying.  Anne Morrow  Lindbergh foresaw  it all in her
1938 memoir  Listen!  The  Wind.    "As  time  passes,"  she
prophesied, "the  perfection of  machinery tends to insulate
man from  contact with  the elements in which he lives.  The
'stratosphere' planes  of the  future will  cross the  ocean
without any  sense  of  the  water  below.    Like  a  train
tunneling through  a mountain,  they will be aloof from both
the problems  and beauty  of the  earth's surface.  Only the
vibration of  the engines  will impress  the senses  of  the
traveler with  his movement  through the air.  Wind and heat
and moonlight  take-offs  will  be  of  no  concern  to  the
transatlantic  passenger.    His  only  contact  with  these
elements will lie in accounts such as this book contains."
 
Once upon  a time  people dreamed  of flying  by themselves,
free as  birds.   But the  experience of  late  20th-century
travelers made  sense of  poet Bob Dylan's query: "Are birds
free from  the  chains  of  the  skyways?"    Instead  of  a
liberating, almost  sexual thrill,  passengers had  to  beat
their way  by car or smelly bus through traffic to a distant
airport, then  stand in  lines to  get  ticketed  and  check
baggage, then  allow themselves to be crammed into a seat to
remain immobile  for hours.  Pressurization made the cabin a
stale, artificial environment.  Even those with window seats
might see  nothing but  clouds.   Far from being in control,
white-knuckled customers  felt thoroughly  out of control as
they trusted  the  pilots  to  take  off  and  land  safely.
Airplanes were  surely much  faster than  railroads or cars,
but their speed annihilated the romance of distance.
 
The magic  died for  manufacturers  and  airlines  as  well.
Individual engineers and pilots might still take pride in an
elegant new  design, a  problem solved,  or  a  feather-like
landing on  instruments in a cross wind.  But the truth was,
aerospace and  airlines were  very tough industries in which
to   make    an   honest   dollar.      The   Pentagon   and
NASA-Eisenhower's  "military  industrial  complex"-dominated
the R&D  market, forcing  aerospace firms  to  underestimate
costs, overpromise  results, and  lobby hard in order to win
government contracts.   Firms  that failed  to gorge  at the
public trough  disappeared, while  the survivors merged into
ever larger  conglomerates or  diversified, thereby shedding
their mystique.   The  federal aviation  bureaucracy  became
ever larger and more opaque, especially after Lyndon Johnson
subsumed it  into the  new Department  of Transportation  in
1967.   Then  deregulation  cut  the  legs  out  from  under
marginal carriers.   Grand old airlines went bankrupt, while
those still  in business  pushed fares into the stratosphere
or else  offered cut-rate fares subject to endless penalties
and restrictions.    Airlines  routinely  over-booked,  thus
ensuring  a  certain  number  of  outraged  customers  every
flight.   The "once in a lifetime" thrill turned into an all
too frequent  annoyance, not  least for  those who  suffered
from air sickness, jet lag, and inner ear disequilibrium.
 
For a  few nervous  years, the  Space Race  kept  alive  the
memory of  men  and  machines  braving  the  unknown,  while
spaceflight enthusiasts dusted off the utopian or calamitous
projections applied  earlier to  aviation.   Americans  were
ecstatic with  relief when John Glenn matched Yuri Gagarin's
feat by  orbiting the  earth in  1962.  A United States rent
asunder by  race riots  and Vietnam  War protests managed to
pull together for a week in July 1969 when Apollo 11 touched
the Moon  and returned  safely to  earth.   Then  even  Moon
missions grew boring.  The Nixon administration canceled the
final Apollo missions.  Even more tellingly, it canceled the
U.S. program  for a  Supersonic Transport  (SST) plane.  For
the first time in the air age Americans surrendered "faster,
higher,  longer"  technology  on  the  grounds  it  was  too
expensive, noisy,  and polluting.   Aviation  was no  longer
"sexy." The romance was gone.
 
Ironically,  the   mistresses  that   replaced  aviation  in
Americans' hearts, that provided the kicks they craved, were
computers (a high-tech industry spawned in part by the needs
of modern  air war) and Hollywood (which had done so much in
the past  to promote  the romance  of flight).    How  could
NASA's routine  Space  Shuttle  missions  compete  with  the
titillations and  virtual omnipotence served up by Star Wars
movies and  video games?  That they weren't real experiences
didn't matter:  the winged  gospel wasn't real either except
for the intrepid birdmen and women themselves.
 
V: THE HORROR
 
The good  Doctor Samuel  Johnson wrote  a fantasy  satire in
1759 called  Rasselas.   It told of an Abyssinian savant who
learned the  secret of  flight.   His king  was elated until
told by the sage that the secret could never be shared.  "If
men were  all virtuous,"  he explained, "I should with great
alacrity teach  them all  to fly.   But  what would  be  the
security of  the good  if the  bad could  at pleasure invade
them from the sky?"
 
Heartbreak turned  to horror on September 11, 2001.  None of
us will  ever purge  those television images from our memory
banks.   They cannot be consigned to our "Recycle Bin," then
deleted.   Recently, in  my seminar called "In Search of the
American Civil  Religion" at  Penn, I  showed the students a
Ken Burns'  video on the Statue of Liberty.  They enjoyed it
and learned  a good  deal.   But they all confessed to being
disturbed by  the program.   Why?   Because  it was  shot in
1985, the  Twin Towers  loomed behind  the Statue, and Burns
repeatedly employed footage in which airplanes soared in the
background.  The very image of Liberty was spoiled for them,
spoiled  by   the  sight   of  routine   takeoffs  from  JFK
International.
 
In the latest American war, the one against Terror, aviation
has played  as large a role as it did in Bosnia, Kosovo, and
the Gulf  War of  1991.  American dominance of air and space
is greater than ever, making ours the most powerful military
machine in history.  Some smart (at least in their own eyes)
strategists suggest air power can trump all other sources of
coercion and  somehow erase  centuries of history and hatred
in such  places as  Afghanistan and Iraq.  Yet over the same
decades when  U.S.  technology  surpassed  all  rivals,  the
airplane  became   a  weapon  of  choice  in  the  hands  of
primitives.  Beginning in the late 1960s terrorists hijacked
airliners in  search of  asylum, ransom, or hostages.  Later
they managed,  on a  few  dreadful  occasions,  to  blow  up
crowded planes in mid-air with missiles or bombs smuggled on
board.   Finally, they  seized on  the diabolical  notion of
taking over  the pilots'  controls and  steering giant  jets
into buildings.
 
We pray it may not happen again.  But the cost we bear after
9/11 is  still more  annoyance and  tedium due  to  security
checks,  still   worse  service   and  amenities   from  the
financially-strapped carriers,  and still  less pleasure  in
flying.   It calls  to mind  the memoir  of an  old Vietcong
soldier.   Captured by  the French  around 1950, he survived
cruel imprisonment  by focusing  on his  dream of a free and
united Vietnam.  After 24 more years of war and privation he
thought his  dream realized  only  to  witness  how  Hanoi's
Communist conquerors  shunted the  Viet Cong aside and ruled
the South  with an  iron fist.   I wish, he confessed in old
age, I  could somehow  be transported  back to  that  French
prison.    Were  Wilbur  and  Orville  Wright  alive  today,
doubtless they  would wish  to be  transported back to Kitty
Hawk, where they hungered only: To Fly!
 
* * *
 
The author  thanks his  "air-minded"  brother  Prof.  Duncan
McDougall for  valuable  suggestions  and  corrections,  and
Orbis  managing   editor   Trudy   Kuehner   for   editorial
assistance.
 
Bibliography
 
Many books  and articles read over many years contributed to
this essay,  but those  I consulted  directly and from which
the quotes are drawn include these excellent works:
 
Joe Christy,  American Aviation:  An Illustrated  History, 2
ed. Blue Ridge Summit, Penna.: McGraw-Hill AERO, 1994.
 
Joseph J.  Corn, The  Winged Gospel:  America's Romance With
Aviation, 1900-1950. New York: Oxford University, 1983.
 
Tom D.  Crouch, The  Bishop's Boys:  A Life  of  Wilbur  and
Orville Wright. New York: W.W. Norton, 1989.
 
Tom D.  Crouch, A Dream of Wings: Americans and the Airplane
1875-1905. New York: W.W. Norton, 1981.
 
Richard P.  Hallion, Taking Flight: Inventing the Aerial Age
From Antiquity Through the First World War. New York: Oxford
University, 2003.
 
Leslie  Haynsworth   and  David   Toomey,  Amelia  Earhart's
Daughters. New York: William Morrow, 1998.
 
Peter L.  Jakab and Rick Young, eds., The Published Writings
of Wilbur  and Orville Wright. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian
Institution, 2000.
 
Anne Morrow Lindbergh, Listen! The Wind. New York: Harcourt,
Brace, 1938.
 
Anne Morrow  Lindbergh,  North  to  the  Orient.  New  York:
Harcourt, Brace, 1935.
 
Charles Lindbergh, "We". New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1927.
 
Walter  A.  McDougall,  ...the  Heavens  and  the  Earth:  A
Political History  of the  Space Age. New York: Basic Books,
1985.
 
Alex Roland,  Model Research:  A  History  of  the  National
Advisory Committee  for Aeronautics,  1915-1958. Washington,
D.C.: NASA, 1985.
 
Michael S.  Sherry, The  Rise of  American  Air  Power:  the
Creation of  Armageddon. New  Haven: Yale  University Press,
1987.
 
Bayla Singer,  Like Sex  With Gods: An Unorthodox History of
Flying. College Station: Texas A&M University, 2003.
 
John William  Ward, "The  Meaning  of  Lindbergh's  Flight,"
American Quarterly 10:1 (Spring 1958): 3-16.
 
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Walter McDougall on the Wright Brothers' Centennial
 
Date: 12/19/2003 4:58:39 AM Eastern Standard Time
 
From:    fpri@fpri.org (Foreign Policy Research Institute)
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