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The New Military: Proposing change
The Times Herald Norristown, PA ^ | 11/28/2003 | KEITH PHUCAS

Posted on 11/29/2003 7:43:42 AM PST by Cannoneer No. 4

Part one of a three-part series on the United States evolving armed forces.

NORRISTOWN - Transformation is the guiding principle for today's U.S. military, and top Defense officials have mandated sweeping changes aimed to quicken the pace of warfare and streamline the Pentagon's cumbersome bureaucracy.

On Nov. 24, President Bush signed the $401 billion Defense Authorization Bill of 2004, the largest defense budget in history.

And though the military's fighting capability is second to none, officials warn that the time it takes to develop some weapons renders them obsolete by the time they are finally produced -often 15 to 20 years later.

Borrowing the best attributes of U.S. Special Operations Forces, the Defense Department envisions a faster, more agile, more lethal fighting force guided in battle by increasingly sophisticated digital technology.

What's Imperative for an Information Age fighting force, according to Adm. Arthur Cebrowski, Ret., director of the Pentagon's Office of Force Transformation, is being connected to the military's Tactical Internet and wowing the enemy.

"We want our enemies, current and future, to look at us and say, 'Wow, how do they do that?'" He told an audience at the Heritage Foundation think tank in Washington recently.

With a continuously improving fighting capability, defeated enemy forces will be left to scratch their heads wondering what hit them. They will see an attack unfold before their eyes, Cebrowski said, but they won't understand how it happened and will be powerless to stop it.

"That's the power of transformation," he said.

Network-centric warfare

Digital warfare came of age in Operation Iraqi Freedom in March. Functioning as the military's communications network, the Tactical Internet relayed command-and-control decisions from commanders to soldiers and Marines crammed inside armored vehicles rolling through the Iraqi desert.

The Force XXI Battle Command Brigade and Below (FBCB2) is the U.S. Army's main digital command-and-control system for highly mobile, real-time battle information.

Bradley Fighting Vehicles and M1A1 Abrams tanks equipped with FBCB2 gave the infantry a picture of the battlefield that included color-coded displays of friendly forces (blue icons) and enemy troop (red icons) locations. During the war, the system effectively replaced paper maps and radio voice communication.

The military's high-tech advantage needs to constantly change and improve, Cebrowski said, to keep enemies second guessing U.S. strategy. The Iraqi military, he said, likely studied the 1991 Gulf War strategy to gauge what coalition forces would do during the recent war.

"That's exactly what we want to happen," he said. "I like to see a lot of generals who want to fight the last war, (but) I just want them all to be on the other side." Not knowing precisely where geographically future threats will come from, defense officials say it's imperative to train troops jointly for rapid deployment to almost anywhere on earth.

The Transformation director and other Pentagon reformers are especially critical of the time it takes to produce weapons systems. Defense programs development cycles must be brought in line with those of commercial industry, Cebrowski said, which are typically measured in months and years - not decades.

Trimming weight

The U.S. Army's Crusader artillery program was an early casualty of the transformation initiative. The $11 billion program was cancelled last year. According to Cebrowski, any weapons program is expendable if it doesn't meet the new transformation criteria.

"(Crusader) is a legacy of industrial age warfare born to satisfy the Army's indirect fire requirements in a strategic context that no longer exists," he said. In other words, Crusader is a relic of the Cold War: too heavy, too expensive and too long in development.

The main Crusader tracked vehicle, equipped with a 150 mm howitzer [I think they mean 155mm - Cannoneer], requires a companion vehicle to supply it with ammunition. The two vehicles weigh in at a whopping 81 tons - a lot of hardware to haul to a battle front.

The lightweight Stryker infantry vehicle is one of transformation's new kids on the block exemplifying a light, more mobile capability. The Stryker family of vehicles, 10 in all, includes a version equipped with 105 mm gun, and models that carry infantry, ammunition and wounded troops.

The "trim" 19-ton vehicle comes loaded with digital technology and has a top speed of 62 miles per hour - 21 miles per hour faster than the much heavier 35-ton Abrams tank. Because of its lighter weight, the Stryker would be easier to transport to faraway fronts, another top transformation goal.

In February, the army began testing the mobile gun Stryker at Aberdeen Proving Ground, near Baltimore, Md. The vehicle is expected to debut in Iraq early next year.[emphasis Cannoneer's]

While Cebrowski doesn't want to eliminate tanks altogether, he clearly believes Stryker is the centerpiece of the military's future, giving the forces necessary nimbleness and speed in urban areas such as Baghdad.

Though the tanks proved effective in protecting their crews from artillery or missile fire, for the transformation director, the new high-tech vehicles give troops better awareness of where the enemy is located so that troops can avoid danger - or speed out of harm's way.

"Anyone that doesn't like speed, or says that speed isn't required, has never been shot at," he said.

However, the Stryker has its share of critics. A report prepared for New Jersey Republican Rep. James Saxton, a member of the House Armed Service Committee, concluded the vehicle is ill suited for warfare.

The July report, written by consultant Victory O'Reilly, said that the vehicle was poorly armored and vulnerable to rocket-propelled grenade attacks.

Responding to the report's finding, the army said that Strykers headed for combat have recently been reinforced with additional armor.

But even armor has limits. In some situations armor is necessary; in other cases it isn't, Cebrowski said.

"(Steel) didn't help 17 dead sailors on board (U.S.S.) Cole, for example," he said. "This is a steel ship. And so you don't see the Navy talking about adding more steel to its destroyers (ships)."

The U.S.S. Cole was attacked in Yemen by terrorists in a bomb-laden boat in 2000. The explosion created a huge hole in the ship.

Instead of more steel, the director said, timely reconnaissance is crucial for safeguarding fighting units. Unmanned aerial vehicles were used effectively in Afghanistan and Iraq to spot enemy troops from the air.

Once the enemy was located on the ground, air power was called in to bomb their positions. This close relationship between the infantry and air support was one of the pluses to come out of Iraq's post-war analysis. The air-infantry teamwork also raises questions about the necessity of Crusader or other artillery programs.

"It is as if we will have discovered a new sweet spot in the relationship between land warfare and air warfare and a tighter integration of those," he said.

A newly formed Stryker Brigade Combat Team - a 2nd Infantry Division unit from Fort Lewis in Washington state - is currently in Kuwait. When the unit moves into Iraq next year [Next year?], defense officials will be watching closely to see how Stryker performs.

The 5,000-strong Stryker brigade is part of a planned troop rotation next year.

Overall, the Pentagon plan to replace 130,000 American troops in Iraq with a fresh contingent that will shrink the force by 20 percent, according to The Associated Press.

The National Guard and Reserve troops make up about 20 percent of the current force of 130,000. According to AP, after the rotation ends in April, nearly 40 percent of the 105,000 troops in the new force will be National Guard and Reserve forces.

Tomorrow: The New Military, Part 2: "The Long Hitch"

Keith Phucas can be reached at kphucas@timesherald.com or at 610-272-2500, ext. 211.


TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: armytransformation; fampl; fapl; sbct; stryker; transformation
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To: Cannoneer No. 4
After Pastsy Schroder another re-invention of the armed services could be very destructive.. course if she were hanged for sedition as a start and then humilated, it might work, that is a de-volution...
141 posted on 11/30/2003 11:30:01 AM PST by hosepipe
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To: archy
Who needs bridges?

All the bridges north and east of Casey had fords beside them. Most of the rivers up there are wide but not very deep. ROK Army uses them for wash racks.

142 posted on 11/30/2003 11:37:07 AM PST by Cannoneer No. 4 (The Republican Party priority is national security. The DemocRATic Party priority is power.)
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To: Cannoneer No. 4
Who needs bridges?

Well, the A10 drivers need something to fly under....

All the bridges north and east of Casey had fords beside them. Most of the rivers up there are wide but not very deep. ROK Army uses them for wash racks.

I suspect after the first week to ten days of a Korean war, most of the bridges in Korea will be fords anyway, whether from airstrikes, artillery or overuse. And washracks will be the least of the maintenance concerns.

-archy-/-

143 posted on 11/30/2003 11:58:18 AM PST by archy (Angiloj! Mia kusenveturilo estas plena da angiloj!)
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To: 300winmag
But, buying 10 billion worth of airframe over 10 billion worth of cheesebox makes too mych sense.
Besides, there would end up being a fight over who actually owns and runs the planes.
If it makes too much sense, that's guaranteed to be the one thing they won't do.
144 posted on 11/30/2003 3:20:28 PM PST by Darksheare (Even as we speak, my 100,000 killer wombat army marches forth)
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To: archy
SWEET!
145 posted on 11/30/2003 3:22:46 PM PST by Darksheare (Even as we speak, my 100,000 killer wombat army marches forth)
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To: tortoise
Artillery: Operational 24 hours a day, 7 days a week
Airpower: Only available if weather and threat conditions permit.

Eeeks, someone doing the planning toked too much.
Or, alternately, someone there has a real attitude against artillery.
146 posted on 11/30/2003 3:27:58 PM PST by Darksheare (Even as we speak, my 100,000 killer wombat army marches forth)
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To: archy
*groans*
Makes me wish the guys in control over here had made better decisions..
147 posted on 11/30/2003 3:28:51 PM PST by Darksheare (Even as we speak, my 100,000 killer wombat army marches forth)
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To: Valin
Double that. The Paladin has the FAASV as a companion resupply vehicle. Therefore, to compare apples to apples, Paladin/FAASV runs about 63-65 tons vice the Crusader at 81 tons. Paladin/Faasv doesn't have the same mobility capability either.
148 posted on 11/30/2003 5:06:25 PM PST by sauropod (I believe Tawana! Sharpton for Prez! Slap the Donkey or Spank the Monkey? Your Choice)
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To: archy
See my no. 148.
149 posted on 11/30/2003 5:07:36 PM PST by sauropod (I believe Tawana! Sharpton for Prez! Slap the Donkey or Spank the Monkey? Your Choice)
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To: archy
Last i heard, Copperhead was being used up and not replenished. IOW, not in the inventory.
150 posted on 11/30/2003 5:08:49 PM PST by sauropod (I believe Tawana! Sharpton for Prez! Slap the Donkey or Spank the Monkey? Your Choice)
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To: sauropod
Last i heard, Copperhead was being used up and not replenished. IOW, not in the inventory.

I wouldn't be a bit surprised. We've got the technology; we know they can be made as needed if needed. The thing to do now is get a CGLP 120mm and maybe a 81mm mortar round in the hands of the troops, and hopefully, a pair of decent vehicles from which to use them- an 81mm towed behind a Humvee or a 120 tube and baseplate tied to the side of a Stryker is not exactly state-of-the art.

If needed, we can always resume production of Copperhead [and when it was first developed, it worked nicely with naval support gun fire as well; now, with nothing bigger than a 5-inch in the Navy toybox, why bother.] or better, a second-generation version, more responsive, maybe with more range- double would be nice. If the guided mortar rounds work, swell. If not, at least the 155s do.

I just flat hate having all eggs in one basket.

-archy-/-

151 posted on 11/30/2003 5:57:22 PM PST by archy (Angiloj! Mia kusenveturilo estas plena da angiloj!)
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To: All
The New Military: Transforming the military

The final part of a three-part series on the United States evolving armed forces.

NORRISTOWN - Defense officials are working to transform the military into an ever more effective fighting force that will be able to respond quickly to future global trouble spots in the ongoing war on terrorism. For now, Iraq is the military's proving ground for its evolving capability to wage war and make peace.

152 posted on 12/01/2003 8:02:29 AM PST by Cannoneer No. 4 (Old soldiers never die. They just go to the commissary parking lot and regroup.)
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To: Darksheare; A Simple Soldier; sauropod; R. Scott; mark502inf; blanknoone; servantoftheservant; ...
ping to Part III
153 posted on 12/01/2003 8:24:25 AM PST by Cannoneer No. 4 (Old soldiers never die. They just go to the commissary parking lot and regroup.)
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To: Darksheare
Have you noticed How all the "good" press for the Stryker is coming from the civilian press who know nothing of ground combat? I've not noticed much from the professional journals.
154 posted on 12/01/2003 8:28:51 AM PST by PsyOp ( Citizenship ought to be reserved for those who carry arms. - Aristotle.)
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To: PsyOp
Any press from the military that I've seen about it has been, well.. 'following the party line' as if they don't really like the thing, but will say what they have to to stay out of trouble with whoever would be angry over it.

155 posted on 12/01/2003 8:33:04 AM PST by Darksheare (Even as we speak, my 100,000 killer wombat army marches forth)
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To: Cannoneer No. 4
"The soldiers can't do their jobs sitting in a Bradley (fighting vehicle) or a tank," said
"network-centric warfare" that utilized the Tactical Internet to digitally connect commanders to infantry troops on the ground and pilots hovering in the air.

Soldiers can't do their jobs sitting inside acardboard box on wheels that isn't even as capable as the Bradley..
And having all that info available via networking is nice but doesn't remove the need for artillery support.
Rather, it increases it if the vehicle itself is incapable of doing what they are asking it to do.
If the pilots in the air can't fly due to weather, enemy action, or what have you, then the guys on the ground are screwed without artillery support.

*UGH!*
156 posted on 12/01/2003 8:38:02 AM PST by Darksheare (Even as we speak, my 100,000 killer wombat army marches forth)
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To: Darksheare
"The soldiers can't do their jobs sitting in a Bradley (fighting vehicle) or a tank," said U.S. Army reservist Col. Tom Collins, an East Norriton resident. It's essential to use lighter vehicles to get around Baghdad's city streets.

I think the good Colonel has it back-asswards. Mechanized Infantry and Armor soldiers CAN to the jobs they were trained to do sitting in a Bradley or a tank. The job of kicking down doors, carrying an AK becaue your unit TOE only gives you a pistol, doing the best they can do as ad hoc improvised Constabulary troopers is what is not so easy to do from those vehicles.

157 posted on 12/01/2003 9:27:42 AM PST by Cannoneer No. 4 (Old soldiers never die. They just go to the commissary parking lot and regroup.)
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To: Cannoneer No. 4
Exactly.
I seem to remember my section chief saying something about having one M-16 in his tank crew, for the whole crew.
But he was a tanker during the 80's, and this may not have been policy for all tank units.
So I don't know if that was just his unit or all units that did that.

I wouldn't mind using an AK, but having to *cough* requisition one from someone is a little tough, especially considering where they're at.
I'm sure the terrs aren't too willing to lend out their weapons like that.

Besides, doing police work is not what a soldier is for.
Going building to building killing everyone that is a threat is one thing.
Going and 'arresting' and 'detaining' bad guys is another.
158 posted on 12/01/2003 9:32:11 AM PST by Darksheare (Even as we speak, my 100,000 killer wombat army marches forth)
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To: Darksheare
Sounds like someone is passing the buck and making excuses to fund a pet project …

Much of our defense posture has the primary mission of funding the defense industry, not providing the most efficient military force possible. “High Tech” rules, and much like LBJ’s Best and Brightest the people who make the big decisions either have no idea what’s happening in combat or they are political animals trying their best to make The Party happy.

159 posted on 12/01/2003 12:00:14 PM PST by R. Scott
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To: R. Scott
That sounds alot like the Russian military where the guys in charge were told what they wanted to hear rather than what the real deal was.
*ugh*
Russia folded in part due to that.
160 posted on 12/01/2003 12:15:10 PM PST by Darksheare (Even as we speak, my 100,000 killer wombat army marches forth)
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