Military Review English Edition November-December 2015 | Page 86
armored, and Stryker. Maneuver BCTs are the Army’s
primary fighting elements and land-space owners.
Under Army 2020, infantry and armored BCTs will
receive an additional maneuver battalion. This increases
a brigade commander’s battalions from two to three and
correspondingly drives up combat power. (Stryker BCTs
already possess three maneuver battalions and will remain
unchanged.) However, these forces are not new elements;
they are coming from other organizations. The Army is
reducing the number of BCTs from forty-five to “an interim solution of thirty-three.”14 The BCT breakdown will
be twelve armored, fourteen infantry, and seven Stryker.
To complement these changes, the Army is also dispersing
and reorganizing engineer and artillery assets with the
goal of empowering the BCT commander with the assets
directly under the commander’s control. Finally, division
structures are also changing. Although there is not one
specific formula, the 4th Infantry Division (4ID) provides
a model. After the restructuring, 4ID will employ one of
each type of BCT—Stryker, infantry, and armored.
The implications of these changes are difficult to
predict. Staffing fewer BCTs reduces the forces available to rotate through a theater for a sustained campaign. However, this is offset by each BCT’s increased
combat power, which translates into a bigger area of
operations and/or the ability to counter more enemy
forces. In the case of 4ID, the new structure provides
excellent flexibility—especially against a hybrid threat.
4ID’s armored BCT provides tremendous firepower
and mobility—but takes time to arrive in theater. The
division’s infantry BCT provides a quickly deployable
force well suited for urban operations—but without
armored protection. The Stryker BCT—with its light
armored vehicles and numerous dismounted soldiers—
brings elements of both. The inherent fire support and
engineering assets round out the BCTs’ and division
commander’s employment capabilities.
How does the Air Force respond to these changes?
Looking back to actions taken by generals Bradley and
Quesada provides a framework for critical thinking.
During World War II, the Air Corps needed to innovate tactical support aviation quickly. One of the ways
it was able to do this was by relying on existing technology. Unlike other World War II aviation tasks, such as
strategic bombing or fighter escort, CAS did not rely on
a specific technology to achieve success.15 The development of a specific airframe for a specific task requires
80
a lengthy timeline or the commitment of significant
wartime resources. Two examples of this are the four-engine strategic bomber and the high-performance fighter
aircraft designed as escorts. The United States developed
the B-17 and P-51 specifically to facilitate the daylight
bombing of European Axis powers.16
World War II CAS did not face this limiting
requirement. Engineers originally designed the P-47
Thunderbolt as an interceptor. The aircraft never
excelled in this role, but soon became one of the
Army Air Corps’ best and most prolific close support aircraft.17 In fact, after P-47s from Quesada’s
IX Tactical Air Command began providing armed
tank column support, an army division commander
stated, “Many veteran tankers now refer to the P-47
as the best and only effective antitank weapon.”18
The Germans agreed. They began calling the fighters Achtung Jabos (most terrible weapon).19 The
P-47s thrived in their new role. A German soldier
attempting to counter the Normandy invasion complained, “Yah, for eleven days I saw seven Luftwaffe
and seven thousand Thunderbolts.”20
What techniques and equipment does the Air
Force currently possess that will support the new
Army structure? In the 2012 Army Training Strategy,
the document’s authors close by stating, “Army leaders
… must recognize that there are no predetermined
solutions to problems.”21 Obviously, this is true for Air
Force leaders as well. Can the Air Force change the
way it currently employs its systems? Existing training
opportunities should be maximized; tactics, techniques, and procedures from Iraq and Afghanistan
should be studied; and modifications to current
equipment should be considered.
For example, when an Army BCT attends training
at the National Training Center in California, the Air
Force normally supports the exercise by conducting
a Green Flag Exercise. In the past, Green Flags employed a single type of aircraft from a single squadron.
The current Green Flag goal is to provide at least two
airframes, unmanned aircraft, and electronic warfare
assets.22 Although this training is excellent, it does not
completely maximize what the Air Force can provide.
Imagine an exercise where the Air Force participated in each step of the process. Mobility aircraft like
C-130s could airdrop an infantry element at the outset
of the engagement. Air Force fighters, bombers and
November-December 2015 MILITARY REVIEW