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USAF Counterinsurgency Issues and Trends

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06.28.2008 at 12:24pm

With a hat tip to Daniel Troy of the Consortium for Complex OperationsUnited Press International recently ran a three part series titled Emerging Threats: USAF Counterinsurgency authored by Shaun Watterman. From the introduction in Part 1:

The veteran military officials picked by Defense Secretary Robert Gates to take over the Air Force face a tough job redefining the service’s role in what many see as the key kind of combat the U.S. military will face in the immediate future: counterinsurgency.

The problem, say many who have studied the topic, is that the things the U.S. Air Force has made its priority capabilities — establishing air supremacy over the enemy and perfecting the timely and pinpoint delivery of high explosives — tend to be less useful in irregular or asymmetric conflicts like those in which the U.S. military is currently engaged in Iraq and Afghanistan.

In particular, critics have singled out an over-reliance on air strikes in Afghanistan as a significant barrier to the success of a “hearts and minds” strategy on the ground, given the inevitability of “collateral damage” — the accidental killing of civilians.

“From an Air Force perspective, we were told to plan for a different kind of war,” Lt. Col. Michael Pietrucha told United Press International, commenting on the general direction of post-Cold War strategic thinking, which emphasized the potential for conventional conflicts with strategic competitors or regional powers like China or Iran.

Pietrucha, a specialist in irregular combat who until recently worked at the Air Force Warfare Center, stressed he did not speak for the service.

He added it was appropriate the Air Force had different priorities, because of its strategic roles in assuring “force projection” — the ability of the U.S. military to strike anywhere in the world — and in operating the nation’s nuclear strike capabilities.

“We have a set of global responsibilities that require us to keep a slightly different focus,” he said, adding that while counterinsurgency might be the most common kind of conflict the military would face in the immediate future, “The most common conflicts are not necessarily the most dangerous.”

Other observers agree that, if the Air Force has been slow to meet the counterinsurgency challenge, they have other priorities, too.

“They have always put their emphasis on air supremacy,” said a senior congressional staffer, “on the basis that unless you have that, your troops on the ground are at risk.”

“The question,” he added, “is whether they have overemphasized it.”

Part 1

Part 2

Part 3

Analysis: USAF’s Counterinsurgency Plan

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