Technology vs. Training

Evans, David

Technology vs. Training In an age of technology worship, a trained fighting force is increasingly an afterthought By David Evans In taking aim at the evolution of high-technology...

...He asserts that the bar is too high in terms of “unrealistically stiff requirements...
...Furthermore, staff experts in Congress have not been impressed with the Navy’s briefings...
...Dunnigan is also right on his second point that, despite mixed results, there is a “continuing rush to automate” the battlefield with a panoply of even more complex weapons...
...As the plane gained weight in development, the spec was relaxed to 162,000 pounds for 2,400 miles...
...In the digital promised land, all sensors and weapons are linked in a vast network enabling American soldiers to concentrate their firepower on a hapless foe...
...According to Air Force statistics, the first B -2 squadron achieved an average “mission capable” rate of a mere 15 percent in its first year of service...
...Ironically, the effort required to keep the bombers stealthy keeps more of them grounded than an enemy could ever hope to shoot down...
...Let us bear in mind that combat-relevant weapons testing is the ultimate form of consumer protection for the soldier, sailor, airman, and marine going in harm’s way...
...It sure looks like he did most of his research by computer...
...In his brief discussion of weapons testing, Dunnigan’s argument is nothing short of perverse...
...Although some 17,000 air-to-ground guided weapons and missiles of all types were ‘rained down on the prostrate Iraqis, more than 25,000 laser guided bombs alone were dropped during the Vietnam war...
...Or, they can go by sea in LPD-17 amphibious ships that will not be shock-tested, then put ashore in Advanced Amphibious Assault Vehicles (AAAVs) that Pentagon technology bureaucrats are vigorously lobbying to have exempted from full-up testing against threat weapons...
...Nor does Dunnigan devote sufficient attention to the effort needed to keep some of America’s high-tech weapons in fighting order...
...From the Gulf War, we now know that some of the most sophisticated tactical fighter-bombers ever fielded by the U.S...
...It must rely on other ships to compensate for these grievous deficiencies...
...Where does Dunnigan get this notion that the bar is too high...
...Pity...
...The text suggests an exclusive reliance on secondary sources: published works, not primary source-material or personal interviews...
...military is more dangerous than a less-advanced technology” Yet the exact opposite priorities are reflected in the 1997 budget, where for every dollar added to operations and maintenance, Congress added roughly $6 to buy weapons...
...in Potomac, MD...
...Biddle found that the lopsided d t s su ffered by the Iraqis could not be explained entirely by American technological superiority, but by the fact that the skills of our troops enabled them to exploit the Iraqis’ tactical blunders...
...Dunnigan begins sensibly enough, asserting what many weapons experts in America's defense establishment know but rarely say publicly: "High DAVID EVAN is a retired Marine corps lieutenant colonel...
...Don’t expect that defense industry-friendly publication to say much about realistic weapons testing and its potential threat to the steady flow of funds to contractors who also happen to advertise heavily in the magazine...
...to face-to-face combat with the enemy in untested vehicles...
...maybe that’s why as a “digital writer” he’s so far off the target...
...Training In an age of technology worship, a trained fighting force is increasingly an afterthought By David Evans In taking aim at the evolution of high-technology weaponry, James Dunnigan has produced a book analogous to the uneven performance of a beginning shooter in military marksmanship: He makes a few 10-point hits inside the bull's eye, but a depressing number of shots land out in the boundaries of the target sheet...
...Prime contractor McDonnell Douglas eagerly sought the contract...
...For a big hint, look at the absence of documentation...
...tech does not always equal performance, or even minimal effectiveness...
...One has to wonder if the Pentagon opponents of survivability testing own stock in body bag companies...
...The arsenal ship seems more like a dead-end concept than a revolutionary leap in naval warfare...
...Dunnip’s journalistic priorities mirror the misbegotten budget priorities in Congress...
...Biddle observed, “A less-skilled (U.S...
...A search of the Nexis database didn’t turn up much on testing, other than the occasional puff-piece in Aviation Week & Space Technology magazine...
...Dunnigan asserts that the AWACS (hrborne Warning And Control System) radar planes proved their worth...
...No bibliography...
...He is presently managing editor of the Aviation Group at Philips Business Information Inc...
...Every description, however, is of a ship with no self-defense and no targetdetection capability (unable to protect itself, the arsenal ship could be easily boarded and commandeered by Malaysian pirates...
...Dunnigan cautions that “training is the key,” and one wishes he had spent more time illustrating how Congress remains brain-locked on buying more weapons rather than ensuring that troops are trained in their use...
...If the same approach is taken to a shrinhng defense budget in coming years, the decay in combat skills will erode our troops’ ability to exploit their technological advantage...
...It may be a nightmare for enemy operators to detect and track the Air-Force’s B2 stealth bomber, but the airplane’s radar-scattering and absorbing coatings are a nightmare for Air Force ground crews to maintain...
...Well, what about the incredibly incompetent AWACS crew that sat and watched their scopes as two F-15 fighters shot down two Army Blackhawk helicopters in April 1994, killing all 26 aboard...
...Dunnigan frets about cuts to the training budget, but there aren’t five pages in his 29.5-page book devoted to the critical issues of training, crew selection, unit cohesion, and the overarching need to assign the smartest soldiers as “trigger pullers...
...Not so...
...In a February 1996 study of the Gulf War, Stephen Biddle of the Institute for Defense Analysis rediscovered proof of the old aphorism about fighting skills counting more than technology...
...Those touchy stealth coatings, though, keep ground crews working 30 hours for every hour the B-2 flies...
...Similarly, the C-17 jet transport originally was supposed to be able to carry a 174,000-pound payload an unrefueled distance of 2,700 miles...
...He also presents the Navy’s one-sided argument for a missile-armed “arsenal ship” to fill the critical shortfall in naval gunfire support...
...And yet, had he focused on the testing issue, Dunn i p would have uncovered far more compelling evidence that “digital soldiers” are still a long way off...
...They can fly inadequately tested C-17 jets from the States, then fly to forward airstrips in tactical C-130J turboprop transports that will be exempted from live-fire testing...
...Tough minded, independent weapons testing is the one thing our defense establishment has the time to conduct, now that the pressure is off to rush weapons into the field to match the Evil Empire’s latest tank or fighter...
...Digitize is the buzzword du jour," he claims...
...The bar was lowered, but not the price...
...And even though the plane is supposed to fly cargo into forwardarea airstrips, exposing it to possible enemy antiaircraft fire, only a small slice of the wing leading edge will be subject to live-fire testing...
...Nor does he mention the 100-mile wide “doughnut”-the closein blind spot where the AWACS radar doesn’t see...
...Why isn’t Dunnip’s discussion of weapons testing, and ,the eroding commitment to combat-realistic tests, more informed...
...military failed to destroy a single Iraqi Scud missile launcher, while the unheralded success story was that of the A-10 “Warthog” attack jet, which cost a fraction of its faster, sleeker brethren, yet, according to Iraqi prisoners, was among the most feared of the Allied jets...
...In fact, given the low commitment to survivability testing, it will soon be possible for the troops to be delivered all the way from the U.S...
...At a cost of $500 million, it does not appear that Congress will fund a prototype...
...Among Dunnigan’s wildly off-target shots is his claim that the Gulf War featured “the most extensive use of smart bombs...
...The airplane’s engines, landing gear and radar require only about two hours of maintenance for every flymg hour...
...Maybe the “minimal effectiveness” of many hightech weapons that D u n n i p laments results from the fact that they flunked their tests and were deployed anyway-or weren’t tested at all to gauge performance...
...This reviewer recalls vividly the case of the shoulder-fired AT-4 anti-armor rocket, where the “required” thickness of steel was reduced to what the weapon’s demonstrably-inadequate warhead could penetrate...

Vol. 29 • March 1997 • No. 3


 
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