Statement of
Lieutenant General Brett M.
Dula
Vice Commander,
Air Combat Command
Mr. Chairman and members of the committee, thank you for this
opportunity to discuss the reconnaissance and surveillance mission in
general, and unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) in particular. Air
Combat Command (ACC) is keenly aware of how vitally important the
reconnaissance and surveillance mission is to the warfighter, and we
look forward to discussing both our current capability and future
vision in this area.
Air Combat Command
ACC is responsible for training, organizing, and equipping forces
to conduct combat and other operations in three broad mission areas -
nuclear, air defense, and theater combat. First, ACC provides battle
management and nuclear forces to U.S. Strategic Command. We are
responsible for one leg of our nation's nuclear triad -- our
nuclear-equipped bomber force. Second, ACC, in conjunction with the
Air National Guard, provides air defense forces to protect the
sovereignty of North American airspace. And third, ACC provides
combat ready forces to the combatant Commander in Chiefs (CINCs) for
contingency operations. We are a command of some 103,000 of this
country's finest men and women, both uniformed and civilian. We
operate nearly 1056 active duty aircraft, fly 35,800 hours each
month, and maintain 16 major installations in the United States, plus
Howard AFB in Panama and Lajes Field in the Azores. The strength of
our Air Force rests on the exceptional quality of our airmen. For
many years these dedicated men and women have maintained continuous
deployments to Japan, Korea, the United Kingdom, Iceland and Greece.
Since the Gulf War we have added large commitments in Southwest Asia
and Turkey, as well as recurring deployments to Italy and France in
support of United Nations and NATO operations in the former Yugoslav
Republic.
ACC operates a number of systems to provide our warfighters with a
robust C4ISR (command, control, communications, and computers,
intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance) capability. The
following combat coded aircraft are dedicated to C4ISR: 20 Airborne
Warning and Control Aircraft (AWACS), 2 (total programmed acquisition
is 19 combat coded and 1 test aircraft) Joint Surveillance Targeting
and Attack Radar Systems (J-STARS), 3 E-4s, 7 EC-135s, 16 EC-130s, 14
RC-135s, 27 U-2s, 2 SR-71s and 1 Predator UAV system (10 combat coded
systems programmed for acquisition). We are committed to providing
the regional CINCs with the C4ISR assets necessary to meet mission
requirements, and believe UAVs will continue to play an increasing
role in meeting requirements. The focus of this testimony is on UAVs.
I will discuss our current efforts and future vision for UAVs in two
areas; equipment and organization/training. Further, I will discuss
several issues pertaining to UAV operations. ACC is excited about the
UAV potential and fully committed to ensuring Predator makes the
transition from an advanced concept technology demonstration (ACTD)
to an operational system. We look forward to exploring the
intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) capabilities of
DarkStar and Global Hawk, and into the next century - additional
tasks like communications relay and SEAD (suppression of enemy air
defense). Obviously, bringing any new system on line offers many
challenges, and in this testimony I'll address some of our challenges
with UAVs. But before discussing UAVs in detail I would like to
describe our current airpower mission and examine our vision of the
current and future reconnaissance and surveillance requirements of
the warfighter.
Military Requirements in Surveillance and
Reconnaissance
Since the fall of the Berlin Wall, our Air Force has changed
dramatically. We reduced our force structure by approximately forty
percent, and our overseas presence substantially. We have embraced an
expeditionary strategy that requires us to be able to rapidly and
decisively project power from the U.S. in order to safeguard our
national interests. Today, due to our steady modernization efforts,
we are better able to project military power and are more capable
than we were at the time of Desert Storm. During Desert Storm, for
example, nine percent of our weapons were precision guided munitions
(PGMs). During Deliberate Force in September of 1995, seventy-two
percent of the U.S. weapons employed were PGMs.
While advances in precision have made our aircraft more effective,
it has also increased the need for accurate and timely information.
Thus, during this same period, information dominance has emerged as
an essential element of our warfighting strategy. In Joint
Vision 2010, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
states information dominance is the critical enabler for the
operational concepts of dominant maneuver, precision engagement,
focused logistics and full-dimensional protection. Clearly,
information dominance has become critical to the warfighter, but I
would be remiss if I failed to emphasize that the operational
concepts in Joint Vision 2010 depend on our ability to
establish air and space dominance. Air and space superiority is a
fundamental requirement for all operational concepts in Joint
Vision 2010 and is a prerequisite to achieving full
spectrum dominance. It diminishes the risks to all friendly military
forces and shapes the battlefield so we can establish dominant
maneuver. While control of the air is a component of Joint Vision
2010, it must be highlighted as the key pre-condition for success
on any future battlefield. We have spent billions in developing
information systems that are the envy of the world, and we have
developed an impressive long range precision capability; however,
these systems will be ineffective without control of the "high
ground." We need to create the environment where high value
reconnaissance assets such as AWACs and J-STARS can operate
unhindered, and our attack aircraft can operate freely above the
battlespace. Furthermore, air dominance will leverage all of our
joint forces and allow for a more effective joint campaign. Thus, the
warfighter's first requirement is ensuring he has the tools necessary
to establish air dominance.
With that requirement stated, it is undeniable that information
superiority confers great advantage on the side that possesses the
capability to collect, process, analyze, and disseminate information,
while denying an adversary the ability to do the same. Indeed, the
high operations tempo experienced by our C4ISR airmen is in part
driven by an increased demand for information superiority. Regardless
of the type of conflict, whether conventional war or operations other
than war, the warfighter needs accurate information in order to
employ our precision weapons. For example, the battle of Al-Khafji
took place from 29-31 January 1991. Iraqi armored units launched
several attacks into Saudi Arabia. J-STARS, although not yet
operational, had been rushed into the theater with contractors on
board just prior to the war. It detected the armored movement, and
directed aircraft to the battle. The result was a major victory for
the coalition. J-STARS also played a role in enforcing the Dayton
peace accords. For instance, it was J-STARS all weather, day and
night capability that detected a Bosnian Serb armored column
attempting to cross a "zone of separation" in clear violation of the
Dayton peace accords, allowing NATO to intercept, stop, and document
the violation. These systems allowed Admiral Smith, the NATO
Commander, to tell the Bosnian Serbs that "there isn't anything you
can do without our knowing." During Deliberate Force in Bosnia,
Predator provided timely battle damage assessment (BDA) of military
targets, and after Dayton, helped to enforce the peace accords by
monitoring checkpoints and mass grave sites. It is clear that across
the spectrum of conflict, both manned and unmanned reconnaissance and
surveillance aircraft will be in great demand and contribute mightily
to the attainment of our military and political objectives. The ISR
requirements UAVs will meet include: indications and warning,
identification of orders of battle, threat assessments, monitoring of
enemy command, control, communication, and intelligence activity,
identification of enemy centers of gravity, identification of
targets, and BDA. This information must be timely, responsive, and of
sufficient quality to support commanders. Further, the systems must
be interoperable and flexible in order to respond to rapidly changing
combat conditions. While no one type of reconnaissance asset can
accomplish all required tasking, UAVs will undoubtedly play a role in
our future force structure. I predict they will increase in both
capability and value as we develop UAV technology and doctrine. The
Air Force is only at the early stages of our UAV development. We must
"walk before we run" and need to ensure the systems we procure in
this fiscally constrained environment are both combat effective and
cost effective. We want to provide the best environment possible to
develop the UAV programs, while maintaining assured capability for
current needs. We fully intend to continue to develop and improve our
information gathering, processing and distribution systems to ensure
we continue to provide a combat advantage to the Joint
Warfighter.
Equipping the Force to Meet Requirements
UAVs will act in concert with other space, airborne, maritime, and
ground systems. Once UAV capability and cost effectiveness are
proven, UAVs may begin to replace manned systems and augment space
systems. In the near term, we see UAVs serving in the ISR role. As
the technology, organization and doctrine evolves, we see UAVs taking
on other tasks, such as a communications relay and SEAD. Long term,
we intend to exploit UAVs for additional missions including precision
engagement.
Predator
The Air Force crossed an historic threshold in September of 1996
when we assumed operational control of the Predator UAV. Predator,
also known as the medium altitude endurance (MAE) or Tier II UAV
completed its ACTD program in June 1996. A block approach is
currently planned for the program's continuing upgrades. The system
provides long-range, long-dwell, near-real-time imagery intelligence
to satisfy reconnaissance, surveillance and target acquisition
mission requirements. The air vehicle carries both electro-optical
(EO), infrared (IR), and synthetic aperture radar (SAR) sensors
which, with Ku-band as well as UHF-band satellite communication links
enable the system to acquire and pass imagery to ground stations for
adverse weather, beyond-line-of-sight use by commanders. A Predator
system includes four air vehicles, a ground control station, a Trojan
Spirit II (satellite communications equipment), and 55 personnel. The
air vehicle typically operates within a 200 NM radius, at an altitude
of 15,000 feet, has an endurance in excess of 20 hours, and cruises
at 65-70 Kts. This system moved from an ACTD directly into
operations. Moving directly from an ACTD without the benefit of a
short engineering, manufacturing , and development (EMD) phase has
led to challenges in the areas of support, maintenance, reliability,
training, and personnel. It is ACC's opinion that the ACTD process
should include a limited EMD phase to ensure a smooth transition from
acquisition to operations. Despite growing pains, Predator has been a
workhorse over Bosnia and has proved its worth to the warfighter.
High Altitude Endurance Program
The High Altitude Endurance (HAE) UAV program is currently an ACTD
aimed at developing and demonstrating long dwell, high altitude
reconnaissance. The HAE UAV has been designated an ACTD by the Deputy
Under Secretary of Defense for Advanced Technology (DUSD/AT). The
current HAE development configuration consists of a common ground
segment and two complementary air vehicles: the Low Observable (LO)
HAE named "DarkStar," and a conventional design HAE named "Global
Hawk." CINC U.S. Atlantic Command (USACOM) has been designated the
sponsoring CINC and will direct ACTD user involvement.
Throughout the ACTD, DUSD (AT) will provide oversight and guidance
for the program. DARPA is responsible for managing the program
throughout the development phase. Management will transition to Air
Force Aeronautical Systems Center (ASC), Wright Patterson AFB, for
the demonstration phase. At the conclusion of the demonstration
phase, USACOM will coordinate system evaluation and provide an
assessment of military utility. This assessment will be based on
users' inputs and objective analysis of performance during the
operational demonstrations and exercises. ACC is working in close
partnership with USACOM, AFMC/ASC, DARPA, and DARO for the
development and demonstration of the HAE UAV. At the conclusion of
the ACTD, ACC takes responsibility for the residual ACTD assets and
applicable post-ACTD HAE development.
The HAE system includes two types of performance-optimized air
vehicles, each capable of being controlled by a common ground
segment. Global Hawk is optimized for supporting low-to-moderate
threat, long endurance surveillance missions in which range,
endurance, and time on station are paramount. DarkStar, a low
observable air vehicle, is optimized for moderate endurance, and
high-threat reconnaissance missions in which assured coverage is more
important than range and endurance.
Both air vehicles are capable of fully autonomous operations once
programmed by the common ground segment, including fully automatic
taxi, take-off, flight, and recovery. Aircraft system, sensor, and
navigational status is provided continuously to the ground operators
through health and status downlink for mission monitoring.
Additionally, the navigation and sensor plans for both air vehicles
can be dynamically updated in flight through redundant data links.
The program is currently in the development phase of the ACTD, where
the objective is to complete the design and fabrication of the
initial test vehicles with payloads and supporting ground segments,
and successfully complete initial flight and performance testing. The
initial Global Hawk rollout ceremony occurred 20 February 1997, with
the first flight scheduled for October 1997. The DarkStar program is
back in full swing following the conclusion of the safety
investigation for the crash of air vehicle one on its second flight,
with the resumption of flight activities scheduled for the late fall
1997 timeframe. The final phase of the ACTD is scheduled for October
1998 to September 2000 and is designed to assess the operational
effectiveness and military utility of the system. The anticipated
residual ACTD capability includes up to eight Global Hawk air
vehicles, five DarkStar air vehicles, and three common ground
segments.
UAV Organization and Training
ACC has taken a proactive approach in organizing our UAV assets
into our current force structure. ACC "stood up" the 11th
Reconnaissance Squadron at Indian Springs Auxiliary Field in Nevada
in July of 1995. This squadron will lead the way in developing the
operational concepts and tactics to ensure the UAV meets the needs of
the warfighter. Currently, we are planning to procure a total of
twelve Predator systems. Of these twelve systems, we intend to
maintain ten systems as combat coded, which would assign five systems
to each Major Regional Conflict (MRC). The remaining two systems
would support training, development testing and operational test and
evaluation.
The 11th Reconnaissance Squadron is in the process of developing
the operations tactics, techniques and procedures to operate the
Predator as a combat aircraft. One disadvantage of the ACTD process
is that the focus is on technical capability; however, the logistical
aspects of the program are immature when the program is released to
operators, thus the need for an EMD phase. An additional challenge
facing Predator is poor weather operations. Icing is a major problem
with the air vehicle. Predator flies at altitudes where icing is
prevalent, and although the sensors possess an all weather
capability, we are exploring improvements to make the air vehicle
more all weather capable. We continue to develop the Predator for
operating in air space shared with manned aircraft. For example, we
are incorporating IFF capability, and pursuing UHF and VHF radio
capability to enable the Predator operator to talk to air traffic
controllers.
One step taken to ensure these operational challenges are overcome
is the establishment of the UAV Battle Lab. The purpose of the Air
Force UAV Battle Lab is to establish a capability to evaluate
technical and operational merit of innovative UAV technology and
concepts of operations and their contribution to dominance in air and
space. The UAV Battle Lab, located at Eglin Air Force Base, will be
the Air Force focal point to explore initiatives that can rapidly
lead to innovation: introduction of new resources and architecture;
improvements to doctrine, tactics and training; and more effective
execution of battle management and combat operations. Its projects
will arise from several sources both internal to the lab and
externally such as unsolicited contractor proposals and surveys of
the R&D community. Once a project is determined to be technically
feasible and of reasonable cost, it can be explored and evaluated for
its contribution to the warfighter, effectiveness, and cost in light
of other systems that may provide duplicative capability. Currently,
the lab has seven personnel assigned and in place. The Battle Lab
stood up this month with initial operational capability planned by
July 97 and full manning by January 98.
UAV ISSUES
ACTD
Predator served as the first UAV ACTD, and as such we have learned
many lessons on bringing a system to fruition from an advanced
concept. ACTD program advantages include the opportunity to provide
advanced technology to the warfighter in a shorter timeframe than a
traditional acquisition process. Additionally, ACTDs are designed to
provide the user with a residual capability. While it is unlikely the
desired production version of a UAV would be identical to the ACTD,
its design will incorporate the lessons learned from the ACTD. The
Predator ACTD identified some disadvantages of the ACTD process. The
transition from an ACTD to an operational program is too abrupt with
many important aspects of the program left to the service to perform.
Not the least of these is the need to reprogram previously committed
funds from other requirements to support continued production. Our
support for UAVs is demonstrated by the reprogramming of $350M over
the FYDP from a myriad of programs to support Predator operations and
maintenance, personnel, and military construction from an already
severely constrained budget. Rather than concentrating on combat
operations, they are forced to develop the support, logistical tail,
and training programs in a short amount of time. For example,
Predator was pressed into service before the support, logistics, and
training programs were developed. A short EMD phase is vital as a
bridge between ACTD and combat operations. It would serve to improve
the transition and would result in an improved product for the
warfighter.
Supporting the warfighter
Predator operations in Bosnia must be judged a success. While
weather limitations and aircraft mishaps point to room for
improvement, the outstanding imagery products provided by Predator,
and the fact that a pilot's life was not at risk while obtaining
intelligence, all point to the continued use of Predator as a combat
asset. With the planned force structure consisting of five combat
systems per MRC, the 11th Reconnaissance Squadron will be capable of
providing five air vehicles airborne at any one time during 24 hour
operations. Clearly, Predator's impressive capability will cause
demand to quickly exceed supply. The 11th Reconnaissance Squadron's
primary effort must be to support the theater commander, and then
component commanders. Predator's capability will always be employed
in accordance with the CINC directed apportionment and air component
daily allocation decision as reflected in the air tasking order.
Dynamic Retasking
The characteristics of airpower; flexibility, precision, speed and
range, allow airmen to place combat power over any part of the
battlespace. This ubiquity of airpower is its greatest asset, and
ideally, an airman can alter his target at any time and mass combat
power over the decisive point. While Predator shares some of these
traits, it only travels at 65 Kts, which makes dynamic retasking
problematic. While the JFACC (Joint Air Forces Component Commander)
will certainly attempt to service the highest priority targets, in
accordance with the theater collection management plan, and retask
the Predator in flight, it is simply too slow to serve solely in that
role. The process of retasking can be made more efficient, but there
is no improvement for the lack of speed possessed by Predator.
Future Predator Enhancements
Enhancements to improve Predator UAV combat capability include
improved satellite communication, improved sensors, and improved
geolocation capability. This integrates Predator with our future
vision of "sensor to shooter" capability, and real time intelligence
in the cockpit. It is critical that information provided be as
precise as the weapons the attack aircraft employs. Finally, UAVs
that possess all weather sensors, and support all weather aircraft,
must have an all weather capability. This is a fundamental
requirement as we have developed the capability of denying the enemy
the sanctuary of night and inclement weather.
Conclusion
The nature of warfare is continually evolving. The increasing use
of long range precision fire capability has led to a need for greater
dispersal on the modern battlefield. Both of these developments
dictate an increased need for information, and UAVs have the
potential to play an increasing role in providing that capability.
The operational capabilities embodied in the Predator system are a
significant first step in providing the warfighter with the
continuous real-time reconnaissance, surveillance and target
acquisition capability he will need on future battlefields. ACC is
committed to leading the way through our ACC UAV Divisions,
operational reconnaissance units, and the UAV Battle Lab. In the near
term, we are focusing on providing the warfighter with
reconnaissance, surveillance and targeting acquisition capability. In
parallel, we will explore exploiting UAVs as communications relays
and for SEAD, and we look forward to the long term goal of exploiting
UAVs for additional missions. In closing, military weapons are much
more than the technological capability of the system. Its military
potential is determined by the synergistic effect of its technology,
organization and doctrine. In conjunction with Joint Vision
2010, we are continuing to study how UAVs can support joint
warfighting. As UAVs prove their military utility and affordability,
they will increasingly become an integral part of our nation's force.
Thank you Mr. Chairman for the opportunity to present this statement.
I'll be happy to answer your questions
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