Archie To SAM
Archie To SAM
Archie To SAM
KENNETH P. WERRELL
August 2005
Air University Library Cataloging Data
Werrell, Kenneth P.
Archie to SAM : a short operational history of ground-based air defense / Kenneth
P. Werrell.—2nd ed.
—p. ; cm.
Rev. ed. of: Archie, flak, AAA, and SAM : a short operational history of ground-
based air defense, 1988.
With a new preface.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 1-58566-136-8
1. Air defenses—History. 2. Anti-aircraft guns—History. 3. Anti-aircraft missiles—
History. I. Title.
358.4/145—dc22
Disclaimer
Opinions, conclusions, and recommendations expressed or implied within are solely those of
the author and do not necessarily represent the views of Air University, the United States Air
Force, the Department of Defense, or any other US government agency. Cleared for public re-
lease: distribution unlimited.
ii
In memory
of
Michael Lewis Hyde
Born 14 May 1938
Graduated USAF Academy 8 June 1960
Killed in action 8 December 1966
DISCLAIMER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ii
DEDICATION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . iii
FOREWORD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xiii
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xxi
v
CONTENTS
Chapter Page
vi
CONTENTS
Chapter Page
INDEX . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 277
Illustrations
Figure
3 German 88 mm gun . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
6 Rocket firings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
vii
CONTENTS
Figure Page
10 Pile mattress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
12 Barrage balloons . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
13 US 90 mm M-1 gun . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
15 German 40 mm Bofors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
16 German 88 mm gun . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
19 B-24 at Ploesti . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
21 Taifun . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
22 Enzian . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
23 Rheintochter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
24 Schmetterling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
25 Wasserfall . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
26 Falling B-24 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
27 Damaged B-17 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
28 Chaff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
29 German 20 mm gun . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
viii
CONTENTS
Figure Page
30 George Preddy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
31 USN 20 mm gun . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
32 USN 40 mm gun . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
34 Falling B-29 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56
35 Duster . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70
36 Skysweeper . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71
37 Vulcan Phalanx . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72
38 Vulcan M163 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73
39 F-51 Mustang . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77
40 Army SAMs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82
41 Nike Ajax . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84
42 Nike Hercules . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86
43 Bomarc . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 89
44 Thunderbird . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90
45 Seaslug . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 91
46 Hawk launch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 93
48 Mauler . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95
49 Chaparral . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97
ix
CONTENTS
Figure Page
50 Redeye launch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 99
52 Avenger . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103
59 EB-66 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123
64 Talos . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 136
65 Terrier . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 137
66 RF-4C . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 139
67 SA-6 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 150
68 ZSU-23 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 151
69 SA-9 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 157
x
CONTENTS
Figure Page
70 Blowpipe . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 161
74 Rapier . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 166
76 Seacat . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 168
82 Sprint . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 188
83 Griffon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 189
84 Galosh 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 190
xi
CONTENTS
Figure Page
90 Scud . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 206
xii
Foreword
Dr. Kenneth Werrell’s history of ground-based air defense
performs an important service both to scholarship and,
more importantly, to the defense of our nation’s freedom. It
is perhaps human nature that we tend over time to lose sight
of the lessons of the past, especially when they do not con-
form to certain cherished preconceptions of ours. That such
myopia can be dangerous, if not downright disastrous, Dr.
Werrell’s study richly illustrates. Without sentimentalism,
he chronicles a pattern of lessons learned and too quickly
forgotten as the marvel of air power was reminded again
and again of its limitations and vulnerability. In Korea and
in Vietnam, the American people were stripped of their illu-
sions of national and technical omnipotence. The unhappy
outcome of those two conflicts was doubly lamentable be-
cause the lessons of World War II were—or should have
been—fresh in our minds. In that world war, as Dr. Werrell
shows, relatively cheap ground-based air defense did
make a difference: at Ploesti, at Antwerp, and at the Rhine
bridges.
And it will make a difference tomorrow. The greatest
value of Dr. Werrell’s work is that it provides guideposts and
guidance for us as professional soldiers and aviators
charged with upholding American security. We have taken
history’s lessons to heart as we plan and program our
ground-based air defenses into the next decade and be-
yond. In both the forward and the rear areas, we have em-
phasized the time-honored principles of mass, mix, and mo-
bility. No one weapon, not even today’s modern aircraft, can
do the job alone. The truism applies with particular force to
antiaircraft defense. And at least one other truism emerges
from Dr. Werrell’s and our own studies: effective air defense
requires a joint and combined effort. Our planning has been
predicated on the assumption that counterair will play a
central role in safeguarding our ground forces from air at-
tack. On the ground, the air defense artillery will count on
the cooperation and assistance of our colleagues in the in-
xiii
FOREWORD
DONALD R. INFANTE
Major General, US Army
Chief of Air Defense Artillery
xiv
About the Author
xv
THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK
Preface to the Second Edition
Archie to SAM is a revised and updated edition of Archie,
Flak, AAA, and SAM. For many years, the Air University Press,
most especially Tom Lobenstein, has suggested I revise this
work. I finally got the opportunity when I served three years in
the Airpower Research Institute (ARI) where Col Al Howey and
Dr. Jim Titus helped clear the way. My “boss,” Dr. Dan
Mortensen, and two other colleagues, Dr. Lee Dowdy and Tom
Searle, helped in many more ways than they realized. My
coworkers in ARI, especially such computer people as Guy
Frankland and La Don Herring, made things much easier. As
with the original study, the extremely capable staff at the Air
University Library (particularly Steve Chun, Diana Simpson,
and Edith Williams) and the Historical Research Agency (with
special thanks to Joe Caver and Archie DiFante) were ex-
tremely helpful. Bud Bennett at Radford University was very
important to this work. I also want to thank the talented staff
at Air University Press who made this project possible. Espe-
cially important were Dr. Richard Bailey, who demonstrated
great competence and patience, and Carolyn J. McCormack,
who saved me from numerous embarrassing mistakes. In addi-
tion, as always my faithful wife Jeanne helped both directly
with typing and editing—and understanding.
xvii
PREFACE
KENNETH P. WERRELL
xviii
Preface to the First Edition
Archie, Flak, AAA, and SAM is an operational history of
ground-based air defense systems from the beginning of air
warfare up through 1988. The title refers to the several names
Airmen use, and have used, to describe ground fire: Archie in
World War I (from the British), flak in World War II and Korea
(from the Germans), AAA throughout, but especially in Viet-
nam (from the American abbreviation for antiaircraft artillery),
and most recently SAM (from the US abbreviation for surface-
to-air missiles). This study concentrates on how these
weapons developed and how they affected both US and non-
US air operations.
The subject of ground-based air defense systems is neg-
lected for a number of reasons. First, research is difficult be-
cause source material is fragmented. Even more significant is
the fact that the topic does not have “sex appeal.” Readers are
more interested in the aircraft than the weapons that bring
them down. Whereas the airplane appears as a dynamic, ad-
vanced, exciting, and offensive weapon, ground-based air de-
fense systems are seen in the opposite light. Further, US ex-
perience has been almost exclusively with the offensive use of
aircraft, not with the defensive use of flak and SAMs; Ameri-
cans have seldom fought without air superiority. Too, there is
the World War II example that many, if not most, people hold
as the archetypical war—during which aircraft defeated all
comers on all fronts. Another factor is that the air defense com-
munity has been overwhelmed by the air offense community. Not
that the former is any less able or less professional than the
latter, only that the air offense community has the attention and
support of both industry and Congress. Little wonder then that
the subject of flak and SAMs has been neglected.
Despite this neglect and the aforementioned reasons, ground-
based air defense systems are important. They have been in-
volved, have impacted on most air conflicts, and have achieved
notable successes. These weapons have downed and damaged
large numbers of aircraft and consequently have forced aviators
to make changes and pay higher costs for operations. Clearly,
ground-based air defenses have been ever present and have
xix
PREFACE
xx
Acknowledgments
Many individuals and organizations helped make this book
possible. First, I wish to thank those at my home institution,
Radford University, who encouraged and made possible my
work with the Air University: the Board of Visitors; Dr. Donald
Dedmon, president; Dr. David Moore, vice president for Aca-
demic Affairs; Dr. W. D. Stump, dean of the School of Arts and
Sciences; and Dr. W. K. Roberts, chairman of the Department
of History. Lt Gen Charles Cleveland, former commander of
the Air University; Maj Gen David Gray, USAF, retired; and
Maj Gen Paul Hodges, former commandant of the Air War Col-
lege, were unsparing in their support throughout this project.
Col Thomas Fabyanic, USAF, retired, the founder and first
director of the ARI, and Col Kenneth Alnwick, USAF, retired,
his successor, deserve much of the credit for helping conceive
the concept, encourage the project, and remove many of the
barriers encountered. Also, special thanks to Col Neil Jones,
USAF, retired; Brig Gen John C. Fryer Jr.; and Col Sidney J.
Wise, who provided vital publication assistance. Others at the
Air University helped in many important ways, especially Col
Dennis Drew, Preston Bryant, Dianne Parrish, John Westcott,
and Dorothy McCluskie. Many individuals helped in document
processing: Lula Barnes, Sue Carr, Carolyn Ward, Marcia
Williams, and Cynthia Hall. For logistical support I am thank-
ful to Capt Harbert Jones, Betty Brown, and Marilyn Tyus.
The US Air Force History Program helped in a number of ways.
Individuals include Dr. Richard Morse, Lynn Gamma, Judy
Endicott, Pressley Bickerstaff, and Margaret Claiborn of the
US Air Force Historical Research Center. The Air University
Library played a key role in making this book possible, with
special thanks due Tomma Pastorett, Ruth Griffin, and Kathleen
Golson. The US Army also lent considerable support to this
project. Especially helpful were several agencies at Fort Bliss:
Air Defense School, Air Defense Museum, and Directorate of
Combat Development. Special thanks are due Jesse Stiller, the
Air Defense Artillery Command Historian. Overseas, Air Com-
modore H. A. Probert, Humphrey Wynn, and J. P. McDonald,
at the Air Historical Branch, London; the staff at the Royal
xxi
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
xxii
Chapter 1
1
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
2
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
3
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
Figure 2. Standard US heavy AAA gun during the interwar years. The
standard US heavy AAA piece during the interwar years was this three-
inch gun. Members of the 62d Coast Artillery engage in a practice ex-
ercise in August 1941. (Reprinted from USAF.)
velocity of 2,800 to 3,000 feet per second (fps) and a rate of fire
of 30 shots per minute (spm). The Germans chose the 88 mm
gun (fig. 3), the British built a prototype 3.7-inch (94 mm)
gun in 1936, and the Americans began to replace their three-
inch gun with a 90 mm gun in 1940. All major powers experi-
mented with new detection devices, but it was the British who
forged a lead in the field of radar.7 Radar was a giant advan-
tage for the defender, at first giving early warning, later con-
trol of aircraft interception (initially with ground and then air-
borne radar), and finally aiming antiaircraft guns.
4
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
5
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
6
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
7
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
8
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
9
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
10
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
11
Figure 7. British 40 mm light antiaircraft gun and crew. Swedish Bofors 40
mm guns saw extensive action throughout the war serving both sides.
(Reprinted from Imperial War Museum.)
Figure 8. Diving V-1 bomb prior to impact in London. Although the de-
fenders destroyed almost 4,000 buzz bombs, about 2,400 bombs hit
London and killed over 6,100 civilians. (Adapted from USAF.)
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
13
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
their small size, about half that of the FW 190. This problem
was exacerbated by the low-altitude approach averaging be-
tween 2,100 and 2,500 feet. Not only was the V-1 tough to
spot and intercept, it was also tough to down. One source es-
timated that the missile was eight times as difficult to down as
a manned aircraft, even though it flew straight and level. Al-
though that estimate was probably an exaggeration, the V-1
was not an easy target to destroy.23
The Allies steadily increased their fighter units to 15 day and
eight night fighter squadrons (two were part-time). Rules of en-
gagement gave the fighters full rein in good weather and AAA
gunners complete freedom in bad weather. During in-between
14
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
15
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
Figure 10: Pile mattress. The British emplaced their heavy (3.7 inch)
guns on a solid base that became known as a “Pile mattress.” (Reprinted
from Imperial War Museum.)
16
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
17
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
18
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
19
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
20
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
21
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
22
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
402 Allied aircraft on the ground and 65 in the air, but the Al-
lies stated their losses as 236 destroyed and badly damaged
on the ground and 23 in air-to-air combat. On their part, the
Germans put their losses at 304 aircraft destroyed and 232 pi-
lots lost. Anglo-American pilots claimed 102 aerial victories,
and Allied gunners claimed 185 to 394 (the former figure, con-
firmed kills; the latter, confirmed kills plus those awaiting con-
firmation). The Allies recovered 137 German aircraft wrecks in
their area of control and, from their remains, credited the
fighters with 57 kills and flak with 80.47
A clearer view of the confused battle is perhaps possible by
focusing on the attack of one airfield. The German fighter unit
JG 11 launched about 65 fighters against the Anglo-American
airfield (Y-29) at Asch, Belgium, where four RAF Spitfire
squadrons and two US fighter groups were stationed. When
23
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
German Flak
Of all combatants in World War II, the Germans had the most
experience with antiaircraft defense. They had come a long way
from the Versailles peace treaty that essentially banned German
antiaircraft weapons. Although the Germans evaded the provi-
sions of the treaty to a degree, that agreement clearly inhibited
them from building any real military force until Hitler came to
power in 1933. In April 1934, the Germans assigned the anti-
aircraft arm to the Luftwaffe. At first, they considered AAA as
24
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
Figure 14. US quad .50 gun. The American quad .50 was an effective
weapon against both air and ground targets. (Adapted from http://www.
strand.com/quad50/halftrk.jpg.)
25
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
26
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
27
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
28
Figure 17. German 128 mm AAA gun. The 128 mm gun was the most
powerful antiaircraft gun the Germans put into service during the war.
By the end of 1944, they had deployed about 2,000. (Reprinted from
Imperial War Museum.)
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
30
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
Figure 19. B-24 at Ploesti. The AAF lost 54 B-24s at the 1 August 1943
raid on the oil refineries at Ploesti. This battle was but one World War II
example of high aircraft losses on low-level missions. (Adapted from
USAF.)
31
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
Figure 20. Ploesti smoke screen. The Germans used various defensive
measures, including smoke screens, to defend the critical Ploesti re-
fineries. The Romana American oil refinery is at the center right of this
17 August 1944 photo. The white dots are bomb craters. (Reprinted from
USAF.)
32
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
and 280 light guns by the time of the final attack on 19 August.
The heavy guns consisted of 128 mm guns (10 percent), 105
mm mobile guns (15 percent), 88 mm mobile guns (60 percent),
and Romanian 75 mm guns. They also captured Soviet 76.5 mm
guns (15 percent). Flak took an increasing toll on American
bombers, doubling from 1.2 percent of sorties in April to 2.4
percent in August, as losses to enemy aircraft declined from 2
percent of sorties to zero.58
The Germans fiercely defended other oil facilities as well. At
Politz, they deployed 600 heavy AAA weapons, and at Leuna,
700. At the latter, about 40 percent of the heavy weapons were
larger than 88 mm guns. Between 12 May 1944 and 4 April
1945, the Allied airmen waged a bombing campaign against
Leuna, Germany’s second largest synthetic oil and chemical
plant. It clearly illustrated the power of massive antiaircraft
protection during World War II. The AAF sent 5,236 bomber
sorties, and the RAF sent 1,394 sorties that dropped 18,092
tons of bombs on the target. However, primarily because of
weather and enemy opposition, only 10 percent of these bombs
fell on the plant complex. Bombs on-target declined from 35
percent in May 1944 to 5 percent in July and finally to 1.5
percent in September. On three missions in October, the Ger-
mans reported that no bombs fell on the plant. The Americans
lost 119 bombers (2.3 percent of sorties), while the British lost
eight (.57 percent), mostly to German flak.59
German cities were also heavily defended by flak. Hamburg’s
defenses included 400 heavy guns, while almost 300 defended
Munich, and 327 protected Vienna. The Allies hit the Austrian
capital on 47 raids and lost 361 heavy bombers, 229 (63 per-
cent) to flak. On 7 February 1945, the Fifteenth Air Force lost
25 of the 689 aircraft sent against Vienna (19 to flak). The Fif-
teenth Air Force hit the city again the next day; but this time,
it lost none of its 470 bombers. The losses on the first raid
were due to the clear weather that helped the gunners and to
the Americans’ lack of airborne coordination and electronic
countermeasures (ECM). The AAF attributed success on the
following day to poorer weather (7/10 to 10/10 overcast) and
better American coordination and ECM.60
33
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
34
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
This was the initial route the Germans took that yielded the
spectacularly performing, yet tactically lame, Me 163. In any
case, in September Hitler halted all long-range development
projects. The Germans later lifted the stop order on the pro-
gram, and, in April 1942, drew up the specifications for a va-
riety of flak rockets, both guided and unguided. The Germans
made rockets the “centerpiece” of their development program.
The Luftwaffe’s leader, Hermann Goering, had high expecta-
tions. In September 1942, he authorized work on AAA rockets.
In response, von Braun forwarded a study in November 1942
that mentioned three types of guided flak rockets: a 28-foot,
single-stage solid-fuel missile; a 33-foot, two-stage solid-fuel
missile; and a 20-foot, single-stage liquid-fuel missile. Pushed
by the German antiaircraft chief, Gen Walter von Axthelm, flak
rockets became the core of the 1942 German antiaircraft de-
velopment program.64
Subsequently, the Germans developed a number of guided
flak missiles and two small, unguided ground-launched rock-
ets, the Foehn and Taifun. The Foehn was designed to combat
low-flying aircraft. It measured less than three inches in di-
ameter and about two feet in length and weighed 3.3 pounds.
First fired in 1943, the rocket had a 3,600-foot range and was
intended to be fired in ripples from a 35-barrel launcher. The
Germans put three batteries into service and credited them
with downing three Allied aircraft. The rocket’s primary impact
was, however, psychological.65
The other unguided flak rocket, the Taifun, measured less
than four inches in diameter and 76 inches in length, weighed
65 pounds, and carried a 1.4-pound warhead (fig. 21). The
Germans fired the liquid-fuel rockets in ripples from either a
30-barrel launcher or a 50-barrel launcher mounted on an 88
mm gun carriage. The Taifun had an altitude capability of
46,000 to 52,000 feet.66
In addition, the Germans developed four guided rockets:
Enzian, Rheintochter, Schmetterling, and Wasserfall. The Enzian
could have passed for an aircraft, albeit a small, radio-controlled
one lacking a horizontal tail (fig. 22). Almost 12 feet in length,
the missile’s sweptback wing spanned 13.5 feet. It weighed 4,350
pounds and was assisted in its launch from an 88 mm gun
35
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
36
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
Figure 22. Enzian. The Germans also worked on four guided antiaircraft
missile projects. This 4,400-pound Enzian was one of the less suc-
cessful of these. (Reprinted from Imperial War Museum.)
37
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
38
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
39
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
40
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
41
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
Figure 26. Falling B-24. During World War II, ground fire downed more
American aircraft than did enemy fighters. In the European theater of
operations, AAA downed 5,400 American aircraft, while enemy aircraft
destroyed 4,300. (Reprinted from USAF.)
Allied Countermeasures
Allied Airmen used a number of measures to reduce the ef-
fectiveness of enemy flak. Planners picked routes around known
flak positions, used higher bombing altitudes, employed satu-
ration tactics, and devised tighter formations.75 Two other
measures deserve detailed treatment.
42
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
Figure 27. Damaged B-17. This B-17 survived a flak hit over Cologne,
Germany. During World War II, the Eighth Air Force suffered 20 percent
damage per sortie and wrote off 1,600 bombers as “damaged beyond
economic repair.” (Reprinted from USAF.)
43
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
Figure 28. Chaff. Chaff was an effective counter used against radar be-
ginning in World War II. (Adapted from US Army Air Defense Museum.)
44
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
45
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
Fratricide
One problem that antiaircraft gunners would rather not talk
about is firing on and hitting friendly aircraft. Fratricide in the
speed and confusion of battle is as understandable as it is re-
grettable. Ground troops and antiaircraft gunners had fired on
friendly aircraft in World War I and formed the attitude: “There
Figure 29. German 20 mm gun. German light flak was very potent. This
single 20 mm gun is assisted by the German soldier in the background
operating a range finder. (Reprinted from Imperial War Museum.)
46
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
47
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
peared to hit both. These are the recorded cases; we can only
speculate on how many other incidents escaped reporting.
Although the Allies instituted several measures to prevent
fratricide, including electronic identification devices (identifica-
tion, friend or foe—[IFF]), recognition signals, and restricted
areas, the problem continued (fig. 30). Between 22 June and 25
July, Allied gunners engaged 25 friendly aircraft and destroyed
eight. Five of these aircraft, two Spitfires on 22 June and three
P-51s on 26 June, were destroyed after they attacked friendly
forces. (There were at least 13 incidents of Allied aircraft at-
tacking Allied forces between 20 June and 17 July 1944, killing
at least two soldiers and wounding three others.) Fragmentary
records indicate that Anglo-American flak crews downed six Al-
lied aircraft in August, two in October, and at least three in
November. Even the brass could not avoid the problem. On 1
January 1945, US AAA units fired on an aircraft carrying AAF
Figure 30. George Preddy. George Preddy was killed by friendly fire as
he chased a German aircraft in December 1944. He was one of the AAF’s
leading aces with 26.8 credits. (Reprinted from http://www.wpafb.af.mil/
museum/history/wwII/ce32.htm.)
48
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
49
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
50
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
Figure 31. USN 20 mm gun. The Navy’s 20 mm guns accounted for one-
third of the Japanese aircraft claimed by ship guns prior to September
1944, and one-quarter of the claims after that date. (Reprinted from
http://www.bcoy1cph.pacdat.net/20mm_Oerlikion_AA_USN..jpg.)
51
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
Figure 32. USN 40 mm gun. The Navy’s 40 mm guns, again the ever-
present Bofors, accounted for one-half of the Japanese aircraft de-
stroyed by ship guns after October 1944. (Reprinted from http://www.
grunts.net/album/navy/guncres.htm.)
52
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
53
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
Figure 33. A-20 aircraft sequence. This Douglas A-20 was downed by
Japanese guns over Karos, Dutch New Guinea. (Reprinted from USAF.)
54
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
55
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
Figure 34. Falling B-29. Japanese air defenses downed about 227
B-29s over Japan, about equally divided between flak and fighters. This
Superfortress was shot down on 26 June 1945. (Reprinted from USAF.)
56
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
57
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
58
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
Notes
1. Edward Westermann, Flak: German Anti-Aircraft Defenses 1914–1945
(Lawrence, Kans.: University Press, 2001), 9.
2. Ibid., 10–16.
3. The Germans fielded almost 2,800 antiaircraft guns at the end of the war
with 30 percent geared for homeland defense. See P. T. Cullen, “Air Defense of
London, Paris, and Western Germany” (paper, Air Corps Tactical School,
Maxwell Field, Alabama, n.d.), 7, 9, 28, 99, table 5, Air Force Historical Re-
search Agency (HRA), Maxwell Air Force Base (AFB), Ala.; “Antiaircraft Defences
of Great Britain: 1914 to 1946,” appendix A, Royal Artillery Institute (RAI),
Woolwick, United Kingdom; “Antiaircraft Gun Trends and Scientific and Tech-
nical Projection: Eurasian Communist Countries,” July 1981, 1–1; N.W.
Routledge, History of the Royal Regiment of Artillery: Anti-Aircraft Artillery,
1914–55 (London: Brassey’s, 1994), 22; and Westermann, Flak, 26.
4. Westermann, Flak, 27.
5. Another source lists the rounds per claim as United States, 1,055;
British, 1,800; and French, 3,225. See Ian Hogg, Anti-Aircraft: A History of
59
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
Air Defence (London: MacDonald and Jane’s, 1978), 67; US Army Air De-
fense School, “Air Defense,” 21, 29, 30; Cullen, “Air Defence of London,” 94;
extracts from Conference on Antiaircraft Defense, Military Intelligence Divi-
sion, France, no. 8312, 26 December 1923, HRA; A. F. Englehart, “Antiaircraft
Defenses: Their Development During the World War” (paper, Air Corps Tac-
tical School, circa 1934), 6, 9, HRA; V. P. Ashkerov, “Anti-Aircraft Missile
Forces and Anti-Aircraft Artillery,” translation from Zenitnyye Raketnyee
Voyska I Zenitnaya Artilleriya (1968), 5–6, HRA. American machine gunners
got another 41 German aircraft. See Charles Kirkpatrick, Archie in the A.E.F.:
The Creation of the Antiaircraft Service of the United States Army, 1917–1918
(Fort Bliss, Tex.: Air Defense Artillery Museum, 1984), 85–86.
6. Sound locators were fickle and unreliable. Under the best of condi-
tions, they had a range of five to 10 miles. See Hogg, Anti-Aircraft, 64; and
[British] Manual of Anti-Aircraft Defence, Provisional, March 1922, 164, RAI.
7. Maj Gen B. P. Hughes and Brig N. W. Routledge, Woolwick, United
Kingdom, interviewed by author, October 1982; “Antiaircraft Artillery,” Air
Corps Tactical School, 1, 1 November 1932, HRA; Louis Smithey and
Charles Atkinson, “Development of Antiaircraft Artillery,” Coast Artillery
Journal, January–February 1946, 70–71; William Wuest, “The Development
of Heavy Antiaircraft Artillery,” Antiaircraft Journal, May–June 1954, 23.
8. Theodore Ropp, War in the Modern World (Durham, N.C.: Duke Uni-
versity Press, 1959), 289.
9. “Antiaircraft Defences of Great Britain”; and Frederick Pile, Ack-Ack
(London: Harrap, 1949), 73. One American wrote in his 1929 Air Corps Tac-
tical School thesis that flak was not worth the effort, which was the view of
bomber proponents on both sides of the Atlantic. See Kenneth Walker, “Is
the Defense of New York City from Air Attack Possible?” Research report, Air
Corps Tactical School, May 1929, 30, HRA.
10. From the German, Flieger Abwehr Kanone, for antiaircraft cannon.
11. Pile, Ack-Ack, 100, 157, 181, 183; “Antiaircraft Defences of Great
Britain”; Hughes interview; “Air Defense,” 2:122–24; Frederick Pile, “The
Anti-Aircraft Defence of the United Kingdom from 28th July, 1939 to 15th
April, 1945,” supplement to the London Gazette, 16 December 1947, 5978,
Air University Library (AUL), Maxwell AFB, Ala.; and “History of A. A. Com-
mand,” n.d., 14, RAI.
12. Pile, Ack-Ack, 115; Pile, “Antiaircraft Defence of UK,” 5975; and “His-
tory of A. A. Command,” 14–15.
13. Routledge, Royal Regiment of Artillery, 400.
14. The British developed a two-inch rocket (that carried a .3-pound war-
head) and a three-inch rocket that weighed 54 pounds, including its 4.5-
pound warhead. The latter was successfully test-fired in Jamaica in
1938–39 and went into service in 1940. In July 1941, the British deployed
1,000 rocket tubes. Almost 6,000 were deployed by July 1943; most of
which were twin-barrel devices. But rocket units registered few claims. See
Routledge, Royal Regiment of Artillery, 56, 79.
60
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
15. Pile, Ack-Ack, 155–56, 186–93, and 379; Pile, “Anti-Aircraft Defence of
UK,” 5982; “History of A. A. Command,” 123–24, plates 45, 49; “Antiaircraft De-
fences of Great Britain,” appendix B; and Routledge, Royal Regiment, 338, 399.
16. Routledge, Royal Regiment, 108 –12, 124, 144 –53.
17. Guns larger than 50-55 mm are considered “heavy”; those less than
this size are considered “light.”
18. US Army Air Defense School, “Air Defense,” 2, 127–28, 131–32; H. E. C.
Weldon, “The Artillery Defence of Malta,” Antiaircraft Journal, May– June
1954, 24, 26, 27, 29; Charles Jellison, Besieged—The World War II Ordeal of
Malta, 1940–1942 (Hanover, N.H.: University Press of New England, 1984),
166–67, 170, 205, 258; Christopher Shores, Duel for the Sky (London:
Blandford, 1985), 88, 90, 92; and Routledge, Royal Regiment, 166–74.
19. Pile, Ack-Ack, 266, 301, 303, 305; Pile, “Anti-aircraft Defence of UK,”
5984; and “Survey of Antiaircraft Defenses of the United Kingdom,” 1, pt.
3:52, 53, 118, RAI.
20. Pile, Ack-Ack, 323–44; and “Fringe Targets,” RAI.
21. For a more detailed discussion of the V-1 and its operations in World
War II, see Kenneth Werrell, The Evolution of the Cruise Missile (Maxwell
AFB, Ala.: Air University Press, 1985), chap. 3; Basil Collier, The Battle of the
V-Weapons, 1944–1945 (London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1964), 56–59;
Roderic Hill, “Air Operations by Air Defence of Great Britain and Fighter
Command in Connection with the German Flying Bomb and Rocket Offen-
sives, 1944–45,” supplement to the London Gazette, 19 October 1948,
5587–89; Basil Collier, The Defence of the United Kingdom (London: Her
Majesty’s Stationery Office, 1957), 361, 365; and British Air Ministry, “Air
Defence of Great Britain, The Flying Bomb and Rocket Campaign: 1944 to
1945,” first draft of report, 7:42–43, HRA.
22. Collier, V-Weapons, 69, 71–75, 79; Hill, “Air Operations by Air Defence,”
5591–92; Rowland Pocock, German Guided Missiles of the Second World War
(New York: Arco Publishing, Inc., 1967), 48; Jozef Garlinski, Hitler’s Last
Weapons (London: Times Book, 1978), 168; David Irving, The Mares Nest
(London: Kimber, 1969), 233, 236, 240; and M. C. Helfers, The Employment
of V-Weapons by the Germans during World War II, monograph (Washington,
D.C.: Office of the Chief of Military History, Department of the Army, 1954),
18–30, HRA.
23. Hill, “Air Operations,” 5594; Collier, Defence of the UK, 374; Mary
Welborn, “V-1 and V-2 Attacks against the United Kingdom during World
War II,” technical report ORO-T-45 (Washington, D.C.: Johns Hopkins Uni-
versity Press, 16 May 1950), 9, HRA; “Minutes and Related Data Scientific
Sub-Committee of Crossbow Committee, V-1, vol. 2,” Operations Research
Section (ADGB) Report 88, n.d., HRA; Report of the British Air Ministry,
“Points of Impact and Accuracy of Flying Bombs: 22 June–28 July,” 29 July
1944, HRA; “The Speed of Air-Launched Divers,” HRA; Report of the General
Board, US Forces, European Theater, “Tactical Employment of Antiaircraft
Artillery Units Including Defense against Pilotless Aircraft (V-1),” study no.
38, 39, HRA; “Minutes and Related Data Scientific Sub-Committee of Cross-
61
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
bow Committee, V-1, vol. 2,” 7 August 1944, S.B. 60093, HRA; Report of
British Air Ministry, “Air Defence of Great Britain Tactical Memoranda I.G.
no. 9675,” 24 November 1944, HRA; British Air Ministry, “Air Defence of
Great Britain,” 126; Hillery Saunders, Royal Air Force, 1939, 1945, vol. 3,
The Fight Is Won (London: Her Majesty’s Stationery Office, 1954), 165.
24. Hill, “Air Operations,” 5592, 5594; “Air Defence of Great Britain,” 121,
151, 179; Saunders, Royal Air Force, 165; and Collier, Defence of the UK, 380.
25. AC/AS Intelligence, “Flying Bomb,” 8, HRA; Mary Welborn, “Over-all
Effectiveness of First US Army Antiaircraft Guns Against Tactical Aircraft”
(working paper, Johns Hopkins University, Washington, D.C., 18 January
1950), 6, AUL; Report of Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Forces
(SHAEF), Air Defense Division, “Notes on German Flying Bomb,” 22 August
1944, HRA.
26. A related but almost entirely overlooked issue is that of the ground
damage caused by the antiaircraft artillery shells. In one instance during
World War I, for example, the shells caused one-third more damage than did
German bombs. See James Crabtree, On Air Defense (Westport, Conn.:
Praeger, 1994), 17.
27. Friendly fire also downed British fighters. In the first week, flak shot
down two Tempests. See Bob Ogley, Doodlebugs and Rockets: The Battle of
the Flying Bombs (Brasted Chart, Westerham, U.K.: Froglets, 1992), 83; and
Pile, Ack-Ack, 330–33.
28. Hill, “Air Operations,” 5592, 5594; SHAEF notes, 26 July 1944, HRA;
and Collier, Defence of the UK, 375.
29. Hill, “Air Operations,” 5596–97; and British Air Ministry, “Air Defence
of Great Britain,” 133–35. For another suggestion for a coastal belt, see Lt
Gen Carl Spaatz to supreme commander, SHAEF, letter, subject: The Use of
Heavy Anti-Aircraft against Diver, 11 July 1944, HRA.
30. Collier, Defence of the UK, 381–83; and Collier, V-Weapons, 91–95.
31. Pile, Ack-Ack, 334–35; Hill, “Air Operations,” 5597; Collier, Defence of
the UK, 523.
32. British Air Ministry, “Air Defence of Great Britain,” 130; “Flying
Bomb,” 8; and SHAEF notes, 15 August 1944, HRA.
33. British Air Ministry, “Air Defence of Great Britain,” 106; and Ralph
Baldwin, The Deadly Fuze (San Rafael, Calif.: Presidio Press, 1980), 261–66.
34. Collier, Defence of the UK, 523; Welborn, “V-1 and V-2 Attacks,” table
2; Hill, “Air Operations,” 5599.
35. Collier, Defence of the UK, 523; and Welborn, “V-1 and V-2 Attacks,” 10.
36. Hill, “Air Operations,” 5599, 5601; “Air Launched ‘Divers’ September
and October 1944,” HRA; British Air Ministry, “Air Defence of Great Britain,”
113; Collier, Defence of the UK, 389, 391, 522; Saunders, Royal Air Force,
167–68; Seventeenth report by assistant chief air staff (Intelligence), “War
Cabinet Chiefs of Staff Committee Crossbow,” 22 July 1944, HRA; and Collier,
V-Weapons, 119, 131.
62
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
37. Air Ministry Weekly Intelligence Summary, 289, HRA; Benjamin King
and Timothy Kutta, Impact: The History of Germany’s V-Weapons in World
War II (Rockville Centre, N.Y.: Sarpedon, 1998), 291.
38. Antiaircraft artillery cost a third of what fighters cost and about 25
percent more than the balloons. Collier, Defence of the UK, 523; Hill, “Air
Operations,” 5603; and British Air Ministry, “The Economic Balance of the
Fly-Bomb Campaign,” summary report, 4 November 1944, HRA.
39. Memorandum 5-7B by US Strategic Air Forces, Armament and Ord-
nance, “An Analysis of the Accuracy of the German Flying Bomb (V-1) 12
June to 5 October 1944,” 144, HRA; British Air Ministry, “Air Defence of
Great Britain,” 123; and Collier, Defence of the UK, 523.
40. Collier, Defence of the UK, appendix L.
41. King and Kutta, Impact, 3, 211.
42. European Theater report no. 38, 40–41, 45, HRA; Operations Report
of Headquarters Antwerp X Forward, no. 2J, 1 May 1945, annex A, HRA;
SHAEF, “Report of ‘V’ Section on Continental Crossbow (September
1944–March 1945),” 28, HRA; and United States Strategic Bombing Survey
(USSBS), V-Weapons (Crossbow) Campaign, January 1947, 2d ed., 15.
43. Report of Headquarters Antwerp X Forward, no. 2H, 4 March 1945,
HRA; Antwerp X report no. 2J, annex A; European Theater report no. 38,
40–45; and King and Kutta, Impact, 274.
44. Peter G. Cooksley, Flying Bomb (New York: Scribner, 1979), 185. For
a good secondary account, see R. J. Backus, “The Defense of Antwerp
Against the V-1 Missile” (master of military arts and sciences thesis, US
Army Command and General Staff College, 1971).
45. US Army Air Defense School, “Air Defense,” 2:36; and Welborn,
“Over-all Effectiveness,” table 8.
46. US Army Air Defense School, “Air Defense,” 2:37; and US Army, “Anti-
aircraft Artillery” note no. 8, 4, US Army Command and General Staff College,
Fort Leavenworth, Kans.
47. “The GAF 1 January Attack,” United States Strategic Air Forces in
Europe, Air Intelligence Summary 62 (week ending 14 January 1945), 5,
HRA; “Airfield Attack of 1 January,” HRA; SHAEF Intelligence Summary 42,
30 [USACGSC]; Daily Air Action Summary, Office of Assistant Chief of Staff,
Intelligence Headquarters, Army Air Forces, Washington, D.C., 3 January
1945, HRA; Duty Group Captain’s Daily Resume of Air Operations, serial no.
1843, Air Ministry, Whitehall, 2 January 1944, HRA; Saunders, Royal Air
Force, 209; Roger Freeman, The Mighty Eighth War Diary (New York: Jane’s
Publishing Co. Ltd., 1981), 412–13; History and Statistical Summary, IX Air
Defense Command, January 1944–June 1945, 80; Werner Gerbig, Six
Months to Oblivion (London: Allan, 1973), 74, 76–79, 110, 112; USAF Credits
for the Destruction of Enemy Aircraft, World War II, USAF Historical Study
85 (Maxwell AFB, Ala.: USAF Historical Division, Air University, 1978), 286;
and Air Staff Operational Summary Report nos. 1503, 1504, Air Ministry
War Room, 2, 3 January 1945, HRA. The most detailed, but not necessarily
63
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
most accurate, account is Norman Franks, The Battle of the Airfields (Lon-
don: Kimber, 1982).
48. Gerbig, Oblivion, 99–103, 116; USAF Historical Study 85, 286; IX Air
Defense Command, 78–79; History, 352d Fighter Group, January 1945,
HRA; History, 366th Fighter Group, January 1945, HRA.
49. US Army Air Defense School, “Air Defense,” 2:158–63; and Welborn,
“Over-all Effectiveness,” 9, 29.
50. See notes 30 and 33; US Army, Antiaircraft Artillery [USACGSC]; and
US Air Forces in Europe, “Air Staff Post Hostilities Intelligence Requirements on
German Air Defenses,” report, vol. 1, sec. 4 (14 September 1945): 17, HRA.
51. Walter Grabman, “German Air Force Air Operations Defense:
1933–1945,” circa 1957, 3, 18, 40a, 81, 83–84, HRA; D. von Renz, “The De-
velopment of German Antiaircraft Weapons and Equipment of all Types up
to 1945,” study, 1958, 102, HRA; and Westermann, Flak, 84, 285.
52. Ian Hogg, German Artillery of World War II (London: Arms and Armour,
1975), 162, 167; R. A. Devereux, “German Experience with Antiaircraft Artillery
Guns in WWII,” study, 19 July 1946, AUL; and US Air Forces in Europe
(USAFE), “Post Hostilities Investigation,” 1:3.
53. Hogg, German Artillery, 115, 170, 172; USAFE, “Post Hostilities Investi-
gation,” 1:5; Peter Chamberlain and Terry Gander, Antiaircraft Guns (New
York: Arco Publishing, Inc., 1975), 22.
54. The Germans cancelled efforts to build a 150 mm flak gun in 1940.
See Hogg, German Artillery, 173–78; Chamberlain and Gander, Antiaircraft
Guns, 23–24; USAFE, “Post Hostilities Investigation,” 1:10, 22; and Wester-
mann, Flak, 69.
55. Matthew Cooper, The German Air Force, 1933–1945 (London: Jane’s
Publishing Co. Ltd., 1981), 185; Samuel Morrison, History of US Naval Op-
erations in World War II, vol. 9, Sicily-Salerno-Anzio: January 1943– June
1944 (Boston, Mass.: Little, Brown and Co., 1954), 215 –16; Albert Garland
and Howard Smyth, The US Army in World War II: The Mediterranean Theater
of Operations, Sicily and the Surrender of Italy (Washington, D.C.: Office of
the Chief of Military History, 1965), 375, 379, 412; and John Terraine, A
Time for Courage: The Royal Air Force in the European War, 1939 –1945 (New
York: Macmillan Publishing Co., Inc., 1985), 579.
56. Assistant Chief of Air Staff, Intelligence Historical Division, “The
Ploesti Mission of 1 August 1943,” USAF Historical Study 103 (Maxwell
Field, Ala.: Historical Division, June 1944), 16, 50, 99, HRA; Report of Army
Air Forces Evaluation Board, “Ploesti,” 15 December 1944, vol. 6:7–8, HRA;
and Report of Mediterranean Allied Air Forces (MAAF), “Ploesti: Summary of
Operations Results and Tactical Problems Involved in 24 Attacks between 5
April–19 August 1944,” 13 January 1945, 1–3, HRA.
57. AAF Evaluation Board, “Ploesti,” 2, 4, appendix E; MAAF, “Ploesti,” 2;
History, 1st Fighter Group, June 1944, 2, HRA; and History, 82d Fighter
Group, June 1944, 2, HRA.
58. Between 1939 and 1944, the Germans captured and used 9,500 anti-
aircraft guns and 14 million rounds of ammunition. See Westermann,
64
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
German Flak, 325; MAAF, “Ploesti,” 1–3; AAF Evaluation Board, “Ploesti,” ii;
Fifteenth Air Force, “The Air Battle of Ploesti,” report, n.d., 83, HRA.
59. Von Renz, “Development of German Antiaircraft Weapons,” 380;
USAFE, “Post Hostilities Investigation,” 8:11; USSBS report, European War,
no. 115, “Ammoniakwerke Merseburg, G.M.B.H., Leuna, Germany,” March
1947, 7–16, 21, AUL; and Frank Anderson, “German Antiaircraft Defenses
in World War II,” Air University Quarterly Review (Spring 1954): 85.
60. USAFE, “Post Hostilities Investigation,” 5:2; Report of Army Air Forces
Evaluation Board European Theater of Operations, “Flak Defenses of Strategic
Targets in Southern Germany,” 20 January 1945, 25, HRA; Report of
Mediterranean Allied Air Forces, “Flak and MAAF,” 7 May 1945, 9, HRA; and
Report of Fifteenth Air Force, “Comparative Analysis of Altitudes and Flak Ex-
perienced during the Attacks on Vienna 7 and 8 February 1945,” 3–4, HRA.
61. Westermann, Flak, 110–11.
62. A gram weighs .035 ounces.
63. Von Renz, “Development of German Antiaircraft Weapons,” 257;
USAFE, “Post Hostilities Investigation,” 7:7, 37; USSBS, “The German Flak
Effort Throughout the War,” 13 August 1945, 16, 19, HRA; Johannes Mix,
“The Significance of Anti-Aircraft Artillery and the Fighter Arm at the End of
the War,” Flugwehr und Technik, February–March 1950, 5, 10; Thomas Ed-
wards and Murray Geisler, “Estimate of Effect on Eighth Air Force Opera-
tions if German Antiaircraft Defenses Had Used Proximity Fuzed (VT) Am-
munition,” report no. 1, Operations Analysis, AC/AS-3, Headquarters Army
Air Forces, Washington, D.C., 15 February 1947, HRA; and USAFE, Walter
von Axtheim, “Interrogation Report,” vol. 12 (1945): 26–27, HRA.
64. Von Renz, “Development of German Antiaircraft Weapons,” 340–43,
353; Ernst Klee and Otto Merk, The Birth of the Missile—The Secret of Peene-
münde (New York: E. P. Dutton, 1965), 65; and Westermann, Flak, 164,
196–97, 209, 227.
65. Von Renz, “Development of German Antiaircraft Weapons,” 257;
USAFE, Von Axthelm, “Interrogation Report,” 24; and USAFE, “Post Hostilities
Investigation,” 3:43–44.
66. Von Renz, “Development of German Antiaircraft Weapons,” 357;
USAFE, “Post Hostilities Investigation,” vol. 12, figs. 61, 8, 9, and 1:23; Willy
Ley, Rockets, Missiles and Space Travel (New York: Viking Press, 1951),
222–23, 393.
67. There are various accounts of these missiles, as the citations indi-
cate. I have relied primarily on Military Intelligence Division, “Handbook on
Guided Missiles: Germany and Japan,” no. 461, 1946 (hereafter cited as
MID 461). It is a single source, has the most detailed technical data, and is
a postwar publication. Also, see Von Renz, “Development of German Anti-
aircraft Weapons,” 362; Von Axthelm, “Interrogation Report”; USAFE, “Post
Hostilities Investigation,” 12:7, fig. 60; Klee and Merk, The Birth of Missiles,
68, 86; and Ley, Rockets, Missiles and Space Travel, 395.
68. MID 461; USAFE, “Post Hostilities Investigation,” 12:8, fig. 61; and Ley,
Rockets, Missiles and Space Travel, 223, 394.
65
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
66
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
67
ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE THROUGH WORLD WAR II
90. Stephen McFarland and Wesley Newton, To Command the Sky: The
Battle for Air Superiority over Germany, 1942–1944 (Washington, D.C.:
Smithsonian Institution, 1991), 81n, 261; US Fleet, “Antiaircraft Action
Summary–October 1944,” Information Bulletin no. 27, 9-2, HRA.
91. Shrader, “Amicicide,” 70 –71.
92. Buford Rowland and William Boyd, US Navy Bureau of Ordnance in
World War II (Washington, D.C.: GPO, n.d.), 219–20, 231, 235, 238, 245–47,
258, 266; and Robert Sherrod, History of Marine Corps Aviation in World War
II (Washington, D.C.: Combat Forces, 1952), 401.
93. Rowland and Boyd, US Navy Bureau, 221–34, 266; Chamberlain and
Gander, Antiaircraft Guns, 40; US Fleet, Information Bulletin no. 27, 1–5;
Hogg, Anti-Aircraft, 80; and Routledge, Royal Regiment, R52–53.
94. Rowland and Boyd, US Navy Bureau, 220, 266, 283, 286; US Fleet,
Information Bulletin no. 27, 1–5.
95. US Army Air Defense School, “Air Defense,” 2:192.
96. Ibid., 197–98; Chamberlain and Gander, Antiaircraft Guns, 34; Report of
General Headquarters, United States Army Forces Pacific, Antiaircraft Re-
search Board, “Survey of Japanese Antiaircraft Artillery,” 3–5, 59, 65 –66, 72,
USACGSC; and United States Pacific Fleet and Pacific Ocean Areas Flak In-
telligence Memorandum no. 4, “Japanese Antiaircraft Materiel,” 11 April
1945, Naval Historical Center (NHC), Washington, D.C.
97. AAF Statistical Digest, 221–27, 255–61; A. H. Peterson, R. G. Tuck,
and D. P. Wilkinson, “Aircraft Vulnerability in World War II” (working
paper, RAND Corporation, Santa Monica, Calif., rev. 12 July 1950), table
8, AUL; Office of Information, Document, 3 May 1967, in “Korean Combat
Statistics for Three-Year Period,” 19 June 1953, NHC; and Kuehl, “The
Radar Eye Blinded,” 31.
98. US Army Air Defense School, “Air Defense,” 2:293; AAA Research
Board, “Survey of Japanese AAA,” 192, HRA; and Chief of Naval Operations,
Air Intelligence Group, Flak Information Bulletin no. 10, June 1945, 28, HRA.
99. AAF Statistical Digest, 226, 261; Air Intelligence report no. 8, 15–17;
Twentieth Air Force, “Flak Damage on Various Types of Missions,” and
“Final Analysis of Flak Loss and Damage for Operations against Japan,” Air
Intelligence report, vol. 1, nos. 26–27, November–December 1945, 3–7, HRA.
See also Kuehl, “The Radar Eye Blinded,” 37–38.
100. Flak downed a number of the top aces. In World War I, ground fire
downed the top ace, the Red Baron, Manfred von Richthofen (80 credits). In
World War II, the leading American ace in Europe, Francis Gabreski (28
credits), crashed while attacking an airfield; US flak killed George Preddy Jr.
(26.8 credits); and German flak downed others such as Hubert Zemke (17.8
credits) and Duane Beeson (17.3 credits). Japanese AAA killed Robert Hanson
(25 credits), the third-ranking Marine ace. Flak also got two of the top
British aces, Brendan Finucane (32 credits) and Robert Tuck (29 credits).
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Chapter 2
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Figure 35. Duster. The Duster was one of a number of failed Army anti-
aircraft projects. It mounted two 40 mm guns on a tracked vehicle.
(Reprinted from http://www.militaryhistorymuseum.org/gallery.html.)
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Figure 37. Vulcan Phalanx. The Navy fitted a number of its ships with
the fast-firing Vulcan Phalanx for close-in protection against aircraft.
(Reprinted from http://www.bb62museum.org/images/phalanx.jpc.)
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Figure 38. Vulcan M163. The Army mounted the 20 mm Vulcan gun with
radar guidance on an M163 armored personnel carrier. (Reprinted from
http://www.relli.com/weapons.htm.)
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flak rockets that reached 10,560 feet. But there are no indica-
tions of any successes with this weapon, and reports of its fir-
ing faded out by December 1952.6
How effective was Communist flak in the Korean War? It did
not prevent air operations, but it did make them more expen-
sive. Hostile fire forced airmen to fly higher and thus reduced
bombing accuracy. The USAF estimated that dive-bombing ac-
curacy declined from a 75-foot circular error probable (CEP) in
1951 to 219 feet in 1953, which meant that more sorties were
required to destroy a target.7 Likewise, B-29s that earlier had
attacked in what one writer describes as an “almost leisurely
fashion” as low as 10,000 feet with multiple passes, now op-
erated at 20,000 feet or above.8 Nevertheless, despite increas-
ing Red flak, USAF loss rates declined during the course of the
war from 0.18 percent per sortie in 1950 to 0.07 percent in
1953. Overall, American (Air Force, Marine Corps, and Navy)
combat losses of 1,230 aircraft on 736,439 sorties amounted
to a rate of .17 percent. The airmen believed that all but 143 of
these were claimed by ground fire (flak and small arms fire).9
A further breakdown reveals that USAF losses were not
evenly distributed. That is, fighter-bombers sustained 58 per-
cent of aircraft losses, although they logged only 36 percent of
sorties. Jets suffered less than did propeller-powered aircraft,
as they operated at higher speeds and altitudes. The Navy’s
piston-powered F4U Corsair took hits at twice the rate of the
jet-powered F9F and was considered 75 percent more vulner-
able. Similarly, the USAF’s famous propeller-powered F-51
Mustang was much more vulnerable than the jet-powered F-80
Shooting Star (fig. 39).10 In the period July through November
1950, the Mustang had a loss rate of 1.9 percent of sorties
compared with the Shooting Star’s loss rate of .74 percent.11
The Air Force assessed the loss rate of prop aircraft to be triple
that of jet aircraft. A breakdown of losses in August 1952 in-
dicated that light flak was the main problem. In that month,
flak destroyed 14 Fifth Air Force aircraft and damaged 153
others. During the entire war, the Air Force credited light flak
with 79 percent of the downed aircraft and 45 percent of the
damaged aircraft, small arms with 7 and 52 percent, and heavy
flak with 14 and 3 percent.12
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Figure 39. F-51 Mustang. The North American Mustang, the P-51 of
World War II fame, saw action as the F-51. It suffered the highest num-
ber of USAF losses to enemy action, of which 95 percent of the known
losses were to ground fire. (Reprinted from USAF.)
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a large area along the front without artillery support for eight
to 45 minutes during the air strike. Following a meeting between
the two services in July 1952, the Army eased the restriction on
artillery fire to a minimum time, although it retained prohibitions
on the use of proximity-fuzed and high-angle fire when aircraft
were in the area. The Airmen now believed that the danger from
enemy guns exceeded the danger from friendly guns.
In their next step, the Americans actively engaged the flak.
On 6 August 1952, the Air Force and Army produced a plan
named SUPPRESS, which set out procedures to neutralize
suspected and known antiaircraft positions. While retaining the
July artillery restrictions, SUPPRESS permitted the fighter-
bomber pilots either to accept or to reject artillery support. The
gunners would hit suspected positions with proximity-fuzed
fire before the strike and then signal the end of proximity-fuzed
fire with a radio call and a white phosphorous or colored smoke
round. The artillery would continue the bombardment with
impact-fuzed ammunition. During a one-month experiment
(25 September 1952 through 25 October 1952) with these pro-
cedures in IX Corps, the USAF lost only one aircraft on 1,816
CAS sorties, compared with planning figures of one loss for
every 380 CAS sorties. (Army artillery fired 679,000 rounds in
connection with the air strikes.) This marked decline in air-
craft losses came despite the tripling of Communist flak guns
in the area facing the IX Corps.
The Eighth Army and Fifth Air Force adopted the policy that
became effective on 2 December 1952. Under the slightly
modified procedures, a light aircraft (T-6 Mosquito) led the
fighter-bombers into the area, marked the target, and after the
fighter-bomber pilots identified the target, called in artillery
fire. Friendly artillery would hit all known enemy antiaircraft
guns within 2,500 yards of the target first with proximity-
fuzed shells and finally with a white phosphorous or colored
smoke round. The barrage continued with impact-fuzed shells
for three minutes, as the aircraft attacked. Despite such prob-
lems as fighter-bomber pilots not always being ready to exploit
the suppression fire and increased numbers of Communist
flak guns, fighter-bomber losses remained acceptable. CAS sor-
ties per fighter-bomber loss rose from 917 in December 1952
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notes with the other services. But even having done all of this,
the question is how much did the American Airmen learn from
the war? In a study of the lessons from the air war in Korea
that included about 100 items covering such areas as heckling
attacks, rescue operations, and Communist passive defense,
the US Air Force did not mention enemy flak. Surely, flak was
more important and more costly to the US Air Force than that.
This attitude led Air Force chief of staff Thomas D. White to
tell his top commanders in October 1957 that the USAF had
never respected flak but that it could no longer ignore it. He
insisted that the airmen find out more about antiaircraft de-
fenses, and find it out quickly.21
Antiaircraft Missiles
At the same time US military forces were enduring the
post–World War II reduction and then the trauma and frus-
trating limited war in Korea, a new weapon was evolving (fig.
40). This weapon that would greatly improve air defense and
radically change air warfare, was, of course, the SAM. A num-
ber of countries attempted to follow up on the German efforts
in the field, but for 20 years, these first-generation missiles
were notable more for their promise than their performance.
The large and unwieldy missiles demonstrated limited mobility,
poor reliability, and questionable lethality. Initially, they used
liquid fuel that presented problems of handling, reliability, re-
action time, and storage. The early missiles were guided by
command systems in which one radar unit acquired and tracked
the target, a second tracked the missile, and a computer made
missile corrections to enable interception. Although this awk-
ward system could down aircraft flying at relatively high alti-
tudes, steady courses, and moderate speeds, it had little ability
to kill fast-moving, low-flying, maneuvering targets. (It must
be remembered, however, that air defenders saw formations of
high-flying aircraft as the threat.) The command guidance sys-
tem was also vulnerable to electronic countermeasures.
A number of projects emerged from American designers. The
US Army sponsored the widest variety of missiles. These mis-
siles can probably best be divided generically into three fami-
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Figure 41. Nike Ajax. The Nike Ajax was America’s first operational SAM.
(Reprinted from US Army Air Defense Museum.)
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The safety issue was driven home when in May 1958 an ex-
plosion of seven Nikes near Middletown, New Jersey, killed six
soldiers and four civilians and caused property damage for
miles.28 The reason the Army phased the Ajax out of service in
1964 had little to do with safety; it was replaced by a more ad-
vanced version.
In 1953, the US Army Ordnance Corps, Bell Laboratories,
Western Electric, and Douglas began work on the Nike Hercules
(fig. 42). One reason for the development of a successor to Ajax
was that by early 1952, it was clear that its radar had diffi-
culty dealing with aircraft that flew in formation. One solution
was to use a nuclear warhead. Because of the size of the pro-
posed nuclear warhead (30-inch diameter), the Army decided
it was more efficient, albeit more time consuming, to develop a
new missile rather than modify the Ajax. There was, of course,
also a desire to improve the system’s performance. The second-
generation Nike was to employ an atomic warhead against for-
mations of aircraft flying as fast as 1,000 mph at a maximum
altitude of 60,000 feet and at a horizontal range of 28 miles.
Hercules could be fitted with a conventional fragmentation
warhead as well. It would build on the existing Ajax technology
and be compatible with the Ajax ground equipment.29
The proposed missile was somewhat larger than its prede-
cessor. The Model 1810 Hercules was seven feet longer, con-
siderably wider, and four times heavier than the Ajax. The Army
made good use of its experience with missiles in general and
the Nike in particular as it was able to begin deployment of the
Hercules in June 1958.30 Flight tests with research and devel-
opment missiles began in early 1955 and extended through
June 1956. In sharp contrast to the Ajax record, Hercules had
few difficulties with the booster but did encounter problems
with the sustainer (main) engine: 12 of the first 20 flight tests
in 1955 were terminated, half by sustainer problems. In addi-
tion, the program suffered a setback in September 1955, when
a Hercules blew up on a test stand, killing one civilian and in-
juring five others. This led the Army to adopt a solid-fuel sus-
tainer engine in 1956, which proved to be more reliable with-
out a loss of performance.31 The Army began to test the Hercules
against drone aircraft (again the QB-17) in 1956, achieving its
85
Figure 42. Nike Hercules. The Nike Hercules was larger, heavier, and
better performing than its predecessor. (Adapted from US Army Air De-
fense Museum.)
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88
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Figure 43. Bomarc.The Air Force Bomarc was only in service a brief pe-
riod of time. (Reprinted from Smithsonian Institution.)
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Figure 45. Seaslug. The Seaslug was an early Royal Navy SAM that
served in the Falklands War but earned no victory credits. (Reprinted
from Imperial War Museum.)
MATRA R422-B, and the Swiss (Oerlikon) built the RSD 58,
again all first-generation missiles.
Meanwhile, the Soviets were also making progress with SAMs.
Their Soviet antiaircraft missile evolved from German World
War II programs. The first Soviet SAM, the SA-1, was a German
Wasserfall with ground (command) guidance. It became opera-
tional in early 1954, the same year the US Army deployed the
Nike Ajax. The West first saw its successor, the SA-2, in 1957.
The Soviets designed this missile to defend against high-flying,
essentially nonmaneuvering, strategic bombers. The SA-2 first
achieved prominence by knocking down an American U-2 over
the Soviet Union in the spring of 1960 and downing another
over Cuba in October 1962.40 SAMs introduced a new element
into air warfare, shifting the advantage back toward the defense.
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Figure 46. Hawk launch. The Hawk went into service (1959) only a year
after the Nike Hercules. Whereas the Nike family was only employed
from fixed installations, the Hawk was mobile. (Reprinted from US Army
Air Defense Museum.)
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Figure 47. Hawk intercepting an F-80. The Hawk was the Army’s first
mobile SAM. It had a long and distinguished career, although it did not
down any aircraft for the United States. This sequence shows what it
could do against an F-80 drone. (Reprinted from Redstone Arsenal.)
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Figure 48. Mauler. The Mauler was another Army antiaircraft missile
system that failed to reach operational status. (Reprinted from Redstone
Arsenal.)
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96
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97
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98
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Figure 50. Redeye launch. The Redeye gave the individual American
soldier a weapon that could down aircraft. This first-generation missile
was limited by its inability to identify friend from foe and restricted en-
gagement envelope. (Reprinted from Redstone Arsenal.)
99
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100
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101
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Figure 51. Stinger launch. The Stinger was the successor to the Red-
eye missile. (Reprinted from Redstone Arsenal.)
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103
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104
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Figure 54. SA-7 Grail. The Soviets quickly developed and fielded man-
portable SAMs. The North Vietnamese first used the SA-7 in 1972, and it
proved especially effective against slow-moving and low-flying aircraft.
(Reprinted from USAF.)
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Notes
1. This Stinger should not be confused with the surface-to-air missile
bearing that same name that is discussed below. See Mary Cagle, “History
of the Mauler Weapon System,” December 1968, 4, R.
2. The 20 mm gun would fire a two-ounce projectile at 2,870 feet per sec-
ond (fps) out to a vertical range of 5,100 yards and a horizontal range of
5,200 yards. Vigilante was designed to defend against jet aircraft up to
10,000 feet and out to slant ranges of 14,000 feet. The Skysweeper could fire
at a rate of 45 to 55 shots per minute (spm) with a muzzle velocity of 2,825
fps and could reach a vertical altitude of 18,600 feet. See Cagle, “Mauler,” 5,
9–10, 19, 55; Robert Frank Futrell, “United States Air Force Operations in
the Korean Conflict: 1 July 1952–27 July 1953,” USAF Historical Study 127
(Maxwell AFB, Ala.: USAF Historical Division, Air University, 1956), 87; and
US Army Air Defense School, “Air Defense: A Historical Analysis,” June
1965, 3:30–33, AUL.
3. The Army version has two rates of fire, 1,000 and 3,000 spm, either of
which quickly exhausts the 2,300 rounds of ammunition carried aboard the
vehicle. See Tony Cullen and Christopher Foss, eds., Jane’s Battlefield Air
Defence, 1988–89 (London: Jane’s, 1988), 64–65; “M163 20 mm Vulcan,”
blokadvies.www.cistron.nl/m163.htm; Federation of Atomic Scientists, “GAU-4
20 mm Vulcan M61A1/M61A2 20 mm Automatic Gun”; Federation of Atomic
Scientists, “M167 VADS Vulcan Air Defense System”; and US Army TACOM-RI,
“The Gatling Gun,” 6 www-acaka1rai.army.mil/LC/cs/csa/aagatlin.htm.
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4. The system had an estimated unit cost of $6.6 million, about 2.4 times
the cost of the tanks it was to protect. Its 4 kilometer (km) range was out-
distanced by Soviet helicopter missiles at 6 km. See O. B. Koropey, “It
Seemed Like a Good Idea at the Time”: The Story of the Sergeant York Air De-
fense Gun (Alexandria, Va.: US Army Materiel Command, 1993), 44, 46, 66,
104–5, 131, 183, 185; and George Mauser, “Off the Shelf and into the Trash
Bin: Sgt York, NDI Integration and Acquisition Reform” (thesis, US Army
War College, 1996), AUL.
5. Cagle, “Mauler,”13–14, 19; US Army Air Defense School, “Air Defense,”
3:33–34; James Eglin, Air Defense in the Nuclear Age (N.Y.: Garland, 1988),
190; Max Rosenberg, “The Air Force and the National Guided Missile Pro-
gram: 1944–1954,” study, 1964, 36, 42, HRA; and Joseph Russo, “ADA in
Retrospect,” Air Defense Trends (July–September 1975): 12.
6. The 85 mm Model 1939 was capable of firing 15 to 20 20-pound shells
per minute at 2,625 fps to an effective ceiling of 25,000 feet, while the 85
mm Model 1944 had an additional muzzle velocity of 325 fps and an in-
creased altitude capability of 4,000 feet. The 37 mm could fire a 1.6-pound
projectile at a rate of 160 spm up to an effective ceiling of 4,500 feet. See
Futrell, Historical Study 127, 41, 43; “Far East Air Forces Intelligence
Roundup,” 12–18 January 1952, 2:11–12; “Far East Air Forces Intelligence
Roundup,” 29 December 1951–4 January 1952, 3:8; “Far East Air Forces In-
telligence Roundup,” 28 February–6 March 1953, no. 31, II-1, II-2, II-10,
HRA; and Andrew T. Soltys, “Enemy Antiaircraft Defenses in North Korea,”
Air University Quarterly Review 7, no. 1 (Spring 1954): 77–80.
7. Circular error probable is the radius of a circle within which one-half of
a missile’s projectiles are expected to fall. See Futrell, Historical Study, 165.
8. Robert Jackson, Air War over Korea (N.Y.: Scribner’s, 1973), 99.
9. Commander in chief, US Pacific Fleet, Korean War: (25 June 1950–27
July 1953) US Pacific Fleet Operations, chap. 3, NHC; “Carrier Operations
Evaluation Report No. 6, interim, 1 February 1953–27 July 1953,” 44, 68,
reproduced in William Hodge et al., “Theater Air Warfare Study” (thesis, Air
War College, Maxwell AFB, Ala., 1977), 39, AUL; “Far East Air Forces Report
on the Korean War,” study, bk. 1:63, 82, 97, HRA; Futrell, Historical Study
127, 80; and US Navy Office of Information, “Korean Combat Statistics for
Three-Year Period,” NHC. A Chinese source states that more than 90 percent
of US aircraft were downed by AAA during the war. See Jon Halliday, “Air
Operations in Korea: The Soviet Side of the Story,” 156–57, in William Williams,
ed., A Revolutionary War: Korea and the Transformation of the Postwar World
(Chicago: Imprint, 1993).
10. The US Air Force knew the F-51 was vulnerable to ground fire be-
cause of its liquid-cooled engine and the air scoop beneath the fuselage. One
World War II study of fighters in the European theater indicated that the P-51
(as it was then designated) was three times as vulnerable to flak as was the
P-47. The author was told the decision to employ the F-51, not the more
rugged P-47, in Korea was based primarily on the availability of parts. See
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108
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24. The warhead was the most changed component. It was increased
from the original 200 pounds to 312 pounds and changed in concept from
using large, slow-moving fragments to smaller, faster-moving ones. Initially,
each of the two main charges (150 pounds each) was designed to fragment
into 30,000 pieces each weighing 30 grains (.087 ounces). Later, this was
changed to 60-grain fragments in a 179-pound center and 122-pound aft
warhead. The warhead was designed to “deliver a high order of tactical dam-
age within a 20-yard radius.” See Cagle, “Nike Ajax,” 87, 89, 154.
25. Bell Labs, 43, 91, 108, 111, 129; and Cagle, “Nike Ajax,” 81, 103–17.
26. Bell Labs, “Project Nike,” 78; and Cagle, “Nike Ajax,” 160, 177–78.
27. Another source gives 15,000 as the total produced. See Tony Cullen
and Christopher Foss, eds., Jane’s Land-Based Air Defence: Ninth Edition,
1996–97 (London: Jane’s, 1996), 290; and Cagle, “Nike Ajax,” 122, 179–81.
28. Cagle, “Nike Ajax,” 167, 182–99.
29. Mary Cagle, “History of the Nike Hercules Weapon System,” April
1973, v, 8–9, 15, 35, 39–40, R.
30. Cagle, “Nike Hercules,” 42–43, 53.
31. Ibid., 57–59, 97.
32. Ibid., 97–99, 102–6; Christopher Chant, Air Defence Systems and
Weapons: World AAA and SAM Systems in the 1990s (London: Brassey’s,
1989), 93.
33. Cagle, “Nike Hercules,” 161–64, 171–72, 187, 192n; and Cullen and
Foss, Jane’s Land-Based Air Defence, 1996–97, 290.
34. US Army Air Defense School, “Air Defense,” vol. 3:48–50; and
Rosenberg, The Air Force, 71, 75, 76, 79, 83, 117–18, 150.
35. See Clayton Chun, “Winged Interceptor: Politics and Strategy in the
Development of the Bomarc Missile,” Air Power History (Winter 1998): 48.
36. Eglin, Nuclear Age, 103, 114, 135–37.
37. Another source states that the Air Force built 570 Bomarcs. See Chun,
“Winged Interceptor,” 50 –51, 57; Mark Morgan and Mark Berhow, Rings of
Supersonic Steel: Air Defenses of the United States Army 1950–1979 and Intro-
ductory History and Site Guide (San Pedro, Calif.: Fort MacArthur Museum
Association, 1996), 22, 24; Kenneth Schaffel, The Emerging Shield: The Air
Force and the Evolution of Continental Air Defense, 1945–1960 (Washington,
D.C.: Office of Air Force History, 1991), 236–38; and Eglin, Nuclear Age, 179.
38. Chun, “Winged Interceptor,” 46, 52–53, 55–57.
39. British SAMs are addressed in chap. 4 in a discussion of the Falk-
lands War.
40. The SA-2 measured 35 feet in length and weighed 4,875 pounds with
its booster. It could carry a 288-pound warhead at Mach 3.5 out to a slant
range of 24–25 miles and was effective between 3,000 and 60,000 feet. Ap-
parently, the Soviets fired 14 SA-2s at Francis Gary Powers in 1960: 12
missed, one destroyed a MiG-19, and one got the U-2. See R. A. Mason, ed.,
War in the Third Dimension: Essays in Contemporary Air Power (London:
Brassey’s, 1986), 105; John Taylor, ed., Jane’s All the World’s Aircraft,
1967–68 (New York: McGraw-Hill Book Co., 1967), 521–22; C. M. Plattner,
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Chapter 3
French Operations
Compared to the later American involvement in Indochina,
the French conducted smaller military operations with less-
modern equipment. One compensating factor was that initially
the Communists offered little direct defense against air attack,
not fielding their first antiaircraft opposition until January
1950.1 During the decisive 1954 battle of Dien Bien Phu, the
French had only 107 World War II–vintage combat aircraft
(fighters, fighter bombers, and bombers). Here, the French at-
tempted to duplicate their 1953 success at Na San, where they
used some of their best troops to lure the guerrillas into the
open to be cut down by air and artillery fire.
The Vietminh, however, learned the lessons from their pre-
vious defeats and increased their antiaircraft protection. The
Communist AAA forced French aircraft, which had initially
flown at 600 to 1,800 feet, to fly at 2,700 to 3,000 feet, which
decreased French effectiveness. The guns also took a toll on
French aircraft. During attacks on the Vietminh supply lines,
for two weeks after 24 November 1953, Communist AAA hit 45
of 51 French aircraft and downed two. Not surprisingly, flak and
air power played a vital role in the actual siege. The Commu-
nists opened the battle by attacking French airfields through-
out Indochina with artillery and infiltrators and damaged a
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AIRMEN VERSUS GUERRILLAS
the next year. The first US Navy loss, one of 60 American air-
craft lost in combat in Indochina in 1964, occurred in Laos in
June 1964.
The air war expanded in May 1964 as the United States
began a continuing program of Air Force and Navy reconnais-
sance flights over Laos. Nevertheless, the Gulf of Tonkin inci-
dent of August 1964 marked the “official” start of the American
air war in Vietnam, as it led to the first air strike against North
Vietnam. Two of the 80 attacking Navy planes involved in the
reprisal attack went down. Considering the meagerness of the
North Vietnamese defenses in terms of quantity and quality at
this point, these losses should have been a warning signal to
the decision makers of what was to come. The air war escalated
further with armed reconnaissance and fixed-target strikes in
Laos in December 1964. In February 1965, American reprisal
strikes on North Vietnam resumed on a tit-for-tat basis.
The full-scale bombing offensive against North Vietnam, code-
named Rolling Thunder, began in March 1965.4 On the first
mission, 2 March 1965, North Vietnamese gunners downed
four of the 130 attacking US and South Vietnamese aircraft.
The North Vietnamese lacked the most modern equipment—they
had no surface-to-air missiles and few jets—but they did have
numerous conventional AAA weapons. So, while they could not
stop the air attacks, they could make them costly (fig. 55).
From the start, America used air power against the north as a
political tool: first, during the reprisal raids and second, during
the Rolling Thunder campaign. The objectives of the latter were
to stiffen the morale of the South Vietnamese, interdict Com-
munist supplies, inflict punishment and cost on the North Viet-
namese, and demonstrate American will.5 But many, then and
now, adamantly proclaim the operation was restricted, some say
decisively, by the civilian decision makers. Sortie levels were con-
trolled, areas of North Vietnam were put off-limits to air attack,
bombing halts were frequent, and targets were carefully selected
from Washington. For example, MiG airfields were off-limits until
1967, as were missile sites until they downed an American air-
craft. In addition, the campaign was graduated, robbing the Air-
men of the elements of shock and surprise and permitting the
North Vietnamese to build and adjust their defenses.6
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AIRMEN VERSUS GUERRILLAS
war with tactics and aircraft designed for nuclear warfare. The
best example of this mismatch was the F-105. A fighter with
an internal bomb bay—a contradiction in terms—it was the US
Air Force’s workhorse, flying many of the missions over the
north and suffering the most damage.9
The United States, for its entire technological prowess, was
ill equipped in other areas as well. At the beginning of the air
war, the United States was still using unguided (dumb) muni-
tions, just as Airmen had used in World War I! Thus, aircrews
had to overfly their targets, which proved dangerous and often
fatal.10 Second, the United States had inadequate electronic
ECM. Although Strategic Air Command (SAC) B-52s were rea-
sonably equipped, TAC fighters were not. The irony therefore is
that, until late in the war, the better-equipped B-52s operated
unopposed over South Vietnam, while throughout the war,
fighters flew against the growing and increasingly lethal de-
fenses in North Vietnam.
Another factor, perhaps the most important, was that the
Americans underestimated the power of the defense and the
abilities of the North Vietnamese. The Airmen focused on the
weapons on which Airmen always focus, where the glamour
and glory are, fighters and air-to-air combat. It is true that the
North Vietnamese built up their air force. But, this air force
proved as elusive as the Vietcong, using guerrilla tactics of hit-
and-run and fighting only when circumstances were favorable.
With the major exception of Operation Bolo in January 1967,
when US fighter pilots ambushed the North Vietnamese fighters
and destroyed seven MiGs without a loss, American Airmen
did not engage in major air battles and thus were unable to
rack up scores as they had in World War II and Korea.11 While
glamorous as always, a matter of pride, and a symbol of success,
air-to-air combat was neither frequent nor important in the
Vietnam air war. The principal Communist weapon against US
aircraft was AAA. American Airmen not only underestimated
North Vietnamese defenses, they especially underestimated
the impact of flak. Both were serious mistakes.
The North Vietnamese fielded a formidable ground-based air
defense system. In early 1965, the North Vietnamese manned
about 1,200 antiaircraft guns, which they increased to almost
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AIRMEN VERSUS GUERRILLAS
2,000 guns within six months. In 1967, Pacific Air Forces es-
timated that there were 9,000 antiaircraft weapons in North
Vietnam, while a Headquarters Air Force estimate put the num-
ber at 3,100 medium (37 mm or 57 mm) and 1,300 heavy (85
mm or 100 mm) guns. With better intelligence, the estimate
was lowered to 2,000 guns by the end of 1969 and to less than
1,000 guns (37 mm and larger) in 1972. Whatever their num-
bers, their impact was significant.12
The farther north the Airmen operated, the more intense were
the defenses. Although only 20 percent of US sorties over Indo-
china in 1965 were against North Vietnam, 62 percent of its
combat losses were there. The following year, 1966, proved only
a little better, with about 30 percent of the total Indochina sor-
ties and fewer than 60 percent of losses occurring over the north.
The area north of 20 degrees latitude, especially around the
Hanoi-Haiphong area, proved most dangerous. In the period
September 1966 through July 1967, the United States flew fewer
than 30 percent of its North Vietnam attack sorties north of 20
degrees yet lost 63.5 percent of its aircraft in that area.13
In all, the United States lost just over 2,400 fixed-wing air-
craft in flight to enemy defenses during the Vietnam War
(through 15 August 1973). Of the known causes of loss, gun-
fire caused 89 percent; SAMs, 8 percent; and MiGs, 3 percent.
In addition, the United States lost approximately 2,400 heli-
copters in flight to enemy action, all but nine (two to MiGs and
seven to SAMs) to AAA (fig. 56). The Communists downed about
1,100 American planes over North Vietnam, 72 percent to
gunfire, 19 percent to SAMs, and 8 percent to MiGs.14
The American Airmen initially used nuclear delivery tactics
that they had practiced in the late 1950s and early 1960s:
high-speed, low-altitude approaches and a rapid climb (pop-
up) to bombing altitude just before reaching the target. One
adjustment with conventional ordnance was to make multiple
passes over the target, but intense ground fire and the result-
ing losses forced a change. Therefore, the Airmen raised ap-
proach altitudes to 15,000 to 20,000 feet, from which the air-
craft dive-bombed their targets and limited attacks to a single
pass. This reduced losses, but, as a consequence, it also reduced
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accuracy, one author asserts, from under 300 feet to over 500
feet.15
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The leaders also feared that such attacks might cause Soviet
casualties. Besides, one of McNamara’s chief assistants, John
McNaughton, believed that the SAMs only represented a bluff
and would not be used.16
The potential SAM threat grew as the North Vietnamese in-
corporated more missiles into their inventory (fig. 57). North
Vietnamese SAM battalions increased from one in 1965 to 25
the next year, to 30 in 1967, and to 35–40 in 1968. This growth
in units permitted the North Vietnamese to increase their missile
Figure 57. SA-2 position with missiles. The introduction of the SAM
changed the dynamic of the air war. Although responsible for only 9
percent of total aircraft losses, the SA-2 forced American aircraft lower
and into the sights of Communist gunners. (Reprinted from USAF.)
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Figure 58. SA-2 launch. American Airmen could avoid the Soviet SA-2
if they were alert and spotted them in time. (Reprinted from USAF.)
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Figure 59. EB-66. One counter to North Vietnamese radar was standoff
electronic jamming. The EB-66 was the chief USAF platform for such
activity. (Reprinted from USAF.)
capabilities. The EB-66 served well throughout the war, but its
operations were limited by its small numbers, old airframe,
inadequate engines, fuel leaks, and restricted operator train-
ing. The Communists countered the jamming by moving their
SAMs forward, forcing the EB-66 in turn to move away from
North Vietnam to orbits over both Laos and the Gulf of Tonkin,
farther from their radars and thus making them less effective.
They also directly attacked the jammers with both MiGs and
missiles, downing six EB-66s over the course of the war.21 In late
1966, the Marines introduced the EA-6A into the jamming role.
A third American measure against the SAMs was code-
named Wild Weasel. The Air Force installed radar homing and
warning—electronics equipment that could detect SAM radar
and indicate its location—into F-100Fs, the two-seat trainer
version of its fighter-bomber. Wild Weasel I went into action in
November 1965, flying with and guiding conventionally armed
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Figure 61. Wild Weasel. The USAF employed special units, called Wild
Weasel, to attack Communist radar. This two-seat F-105G is carrying
two Shrike antiradiation missiles. (Reprinted from USAF.)
They fired the SA-2s at the jamming signal, but as this gave
azimuth and not range information, this technique was much
less accurate than the normal method. Thus, the pods per-
mitted operations from 10,000 to 17,000 feet, above the reach
of light and medium flak. The Air Force put the pods into ser-
vice in January 1967. There were, of course, drawbacks to
using ECM pods. The tighter formations that were best suited
for ECM results made the aircraft more vulnerable to MiG at-
tack. Another penalty was that the increased altitude of opera-
tions decreased the weapon’s accuracy.26 The Navy did not
adopt the pods and paid a price. In the first nine months of
1967, the US Air Force pod-equipped forces lost five aircraft in
the heavily defended Route Package VI, while at the same time,
the Navy lost about 20 aircraft in that area. In the previous
year, SAMs accounted for 50 percent of Air Force losses in that
area; now they claimed only about 16 percent. During these
times, SAMs were credited with one-half of Navy aircraft losses.27
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Figure 62. Damaged B-52. The B-52s operated at high altitudes out of
the reach of most North Vietnamese guns, but not from missiles. SAMs
hit this Stratofortress and forced it to make an emergency landing at
DaNang. (Reprinted from USAF.)
(later called Linebacker I), the code name for the renewed air
attacks of the North in 1972, the Communists fired 2,750 SA-2s
at US aircraft and downed 46 planes.32
Just as North Vietnam changed the rules of the game, so did
the United States. Nixon’s policy of détente gave him flexibility
that his predecessor, who feared direct intervention by the So-
viets or the Chinese, lacked.33 In 1972, the president author-
ized the mining of North Vietnamese ports, long requested by
the military, and used air power as it had not been used before.
The Airmen employed air power more effectively also because
they had fewer political restrictions, although some targets
and areas continued to be denied to them.34 US air power played
a major role in stopping the invasion by inflicting terrific losses
on North Vietnamese forces. As never before, American Airmen
had targets they could see, hit, and destroy. The Airmen also
had better weapons.
Although the Airmen had not introduced new aircraft since the
1968 bombing of North Vietnam, they did use other equipment
that improved bombing effectiveness. These devices put more
bombs on target, thus reducing the exposure of friendly aircraft
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Figure 63. EA-6B Prowler. The EA-6B Prowler carried a four-man crew
to jam enemy radars. (Reprinted from USAF.)
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AIRMEN VERSUS GUERRILLAS
Linebacker II
On 14 December President Nixon gave the North Vietnamese
72 hours to get back to serious negotiations “or else.” The “or
else” was a three-day bombing offensive against North Vietnam,
which Nixon ordered that day and then changed on 19 Decem-
ber to an indefinite period. The object of Linebacker II—the code
name for the December bombing—was to restart negotiations.40
US Airmen returned to the home of the SAMs, AAA, and MiGs
on the night of 18 December.41 For three consecutive days, the
script was about the same. First, F-111s began with attacks on
airfields and various other targets at 1900, kicking off an opera-
tion that lasted about nine and one-half hours.42 About 20 to
65 minutes later, the first of three waves of B-52s unloaded their
bombs. The second wave followed about four hours later and
was in turn followed by the third wave about five hours later.
Each wave consisted of 21 to 51 B-52s supported by 31 to 41
other aircraft, and each wave flew exactly the same pattern:
the same heading from the west and, after a sharp turn after
bombing, the same exit heading to the west. There were also
daylight attacks by Air Force, Marine, and Navy aircraft.
The bombing rocked Hanoi, but the aircraft losses jolted the
Airmen as well. During the first three days of the operations,
12 aircraft went down, not a large number and seemingly
bearable; however, B-52 losses—three on the first night and six
on the third—were shocking. B-52s were, after all, America’s
primary strategic nuclear bomber, the foundation of the air-
breathing leg of the Triad. Up to this point, the US Air Force
had lost only one B-52 to enemy fire, although 17 had been
lost to other causes. While the overall B-52 loss rate of 3 per-
cent of effective sorties on the three missions appeared accept-
able, the loss rate on the third mission was 6.8 percent, and
the nine B-52s lost to this point in Linebacker II represented
almost 5 percent of the 170 to 210 B-52s the US Air Force had
deployed in Southeast Asia and over 2 percent of the 402 in
service in 1972.43 This was reminiscent of the summer and fall
of 1943 over Germany.
The B-52 losses highlighted a number of problems. First, the
B-52 fleet was of mixed quality, consisting of 107 of the older
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on the last two days of the operation, along with F-4 attacks
on SAM storage facilities. Despite these efforts, intelligence es-
timated that only two sites were 50 percent damaged, eight
were undamaged, and results against three were unknown.64
It should be noted that only 3 percent of the bombs dropped
during Linebacker II fell on SAM targets as compared with 5.3
percent that fell on airfields.65 The redeeming feature was that
by 29 December, the north Vietnamese had run out of SAMs,
leaving North Vietnam essentially defenseless (fig. 64).66
Clearly, Linebacker II was an outstanding feat of arms.
After years of restrictions and frustrations, American Airmen
were able to directly take on and defeat a formidable air de-
fense system. For the United States, and especially the Air-
men, this was a proud, satisfactory way to end the war, or at
Figure 64. Talos. During the Vietnam War, the Navy’s Talos missiles
downed one MiG in 1968 and another in 1972. This Talos is aboard the
USS Galveston. (Reprinted from USAF.)
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Conclusions
The American Airmen were unprepared for the war fought in
the skies over Southeast Asia—unprepared in terms of the po-
litical restrictions levied on them, the scant targets they had to
attack, and the nature of the long conventional war they had to
fight. As the realities of battle forced them to change both their
tactics and equipment, the Airmen had to relearn the lessons
of the past, and in the process, suffer substantial losses. They
again found that enemy antiaircraft defenses, SAMs rather
than aircraft, presented the major obstacle to air operations.
They again learned how dangerous it was to fly close to the
Figure 65. Terrier. A Terrier downed a MiG in 1972, one of three MiGs de-
stroyed by Navy SAMs. This Terrier is mounted on the USS McCormick.
(Reprinted from USAF.)
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Figure 66. RF-4C. More F-4s were lost than any other USAF aircraft in
Vietnam. The Air Force attributed 80 percent of these losses to ground
fire, 10 percent to MiGs, 7 percent to SAMs, and 2 percent to ground
attack. (Reprinted from USAF.)
Notes
1. Victor Flintham, Air Wars and Aircraft: A Detailed Record of Air Com-
bat, 1945 to the Present (New York: Facts on File Yearbook, Inc., 1990), 256.
2. The Vietminh used American 105 mm guns captured in the Korean
War so the errant French ammunition drops were important supply channels
for the Communists. See Bernard Fall, Hell in a Very Small Place: The Siege
of Dien Bien Phu (Philadelphia, Pa.: J. P. Lippincott, 1966), 31–34, 49, 133,
144, 454–55; William Leary, “CAT at Dien Bien Phu,” Aerospace Historian,
September 1984, 178–80, 183; Robert Frank Futrell, The United States Air
Force in Southeast Asia: The Advisory Years to 1965 (Washington, D.C.: Office
of Air Force History, 1981), 19–20, 116; and V. J. Croizat, trans., A Trans-
lation from the French: Lessons of the War in Indochina, vol. 2, RAND Report
RM-5271-PR (Santa Monica, Calif.: RAND, 1967), 292, 302.
3. Futrell, USAF in Southeast Asia to 1965, 158–59, 163, 196.
4. Benjamin Schemmer, “Vietnam Casualty Rates Dropped 37% after
Cambodia Raid,” Armed Forces Journal, 18 January 1971, 30; Michael McCrea,
“U.S. Navy, Marine Corps, and Air Force Fixed-Wing Aircraft Losses and
Damage in Southeast Asia (1962–1973),” Center for Naval Analyses (CNA),
study, August 1976, 2-1, 2-13, 2-19, 2-20, AUL; and Futrell, USAF in South-
east Asia to 1965, 116.
5. The Pentagon Papers, ed., the Senator Gravel edition (Boston, Mass.:
Beacon Press, 1975), 3:269; and Lon Nordeen, Air Warfare in the Missile Age
(Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1985), 11.
139
AIRMEN VERSUS GUERRILLAS
140
AIRMEN VERSUS GUERRILLAS
War Vietnam (Indianapolis, Ind.: Bobbs-Merrill Co., Inc., 1978), 224; Schem-
mer, “Vietnam Casualty Rates,” table 351; Institute for Defense Analyses (IDA),
Jason Study, “The Bombing of North Vietnam,” December 1967, 2:49, LBJ; and
Wayne Thompson, To Hanoi and Back: The U.S. Air Force and North Vietnam,
1966–1973 (Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution, 2000), 40, 242.
13. Report of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), “The Effectiveness of
the Rolling Thunder Program in North Vietnam: 1 January–30 September
1966,” November 1966, A-2, A-16, LBJ; CIA, “Report on Rolling Thunder,”
1966, 6, LBJ; IDA, Jason Study, “The Bombing of North Vietnam,” 3:49–50;
and Raphael Littauer and Norman Uphoff, eds., The Air War in Indochina,
rev. ed. (Boston, Mass.: Beacon Press, 1971), 283.
14. Rene Francillon, Vietnam: The War in the Air (New York: Arch Cape
Press, 1987), 208; and McCrea, “Fixed-Wing Aircraft Losses and Damages,” 6-
2, 6-11, 6-20.
15. McCrea, “Fixed-Wing Aircraft Losses and Damages,” 2–3; Futrell,
Aces and Aerial Victories, 4; and Thompson, To Hanoi and Back, 49.
16. Cable to White House Situation Room, 12/16437 May, 1; Intelligence
memorandum, subject: Status Report on SAMs in North Vietnam, 29 June
1965, 1–2; and memorandum, subject: CIA Appreciation of SA-2 Activity in
North Vietnam during Late July, 1 August 1965, 1, in CIA Research Reports:
Vietnam and Southeast Asia, 1946–1976, ed. Paul Kesaris (Frederick, Md.:
University Publications, 1983); Futrell, Aces and Aerial Victories, 5; Notes of
Lyndon B. Johnson, White House meeting, 16 May 1965, 3, LBJ; and
Thomas D. Boettcher, Vietnam: The Valor and the Sorrow (Boston, Mass.: Little,
Brown and Co., 1985), 232.
17. McCrea, “Fixed-Wing Aircraft Losses and Damages,” 2–10; Granville,
“Summary of USAF Aircraft Losses,” 10–11; and US Pacific Fleet, “An Analysis
of SA-2 Missile Activity in North Vietnam from July 1965 through March
1968,” staff study 8–68, October 1968, 2, NHC.
18. Momyer, Air Power in Three Wars, 136.
19. Nordeen, Air Warfare, 16; Peter Mersky and Norman Polmar, The
Naval Air War in Vietnam (Annapolis, Md.: Nautical and Aviation, 1981), 61;
Bryce Walker, Fighting Jets (Alexandria, Va.: Time-Life Books, 1983), 112;
and M. J. Armitage and R. A. Mason, Air Power in the Nuclear Age, 2d ed.
(Urbana, Ill.: University of Illinois, 1985), 108.
20. Marshall Michel, Clashes: Air Combat over North Vietnam, 1965–1972
(Annapolis: Naval Institute, 1997), 32; Nordeen, Air Warfare, 18; CIA, “Ef-
fectiveness of Air Campaign,” B-22; and Paul Burbage et al., “Air Superiority
Tactics over North Vietnam” (thesis, Air Command and Staff College,
Maxwell AFB, Ala., 1975), 13, AUL.
21. Giles Van Nederveen, “Sparks over Vietnam: The EB-66 and the
Early Struggle of Tactical Electronic Warfare,” CADRE paper, 2000, 11, 14,
19, 38–44, 62, 70, 74, 76, 99; Futrell, Aces and Aerial Victories, 4–5;
Nordeen, Air Warfare, 13; Gordon Swanborough and Peter Bowers, United
States Navy Aircraft since 1911 (New York: Funk and Wagnalls Co., 1968),
177–78; Gordon Swanborough and Peter Bowers, United States Military Air-
141
AIRMEN VERSUS GUERRILLAS
craft since 1908, rev. ed. (London: Putnam, 1971), 267–69; Julian Lake and
Richard Hartman, “Air Electronic Warfare,” US Naval Institute Proceedings,
October 1976, 46; and “US Marine Corps Forces in Vietnam: March
1965–September 1967, Historical Summary,” 2:36.
22. Nordeen, Air Warfare, 16; and Burbage, “The Battle for the Skies,” 240.
23. McCrea, “Fixed-Wing Aircraft Losses and Damages,” 2-24, 2-29;
Michel, Clashes, 225; USAF Pacific Command Scientific Advisory Group,
“Shrike Missile Effectiveness under Rolling Thunder Operations” (Working
paper 1-67, Headquarters of the Commander in Chief Pacific, Scientific Ad-
visory Group, January 1967), 1, AUL; USAF Pacific Command Scientific Advi-
sory Group, “Shrike Effectiveness under Rolling Thunder Operation, First
Quarter, 1967,” (Working paper 7–67, assistant for operations analysis,
Headquarters Pacific Air Forces, April 1967), 1, AUL; Nordeen, Air Warfare,
18–19; Military Assistance Command, Vietnam, uncoordinated draft, “Line-
backer Study,” staff study, January 1973, 7, HRA; and Burbage, “The Battle
for the Skies,” 247.
24. Report of Tactical Air Command (TAC), Directorate of Fighter Opera-
tions, “SEA Tactics Review Brochure,” April 1973, 2:77–79, AUL; Nordeen,
Air Warfare, 19, 22; Swanborough and Bowers, United States Military Air-
craft, 471; and Momyer, Air Power in Three Wars, 130.
25. Ivan Rendall, Rolling Thunder: Jet Combat from World War II to the
Gulf War (New York: Free Press, 1997), 151–54.
26. McCrea, “Fixed-Wing Aircraft Losses and Damages,” 2–24; Michel,
Clashes, 37–38, 62; Nordeen, Air Warfare, 23–24; Burbage, “Battle for the
Skies,” 240; Momyer, Air Power in Three Wars, 127; and Lake and Hartman,
“Air Electronic Warfare,” 47.
27. Michel, Clashes, 127.
28. Littauer and Uphoff, The Air War in Indochina, 283.
29. Schemmer, table 351.
30. Ibid.; Carl Berger et al., eds., The United States Air Force in Southeast
Asia: 1961–1973 (Washington, D.C.: Office of Air Force History, 1977), 116;
Armitage and Mason, Air Power in the Nuclear Age, 2; James Coath and
Michael Kilian, Heavy Losses: The Dangerous Decline of America’s Defense
(New York: Penguin Books, 1985), 136–37; Warren Young, The Helicopters
(Alexandria, Va.: Time-Life Books, 1982), 140; and Peter Mersky, US Marine
Corps Aviation: 1912 to the Present (Baltimore, Md.: Nautical and Aviation,
1987), 244. In Vietnam, on average, one helicopter was hit on every 450 sor-
ties, one downed on every 7,000, and one lost on every 20,000. See Peter
Borgart, “The Vulnerability of Manned Airborne Weapon Systems, pt. 3: In-
fluence on Tactics and Strategy,” International Defense Review, December
1977, 1065.
31. Claude Morita, “Implication of Modern Air Power in a Limited War,”
Report of interview with Gen John Vogt Jr., commander, Seventh Air Force,
Office of Pacific Air Forces History, 29 November 1973, 23–24, AUL; John
Doglione et al., Airpower and the 1972 Spring Invasion, monograph 3 in
USAF Southeast Asia Monograph Series, ed., Arthur J. C. Lavalle (Washington
142
AIRMEN VERSUS GUERRILLAS
D.C.: Department of the Air Force, 1975–1979), 142, 197; Nordeen, Air Warfare,
64; G. H. Turley, “Time of Change in Modern Warfare,” Marine Corps Gazette,
December 1974, 18; CNA, “Documentation and Analysis of US Marine Corps
Activity in Southeast Asia: 1 April–31 July 1972,” 1:110, 1:111, Marine Corps
Historical Center; and Lake and Hartman, “Air Electronic Warfare,” 47.
32. Doglione, Airpower and the 1972 Spring Invasion, 132; Berger et al.,
The USAF in Southeast Asia, 168; Nordeen, Air Warfare, 64; House of Rep-
resentatives, Hearings before the Subcommittee of the Committee on Appro-
priations, 93d Cong., 1st sess., 9 January 1973, 10; and CNA, “Summary of
Air Operations in Southeast Asia: January 1972–31 January 1973,”
OEG/OP508N, January 1974, 4-17, 4-19.
33. Seymour Hersh, The Price of Power—Kissinger in the Nixon White
House (New York: Summit Books, 1983), 506; and Richard Nixon, RN: The
Memoirs of Richard Nixon (New York: Grosser & Dunlap, 1976), 606–7.
34. Guenter Lewy, America in Vietnam (New York: Oxford University,
1978), 410; and Hersh, The Price of Power, 526.
35. TAC, “SEA Tactics Review Brochure,” 11, 68.
36. Guided weapons were expensive, limited by the weather, and few in
number. See Directorate of Operations Analysis, Headquarters Pacific Air
Forces, Project Contemporary Historical Examination of Current Operations
Report, “Linebacker: Overview of the First 120 Days,” 27 September 1973,
21, 27, AUL; and Nordeen, Air Warfare, 59, 63. One problem encountered
with the ECM pods was that they created interference with the electro-optical
guided bomb (EOGB) guidance system. A wire screen quickly solved that
problem. See Patrick Breitling, “Guided Bomb Operations in SEA: The
Weather Dimensions, 1 February–31 December 1972,” Contemporary His-
torical Examination of Current Operations Report, 1 October 1973, 3, 24,
AUL; Jeffery Rhodes, “Improving the Odds on Ground Attack,” Air Force
Magazine, November 1986, 48; Delbert Corum et al., The Tale of Two Bridges,
monograph 1 in USAF Southeast Asia Monograph Series, ed., Arthur J. C.
Lavalle (Washington, D.C.: Department of the Air Force, 1975–1979), 85–86;
and Morita, “Implications of Modern Air Power,” 6.
37. Michel, Clashes, 222; Momyer, Air Power in Three Wars, 129; Military
Assistance Command, Vietnam, “Linebacker Study”; Nordeen, Air Warfare, 24;
and Senate Committee on Armed Services, Hearing on Fiscal Year 1974 Autho-
rization, 92d Cong., 2d sess., 13–20 March 1973, pt. 6:4275.
38. TAC, “SEA Tactics Review Brochure,” 11, 78. During the period of 10
May through 10 September 1972, the United States lost 63 fixed-wing air-
craft in combat over the north: 21 to AAA, 22 to MiGs, and 20 to SAMs.
39. Military Assistance Command, Vietnam, “Uncoordinated Draft,” 7,
chap. 8; Burbage, “Battle for the Skies,” 267; Directorate of Operations
Analysis, “Linebacker,” 70–72; DOD, Office of the Assistant Secretary of
Defense, “US Aircraft Losses in SE Asia,” October 1973, table 351, 5; R. Mark
Clodfelter, “By Other Means: An Analysis of the Linebacker Bombing Cam-
paigns as Instruments of National Policy” (master’s thesis, University of
143
AIRMEN VERSUS GUERRILLAS
Nebraska, 1983), 77; and CNA, “Summary of Air Ops in SEA: January
72–January 73,” 4-1, 4-8, 4-19, 4-23.
40. Marvin and Bernard Kalb, Kissinger (Boston, Mass.: Little, Brown
and Co., 1974), 412; Clodfelter, “By Other Means,” 105, 111; W. Hays Parks,
“Linebacker and the Law of War,” Air University Review 34 (January–February
1983): 16; and Nixon, RN: The Memoirs, 734.
41. Broughton, Thud Ridge, 36.
42. Briefing Books IV, Headquarters US Air Force, details on the Line-
backer II missions, 2 vols., December 1972, HRA.
43. Norman Polmar, ed., Strategic Air Command—People, Aircraft, and
Missiles (Annapolis: Nautical & Aviation, 1979), 126; Granville, “Summary of
USAF Aircraft Losses,” 18; James McCarthy and George Allison, Linebacker
II—A View from the Rock (Maxwell AFB, Ala.: Air Power Research Institute,
1979), 12; and Karl Eschmann, “The Role of Tactical Air Support: Line-
backer II” (thesis, Air Command and Staff College, Maxwell AFB, Ala., 1985),
70–72, AUL.
44. “The Role of Tactical Support,” 49, 70–72; and McCarthy and Allison,
Linebacker II, 86. On these first three missions, 1.6 percent of the Ds and
4.9 percent of the Gs went down per sortie. In the entire 11-day campaign,
the Ds suffered 1.8 percent and the Gs, 2.7 percent. About 10 percent of the
missiles fired against the Gs impacted, whereas only 3 percent of those fired
against the Ds impacted. See Headquarters US Air Force, briefing books, De-
cember 1972; briefing, Headquarters Pacific Air Forces, “Operations Analysis:
Linebacker II Air Operations,” 31 January 1973, HRA; McCarthy and Allison,
Linebacker II, 70; and Eschmann, “The Role of Tactical Air Support,” 49.
45. This policy quickly changed beginning with the second wave on the
second day. See McCarthy and Allison, Linebacker II, 46–47.
46. Robert Clement, “A Fourth of July in December: A B-52 Navigator’s
Perspective of Linebacker II” (thesis, Air Command and Staff College,
Maxwell AFB, Ala., 1984), 18, 49, AUL; and McCarthy and Allison, Line-
backer II, 30, 32.
47. Headquarters USAF, “Linebacker USAF Bombing Survey,” 1973, 35,
HRA; TAC, “SEA Tactics Review Brochure,” 11, 77; and Eschmann, “The Role
of Tactical Support,” 60.
48. Eschmann, “The Role of Tactical Support,” 60, 63; and Clodfelter, “By
Other Means,” 121.
49. TAC, “SEA Tactics Review Brochure,” 11, 76.
50. Strategic Air Command (SAC) Briefing, subject: Chaff Effectiveness
in Support of Linebacker II Operations, March 1973, HRA.
51. TAC, “SEA Tactics Review Brochure,” 11, 76.
52. “The Battle for the Skies over North Vietnam: 1964–1972,” 94, HRA.
53. SAC, “Chaff Effectiveness,” March 1973; and TAC, “SEA Tactics Re-
view Brochure,” 11, 76.
54. SAC, “Chaff Effectiveness,” March 1973. For a general discussion of the
changes, also see Clement, “A Fourth of July in December,” 49; Eschmann,
“The Role of Tactical Air Support,” 75–76; McCarthy and Allison, Linebacker II,
144
AIRMEN VERSUS GUERRILLAS
97, 121; and History, 388th Tactical Fighter Wing, October–December 1972,
27, 32–33, HRA.
55. B-52s flew 708 effective sorties; F-llls, 148; A-7s, 226; and F-4s, 283.
See Headquarters US Air Force, Briefing Books, II.
56. During periods of limited visibility, TAC fighters scored some re-
markable successes, most notably hitting two especially difficult targets, the
Hanoi thermal plant and Radio Hanoi. The latter, protected by a 25-foot high
and 10-foot thick blast wall, had survived the bombing of 36 B-52s. F-4s got
four laser-guided bombs inside the walls and destroyed the target. See
Clodfelter, “By Other Means,” 120; and Office of Assistant Chief of Staff,
Intelligence (ACSI), “Linebacker II: 18–29 December 72,” supporting docu-
ment III-KI, HRA.
57. History, Air Force Intelligence Service, 1 July 1972–30 June 1973:
Linebacker Summary III, K2, HRA; CNA study, “US Navy, Marine Corps, and
Air Force Fixed-Wing Aircraft Losses and Damage in Southeast Asia
(1962–1973), Pt. 1: List of Aircraft Lost,” report no. CRC 305 (Alexandria, Va.:
Defense Documentation Center, 1977), 191–93, 223, 488–92, AUL; Eschmann,
“The Role of Tactical Air Support,” 103–4, lists 30 aircraft destroyed, in-
cluding three lost in accidents. Futrell, Aces and Aerial Victories, 17, states
that 27 US Air Force aircraft were lost. The North Vietnamese claimed 81 US
aircraft (34 B-52s). See also Gareth Porter, A Peace Denied—The United
States, Vietnam, and the Paris Agreements (Bloomington, Ind.: Indiana Uni-
versity, 1975), 161–62; and Richard Holloran, “Bombing Halt Brings Relief
to B-52 Crews in Guam,” New York Times, 2 January 1973, 3. Drenkowski,
“Operation Linebacker II,” pt. 2, 55, says that 22 to 27 B-52s were destroyed.
58. Clodfelter, “By Other Means,” 108; and Clement, “A Fourth of July in
December,” 47.
59. Headquarters US Air Force, Briefing Books, I and II.
60. Eschmann, “The Role of Tactical Air Support,” 108; Berger et al.,
USAF in SEA, 60; Drendel, And Kill MiGs: Air to Air Combat, 47, 73; SAC,
“Chaff Effectiveness,” March 1973; McCarthy and Allison, Linebacker II, 65,
116; and Futrell, Aces and Aerial Victories, 125.
61. Eschmann, “The Role of Tactical Air Support,” 46.
62. CNA, “Summary of Air Ops SEA: January 72–January 73,” 4-17.
The North Vietnamese did not have the most modern equipment; in the 1973
Middle East War, Egyptians and Syrians inflicted heavy losses on Israeli air-
craft with Soviet SA-3 and SA-6 missiles and ZSU-23-4 guns, equipment not
employed in the Vietnam War. See chap. 4. The North Vietnamese may have
improved and manned their defenses without the help or knowledge of the
Soviets. See Porter, A Peace Denied, 161; and Jon Van Dyke, North Vietnam’s
Strategy for Survival (Palo Alto, Calif.: Pacific Books, 1972), 61, 217.
63. On the third day of the campaign, a SAC commander ordered a
search for North Vietnamese SAM storage facilities. Within 18 hours, the in-
telligence people began to find them, whereupon SAC requested JCS per-
mission to bomb them. Permission for all but one was forthcoming, although
it took another 24 to 36 hours. As a result, these targets were not hit until
145
AIRMEN VERSUS GUERRILLAS
146
Chapter 4
147
OPERATIONS BETWEEN VIETNAM AND THE PERSIAN GULF
148
OPERATIONS BETWEEN VIETNAM AND THE PERSIAN GULF
149
OPERATIONS BETWEEN VIETNAM AND THE PERSIAN GULF
Figure 67. SA-6. The mobile SA-6 did not see service over Vietnam, but
was effective against the Israeli air force in the 1973 war. (Reprinted
from US Army Air Defense Museum.)
150
OPERATIONS BETWEEN VIETNAM AND THE PERSIAN GULF
151
OPERATIONS BETWEEN VIETNAM AND THE PERSIAN GULF
152
OPERATIONS BETWEEN VIETNAM AND THE PERSIAN GULF
153
OPERATIONS BETWEEN VIETNAM AND THE PERSIAN GULF
154
OPERATIONS BETWEEN VIETNAM AND THE PERSIAN GULF
The IAF clearly won the air war, destroying about 450 Arab
aircraft, while losing about 107 aircraft in combat, 115 overall.
Compared to the 1967 war, the Arabs lost about the same
number of aircraft—although many more in the air—while the
Israelis lost twice as many. On a sortie basis, however, IAF losses
actually declined from 4 percent in 1967 to just over 1 percent
in 1973. Arab losses in 1973 were just under 5 percent.19
Although the IAF defeated the Arab air forces in the air, it
failed to use air power as it had in the 1967 war. CAS proved
limited and disappointing, especially in the first three critical
days of the war. One study concluded that aircraft did not un-
equivocally damage or destroy one tank. Even if this decline in
CAS effectiveness is overdrawn, air power clearly influenced
the war less in 1973 than it had in 1967. A dense, mobile, mixed,
surface-based air defense system thwarted arguably the best-
trained and highest motivated air force in the world and in-
flicted severe losses on it. Just as American Airmen under-
estimated North Vietnamese air defenses, so had the Israeli
airmen underestimated Arab air defenses. Both paid the price.
The 1973 war seemed to indicate that the balance between the
offense and defense (specifically aircraft versus ground defenses)
had swung in favor of the latter. Aircraft appeared to have lost
its battlefield dominance.20 The IAF action in Lebanon in the
summer of 1982 altered this view.
155
OPERATIONS BETWEEN VIETNAM AND THE PERSIAN GULF
156
OPERATIONS BETWEEN VIETNAM AND THE PERSIAN GULF
Figure 69. SA-9. The Soviet SA-9 mounts eight SA-7 missiles on a
mobile platform. (Reprinted from USAF.)
157
OPERATIONS BETWEEN VIETNAM AND THE PERSIAN GULF
158
OPERATIONS BETWEEN VIETNAM AND THE PERSIAN GULF
Indo–Pakistani War
In September 1965, war erupted on the Asian subcontinent
between India and Pakistan and lasted 23 days. Both sides
fielded small air forces equipped with a few modern aircraft
(Indian MiG-21s and Pakistani F-104s), but most aircraft were
at least a decade beyond their prime (Indian Hunters and
Vampires and Pakistani F-86s).
Just as the ground war ended in a stalemate, so did the air
war. But even at this writing (2005), it is difficult from the con-
flicting claims to sort out exactly what happened. The Pakistanis
claim to have destroyed 110 Indian aircraft, 35 in air-to-air
combat, 32 by antiaircraft guns, and the remainder in attacks
on airfields. They admit to losing 19 aircraft, eight in air combat,
two to their own AAA, and nine to other causes. The Pakistanis
admit that Indian guns downed a few aircraft but claim that
none of the F-86s engaged in almost 500 CAS sorties were lost,
although 58 were damaged. The Indians claim 73 Pakistani
aircraft were destroyed and admitted losing 35. The Indians
fired a few SA-2 missiles and claimed one C-130. The Pakistanis
dispute this claim, stating that they did not lose a C-130 to the
SAMs, and counter that the SA-2 got an Indian An-12 trans-
port. The Pakistanis do admit that an SA-2 damaged an RB-57F
at 52,000 feet.28
In December 1971, the two countries fought another brief
(two-week) war. By this time, both sides had upgraded their air
159
OPERATIONS BETWEEN VIETNAM AND THE PERSIAN GULF
forces in quality and quantity but still fielded forces that were
relatively small and of mixed vintage. Pakistan lost the war
and its eastern territory—what is now Bangladesh. Again, the
combatants’ claims markedly conflict, and these differences
remain along with the political problems. Indians claimed to
have destroyed 94 Pakistani aircraft for the loss of 54 and
stated that one aircraft fell to an SA-2 missile. The Pakistanis
claimed the destruction of 104 Indian aircraft at the cost of 26
planes. They admit losing three to four aircraft to flak as well
as two aircraft to friendly fire. The Pakistanis assert that AAA
registered 49 of their 104 kills. Another source states that one-
half of the lost Pakistani aircraft fell to ground defenses.29
160
OPERATIONS BETWEEN VIETNAM AND THE PERSIAN GULF
161
OPERATIONS BETWEEN VIETNAM AND THE PERSIAN GULF
Figure 71. Sea Dart launch. The Sea Dart, shown here in a peacetime
launch, equipped both Argentine and British forces. It downed five to
eight Argentine aircraft. (Reprinted from Imperial War Museum.)
162
OPERATIONS BETWEEN VIETNAM AND THE PERSIAN GULF
Figure 72. Roland launch. The Roland was developed by the French,
who claimed it destroyed four British aircraft in the Falklands War, a
claim denied by the British. (Reprinted from Redstone Arsenal.)
163
OPERATIONS BETWEEN VIETNAM AND THE PERSIAN GULF
164
OPERATIONS BETWEEN VIETNAM AND THE PERSIAN GULF
aircraft. The Blowpipe, like the SA-7 and the American Redeye
and Stinger, is operated by one man; but, unlike the heat-
seeking Soviet and American devices, Blowpipe is optically
guided. It proved it could do the job, both ashore and afloat.
One detachment aboard a Royal Fleet auxiliary fired six mis-
siles and claimed three aircraft destroyed. The Argentines also
used the Blowpipe and claimed hits on one Harrier and two
helicopters. In addition, the British used the lighter-weight
Stinger but fired only four missiles for one kill. (However, there
is some controversy about that particular claim.)37
The British initially credited the Rapier, their other ground-
based SAM, with 13 kills, later raised to 20 (fig. 74). Just as
the Roland kills are hotly disputed by the British, so are the
Rapier kills by those who have seen Argentine documents and
talked to Argentine pilots. (Perhaps this argument has more to
do with future sales of these weapons than with history.) Au-
thors using Argentine sources put the Rapier credits at one to
three. While the British stated that the campaign validates the
165
OPERATIONS BETWEEN VIETNAM AND THE PERSIAN GULF
Figure 74. Rapier. Another British SAM employed in the Falklands cam-
paign was the Rapier. (Reprinted from USAF.)
166
OPERATIONS BETWEEN VIETNAM AND THE PERSIAN GULF
Figure 75. HMS Coventry. Argentine airmen suffered high losses in the
Falklands War but pressed home attacks that nearly repelled the British
counter invasion. They sank a number of ships, one of which was the
HMS Coventry. (Reprinted from http://www.jove.prohosting.com-sinking/
falklands/shtml.)
but the third scored a direct hit, which sank the ship. According
to the manufacturer, obsolescent radar and computers ham-
pered the missile. In addition, seas rougher than anticipated
in its design degraded the system’s performance against low-
flying aircraft.39
The small, short-range Seacat began development in 1958
and is in service with a number of countries (fig. 76). Although
British sources credit it with eight kills, other sources put this
figure at one. The other short-range missile system was the
more advanced Seawolf. Although clearly a better system than
the Seacat, which it was designed to replace, Seawolf was only
fitted on two ships. (Argentine duds hit both.) Nevertheless,
this SAM received credit for downing three to five aircraft and
at least one air-to-surface missile.40
Regardless of the actual number of kills and the dispute
over claims, the fact is the Royal Navy’s defenses proved barely
adequate; the Argentine air force came close to driving off the
167
OPERATIONS BETWEEN VIETNAM AND THE PERSIAN GULF
Figure 76. Seacat.The short-range British Seacat was an older SAM used
by the Royal Navy, as well as by the Argentines. There is some dispute
as to its effectiveness in the Falklands War. This picture is of a training
exercise before that war. (Reprinted from Imperial War Museum.)
British fleet. The Argentine air force sank seven ships and hit
another dozen.41 Clearly, the Argentines came off better in the
air-sea battle in terms of resources expended. Each British
ship cost tens if not hundreds of millions of dollars; the HMS
Sheffield, for example, cost $225 million. Argentine Exocets
and aircraft cost far less, approximately $200,000 for the mis-
siles and perhaps $5 million for a modern jet fighter.42 But, the
British did win the war and did achieve their national objective.
168
OPERATIONS BETWEEN VIETNAM AND THE PERSIAN GULF
169
OPERATIONS BETWEEN VIETNAM AND THE PERSIAN GULF
170
OPERATIONS BETWEEN VIETNAM AND THE PERSIAN GULF
171
OPERATIONS BETWEEN VIETNAM AND THE PERSIAN GULF
172
OPERATIONS BETWEEN VIETNAM AND THE PERSIAN GULF
Summary
Any war is difficult to evaluate, but small wars are especially
tricky. Because the amount of equipment used is usually small
and for the most part less than the most modern, it is difficult
to extrapolate the findings into more general and future uses.
When wars are fought between other countries, problems of
analysis increase. Nevertheless, war is the only laboratory the
soldier has, and he or she must make the most of it.
The 1973 Arab-Israeli War presented many surprises, from
its origin to the way it was fought. The Arabs defied the con-
ventional wisdom in two respects: by attacking a country having
a superior military and attacking without air superiority. Ini-
tially, the Arabs used their air forces sparingly and advanced
under a dense and lethal umbrella of SAMs and guns. This air
defense proved effective and inflicted heavy losses on the Israeli
air force. Arab missiles and guns sorely tested the IAF; but,
the Israelis changed their tactics, adopted new equipment,
persisted, and won. However, Arab air defenses did not permit
the Israelis to fight the air and ground war as they had in 1967
and as they would have liked. Because of this war, some com-
mentators spoke of the demise of the tank and aircraft, victims
of the modern missile. The defense seemed to be supreme.
However, the wars of 1982 seemingly offered different lessons.
The IAF won a striking victory against Syrian aircraft and SAMs.
This came about with coordinated efforts of all arms and es-
pecially with high-technology equipment such as ARMs, re-
motely piloted vehicles (RPV), and electronics aircraft.
The implications of the war in the Falklands appear less
clear. It might be thought of as the converse of Vietnam; that
is, a relatively sophisticated but small British force pitted against
a larger but less-modern Argentine one. The Argentines used
mostly old aircraft and old bombs, without ECM protection
and at the limits of their range. Not surprisingly, the British,
173
OPERATIONS BETWEEN VIETNAM AND THE PERSIAN GULF
Notes
1. Victor Flintham, Air Wars and Aircraft: A Detailed Record of Air Com-
bat, 1945 to the Present (New York: Facts on File Yearbook, Inc., 1990), 46;
Moshe Dayan, Diary of the Sinai Campaign (New York: Schocken Books, Inc.,
1965), 177–78, 221; Chaim Herzog, The Arab-Israeli Wars: War and Peace in
the Middle East (New York: Random House, 1982), 145; Trevor Dupuy, Elu-
sive Victory: The Arab-Israeli Wars, 1947–1974 (New York: Harper and Row,
1978), 212; and Stephen Peltz, “Israeli Air Power,” Flying Review Interna-
tional, December 1967, 1019.
2. Edward N. Luttwak and Daniel Horowitz, The Israeli Army (New York:
Harper and Row, 1975), 229–30; Nadav Safran, From War to War—The Arab-
Israeli Confrontation, 1948–1967 (Indianapolis, Ind.: Bobbs-Merrill Co., Inc.,
1969), 324 –25; Murray Rubenstein and Richard Goldman, Shield of David
(Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice Hall, Inc., 1978), 100; Robert Jackson, The
Israeli Air Force Story (London: Stacey, 1970), 218; Warren Wetmore, “Israeli
Air Punch Major Factor in War,” Aviation Week, 3 July 1967, 22; and Edgar
O’ Ballance, The Third Arab-Israeli War (Hamden, Conn.: Archon Books, 1972),
67, 75, 82.
3. Jackson, The Israeli Air Force, 153, 248; Wetmore, “Israeli Air Punch,”
2; James Hansen, “The Development of Soviet Tactical Air Defense,” Inter-
174
OPERATIONS BETWEEN VIETNAM AND THE PERSIAN GULF
national Defense Review, May 1981, 532; and “Off the Record,” Journal of
Defense and Diplomacy, January 1988, 63.
4. Soviet pilots also were involved, but that is another subject for another
study. See Jackson, Israeli Air Force, 233; Luttwak and Horowitz, The Israeli
Army, 302, 321–23; Chaim Herzog, The War of Atonement, October 1973
(Boston, Mass.: Little, Brown and Co., 1975), 8, 9, 232, 235–37, 253; Insight
Team of the Sunday Times (London), The Yom Kippur War (Garden City, N.Y.:
Doubleday and Co., 1974), 33, 36; and Lon Nordeen, Air Warfare in the Missile
Age (Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1985), 134.
5. Hansen, “The Development of Soviet Tactical Air Defense,” 533;
Nordeen, Air Warfare, 149–50; Herzog, War of Atonement, 256; and Ronald
Bergquist, The Role of Airpower in the Iran-Iraq War (Maxwell AFB, Ala.: Air
Power Research Institute, 1988).
6. Herzog, War of Atonement, 256; Hansen, “The Development of Soviet
Tactical Air Defense,” 533; C. N. Barclay, “Lessons from the October War,”
Army, March 1974, 28; Charles Corddry, “The Yom Kippur War, 1973—
Lessons New and Old,” National Defense, May–June 1974, 508; Robert
Ropelewski, “Setbacks Spur System to Counter Israel,” Aviation Week, 7
July 1975, 15; Amnon Sella, “The Struggle for Air Supremacy: October
1973–December 1975,” RUSI Journal for Defense Studies, December 1976,
33; and Insight Team, The Yom Kippur War, 189.
7. Brereton Greenhouse, “The Israeli Experience,” in Case Studies in the
Achievement of Air Superiority, ed. Benjamin Cooling (Washington, D.C.:
Center for Air Force History, 1994), 590; Nordeen, Air Warfare, 149; Luttwak
and Horowitz, The Israeli Army, 348; Herbert Coleman, “Israeli Air Force De-
cisive in War,” Aviation Week, 3 December 1973, 19; “US Finds SA-6 to be
Simple, Effective,” Aviation Week, 3 December 1973, 22; Robert Ropelewski,
“Egypt Assesses Lessons of October War,” Aviation Week, 17 December 1973,
16; “SA-6–Arab Ace in the 20-Day War,” International Defense Review, De-
cember 1973, 779–80; and Robert Hotz, “The Shock of Technical Surprise,”
Aviation Week, 24 March 1975, 9.
8. Nordeen, Air Warfare, 149; Ropelewski, “Egypt Assesses,” 16; and “Soviet
Antiaircraft Gun Takes Toll,” Aviation Week, 22 October 1973, 19.
9. Insight Team, The Yom Kippur War, 161, 184–85; Herzog, The Arab-Israeli
Wars, 281, 346; Herzog, The War of Atonement, 87, 256; J. Viksne, “The Yom
Kippur War in Retrospect,” Army Journal, April 1976, pt. 1:41; “Israeli Aircraft,
Arab SAMs in Key Battle,” Aviation Week, 22 October 1973, 14; Historical
Evaluation and Research Organization, “The Middle East War of October
1973 in Historical Perspective,” study, February 1976, 145, AUL; Dupuy,
Elusive Victory, 551; Bryce Walker, Fighting Jets (Alexandria, Va.: Time-Life
Books, 1983), 149; and Peter Borgart, “The Vulnerability of the Manned
Airborne Weapon System, pt. 3: Influence on Tactics and Strategy,” Inter-
national Defense Review, December 1977, 1066.
10. Nordeen, Air Warfare, 165; Luttwak and Horowitz, The Israeli Army,
349; Coleman, “Israeli Air Force Decisive,” 19; “SA-7 Avoids Homing on Flares,”
Aviation Week, 5 November 1973, 17; Robert R. Rodwell, “The Mid-East War:
175
OPERATIONS BETWEEN VIETNAM AND THE PERSIAN GULF
A Damned Close-Run Thing,” Air Force Magazine, February 1974, 39; and
Hotz, “The Shock,” 9.
11. Ehud Yonay, No Margin for Error: The Making of the Israeli Air Force
(New York: Pantheon, 1993), 321; Nordeen, Air Warfare, 349, 351; and Jeffrey
Greenhunt, “Air War: Middle East,” Aerospace Historian, March 1976, 22.
12. Rodwell, “The Mid-East War,” 39; Dupuy, Elusive Victory, 552; Nordeen,
Air Warfare, 156; Luttwak and Horowitz, The Israeli Army, 349; Insight Team,
The Yom Kippur War, 187–88, 370; Coleman, “The Israeli Air Force,” 19; Bill
Gunston et al., War Planes: 1945–1976 (London: Salamander, 1976), 58;
Walker, Fighting Jets, 149; and Borgart, “The Vulnerability,” pt. 3, 1064.
13. Insight Team, The Yom Kippur War, 204; Walker, Fighting Jets, 150;
Coleman, “The Israeli Air Force,” 18; and Yonay, No Margin for Error, 353.
14. Yonay, No Margin for Error, 313. Another author states that the IAF
destroyed 28 SAM sites and the Israeli army 12 others. See Herzog, War of
Atonement, 242, 259; Insight Team, The Yom Kippur War, 338; Herzog, Arab-
Israeli Wars, 285, 341; and Rubenstein and Goldman, Shield, 127, 129.
15. Greenhouse, “The Israeli Experience,” 597–98; Herzog, Arab-Israeli
Wars, 346–47; Herzog, War of Atonement, 257; Luttwak and Horowitz, The
Israeli Army, 347; Nordeen, Air Warfare, 163–66; M. J. Armitage and R. A.
Mason, Air Power in the Nuclear Age, 2d ed. (Urbana, Ill.: University of Illinois,
1985), 134; Roy Braybrook, “Is It Goodbye to Ground Attack?” Air International,
May 1976, 234–44; Charles Wakebridge, “The Technological Gap in the Middle
East,” National Defense (May–June 1975): 461; and “SA-6–Arab Ace,” 779.
16. John Kreis, Air Warfare and Air Base Air Defense, 1914–1973 (Wash-
ington, D.C.: Office of Air Force History, 1988), 336.
17. “Bekaa Valley Combat,” Flight International, 16 October 1982, 1110;
Herzog, The War of Atonement, 260; Insight Team, The Yom Kippur War, 315;
Kreis, Air Warfare and Air Base, 336; Thomas Walczyk, “October War,” Strategy
and Tactics (March–April 1977): 10; Martin van Creveld, The Washington
Papers, Military Lessons of the Yom Kippur War—Historical Perspectives, no. 24
(Beverly Hills/London: Sage Publications, 1975): 31; Borgart, “The Vulnera-
bility,” 1064, 1066; Rubenstein and Goldman, Shield, 128; Herzog, Arab-Israeli
Wars, 347; and Ropelewski, “Egypt Assesses,” 16.
18. Rubenstein and Goldman, Shield, 13; Dupuy, Elusive Victory, 592;
Nordeen, Air Warfare, 151; Herzog, Arab-Israeli Wars, 266; Herzog, War of
Atonement, 258; and Lawrence Whetten and Michael Johnson, “Military
Lessons of the Yom Kippur War,” World Today, March 1974, 109.
19. Herzog, The War of Atonement, 260–61; Corddry, “The Yom Kippur
War–1973,” 508; Historical Evaluation and Research Organization, appen-
dix; Walczyk, “October War,” 10; William Staudenmaier, “Learning from the
Middle East War,” Air Defense Trends, April–June 1975, 18; “Israeli Aircraft,
Arab SAMs in Key Battle,” 14; Rubenstein and Goldman, Shield, 128; and
Borgart, “The Vulnerability,” 1066. A number of factors contribute to the
discrepancy in losses. Besides the differences in the training, leadership,
motivation, and doctrine of the opposing forces, two other factors stand out:
Soviet versus Western hardware and the Arab lack of ECM equipment and
176
OPERATIONS BETWEEN VIETNAM AND THE PERSIAN GULF
Israel’s use of it. See Dupuy, Elusive Victory, 549; Coleman, “The Israeli Air
Force,” 18; and Nordeen, Air Warfare, 162–63.
20. Van Creveld, The Washington Papers, 31–32; Luttwak and Horowitz,
The Israeli War, 350–51; Hansen, “The Development of Soviet Air Defense,”
533; Historical Evaluation and Research Organization, “The Middle East
War,” 148, 177; and Drew Middleton, “Missiles Blunt Thrust of Traditional
Tank-Plane Team,” New York Times, 2 November 1973, 19.
21. “Bekaa Valley Combat,” 1110; William Haddad, “Divided Lebanon,”
Current History, January 1982, 35.
22. “Antiaircraft Defence Force: The PLO in Lebanon,” Born in Battle, no. 27,
7, 32; R. D. M. Furlong, “Israel Lashes Out,” Interavia, August 1982, 1002–3;
Clarence Robinson Jr., “Surveillance Integration Pivotal in Israeli Suc-
cesses,” Aviation Week, 5 July 1982, 17; Edgar Ulsamer, “In Focus: TAC Air
Feels the Squeeze,” Air Force Magazine, October 1982, 23; and Anthony
Cordesman, “The Sixth Arab-Israeli Conflict,” Armed Forces Journal Interna-
tional, August 1982, 30. The IAF may have destroyed as many as 108 Syrian
aircraft. See “Syrian Resupply,” Aerospace Daily, 15 November 1982, 74.
23. Furlong, “Israel,” 1002–3; Robinson, “Surveillance,”17; Ulsamer, “In
Focus,” 23; Cordesman, “Sixth Arab-Israeli Conflict,” 30; “Bekaa Valley
Combat,” 1110; Drew Middleton, “Soviet Arms Come in Second in Lebanon,”
New York Times, 19 September 1982, 2E; “Israeli Defense Forces in the
Lebanon War,” Born in Battle, no. 30, 22, 45–47; “The Syrians in Lebanon,”
no. 27, 12, 28, 31–33; and “SA-9 Firings Seen Part of Attempt to Probe Israeli
Capabilities,” Aerospace Daily, 8 November 1982, 45.
24. Eugene Kozicharow, “Navy Blames Aircraft Loss on Soviet Sensor
Change,” Aviation Week, 12 December 1983, 25–26; Richard Halloran, “Navy,
Stung by Criticism, Defends Cost of Bombing Raid in Lebanon,” New York
Times, 7 December 1983, 1, 19; and Thomas Friedman, “US Ships Attack
Syrian Positions in Beirut Region,” New York Times, 14 December 1983, 1.
25. “US Demonstrates Advanced Weapons Technology in Libya,” Aviation
Week, 21 April 1986, 19; Fred Hiatt, “Jet Believed Lost, 5 Sites Damaged in
Raid on Libya,” Washington Post, 16 April 1986, A25; and Anthony Cordesman,
“After the Raid,” Armed Forces, August 1986, 359.
26. Cordesman, “After the Raid,” 358, 360.
27. Ibid., 355–60; “US Air Power Hits Back,” Defence Update/73, 1986,
27–32; Hiatt, “Jet Believed Lost,” A25; “US Demonstrates Advanced
Weapons Technology in Libya,” 20, 21; David North, “Air Force, Navy Brief
Congress on Lessons from Libya Strikes,” Aviation Week, 2 June 1986, 63;
and Judith Miller, “Malta Says Libya Got Tip on Raid,” New York Times, 6
August 1983, 1, 8.
28. Flintham, Air Wars and Aircraft, 195; John Fricker, Battle for Pakistan:
The Air War of 1965 (London: Allan, 1979), 122, 124, 183–84. Slightly different
claims can be found in Nordeen, Air Warfare, 113.
29. Flintham, Air Wars and Aircraft, 200–202; John Fricker, “Post-
Mortem of an Air War,” Air Enthusiast, May 1972, 230, 232; Nordeen, Air
177
OPERATIONS BETWEEN VIETNAM AND THE PERSIAN GULF
178
OPERATIONS BETWEEN VIETNAM AND THE PERSIAN GULF
which vary at times from these numbers, in Wood and Hewish, “The Falk-
lands Conflict, pt.1,” 980; Moore, “The Falklands War,” 21; Cordesman, “The
Falklands,” 32; and Guilmartin, “The South Atlantic,” 17.
36. Briasco and Huertas, Falklands, 165–68, 173; Ethell and Price, Air
War South Atlantic, 207; and Rodney Burden et al., Falklands: The Air War
(London: Arms and Armour, 1986), 33–147.
37. Derek Wood and Mark Hewish, “The Falklands Conflict, pt. 2: Missile
Operations,” International Defense Review, September 1982, 1151, 1154;
Moore, “The Falklands War,” 20; Christopher Foss, “European Tactical Missile
Systems,” Armor, July–August 1975, 24; Ethell and Price, Air War South At-
lantic, 196–209; Briasco and Huertas, Falklands, 165–69; and Terry Gander,
“Maintaining the Effectiveness of Blowpipe SAM,” Jane’s Defence Review, 4,
no. 2 (1983): 159.
38. Some accounts claim that Rapier’s radar interfered with the Royal
Navy’s radar. After all, the British army did not expect to fight alongside de-
stroyers on the plains of central Europe! Others state that the British sent
the army unit to the Falklands without radar, in contrast to the Royal Air
Force regiment that arrived later with Rapier and radar. Whatever the case,
the initial unit that went ashore in the campaign, and the only one that saw
action, fired optically guided missiles. See “UK Planned to Use Shrike Mis-
siles against Argentine Radars,” Aerospace Daily, 30 August 1982, 334; “Air
Defense Missiles Limited Tactics of Argentine Aircraft,” Aviation Week, 19
July 1982, 21; Great Britain, Ministry of Defence, Falklands Campaign, 22;
Wood and Hewish, “The Falklands Conflict, pt. 2,” 1153; Moore, “The Falk-
lands War,” 19; and Price, Air War South Atlantic, 196–208; Briasco and
Huertas, Falklands, 165–69; and Jacques du Boucher, “Missiles in the Falk-
lands,” African Defence, October 1983, 60.
39. John Laffin, Fight for the Falklands (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1982),
92–93; Ministry of Defence, Falklands Campaign, 9, annex B; Wood and
Hewish, “The Falklands Conflict, pt. 2,” 1151, 1154; Ethell and Price, Air
War South Atlantic, 196–208; and Briasco and Huertas, Falklands, 165–69.
40. Cordesman, “The Falklands,” 38; Ministry of Defence, Falklands Cam-
paign, annex B; Insight Team, War in the Falklands, 216; Ethell and Price,
Air War South Atlantic, 196–208; Briasco and Huertas, Falklands, 165–69;
Roger Villar, “The Sea Wolf Story-GW S25 to VM40,” Jane’s Defence Review
2, no. 1 (1981): 75.
41. Cordesman and Wagner, Afghan and Falklands Conflicts, 337–38, 351.
42. Cordesman, “The Falklands,” 34; Alistair Horne, “A British Historian’s
Meditations: Lessons of the Falklands,” National Review, 23 July 1982, 888.
43. Anthony Cordesman and Abraham Wagner, The Lessons of Modern
War, vol. 2, The Iran-Iraq War (Boulder: Westview, 1990), 460–62; Anthony
Cordesman, “Lessons of the Iran-Iraq War: pt. II, Tactics, Technology, and
Training,” Armed Forces Journal International, June 1982, 70, 78–79; “The
Iranian Air Force at War,” Born in Battle, no. 24, 13; “The Iraq-Iran War,” De-
fence Update, no. 44 (1984): 43–44; and Nordeen, Air Warfare, 185–88.
179
OPERATIONS BETWEEN VIETNAM AND THE PERSIAN GULF
44. Stephen Harding, Air War Grenada (Missoula, Mont.: Pictorial Histories,
1984), 9, 33, 36, 51; and Thomas D. Des Brisay, “The Mayaguez Incident,” in
Air War–Vietnam (Indianapolis, Ind.: Bobbs-Merrill Co., Inc., 1978), 326.
45. Jean de Galard, “French Jaguar Shot Down in Chad,” Jane’s Defence
Weekly 1, no. 4 (4 February 1984): 142; Charles Mohr, “Contras Say They Fear
a Long War,” New York Times, 16 June 1986, 8; Pico Iyer, “Sudan: Stranded
Amid the Gunfire,” Time, 1 September 1986, 34; and William Claiborne, “S.
African Military Says Intervention in Angola Staved Off Rebel Defeat,” Wash-
ington Post, 13 November 1987, A28.
46. John Cushman, “The Stinger Missile: Helping to Change the Course
of a War,” New York Times, 17 January 1988, E2; Ray Barnes, ed., The U.S.
War Machine (New York: Crown Publishers, 1978), 234–35; Maurice Robertson,
“Stinger: Proven Plane Killer,” International Combat Arms, July 1985; and
General Dynamics, The World’s Missile Systems (Pomona, Calif.: General Dy-
namics, 1982).
47. Cordesman and Wagner, Afghan and Falklands Conflicts, 170, 174;
Bill Gertz, “Stinger Bite Feared in CIA,” Washington Times, 9 October 2000;
“Soviets Press Countermeasures to Stinger Missile,” Aerospace Daily, 6 August
1987, 205; “Disjointed Rebels Join Forces as They Oust Their Enemy,” Insight,
25 January 1988, 21; and Anthony Cordesman, “The Afghan Chronology:
Another Brutal Year of Conflict,” Armed Forces, April 1987, 156–60.
48. Cordesman and Wagner, Afghan and Falklands Conflicts, 177;
Cordesman, “Afghan Chronology,” 158–60; Cushman, “The Stinger Missile,”
E2; Rone Tempest, “Afghan Rebel Rockets Jar Government Assembly,”
Washington Post, 30 November 1987, A24; John Kifner, “Moscow Is Seen at
Turning Point in Its Intervention in Afghanistan,” New York Times, 29 No-
vember 1987, 1; Peter Youngsband, “Grappling for the Advantage When Talk
Replaces Gunfire,” Insight, 7 December 1987, 43; Robert Schultheis, “The
Mujahedin Press Hard,” Time, 18 May 1987, 51; and Steven R. Weisman,
“US in Crossfire of Border War,” New York Times, 17 May 1987, E3.
180
Chapter 5
Figure 79. V-2 launch. V-2s at the German Peenemünde test site during
World War II. The World War II V-2 campaign was the first, largest, and
deadliest missile campaign yet seen. (Reprinted from US Army Aviation
and Missile Command.)
181
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE
Army Development
The Army was making progress on the issue of ballistic mis-
sile defense. In January 1949, the Army established a formal
requirement for ballistic missile defense that early in 1951
spawned the PLATO Project that was to provide antiballistic
missile (ABM) protection for the field army. The Army increased
the requirement in 1954 to defend against intercontinental
ballistic missiles (ICBM) in the 1960–70 time frame. A number
of studies emerged, with one in 1956 suggesting a Nike-Zeus
variant. PLATO was shut down in 1959, not for technical rea-
sons, but because of funding problems.6
The follow-on to PLATO was the Field Army Ballistic Missile
Defense System (FABMDS) program that began in 1959. How-
ever, as this had a long lead time, with an expected operational
date of 1967, the Army sought other equipment. Early on, the
182
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE
Army considered using Hawk in this role, and before this con-
cept was discarded in 1960, a Hawk intercepted a short-range
HONEST JOHN ballistic missile. The Army wanted more but
settled for the Nike-Hercules as an interim system. An improved
Hercules intercepted a higher-performing Corporal missile in
June 1960 and then another Hercules. The Army deployed the
Nike-Hercules as an antitactical ballistic missile to Germany in
the early 1960s. Meanwhile, DOD cancelled FABMDS in late
1962. In October, the Army renamed the project AAADS-70,
which became known as SAM-D.7
In March 1955, the Army gave Bell Labs a contract to study
future (1960–70) threats presented by air-breathing vehicles
and ballistic missiles. In short order, the Army began to focus
on the latter problem, which led to a proposal for a new defen-
sive missile, the Nike II. The missile was to have interchangeable
noses, one with an active sensor for use against air breathers
and the other a jet-control device (thrust vector motor) that
would permit maneuver above 120,000 feet to enable intercep-
tion of ballistic missiles outside the atmosphere. The system
would use two sets of radars: one considerably distant from
the missile site and the other more closely located.8
The Army and Air Force dueled for the BMD role. In November
1956, Secretary of Defense Charles Wilson directed the Army
to develop, procure, and man the land-based surface-to-air
missile (SAM) for terminal defense, and the Air Force was to
handle area defense—long-range acquisition radars and the
communications network that tied this system to the terminal
defenses. In January 1958, the secretary assigned responsi-
bility for development of all antiballistic missiles to the Army
and assigned the Air Force the development of the system’s
long-distance radar acquisition system, the ballistic missile
early warning system (BMEWS).9
Challenges to the BMD system were powerful, enunciated
early, and have persisted over the decades. Most of these ob-
jections have been technical. The opponents have doubted that
the ABM could sort out warheads, especially of small radar cross
sections, from decoys or debris. There has also been a ques-
tion regarding the system’s effectiveness against a massive
saturation attack. A further difficulty has been the system’s
183
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE
184
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE
Figure 80. Nike family. America’s first ABM family. From right to left
(and in the order of their deployment), the Nike Ajax, Nike Hercules,
and Nike Zeus. (Reprinted from US Army Aviation and Missile Command.)
185
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE
186
Figure 81. Spartan launch. The Spartan missile was the long-range
component of the first American ABM system. It was designed to hit in-
coming ballistic missiles before their reentry. (Reprinted from US Army
Aviation and Missile Command.)
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE
Figure 82. Sprint. The Sprint missile was the short-range component of
the American ABM system. It was a high-acceleration missile designed
to destroy incoming warheads that eluded the Spartan. (Reprinted from
http://www.brook.educ/FP/projects/nucwcost/sprint.htm.)
188
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE
Figure 83. Griffon. The first Soviet ABM known to the West was the
Griffon. Flight tests in 1957 led to the construction of 30 firing sites in
the early 1960s. But the Soviets stopped construction in 1963 and
abandoned the sites the next year. (Reprinted from Federation of Atomic
Scientists.)
189
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE
Figure 84. Galosh 1. The Soviets deployed the Galosh in four sites in a
ring around Moscow. It was fully operational in 1970. (Reprinted from
Department of Defense.)
190
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE
191
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE
192
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE
193
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE
derailed this effort.38 This was the situation when a new ad-
ministration came into office.
Proponents of ABM expected the incoming Republicans to
press forward with the ABM deployment. But Pres. Richard M.
Nixon, the stereotypical cold warrior, was also a shrewd politi-
cian. Reacting to the popular discontent over the path Sentinel
was taking, he changed the direction of the project within weeks.
In March 1969, Nixon announced that the ABM system was
being renamed (Safeguard), scaled down (from 17 Sprint sites
to 12), relocated (from the cities), and reoriented (to defend the
United States ICBMs). This was not only a compromise between
the extremes of increase or cancellation; it also was a different
path from the one trod by the previous Democratic adminis-
tration. The fact of the matter was that Nixon saw the system
as a bargaining chip in the ongoing arms negotiations.39
The public and political battle continued. Early 1969 saw
one of the hottest discussions of defense policy of post–World
War II America. The public remained relatively uninformed or
confused about the issue, but those who expressed an opinion
continued to support ABM by a margin of nearly two to one.
The Senate was a different matter. After a record 29-day debate,
on 6 August 1969 the Senate voted and divided evenly, allowing
Vice Pres. Spiro T. Agnew to cast the deciding vote to preserve
the system.40
Then, to the surprise of some and relief of many, America
and the Soviet Union reached an agreement after difficult ne-
gotiations. In May 1972, the two superpowers signed the
Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty (SALT) agreement that lim-
ited the number of strategic weapons.41 As important as that
treaty was, more important to this story was the agreement to
limit ABMs.
The ABM treaty was also concluded in May 1972. It permitted
each country to have two ABM sites, one within 150 kilometers
(km) of its national capital and another at least 1,300 km from
the first and within 150 km of ICBM sites. Each site was limited
to a maximum of 100 launchers and 100 interceptor missiles.
The treaty prohibited developing, testing, and deploying systems
(or their air-, mobile-, sea-, or space-based components) and up-
grading existing systems to ABM capabilities. It further forbade
194
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE
Figure 85. US ABM site at Grand Forks, North Dakota. The 16 round ob-
jects in the foreground are Sprint silos, the longish objects behind
them are the Spartan silos, and the pyramid-shaped structure to the rear
is the missile site radar. (Reprinted from http://www.paineless.id.au/
missile/Hsafeguard.html.)
195
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE
196
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE
Interceptor
Radar
Shelter
Figure 86. Low altitude defense system (LoADS). The low altitude de-
fense system was a mobile underground ABM system designed to pro-
tect American missile fields. Neither the missile field (Multiple Protec-
tive Shelter) nor LoADS was built. (Reprinted from Office of Technology
Assessment.)
197
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE
198
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE
199
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE
Figure 87. Scud missile. The Iraqis modified the Soviet Scud missile
which extended its range but lessened its accuracy. Iraqi Scud attacks
put political pressure on the coalition and, as a result, diverted resources.
(Reprinted from http://www.acq.osd.mil.)
200
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE
Figure 88. Scud hit on barracks. The coalition suffered amazingly low
casualties in the first Gulf War. The worst single incident was a Scud
hit on an American barracks in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, that killed 28
Americans and wounded another 97. (Reprinted from Defense Visual In-
formation Center.)
201
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE
The Patriot
The Army had been concerned about defense against tactical
ballistic missiles since the V-2s appeared in World War II. As al-
ready related, the ground service had conducted a number of
various projects to accomplish this goal. In August 1965, DOD
established a project office at the Redstone Arsenal for the sys-
tem that was renamed SAM-D (surface-to-air missile develop-
ment). The Army wanted a system that was mobile, included an
antimissile capability, and could replace its Hawk and Nike-
Hercules missiles. To be clear, the missile was designed mainly
as a point defense weapon (meaning it had limited range) against
relatively lower-flying and lower-speed aircraft rather than
against much higher- and faster-flying ballistic missiles.
There were various efforts to cancel the program. The Army
responded by simplifying the technology and cutting costs. More
to the point, in 1974 DOD dropped the BMD requirement to save
money. Now SAM-D was to be strictly a mobile SAM to counter
aircraft. In May 1976, the program was renamed Patriot (phased-
array tracking to intercept of target), which was a rather strained
acronym. However, some say this was intended to please in-
202
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE
203
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE
Patriot in Action
The Patriot was the only US weapon used against an incoming
ballistic missile, and it formed the last line of active defense
against the Scuds (fig. 89). The United States airlifted 32 Patriot
Figure 89. Patriot missile in Desert Storm. The Patriot missile was the
American counter to the Iraqi Scud during the first Gulf War. Its perfor-
mance was controversial, but it did ease political and psychological
pressures. (Reprinted from Redstone Arsenal.)
204
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE
205
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE
Figure 90. Scud. Scud debris, first Gulf War. The coalition’s inability to
throttle the Scud attacks was an embarrassment, but otherwise the
missile was not an effective military weapon. (Reprinted from Defense
Visual Information Center.)
206
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE
207
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE
Notes
1. A fuller version of the ballistic missile defense story can be found in
this author’s “Hitting a Bullet with a Bullet: A History of Ballistic Missile De-
fense,” CADRE Research Paper 2000–02 (Maxwell AFB, Ala.: College of Aero-
space Doctrine, Research and Education, 2000).
2. United States Strategic Bombing Survey, Overall Report (Washington,
D.C.: Government Printing Office [GPO], 1945), 88–89; Adam Gruen, Preemp-
tive Defense: Allied Air Power versus Hitler’s V-Weapons, 1943–1945 (Wash-
ington, D.C.: Air Force History and Museums Program, 1998), 15; Robert Allen,
“Counterforce in World War II,” in Theater Missile Defense: Systems and
Issues—1993 (Washington, D.C.: American Institute of Aeronautics and
Astronautics, 1993), 109; and Military Intelligence Division, Handbook on
Guided Missiles of Germany and Japan, February 1946, R.
3. David Johnson, V-1, V-2: Hitler’s Vengeance on London (New York:
Stein and Day, 1981), 168–69.
4. Donald Baucom, The Origins of SDI, 1944–1983 (Lawrence, Kans.:
University Press of Kansas, 1992), 4; and Frederick Pile, Ack-Ack: Britain’s
Defence against Air Attack during the Second World War (London: Harrap,
1949), 388.
5. Army Ordnance Missile Command, Surface-to-Air Missiles Reference
Book, V-1, 2, R; Stephen Blanchette, “The Air Force and Ballistic Missile De-
fense” (thesis, Air Command and Staff College, February 1987), 10–11, 15–16,
AUL; Baucom, The Origins of SDI, 4, 6, 12–13; Georgia Institute of Technology,
“Missile Catalog: A Compendium of Guided Missile and Seeker Information,”
April 1956, 101, 128, 130, R; “History of Air Research and Development Com-
mand: July–December 1954,” vol.1, 225–27, Historical Research Agency,
Maxwell AFB, Ala.; and James Walker, Frances Martin, and Sharon Watkins,
Strategic Defense: Four Decades of Progress (n.p.: Historical Office, US Army
Space and Strategic Defense Command, 1995), 4.
208
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE
209
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE
15. “ABM Project History,” I-15; and NORAD, “Quest for Nike Zeus,” 1.
16. “ABM Project History,” I-24, I-26; History of the 1st Strategic Aero-
space Division: The Nike–Zeus Program, August 1959–April 1963, 17–18,
29, HRA; and Walker, Martin, and Watkins, Strategic Defense, 19.
17. “ABM Project History,” I-22, I-23.
18. Walker, Martin, and Watkins, Strategic Defense, 19.
19. SMDC, “Discussion of Nike-Zeus Decisions,” 10; and NORAD, “Quest
for Nike Zeus,” 16–17.
20. SMDC, “Discussion of Nike-Zeus Decisions,” 8–9.
21. SMDC, “ABM Project History,” 2–9, X-1, I-36, I-37; and Walker, Martin,
and Watkins, Strategic Defense, 23.
22. Army Ordnance Missile Command, reference book, IV-14; “ABM
Project History,” I-37, 2–9, 9-1, IX-4, IX-21, IX-23; and Briggs, The Shield
of Faith, 246–47.
23. “ABM Project History,” I-37, I-44, II-1; Baucom, The Origins of SDI,
19; and Walker, Martin, and Watkins, Strategic Defense, 23, 26.
24. Other methods to enhance survivability of offensive forces were to
launch on warning, disperse, proliferate, and increase the number of weapons
on alert.
25. Steven Zaloga, Soviet Air Defence Missiles: Design, Development and
Tactics (Coulsdon, Surrey, U.K.: Jane’s, 1989), 121–22.
26. Galosh was a three-stage liquid-fuel rocket that carried a nuclear
warhead of 2–3 megaton yield out to a maximum range of 300 km and to a
maximum altitude of 300 km. See David Yost, Soviet Ballistic Missiles and
the Western Alliance (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University, 1988), 28; and
Zaloga, Soviet Air Defence Missiles, 128, 133, 135, 137.
27. According to a highly placed official and creditable academic, the ma-
jority of the intelligence community believed Tallinn was an air defense sys-
tem. See Morton Halperin, The Decision to Deploy the ABM: Bureaucratic and
Domestic Politics in the Johnson Administration (Washington, D.C.: Brook-
ings Institution, 1973), 82; “ABM Project History,” I-41, I-43, I-44, 2–4;
Briggs, The Shield of Faith, 277; David Grogan, “Power Play: Theater Ballistic
Missile Defense, National Ballistic Missile Defense and the ABM Treaty”
(Master of Laws, George Washington University Law School, May 1998), 9;
Jayne, “The ABM Debate,” 307, 318; Benjamin Lambeth, “Soviet Perspectives
on the SDI,” in Samuel Wells and Robert Litwak, eds., Strategic Defenses
and Soviet-American Relations (Cambridge, Mass.: Ballinger, 1987), 50; Kerry
Stryker, “A Bureaucratic Politics Examination of US Strategic Policy Making:
A Case Study of the ABM” (MA thesis, San Diego State University, 1979), 107,
156; Walker, Martin, and Watkins, Strategic Defense, 29–30; and Zaloga, Soviet
Air Defence Missiles, 15, 100, 102.
28. Douglas Johnston, “Ballistic Missile Defense: Panacea or Pandora?”
(PhD diss., Harvard, 1982), 195; and Yost, Soviet Ballistic Missiles, 26.
29. Interview with Lt Gen Austin Betts, 12 March 1971, 8, HRA; Briggs,
The Shield of Faith, 259; Donald Bussey, “Deployment of Antiballistic Missile
(ABM): The Pros and Cons,” Library of Congress Legislative Reference Service,
210
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE
April 1967, 17, 24; Halperin, The Decision to Deploy, 63; and Walker, Martin,
and Watkins, Strategic Defense, 26. See also “The ABM Debate,” 129–31, for
example.
30. McNamara’s predecessor, Thomas Gates, was also against deploy-
ment because he believed the public would not support the required shelter
program. See Jayne, “The ABM Debate,” 90; and Howard Stoffer, “Congres-
sional Defense Policy-Making and the Arms Control Community: The Case
of the Antiballistic Missile” (PhD diss., Columbia University, 1980), 117.
McNamara’s position on the limits of the ABM system remained constant.
The Kennedy administration had pushed through a shelter request in August
1961 but had difficulties with follow-up programs the next year. One DOD
study in the early 1960s concluded that shelters could save a life for $20
versus $700 per person for the Nike-X. See Briggs, The Shield of Faith, 252;
and Jayne, “The ABM Debate,” 182, 230.
31. The arguments for and against the ABM during this period are most
clearly set out in Halperin, The Decision to Deploy, 79–81. See also Baucom,
Origins of SDI, 23; Betts interview, 4; Stryker, “A Bureaucratic Politics Ex-
amination,” 104; Briggs, The Shield of Faith, 285; and Walker, Martin, and
Watkins, Strategic Defense, 29–30.
32. Betts interview, 8; Halperin, The Decision to Deploy, 78, 83; Jayne,
“The ABM Debate,” 309, 359; Stryker, “A Bureaucratic Politics Examination,”
171, 181–82, 208, 227; and Senate Committee on Foreign Affairs, “Staff
Memorandum on Current Status of the Antiballistic Missile (ABM) Program,”
90th Cong., 1st sess., March 1967, 2.
33. Baucom, Origins of SDI, 33, 34; Halperin, The Decision to Deploy,
84–86; and Jayne, “The ABM Debate,” 360.
34. Baucom, Origins of SDI, 34; and Jayne, “The ABM Debate,” 372.
35. Casualty estimates for a small Chinese attack against the United States
were about 6 to 12 million without defenses, 3 to 6 million with terminal de-
fenses, and zero to 2 million with terminal and area defenses. See Jayne,
“The ABM Debate,” 302; and Halperin, The Decision to Deploy, 89n.
36. Baucom, Origins of SDI, 35–37; Briggs, The Shield of Faith, 286, 327;
Jayne, “The ABM Debate,” 249n38, 374n2; and Walker, Martin, and Watkins,
Strategic Defense, 33.
37. James Bowman, “The 1969 ABM Debate” (PhD diss., University of
Nebraska, 1973), 127–32, 170; McMahon, Pursuit of the Shield, 45, 47; Stoffer,
“Congressional Defense Policy Making,” 149; Walker, Martin, and Watkins,
Strategic Defense, 33.
38. Jayne, “The ABM Debate,” 413–14; Thomas Longstreth and John
Pike, A Report on the Impact of US and Soviet Ballistic Missile Defense Pro-
grams on the ABM Treaty (n.p.: National Campaign to Save the ABM Treaty,
1984), 4; and McMahon, Pursuit of the Shield, 45.
39. Baucom, Origins of SDI, 38; Bowman, “The 1969 ABM Debate,” 178;
Briggs, The Shield of Faith, 299; Erik Pratt, “Weapons Sponsorship: Promot-
ing Strategic Defense in the Nuclear Era” (PhD diss., University of California,
211
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE
212
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE
54. Reiss, The Strategic Defense Initiative, 2, 89; Dennon, Ballistic Missile
Defense, 90; Paul Uhlir, “The Reagan Administration’s Proposal to Build a
Ballistic Missile Defense System in Space: Strategic, Political and Legal Im-
plications” (MA thesis in International Relations, University of San Diego,
1984), 101.
55. Hugh Funderburg, “The Strategic Defense Initiative and ABM Efforts:
An Analysis” (MA thesis, Political Science, Western Illinois University, 1985),
17; Longstreth and Pike, A Report on the Impact of US and Soviet Ballistic
Missile Defense Programs, 10; Reiss, The Strategic Defense Initiative, 60; and
Zuazua, “A Strategic Defense Initiative,” 38.
56. Hunter, “The Reign of Fantasy,” 154–69; Kincade, “The SDI and Arms
Control,” 103; Zuazua, “A Strategic Defense Initiative,” 38.
57. Dennon, Ballistic Missile Defense, 13, 105n53; Aengus Dowley, “A
Review of the Strategic Defense Initiative and Ballistic Missile Defenses” (MS
thesis, Southwest Missouri State University, 1995), 69, 124; Funderburg,
“Strategic Defense Initiative,” 17; Papp, “From Project Thumper to SDI”; and
Zuazua, “A Strategic Defense Initiative,” 28.
58. Dennon, Ballistic Missile Defense, 111; and McMahon, Pursuit of the
Shield, 7.
59. Norman Freidman, Desert Victory: The War for Kuwait (Annapolis:
Naval Institute, 1992), 340.
60. Rick Atkinson, Crusade: The Untold Story of the Persian Gulf War
(New York: Houghton Mifflin, 1993), 79; Freidman, Desert Victory, 340;
McMahon, Pursuit of the Shield, 298; David Snodgrass, “Attacking the Theater
Mobile Ballistic Missile Threat,” School of Advanced Airpower Studies, n.d.,
89, AUL; Roy Braybrook, Air Power: The Coalition and Iraqi Air Forces (London:
Osprey, 1991), 9; James Coyne, Airpower in the Gulf (Alexandria, Va.: Aero-
space Education Foundation, 1992), 55; Warren Lenhart and Todd Masse,
“Persian Gulf War: Iraqi Ballistic Missile Systems,” CTS, February 1991, 1–2,
AUL; and R. A. Mason, “The Air Power in the Gulf,” Survival, May/June
1991, 216.
61. Friedman, Desert Victory, 340.
62. Anthony Cordesman and Abraham Wagner, The Lessons of Modern
War, vol. 4, The Gulf War (Boulder: Westview Press, 1996), 856; Coyne, Air-
power in the Gulf, 55, 122; Richard P. Hallion, Storm over Iraq: Air Power and
the Gulf War (Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution, 1992), 186; George
Lewis, Steve Fetter, and Lisbeth Gronlund, “Casualties and Damage from
Scud Attacks in the 1991 Gulf War” (DSCS working paper, March 1993), 5;
and, Atkinson, Crusade, 90.
63. Gulf War Air Power Survey (GWAPS), vol. 4, Weapons, Tactics, and
Training (Washington, D.C.: GPO, 1993), 332; and Hallion, Storm over Iraq,
185–86.
64. Atkinson, Crusade, 418, 420; GWAPS, vol. 5, Statistical Compendium
(Washington, D.C.: GPO, 1993), 657–58; and Hallion, Storm over Iraq, 185.
213
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE
65. Atkinson, Crusade, 416–17, 419; Hallion, Storm over Iraq, 185; Michael
Hockett, “Air Interdiction of Scud Missiles: A Need for Alarm,” Air War College
paper, April 1995, 40, AUL; and McMahon, Pursuit of the Shield, 299–300.
66. GWAPS, vol. 2, Operations and Effects and Effectiveness, 191; Michael
Gordon and Bernard Trainor, The Generals’ War (Boston: Little, Brown and
Company, 1995), 239; and Edward Marolda and Robert Schneller, Shield and
Sword: The United States Navy and the Persian Gulf War (Washington, D.C.:
The Naval Historical Center, 1998), 197.
67. There certainly was a reluctance on the part of many of the Arab
countries to do battle with the Iraqis. Some, if not most, would much rather
have fought Israel. Reportedly, Egyptian and Syrian soldiers cheered when
they learned that Iraq had launched Scuds against Israel. See GWAPS, vol. 4,
Weapons, Tactics, and Training, 35; and Gordon and Trainor, The Generals’
War, 235.
68. Gordon and Trainor, The Generals’ War, 231; Hallion, Storm over
Iraq, 180; and Robert Scales, Certain Victory (Washington, D.C.: Brassey’s,
1994), 183.
69. Richard Barbera, “The Patriot Missile System: A Review and Analysis
of Its Acquisition Process,” Naval Postgraduate School, March 1994, 9, AUL;
Donald Baucom, “Providing High Technology Systems for the Modern Battle-
field: The Case of Patriot’s Antitactical Ballistic Missile Capability,” Air Power
History (Spring 1992): 4–6, 8; Tony Cullen and Christopher Foss, eds., Jane’s
Battlefield Air Defence 1988–89, 9th ed. (Coulsdon, Surrey, U.K.: Jane’s, 1988),
206; William Gregory, “How Patriot Survived: Its Project Managers,” Interavia
Space Review, March 1991, 66; and Steven Hildreth and Paul Zinsmeistser,
“The Patriot Air Defense System and the Search for an Antitactical Ballistic
Missile Defense,” Congressional Research Service, June 1991, 9, AUL.
70. Barbera, “The Patriot Missile System,” 11, 48; Baucom, “Providing High
Technology,” 7; Cullen and Foss, Jane’s Battlefield Air Defence 1988–89, 206;
Theodore Postal, “Lessons of the Gulf War Experience with Patriot,” Inter-
national Security (Winter 1991/92): 129–33; Frank Schubert and Theresa
Kraus, The Whirlwind War: The United States Army in Operations Desert Shield
and Desert Storm (Washington, D.C.: Center of Military History, 1995), 241.
71. Barbera, “The Patriot Missile System,” 13–14, 23–24; Baucom, “Pro-
viding High Technology,” 7, 9; and Cordesman and Wagner, The Lessons of
Modern War, 869.
72. Barbera, “The Patriot Missile System,” 13–17; Baucom, “Providing High
Technology,” 9; Cullen and Foss, Jane’s Battlefield Air Defence 1988–89,
206; Hans Fenstermacher, “The Patriot Crisis” (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard
University, Kennedy School of Government Case Program, 1990), 3, 5, 7–9, 13;
Gregory, “How Patriot Survived,” 67; and Hildreth and Zinsmeistser, “The
Patriot Air Defense System,” 11.
73. Jorg Bahneman and Thomas Enders, “Reconsidering Ballistic Missile
Defence,” Military Technology, April 1991, 50; Barbera, “The Patriot Missile
System,” 22, 37, 65; Cullen and Foss, Jane’s Battlefield Air Defence
1988–89, 209; and Schubert and Kraus, The Whirlwind War, 264.
214
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE
74. GWAPS, vol. 2, Operations and Effects and Effectiveness, 118; Hallion,
Storm over Iraq, 180; and Snodgrass, “Attacking the Theater Mobile Ballistic
Missile,” 87.
75. The Scuds emitted one-third the heat signature of an ICBM. See
Cordesman and Wagner, The Lessons of Modern War, 862; and Donald Kutyna,
“Space Systems in the Gulf War,” draft, 138.
76. Gulf War Air Power Survey, Command and Control (Washington, D.C.:
GPO, 1993), 248–50; GWAPS, vol. 4, Weapons, Tactics, and Training, 280–81.
This warning was an important factor in the relatively low casualty rate. One
reason the V-2 ballistic missile was so much more deadly (five killed per mis-
sile) than the V-1 flying bomb (0.6 kills per missile) during World War II was
that the former gave no warning as it arrived at supersonic speeds, while the
latter flew at subsonic speeds with a very distinctive sound that stopped be-
fore its last plunge. See Hallion, Storm over Iraq, 186; and Kenneth P. Wer-
rell, The Evolution of the Cruise Missile (Maxwell Air Force Base, Ala.: Air
University Press, 1985), 60–61. For slightly different figures but the same
conclusion, see Lewis, “Casualties and Damage,” 4–5. The satellites were not
infallible. For example, on one occasion, they mistook a B-52 strike for a
Scud launch. See Tom Clancy with Chuck Horner, Every Man a Tiger (New
York: Putnam, 1999), 385, 464; and Gary Waters, Gulf Lesson One—The
Value of Air Power: Doctrinal Lessons for Australia (Canberra, Australia: Air
Power Studies Centre, 1992), 217.
77. Part of the reason for the disparity in the rate of success in the two
areas came from different crews, doctrine, and conditions. See Cordesman
and Wagner, The Lessons of Modern War, 871–74; Coyne, Airpower in the
Gulf, 122; GWAPS, vol. 2, Operations and Effects and Effectiveness, 118n;
GWAPS, vol. 4, Weapons, Tactics, and Training, 280n; Hallion, Storm over
Iraq, 185; Stewart Powell, “Scud War, Round Three,” Air Force Magazine,
October 1992, 35; and Snodgrass, “Attacking the Theater Mobile Ballistic
Missile,” 88–90.
78. Ted Postal, letter to the editor, International Security (Summer 1992),
226; General Accounting Office, Operation Desert Storm: Data Does Not Exist
to Conclusively Say How Well Patriot Performed, September 1992, 3–4; and
Steven Hildreth, “Evaluation of US Army Assessment of Patriot Antitactical
Missile Effectiveness in the War Against Iraq,” Congressional Research Service,
April 1992, 7, 16.
79. Postal letter, 235n, 237–39.
80. Postal, “Lessons of the Gulf War Experience with Patriot,” 146; and
Theodore Postal, “Lessons for SDI from the Gulf War Patriot Experience: A
Technical Perspective,” testimony before the House Armed Services Com-
mittee, 16 April 1991, 4, AUL. For a defense of the Patriot, see Robert Stein,
“Patriot ATBM Experience in the Gulf War,” International Security (Summer
1992): 199–225. The participants in this fight had a specific agenda—they
were contesting the facts for the impact of the Patriot’s Gulf War perfor-
mance on SDI and National Ballistic Missile Defense. For a more balanced
215
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE
view, see Alexander Simon, “The Patriot Missile: Performance in the Gulf
War Reviewed,” July 1996, http://www.cdi.org/issues/bmd/Patriot.html.
81. Atkinson, Crusade, 147–48, 175; Clancy, Every Man a Tiger, 321,
379; GWAPS, vol. 2, Operations and Effects and Effectiveness, 182; 330, 335;
GWAPS, vol. 5, Statistical Compendium, 418; Gordon and Trainor, The Gen-
erals’ War, 237–38; Thomas Keaney and Eliot Cohen, Revolution in Warfare?
(Annapolis: Naval Institute, 1995), 73n; Mason, “The Air Power,” 217; and
Snodgrass, “Attacking the Theater Mobile Ballistic Missile,” 3.
82. Atkinson, Crusade, 177–81; GWAPS, vol. 2, Operations and Effects
and Effectiveness, 330–31; Gordon and Trainor, The Generals’ War, 241,
245–46; Hallion, Storm over Iraq, 181; Keaney and Cohen, Revolution, 73;
and Scales, Certain Victory, 186.
83. Cordesman and Wagner, The Lessons of Modern War, 331–32;
GWAPS, vol. 4, Weapons, Tactics, and Training, 292–93; and Gordon and
Trainor, The Generals’ War, 240. The Scud problem could have been much
worse. If the missile had been more modern, it could have been maneuvering
and more accurate. It also could have been used in greater numbers, armed
with chemical warheads, or with a more dependable warhead. (Of 39 warheads
that impacted in Israel, only a third detonated. See Lewis, “Casualties and
Damage,” 1.)
84. James Winnefeld, Preston Niblack, and Dana Johnson, League of Air-
men (Santa Monica, Calif.: RAND, 1994), 132, 134.
216
Chapter 6
In the half century since World War II, the US military has
been designed to battle masses of communist ground and air
forces on and over the plains of Central Europe. Many believed
the military could operate as well in other locales against lesser
threats; and since it could fight and win a large war against a
major foe, surely it could fight and win a small one against a
lesser one. But the conflicts in both Korea (1950–53) and Viet-
nam (1965–72) demolished this assumption, as air units there
had at best mixed results. Some would even insist the Airmen’s
efforts in Vietnam were both expensive and counterproductive.
The American military’s next major combat test would come
within months of the fall of the communist empire and the end
of the Cold War. Like the previous two wars, this one would
also be thousands of miles from Europe, against a foe mainly
equipped with Soviet materiel, and fought with a force config-
ured for the NATO defense of Western Europe. However, unlike
the conflicts in Northeast and Southeast Asia, after more than 40
years, the US military would finally fight its kind of fight.1
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218
GROUND-BASED AIR DEFENSE SINCE 1990
219
Figure 91. F-117 Stealth aircraft. The F-117 Stealth, an aircraft with ex-
tremely low detectability, introduced a new element into air warfare. Some
believe it has revolutionized air warfare. If not, clearly it has radically
changed air combat. (Reprinted from Defense Visual Information Center.)
GROUND-BASED AIR DEFENSE SINCE 1990
“one shot, one hit” accuracy, which meant that a few aircraft
could exact significant damage on the defender. Great fleets of
attack and support aircraft were no longer needed to inflict
critical damage on an opponent.10
The coalition had significant intelligence advantages. Cer-
tainly, the American fleet of sophisticated photographic, in-
frared, and electronic surveillance satellites was crucial. Air-
borne platforms added to this capability. In addition, the
coalition contacted and received information from the companies
that had built and installed equipment in potential targets.
The Airmen also utilized agents on the ground.11 On the other
side, the Iraqis had a good idea of US reconnaissance capabili-
ties because of US intelligence assistance to the Iraqis during
the Iran-Iraq War. Therefore, they employed various methods
to deny US overhead capabilities. In the end, however, seldom
has one force so well informed fought another so ill informed.
Perhaps the greatest advantage the coalition forces had over
the Iraqis was in the quality of personnel. The allied airmen were
competent and highly trained. Not only did they have more fly-
ing experience than their opponents, but also many (certainly
from the NATO forces) had trained in the highly realistic flag
exercises. Even had the two combatants exchanged equipment,
the coalition would have won—albeit at a greater cost.
The coalition planned to use its overwhelming air power to
simultaneously attack both air defense and strategic targets.12
The initial plan called for the F-117s to attack key air defense
centers, cruise missiles to hit the electric power grid, along with
attacks on command and communications facilities. These as-
saults would be followed by flights of American F-14 and F-15
fighters to counter any Iraqi interceptors. Later, massive coalition
air attacks supported by drones, jammers, and aircraft equipped
with radar-homing missiles would overload, neutralize, and
destroy the Iraqi air defense system.13
The strategic plan called for a four-phase operation to achieve
the coalition’s military and political goals. The Airmen’s target
list grew from 84 in August 1990 (Instant Thunder) to 481 by the
start of the shooting on 15 January 1991. At the same time, the
number of targets in the target set “Strategic Air Defense” grew
from 10 to 56, and those in “Airfields” grew from 7 to 31.14
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222
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223
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The Air Force fitted reflectors to the drone and formed crews
to operate them with men who had manned the US Air Force’s
discarded ground-launched cruise missile. They were to fly
“figure eight” patterns over targets in the Baghdad and Basra
areas until they ran out of fuel (they could fly about an hour)
or were shot down.20
The drones worked wonderfully well for the coalition. The
Air Force launched 38 of the devices from two different sites
against their targets, while the Marines and Navy used 137
TALDs during the first three days. Intelligence noted an in-
crease of 25 percent in SAM and AAA radar activity during the
first wave. The Airmen estimated that the decoy use doubled
or tripled the kills achieved by the antiradiation missiles. General
Glosson noted that the Iraqis fired an average of 10 SAMs at
each of the decoy drones.21
The Airmen found themselves short of jamming platforms.
The Air Force used 36 EF-111Fs and 18 EC-130Hs, while the
Marine and Navy employed 39 EA-6Bs. There were no allied
jammers. Therefore, while the coalition had jamming aircraft,
it realized the density of the defenses and the number of air-
craft and strikes demanded more. Nevertheless, the jamming
224
GROUND-BASED AIR DEFENSE SINCE 1990
Figure 93. BQM-74 drone. The Airmen used the BQM-74 drone to deceive
enemy radars as well as force them to reveal their positions to more
active defensive measures. (Reprinted from http://www.multipull.com/
twascasefile/bqm74e.gif.)
225
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226
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the coalition forces fired 200 HARMs and during the first week
used most of the 2,000 expended in the war.29
Another antiradiation missile was the ALARM (air-launched
antiradar missile). The British completed its trials in October
1990 and rushed it to the theater. The two-stage missile climbed
to about 40,000 feet, where after rocket burnout, a parachute
deployed and allowed the missile to slowly float earthward.
During this 10-minute period, the missile searched for radars
entered into its electronic library and, if detected, discarded
the parachute and sought them out. In all, the Royal Air Force
flew two dozen missions and fired 113 ALARMs.30
The Airmen were especially effective against Iraqi electronic
equipment. Iraqi radar activity on day seven of the war was
only 10 percent of that on day one. Reportedly, 85 percent of
the radar-guided SAMs launched by the Iraqis were unguided,
and these missiles accounted for only 10 percent of the coali-
tion aircraft losses.31
In addition to the intimidation and destruction caused by
the antiradiation missiles, the coalition airmen made tactical
changes that degraded the Iraqi ground-based air defenses.
Specifically, after suffering losses in the first three days of
combat employing low-level tactics with which they had trained
before the war, the airmen shifted their operations to medium
altitudes of around 15,000 feet.32 Higher-altitude operations
decreased the effectiveness of both AAA and infrared-guided
SAMs. However, operations from higher altitudes also decreased
bombing accuracy with “dumb” bombs, increased the interfer-
ence of weather to precision-guided munitions delivery, and
reduced the effectiveness of the A-10’s potent 30 mm cannon.
For example, the F-16s achieved peacetime accuracy of 30 feet
with unguided bombs, but during the war, this rose to 200
feet.33 One postwar study notes that this change in altitude
“was one of the most significant changes in allied strike plan-
ning, since peacetime training for most of the contributors for
air power (including the most important, the United States and
the United Kingdom) had emphasized low-level delivery of
weapons.”34 The Gulf War demonstrated that the better way to
combat dense air defenses was to use SEAD operations (US
Air Force tactics) rather than the low-level tactics of NATO.35
227
GROUND-BASED AIR DEFENSE SINCE 1990
Figure 94. Damaged A-10. Of the 38 coalition air forces lost in combat,
only one fell to enemy aircraft. AAA also damaged 24, IR SAMs 15,
and radar-guided SAMs four aircraft, including this A-10, one of 13
Warthogs damaged. (Reprinted from Defense Visual Information Center.)
228
GROUND-BASED AIR DEFENSE SINCE 1990
229
GROUND-BASED AIR DEFENSE SINCE 1990
230
GROUND-BASED AIR DEFENSE SINCE 1990
AAA at the airmen but were able to down only one F-117 and
one F-16. However, the loss of the F-117 was shocking, as none
had been hit, much less lost, in the Gulf War. The cause of loss
was not made public, but it was probably due to an SA-3. Never-
theless, the aircraft loss rate was less than that of the Gulf
War. However, the loss of 15 UAVs by one account (25 UAVs by
another) and three to five percent of the sorties indicates both
their vulnerability and, in fact, why they were employed.41
The Serbs learned from the Iraqi experience. On only a few
occasions did they directly confront allied forces; instead, they
attempted to preserve their air defense system as a force in
being. They were successful, as Serbs were firing as many SAMs
at allied aircraft on the last days of the operation as on the
first. Thus, the Airmen had to maintain high levels of support
aircraft and operate from higher altitudes (above 15,000 feet)
throughout the campaign, unlike the action in Iraq where both
altitude and support sorties declined later in the operation
after the air defenses had been suppressed.42
The United States responded to the 11 September 2001 at-
tacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon with an as-
sault on the terrorist sanctuary in Afghanistan as well as the
government of Afghanistan that protected them. On 7 October,
US air strikes hit command and control, air defense, and air-
fields in Afghanistan. Compared to the operations against Iraq
and Serbia, the opposition was weaker and American capabilities
greater. The American Airmen used not only the equipment that
proved so successful against Iraq but such new equipment as
the B-1 and B-2 bombers, UAVs, and munitions: wind-corrected
munitions dispenser, joint direct attack munition, and GPS-
guided bombs. Neither the terrorists nor the Afghans had much
of an air defense. In the one-sided conflict, American Airmen lost
three aircraft in accidents and two of three UAVs to icing but
none to enemy causes. Against this minimal resistance, the prin-
cipal problem was that of distinguishing the correct target.43
A year and a half later, Iraq was the site of another swift war.
On 21 March 2003, coalition air forces began air strikes on
Iraq. Iraqi air defenses were significantly weaker than they
were in the first Gulf War, consisting of 325 combat aircraft
and 210 large SAMs. Coalition air forces were also smaller in
231
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Notes
1. A further irony is that the US military trained (for practical reasons) in
the western American desert on terrain perhaps as close to the actual battle-
field in the Persian Gulf War as could be expected.
232
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233
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234
GROUND-BASED AIR DEFENSE SINCE 1990
20. Gordon and Trainor, The Generals’ War, 113–14; GWAPS, vol. 2, Op-
erations and Effects and Effectiveness, 132; and GWAPS, vol. 4, Weapons,
Tactics, and Training, 102–3. The decoys could fly as fast as 550 knots, as
far as 450 nautical miles, and as high as 40,000 feet for about an hour but
not at the same time. See Cordesman and Wagner, The Gulf War, 413.
21. Barlow, “Command, Control, and Communications,” 149; Thomas
Christie, John Donis, and Alfred Victor, “Desert Shield/Desert Storm Sup-
pression of Enemy Air Defenses,” Phase I report, IDA Document D-1076,
January 1996, 4, HRA; and Glosson interview, 6 March 1991, 8, HRA.
22. Cordesman and Wagner, The Gulf War, 427; Marine lieutenant general
Royal Moore cited in Winnefeld, Niblack, and Johnson, A League of Airmen,
179, note 46; and Conduct of the Persian Gulf War, Final Report to Congress,
April 1992, 129, 218.
23. GWAPS, vol. 4, Weapons, Tactics, and Training, 92–93; and GWAPS,
vol. 5, A Statistical Compendium, 339, 641.
24. Norman Friedman, Desert Victory: The War for Kuwait (Annapolis,
Md.: Naval Institute, 1991), 166; and GWAPS, vol. 4, Weapons, Tactics, and
Training, 94.
25. GWAPS, vol. 4, Weapons, Tactics, and Training, 94–96.
26. Ibid., 96–97.
27. Ibid., 104.
28. “AGM-88 HARM,” Air Force Magazine, May 2000, 156.
29. Christie, Donis, Victor, Desert Shield/Desert Storm, II-4; Glosson in-
terview, March 1991; Lt Gen Charles A. “Chuck” Horner interview, 4 March
1992, 55, HRA; Thomas Keaney and Eliot Cohen, Revolution in Warfare?: Air
Power in the Persian Gulf (Annapolis, Md.: Naval Institute, 1995), 195; GWAPS,
vol. 2, Operations and Effects and Effectiveness, 133; and GWAPS, vol. 5, Sta-
tistical Compendium, 550–53.
30. GWAPS, vol. 4, Weapons, Tactics, and Training, 114; and Stan Morse,
ed., Gulf Air War Debrief (London: Aerospace, 1991), 154–57.
31. “Airborne Electronic Combat in the Gulf War,” n.d., 2, HRA.
32. Later in the campaign, Horner lowered this altitude to 10,000 feet and
then to 8,000 feet.
33. This accuracy is measured in circular error probable, with one-half
of the bombs falling within that radius.
34. William Andrews, Airpower against an Army: Challenge and Response in
CENTAF’s Duel with the Republican Guard, CADRE Paper (Maxwell AFB,
Ala.: Air University Press, 1998), 35; Atkinson, Crusade, 101–2; GWAPS, vol.
2, Operations and Effects and Effectiveness, 99; GWAPS, vol. 4, Weapons,
Tactics, and Training, 51; Edward Marolda and Robert Schneller, Shield and
Sword: The United States Navy and the Persian Gulf War (Washington, D.C.:
Naval Historical Center, 1998), 183, 194; and Winnefeld, Niblack, and Johnson,
A League of Airmen, 127.
35. Friedman, Desert Victory,164.
36. In addition, US forces lost 13 aircraft, and the allies lost five aircraft
to noncombat causes. See Keaney and Cohen, Revolution in Warfare?, 196;
235
GROUND-BASED AIR DEFENSE SINCE 1990
GWAPS, vol. 2, Operations and Effects and Effectiveness, 142; and GWAPS,
vol. 5, Statistical Compendium, 640–51.
37. “Fact Sheet,” US Central Command Air Forces, 2, May 1998.
38. The United States also fired 325 TLAMs and 90 CALCMs. See Greg
Seigle, “ ‘Fox’: The Results,” Jane’s Defence Weekly, 13 January 1999, 25.
39. Headquarters USAF, “The One Year Report of the Air War over Serbia:
Aerospace Power in Operation Allied Force,” October 2000, 34.
40. Allied Forces Southern Europe, Fact Sheet: Operation Deliberate Force;
Federation of American Scientists, “Operation Deliberate Force”; Kevin Fedark
and Mark Thompson, “All For One,” Time, 19 June 1995; and Richard P.
Hallion, “Control of the Air: The Enduring Requirement” (Washington, D.C.:
Bolling AFB, 1999).
41. Apparently, Serb helicopters downed some UAVs. See Tim Ripley, “UAVs
over Kosovo—Did the Earth Move?,” Defense System Daily, 1 December 1999;
Anthony Cordesman, “The Lessons and Non-Lessons of the Air and Missile
Campaign in Kosovo,” Center for Strategic and International Studies, Sep-
tember 1999, 24, 132, 209–10; David Fulghum, “Report Tallies Damage, Lists
US Weaknesses,” Aviation Week and Space Technology, 14 February 2000,
34; Joel Hayward, “NATO’s War in the Balkans: A Preliminary Assessment,”
New Zealand Army Journal, July 1999; Headquarters USAF, “Air War over
Serbia,” 44; “Operation Allied Force: The First 30 Days,” World Air Power
Journal (Fall 1999): 18, 21; “NATO’s Role in Kosovo,” 30 October 2000,
http://www.NATO.int/kosovo/ kosovo; USAF, “Air War Over Serbia (AWOS)
Fact Sheet,” 31 January 2000 [in USAF, One Year Report]; and Headquar-
ters USAF, “The Air War over Serbia,” 33, 44.
42. Headquarters USAF, “The Air War over Serbia,” 19, 43.
43. David Donald, “Operation Enduring Freedom,” International Air
Power Review (Spring 2002): 16–29.
44. Michael T. Moseley, “Operation Iraqi Freedom: By the Numbers”
(Shaw AFB, S.C.: USAF Assessment and Analysis Division, 30 April 2003);
and Werrell, Chasing the Silver Bullet, 256, 258.
45. Moseley, “Operation Iraqi Freedom”; and David Willis, “Operation
Iraqi Freedom,” International Air Power Review (Summer 2003): 24.
46. Willis, “Operation Iraqi Freedom,” 17.
47. Barry Posen, “Command of the Commons,” International Security
28:1, 25.
48. Dexter Filkins, “At Least 17 Dead as 2 U.S. Copters Collide over Iraq,”
New York Times, 16 November 2003, 1.
236
Chapter 7
The breakup of the Soviet Union ended the Cold War and
dramatically changed the balance of strategic power and the
nature of the threat to the United States. On the positive side,
the lessening of tensions between Russia and the United
States greatly reduced the possibilities of an all-out nuclear
exchange between the two. At same time, the fragmentation of
the Soviet Union presented new challenges. There were fears
for the security of Russian nuclear weapons, as underscored
by the abortive August 1991 coup. The threat from Russia
seemed to be less of a massive, planned strike and more of an
accidental or unauthorized launch (action by a rogue com-
mander or perhaps a rebel group).
Aside from Russia, another problem was the proliferation of
weapons of mass destruction (nuclear, biological, and chemical
[NBC]) and of ballistic missiles. If some could shrug off posses-
sion of such weapons in the hands of such responsible states as
Britain, France, and Israel, the same was not the case with such
terrorist-sponsoring states as Iran, Iraq, Libya, North Korea, and
Syria. During a visit to Russia in 1991, a congressional delega-
tion found that this was more than just a Western perception.1
In response to these changes, the United States refocused
its BMD program. In his 1991 State of the Union address,
Pres. George Bush announced that the American BMD would
be redirected from defending against a massive Soviet ballistic
missile strike to defending against a more limited missile at-
tack of up to 200 warheads. His view was summed up in the
system’s new name, global protection against limited strikes
(GPALS). It would shift the strategic defense initiative into a
three-fold program consisting of theater warning to allies and
forward-deployed US troops, defense of stateside Americans, and
a space-based system to fend off an attack anywhere in the
world.2 GPALS was a two-layer system consisting of 1,000
space-based brilliant pebbles to intercept hostile missiles in
their boost phase and 750 ground-based interceptors to defend
237
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE IN THE 1990S
238
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE IN THE 1990S
239
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE IN THE 1990S
240
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE IN THE 1990S
Figure 95. Hawk intercepting Lance. The Hawk had the potential to
intercept ballistic missiles, as it demonstrated in intercepting this
Lance surface-to-surface missile. (Reprinted from Ballistic Missile De-
fense Organization.)
241
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE IN THE 1990S
242
Figure 96. Arrow launch. The Arrow is a joint US-Israeli development. The
Israelis declared the theater ballistic missile defense weapon operational
in 2000. (Reprinted from Ballistic Missile Defense Organization.)
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE IN THE 1990S
Navy Systems
The push for a nautical BMD had two roots. First, the Navy
required protection of its assets from ballistic missiles. Second,
ship-based BMDs would permit shifting of scarce resources
and eliminate the problem of host-country permission. Such
mobility would represent a show of force and give the United
States a political/diplomatic advantage.
The Navy developed two programs: the lower-tier Navy area-
wide system and the upper-tier Navy theaterwide (NTW) system,
both based on the standard missile. The short-range BMD
244
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE IN THE 1990S
245
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE IN THE 1990S
Figure 98. Navy TMD launch. The Navy’s Theater Ballistic Missile Defense
system is being tested. (Reprinted from http://www.checkpoint-online.ch/
CheckPoint/Monde/Mon0010-Pro11.)
246
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE IN THE 1990S
247
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE IN THE 1990S
aboard 22 Aegis ships in less than five years, for an initial cost
of $3 billion. However, a Navy estimate for a 12-ship system was
$15 billion, while later estimates for such a system were between
$16 billion and $19 billion. A sea-based NMD would violate
the ABM treaty.31
The attractiveness of the Navy system was evident in 1999.
In September, the Japanese agreed to conduct joint research
with the United States for the NTW system. The two partners
intend to jointly deploy a Block II Standard, with an undeter-
mined IOC. The next month, naval representatives from the
United States, Australia, Germany, Italy, and the Netherlands
met to investigate a future cooperative naval effort. The Standard
missile figured prominently in these talks.32
To jump a bit ahead of the chronology, the election of
George W. Bush to the presidency in 2000 renewed interest in
the Navy BMD programs. Bush, Senate Majority leader Trent
Lott, Secretary of State Colin Powell, and former secretary of
state Henry Kissinger all called for the deployment of a sea-
based system.33
A New Threat
One reason for this increased activity was the recognition of
an increased threat. Following the collapse of the Soviet Union
and the overwhelming military victory in the Gulf War in the
early 1990s, Americans relaxed, expected a peace dividend,
and believed they were secure. They also began to cut the mili-
tary. The politicians were also lulled by a 1995 national intel-
ligence estimate (NIE) and the intelligence community’s March
1998 annual report that held that it would take 15 years for a
country without a ballistic missile infrastructure to deploy an
ICBM. This would give the United States ample warning before
such a deployment.34 Critics noted that this estimate ignored
the existing Russian and Chinese ICBMs, turned a blind eye
to the vulnerability of Alaska and Hawaii, and disregarded
missile and missile technology transfer.
This complacent view was jarred by events in the summer of
1998. First, a congressionally mandated committee chaired by
former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld concluded that
248
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE IN THE 1990S
249
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE IN THE 1990S
250
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE IN THE 1990S
251
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE IN THE 1990S
252
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE IN THE 1990S
253
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE IN THE 1990S
254
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE IN THE 1990S
255
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256
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE IN THE 1990S
the summer of that year was critical.70 Before the event, some
claimed that the upcoming test was rigged. An article in Time
stated that “little is being left to chance . . . . So little, in fact, that
this may be a test in name only—an expensive piece of Potemkin
performance art to win enormous military appropriations.”71
In any event, the program suffered a twin failure on 8 July
2000, when the kill vehicle failed to separate from the booster,
and the balloon decoy did not deploy from the target missile.
The Los Angeles Times called it a “spectacular test failure” and
a “debacle of monumental proportions.”72 In addition, while a
neutral observer might consider the incident a nontest, certainly
it was bad public relations and politics.
With only one success on three attempts, diplomatic pressure
from friends and nonfriends alike, domestic pressure magnified
by the media, and escalating cost estimates, President Clinton
was under great pressure to cancel the program. The close
presidential election campaign did not help matters. On 1 Sep-
tember 2000, he announced that he was postponing a decision,
leaving that responsibility to his successor.73
257
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE IN THE 1990S
258
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE IN THE 1990S
elections. The fate of the system may well depend on which po-
litical party controls the executive and legislative branches.
The second set of events was technological—successful missile
tests. As one reporter opened his piece on the July 2001 test,
saying, “The brilliant flash in the sky above the Pacific signified
not just a hit by the Pentagon’s prototype missile interceptor
but an opening shot in President Bush’s long political, diplo-
matic, and technical battle over a national missile defense sys-
tem.”80 Avoiding a simple decoy, the interception demonstrated
that the system could work. For its part, the military was sub-
dued and modest in its reaction, noting that the full results of
the tests would not be known for two months and that this
was just the first step on a long journey. Critics noted that the
test vehicle would differ in both hardware and capability from
the deployed system and that even with the successful inter-
ception, a key component failed.81 The next test (December
2001) was also successful against a warhead obscured by a
single balloon decoy and pieces of debris. A third consecutive
success in March 2002 was more impressive: the interceptor
missile picked the warhead instead of the three decoys.82
The third set of events was diplomatic. President Bush an-
nounced in December 2001 that the United States was with-
drawing from the ABM treaty. Despite the dire warnings of
BMD critics, relations with Russia did not spin out of control.
In fact, Bush was able to fulfill his campaign promise of reduc-
ing the numbers of nuclear warheads. When the Soviet Union
collapsed in 1991, each side had about 11,000 warheads. The
START II agreement (1993), signed but not ratified, called for
a reduction of 3,000 to 3,500. Nevertheless, by 2002, each
side had reduced its nuclear arsenal to approximately 6,000
warheads. With lessened tensions, further reductions were
possible and pursued. The United States was willing to accept
a figure of 2,000 to 2,500 warheads, while the Russians, severely
strapped for funds, sought even deeper cuts to 1,500 or less.
In May 2002, American and Russian leaders signed an agree-
ment to reduce nuclear warheads to 1,700 to 2,200 by 2012.
The Russians accepted higher numbers than they desired but
did get a concession in a legally binding document. In addi-
tion, they got a role in NATO. The warming relations between
259
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE IN THE 1990S
Figure 100. Airborne laser. One futurist ABM weapon is the airborne
laser. Seven of these aircraft are scheduled to enter service before the
end of the decade. (Reprinted from http://www.sargentfletcher.com/bus_dew/
yalla.jpg.)
Notes
1. David Dennon, Ballistic Missile Defense in the Post-Cold War Era (Boul-
der: Westview Press, 1995), 11.
2. Donald Baucom, The Origins of SDI, 1944–1983 (Lawrence, Kans.:
University Press of Kansas, 1992), 199; Ballistic Missile Defense Organization
(BMDO), “Fact Sheet: Ballistic Missile Defense Organization Budgetary His-
tory,” http://www.acq.osd.mil/bmdo/bndolink/htm/tmd.html; Dennon,
Ballistic Missile Defense, 8–10; General Accounting Office, Theater Missile
Defense Program: Funding and Personnel Requirements Are Not Fully Defined,
December 1992, 1–2, AUL; James Lindsay and Michael O’Hanlon, Defending
America: The Case for Limited National Missile Defense (Washington, D.C.:
Brookings Institution, 2001), 114.
3. BMD funding shifted from $1,103 million on TMD in 1993 and $1,886
million on NMD to $1,646 million and $553 million in 1994. See BMDO,
“Fact Sheet,” 1.
260
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE IN THE 1990S
261
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE IN THE 1990S
13. The French dropped out in May 1996. See BMDO, “Fact Sheet: Medium
Extended Air Defense System,” 1–2, http://www.acq.osd.mil/bmdo/
bmdolink/htm/tmd/html; Center for Defense and International Security
Studies, “US-Allied Cooperation,” 3, http://www.cdiss.org/coopt.htm; and
Vago Muradian, “Lockheed Martin Beats Raytheon to Win MEADS Effort,”
Defense Daily, 20 May 1999.
14. BMDO, “Fact Sheet,” 1; Federation of Atomic Scientists, “Medium Ex-
tended Air Defense System (MEADS) Corps SAM,” 1, http://www.fas.org/
spp/starwars/program/MEADS.htm; Cullen and Foss, Jane’s Land-
Based Air Defense, 292; Ramon Lopez, Andy Nativi, and Andrew Doyle, “The
Need for MEADS,” Flight International, 17–23 March 1999, 34; and
Schomisch, 1994/95 Guide, 78.
15. BMDO, “Fact Sheet,” 2; Cullen and Foss, Jane’s Land-Based Air De-
fense, 292; Gronlund, “The Weakest Line of Defense,” 47; Lopez, Nativi, and
Doyle, “The Need for MEADS,” 34; Greg Seigle, “US Spending Row Puts
MEADS in Jeopardy,” Jane’s Defence Weekly, 25 August 1999; and Wall,
“Missile Defense Changes Emerge,” 30.
16. Muradian, “Lockheed Martin.”
17. General Accounting Office, US Israel Arrow/Aces Program: Cost, Tech-
nical, Proliferation and Management Concerns, August 1993, 1–2; Arieh
O’Sullivan, “Final Arrow Test to be Held Soon,” Jerusalem Post, 22 October
1999; and Arieh O’Sullivan, “Air Force Welcomes Arrow 2,” Jerusalem Post,
15 March 2000.
18. BMDO, “Fact Sheet,” 1, http://www.acq.osd.mil/bmdo/bmdolink/
html/tmd.html; Steven Hildreth, “Theater Ballistic Missile Defense Policy, Mis-
sions and Program: Current Status,” Congressional Research Service, June
1993, 30; William Orme, “In Major Test, New Israeli Missile Destroys ‘In-
coming’ Rocket,” New York Times, 2 November 1999; Schomisch, 1994/95
Guide, 125; and Greg Seigle, “Confidence Over US-Israeli Target Test of
Arrow 2,” Jane’s Defence Weekly, 20 October 1999.
19. BMDO, “Fact Sheet,” 2; Schomisch, 1994/95 Guide, 124–25; and
Seigle, “Confidence over US-Israeli Target Test.”
20. Arieh O’Sullivan, “Arrow Anti-Missile Shield is Operational,”
Jerusalem Post, 17 October 2000; “The Arrow Shield,” Jerusalem Post, 16
March 2000; Hildreth, “Theater Ballistic Missile Defense Policy,” 30; William
Orme, “Israel: Missile Defense Deploys,” New York Times, 15 March 2000,
A6; and Schomisch, 1994/95 Guide, 125.
21. Cullen and Foss, Jane’s Land-Based Air Defense, 9th ed., 1996–97,
283; David Heebner, “An Overview of the U.S. DOD Theater Missile Defense
Initiative,” 53, in American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Theater
Missile Defense: Systems and Issues—1993 (Washington, D.C.: AIAA, 1993);
and Earl Ficken, “Tactical Ballistic Missile Defense: Have We Learned Our
Lesson?” Air War College, April 1995, 21.
22. Ballistic Missile Defense Organization, “Fact Sheet: Theater High Al-
titude Area Defense System,” 2, http://www.acq.osd.mil/bmdo/bmdolink//
262
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE IN THE 1990S
263
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE IN THE 1990S
77; and Simon Worden, “Technology and Theater Missile Defense,” in American
Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Theater Missile Defense: Systems
and Issues—1993 (Washington, D.C.: AIAA, 1993), 94.
30. BMDO, “Fact Sheet: Navy Theater Wide Ballistic Missile Defense,”
1–2; Wade Boese, “Navy Theater Missile Defense Test Successful,” Arms Con-
trol Today, March 2002, 29; Goodman, “Layered Protection”; Anthony Sommer,
“Defense Missile Test Will Be Held Off Kauai,” Honolulu Star-Bulletin, 11 July
2000; and Robert Suro, “Missile Defense is Still Just A Pie in the Sky,”
Washington Post, 12 February 2001.
31. The Aegis ships already have cost the country $50 billion. See Coyle,
“Rhetoric or Reality?”; Kim Holmes and Baker Spring, “Missile Defense Com-
pass,” Washington Times, 14 July 2000; Murray Hiebert, “Flying High on
Blind Faith,” Far Eastern Economic Review, 22 February 2001; and Lindsay
and O’Hanlon, Defending America, 102–3.
32. Colin Clark and Robert Holzer, “U.S., Allies Move on Maritime TMD
Partnership Plan,” Defense News, 29 November 1999, 1; and Sandra Erwin,
“U.S. Ponders Sea-Based Missile Defense,” National Defense, October 1999, 25.
33. “Let President Defer Missile Deployment,” Minneapolis Star Tribune,
11 July 2000; and Richard Newman, “Shooting from the Ship,” U.S. News
and World Report, 3 July 2000.
34. This reminds historically minded individuals of the interwar British
10-year rule that justified minimal defense budgets. This policy left the
British unprepared for World War II, perhaps encouraging German aggres-
sion, and certainly leading to military setbacks early in the war.
35. Quoted in Clarence Robinson, “Missile Technology Access Emboldens
Rogue Nations,” Signal, April 1999; and James Hackett, “CIA Candor on
Missile Threat,” Washington Times, 20 September 1999, 19.
36. Lindsay and O’Hanlon, Defending America, 198, appendix C, “Excerpts
from the 1998 Rumsfeld Commission Report.”
37. Robinson, “Missile Technology.”
38. Ibid. The report had considerable credibility due to its unanimous
findings and its impressive authors. See Lindsay and O’Hanlon, Defending
America, 197n.
39. Quoted in “Missile Controversies,” Air Force Magazine, January
1999, 50.
40. “Missile Controversies,” 50.
41. Specifically, the National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) stated, “We project
that during the next 15 years the United States most likely will face ICBM
threats from Russia, China, and North Korea, probably from Iran, and pos-
sibly from Iraq.” See Lindsay and O’Hanlon, Defending America, 218, ap-
pendix D, “Excerpts from the 1999 National Intelligence Estimate”; John
Donnelly, “Iran Has Makings of North Korea’s Taepo Dong,” Defense Week,
24 May 1999, 1; Jim Lea, “Report: N. Korea Using Japanese Technology for
Developing Missiles,” Pacific Stars and Stripes, 20 February 1999, 3; Jim
Lea, “ROK Won’t Join Missile Program,” Pacific Stars and Stripes, 5 May
1999, 3; Robinson, “Missile Technology”; and Steven Myers and Eric Schmitt,
264
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE IN THE 1990S
“Korea Accord Fails to Stall Missile Plan,” New York Times, 18 June 2000.
42. “Budget Rise Sought to Cover Missile Shield,” South China Morning
Post, 21 December 1999; Steven Hildreth and Gary Pagliano, “Theater Mis-
sile Defense and Technology Cooperation: Implications for the U.S.-Japan
Relationship,” Congressional Research Service, August 1995; and Calvin
Sims, “U.S. and Japan Agree to Joint Research on Missile Defense,” New
York Times, 17 August 1999.
43. Don Kirk, “U.S. to Back Seoul’s Plan For Extended Missile Force,” In-
ternational Herald Tribune, 13 July 2000; Lea, “ROK Won’t Join”; and Don
Kirk, “U.S. and Japan to Join in Missile Defense to Meet Pyongyang Threat,”
International Herald Tribune, 29 July 1999.
44. Vanessa Guest, “Missile Defense is Wrong Call on Taiwan,” Los Angeles
Times, 3 May 1999, 17; “Missile Defense System Necessary,” South China
Morning Post, 25 June 1999; and “Taiwan Plans to Buy Missile Defense,”
Washington Post, 26 March 1999, 22.
45. William Tow and William Choung, “Asian Perceptions of BMD: De-
fense or Disequilibrium?” Contemporary Southeast Asia, December 2001;
and Lindsay and O’Hanlon, Defending America, 124–25.
46. Joseph Fitchett, “Washington’s Pursuit of Missile Defense Drives
Wedge in NATO,” International Herald Tribune, 15 February 2000.
47. Elizabeth Becker, “Allies Fear U.S. Project May Renew Arms Race,”
New York Times, 20 November 1999, 5; Clifford Beal, “Racing to Meet the
Ballistic Missile Threat,” International Defense Review, March 1993, 211;
William Drozdiak, “Possible U.S. Missile Shield Alarms Europe,” Washington
Post, 6 November 1999, 1; “Experts: U.S., Europe Far Apart on Response to
Ballistic Missile Threat,” Inside Missile Defense, 14 July 1999, 1; and
Schomisch, 1994/95 Guide, 99.
48. Tow and Choung, “Asian Perceptions of BMD.”
49. There were allegations of Soviet cheating on the treaty. While most of
these cases fell into the gray category, matters that lawyers can argue end-
lessly over, the Soviet foreign minister Eduard Shevardnadze admitted in
October 1989 that the radar installation at Krasnoyarsk was in violation of
the treaty. See Ralph Bennett, “Needed: Missile Defense,” Reader’s Digest,
July 1999.
50. ICBMs have a speed of 7 km per second and a 10,000 km range,
while tactical ballistic missiles have speeds around 2 km per second. See
Falkenrath, “US and Ballistic Missile Defense,” 37, 39; and Gronlund, “The
Weakest Line of Defense,” 59.
51. Gronlund, “The Weakest Line of Defense,” 59.
52. “Missile Defense,” Kansas City Star, 24 January 1999, K2; and
Schomisch, 1994/95 Guide, 24.
53. Thomas Lippman, “New Missile Defense Plan Ignites Post–Cold War
Arms Debate,” Washington Post, 14 February 1999, 2; Steven Myers, “U.S.
Asking Russia to Ease the Pact on Missile Defense,” New York Times, 21
January 1999, 1.
265
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE IN THE 1990S
54. The administration wanted to get further arms reductions, even though
the START II agreement had not been ratified by the Russian parliament.
There were hopes that START III would further reduce each power’s strategic
nuclear warheads from 6,000 to 1,500. See Sheila Foote, “White House
Threatens Veto of Cochran’s NMD Bill,” Defense Daily, 5 February 1999, 1;
Lippman, “New Missile Defense Plan”; Bill Gertz, “U.S. Missile Plan Hits
Roadblock,” Washington Times, 22 October 1999, 1; Frank Gaffney, “What
ABM Treaty?” Washington Times, 4 March 1999, 17; Bradley Graham, “U.S.
to Go Slowly on Treaty,” Washington Post, 8 September 1999, 12; and
Jonathan Weisman, “U.S., Russia to Develop a Joint Missile Defense,” Balti-
more Sun, 1 August 1999.
55. Michael Gordon, “U.S. Seeking to Renegotiate a Landmark Missile
Treaty,” New York Times, 17 October 1999, 1; Graham, “U.S. To Go Slowly
on Treaty,” 13; Jane Perlez, “Russian Aide Opens Door a Bit to U.S. Bid for
Missile Defense,” New York Times, 19 February 2000; “Russia: Talks with
U.S.,” New York Times, 23 December 1999, A8; “Russia Rejects Changes in
ABM Treaty,” Washington Post, 4 March 2000, 14; and Weisman, “U.S., Rus-
sia to Develop.”
56. Bennett, “Needed”; and David Sands, “U.S. Considers Placing Missiles
at Alaska Sites,” Washington Times, 9 September 1999, 17.
57. Elizabeth Becker and Eric Schmitt, “Delay Sought in Decision on
Missile Defense,” New York Times, 20 January 2000; Justin Brown, “Two
Views of Security, as Seen in ‘Star Wars,’ ” Christian Science Monitor, 13
March 2000; Bradley Graham, “Missile Shield Still Drawing Friends, Fire,”
Washington Post, 17 January 2000; James Hackett, “Sorties Against Missile
Defenses,” Washington Times, 27 December 1999; and Jane Perlez, “Biden
Joins G.O.P. in Call for a Delay In Missile-Defense Plan,” New York Times, 9
March 2000.
58. In February 1985, long-time government policy maker Paul Nitze pro-
posed that SDI should be judged by its military effectiveness, survivability,
and cost effectiveness at the margin; that is, it should be cheaper for the de-
fense than the offense to add additional systems. See Eisendrath, Goodman,
and Marsh, The Phantom Defense, 16; and Mary McGrory, “Going Ballistic,”
Washington Post, 30 March 2000.
59. “A Misdirected Missile Defense Plan,” Los Angeles Times, 30 April
2000, M4.
60. Davis Abel, “Missile System’s Best Defense is Public Opinion,” Boston
Globe, 28 January 2001; William Broad, “Nobel Winners Urge Halt to Missile
Plan,” New York Times, 6 July 2000; and Elaine Sciolino, “Critics Asking
Clinton to Stop Advancing Missile Plan,” New York Times, 7 July 2000.
61. Jim Abrams, “Report Puts $60 Billion Tag on Shield,” USA Today, 27
April 2000; Tony Capaccio, “National Missile Defense Cost Estimate Rises
nearly 20 Percent,” Defense Week, 11 September 2000; Helen Dewar, “Clinton
is Urged to Defer to Successor on Missile Shield,” Washington Post, 14 July
2000; and John Donnelly, “Missile Defense Costs 60 Percent More than Ad-
vertised Price,” Defense Week, 3 April 2000.
266
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE IN THE 1990S
267
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE IN THE 1990S
268
Chapter 8
Summary
Airmen have had to contend with ground-based air defense
since it downed the first aircraft in 1912. In every war except
World War I, more American aircraft have been lost to ground-
based air defenses than to fighters; nevertheless, air-to-air
combat has dominated both the public’s and the Airmen’s
mind. While this mistaken and romantic attitude is probably
understandable and excusable for the public, it is not for Air-
men, who must be held to a higher standard. They should, and
must, know better.
Probably this attitude of denigrating AAA and the defense (the
idea that the bomber would always get through) peaked in the
1930s and 1940s. In the late 1920s and the early 1930s, avia-
tion made great strides, and the gap between offense and defense
widened. During the early years of World War II, the offense
held the advantage, as flak was relatively ineffective. However,
between 1935 and 1944, almost to the end of the war, aviation
advanced modestly. (For example, the B-17 that first flew in
1935 was still frontline equipment in 1945, as were such fight-
ers as the Me 109 and Spitfire, which first flew in 1935 and
1936.) These aircraft and others like them are more represen-
tative of air combat in World War II than the better performing
and better remembered B-29s and Me 262s that both went into
combat in June 1944.
269
SUMMARY, TRENDS, AND CONCLUSIONS
270
SUMMARY, TRENDS, AND CONCLUSIONS
events in the last stages of the war obscured these facts. The
introduction of jets markedly improved aircraft performance,
just as the atomic bomb enormously expanded firepower. There-
fore, both the public and military saw the offensive as supreme.
However, the combatants used only the jet, not the atomic
bomb, in America’s next war. Korea was different from World War
II and the wars that the prophets and theorists had forecast. The
peasant hordes on the periphery of Asia stalemated the strongest
nation in the world. This war was limited by both sides (at least
by the major players, the United States, China, and the Soviet
Union; the Koreans understandably had a different view) in
terms of means and objectives. With the exception of the MiG-15,
the Communists used only obsolete equipment to thwart and im-
pose considerable losses on United Nations’ airmen. Air power
was not decisive in the war. At the same time, the war reempha-
sized many of the basic AAA lessons from World War II—the
lethality of flak, the danger of low-altitude operations, and the
usefulness of antiflak countermeasures.
In many respects, the Vietnam War repeated the same pattern.
Again, American Airmen were unprepared for the reality of com-
bat and especially AAA, their chief opponent. Once more, the les-
sons of World War II and Korea had to be relearned. Yet again,
the air power of the strongest nation in the world proved indeci-
sive against Asian masses armed with simple weapons.
The one new air defense weapon introduced into combat in
Vietnam was the SAM. Although these missiles claimed rela-
tively few aircraft, they made air operations more difficult and
expensive. American tactics and equipment were able to over-
come the SAMs, but the missiles forced the Airmen to increase
the number of support aircraft and to operate at lower altitudes
where AAA proved even more deadly. American Airmen learned
to cope with the ground-based defenses. They used modified
tactics, ECM, and new technology, such as antiradiation missiles
(ARM) and standoff weapons. Linebacker II (December 1972)
clearly demonstrated that modest numbers (compared to World
War II) of second-rate air defense equipment could not stop
large-scale air efforts by a major power but could inflict both
a burden and a loss on the attacker.
271
SUMMARY, TRENDS, AND CONCLUSIONS
272
SUMMARY, TRENDS, AND CONCLUSIONS
Trends (Speculations)
What does all this mean? What are the lessons of the past?
And what do they tell us about the future? Just as in weather
273
SUMMARY, TRENDS, AND CONCLUSIONS
274
SUMMARY, TRENDS, AND CONCLUSIONS
Conclusions
Historically, US Air Force assumptions about future conflicts
have proven to be in error. Since 1945, the Air Force has geared
itself for air-to-air combat and a nuclear exchange with a major
power. Although this certainly was America’s most serious
challenge during the past 60 years, the reality of war since
1945 has proven to be far different. Since World War II, the US
Air Force has fought in three wars against minor powers, used
conventional weapons, and found its chief opposition to be
ground-based air defense weapons.
These conflicts proved different from their anticipation, but
again they indicated the power of the defense. The first two,
Korea and Vietnam, demonstrated the problems of fighting an
extended campaign against a primitive, determined, and re-
sourceful enemy. Vietnam also saw the introduction of the
SAM, which tilted the balance away from the offense toward
the defense. Americans countered these threats using ECM,
direct action, and tactics; however, they never found an accept-
able solution at a reasonable price. The US military was forced
to relearn old lessons at considerable cost.
It is important to note that since 1945 the United States has
not faced a peer competitor in direct air-to-air combat as it did
over Europe in World War II. With the exception of Korea, where
the United States faced a larger force of equivalent quality air-
275
SUMMARY, TRENDS, AND CONCLUSIONS
276
Index
277
INDEX
278
INDEX
Convair, 98 claims
Crotale, 158 Argentina, 160
dud bombs, 163
D-day, 13, 47 ECM, 33, 43, 45, 56, 80, 101–2,
defensive-offensive resource ratio 117, 122, 125–26, 130, 133–35,
World War I, 1–3, 26, 46, 117, 269 138, 148, 151–53, 156, 158–59,
Dien Bien Phu, 113–14 161, 163–64, 173, 271–72,
Donnelly, Charles, 223 274–75
Doolittle, James, 49 F-117, 220, 223, 231
Douglas, 54, 85, 122 Foehn, 35–36
Douhet, Giulio, 6 France
aircraft
EA-6A, 123 Mirage, 230
EA-6B, 130–31, 225–26 Dien Bien Phu, 113–14
EB-66, 122–23, 128, 133 SAM (surface-to-air missiles)
EC-130H Compass Call, 226 Crotale, 158
ECM (electronic countermeasures), 33, PARCA, 90
80 Roland, 160, 162–63, 165
carpet, 43 fratricide (identification problem)
chaff, 43–44, 58, 80, 130, 133–34, Battle of Britain, 6
Cape Gloucester, Bismarck, 49
153, 156, 161, 223, 270
Korean War, 74–76, 80, 106, 122,
Falkland War, 147, 161, 165,
169, 184
167–68
Middle East War, 151
Middle East War, 151
fuzes
Pods, 125–26, 148, 153, 156
increased effectiveness
Vietnam War, 115, 117–18, 136,
Germany, 33
138, 147, 149, 189, 192, 218,
proximity, 15, 17, 34, 39, 45, 52–53,
225–26, 271–72
58, 166, 251, 270
EF-111, 225–26
Falkland War, 147, 161, 165,
Enzian, 35–37, 39
167–68
Exocet, 163 Germany, 1, 24, 26, 28, 30, 33,
40–41, 43, 49, 54–56, 132,
F-4, 119, 125, 128, 131, 136 183–84, 248
F4U, 76, 78 Korean War, 74–76, 80, 106, 122,
F9F, 76 169, 184
F-14, 221 V-1 campaign, 7, 13–14, 19, 57, 270
F-15, 221 fuze setters
F-51, 76–77 continuous, 3, 49
F-80, 76, 94 FW 190, 14, 24
F-105, 116–17, 125, 131
F-111, 135 Gazelle, 162
FB-111, 158–59 General Electric, 71, 88, 182
Falkland War, 147, 161, 165, 167–68 Germany
aircraft losses aircraft
Argentina, 160 FW 190, 14, 24
Great Britain, 3, 8 Ju 88, 22
Argentine Air Force Me 109, 269
impact of, 22, 24, 43, 113, 117, Me 163, 35
150, 191, 200, 205, 219, 252, antiaircraft artillery
274, 276 Banned, 24
279
INDEX
280
INDEX
281
INDEX
282
INDEX
283
INDEX
284
INDEX
SAM, 34, 74, 81–82, 84, 87, 90–92, 121, 125, 171, 218, 221,
94, 96, 119–25, 133–36, 138, 232, 269–70, 276
148–49, 152–54, 156, 160–61, guns
165–70, 183, 202, 218, 224, 230, move, 103, 123, 150, 256
232, 241, 271, 275 Pile mattress, 7, 16
Talos, 88, 136 rules of engagement, 14
Terrier, 137 V-2, 13, 20, 38–40, 181, 200, 207
University of Michigan, 88, 182 Versailles peace treaty, 24
USS Galveston, 136 Vietminh, 113–14
USS Helena, 53 antiaircraft artillery impact on
USS McCormick, 137 Dien Bien Phu, 113–14
Vietnam War, 115, 117–18, 136, 138,
V-1, 7, 12–15, 17–22, 57, 181–82, 270 147, 149, 189, 192, 218, 225–26,
bomber-launched, 90 271–72
difficult target, 200 aircraft losses
long-range version, 19 Linebacker I, 127, 129–30
V-1 campaign, 7, 13–14, 19, 57, 270 Linebacker II, 121, 132, 134–38,
Antwerp, 20–22, 49 271
casualties, 20, 22, 46, 56, 58, air tactics, 138, 227
120, 158, 182, 201, 207, 273 anti-SAM, 121, 130
defenses of, 13, 17, 19, 158, 160, changed, 43, 57, 88, 90, 119–21,
224, 276 127, 129–30, 132, 134, 151,
guns 172–73, 194, 199, 202, 220,
number of, 1, 3, 7, 9, 11, 13, 232, 237–38, 244
15, 17, 25, 34–35, 40–42, air-to-air combat, 23, 117, 147, 159,
47, 51–53, 56–57, 70, 72, 232, 269, 275
77, 80–82, 93, 102, 104, antiaircraft artillery, 2–4, 7, 22, 53,
114, 121, 128, 130, 132, 228
138, 149, 154–55, 160, direct attack, 80, 114, 184, 226,
163, 167, 170, 182, 190, 231, 270
192, 194, 196–97, 201–2, major obstacles, 196
218–19, 221, 224, 239, underestimated, 92, 117, 155
253–54, 256–57, 271 antiradiation missiles, 124, 126,
Great Britain 131, 153, 159, 161, 224, 227–28,
balloons, 1, 20–21 271
casualties, 20, 22, 46, 56, 58, Strike, 28, 78–80, 115, 152, 154,
120, 158, 182, 201, 207, 156–58, 202, 222, 227, 237
273 Standard, 1–5, 19, 23, 26–27, 58,
defenses, 2, 6–7, 13, 15, 125, 222–23, 240, 244,
17–19, 28, 30, 33, 56–57, 247–48, 269
59, 69, 75, 81, 115, claims, 6, 51, 135, 153, 159–60,
117–18, 122, 125, 130, 162, 167, 170, 182, 205–6, 239
135, 137–38, 148–50, Dien Bien Phu, 113–14
153–56, 158–60, 166–67, dumb munitions, 117
169, 171, 173–74, 183, ECM, 33, 43, 45, 56, 80, 101–2,
207, 217–19, 222–24, 117, 122, 125–26, 130, 133–35,
226–32, 269–73, 276 138, 148, 151–53, 156, 158–59,
fighters, 6–7, 10, 14–15, 161, 163–64, 173, 271–72,
19–23, 31–32, 41–42, 274–75
45–46, 49, 54–57, 59, 75, B-52, 116, 128–29, 132–33, 135
83, 92, 106, 113, 116–17, pods, 125–26, 148, 153, 156
285
INDEX
286
Archie to SAM
A Short Operational History of Ground-Based Air Defense
Chief Editor
Dr. Richard Bailey
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