Title: Sea Power and Maritime Affairs
1Sea Power and Maritime Affairs
- Lesson 17 The US Navy from the Maritime Strategy
to 9/11, 1981-2001 - (This presentation is a work in progress)
2Learning Objectives
- Comprehend the policy goals of the Reagan defense
buildup and the internal political situation that
permitted it. This includes the Goldwater-Nichols
Act (1986) and its effect on the navy. - Comprehend the trends of public commitment during
the period from 1980 to 1989 relative to the
support for defense budgets, force deployments,
and administration policies. - Know the essential elements of the Maritime
Strategy (1986). - Know the possible causes of the Iraqi invasion of
Kuwait in 1990 and the US reactions to it.
3Learning Objectives
- Know Iraqi military capabilities prior to the
invasion. - Know the elements of the coalition force for
Desert Shield and Desert Storm (1990-1991). - Comprehend the roles of the US Navy and US
Marine Corps in Desert Shield and in the air,
maritime and ground operations of Desert Storm. - Comprehend the national strategic implications of
the end of the Cold War and its effects on the US
Navy,
4Learning Objectives
- Comprehend the role of the US Navy in regional
conflicts, including post-Gulf War Iraq,
Yugoslavia, Somalia, and Afghanistan. - Begin to comprehend the nature of joint
operations in the post-Cold War era. - Comprehend the changes in naval policy and
technology of the 1990s and will know how to
evaluate their relevance to post-9/11 navy.
5Iran Hostage Wrap-Up
- Hostages released on January 20, 1981, shortly
after Reagan inauguration. - Where we once had an ally, we now had in Iran a
vital enemy. - So we picked up a new friend...
6IRAQ
- Supported Iraq in Iran-Iraq War 1980 - 1988
- USS Stark - May 1987
- USS Vincennes - July 1988
7Reagan Foreign Policy
- Soviets are bad guys bent on world domination.
- We must build our military to combat communists
and terrorists.
8Reagan and Soviet Diplomacy
- Increased military spending (e.g., SDI)
- Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan
9REAGAN DEFENSE BUILDUPNaval Expansion under
Secretary of the Navy John F. Lehman, Jr.
(1981-1987)
- Rickover firing
- Revamping U.S. Naval Strategy
- Establishment of the Navy Policy Board
- The Maritime Strategy
- Interventionism, Peacekeeping and Responses to
Terrorism - Strategic Reorientation
10The Maritime Strategy
- Product of the Policy Board
- Main Tenet 600-ship Navy with carrier battle
groups as centerpiece - Offensive outlook
- Forward-deployed forces
11Criticisms to the Maritime Strategy
- Could be very costly in terms of carrier and
aircraft losses. - Difficult to keep SLOCs open with bulk of fleet
concentrated for the forward offensive battle. - Potentially provocative in destabilizing nuclear
balance thereby, triggering nuclear exchange.
12Interventionism-Peacekeeping and Responses to
Terrorism
- This gave Lehman an opportunity to test and
refine the naval doctrine - Peace-Keeping in Lebanon
- Beirut Bombing
- Grenada (Operation Urgent Fury)
- Hijacking of TWA 847
- Achille Lauro hijacking
- Gulf of Sidra attack by USAF and USN
- Raid on Libya- Operation Eldorado Canyon
- Tanker War
- Operation Praying Mantis
13Above President Reagan at Memorial Service for
Marines killed in Beirut To the right
President Reagan drafts his speech for Beirut
policy.
14Strategic Reorientation
- Nature In reaction to defeat in Vietnam and its
debilitating aftermath, the Reagan administration
proclaimed that henceforth the U.S. would only
fight when its national interests were clearly at
stake, and it would apply overwhelming force
rather than commit a limited force in increments
15STRATEGIC LEGACY OF REAGAN 1. GOLDWATER-NICHOL
S 2. WEINBERGER DOCTRINE 3. POWELL DOCTRINE
16Strategic Legacy of Reagan
- Weinberger Doctrine
- Be reluctant to employ force, but then use only
overwhelming force - Powell Doctrine
- CJCS Colin Powell, same as Weinberger
- Goldwater-Nichols Defense Reorganization Act
- Elevated CJCS to principle military strategist
for the nation, 1986
17The Immediate Post-Lehman Navy(1987-1991)
- The Navy continued to be built around the
big-deck carrier. - Navy continues to be dominated by the carrier
aviation and nuclear submarine communities. - Question for the 1990s What was the proper
size and composition of the surface fleet in an
era of shrinking appropriations? - Desert Shield/ Desert Storm (1990, 1991)
18Operation Desert Shield(Defense of Saudi Arabia)
- U.S. National Policy Objectives
- Withdrawal from Kuwait
- Restoration of Kuwaits legitimate government
- Security and stability of Saudi Arabia and the
Persian Gulf - Safety and protection of the lives of American
citizens abroad - Repayment of war reparations
- Destruction of weapons
19(No Transcript)
20Naval Role in Desert Shield
- Initial deterrent to invasion of Saudi Arabia.
- Maritime Intercept Operations (MIO)
- United Nations-approved blockade of trade with
Iraq. - Sealift - Maritime Pre-positioning Ships (MPS)
- 95 of all equipment moved into theater by the
sea. - Air strikes against Iraqi forces achieved air
supremacy. - Ready Reserve Fleet ships Six carrier battle
groups (CVBGs) and two battleship battle groups
(BBBGs). - Marine forces
- SEAL Teams
21Operation DESERT STORMThe Mother of all battles
has begun.- Saddam Hussein
- Four-phased campaign
- Phase 1- Strategic Air campaign
- Phase 2- Air supremacy in theater
- Phase 3- Battlefield Preparation
- Phase 4- Offensive ground campaign
22Air Campaign
- Commenced 17 Jan 1991
- Naval
- Tomahawks (52)
- Three carriers
- Air superiority in the first hours of war
23Maritime Campaign
- Phase 1 and 2
- Participate in air and establish sea control
- Phase 3
- Attack ground forces w/ Aircraft and naval
Gunfire - Phase 4
- All of the above and amphibious feints, demos,
prepare assaults
24ASUW
- 143 Iraqi naval vessels destroyed/damaged
- All Iraqi ports/bases damaged
- All northern Persian Gulf oil platforms secured
- No attacks by Iraqi surface ships on coalition
25Countermine
- U.S. assets include MCM-1, 2 MSO ships, 6 MH-53E
- Two ships hit U.S.S. Tripoli and U.S.S Princeton
26Amphibious Warfare
- ATF conducted 5 operations
- Raided Umm Al- Maradim off Kuwait
- Against Faylaka Island
- Against Ash Shuaybah port Facility
- Against Bubiyan Island
- Landing of 5th MEB in Saudi Arabia
- Resulted in Iraqi focus on their western flank.
27Ground Campaign
- 24-28 Feb -- 100 hour campaign
- Marine Contribution
- I MEF committed two Infantry divisions
- Naval Force amphibious assault on Kuwait Coast
- I MEF took 8000 prisoners 20 miles into Kuwait by
the end of day 1. - Kuwait airport by 27 Feb
28(No Transcript)
29Conclusions
- Estimated Iraqi losses
- 100,000 soldier dead, wounded and captured, 3847
tanks, 1450 armored personnel carriers, 2917
artillery pieces and 32 aircraft - 86,000 est. prisoners
- U.S.
- 313 combatant and non combatant
- Coalition
- First since WWII- fastest victory ever
- Importance of power projection from the sea
30A Cold War?
- Gulf War fought with Cold War equipment using
Cold War tactics. - Air Attacks on pre-planned targets.
- Targeting reminiscent of Cold War strategic
bombing plans. - Not Network-Centric
31Toward Network-Centrism
- National Sensor Exploitation
- Development of FAC (A) Doctrine
- Strategic Judgment Air power was effective, but
not so effective that ground forces could be
neglected
32The Balkan Conflicts of the 1990s
33Bosnia
- Post-Soviet Union collapse four of the six
Yugoslavian republics want independence. - Serbian President Milosevic uses
- force to oppose these states.
- This situation will require the
- assistance of U.S. and U.N.
- troops for over a decade.
341992
- U.N. Security Council directive to use all
measures necessary to end hunger and atrocities
in Bosnia-Herzegovina. - January. U.N. protection force sent.
- May 22. U.N. recognizes Croatia, Slovenia, and
Bosnia as independent states. - March 30. U.N. called for humanitarian aid,
economic embargos, and ban on air traffic.
35- July 1. Washington called for relief flights
that would be multinational and be supported
until OPERATION DENY FLIGHT in April 1993. - September 22. Yugoslavia expelled from U.N. in
response to Milosevics atrocities. - NATO leaders reluctant to act, for fear that they
would be dragged into a costly and unwinnable
war.
361993
- NATO military operations largely limited to
enforcing - U.N. no fly zone. Becomes largest ongoing
military operation over Europe since WWII. - April 12. OPERATION DENY FLIGHT. NFZ over
Bosnia. - June 15. OPERATION SHARP GUARD. Adriatic
blockade.
37Toward a Network-Centric Battlespace
- For the first time it was clear that virtually
all targets were moveable. - Joint Combined Air Operations Center (CAOC)
established in Aviano, Italy.
38Key U.S. Sensor Assets
- UAV (Predators and Gnat-750s)
- P-3C Orion
- E-2C Hawkeye, AWACS (E-3)
- JSTARS (E-8A)
- EC-130E (ABCCC)
39Other 1990s Naval Events
- September 1991. Tailhook
- April 1993. SECDEF announces that women will fly
combat aircraft missions and serve on combat
vessels. - July 1993. Dont Ask, Dont Tell Clinton
policy for homosexuals in the military. - February 1994. LT Shannon Workman becomes first
female carrier qualified fighter pilot.
40- February 1998. A Marine Corps EA-6B, based in
Aviano, Italy, flies below low level training
route altitude and severs gondola cables killing
civilians. - October 1994. LT Kara Hultgreen, first woman
carrier qualified in the F-14 Tomcat, is killed
during landing operations. - March 1995. LCDR Wendy Lawrence, daughter of
Admiral Lawrence (Vietnam POW), becomes first
female naval aviator in space on board STS 60,
The Endeavor.
41- 8. May 1996. Death of Admiral Michael Boorda.
Chief of Naval Operations shoots himself in
response to journalistic investigations of his
entitlement to wear combat V for service in
waters off Vietnam. - 9. October 2000. Attack on the USS Cole.
- 10. February 2001. Greenville incident.
- 11. April 2001. EP-3 incident.
42CDR Wendy Lawrence, U.S. Navy
Admiral Jeremy M. Boorda, U.S. Navy
USS Cole damage
43EP-3 crewmembers stand at ease during the
ceremony welcoming them to Hawaii following their
release from China
44PolicyNew Technology
- September 1992. From the Sea. The Navy
adopts new mission as consequence to the end of
the Cold War. - September 1993. Bottom Up Review 346-ship
navy with 11 carrier battle groups. Goal
Ability to fight 2 major regional conflicts and
one low intensity conflict at the same time. - May 1997. As result of first Quadrennial
Defense Reviews, force levels to be able to deal
with two simultaneous regional conflicts call for
12 carriers groups and 12 amphibious ready groups.
45- June 1997. Navy signs preliminary agreement for
construction of the DD-21 Zumwalt class. - May 1999. Osprey, MV-22, first of four
production models approved. - September 1999. New attack sub (NSSN) Virginia
class to be built. - April 2000. MV-22 crashes in Arizona 19 lost.
46- December 2000. MV-22 crashes in Jacksonville,
killing all four crewmen. - December 2000. JSF X-35C, carrier version, makes
first flight. - March 2000. Mrs. Reagan christens USS Ronald
Reagan, CVN 76. - June 2001. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld
reports that DD21 land-attack destroyer would not
be a substantial improvement over existing
platforms.
47(No Transcript)
48MV-22 OSPREY
X-35 JSF
49 50(No Transcript)
51Significance of the 1990s for the Navy of the
Future
- Comprehend the transitional nature of the naval
strategy and policy in the 1990s when judged
against the post 9-11 events and the War on
Terrorism. - Understand that many of the guiding assumptions
of the 1990s were made obsolete by 9-11 and the
War on Terrorism. - Assess what aspects of the naval policy and
strategy of the 1990s remain valid for the early
2000s.
52- Given the events of the last decade (ESGs,
sea-basing, etc.), was the planning of the 1990s
short-sighted? Is From the Sea relevant in
2001 when we are fighting a war hundreds of miles
inland in Afghanistan? Is the CVBG a relic of
the cold war in the age of network-centric
dispersion?
53Next time The US Navy since 2001