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Airpower Through WW I

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Title: Airpower Through WW I


1
Airpower Through WW I
2
Airpower!!
3
Airpower Through WWI
  • Define Air and Space Power
  • Competencies
  • Distinctive Capabilities
  • Functions
  • Air and Space Doctrine
  • Principles of War
  • Tenets of Air and Space Power

4
Airpower Through WWI
  • Lighter-than-air vehicles
  • Potential of the airplane
  • Heavier-than-air vehicles
  • Early Uses of Airpower
  • Airpower in WWI
  • The Battle of Air Supremacy
  • American Participation in WWI

5
Airpower Through WWI
  • Close Air Support and Interdiction in WWI
  • Development of Tactics in WWI
  • Strategic Bombing Theorists
  • Lt Col Edgar S. Gorrell (American)

6
Air and Space Power
  • The synergistic application of air, space, and
    information systems to project global strategic
    military power.
  • AFDD 1

7
Air and Space Power
  • Synergistic application
  • Air, Space, and Information Systems
  • To project global strategic military power

8
Core Competencies
  • Fundamental qualities that enable the Air Force
    to develop and deliver air and space power
  • (1.) Developing Airmen
  • (2.) Technology-to-warfighting
  • (3.) Integrating Operations

9
Distinctive Capabilities
  • Capabilities that the Air Force does better than
    any other service.
  • Air and Space Superiority
  • Information Superiority
  • Global Attack
  • Precision Engagement
  • Rapid Global Mobility
  • Agile Combat Support

10
Functions
  • Functions Missions
  • Broad, fundamental, and continuing activities of
    air and space power not unique to the Air Force

Air Refueling Spacelift Special
Ops Intelligence Surveillance and
Reconnaissance Combat Search and Rescue
(CSAR) Navigation and Positioning Weather Services
Strategic Attack Counterair Counterspace Counterla
nd Countersea Information Operations Combat
Support Command and Control (C2) Airlift
11
Doctrine
  • A belief in the best way to implement/use air and
    space power
  • Based on
  • - History
  • - Technology
  • - Future Threats
  • - Leaders Experiences
  • Provides Guidance
  • Must NOT Stagnate

12
Doctrine Examples
  • WWI
  • - Armies vs. Machine Gun
  • WWII
  • - Daylight, High Altitude, Unescorted
    Precision Bombing

13
CFD Model
Time Period Distinctive Capabilities Functions (missions) Doctrinal Emphasis
Pre- WW I Information Superiority Surveillance Reconnaissance Artillery Spotting Gathering Military Info to support land forces



14
Principles of War
  • those aspects of warfare that are universally
    true and relevant.
  • -Joint Pub 1

15
Principles of War
  • Historically Tested
  • Apply equally to all U.S. Armed Forces
  • Unity of Command, Objective, Offense, Mass,
    Maneuver, Economy of Force, Security, Surprise,
    Simplicity

16
Principles of War
  • UNITY OF COMMAND Ensures unity of effort for
    every objective under one responsible commander.
  • OBJECTIVE Directs military operations toward a
    defined and attainable objective that contributes
    to strategic, operational, or tactical aims.
  • OFFENSIVE States that we act rather than react
    and dictate the time, place, purpose, scope,
    intensity, and pace operations. The initiative
    must be seized, retained, and fully exploited.

17
Principles of War
  • MASS Concentrates combat power at the decisive
    time and place
  • MANEUVER Places the enemy in a position of
    disadvantage through the flexible application of
    combat power.

18
Principles of War
  • ECONOMY OF FORCE Creates usable mass by using
    minimum combat power on secondary objectives.
    Makes fullest use of forces available.
  • SECURITY Protects friendly forces and their
    operations from enemy actions which could provide
    the enemy with unexpected advantage.

19
Principles of War
  • SURPRISE Strikes the enemy at a time or place
    or in a manner for which he is unprepared.
  • SIMPLICITY Avoids unnecessary complexity in
    preparing, planning, and conducting military
    operations.

20
Other Principles
  • Restraint limits collateral damage and prevents
    unnecessary or unlawful use of force
  • Perseverance ensures commitment necessary to
    attain desired end state
  • Legitimacy develops and maintains the will
    necessary to attain desired end state

21
Tenets
  • Fundamental truths that are unique to the air and
    space environment.
  • - Centralized Control and Decentralized
    Execution
  • - Flexibility/Versatility
  • - Synergistic Effects
  • - Persistence
  • - Concentration
  • - Priority
  • - Balance

22
Tenets
  • Centralized Control/Decentralized Execution
  • Air power must be controlled by airmanJFACC
  • Delegation of execution authority
  • Flexibility and Versatility
  • Exploit mass maneuver simultaneously
  • Parallel attacksparallel attacks at strategic,
    operational, and tactical levels
  • Synergistic Effects
  • Higher effectiveness than sum of individual
    contributions

23
Tenets
  • Persistence
  • Continuous efforts
  • May need to hit targets more than oncedo not
    need to remain in close proximity to do so
  • Concentration
  • At a point where it will be decisive
  • Avoid spreading air and space power to thin
  • Priority
  • Prioritize applications to have greatest impacts
  • Must consider finite force structure
  • Balance
  • Principles of war and Tenets
  • Offensive and defensive application of power
  • Strategic, operational, and tactical impacts

24
Early Years of Flight Introduction
  • Man first flew aloft in a balloon in 1783
  • Airpower did not have an immediate impact
  • Flying machines were not readily accepted by land
    oriented officers
  • Airpowers first major impact was not until World
    War I

25
Balloons
  • Montgolfier Brothers flew first hot-air balloon
    in 1783
  • Ben Franklin saw first balloon flight and
    immediately he saw military potential
  • First used for military purposes by the French in
    1794 at Maubege.
  • Union and Confederate forces employed balloons
    during the American Civil War

26
Balloons
  • Adolphus W. Greely, the grandfather of military
    aviation in U.S., revived interest in military
    capability of balloons in 1891
  • - 1898 - Greely balloon used to direct
    artillery fire during the Battle of San
    Juan Hill
  • Interest in balloons dropped quickly with the
    development of heavier-than-air vehicles

27
Dirigibles
  • Steerable balloons -- often called Airships
  • 1884 -- first successful flight in a dirigible
  • Ferdinand Von Zeppelin -- person most readily
    identified with dirigibles
  • - Zeppelins first flown in 1900
  • - Germans used to bomb England in WW I
  • - Germans used to fly observation cover for
    their surface fleet in WW I
  • Vulnerable to winds and ground fire

28
The Early Years of Flight
  • Uses of Balloons and Dirigibles
  • - Reconnaissance
  • - Artillery spotting
  • - Bombing (extremely limited prior to WWI)
  • - Morale Booster/Escape Means
  • - Air transport of supplies

29
Early Pioneers of Flight
  • Otto Lilienthal -- studied gliders and first to
    explain the superiority of curved surfaces
  • Percy Pilcher -- built airplane chassis
  • Octave Chanute -- Developed a double
    winged-glider/wrote history of flight to1900
  • Samuel P. Langley -- First to secure government
    support to develop an airplane
  • - Failed twice to fly from houseboat in 1903
  • - Congress withdrew monetary support

30
Orville and Wilbur Wright
  • First to fly a heavier-than-air, power-driven
    machine -- 17 December 1903
  • - Flight traveled 120 feet and lasted 12
    seconds
  • Approached flying scientifically and
    systematically
  • Used experience of Lilienthal, Pilcher and
    Chanute
  • Built a glider in Dayton in 1899
  • - Moved to Kitty Hawk, N. Carolina in 1900

31
Reactions to the Wrights Invention
  • U.S. government was very skeptical at first
  • - Not interested because of the Langleys
    failures
  • Britain and France were very enthusiastic
  • President Roosevelt directed the Secretary of
    War, W. H. Taft, to investigate the Wright
    brothers invention in 1906
  • Dec.1907 -- Chief Signal Officer, BG James Allen,
    issued Specification 486 calling for bids to
    build the first military aircraft

32
Signal Corps Specification 486
  • Established the requirements for the first
    military aircraft. Aircraft must be able to
  • - Carry 2 persons
  • - Reach speed of 40 mph
  • - Carry sufficient fuel for 125 mile nonstop
    flight
  • - Be controllable in flight in any direction
  • - Fly at least one hour
  • - Land at take-off point, without damage
  • - Be taken apart and reassembled in one hour
  • - No military operational requirements
    specified

33
Specification 486 (Cont)
  • 41 proposals were received, only 3 complied with
    specifications
  • U.S. Army signed contract with Wright brothers on
    10 Feb 1908
  • Wright brothers delivered the first military
    aircraft on 20 Aug 1908
  • U.S. Army accepted the first operational aircraft
    on 2 Aug 1909

34
Early Flight Video
35
The Early Years of Flight
  • Until WWI balloons, dirigibles and aircraft were
    primarily reconnaissance vehicles
  • Early on, the flying machines were not seen as
    weapons of war
  • Few believed the flying force was ready to
    separate air force
  • The potential uses of the airplane would evolve
    considerably during WWI

36
World War I -- Missions
  • Reconnaissance Collecting visual and
    photographic information
  • Counterair Air-to-air combat
  • Close Air Support Support of ground forces
  • Interdiction Striking enemy resources close to
    the battlefield
  • Strategic Bombing Strikes deep into enemy
    territory to destroy war making capabilities

37
WWI Early Uses of Airpower
  • Reconnaissance and artillery spotting
  • - Took away the element of surprise
  • - Hampered by weather / unserviceable
    aircraft
  • Pursuit Aviation (Air superiority)
  • - Grew out of attempts to deny
    reconnaissance
  • - 1st air-to-air kill occurred in Oct. 1914
  • - Developed rapidly in WWI
  • - Key to winning the air war

38
WWI Technological Developments
  • Roland Garros (French) Developed metal strips
    for propellers so machine gun bullets would not
    shatter the props
  • Anthony Fokker (Dutch) Designed synchronizing
    gear so bullets would pass through the spinning
    propeller blades

39
WWI Technological Developments
  • Nieuports and Spads (French) most reliable and
    flexible aircraft in 1916
  • Fokker Triplane German aircraft that put the
    Germans back on top in 1917

40
American Participation in WWI
  • When U.S. entered the war in April 1917, US Air
    Service was totally unprepared
  • - Aviation Section had 56 pilots and less
    than 250 airplanes -- none ready for combat
  • Congress approved 640 million in July 1917 to
    raise 354 combat squadrons
  • At the end of WWI, Air Service had 183,000
    personnel and 185 squadrons

41
Strategic Bombing in WWI
  • Limited in scope and intensity
  • Had a negligible outcome on the war
  • Laid the foundation for future thought

42
Bombing of Britain
  • Germans conducted daylight bombing raids against
    Britain using Zeppelins - 1915-16
  • - Stopped because of poor results
  • Germans reinitiated daylight raids using Gotha
    bombers in 1917 ineffective
  • Germans begin night bombing using Zeppelins and
    Reisen bombers 1917-18 Primarily terror raids
  • Strengthened British morale, destroyed little war
    making capacity

43
Allied Bombing of Germany
  • Began in 1914 generally ineffective
  • British bombed German cities and airfields in
    retaliation for German strikes
  • Allies created the Inter-Allied Independent Air
    Force (IAIAF) in 1919 for the purpose of bombing
    Germany.
  • - War ended before the IAIAF was used

44
Strategic Bombing Theorists
  • Sir Hugh Trenchard
  • Giulio Douhet

45
Sir Hugh Trenchard
  • Commander of the Royal Air Force
  • Primary target should be civilian morale
  • Believed allies should attack German homeland
  • Attack around the clock

46
Giulio Douhet
  • General in the Italian Army
  • Believed airpower was supreme after WWI
  • Believed bombers would win all wars
  • Air weapon would be used against ports, railroads
    and economic structures
  • Best way to gain air superiority was to destroy
    the enemys ground organization

47
Giulio Douhet
  • Once air superiority was achieved, bombers would
    concentrate on cities to destroy industry and
    morale
  • Influenced by Italian geography where there was
    little threat of a ground invasion
  • His doctrine led to total war conceptwar on the
    nation as a whole, not just military forces

48
Lt Col Edgar S. Gorrell
  • Theories mirrored Trenchard, but felt bombing
    should concentrate on one city at a time until
    destroyed
  • Ignored during war, ideas recognized in 1930s
  • Believed best way to stop Germans was to destroy
    production
  • Stressed continuous day/night bombings to deprive
    Germans of rest and repair time
  • Proposed attacks of single to target to complete
    destruction

49
Review of CFD Model
  • Distinctive Capabilities Air and space
    expertise, capabilities, and technological
    know-how that produces superior military
    capabilities
  • Functions Broad, fundamental and continuing
    activities of air and space power
  • Doctrine fundamental principles which military
    forces guide their actions in support of national
    objectives

50
CFD Model
Time Period Distinctive Capabilities Functions (missions) Doctrinal Emphasis
Pre- WW I Information Superiority Surveillance Reconnaissance Artillery Spotting Gathering Military Info to support land forces
Post WW I Information Superiority Precision Engagement Surveillance Reconnaissance Counter Air Strategic attack Strategic attack, of military targets


51
Airpower Through WWI
  • Define Air and Space Power
  • Competencies
  • Distinctive Capabilities
  • Functions
  • Air and Space Doctrine
  • Principles of War
  • Tenets of Air and Space Power

52
Airpower Through WWI
  • Lighter-than-air vehicles
  • Potential of the airplane
  • Heavier-than-air vehicles
  • Early Uses of Airpower
  • Airpower in WWI
  • The Battle of Air Supremacy
  • American Participation in WWI

53
Airpower Through WWI
  • Close Air Support and Interdiction in WWI
  • Development of Tactics in WWI
  • Strategic Bombing Theorists
  • Lt Col Edgar S. Gorrell (American)
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