Aligning Airpower Capabilities with Australia’s Maritime Strategy

04/26/2024

At the April 11, 2024 Williams Foundation seminar, the former head of the Air Warfare Center and now Director General for Air Combat Capability, Air Commodore Ross Bender, addressed the way ahead for the RAAF in dovetailing with the new strategic focus of the Australian government.

Bender noted that the RAAF although closely partnered with other allies is focused on “conducting campaigns directed to the operational and strategic goals supporting national defense.”

It is focused in this sense, and increasingly on the region.

The speed and range of airpower is an essential contribution to the defense of Australia’s maritime interests.

As Bender put it: “The ADF must be able to operate across great distances to assure the security of our economic interests and be able to support our allies and partners. Air capability is vital to the maritime domain by providing the speed and responsiveness which it can deliver.”

He provided a slide which reminded the audience of an aspect of the range and focus challenge.

He commented on this slide as follows: “And though we’ll discuss northern approaches, we should not forget the south with the Antarctic Treaty in mind, which from 2048, any of the parties can call for review. I also flag our contributions to some long standing and some relatively new maritime surveillance operations throughout our region, supporting the Australian Government and importantly, our regional partners.

“You might be aware of the Australian P-8 that recently visited La Réunion. Australia is a maritime nation and the ADF must be able to operate across great distances to assure the security of economic interests and be able to support our allies and partners.”

I would note that the ADF is truly dependent on what the RAAF can do as it provides both the air capability associated with the USAF in the United States as well as what the U.S. Navy provides for the U.S. military. It delivers strike, reconnaissance, maritime ISR and targeting data to the ADF. If the RAAF is not capable of performing its air delivered 360 degree capabilities, then the entire maritime domain defense enterprise for Australia is severely weakened.

In his talk, he discussed the need for the RAAF to develop its own version of agile employment which largely will evolve over ways to operate from the Northern areas of Australia where there are significant infrastructure and work force limitations. The challenge of fuel and logistical support to a distributed force is a major one to be met.

I would note that it has been announced that there is to be acquisition of AGM-158C LRASM anti-ship missiles to be carried on F/A-18Fs, P-8As and eventually F-35As, as well as AGM-158B JASSM-ER air-to-ground missiles. Another item is integration of the Kongsberg Joint Strike Missile on the F-35A. E/A-18G Growlers will receive 63 AGM-88E AARGM-ER missiles for attacking radars.

And as McInnes noted in his presentation, the range of these missiles in terms of effective attack is expanded by the operation of the air platform themselves.

Bender then discussed the coming of Triton to the ADF.

“Triton will operate from RAAF base Tyndall in the Northern Territory and be controlled from RAAF base Edinburgh in South Australia, a clear example of the new paradigm for the ADF and the Air Force. The platform is high cost, requires a highly skilled workforce to operate and maintain, but its capability is ideally suited for constant observation of our northern approaches.”

But the plan is to expand over time autonomous capabilities augmenting the manned and remotely piloted combat force.

Air Commodore Bender underscored: “Advanced autonomous concepts and capabilities, such as collaborative combat aircraft, can expand the projected envelope of high value, air or maritime assets, while extending their effective reach.”

Air Commodore Bender presenting at the Williams Foundation Seminar April 11, 2024.

A challenging and I personally believe costly effort that is not fully recognized in realistic budget discussions is simply adapting the RAAF to new operational conditions and contexts.

This is how Air Commodore Bender put It: “There must be important efforts to address a challenge in operating force in Australia. We can’t consider our bases as sanctuaries anymore, disconnected from the support base in Australia. How do we continue to operate and demonstrate resilience and maintain the initiative to support deterrence?

“The Air Force is adopting an agile operations concept of a maneuver across a dispersed and hardened network of bases. Of course, this approach must include the measures we can take through the development of integrated air and missile defense capabilities. This protection also requires an understanding of own force signatures, and the automated threat environment, including to supporting and enabling elements.

“An agile posture increases deterrence by being strategically predictable, but operationally unpredictable. Strategic predictability comes from ensuring potential adversaries are left under no doubt about our resolve to ensure survivable, resilient, and enduring airpower operations. Agility at the level we think necessary requires new approaches to combat support, logistics and command and control.

“At its heart, an agile operations concept provides a network of air domain access points to enable aircraft to move rapidly to enable us to aggregate effects, and then disaggregate and reconstitute to complicate advisory targeting. Agile operations enable the resilience of our airpower.”

But what is the challenge in moving ahead with such a vision?

What follow are my own thoughts and not those of any speaker during the day of the Williams Foundation seminar from the ADF.

The reality is that the government is cutting airpower in favor of its investments in the future maritime force, notably SSNs and the future surface fleet. This leaves clear gaps with regard to the enhancing of ADF capability in the crucial three-to-five year period facing the ADF.

Government documents and officials have embraced the notion that Australia’s warning time is significantly reduced but the reality is that the government is cutting current capability to pay for a force 10 years away.

One needs to be clear.

The decision to cut funding for the fourth squadron of F-35s is a significant reduction in capability. Notably, when one considers the range at which F-35s operating as an allied fleet can move data for targeting, eliminating the numbers of aircraft have an impact.

And the RAAF F-35s are capable of integration with those of the USAF and in fact now operate in such a manner. This is not interoperability but integratability which is a very unique contribution delivered by the F-35 across the ADF and U.S. militaries fleet of F-35s, USMC, US Navy and USAF.

This is simply not true of a legacy aircraft like the Super Hornet, for in fact that is why the ADF was buying the F-35 in the first place.

And air autonomous systems are not a solution for the three-to-five-year period in and of themselves but might become useful adjuncts as ISR or C2 nodes in a kill web especially as Triton comes on board. There could be accelerated capability to move data from Triton to loyal wingman operations if there is an operational and budgetary space for the USE of autonomous systems prioritized by the government in the three-to-five-year period.

And the work on the Australian approach to agile combat employment is a priority but will be costly up front and require new working relationships between Army and the RAAF as well.

In an interview I did last year with John Blackburn with Air Vice-Marshal Darren Goldie, then the Air Commander of the RAAF, we discussed the challenge of re-focusing the force:

“We don’t have the level of knowledge and normative experience we need to generate regarding infrastructure across Western and Northern Australia for the Australian version of agile combat employment.”

He contrasted the Australian to the PACAF approach to agility. The USAF in his view was working on how to trim down support staff for air operations and learning how to use multiple bases in the Pacific, some of which they owned and some of which they did not own.

The Australian concept he was highlighting was focused on Australian geography and how the joint force and the infrastructure which could be built — much of it mobile – could allow for dispersed air combat operations.

This meant in his view that “we need to have a clear understanding of the fail and no-fail enablers” for the kind of dispersed operations necessary to enhance the ADF’s deterrent capability.

A key element of this is C2. Rather than looking to traditional CAOC battle management, the focus needs as well to focus on C2 in a dispersed or disaggregate way, where the commander knows what is available to them in an area of operations and aggregate those forces into an integrated combat element operating as a distributed entity.

Goldie commented: “We are developing concepts about how we will do command and control on a more geographic basis. This builds on our history with Darwin and Tindal to a certain extent, although technology has widened that scale to be a truly continental distributed control concept.

“We already a familiar with how an air asset like the Wedgetail can take over the C2 of an air battle when communications are cut to the CAOC, but we don’t have a great understanding of how that works from a geographic basing perspective. What authorities to move aircraft, people and other assets are vested in local area Commanders that would be resilient to degradation in communications from the theatre commander – or JFACC?

“We need to focus on how we can design our force to manoeuvre effectively using our own territory as the chessboard.”

Air Vice-Marshal Goldie underscored that the ability to work with limited resources to generate air combat capability is exercised regularly by the normal activity of 75 Squadron, flying F-35s in Australia’s Air Combat Group. This squadron operates from RAAF Base Tindal in the Northern Territory and as Goldie put it: “they have to operate with what they have in a very austere area.”

He highlighted a recent exercise which 75 squadron did with their Malaysian partners. The squadron operated their F-35s, and each day practiced operations using a different support structure. One day the operated with a C-27J which carried secure communication, along with HF communications systems and dealing with bandwidth challenges each bearer posed.

Another day they would operate with a ground vehicle packed with support equipment and on another day they would operate without either support capability. The point being the need is to learn to operate in austere support environments and to shape the skill sets to do so.

By learning how to use Australian territory to support agile air operations, and to take those capabilities to partner or allied operational areas, Australia will significantly enhance its deterrent capabilities going forward. This is a key challenge being squarely addressed by the RAAF.

So what can be achieved in the near to midterm along these lines?

In my view, this is a key measure of the credibility of Australian deterrence by denial or whatever other term you might use.

Conceptualizing Australia’s Maritime Strategy and Shaping a Government Approach

04/24/2024

By Robbin Laird

I followed up with Jennifer Parker on April 19, 2024 with regard to her presentation on how to conceptualize Australian maritime strategic interests and strategy.

We focused on how she conceptualized the strategy and the needed approach as much wider than a focus on ADF capabilities.

We discussed the need for reforming the Australian Defense Force’s structure to address 21st century security challenges.

We highlighted in our discussion the importance of involving society and the economy in a broader conversation about defense and security, and the need for expedited capability acquisition to address existing gaps and emerging threats.

We finally focused on the challenge to shape a more ambitious approach to defense organization design, involving a broader societal and economic involvement to address capacity issues and maximize government capacity.

Parker started by arguing that “in Australia, we jump to the capability conversation to quickly.”

She argued that any consideration of national security strategy must start with assessing Australia’s critical vulnerabilities across various domains, including political warfare, cyber warfare, and space which affects its maritime interests. Maritime strategy then would be  part of such an approach.

And when done in this manner, Parker argues that “we need to address organizational structure and how we have organized ourselves to deal with our vulnerabilities.”

Doing so will underscore the need for restructuring national agencies and departments to better address these vulnerabilities, with a focus on linking up broader considerations and authorities to do so.

This suggests or reinforces the need for a national security architecture to coordinate maritime security efforts. In such an architecture one key organizational issue to be dealt with is the lack of data sharing across fleets and departments, and the need for a central authority to address security crises.

Such a re-think then would lead to a broader engagement of the society and the economic leaders in shaping such a national strategy which would be inclusive of a maritime one.

Parker put it this way: “The third thing to do after focusing on vulnerabilities and government restructuring is to  be really open with the public about what’s happening, and why we need these changes.”

This is a version of my own argument that simply pursuing a national security strategy in age where global security challenges are diffuse within our societies is simply continuing the role if national security decision makers as some sort of high priesthood.

The broader engagement of the society and economy is critical.  Evolving defense needs rely increasingly on a security base which is not narrowly about defense. Much or perhaps most of the technologies to be mastered for defense come from the commercial sector. The flow of dual use technologies has changed from defense to the civil economy to operating the other way around.

Based on such a re-set the ADF needs to review its structure to address multiple domains of operations as it proceeds with its multi-domain integration.

We then discussed the capability issues.

How does Australia address its gaps in Navy capabilities, particularly in submarines and ships, in a more urgent manner?

Parker underscored that the Navy’s capability acquisition process needs reform in order to move faster and be more responsive to changing needs.

I mentioned my discussions with a senior U,S, Admiral who focused on their need to fill capabilities gaps with new or extant technologies, but the U.S. acquisition process simply does not allow them to do so.

The same is true of Australia, and this especially significant as contributions from autonomous systems – air and maritime – which are software driven payload carriers — become especially significant in force redesign an meeting shortfalls in the short and medium term. Their constant redesign as use dictates a new approach whereby the users and the developers need to be working in an ongoing and continuous process of changing these systems based on real world experience.

When the Plan Jericho approach was launched by the RAAF one of the key themes identified was the need to enable software transient advantages for the force compared to an adversary. This is evident now in the coming of autonomous systems and how to include them in the force, but the challenge of how data is generated by the force and used in a whole of government maritime security and defense effort only is worsened by the coming of these systems.

There needs to be organizational change in the ADF and in whole of government in order to effectively employ these new platforms – who are not covered at all by the legacy acquisition process – to the benefit of the ADF, the Maritime Border Command and to the Australian government.

When such a re-design is pursued then the workforce problem changes as well. Parker emphasized the need to shift from a more traditional conversation of recruitment and retention to how agencies are organized for cross domain capacity.

How to enhance the efficacy and efficiency of the government cross domain to deliver the necessary decisions in the right time?

How to use the workforce more effectively and to assess the ability to deliver desired effects is even more important than managing the extant workforce to increase its numbers as the ADF seeks to expand.

Featured Photo:

Minister for Defence Industry, The Hon Pat Conroy MP announced at Garden Island, Sydney that the Government will deliver a sovereign, autonomous undersea capability for the Royal Australian Navy, through the Ghost Shark Program.

Ghost Shark Alpha the first prototype co-developed by Defence Science and Technology Group, the Royal Australian Navy and Anduril Australia was unveiled.

Credit:  Australian Department of Defence, April 4, 2024.

See also, the following:

Shaping a Way Ahead for Australian Maritime Strategy

Bomber Task Force 24-2

U.S. Air Force Airmen assigned to the 28th Bomb Wing, Ellsworth Air Force Base, South Dakota, prepare to depart Luleå-Kallax Air Base, Sweden, Feb. 29, 2024, during Bomber Task Force 24-2.

The Air Force routinely operates across the globe and remains flexible and agile to respond to the changes in the operational environment.

BTF operations provide U.S. leaders with strategic options to assure Allies and partners, while deterring potential adversary aggression across the globe.

LULEA, SWEDEN
02.29.2024
Video by Staff Sgt. Jake Jacobsen
28th Bomb Wing Public Affairs

French Defence Exports: An April 2024 Update

04/23/2024

By Pierre Tran

Paris – Sales and orders of the defense sector of the French aeronautics and space industry fell in 2023 compared to the previous year, while overall sales rose nine percent to €70.2 billion ($75 billion), the chair of the GIFAS trade association told a news conference April 23.

The defense market showed “a small decline,” with 2023 sales of €17.9 billion and a 25.5 percent drop in “export deliveries,” Guillaume Faury said.

Those falls followed orders for military aeronautics which made 2022 a “year of reference,” and he said “false conclusions” should not be drawn on 2023.

The United Arab Emirates ordered in 2022 80 Rafale fighter jets from Dassault Aviation, a deal worth €14 billion. Abu Dhabi also ordered MBDA missiles worth €2 billion.

Dassault delivered in 2023 13 Rafales and received orders for 60 units, which made last year a “very positive year for the Rafale,” Faury said. MBDA “signed numerous contracts,” while Thales signed contracts tied to the Rafale, Aster missile for France, Ground Master 400 radar for Indonesia, and flight simulation for the UAE, he added.

Faury is also chief executive of Airbus, a builder of airliners, based in Toulouse, southern France.

The 2023 military sales of €17.9 billion marked a seven percent fall from the previous year, while €6.9 billion of defense exports dropped 25.5 percent, the GIFAS presentation showed. Military sales to France rose 10.3 percent to €11 billion.

Sales and delivery of the Rafale weigh heavily in the military sector of the French aeronautic industry.

Dassault delivered 11 Rafales to France last year, the company said in its March 6 statement on 2023 financial results. The company also shipped two Rafales to Greece, bringing its total deliveries of the multirole fighter to 13 last year.

That output fell short of a plan to ship 15 Rafales last year, pointing up possible future difficulties in deliveries, which could make it hard to sell the fighter, International Institute for Strategic Studies, a London-based think tank, said Jan. 18 in a research note.

“The bulging order book could challenge dealmaking in the near term, with particular pressure on the Rafale industrial production set-up expected in the 2026–33 timeframe,” the IISS said.

“The French aircraft maker aimed to produce 15 Rafales last year but only completed 13. The company has not yet given 2024 production guidance, though output will likely increase this year and next, given the strong demand. Even so, it is unlikely that annual aircraft numbers will quickly reach mid-20s.”

Dassault said in its results statement that drop in Rafale deliveries was due to problems in the supply chain, which also led to a fall in shipping its Falcon business jet to 26 from a forecast 35. There was also delay in the entry into service of the Falcon 6X, the company said.

The company said in its guidance for 2024 financial results it expected to deliver 20 Rafales and 35 Falcons, with an expected rise in annual sales to some €6 billion. That compared to 2023 sales of €4.8 billion.

On prospective foreign sales, India is in negotiations for an order for 27 Rafales for its navy, and the Indian air force is keen to add a further 36 fighters, the IISS said.

Other export prospects include Serbia, which said April 9 it expected to sign a contract for 12 Rafales in the next two months, Reuters news agency reported. That fighter deal was worth some €3 billion and would replace an aging fleet of Mig 29 fighters.

A Serbian order of the Rafale would echo a procurement of a similar number of the French-built fighter by its neighbor, Croatia, with which there are tense relations.

Dassault is also in talks for a sale of the Rafale to Colombia, which had reportedly shortlisted the fighter but had run into financial difficulty before a deal could be sealed.

On the GIFAS presentation of 2023 military orders, the value of orders fell 50 percent to €20.3 billion, of which export orders dropped 67.4 percent to €9.2 billion, and French orders fell 9.2 percent to €11.1 billion.

France placed in December 2023 a long awaited order for 42 Rafales, as set out in the 2024-2030 military budget law adopted in July 2023.

Indonesia also placed in 2023 an order for a second batch of 18 Rafales. Jakarta’s order for the third and final batch of 18 units came into effect on 8 Jan. 2024, bringing the total order to 42 French-built fighters.

Total civil, military and space orders fell slightly last year to €65.1 billion, down 4.7 percent  in the previous year, GIFAS said. Exports accounted for 73 percent of those orders.

Airbus accounts for the bulk of civil orders, and demand for the European aircraft has risen as its U.S. rival, Boeing, has struggled to deal with safety concerns over its 737 Max airliners.

While total French aeronautic and space sales rose nine percent to €70.2 billion, of which exports accounted for €45.7 billion, the true benchmark was the 2019 sales of €74.3 billion, before the Covid crisis hit the French aerospace industry, Faury said.

Last year was a year of “recovery” and “growth,” he said, but there was clearly still a struggle for subcontractors in the supply chain.

The French aerospace industry employs 210,000 workers, and is looking to recruit 25,000-30,000 this year. Some 30 percent of the work force are women, and the recruitment drive includes 6,000-7,000 student internships.

Urgent Need for Ukraine

In the small-medium sized companies, there is Delair, which is due to deliver this summer 100 mini-UAVs, the first batch of a French planned procurement of 2,000 loitering munition drones, also known as “kamikaze drones.”

The company will supply a modified version of its UX11 drone, which will carry a  munitions package from its project partner, Nexter, the French unit of KNDS, a Franco-German builder of tanks and artillery.

The Delair chief executive, Bastien Mancini, showed March 20 its assembly room of drones to the Association des Journalistes Professionels de l’Aéronautique et de l’Espace (AJPAE), a press club. The privately held company is based in Labège, just outside Toulouse.

There was something of the look of high-tech cottage industry, with wing and fuselage parts, propellers, and command and control systems laid out around the room for careful assembly.

France will ship that initial batch of drones, ordered under an urgent operational requirement, to Ukraine. Kyiv has said it is in sore need of renewing its stock of arms, as Russian forces advance against Ukrainian troops, hampered by lack of ammunition and air defense.

The Ukrainian use of the U.S.-built Switchblade loitering munition against Russian armor grabbed attention of the public and militaries around the world, prompting the French forces to search for a similar weapon.

The remaining 1,900 munition drones will be shipped to French and Ukrainian forces, the French armed forces minister has said. How they will be divided and the value of the order are undisclosed.

The Direction Générale de l’Armement procurement office and its specialist agency Agence Innovation Defense last year selected the Delair-Nexter drone, along with a munition drone proposed by missile maker MBDA, and its project partner, Novadem.

Some 20 partnerships pitched in that drone competition, dubbed Colibri, and it has been reported those other projects could be proposed for the outstanding order for 1,900 drones.

The armed forces minister, Sébastien Lecornu, visited Feb. 29 Delair, and he said France was also renewing an order for a further 150 mini drones from the company, namely the DT26 and UX11. That deal announcement follows an order in July last year for 150 Delair drones, comprising 50 DT26 and 100 UX11, for sending to Ukraine.

Kyiv showed close interest in an anti-jamming capability in the drones.

Delair reported 2023 sales of some €10 million, and expects to double that revenue this year. The company is tripling production, building 12 drones a month, up from four a month. Delair is recruiting 40 staff this year, after hiring 30 last year. The unit cost of a drone is understood to be €4,000-€5,000, depending on the payload.

The company has tested its DT46 drone on the French navy’s Tonnerre helicopter carrier. That UAV is capable of vertical lift as well as catapult launch.

The company started building drones for the civil market, with its first UAV, the DT18, receiving certification in 2012. That aircraft was designed for inspection of pipelines and electricity lines.

Delair sold drones in 2016 for use by the Organization for Security and Coperation in Europe for surveillance of Ukraine’s border with Russia.

Lecornu told the press pack on his visit to Delair, the French-built drones being sent to Ukraine were “absolutely fundamental in the conduct of operations,” and “complementary to the Caesar cannon in the artillery domain.”

“These drones are essential for the battlefield because these are drones which will save the soldier’s life,” he said.

Featured Image: The Delair DT46 drone. Credit Delair.

10th Marine Regiment HIMARS Training in Exercise Nordic Response 24

04/22/2024

U.S. Marines with 2nd Battalion, 10th Marine Regiment, 2nd Marine Division, conduct a High Mobility Artillery Rocket System live-fire training range in preparation for Exercise Nordic Response 24 in Setermoen, Norway, Feb. 27, 2024.

Exercise Nordic Response, formerly known as Cold Response, is a NATO training event conducted every two years to promote military competency in arctic environments and to foster interoperability between the U.S. Marine Corps and allied nations.

SETERMOEN, NORWAY
02.27.2024
Video by Cpl. Joshua Kumakaw and Lance Cpl. Grace Stover
II Marine Expeditionary Force

Air Power in Australia’s Maritime Strategy

04/21/2024

By Robbin Laird

This was the title of the presentation by Chris McInnes, a noted Australian airpower and defence analyst, to the April 11, 2024 Williams Foundation Seminar. He provided an overview of how airpower made unique contributions to Australian defence by providing rapid strike options throughout the Australian areas of interest.

McInnes highlighted air power’s ability to provide rapid engagement and could do so over extensive operational space to deliver desired effects. He argued that in times of an effects-based approach, airpower transforms the time and space dimension for Australia’s maritime strategy.

Airpower provides cost-effective options for Australia’s national security and cost-effectiveness should be prioritized in Australia’s maritime strategy of denial, focusing on delivering large amounts of high explosives to hard targets like warships, airfields, and ports.

Indeed, his presentation was an argument that airpower provided a cost-effective way to deliver massive firepower at range.

His analysis led to his argument that airpower gives Australia time and space to plan, act, and move effectively. This means that prioritizing investment in air superiority to avoid second-best hand in high-stakes situations is crucial.

The presentation can be broken down into three core efforts.

The first was to look back at World War II and examine airpower’s key role in the Pacific campaign. It played a crucial and decisive impact on the enemy prior to any other means to encroach on the Japanese advances in the Pacific. A combined arms campaign was necessary to recover territory seized by the Japanese empire, but air power was the tip of the spear and a core element of the ability of the allied air forces from sea and land to destroy enemy forces.

The second revolved around the question of the time-space functionality of airpower. Every platform in the joint force is a time-space entity with core characteristics which define what it is able to do. Airpower can move at speed and range no ship can; ships provide slower moving capabilities which can build out a presence force.

As he argued:

“We can swiftly respond with airpower across huge distances with different options in different places on different days. We have more options available and more time in which to consider them.

“But it works both ways. Three hours from Darwin is also three hours to Darwin. PLA airpower can and does hold Australia and its assets at risk across our region in a discretionary, scalable and sustainable manner and in hours, not days. It has already disrupted Australia’s sense of time and space. We are inside our warning time.

“I don’t think we’ve quite latched on to what that means though. Airpower shapes how we sense and exploit time and space, which is the most precious thing for Australia and its maritime strategy.”

He used a chart to visually underscore the time-space point about airpower.

McInnes carefully examined the cost-benefit of weapons delivery enabled by airpower with standoff weapons from sea or land.

He introduced his analysis as follows:

“My analysis is limited to strike as the central operational feature of Australia’s maritime strategy of denial. I see the delivery of large amounts of high explosives as determining strike effectiveness and war, and credibility in circumstances short of war.

“Australia’s maritime strategy of denial depends on our ability to deliver large and concentrated amounts of high explosive at long range, we could call this impactful projection. We need to hit hard enough to stop movement in different places on different days across a huge area over and over again.

The charts he showed highlighted the range, unit costs per weapon, and warhead class correlated with the launch platform to assess cost effectiveness of ADF weapons.

He described the charts this way:

“Unit costs are shown in U.S. dollars and are based on U.S. budget figures going back to the 70s. The unit cost of new weapons will fall as more are purchased.

“The charts clearly show that the delivering the weight of explosive our maritime strategy needs is going to be very expensive, particularly if we become overly reliant on stand-off missiles rather than stand-in weapons in the bottom left corner. It is remarkable how often one reads of the ADF need for long range missiles because of the apparently short range of our air power.

“We must however distinguish between stand-off range – which is the distance a weapon travels from its launcher, and which is what the first chart shows – and effective reach, which incorporates the distance the platform and weapons can rapidly cover.

“When considering effective reach rather than stand-off range, the picture changes dramatically. Stand-in weapons suddenly become some of our longest-range options.

“The second chart incorporates a modest strike radius for the Super Hornet, our shortest-range weapon carrying aircraft. The ADF certainly does need stand-off weapons as they have specific utility against particular targets including air defenses, but they are expensive and inefficient high explosive delivery devices.

“Every exquisite component is single use and many many missiles are needed for strikes, particularly against defended targets. They must carry and do everything internally, including propulsion, navigation and communication. This forces trade-offs, often in warhead size.”

“Stand-in weapons are much lower cost and almost entirely warhead, including our largest options. They do rely on expensive delivery platforms, but these are reusable, and multi-role. We do need standoff weapons for specific tasks. But once that is done, stand-in weapons are our most economical and among our longest range options for maritime strategy of denial.”

He then focused on the key question of the operational infrastructure for the ADF and its operations, arguing that criticism of airpower as too dependent on vulnerable bases and supply lines overlooked the reality that these dependencies could not be avoided.

This is how he put it when looking at the opportunity costs of different operations:

“What are the trade-offs?

“It seems unavoidable that Australia will always need bases and supplies in its north for military operations in our region. Because at some point, all operations need bases and they will all need air power of some kind. Suggestions that dispersing Australia’s assets throughout the archipelago to our north can somehow minimize these costs are hard to square.

“Even assuming we hold permission to fly missiles through our neighbours airspace, the units will need to supply and defend themselves locally against air and other attack and they will still need supply lines back to Australia, which will have to be secured using air and sea power.”

McInnes’s closing point was to call for a renewed emphasis on the primacy of air superiority in airpower thinking and investment. As he said:

“However, we will have no options at all without air superiority. And this I contend is where we have reason for concern. In its simplest sense, air superiority is the condition under which we can operate free from prohibitive interference by the enemy.

““Air superiority can be general or local in time and space, it is almost never absolute, and it is a continuous struggle. It is deeply ingrained in the design and operation of Western societies and military forces, including the ADF. It is fundamentally why Australia has an Air Force. It was explicitly the prime campaign for Australian air power until the turn of the century.

“But the Western bloc has lost sight of this primacy over the last 30 years due to complacency and distraction. While the U.S. is reinvigorating it’s air superiority approach, its Air Force is struggling for funding while operating its oldest and smallest aircraft fleet since it was formed. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has given European air forces a rude wake up. Australia has strengths in the air but it would appear requirements exceed resources geographically and across missions. Mass and tempo are limited.”

“Air superiority is a fast-moving competition and deeply unforgiving for those who fall behind. The primacy of air superiority needs to be restored, particularly as the threat grows and funding is squeezed.”

Chris McInnes presenting at the Williams Foundation Seminar April 11, 2024.

The really decisive aspect of his presentation and indeed what is at the core of the evolution of 21st century combat forces, is the question of payloads and platforms or what I refer to as the evolution of the kill-web force. At the heart of the evolution of fifth generation enabled operations is a significant shift in terms of the sensor-shooter relationship whereby the weapons to be fired at an adversary do not necessarily come for the platform which has the sensor which has identified the target. This is at the heart of the F-35 development which frankly is still not fully understood and comprehended in the defence analytical world.

If your goal is to deliver lethal payloads, there are a variety of ways to do so.

But at the heart of the issue is where are they launched from and determining what target sets determine which weapons you need and their range. With manned and uncrewed air assets, one significantly reduces the range of the weapon necessary to strike a target as opposed to being launched from land or a ship. The U.S. aircraft carriers have combined speed, mobility, and launching airpower to close the distance for the missiles being fired.

To conclude, I want to build on McInnes’s focus on the need dramatically to reduce the cost of the weapons being used. I would argue that we need to build the functional equivalent of the 155mm shell used by the artillery for an air-launched missile which can be produced across the allied forces.

This will not be a super long missile, probably in the range of 400 miles, but the long range TLAMS which go further are expensive and in limited supply. What this means is that the future belongs to the common air missile produced in quantity that could also be fired from the ground or sea. The functional equivalent of the role of the shells of the 88 in the German army in World War II is what I envisage.

What does a 21st century defence strategy look like for Australia in a multi-polar authoritarian world?

04/16/2024

The answer is that it does not look like the defence strategy which has been followed throughout most of the post-war period. The threat envelope is quite different. There is no American and Western managed rules-based order dominating the world. There are diverse authoritarian movements and states which follow their distinct interests but play off of one another.

As one analyst has put it: “But the end of the Cold War has led to the atomisation of threats – many of these threat groups possess weapons and backing from powerful regional states that in some cases make them as capable as state-based actors.

“Nowhere is this more apparent than in the Middle East, where improved military capabilities are combined with an ideological zealotry that makes normal cost-benefit calculations underpinning deterrence redundant. This makes it very difficult for Washington to achieve the type of deterrence on which long-term regional stability is often based.”

And the direct threat to Australia is broad and not narrowly focused on what the Australian Defence Force can do. A sustainable force and a resilient Australia are beyond the scope of narrowly considered defence investments in a ready force. They are all of government and all of society challenges.

At the Williams Foundation Seminar held on April 11, 2024, the former Australian Secretary of Home Affairs, Mike Pezzullo, clearly underscored how different the era into which Australia and its allies had entered compared to the previous one.

As he put it in his presentation:

“What might this mean for Australia and specifically the Australian defence enterprise? Defence planning is rightly focused on a wide range of contingencies. With very little notice the Australian Defence Force could be called upon to undertake rapid deployments into the nearby arc of small states. While necessary and important, such ventures would only be marginally relevant to today’s great issues of war and peace. The same could be said of vital operations in support of distressed communities in the wake of natural disasters.

“Given long lead times, defence also has to focus on complex capability and programming issues, especially as related to the planned force of 2035 and beyond.”

But he cautioned that the threats in front of Australia now needed to drive a re-set in efforts that considered the engagement of the society in its own defence, not just crafting hypothetical future force structures.

And he quite correctly warned against the danger of shaping Potemkin long range capabilities that may never arrive in time to make a difference.

He focused much of his attention on the need to engage whole of government in working with economic leaders in shaping a way ahead for a more resilient Australia that could support a sustainable ADF along with core allies working with Australia as a strategic reserve both to deter and to prevail in crisis situations.

Mike Pezzullo presenting at the Williams Foundation seminar on April 11, 2024.

He underscored: “The most important question is whether a nation at large has the structures, capabilities and above all, the mindset and the will, that are required to fight and keep fighting to absorb, recover, endure and prevail. These cannot be put in place or engendered on the eve of the storm.

“Now as a practical suggestion to focus relevant effort, we should consider modernizing the earlier practice from the 1930s and and then again from the 1950s of the preparation of a war book. The war book of those times were guides on what would need to be done and by whom, in the event of war. Preparing a new war book would help to focus the national mind.”

He clarified his suggested approach as follows:

“A new war book would deal with the entire span of civil defense and mobilization which would be required to move to a war footing, consisting of a range of coordinated plans. Some would deal with critical infrastructure protection, and national cyber defense. Other plans would deal with the mobilization of labour and industrial production covering supply chains, industrial materials, chemicals, minerals, and so on.

“Sectoral plans would address the allocation, rationing and or stockpiling of fuel, energy, water, food, transport, shipping, aviation, communications, health services, pharmaceuticals, building construction resources, and so on and so forth.

“They would also be plans for the protection of the civil population covering evacuation, rapid fortification and or shelter construction, and for augmenting police fire, rescue and ambulance capacities, and also dealing with social cohesion, border security, domestic security and public safety.

“Lessons could be adapted from international experience, especially Ukraine and Israel, as well as from domestic experiences such as natural disasters, and the COVID pandemic noting however, that war is different.”

In short, 21st century defence is not narrowly focused on the ADF and long range investments in a future force.

All one has to look around you and find the activity of the multi-polar authoritarian world and the end of the American-led “rules-based order” to understand the future is now.

How best to shape a way ahead in terms of augmented capabilities in short to mid-term and engage the nation in its own defence for the longer term is really the challenge.