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Home » Polmar's Perspective » Army Embarks on Ambitious UAV Plan

Army Embarks on Ambitious UAV Plan

army-uavs.jpg

Of the five U.S. mil­i­tary ser­vices, the Army is embarked on the most ambi­tious plan to inte­grate Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV) into all lev­els of the force. Based in large part on the Army’s five years of expe­ri­ence in fight­ing in Afghanistan and Iraq, UAVs are being inte­grated into oper­a­tions from the divi­sion down to the pla­toon level.

This whole­sale adop­tion of UAVs is exac­er­bat­ing the Army-​​Air Force con­tro­versy over single-​​service con­trol over UAV pro­cure­ment and oper­a­tional con­trol. For the past sev­eral years the Army (and to some extent the Marine Corps) has com­plained about the allo­ca­tion of Air Force-​​controlled UAVs, while the Air Force has pointed to the oper­a­tional and pro­cure­ment prob­lems that could be solved by single-​​service con­trol — under the Air Force.

For exam­ple, the Army has great affin­ity for the MQ-​​1 Predator, a long-​​endurance, medium-​​altitude recon­nais­sance UAV. The MQ-​​1 vari­ant can be armed with Hellfire anti-​​tank mis­siles, and has been used effec­tively by the CIA as well as the Air Force. Predator wore Army green until 1996, when the Air Force (and CIA) took over that UAV effort. Reportedly, the Army now obtains less than one-​​half of the Predator time requested.

There are major “cul­tural” dif­fer­ences between Army and Air Force oper­a­tion of UAVs. The Army devolves oper­a­tional con­trol of UAVs to field com­man­ders at var­i­ous lev­els, while the Air force oper­ates UAVs through regional air com­po­nent com­man­ders. And, in gen­eral, the Army relies more on soft­ware and uses enlisted men as UAV con­trollers while the Air Force uses rated pilots.

In this envi­ron­ment, the Army is seek­ing — and Congress is fund­ing — the MQ-​​1C Sky Warrior, a mod­i­fied Predator vari­ant tai­lored for Army require­ments with the 3,000-pound air­craft car­ry­ing 300 pounds of sen­sors inter­nally and 500 pounds of exter­nal sen­sors and weapons. The Army wants 45 squadrons of Sky Warriors, each with 12 UAVs. Combat divi­sions will have a Sky Warrior squadron and com­bat brigades will get detach­ments of two to four of these UAVs. The Army pro­gram is seek­ing more than 500 Sky Warriors that will carry Hellfire mis­siles and Viper Strike smart bombs as well as sen­sors and tar­get designators.

On an interim basis Army divi­sions now have the RQ-​​5A Hunter UAV. The General Atomics Predator/​Sky Warrior beat out an improved ver­sion of the Hunter for Army service.

At the brigade level the RQ-​​7A Shadow UAV will also be pro­vided, later to be sup­ple­mented by an improved RQ-​​8A Fire Scout. The Fire Scout UAV is a rotary-​​wing air­craft devel­oped by the Navy for ship­board use. It was orig­i­nally rejected by the Navy because of short­com­ings, but is now in pro­duc­tion for the Navy. The Fire Scout, devel­oped by Northrop Grumman/​Teledyne Ryan Aeronautical, weighs some 2,600-pounds with an array of inter­nal sen­sors. While it has the advan­tage of VSTOL oper­a­tions, its weapons pay­load will be limited.

Next on the Army’s UAV list is the small, four-​​plus pound RQ-​​11A Raven. This micro-​​UAV is being pro­vided at the bat­tal­ion, com­pany, and pla­toon level to pro­vide a pic­ture of “what’s on the other side of the hill.” The Army’s Raven require­ment is in excess of 3,000 vehi­cles, with about half that num­ber now in the inventory.

The Air Force has lit­tle inter­est in the short-​​range, low-​​flying UAVs being pro­cured by the Army. Rather, it is the Predator/​Sky Warrior and Fire scout pro­grams that divide the ser­vices. They have agreed to coop­er­ate on sup­port­ing Predator and Sky Warrior UAVs, which will save money for both ser­vices. But beyond that agree­ment their respec­tive UAV pro­grams have cre­ated con­tention over the future pro­cure­ment and oper­a­tional con­trol of unmanned sys­tems between the Army and Air Force

In dis­cussing the Army’s ambi­tious UAV pro­gram, the Association of the U.S. Army in its January 2008 report “U.S. Army Aviation: Balancing Current and Future Demands,” explains that UAVs “com­bine the capa­bil­i­ties of per­sis­tent view of an area, pre­cise tar­get des­ig­na­tion, instant assess­ment of attack results, and rapid destruc­tion of fleet­ing tar­gets.… [UAVs] have now become an inte­gral part of the land com­po­nent commander’s abil­ity to con­duct recon­nais­sance, attack and many other crit­i­cal missions.”

The report might have added that those were mis­sions pre­vi­ously car­ried out pri­mar­ily by the Air Force.

– Norman Polmar

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March 19th, 2008 | Polmar's Perspective | 390623 Comments »http://defensetech.org/2008/03/19/army-embarks-on-ambitious-uav-plan/Army+Embarks+on+Ambitious+UAV+Plan2008-03-19+10%3A10%3A00Ward You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

« « New Engines for the V-​​22? | Army Also Wants Bat Recce Capability » »

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  1. Dennis says:
    March 19, 2008 at 10:50 am

    I had a con­ver­sa­tion with a friend, who is an Army offi­cer who has done one tour in Iraq, and he says that the Air Force is a bit “unre­spon­sive” to the needs of the guys on the ground.
    Specificly the UAV’s and the C-130’s with the guns stick­ing out the side.….
    I am sure there are two sides to this argu­ment though.
    Mainly some Air Force Nerd offi­cer who is afraid to devi­ate from the script even though the sit­u­a­tion has changed on the ground…
    Or am I being to cynical?

    Reply
  2. James says:
    March 19, 2008 at 1:06 pm

    i think a big prob­lem of the air­force is it doesnt YET have the abil­ity to truly do pin­point attacks in a city there ter­ri­fied of col­lat­eral dammage like every­ones said many a times we need coin air­craft the drones can do that job ok
    the specters the c130 vari­ant with the guns stick­ing out the side are sup­posed to get a big upgrade

    Reply
  3. Vercingetorix says:
    March 19, 2008 at 1:29 pm

    Good, keep the deci­sions on the low­est pos­si­ble level. 500 Predators, though? Good God, hosanah and the high­est! Now that’s a pro­gram that I think all DT read­ers can get behind and push.

    Reply
  4. tipover says:
    March 19, 2008 at 3:18 pm

    The Air Force likes to think on the “strate­gic” level where the Army is think­ing “tac­ti­cal”. It’s hard for some Air Force offi­cer based on CONUS to get excited about 3 bad guys sneak­ing around a house half a world away. It’s a dif­fer­ence in imme­di­acy.
    While work­ing as a main­tainer on RF-4C’s I saw that most wished they had shoot­ers (As a for­mer Army Fire Direction Control troop I had a much dif­fer­ent per­spec­tive on the impor­tance of timely recon). Hanging recce pods on fight­ers has prob­a­bly not helped much in chang­ing the AF attitude.

    Reply
  5. Charles Spiegelman says:
    March 19, 2008 at 11:09 pm

    What is needed is not AF or Army UAV but Defense Force UAV, i’m one of those guys who believes there should be no AF, Army or Navy but Instead United States Defense Force, Air, Land and Sea, and the DOD should be abol­ish in favore of a more robuse orga­ni­za­tion, with one four star Chief of Staff, three Three Star Chief of Services etc. Streamline, less waste and more bang for the buck. But i’m dream­ing it will never hap­pen because no one wants to rock the boat even if it is sink­ing. Too many heads and not enought lead­ers we need peo­ple who know the job and get it done. Where is a Patton when you need him.

    Reply
  6. Douglas Henry says:
    May 15, 2008 at 6:13 pm

    Does any­one know if the RQ-​​11b Raven SUAS has been included into the 35K (UAV Operator) MOS for the Army? Please email me if any­one knows.

    Reply
  7. Oyun says:
    April 7, 2009 at 3:52 pm

    Good, keep the deci­sions on the low­est pos­si­ble level. 500 Predators, though? Good God, hosanah and the high­est! Now that’s a pro­gram that I think all DT read­ers can get behind and push.

    Reply

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