Falcon 4.0: MANPADS In Modern Warfare: David and Goliath - Page 1/1
Created on 2005-02-09
Title: Falcon 4.0: MANPADS In Modern Warfare: David and Goliath By: David Pascoe Date: 1999-09-07 1768 Flashback:Orig. Multipage Version Hard Copy:Printer Friendly
One of the often voiced complaints about the Falcon 4 campaign is that
there are too many SAMS, particularly the SA-7 MANPAD. But is this
really true? In order to answer that question, let's consider some
modern developments as well as historical experience.
Lessons from Modern Warfare
Serious students of war are familiar with the fact that modern
warfare tends to be more of a battle between weapons designers than the
men in the field who employ them. The Cold War was an astounding
example of how warfare has been reduced to an arms race where the
greatest advantages are to be obtained with superior weaponry.
The introduction of the airplane shortly after the turn of
the century was a good example of how the advantages of a new invention
are often slow to be realized. But once the that advantage is realized,
it's not long before all the major armies of the world end up with
large arsenals of the same weapon. Once this happens, advancements and
improvements to the weapon proceed rapidly to the point where the
original advantages become more or less neutralized, if not lost
altogether.
In the last 30 years, new weapons development has proceeded
at an incredible rate. While this would seem to give the more advanced
militaries of the world a great advantage over their lesser
counterparts, the US experience in Vietnam has, or at least should
have, become a real bell-ringer. The Vietnam experience teaches that
for every new weapon developed there soon follows a counter development
(which may or may not be based upon new technology.) In Vietnam, the
offensive counter was as old as Sun-Tzu himself.
Technology and Hi-Tech Weapons
While few would argue that US weapons development in the last
decade or so has been nothing short of incredible, critics of extreme
high tech weaponry argue two important points. One of these is that the
technological advances (such as the enormously costly stealth
technology) are usually susceptible to low cost, old technology counter
weapons and the method of their employment. The pendulum is constantly
swinging back and forth between weapon/counter-weapon, and the rate of
swing is ever increasing.
Perhaps the greatest and most important neutralizer of high
tech weapons of war, however, and one that has received little notice
outside of military planning circles, is the MANPAD. MANPAD simply
represents the man-portable anti-aircraft missile as represented by the
Russian SA-7 family and the US Stinger family.
These, in fact, are not new weapons, but have been around for nearly a
quarter century. While much has been written about how the CIA
supplying Stingers to the Afghan rebels was credited with the Russian
pullout of Afghanistan, the impact of this development on the overall
face of warfare has largely been under appreciated.
The SA-7 GRAIL
Summary: Range (KM): 0.8-4.2
Altitude (FT): 150-7K
Speed (Mach): 1.4-1.8
Guidance: Passive IR Warhead
(LBS): 3 Missiles/launcher: 1
Reload Time: 10 seconds
"The venerable Russian SA-7 Grail (1966) is comparable to the US Redeye
and is only effective when fired at a target aircraft's rear aspect.
Since the missile must over-take the target, aircraft moving at
extremely high speeds are generally able to outrun it. It does not
incorporate solar filtering which prevents pointing the launcher within
20 degrees of sun and 5 degrees of the horizon.
"The SA-7 is easily defeated by IR countermeasures (flares). In 1971, a
new, higher-performance model of the SA-7 entered service. This
improved system, the SA-7b, includes a more sophisticated seeker with a
filter to reduce its susceptibility to infrared countermeasures;
however, it is still only effective against rear-aspect targets. It
first saw combat during the Egyptian-Israeli Wars (1968-70) with no
verified kills.
"The system was used extensively by North Vietnamese during Vietnam War
against US and RVN aircraft. Over 4000 missiles were shot by Syria and
Egypt at Israeli aircraft during the 19 days of the Yom Kippur War
(1973) with just 7 kills, 30 damaged aircraft. It was used in Falklands
(1982) by Argentinian occupation forces with no kills. It was used by
Iraq during the Gulf War (1991) with no kills. The Chinese HN-5 is a
reversed engineered version of the Russian SA-7.
"The current production model, the HN-5A, is a copy of the improved
SA-7b. Iran, North Korea, Thailand, and Pakistan possess the HN-5A.
Like China, Egypt and Pakistan produce SA-7 derivatives called the SAKR
EYE and ANZA, respectively. The SA-7 SAM, including its variants and
domestically produced copies, is one of the most proliferated SAM
systems in the world.
"It is used in the following countries: Afghanistan Algeria Angola
Argentina Benin Botswana Bulgaria Burkina Faso Cambodia Cape Verde
Islands Chad Cuba Cyprus Egypt Ethiopia Ghana Guinea Guinea-Bissau
Guyana India Iran Iraq Jordan North Korea Kuwait Laos Libya Mali
Mauritania Mauritius Mongolia Morocco Mozambique Nicaragua Nigeria Peru
Seychelles Sierra Leone South Africa Somalia Sudan Syria Tanzania
Thailand Uganda Yemen Zambia Zimbabwe."
This becomes apparent when visiting the air combat forums and
discussion groups where the complaints about the number of SAMs in
Falcon 4 are seemingly endless. Most blame the sim for a lack of
realism by having too many SAMs, particularly the SA-7 MANPAD. Falcon 4
campaign battlefields are swarming with SA-7s that are very difficult,
if not impossible, to completely eliminate.
The fact of the matter is that Falcon 4 very faithfully
represents the huge numbers of MANPADs that have found their way into
the hands of even some of the world's poorest nations. That's why they
can rightfully be called, "The Great Equalizer." Even the world's most
advanced, 100 million dollar stealth fighter or bomber is still
vulnerable to low tech, old technology and relatively cheap weaponry.
Lessons in Counter Tactics
It is the ultimate reality of the arms race that for every new
weapon developed, there will soon follow a counter weapon or counter
strategy. This is how the NVA developed effective anti-helicopter
tactics within about six months after the introduction of the chopper
in the Vietnam war, resulting in 4600 official chopper losses (and
probably many more "off the books".) Think, for a moment, of what the
loss of four-thousand, six-hundred helicopters really means. Yet our
military claimed the introduction of air mobile tactics was a complete
success.
This is a point yet to be driven home in recent wars for a
variety of reasons. In Desert Storm, Iraq failed to make effective use
of MANPADs, instead opting for the more impressive-looking but far more
vulnerable large missile systems. Serbia made a similar mistake, opting
for a more vulnerable integrated air defense system. Yet the small
number of MANPADS present in Kovoso were enough to hold even the A-10s
at bay most of the time.
While the Afghan war was a dramatic demonstration on the
portent of portable SAMs for the future of high tech fighters and
bombers, this war was not followed closely by the media or the general
public. As a result, its message was largely lost to the public, but
certainly not to the Pentagon or Kremlin planners. The bad news for
them was that this piddling little shoulder fired missile had forever
changed the face of high tech warfare. It threatened to make the 30
million dollar aircraft, in which they had so heavily invested, nearly
useless.
A Hope for Stealth?
While it might seem reasonable that the MANPAD was responsible
for the huge sums of money poured into stealth development, actually it
wasn't. Stealth is primarily an anti-radar technology with a bit of
anti-infrared tacked on.
Unfortunately for high tech nations and their militaries, infrared
targeting systems have more than kept pace with stealth development,
whereas radar has made only modest gains. The jet aircraft is never
going to be able to completely eliminate its heat signature, and that's
why the Russian Archer is so deadly with its dual tracking systems.
Falcon 4 drivers should take note that there is not a single
weapon system advancement in the world that has not been quickly
countered or neutralized, either by the opposition gaining the same
weapon in equal numbers, or through a superior counter weapon, or via
counter strategy. Within five years of the development of the A-bomb,
the Russians had their own. The Germans invented the jet; within 5
years we had them too. And on and on it goes.
The SA-18 GROUSE
Summary: Range (KM): 0.6-5.0
Altitude (FT): 30-20K
Speed (Mach): 2.5
Guidance: Passive IR Warhead
(LBS): 4 Missiles/launcher: 1
Reload Time: 10 sec
The SA-18 GROUSE (Igla 9K38) is a further development from the SA-7
& SA-14 series of manportable SAMs. It is an entirely new design
missile with substantially improved range and speed. Its higher speed
enables it to be used against faster targets.
The 9M39 missile of the SA-18 employs an IR guidance system using
proportional convergence logic. The new seeker offers better protection
against electro-optical jammers; the probability of kill against an
unprotected fighter is estimated at 30-48%, and the use of IRCM jammers
only degrades this to 24-30%. The 2 kg warhead is fitted with a contact
and grazing fuse. The SA-14 is used by the following countries: Angola
Cuba India Iraq Syria
How the War Was Won
Most Americans today believe that the US won WWII with superior
weapons. This is not true. At the outset of WWII, the US military was
ranked 19th in the world, a third-rate power. Japanese naval vessels
were not only superior to ours, they outnumbered our fleet by 3:1 in
warships.
Up to the mid point of the war, their aircraft were also
better than ours. That did not prevent us from defeating them in their
own backyard. The same applies to the Germans. Virtually everything
about their war machine was superior to ours. That did not stop Patton
from taking Europe with the grossly inferior Sherman tank. The truth is
that Hitler defeated himself by attacking Russia and spreading himself
too thin. Had that not been the case, we might never have entered the
European war.
The Changing Face of War
The face of warfare has been changing rapidly ever since the
American colonists decided to hide behind trees and shoot down the
British rank and file like so many ducks in a row. We look at that
example and wonder how the British could be so stupid as to
conveniently line themselves up to be shot.
But where retrospective vision is always 20-20, it's a lot more
difficult to accept the truth that we, today, are just as bound in our
traditionalist thinking as the British were over two hundred years ago.
This is the history of warfarel the side that innovates usually wins.
It is said that most commanders are still fighting the last
war. It is not easy to break out of conventional thinking. All you have
to do is to look at the commanders of the Vietnam war to see how easy
it is to fall victim to conventional thinking.
Traditional thinking eventually made utter fools out of some highly
decorated men, some of the very same men who won WWII. The few that
break out of conventional thinking are called geniuses, when all they
really did was to see beyond the range of common ideas, beyond the
doctrine taught in war colleges.
The innovative military minds who left behind traditional
ways were not more intelligent, better, more educated or smarter men.
In fact, the most innovative thinkers are often those without formal
education. Odd, isn't it.
Yet it's understandable, because they were not trained by some school
as to how and what they should think. Instead, they were forced to
think on the fly, they were forced to take the time and effort to find
alternative means to an end. Observe the performance of the likes of
Mao, Patton, Giap, Halsey, Rommel, Napoleon, Sherman, Grant, etcetera.
These men were mostly educated, but not in schools that slaved them to
standard doctrine.
The Lesson for Us
In this is a good lesson for all war strategy gamers, including
Falcon 4 campaigners. This campaign presents us with a reasonable
representation of what a conventional war with North Korea might be
like.
Bearing in mind that we did not win the 1950 war with them
(despite the fact that many people believe that we did), there is no
reason not to believe that the outcome of future war would be any
different if we fight it the same way. That is particularly true
considering the political constraints present today that were not
present then. (The use of the A-bomb was so seriously considered that
it had actually been prepared for use. McAruther and Curtis LeMay
almost got their wish to "bomb them back to the stone age.")
For those who may be interested, the History Channel runs a new series, "Korea, the Forgotten War," beginning September 20th.
The Falcon 4 Challenge
The challenge presented us in the Falcon 4 campaign is how to
defeat a numerically superior enemy on his home turf, and to do it with
the tools given us. It is not an easy challenge, nor should it be. It
is a strategic as well as a tactical challenge for war gamers to break
out of modes of conventional thinking in order to win. We should take
our cue from Vietnam where, to fall victim to conventional thinking,
and to play by self-imposed "rules", is to lose.
Falcon 4 is not just an air combat simulation. It merges war
gaming with air combat, and to win you have to think as much like a
battlefield commander as a fighter pilot. The name of the game here is
not numbers (the Vietnam doctrine of attrition), but strategy. That's
why Microprose starts you out at a disadvantage in the first place. The
theater is teeming with SAMs, and you may have noticed that the enemy
has four times as many air defenses as our side does (at default
settings that can be changed).
No matter how bad the odds, there is always a way to win. Our job as campaign strategists is to find it.