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Predator Combat Air
Patrols Double
May 8, 2008 A
significant unmanned aerial vehicle warfighting milestone was reached
more than two years ahead of schedule May 1, with the beginning of the
24th MQ-1 Predator combat air patrol in the global war on terror, Air
Force officials said.
An
MQ-1 Predator unmanned aerial vehicle, like the one shown here, support
coalition ground forces with firepower, overwatch and reconnaissance.
This CAP doubles the around-the-clock
Predator capability of last year, two years ahead of the Defense
Department’s goal of 2010 for 21 Predator CAPs, officials said.
Predators now supply more than 13,400 hours of full-motion video to
ground forces every month while conducting armed overwatch, force
protection and precision air-to-surface engagements with the AGM-114
Hellfire missile.
"The Predator teams have just been doing unbelievable work down there
[in the International Zone], and in Baghdad as well," Army Gen. David H.
Petraeus, commander of Multinational Force Iraq, said recently. "And I
think there's some path-breaking work on going here."
Sustaining one CAP 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a year
typically calls for four aircraft, but for surge operations, the Air
Force now maintains 24 continuous CAPs with the total fleet of 76 combat
aircraft.
Predator missions are launched by crews at sites in U.S. Central
Command's area of responsibility while flown by crews at various
locations in the United States. This concept of operations, called
remote split operations, allows greater effectiveness in supplying more
full-motion video directly to warfighters engaged in combat, officials
said. This model of operations nearly triples sustainable combat
capability by maximizing the number of available crews and aircraft
engaged in combat operations in the global war on terror, Air Force
officials said.
Prior to the innovation of remote split operations in Operation Iraqi
Freedom, the Air Force used a traditional unit-deployment model
developed in the 1990s. The traditional model of rotating units through
the theater limited the Air Force to committing only about 30 percent of
its Predator forces to combat. Under this remote model, the Air Force
commits 85 percent of its aircraft to combat operations.
And just as split operations allow more aircraft in combat, flying the
missions from the continental United States reduces the number of
Americans deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan to conduct these missions,
officials said, noting
that the smaller forward presence reduces American exposure to enemy
actions and allows the Air Force to project power without projecting
vulnerability.
The Air Force acceleration of Predator capability to combat was made
possible by increased production and delivery of Predator aircraft and
several personnel actions, including freezing Predator assignments and
reassigning pilots from other aircraft and duties to meet the growing
demand for full-motion video, officials said. The Air National Guard
also has accelerated its Predator commitment in five states, operating
six CAPs.
The Air Force plans to expand Predator training by standing up a second
Predator training squadron and establish a Predator weapons instructor
course in early 2009. This action is necessary to lay the foundation to
further increase and enhance joint warfighting capability, officials
said. |