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Industry: Email Alert RSS FeedKilkenny: Information is Key To Time-Critical Strike Capability
Sea Power, Jul 2004 by Burgess, Richard R
As the director of aviation plans and requirements for the director of air warfare in the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations (CNO), Rear Adm. (select) Joseph F. Kilkenny oversees aircraft carrier and tactical carrier aviation requirements. Kilkenny also assists Rear Adm. Mark P. Fitzgerald, director of air warfare in the Office of the CNO, in formulating requirements in strike warfare, particularly in support of the Sea Strike leg of CNO Adm. Vern Clark's Sea Power 21 strategy.
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A naval flight officer, Kilkenny served as an A-6 bombardier/navigator in three attack squadrons, commanding the third, Attack Squadron 196. As a carrier air wing operations officer, he flew in the first air strikes of the 1991 Gulf War. He later served as air operations officer of Carrier Group Two and as director of the strike warfare directorate of the Tactical Training Group, U.S. Atlantic Fleet. He served as head of aviation officer distribution at the Bureau of Personnel after commanding Carrier Air Wing Three during the maiden deployment of the USS Harry S. Truman. Kilkenny spoke recently with Sea Power Managing Editor Richard R. Burgess about the Navy's plans for precision strike.
What are the trends in the Navy's requirements for precision strike?
Kilkenny: We do a really superb job of hitting fixed targets. We need some work in countering moving or mobile targets and that's where we are going with the next generation of weapons. When I first came in the Navy, we had general-purpose bombs, then laser-guided bombs and then we have the [Joint] J-family of precision weapons. The measuring units in the airplanes are getting better, the weaponry is getting better and we are narrowing down our circular error-of-probability miss distance.
'Time critical' seems to be the metric for hitting mobile targets. How can that be improved?
Kilkenny: What applies to time-critical strike is persistence in ISR [intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance]. We can hit a lot of targets, but if we don't know where they are or if they move to an unknown location, the greatest arsenal known to mankind won't be employed against them. There's a difference between knowing where a target is in general terms and positively identifying it and going after it. The Chief of Naval Operations' Task Force ISR is conducting a study right now to determine our requirements. The investments in ISR are costly so we need to review where we are going in order to get the best warfare capabilities for our money.
The Navy seems to have reached its goal of enabling a single strike fighter to attack multiple targets with precision. What's the next step?
Kilkenny: The next way to get even better at that is the network area, which will expand our capability to reach out. The weapons and platforms are really getting better, and it's going to come down to persistent ISR so we can truly see the shape of the battle space, how it's changing and what's evolving. The most important piece will be getting that information in a time-sensitive manner to the platforms that are capable of taking out those targets.
This concept of ForceNet will enable us to make a time-critical strike. In any battle space now it is extremely hard for Navy, Air Force and even Marine Corps assets to share information. So if in ForceNet we can share this information on a timely basis with other services and coalition forces, we can exponentially reduce the kill chain. I don't think we have even begun to tap the capability to network with each other. We used to do it in hours and now it's down to 30 minutes, and we're shooting for less than that.
How can the time from target detection to weapon on target be shortened?
Kilkenny: We need a decision-making aid. I think it's truly important. Right now there's an awful lot of folks that we have to go through to be able to get the ability to strike a target, so we need some kind of decision-making aid with software where we can tie in ISR and factor in such things as rules of engagement and other sensitivities, blast fragment pattern [to avoid collateral damage], target priority, target location, etc. That would really shorten the time between identifying a target and getting permission to drop. I truly think that we have some smart minds out there in industry that can help solve this problem. I know they use decision-making aids in business; I think we ought to be able to come close to something similar to that in strike warfare.
What new precision weapons are planned or entering service in the near future?
Kilkenny: We have the majority of the target set covered with our current weapons. For finding relocatable targets and moving targets, we are testing the waters on some sort of high-speed standoff weapon, maybe anywhere from the Mach 2 to 3.5 speed range. It'll shorten the kill chain and enable us to hold at-risk, high-value deep interdiction targets with short dwell times.
The classic one is our AARGM [Advanced Anti-Radiation Guided Missile]. That weapon has a tremendous capability in [suppression of enemy air defenses]. In fact, it is more properly characterized as a [destruction of enemy air defenses] weapon. It will really change the way we attack well-defended targets. We will either suppress or cause an alteration in the enemy's integrated air-defense system. With AARGM, we're going to be able to destroy the target whether it's blinking [radiating] its radar or not.
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