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Demand for special ops forces outpaces supply: commanders worry back-to-back wars in Afghanistan and Iraq are stretching the force.


Senior officials at the U.S. Special Operations Command A subordinate unified or other joint command established by a joint force commander to plan, coordinate, conduct, and support joint special operations within the joint force commander's assigned operational area. Also called SOC. See also special operations.  are grappling with a looming force structure crisis. At their current level, special operations forces Those Active and Reserve Component forces of the Military Services designated by the Secretary of Defense and specifically organized, trained, and equipped to conduct and support special operations. Also called SOF.  can meet today's demands, but it will be difficult for SOCOM SOCOM Special Operations Command (US DoD)  to sustain the pace, given the rapid growth in their worldwide commitments.

Nearly 20,000 special operators are involved in ongoing conflicts in Iraq (more than 12,000) and Afghanistan (about 8,000). That is nearly half the entire special operations force of 47,000.

Special operations forces can't be mass-produced on short notice, said Army Lt. Gen. Bryan Brown, SOCOM's deputy commander. "The worst thing we can do tight now is to try to add a bunch of people. We have a thoughtful system that has proven itself. We need to increase our recruiting and the troops."

People cannot simply be assigned as special operators and be rushed through the training process, he emphasized. It rakes at least two years to train a member of the Army's Special Forces, for example. According to a SOCOM spokesperson, the Army is continuing to recruit and train Green Berets even during the escalating operation tempo.

SOCOM is not structured to meet the growing demands of the war on terrorism Terrorist acts and the threat of Terrorism have occupied the various law enforcement agencies in the U.S. government for many years. The Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996, as amended by the usa patriot act , said Marshall Billingslea, principal deputy assistant secretary of defense for special operations and low-intensity conflict.

Despite funding increases, "we are going to fight the war on terrorism with the resources that we have today for the next year," he said. In fiscal year 2004, SOCOM received a $1.5 billion budget boost, which brings the command's annual budget to $6.7 billion.

Regional Commanders

"There is a level of activity going on a daily basis, which only gets noticed in a crisis," said retired Army Lt. Gen. William Tangney, former deputy commander of SOCOM. A large portion of SOF SOF
abbr.
sound on film
 troops generally are committed on a daily basis in support of the regional commanders.

In the case of the Army's Green Berets, for example, before the conflict in Afghanistan starred, a couple of hundred operators were deployed to South America to fight the war on drugs. The Seventh Special Forces Group deals with South America. The First Special Forces Group was deployed to countries in East Asia, while the 10th Group was assigned to support U.S. European Command, with operators working in places like Bosnia and Kosovo. The Fifth Group focused on the Middle East, while the Third Group has responsibilities in Africa.

Special operations units are heavily involved in both Afghanistan and Iraq on a larger scale, "but they are still to be able to deal with their contingencies" in other parts of the world as well, said a SOCOM spokesperson.

"Afghanistan spiced-up the op tempo, and now with Iraq is a lot higher, plus, at the same time, you have the commitments around the world, even though they have been reduced," Tangney said. The operational tempo fur special operations started to grow after the Gulf War in 1991, he said.

"Ever since 1991, the op tempo has been fairly high, but manageable," he said. It increased even more a few years later with the conflicts in Bosnia and Kosovo, he said. However, he said, that was still manageable.

In the Afghani af·ghan·i  
n. pl. af·ghan·is
See Table at currency.



[Pashto afghn
 war, "we were able to execute those months of conflict without overly stretching the force," he added. But with the fighting in Iraq, coming so shortly after Afghanistan, "they stretched our," he said.

"With the size of the force that you have today, especially in the Army, you are nor going to be able to create another Special Forces group," Tangney said. But he noted that SOCOM has a larger force today than it had in 1991, even though the conventional services downsized dramatically.

When the Air Force went from 22 fighter wing equivalents to 13 fighter wing equivalents, the size of the Air Force special ops Air Force Special Ops are special operations personnel of the United States Air Force under the Air Force Special Operations Command or AFSOC, a branch of the United States Special Operations Command (USSOCOM).  increased, with the addition of the MC-130H Combat Talon aircraft and the AC-130U gunships, said Tangney.

"There was a fur amount of growth when everybody was decreasing," he said.

Currently, the Navy Special Warfare Center is planning to increase the SEAL reams from eight to 10. "We want to grow more SEAL teams into a crisis response force, which will increase our ability to react," said Capt. Randy Goodman, from the Naval Special Warfare Noun 1. Naval Special Warfare - the agency that provides units to conduct unconventional and counter-guerilla warfare
NSW

United States Navy, US Navy, USN, Navy - the navy of the United States of America; the agency that maintains and trains and equips
 Command.

It takes about three years from the time a SEAL is selected into the program until he is combat ready, said Cmdr. Ryan Zinke.

Ideally, the Navy would like to recruit about 250 SEAL a year, but right now the service is failing short, with only 200 a year. The Navy selects operators from a pool of 900 applicants our of which roughly 150 do nor make it through the first day of training, said Zinke. It costs about $800,000 to train one SEAL in his first year.

He said that the Navy is competing with corporate America for the same people. "Even though our retention is great among the special operations level, it is still nor at the level where we could sustain it," Zinke said.

According to Zinke, the SEAL force structure is so small that NSW NSW New South Wales

Noun 1. NSW - the agency that provides units to conduct unconventional and counter-guerilla warfare
Naval Special Warfare
 cannot find enough SEAL to train the incoming freshmen and the rest of the SEAL. NSW is looking at participating in the Army's airborne trooper program and plans to contract out some of the communications courses, as well as some of the shooting courses.

One area of special operations that is hurting fur both people and better technology is the psychological operations, or PSYOPS PSYOPS Psychological Operations (plural, PSYOP is preferred)  units.

"The world has evolved greatly since the creation of PSYOPS," Billingslea said. "We are going to capitalize on the revolution in communications technology that has happened and yet in some way passed us [PSYOPS] by today We are going to focus on things such as bandwidth, satellites, satellite radios, unmanned aircraft, digital media, to upgrade our PSYOPS capability to increase our reach and our ability to message into denied areas."

Brown said that SOCOM intends to grow the psychological operations force and "will increase our planning, our coordination capability and increase command power to our geographic combatant commanders."

Restructuring

SOCOM will be restructured and will rake on a new leadership position, said Billingslea. "We will move from a supporting commander role to one of the supported commander roles for specific missions," said Brown. "Since its inception, SOCOM has always had such authority but was seldom executed. Now it needs to do it more.

Continuous regional presence and sustained operations in various theaters is going to require additional combat and service support to SOP from the conventional services, said Billingslea. "We are going to need conventional forces to step in and [...] pick up certain missions that are nor SOF unique missions necessarily," such as combat search and rescue A specific task performed by rescue forces to effect the recovery of distressed personnel during war or military operations other than war. Also called CSAR. See also search and rescue.  and civilian evacuations. Regional commanders are relying on the SOF troops to do such missions, "because of the competence attached to their abilities."

Regional combat commanders will also no longer be able to own SOF units assigned to their area of operations An operational area defined by the joint force commander for land and naval forces. Areas of operation do not typically encompass the entire operational area of the joint force commander, but should be large enough for component commanders to accomplish their missions and protect their . "Assets needed one day in one country are going to be needed somewhere far the next day," said Billingslea. "We are going to change how SOF organize and execute their missions.

He explained that the conventional services will have to provide more weapons platforms and logistics support. "They have already done so," he acknowledged. "But we are going to be calling on them again."

Brown explained that extended SOF missions mean that a new type of combatant command headquarters will be needed. "The traditional trained organizations and the equipped missions that we have done so well in the past will be joined with a capability to execute the war against terrorism. We have established a 24/7 joint operation center available to the CINGs and special operation centers [of] command," said Brown.

SOF units will be needed for missions such as special reconnaissance, information operations and extended logistics. Improved reconnaissance capacities could come from unmanned aerial vehicles

Main article: Unmanned aerial vehicle
The following is a list of Unmanned aerial vehicles developed and operated by various countries around the world. Listed with primary mission(s) and year of first flight.
, as well as unmanned underwater vehicles, said Biilingslea. More technicians and analysts are also needed to analyze and interpret data, he added.

Extended logistics are under review right now, said Billingslea, because fighting war on terror This article is about U.S. actions, and those of other states, after September 11, 2001. For other conflicts, see Terrorism.

The War on Terror (also known as the War on Terrorism
 is placing an additional burden on the support systems that were designed to react only in episodic deployments, in conjunction with conventional forces. "SOCOM has a modest organic command and control and logistics structure to enable SOF to conduct short duration contingency operations," he said.

Improving airlift capabilities is a top priority. The war in Afghanistan has left the special operators' community with aircraft shortages, particularly MH-47 Chinook Chinook, indigenous people of North America
Chinook (shĭnk`, chĭ–), Native American tribe of the Penutian linguistic stock.
 helicopters.

During the conflict, 11 MH-47s were damaged and two were totally destroyed, said Brown. "Today, we can't meet all the requirements we have with this helicopter." He said the increase in the SOCOM budget is going to help replace those aircraft.

The C-130 fleet is also overtaxed, said Brown. "Resources are being made available to quickly provide Air Force Special Operations Command Air Force Special Operations Command (AFSOC) was established 22 May, 1990,with headquarters at Hurlburt Field, Fla. AFSOC is a United States Air Force (USAF) major command and is the air component to the United States Special Operations Command (USSOCOM), a unified command  with the additional aircraft." Four C-130s are going to be converted into AC-130 gunships, one of the most popular platforms among special operators.

The new ganships will "include enhanced survivability sur·viv·a·ble  
adj.
1. Capable of surviving: survivable organisms in a hostile environment.

2. That can be survived: a survivable, but very serious, illness.
 assets, such as directional infrared countermeasures, decoy DECOY. A pond used for the breeding and maintenance of water-fowl. 11 Mod. 74, 130; S. C. 3 Salk. 9; Holt, 14 11 East, 571.  and jammers," said Brown. "We are also looking at a single barrel 30-mm cannon to replace the 25-mm."

Production for the MC-130 air refueling system has been accelerated to have 24 systems by the end of 2005, Brown noted.

Command and control, intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance may refer to:
  • the US Joint Command see'' Joint Functional Component Command for Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance.
  • the military term, see'' Intelligence, Surveillance, Target Acquisition, and Reconnaissance.
 technologies, meanwhile, need serious improvement, said Brig. Gen. (Select) Bruce Burda, the vice- commander of AFSOC AFSOC Air Force Special Operations Command
AFSOC Air Force special operations component (US DoD) 
.

He said that the Air Force continues to work with stove-piped functions and over-classification. That has resulted in incidents of fratricide frat·ri·cide  
n.
1. The killing of one's brother or sister.

2. One who has killed one's brother or sister.



[Middle English, from Old French, from Latin
 and a "few dose calls."

"Integration/deconfliction needs to be an area we need to improve on," he said. "Part of it is an education and training issue with our personnel, [for] them to understand the conops [concepts of operation] better."

He emphasized that the Air Force operators need to get a continuing flow of information and "share the fratricide incidents with the force to make sure that they know what happened and that it does not happen again."

According to Brown, SOCOM is developing new technology for ground operators to acquire precision locator data for the use and targeting of GPS satellite-guided and laser-guided munitions mu·ni·tion  
n.
War materiel, especially weapons and ammunition. Often used in the plural.

tr.v. mu·ni·tioned, mu·ni·tion·ing, mu·ni·tions
To supply with munitions.
.

"It's got to be small, lightweight," he said. "The PTLD PTLD Post Transplant Lymphoproliferative Disorder
PTLD Physical Teardown Logistics Demonstration
 [Precision Target Locator Designator program] has envisioned such a device, but we are not there yet." The device needs to be able to transfer the information directly to the overhead platforms, "so that we can eliminate the problem of fratricide."

The use of tactical UAVs in conjunction with other systems enhances reconnaissance and helps with the positive identification of targets, said Burda.

UAV UAV Unmanned Aerial Vehicle
UAV Unmanned Air Vehicle
UAV Unmanned Aerospace Vehicle
UAV Unmanned Airborne Vehicle
UAV Uninhabited Air Vehicle
UAV Urban Assault Vehicle
UAV Unpiloted Aerial Vehicle (less common) 
 video feeds were made available to the AC-130 gunship gun·ship  
n.
An armed aircraft, such as a helicopter, that is used to support troops and provide fire cover.
 during the war in Afghanistan. Burda said that AFSOC "acquired the ability to integrate UAVs into terminal attack control operations."

Brown said he would like to be able to transfer UAV data directly into aircraft platforms at all times. Real-time video and the ability to reach back to overhead platforms and UAVs should be available to Special Forces and SEAL at "the farthest end of the earth, without requiring to carry a myriad of computers and radios."

Navy Special Warfare is working to develop UAV programs for situational awareness, as well.

NSW is also working with the surface Navy on futuristic programs, such as the Littoral Combat Ship The Littoral Combat Ship is the first of the U.S. Navy's next-generation surface combatants. Intended as a relatively small surface vessel for operations in the littoral region (close to shore), the LCS is smaller than the Navy's guided missile frigates, and have been compared to  and the DDX DDx

abbreviation for differential diagnosis; used in medical records.
 land-attack destroyer. "They are building these ships with the employment of SEALs and special operations as a big part of the program," he said.

The Advanced Seal Delivery Vehicle The SEAL Delivery Vehicle or (SDV) is a manned submersible and a type of Swimmer Delivery Vehicle used to deliver United States Navy SEALs and their equipment for special operations missions.  (ASDS ASDS Advanced SEAL Delivery System
ASDS American Society of Dermatologic Surgery
ASDS Accunet Spectrum of Digital Services (AT&T)
ASDS Advanced Sensor Distribution System
ASDS Air Situation Display System
ASDS Airborne Serial Data System
) will achieve operational capability this summer, after significant schedule delays and cost overruns, according to Brown. NSW also developed a $5.5 million simulator for the ASDS. The ASDS is a mini-submersible that transports SEAL from submarines to the shore.

Special operators play an important part in evaluating their new equipment and making recommendations for future investments, said SOCOM officials.
COPYRIGHT 2003 National Defense Industrial Association
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Author:Tiron, Raxana
Publication:National Defense
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:May 1, 2003
Words:2004
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