Vice chief tells Air Force staff to 'fix the weather'.Although the Air Force has some of the most sophisticated precision-guided weaponry ever made it has yet to solve a key piece of the high-tech warfare puzzle: the weather forecast. Current weather data-processing systems employed in air operations centers See: tactical air control center. are antiquated and, most regrettably, are not interoperable with the rest of the Air Force war planning tools, said Brig. Gem Thomas Stickford, director of weather programs. "The weather cell is a stumbling block stumĀ·bling block n. An obstacle or impediment. stumbling block Noun any obstacle that prevents something from taking place or progressing Noun 1. " that slows down strike missions, he told a conference of the Institute for Defense and Government Advancement. It can take up to two hours to merge weather satellite data with imagery of the target area and other information used in planning aerial bombings, he said. "The better the data, the better the predictions." Some of the most reliable weather data comes from special operations Operations conducted in hostile, denied, or politically sensitive environments to achieve military, diplomatic, informational, and/or economic objectives employing military capabilities for which there is no broad conventional force requirement. teams on the ground. Situations can get especially dicey when the weather conditions change rapidly, because the updates are relayed manually. If a mission happens to be based on outdated weather information, the consequences could be deadly, Stickford explained. The good news for the weather people is that the problem got the attention of Gen. T. Michael Moseley Teed Michael Moseley, KBE[1], is the current Chief of Staff of the United States Air Force. He assumed the position during a ceremony at Andrews Air Force Base on September 2, 2005. , the Air Force top commander during the preparations and early phase of the Iraq war Iraq War: see under Persian Gulf Wars. Iraq War or Second Persian Gulf War Brief conflict in 2003 between Iraq and a combined force of troops largely from the U.S. and Great Britain; and a subsequent U.S. , who is now vice chief of staff. When Moseley returned from Iraq, his marching orders were, "we need to fix this business," Stickford recalled. "All of a sudden, doors opened up. We were helped with money, expertise, all sorts of things." The improvements will come in the form of automated data-sharing systems, known in Air Force parlance Parlance - A concurrent language. ["Parallel Processing Structures: Languages, Schedules, and Performance Results", P.F. Reynolds, PhD Thesis, UT Austin 1979]. as "machine-to-machine weather." The idea is to get weather information instantly fed into command-and-control systems so planners can make decisions based on accurate up-to-date weather data. The Air Force tested a machine-to-machine weather software tool during the recent Joint Expeditionary Force An armed force organized to accomplish a specific objective in a foreign country. expeditionary force n → cuerpo expedicionario expeditionary force n → corps m Experiment, at Nellis Air Force Base Nellis Air Force Base (IATA: LSV, ICAO: KLSV) is a United States Air Force base, in Clark County, Nevada, on the northeast side of Las Vegas. It is also treated as a census-designated place by the United States Census for statistical purposes, and so specific , Nev. Moseley also directed that simulations used in Air Force training exercises get realistic weather models, which often has not been the case in the past, Stickford said. Exercise planners tend to dismiss the weather as an annoyance that "screws things up," he said. "One of the lessons from Iraq is that weather needs to be in models and simulations." The Air Force, additionally, is revising its definition of "all-weather" weapons. There is no such thing, Stickford acknowledged. Even the most sophisticated weapons don't work in dust storms, for example. A more accurate description is "adverse-weather" weapons, he said. "On any document that comes across my desk and says 'all weather,' we scratch that out, and we put 'adverse weather.'" |
|
||||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion