On December 18, 1972, more than one hundred U.S. B-52 bombers flew
over North Vietnam to initiate Operation Linebacker II. During the
next eleven days, sixteen of these planes were shot down and another
four suffered heavy damage. These losses soon proved so devastating
that Strategic Air Command was ordered to halt the bombing. The U.S.
Air Force's poor performance in this and other operations during
Vietnam was partly due to the fact that they had trained their pilots
according to methods devised during World War II and the Korean War,
when strategic bombers attacking targets were expected to take heavy
losses. Warfare had changed by the 1960s, but the USAF had not
adapted. Between 1972 and 1991, however, the Air Force dramatically
changed its doctrines and began to overhaul the way it trained pilots
through the introduction of a groundbreaking new training program
called "Red Flag."
In _The Air Force Way of War_, Brian D. Laslie examines the revolution
in pilot instruction that Red Flag brought about after Vietnam. The
program's new instruction methods were dubbed "realistic" because they
prepared pilots for real-life situations better than the simple
cockpit simulations of the past, and students gained proficiency on
primary and secondary missions instead of superficially training for
numerous possible scenarios. In addition to discussing the program's
methods, Laslie analyzes the way its graduates actually functioned in
combat during the 1980s and '90s in places such as Grenada, Panama,
Libya, and Iraq. Military historians have traditionally emphasized the
primacy of technological developments during this period and have
overlooked the vital importance of advances in training, but Laslie's
unprecedented study of Red Flag addresses this oversight through its
examination of the seminal program.
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U.S. Tactics and Training after Vietnam
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780813160863
Publisert
2015
Utgiver
University Press of Kentucky
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter