By Air Force Tech. Sgt. Jonathan Hehnly 386th Air Expeditionary
Wing
SOUTHWEST ASIA, Aug. 31, 2017 — Often when people think
about how air power is employed in the fight against the Islamic State of Iraq
and Syria, thoughts may turn to cargo aircraft delivering critical supplies and
personnel to the front lines or bombs being dropped on targets.
Yet, the Air Force has the non-kinetic ability to disrupt
enemy communications on the ground and therefore turn the tables on the
battlefield.
The 386th Air Expeditionary Wing has the capability to
deliver decisive airpower not only through its C-130 airlift mission, but
through the highly sought after non-kinetic ability of the EC-130H Compass Call
aircraft operated by the 43rd Expeditionary Electronic Combat Squadron. These
heavily modified airframes are responsible for a highly specialized, unique
mission: electronic warfare.
Precision Electronic Warfare Capability
“The mission of the 43rd EECS is to deliver precision
electronic attack effects to deny or degrade enemy command and control, protect
friendly forces and to achieve the combatant commander’s objectives to defeat
our adversaries anytime, anywhere in the joint operations area,” said Air Force
Capt. Joshua, a 43rd EECS electronic warfare officer.
The Compass Call aircraft is an airborne tactical weapon
system that uses noise jamming to disrupt enemy command-and-control
communications and deny time-critical coordination essential for enemy force
management.
“The 43rd EECS provides the Combined Forces Air Component
commander, or CFACC, with a critical non-kinetic option,” said Air Force Lt.
Col. Matthew Cunningham, an EC-130H aircraft commander. “EC-130H employment of
airborne electronic attacks functions as a force multiplier by degrading ISIS
command and control. All military operations, to include those of our
adversaries, require clear lines of communication between commanders and their
forces. When we deny, disrupt or degrade these lines of communications, we
reduce the adversary's battlefield effectiveness and give friendly forces a
decisive advantage in individual engagements.”
EC-130H crews are currently performing tactical command,
control and communications countermeasures in support of U.S. and coalition
forces throughout the U.S. Air Forces Central Command area of responsibility
from the massive retaking of Mosul, Iraq to smaller, single-event missions,
Joshua said.
The desired effects provided by the EC-130H’s unique
communications jamming capability make the aircraft and its crew a low-density,
high-demand asset in the Operation Inherent Resolve battlespace. The autonomous
electronic attack capability is unique to Compass Call aircraft and cannot be
duplicated by any other airborne communications jamming assets.
“Compass Call is the Air Force's premier electronic attack
platform,” Cunningham said. “It is the CFACC's only autonomous communications
jamming, electronic attack asset. This unique autonomy is attributed to a crew
of about a dozen highly-specialized, competent airmen.”
Team Effort
The EC-130H’s flight deck personnel responsible for the
aircraft’s flight and navigation are the same as found in most C-130 variants.
In the back of the aircraft, however, are a number of linguists actively
monitoring ISIS communications, while electronic warfare officers, or EWO,
simultaneously employ the Compass Call’s electronic attack weapons system. The
EWO, serving as the mission crew commander, acts as the conduit between the
partner forces on the ground and the mission crew to ensure the right effects
are being placed on the right targets at the right time.
Because the EC-130H aircraft requires unique and specialized
maintenance support to keep the aircraft and weapon systems mission ready,
maintenance airmen from Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, Arizona, deploy with the
Compass Call aircraft and aircrews.
“Operations and maintenance work together at home station
and we fight together in support of Combined Joint Task Force Operation
Inherent Resolve,” Cunningham said. “They are a valued and integral part of our
43rd EECS team. We do not fly our mission without our maintainers’ dedication
and effort.”
This non-kinetic capability allows the Air Force to reshape
the combat environment by injecting unforeseeable command-and-control
challenges on adversaries and dominating the electromagnetic spectrum, which in
turn, enables joint and coalition military forces to seize initiative and
dominate the battlefield.
“Non-kinetic warfare is, as the name implies, warfare
without the utilization of kinetic resources such as missiles or bombs,” Joshua
said. “The spectrum of non-kinetic warfare can include, but is not limited to,
electronic attack, cyber operations and information operations. Non-kinetic
warfare will continue to grow as we proceed into the future and face evolving
and dynamic threats.”
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