Air Force transformation in Europe aiding terror war

  • Published
  • By Donna Miles
  • American Forces Press Service
The transformation taking place throughout the Defense Department started early for U.S. Air Forces in Europe, which began reshaping and repositioning its assets 15 years ago and is now better prepared to support the war on terrorism, the command's top officer said June 23.

Gen. Robert H. "Doc" Foglesong said USAFE began returning much of its force structure to the United States after the Cold War ended, and it became evident that the United States no longer had to prepare to face off against the Soviet Union at the Fulda Gap, a heavily defended corridor separating former West Germany and East Germany.

The command's leaders recognized that USAFE's long-standing mission was changing, and that "we were going to be in the enabling business as much as we were going to be in the kinetic warfighting business," General Foglesong said.

In response, the command's leaders began a series of sweeping changes. USAFE cut its fighter aircraft fleet from more than 700 in the 1990s to fewer than 200 today, converting some wings to suit the support missions they were being tasked to carry out. USAFE also introduced refueling and airlift wings.

"We converted some of our 'iron' from kinetic kinds of things we were going to use in the Cold War to support mechanisms," General Foglesong said.

At the same time, USAFE began changing the way it positioned its forces. In the 1990s, the command had 25 main bases. Today, it has just five, and is putting more emphasis on smaller, forward-operating sites and cooperative support locations.

"Our footprint started changing about a decade and a half ago, and we actually have just continued to refine it over the last three or four years," General Foglesong said.

These changes helped pave the way for USAFE's transformation into a rapidly deployable expeditionary force that is playing a major role in the war on terrorism, he said.

The terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, and the launch of the war on terrorism helped speed up changes already taking place throughout the command.

"It caused us all to recognize that we had to change even faster than we thought we were doing," General Foglesong said.

Command officials beefed up intelligence and long-haul communications capabilities, and new emphasis went into supporting the movement of troops and supplies to or through Europe, he said.

"What we have to be able to do is help open up the logistics supply line (by) mechanizing our bases to accept more long-haul strategic lift that comes into the continent," General Foglesong said. "Our ability to help with the logistics flow is enhanced by the ... fact that we've been able to mechanize our bases to accept, do maintenance on, refuel and then posture these aircraft to go on to wherever our combat commanders need them."